The Seventh Heaven Read Online Free Page A

The Seventh Heaven
Book: The Seventh Heaven Read Online Free
Author: Naguib Mahfouz
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me to have been the cause for which you sullied your pages. I am overwhelmed with grief because of it—while my sense of happiness shrinks to nothing.
2
    In the midst of a sigh, Raouf found himself in a new city— brilliantly illuminated, but without a sun. The sky was a cupola of white clouds, the ground rich with greenery, with endless orchards of flowering fruit trees. Stretching into the distance were rows of white roses. Throngs of people met and broke up with the fleetness of birds. In an empty spot, he felt the loneliness of the first-time arrival. At that moment, there arose before him a man enshrouded in a white mist.
    “Welcome, Raouf,” the man said, smiling, “to the First Heaven.”
    “Is this Paradise?” Raouf asked, shouting with joy.
    “I said, ‘the First Heaven,’ not ‘Paradise,’” the stranger admonished.
    “Then where is Paradise?”
    “Between it and you, the path is very, very long,” the man answered. “The fortunate person will spend hundreds of thousands of enlightened years traversing it!”
    A sound like a groan escaped Raouf. “Permit me firstto introduce myself,” said the man. “I am your interlocutor, Abu, formerly High Priest at Hundred-Gated Thebes.”
    “I’m honored to meet you, Your Reverence. What a happy coincidence that I’m Egyptian myself!”
    “That is of no importance,” replied Abu. “I lost all nationality thousands of years ago. Now I am the defense counsel appointed by the courts for the new arrivals.”
    “But there can be no charge against me—I’m a victim….”
    “Patience,” Abu said, cutting him off. “Let me tell you about your new surroundings. This heaven receives the new arrivals. They are tried in court, where I serve as their advocate. The verdicts are either for acquittal or for condemnation. In case of acquittal, the defendant spends one year here spiritually preparing for his ascent to the Second Heaven.”
    Raouf interrupted him, “But what then does ‘condemnation’ mean?”
    “That the condemned must be reborn on earth to practice living once again; perhaps they would be more successful the next time,” said Abu. “As for verdicts that fall between acquittal and condemnation, in such cases the accused is usually put to work as a guide to one or more souls on earth. Depending on their luck, they may ascend to the Second Heaven, or the length of their probationary period might be extended, et cetera.”
    “At any rate, I’m definitely innocent,” Raouf blurted confidently. “I lived a good life and died a martyr.”
    “Do not be so hasty,” Abu counseled him. “Let us open the discussion of your case. Identify yourself, please.”
    “Raouf Abd-Rabbuh, eighteen years of age, a universitystudent of history. My father died, leaving my mother a widow who lives on a charitable trust from the Ministry of Religious Endowments.”
    “Why are you so satisfied with yourself, Raouf?” queried Abu.
    “Well, despite my intense poverty, I’m a hard-working student who loves knowledge, for which my thirst is never quenched.”
    “That is beautiful, as a matter of principle,” remarked Abu, “yet you received most of your information from others, rather than through your own thinking.”
    “Thought is enriched through age and experience,” said Raouf. “And regardless, would that count as a charge against me?”
    “Here a person is held accountable for everything,” rejoined Abu. “I observe that you were dazzled by new ideas.”
    “The new has its own enchantment, Your Reverence Abu,” said Raouf.
    “First of all, do not call me, ‘Your Reverence,’” Abu rebuked him. “Second, we do not judge a thought itself even when it is false. Rather, we denounce submission to any idea, even if it is true.”
    “Such a cruel trial! Justice on earth is far more merciful.”
    “We will come to justice,” Abu reassured him. “How did you find your alley?”
    “Horrible,” spat Raouf. “Most of the people there are poor
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