searchIcon closeIcon
Cancel
icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

A KING OF KINGS

Marrying A Secret Zillionaire: Happy Ever After

Marrying A Secret Zillionaire: Happy Ever After

Hamid Bawdekar
Linsey was stood up by her groom to run off with another woman. Furious, she grabbed a random stranger and declared, "Let's get married!" She had acted on impulse, realizing too late that her new husband was the notorious rascal, Collin. The public laughed at her, and even her runaway ex offered to reconcile. But Linsey scoffed at him. "My husband and I are very much in love!" Everyone thought she was delusional. Then Collin was revealed to be the richest man in the world. In front of everyone, he got down on one knee and held up a stunning diamond ring. "I look forward to our forever, honey."
Modern CEOMultiple identitiesArrogant/DominantFlash Marriage
Download the Book on the App

The island city of Tyre lay close to the Syrian coast. It seemed to float among the waves that fretted themselves into foam as they rolled in between the jagged rocks, and spread over the flats, retiring again to rest in the deep bosom of the Mediterranean. The wall that encircled the island rose in places a hundred cubits, and seemed from a distance to be an enormous monolith. It was therefore called Tsur, or Tyre, which means The Rock.

At the time of our narrative, about the middle of the fifth century B.C., the sea-girt city contained a dense mass of inhabitants, who lived in tall wooden houses of many stories; for the ground space within the walls could not lodge the multitude who pursued the various arts and commerce for which the Tyrians were, of all the world, the most noted. The streets were narrow, often entirely closed to the sky by projecting balconies and arcades-mere veins and arteries for the circulation of the city's throbbing life.

For recreation from their dyeing-vats, looms, and foundries, the artisan people climbed to the broad spaces on the top of the walls, where they could breathe the sweet sea air, except when the easterly wind was hot and gritty with dust from the mainland, a few bow-shots distant. The men of commerce thronged the quay of the Sidonian harbor at the north end of the island, or that of the Egyptian harbor on the south side-two artificial basins which were at all times crowded with ships; for the Tyrian merchantmen scoured all the coast of the Great Sea, even venturing through the straits of Gades, and northward to the coasts of Britain, and southward along the African shore; giving in barter for the crude commodities they found, not only the products of their own workshops, but the freight of their caravans that climbed the Lebanons and wearily tracked across the deserts to Arabia and Babylon. The people of fashion paraded their pride on the Great Square, in the heart of the city-called by the Greeks the Eurychorus-where they displayed their rich garments in competition with the flowers that grew, almost as artificially, in gay parterres amid the marble blocks of the pavement.

But one day a single topic absorbed the conversation of all classes alike, in the Great Square, on the walls, and along the quays. Councillors of state and moneyed merchants debated it with bowed heads and wrinkled brows. Moulders talked of it as they cooled themselves at the doorways of their foundries. Weavers, in the excitement of their wrangling over it, forgot to throw the shuttle. Seamen, lounging on the heaps of cordage, gave the subject all the light they could strike from oaths in the names of all the gods of all the lands they had ever sailed to. Even the women, as they stood in the open doorways, piloting their words between the cries of the children who bestrode their shoulders or clung to their feet, pronounced their judgment upon the all-absorbing topic.

A bulletin had appeared on the Great Square proclaiming, in the name of the High Council of Tyre, a stupendous religious celebration. Vast sums of money had been appropriated from the city treasury, and more was demanded from the people. A multitude of animals was to be sacrificed, and even the blood of human victims should enrich the altar, that thus might be purchased the favor of Almighty Baal.

To understand this proclamation, we must know the circumstances that led to it.

The Ph?nician prestige among the nations had for many years been steadily waning. The political dominance of Persia, with her capital far over the deserts at Susa, was less humiliating to this proud people than was the growing commercial importance of the Greeks across the sea. For not only had the Greeks whipped the Ph?nicians in naval battles, as at Salamis and Eurymedon, but they were displacing Ph?nician wares in foreign markets, and teaching the Greek language, customs, and religion to all the world. Yet the Greeks were thought by the Tyrians to be but an upstart people. They had not so many generations, as the Ph?nicians had ages, of glorious history.

How could Ph?nicia regain the supremacy? This was the all-absorbing question which appealed to the patriotism, and still more to the purses, of the Tyrians, and of their neighbors along the coast.

Many were the wiseacres who readily solved this problem to their own satisfaction. Thus, for example, the priests of Melkarth-the name they gave to Baal in his special office as guardian of the city-had a theory of their own. It was to the effect that the gods were offended at the growing laxity of worship, and especially at the falling-off of the temple revenues, which were in great measure the sumptuous perquisites of the priests themselves. They were especially disaffected towards their young king, Hiram, whom they regarded as an obstacle to any reforms on this line. Hiram had spent his early training years with the fleet, and was conversant with the faiths and customs of many countries. Thus he was educated to a cosmopolitan, not to say sceptical, habit of mind, and was led to doubt whether any movement that originated in the ambition of a horde of unscrupulous and superstitious priests could win the favor of the gods, even admitting that such supernal beings existed, of which the king was reported to have expressed a doubt.

King Hiram had been but a few months on the throne, to which he had succeeded on the death of his father, when he opened the meeting of the Great Council which issued the proclamation regarding the sacrifice.

His Majesty sat upon the bronze throne. Above him shone a canopy of beaten gold. At his back hung a curtain of richest Tyrian purple, in the centre of which gleamed a silver dove with outspread wings, the symbol of Tyre from those ancient days when its commerce and renown began to fly abroad over the world.

Hiram's face was typically Ph?nician, and betokened the clear tide of his racial blood. His forehead was broad, and prominent at the brows. His eyes were gleaming black. His nose started as if with the purpose of being Jewish, but terminated in the expanded nostril that suggested the Egyptian. His hair was black, with the slightest touch of red, which, however, only strong light would reveal. He wore the conical cap of the sailor, for his pride of naval command had never become secondary to even his sense of royal dignity; and many a time had he declared that a true Ph?nician king was chiefly king of the sea. The royal cap was distinguished from that of common sailors by the ur?us, or winged serpent's crest, which was wrought in golden needlework upon the front. The king's throat and chest were bare, except for a purple mantle which hung from his left shoulder, and crossed his body diagonally; and for a broad collar of silk embroidered with silver threads, which shone in contrast with his weather-bronzed skin. His arms were clasped above the elbows with heavy spirals of gold. He wore a loose white chiton, or undergarment, which terminated above the knees, and revealed as knotty a pair of legs as ever balanced so graceful a figure. But one thing marred his appearance-a deep scar on his chin, the memorial of a hand-to-hand fight with Egyptian pirates off the mouth of the Nile.

The king leaned upon one of the lion-heads that made the arms of his throne. One foot rested upon a footstool of bronze; the other in the spotted fur of a leopard, spread upon the dais.

Sitting thus, he spoke of the subject before the council. At first he scarcely changed his easy attitude. He traced the rise of the Greek power with voluble accuracy, for he had studied the problems it presented in another school than that of Ph?nician prejudices. As he proceeded he warmed with the kindling of his own thoughts, and, straightening himself on the throne, gesticulated forcibly, making the huge arm of the chair tremble under the stroke of his fist, as if the moulded bronze were the obdurate heads of his listeners. At length, fully heated with the excitement of his speech, and by the antagonism too plainly revealed in the faces of some of his courtiers, he rose from his throne, and stood upon the leopard skin as he concluded with these words:

"Let me speak plainly, O leaders of Ph?nicia, as a king of men should speak to kingly men! Why does the Greek outstrip us? Because he is stronger. Why is he stronger? Because he is wiser. Why is he wiser? Because he learns from all the world; and we, though we trade with all the tribes of men, learn from none. Our guide-marks are our own footprints, which we follow in endless circles. We boast, O Ph?nicians, that we have taught the world its alphabet, but we ourselves have no books beyond the tablets on which we keep the accounts of our ships, our caravans, and our shambles. It is our shame, O men of Tyre! We have instructed the sailors of the Great Sea to guide their ships by the stars, but in all our customs of government and religion we dare not leave the coast-line of our ancient notions. We go up and down the channels of our prejudice; ay, we ground ourselves in our ignorance.

"And hear, O ye priests! Our religion as practised is our disgrace. If Baal be the intelligence that shines in the sun, he despises us for our stupidity. Nay, scowl if ye will! But look at the statues of our gods! A Greek boy could carve as finely with the dough he eats. Look at our temples! The Great Hiram built a finer one than we possess five centuries ago, there in Jerusalem, for the miserable Jews to worship their Jehovah in. Ye say that Baal is angry with us. And well he may be! For we open not our minds to the brightness of his beams: we hide in the shadows of things that are old and decayed, even as the lizards crawl in the shadow of the ruins that everywhere mark our plains.

"Ye say, O priests, that we must sacrifice more to Baal. Truly! But it is not the sacrifice of death, rather the real offering of life, of our wiser thoughts, our braver enterprise, that Baal would have.

"This, this is the end of all my speaking, O men of Tyre! Heap up your treasures, and burn them if ye will! Slaughter your beasts! Toss your babes into the fire of Moloch! But know ye that your king gives you no such commandment; nor will he have more of such counsel."

So saying, King Hiram strode down from the dais, and left the council chamber. As he passed out, the members rose and made deep obeisance; but their bowed forms did not conceal from him their scowling faces.

The councillors, left alone, gathered close together, evidently not for debate, but to confirm one another in some predetermined purpose. Their words were bitter. Old Egbalus, the high priest of Baal-Melkarth for the year, thanked his god that the throne of Tyre had lost its power, since one so utterly blasphemous, so traitorous, had come to occupy it.

Read Now
A King of Tyre

A King of Tyre

James M. Ludlow
This is a pre-1923 historical reproduction that was curated for quality. Quality assurance was conducted on each of these books in an attempt to remove books with imperfections introduced by the digitization process. Though we have made best efforts - the books may have occasional errors that do not
Literature
Download the Book on the App
Early Kings of Norway

Early Kings of Norway

Thomas Carlyle
Till about the Year of Grace 860 there were no kings in Norway, nothing but numerous jarls,—essentially kinglets, each presiding over a kind of republican or parliamentary little territory; generally striving each to be on some terms of human neighborhood with those about him, but,—in spite of "Fylk
Literature
Download the Book on the App
A Sailor of King George

A Sailor of King George

Captain Frederick Hoffman
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to keep the quality of these images, so th
Literature
Download the Book on the App
Rule of a ruthless king.

Rule of a ruthless king.

Reanne Michelle
Princess Aurelia of Northlaye lives in constant fear of her father King Edric. His sudden demand of her betrothal to prince Mallon of Ailingdale against her will is nothing compared to the cold, hard and brutal way his constant treatment is of her and the people of his own kingdom. Aurelia secretly
Romance BetrayalAttractiveContract marriage Royalty DramaNobleMediaevalRomanceKickass Heroine
Download the Book on the App
A Slave to the Kings

A Slave to the Kings

LadyArawn
*Mature audience only: Contains mature language, sex, abuse and violence.* -------------- She has no name, not anymore, after so long she has simply forgotten what a name is, what it means to be able to choose, what it means to be able to wish, she has simply forgotten what it means to be a person.
Werewolf R18+ModernFantasySexual slaveVampireTwistArrogant/DominantNoble
Download the Book on the App
The Sea-Kings of Crete

The Sea-Kings of Crete

James Baikie
The object aimed at in the following pages has been to offer to the general reader a plain account of the wonderful investigations which have revolutionized all ideas as to the antiquity and the level of the earliest European culture,
Literature
Download the Book on the App
A Character of King Charles the Second

A Character of King Charles the Second

George Savile, Marquis of Halifax
A Character of King Charles the Second by George Savile, Marquis of Halifax
Literature
Download the Book on the App
King of the Jews

King of the Jews

William T. Stead
King of the Jews by William T. Stead
Literature
Download the Book on the App
The King Of Filifia

The King Of Filifia

Anna Fermis
Elvy Ashton was a smart, obidient and know-her-limitation woman. A kind of woman that Prince Dwight Luhence Emmerson, the next king of Filifia, wants. He wanted her badly that he almost forget his responsibilities in his country. Dwight need to marry the lost princess of Ihmapuleya and having an aff
Romance FamilyBetrayalLove at first sightAttractivePrinceRoyalty NobleRomance
Download the Book on the App
The King of Slaughter

The King of Slaughter

Guan Zhong Lao Ren
In the world of killing, the Law of the Gungle is the only law. And the only way not to be eaten by others is to keep getting stronger. Su Qin, an abandoned son of a rich family, has now become the most terrifying slaughter, and the whole world is now his hunting ground.
Modern ModernRomance
Download the Book on the App

Trending

LOVE ON A LUXURY BUS Black as the Forest (All the Hounds of Hell #1) He's My Ruthless Billionaire TGLES #2: Belong To Me My Savior is a Devil CAGED- A Dark Billionaire Captive Romance
Alpha King of Water

Alpha King of Water

AdiennaMichelle
“Your only role is enduring the pain.” Her desire for revenge, power, and strength. His adoration to her body; never-ending lust. She is the monster that he created. He is her creator and soon to be his killer. She hates him for taking advantage of women, but he is irresistible. He wants to
Werewolf R18+FantasyRevengePlayboyRebirth/RebornAlphaLust/EroticaWerewolfForbidden love
Download the Book on the App
The Unrefined Mate Of The Angel Kings

The Unrefined Mate Of The Angel Kings

Rebecca Nova
So it's true. I am their mate! I am the one they have been waiting for all this time. How can that be? Can I really be so lucky? "Don't bother celebrating. We do not intend to make a detestable human servant our queen." Angel Fenris states, his voice laced with disgust just like the last time we me
Romance FantasyBetrayalLove triangleRoyalty DramaArrogant/DominantRomanceKickass Heroine
Download the Book on the App
The King of Hell

The King of Hell

Amy David
She accidentally gets bonded to the devil, to break the bond one of them has to die and since the devil cannot die he has to kill her but due to some reasons he has to wait for some time before her death. He hates her for her pure and innocent personality. She loves his scary and dangerous nature
Fantasy ThrillerModernFantasyForced loveSecret relationshipAttractivePrinceRoyalty Arrogant/DominantRomance
Download the Book on the App
ALPHA KING OF FIRE

ALPHA KING OF FIRE

AdiennaMichelle
“PYRO. That’s my name.” Fira was about to die at the hands of hunters when there was a man came to save her. This man had a cold emotion with his unusual strength, good at dodging, and a fighter who can prevent every strike of the opponent without looking at it. She was curious about the identity o
Romance R18+FamilyFantasyServant
Download the Book on the App
King of Madness

King of Madness

Emma Mountford
"She saved me, with one nervous smile over a decade ago she started to put my broken pieces back together, it started under the apple tree and that is where it will end because I need Audrey to stay whole, even if that means I tear her apart." Coming back to her grandparents house after she had be
Romance R18+ModernForced loveFirst loveMafiaSchemingBadboyArrogant/Dominant
Download the Book on the App
The King of bed

The King of bed

princeughtor33
KING VALENCIA the famous fuckboy on their university, He was knows for being sexually attractive and handsome, Hot, Heartless playboy. At first glance, your jaw will drop with its grace, He always gets what he wants and he loves sex. And he has one rule in life, his number one rule is 'NO KISS, JU
Romance
Download the Book on the App
King of Darkness

King of Darkness

Caia clearwood
A vampire with memory loss. A fae with vampire issues. What happens when fate merges their path? ———————— Willow, a fae, an assassin, and also known as 'whisperer' by a selected few, is ordered to spy on the vampire king by her Guild head. But before she can venture on her task, she stumbles on
Fantasy MysteryFantasyBetrayalVampireArrogantDominant
Download the Book on the App
King of War

King of War

Grace Mercy
Blurb: "What on Earth are you saying, Erica?" Neil looked at her, he could see it in her eyes. " "Why on earth would I hang out with a broke man like you? You are a mere delivery boy and there is no way you would ever be in my class." Erica was looking at Neillike she was looking at a pile of trash.
Mafia R18+LegendBetrayalDivorceCelebritiesAttractiveHidden identities
Download the Book on the App
The King of Alsander

The King of Alsander

James Elroy Flecker
In this quirky and enjoyable fantasy novel, the protagonist decides to make a sudden break from the humdrum routine of his daily life when a disembodied voice directs him to travel to a land called Alsander. Once he arrives, he's hailed as a hero and ascends to the throne.
Literature
Download the Book on the App
King Of Lust

King Of Lust

Dr Erotica
Dorrek Vladimir, a young inexperienced warlock joins Whitemourne Academy for the gifted. A place where young ones like him can learn to control their gifts and live among others freely, but also a place where the ruthless king of lust himself calls it his turf, and finds it unpleasant when a rebelli
LGBT+ R18+ModernFantasyFirst loveSecret relationshipSexual slaveAttractiveAlphaBXBLust/Erotica
Download the Book on the App

Trending

Read it on MoboReader now!
Open
close button

A KING OF KINGS

Discover books related to A KING OF KINGS on MoboReader