OJi
The Writing On TkE W^ll Leon Garfield & Michael Bragg
MM
The Writing On The Wvll &
Leon Garfield
Michael Bragg...
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OJi
The Writing On TkE W^ll Leon Garfield & Michael Bragg
MM
The Writing On The Wvll &
Leon Garfield
Michael Bragg Samuel
is
small by an) standard. So short, the
dishes he carries appear to have legs of their
own, and
so insignificant, a
tor Belshazzar, the
mere kitchen-hoy
King, he measures his worth
along with his only friend, a tattered
cat
named
Mordecai.
One
night, while the rich
and mighty are
something happens that stuns and silences even the great King himself Samuel, his head concealed feasting at Belshazzar's court,
behind
a
huge mound
of strawberries,
grateful tor the peace, tor
moment
tor
now
Mordecai. Filling
is
he can steal a
a
holy golden
bowl from Belshazzar's table with cream from jug, Samuel is unaware of the
a hol\ silver
magnificence and mystery that surround the writing on Belshazzar's wall.
Leon Garfield and Michael Bragg, who collaborated so successfully on King Nimrocts .
the Biblical account of The
Tower
of
Babel, here present another highly original, deeply personal interpretation, this one based
upon the
fifth
Daniel
a tale of
—
The Book of weights and measures,
chapter from
need and greed that as
is
as
meaningful today
ever before.
Lothrop,
i
Shepard Books
i
I
Duff
3 0209
Jbrary
00008 0573
DUFFY ELEMENTARY LIBRARY
224 Ga
Garfielc 1, Leon THE WRITINC
\
ON THE WALL
DATE DUE SFP ? *
tOf
r
fjpr
m
t
m /\i (M\a^ .
fifl
Writing On Hie
Wvll
j
Text copyright
C 1983 b\
Illustrations cop\ right
First
b\
published
in
Leon Garfield
© 1983b)
Great Britain
in
Library of Congress Cataloging Garfield, Leon.
The writing on the
1083
Methuen Children's Books Ltd
wall.
Summary Samuel, a :
kitchen-boy
Belsha//ar, the King, and his guests All rights reserved.
reproduced or
No pan
of this book ma> be
any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrie\al utilized in
system, without permission
in
writing from
the Publisher. Inquiries should be addressed to
Lee& Shepard Books, a division of \\ illiam Morrow & Company, Inc., 105 Madison Avenue, New York. New York 10016.
Lothrop,
Printed in Great Britain.
IS. Edition 12345678910
First
Publication Data
in
Michael Hragg
during which
God delivers a message
is
interpreted by Judge Daniel.
2.
Belshazzar
1.
Daniel, the Prophet
Belshazzar.
Michael.
1 1.
[ 1
Babylon, serves
to
Belshazzar which
3.
Biblestories,
Daniel, the Prophet
Bible stories
3.
in
the feast
Juvenile literature.
Juvenile literature.
English— O. T. Daniel. 2.
at
— O. T]
I.
Bragg,
Title.
BS580.D2G37
ISBN 0-688-02
1083 1
12-3
224.509505
82-24938
The Writing On The
Wall Leon Garfield &
V
Michael Bragg
A
LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD BOOKS
NEW YORK
LIBRA?
\ OIST TUCSON UNIFIED SCHOOL
\
m
1
TUCSON, AZ 85717
f
:
r*
Just as
Sam
is
short for
Samuel was short
When
Samu
for a boy.
he fetched the dishes
Very in, all
could see was roast goose and
he took the dishes out,
were dirty plates and
all
legs.
legs.
you
When
you could see
The most you
ever saw of his other end was a tuft of hair sticking
up over the top of sprouts
dumplings,
He was
like a sprig
a nothing, a
or
of black parsley.
nobody; he was
a
kitchen-boy in Babylon, and he was
rushed off his
feet.
V
I
JL
Z;^5**L
rr'
JF2K
"Hey there, name is! Over "Hey there,
roast potatoes, or whatever your
here!" hard-boiled eggs, or whatever your
» *
t
It
ir +
is!
Over here!"
was Friday night and Belshazzar, the King,
was giving
U
'
face
a feast. All the rich
and mighty of
t
Babylon had come dukes and duchesses, :
generals and admirals, lawyers and bankers and
'
their wives sat
and guzzled
cheek by costly cheek, and swigged
to the greater glory of Belshazzar, the
King. 4-
"Hey mother
there, pickled herrings, or calls
you! Over here!"
whatever your
V
M
Even the gods of Babylon had been summoned attend.
They
arrived in carts and on the tops of
wagons ugly great :
to
idols covered
rubies, like high-class measles.
all
over with pearls and !^
• •
• •
;
God had
But one
come
not
:
the invisible
God
of the
Jews. So Belshazzar, the King, grew angry and sent to this
God's temple, saying:
"If He will not come and dine greatest in the land,
He
my
gates
his
and holy gorgeous
own
table for his
plates,
came
vv
/
in like a speckled scarlet
^/
/
and had them
own proud
and the golden bowls were waiting
(-
dog
!"
were piled with grapes, the jugs were
that
table, like the
he took away God's holy golden bowls, and holy
silver jugs,
upon
my
shall eat off the floor, like a
or a cat, or the beggar at
And
at
feast. filled
The
set
plates
with cream
for the strawberries
mountain on
legs.
v
i ley there, strawberries, or whatever
those
it is
skinny stumps belong to! Over here!"
Samuel stepped, dainty
as a bride
around
This wasn't because he was frightened
a
puddle.
of falling;
it
was
because he didn't want to tread on Mordecai. Mordecai
N
was
a cat, a tattered,
Wherever Samuel went, Mordecai went
hungry
cat.
waving
his tail
drift
one-eared, smelly fleabag of a
and weaving between Samuel's
too,
feet like a
of tabby smoke, with eyes.
Although Mordecai could see what nobody
else
could see, which was that Samuel had a face, which kept peering
moon
down
in its
everybody
"Hey
him around the edge of a dish like the second quarter, he miaowed at him like at
else
there, fried sprats!
Mordecai was left
starving.
Down
here!"
There was hardly anything
of him. His sides were almost meeting in the
middle; and he was sure
that, if
he was weighed
balances, he wouldn't have tipped the scales at a
pennyweight.
in the
_
"Hey
there, boiled halibut!
Down
here!
PLEASE!"
Samuel's heart ached for Mordecai; but he was rushed
oft his feet
and there
just
by the rich and mighty of Babylon,
wasn't any time for a
cat.
"Behold!" cried Belshazzar, the King,
up strawberries cream
as thick as pride.
supper
He
as bright as blood,
now
"What
all
he spooned
and poured on
will this
God do
that Belshazzar has His jugs
laughed; and
as
for
His
and bowls ?"
the rich and mighty laughed too.
They shook and swayed and
clinked and jingled, like a
miser in a gale. 'This
God," he shouted,
"will have to
come
like a
beggar to the hall of Belshazzar, the King!"
c
1
le
began
to
laugh again.
Then
he stopped. His
mouth fell open, and a straw hern fell out, and made a bloodstain on the eloth. His eves bulged, his
knees knocked, and he clutched
at the table for
support.
What was wrong? What was staring
at,
the great
King
The dukes and
high up on the wall?
generals and lawyers and bankers and their wives
turned
"A
in their seats
and looked up
at the wall.
A- A- AH!"
Painted faces turned as white as plaster; forks
and spoons dropped from trembling fingers and glasses
fell
and smashed upon the
floor.
"HOO-OO-OO-OOH!" Out of nothing, out of nowhere, come! no
It
wrist,
was
a
hand
hand had
as pale as death!
no sleeve, no arm.
with fingers that
a
It
moved along
Seratch - scratch - scratch!
was
There was
just a
hand,
the wall! It
began
to write.
Scratch - scratch - scratch! Strange words
appeared, words that none could read.
hand stopped.
It
every heart; then
turned and seemed to point it
faded into
Belshazzar, the King, and sat
and glared
feast in stone.
at
Then
the at
air!
all
the rich
company
the writing on the wall, like a
\
A £ J
^W
I
The for
hall
was
as quiet as
Mordecai, the
Sunday; and Samuel looked
cat.
"Pussycat, pussycat, where have you been?"
whispered Samuel, as Mordecai came and looked up
him with eyes
"Under
like
empty
hoop of his back and table to look for
saucers.
miaowed Mordecai, making
the table,"
crook with his
a
at
tail,
a
"under the
some cream."
"Pussycat, pussycat, did you find any there?"
whispered Samuel.
"Nothing but
miaowed Mordecai, "nothing
feet,"
but feet and the legs of a chair."
Samuel
listened.
Nobody
called for him.
He
waited.
Nobody wanted him. He peered around one side speckled mountain of strawberries. Nobody was looking at him.
He
of the
peered around the other side.
Everybody was looking
at the wall.
He
didn't
know
why. All Samuel could see were strawberries and cream .
.
.
and Mordecai, the
cat.
\
V t
-a*
'
Everybody was looking
the wall; except Samuel,
at
who was watching everybody
to
make
sure they
weren't watching him; and Mordecai the cat,
who was
watching Samuel.
"Hey "Hey
He from
there,
you with the
there,
Mordecai!
lowered his dish, a
face!
It's
filled
dish,
time for a cat!"
up
holy silver jug, and put
table of Belshazzar, the King.
and stood,
stock-still,
Cream, down here."
it
a holy
on the
Then he
golden bowl floor
under the
picked up his
behind the mountain of
strawberries, while tattered, one-eared, smelly old
Mordecai finished off the cream and polished God's golden bowl with his rough pink tongue.
And
all
the while, Belshazzar, the King, and the rich
and mighty of Babylon shook and trembled, and stared at the writing
on the
wall.
* *
A \
"Bring length
me
wise
men!"
for only the rich
;
invited to the feast,
cried Belshazzar at
and mighty had been
and none of them was wise.
"Let them read the writing on the wall!"
So the wise men of Babylon were fetched from schoolroom and study and
up
at the writing
blinked.
library.
They peered
and squinted and stared and
They put
their heads together, like
wrinkled old eggs in a nest.
They
scratched them,
they rubbed them and ploughed them with
frowns; but nothing came out. read so
much
as a single
word.
They could not
At
last
there was only one wise
man
to
come: Judge Daniel, who was the wisest
man
of the Jews.
before the King,
He came tall
and stood
and stern and
black, save for his beard
all
in
which poured
down his chest like an avenue of snow. "Can you read the writing on the wall?" demanded Belshazzar, the King. Judge Daniel looked; and slowly nodded his head.
"Then tell me what it commanded Belshazzar.
says!"
So Judge Daniel answered and ;
was as dark
his voice
as a night without stars. It
struck fear into every heart
;
and even
Samuel's hair stood up on end, so that the
mountain of strawberries grew
a fringe
on
top, stiff as railings.
A &
,
4 7
Your days
are
numbered, Belshazzar,
the King," said Judge Daniel.
been weighed wanting.
from
and
in the balances
You have
God
His
silver jugs
set yourself
your kingdom King.
God
sinned.
is
"You have
and found
You have
taken
and golden bowls
above Him. Therefore finished, Belshazzar, the
has finished
it."
m
There was
a
sound of rattling
the chattering of teeth
;
in the hall,
which was
and the sound of an empty
wind, which was the gasping of breath.
"A- A- A- AH!" Their rich robes grew huge and heavy on the feasters
;
and
their jewelled
like iron fists pressing
crowns and coronets seemed
down on
their heads.
With
shaking limbs and frightened faces they crept away into the night, and hid themselves in shadows and holes in the ground, where they find them.
The
hoped
that
God would
never
strawberry mountain sank out of sight,
and under the table of Belshazzar, the King.
k
y
At
last
empty of all save
the hall was
Judge Daniel
in his long black
He
his tall black hat.
gazed
gown and
at the
tumbled
and the broken glasses and the
chairs,
scattered plates
;
and then
at the table
of
Belshazzar, the King.
"Hey
there!" he cried, spying
something unusual. "Boy's tail
or whatever you are!
Samuel came Mordecai the
"Well?"
forth;
and
feet
cat's
Over here!"
and with him came
cat.
said
Judge Daniel, solemn
coffin with folded arms.
"Who
are
as a
you?"
"Just another sinner," said Samuel, sorely afraid. is
"Name
Mordecai the
of Samuel; and this
cat."
"Is that so?" said Judge Daniel, kneeling
down made
to a
a drift
;
be on
a level so that his
beard
kind of toboggan run ending up in for
Samuel was short
for a boy.
7
/
"Look," what
I
said Samuel, sad as rain
did."
And
on
a holiday, "look
he fetched out from under the table, a
holy silver jug and a holy golden bowl. "I took what
was God's, and used
it
for
Mordecai, the cat."
Judge Daniel frowned and stroked
his beard,
and
absent-mindedly poured out more cream for Mordecai, the cat.
"Weighed
in the balances
Samuel, gazing up wall.
"That's us
wouldn't dust!"
at the
mysterious writing on the
all right.
tip the scales
and found wanting," said
on
The a
pair of us put together
pennyweight Light !
as
I
Judge Daniel sighed and shook when," he asked, cat,
"can
a
his head.
tickling the only ear of
kitchen-boy read what
could not understand?
It
all
"Since
Mordecai, the
the wise
men
says on the wall, as plain as
anything, that Samuel and Mordecai have been
weighed
in the balances
sighed again.
And
and found
NEEDING." He
"So go home, Samuel, go home
to bed.
take this golden bowl and this silver jug to
remind you always."
"To remind me of what?" asked Samuel. "That God punishes greed, not need," said Judge Daniel, in a voice as soft as dreams.
So Samuel went; and winding between drift
of tabby smoke, went Mordecai the
his legs, like a
cat.
.
Belshazzar the king made a great
commanded
Belshazzar
feast.
bring the golden
to
and silver vessels which his father Nebuchadnezzar had taken out ot the temple which was in Jerusalem
And
and his princes, his wives, and drank in them. And praised the gods of gold, and of silver, of brass, of iron, of wood, and of stone. In the same hour came forth fingers of a man's hand, and wrote upon the wall of the king's palace: and the king saw the part of the hand that wrote the king,
his concubines,
Then came
in all the king's
wise men: but
make known to the king the interpretation thereof. Then was Daniel brought in before the king. And the king spake, Art thou that Daniel,
they could not read the writing, nor
.
which
art
of the children of the captivity of
Judah, whom the king of Jewry...?
my
father brought out
and make
If thou canst read the writing,
known
to
.
me
the interpretation thereof, thou
and have
shalt be clothed with scarlet,
a chain
of gold about thy neck, and shalt be the third
kingdom.
ruler in the
Then Daniel answered, Give to another; yet
the king,
I
will read the
and make known
to
thy rewards
writing unto
him
the
interpretation
The God in whose hand thy breath is, and whose are all thy ways, hast thou not glorified: Then was the part of the hand sent from him; and this writing was written This
is
the interpretation of the thing:
MENE; God finished
hath
TEKEL; Thou and
art
numbered
kingdom, and
art
weighed
in the balances,
found wanting.
PERES; Thy kingdom to the
thy
it.
Medes and
is
divided, and given
Persians
In that night was Belshazzar the king of the
Chaldeans
slain.
And Darius
the
Median took
the
kingdom,
being about threescore and two years old.
From
the
King James
Version
of The Holy Bible
The Hook ofDaniel, Chapters
IH
I