"Lord of Light" - читать интересную книгу автора (Zelazny Roger)

chambers below. Light, bom not of torches but of the generators of Yama, filled the cavern. The bed, set upon a platform, was closed about on three sides by screens. Most of the machinery was also masked by screens and hangings. The saffron-robed monks who were in attendance moved silently about the great chamber. Yama, master artificer, stood at the bedside. As they approached, several of the well-disciplined, imperturbable monks uttered brief exclamations. Tak then turned to the woman at his side and drew back a pace, his breath catching in his throat. She was no longer the dumpy little matron with whom he had spoken. Once again did he stand at the side of Night immortal, of whom it has been written, "The goddess has filled wide space, to its depths and its heights. Her radiance drives out the dark." He looked but a moment and covered his eyes. She still had this trace of her distant Aspect about her.
"Goddess..." he began. "To the sleeper," she stated. "He stirs." They advanced to the bedstead. Thereafter to be portrayed in murals at the ends of countless corridors, carved upon the walls of Temples and painted onto the ceilings of numerous palaces, came the awakening of he who was variously known as Mahasamatman, Kalkin, Manjusri, Siddhartha, Ta- thagatha, Binder, Maitreya, the Enlightened One, Bud- dha and Sam. At his left was the goddess of Night; to LORD OF LIGHT 17 his right stood Death; Tak, the ape, was crouched at the foot of the bed, eternal comment upon the coexist- ence of the animal and the divine. He wore an ordinary, darkish body of medium height and age; his features were regular and undistin- guished; when his eyes opened, they were dark.