Page:The Pharaohs and their people; scenes of old Egyptian life and history (IA pharaohstheirpeo00berkiala).pdf/181

 to turn aside thither that he might 'behold the face of his father and offer sacrifice.' But on arriving, he was much struck by the general dilapidation of the tombs, and the marks of careless neglect on every side. 'Nothing had been built up,' he said, 'by the son for the father, though he should have been careful to preserve it according to his expectations, since its possessor had taken flight to heaven. But not one son had renewed the memorial of his father who rested in the grave.' On examining his own father's temple, he found evidence not only of neglect but of dishonesty. 'The revenues had failed, the servants of the temple had taken, without exception, whatever had come in for themselves.' Consequently the columns were not raised on their bases, the statues lay prostrate on the ground. Rameses forthwith called together the princes, the captains and the architects, and after their prostrations and flattering speeches were ended he addressed them. After speaking of the state of things he had found at Abydos, he went on to say: 'The most beautiful thing to behold, the best thing to hear, is a child with a thankful breast, whose