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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Tales from the Arabic Volume 1, by John Payne
+(#2 in our series by John Payne)
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
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+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
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+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: Tales from the Arabic Volume 1
+
+Author: John Payne
+
+Release Date: March, 2004 [EBook #5242]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on June 10, 2002]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, TALES FROM THE ARABIC VOLUME 1 ***
+
+
+
+
+Text scanned by JC Byers and proof read by the volunteers of the
+Distributed Proofreaders site: http://charlz.dns2go.com/gutenberg/
+
+
+
+ TALES FROM THE ARABIC
+
+ Of the Breslau and Calcutta (1814-18) editions of
+
+ The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night
+
+ not occurring in the other printed texts of the work,
+
+ Now first done into English
+
+ By John Payne
+
+ In Three Volumes:
+
+
+
+ VOLUME THE FIRST.
+
+
+
+ 1901
+
+ Delhi Edition
+
+
+ Contents of The First Volume.
+
+
+
+ Breslau Text.
+
+1. Asleep and Awake
+ a. Story of the Lackpenny and the Cook
+2. The Khalif Omar Ben Abdulaziz and the Poets
+3. El Hejjaj and the Three Young Men
+4. Haroun Er Reshid and the Woman of the Barmecides
+5. The Ten Viziers; or the History of King Azadbekht and His
+ Son
+ a. Of the Uselessness of Endeavour Against Persistent Ill
+ Fortune
+ i. Story of the Unlucky Merchant
+ b. Of Looking to the Issues of Affairs
+ i. Story of the Merchant and His Sons
+ c. Of the Advantages of Patience
+ i. Story of Abou Sabir
+ d. Of the Ill Effects of Precipitation
+ i. Story of Prince Bihzad
+ e. Of the Issues of Good and Evil Actions
+ i. Story of King Dadbin and His Viziers
+ f. Of Trust in God
+ i. Story of King Bexhtzeman
+ g. Of Clemency
+ i. Story of King Bihkerd
+ h. Of Envy and Malice
+ i. Story of Ilan Shah and Abou Temam
+ i. Of Destiny or That Which Is Written on the Forehead
+ i. Story of King Abraham and His Son
+ j. Of the Appointed Term, Which, If it Be Advanced, May
+ Not Be Deferred and If it Be Deferred, May Not Be
+ Advanced
+ i. Story of King Suleiman Shah and His Sons
+ k. Of the Speedy Relief of God
+ i. Story of the Prisoner and How God Gave Him Relief
+6. Jaafer Ben Yehya and Abdulmelik Ben Salih the Abbaside
+7. Er Reshid and the Barmecides
+8. Ibn Es Semmak and Er Reshid
+9. El Mamoun and Zubeideh
+10. En Numan and the Arab of the Benou Tai
+11. Firouz and His Wife
+12. King Shah Bekht and His Vizier Er Rehwan
+ a. Story of the Man of Khorassan, His Son and His Governor
+ b. Story of the Singer and the Druggist
+ c. Story of the King Who Knew the Quintessence of Things
+ d. Story of the Rich Man Who Gave His Fair Daughter in
+ Marriage to the Poor Old Man
+ e. Story of the Rich Man and His Wasteful Son
+ f. The King's Son Who Fell in Love with the Picture
+ g. Story of the Fuller and His Wife
+ h. Story of the Old Woman, the Merchant and the King
+ i. Story of the Credulous Husband
+ j. Story of the Unjust King and the Tither
+ i. Story of David and Solomon
+ k. Story of the Thief and the Woman
+ l. Story of the Three Men and Our Lord Jesus
+ i. The Disciple's Story
+ m. Story of the Dethroned King Whose Kingdom and Good Were
+ Restorfd to Him
+ n. Story of the Man Whose Caution Was the Cause of His
+ Death
+ o. Story of the Man Who Was Lavish of His House and His
+ Victual to One Whom He Knew Not
+ p. Story of the Idiot and the Sharper
+ q. Story of Khelbes and His Wife and the Learned Man
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Breslau Text.
+
+
+
+ ASLEEP AND AWAKE[FN#1]
+
+
+
+
+
+There was once [at Baghdad], in the Khalifate of Haroun er
+Reshid, a man, a merchant, who had a son by name Aboulhusn el
+Khelia.[FN#2] The merchant died and left his son great store of
+wealth, which he divided into two parts, one of which he laid up
+and spent of the other half; and he fell to companying with
+Persians[FN#3] and with the sons of the merchants and gave
+himself up to good eating and good drinking, till all that he had
+with him of wealth[FN#4] was wasted and gone; whereupon he betook
+himself to his friends and comrades and boon-companions and
+expounded to them his case, discovering to them the failure of
+that which was in his hand of wealth; but not one of them took
+heed of him neither inclined unto him.
+
+So he returned to his mother (and indeed his spirit was broken),
+and related to her that which had happened to him and what had
+betided him from his friends, how they, had neither shared with
+him nor requited him with speech. "O Aboulhusn," answered she,
+"on this wise are the sons[FN#5]of this time: if thou have aught,
+they make much of thee,[FN#6] and if thou have nought, they put
+thee away [from them]." And she went on to condole with him, what
+while he bewailed himself and his tears flowed and he repeated
+the following verses:
+
+ An if my substance fail, no one there is will succour me,
+ But if my wealth abound, of all I'm held in amity.
+ How many a friend, for money's sake, hath companied with me!
+ How many an one, with loss of wealth, hath turned mine
+ enemy!
+
+Then he sprang up [and going] to the place wherein was the other
+half of his good, [took it] and lived with it well; and he swore
+that he would never again consort with those whom he knew, but
+would company only with the stranger nor entertain him but one
+night and that, whenas it morrowed, he would never know him more.
+So he fell to sitting every night on the bridge[FN#7] and looking
+on every one who passed by him; and if he saw him to be a
+stranger, he made friends with him and carried him to his house,
+where he caroused with him till the morning. Then he dismissed
+him and would never more salute him nor ever again drew near unto
+him neither invited him.
+
+On this wise he continued to do for the space of a whole year,
+till, one day, as he sat on the bridge, according to his custom,
+expecting who should come to him, so he might take him and pass
+the night with him, behold, [up came] the Khalif and Mesrour, the
+swordsman of his vengeance, disguised [in merchants' habits] as
+of their wont. So he looked at them and rising up, for that he
+knew them not, said to them, "What say ye? Will you go with me to
+my dwelling-place, so ye may eat what is ready and drink what is
+at hand, to wit, bread baked in the platter[FN#8] and meat cooked
+and wine clarified?" The Khalif refused this, but he conjured him
+and said to him, "God on thee, O my lord, go with me, for thou
+art my guest this night, and disappoint not my expectation
+concerning thee!" And he ceased not to press him till he
+consented to him; whereat Aboulhusn rejoiced and going on before
+him, gave not over talking with him till they came to his [house
+and he carried the Khalif into the] saloon. Er Reshid entered and
+made his servant abide at the door; and as soon as he was seated,
+Aboulhusn brought him somewhat to eat; so he ate, and Aboulhusn
+ate with him, so eating might be pleasant to him. Then he removed
+the tray and they washed their hands and the Khalif sat down
+again; whereupon Aboulhusn set on the drinking vessels and
+seating himself by his side, fell to filling and giving him to
+drink and entertaining him with discourse.
+
+His hospitality pleased the Khalif and the goodliness of his
+fashion, and he said to him, "O youth, who art thou? Make me
+acquainted with thyself, so I may requite thee thy kindness." But
+Aboulhusn smiled and said, "O my lord, far be it that what is
+past should recur and that I be in company with thee at other
+than this time!" "Why so?" asked the Khalif. "And why wilt thou
+not acquaint me with thy case?" And Aboulhusn said, "Know, O my
+lord, that my story is extraordinary and that there is a cause
+for this affair." Quoth the Khalif, "And what is the cause?" And
+he answered, "The cause hath a tail." The Khalif laughed at his
+words and Aboulhusn said, "I will explain to thee this [saying]
+by the story of the lackpenny and the cook. Know, O my lord, that
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF THE LACKPENNY AND THE COOK.
+
+
+
+One of the good-for-noughts found himself one day without aught
+and the world was straitened upon him and his patience failed; so
+he lay down to sleep and gave not over sleeping till the sun
+burnt him and the foam came out upon his mouth, whereupon he
+arose, and he was penniless and had not so much as one dirhem.
+Presently, he came to the shop of a cook, who had set up therein
+his pans[FN#9] [over the fire] and wiped his scales and washed
+his saucers and swept his shop and sprinkled it; and indeed his
+oils[FN#10] were clear[FN#11] and his spices fragrant and he
+himself stood behind his cooking-pots [waiting for custom]. So
+the lackpenny went up to him and saluting him, said to him,
+'Weigh me half a dirhem's worth of meat and a quarter of a
+dirhem's worth of kouskoussou[FN#12] and the like of bread.' So
+the cook weighed out to him [that which he sought] and the
+lackpenny entered the shop, whereupon the cook set the food
+before him and he ate till he had gobbled up the whole and licked
+the saucers and abode perplexed, knowing not how he should do
+with the cook concerning the price of that which he had eaten and
+turning his eyes about upon everything in the shop.
+
+Presently, he caught sight of an earthen pan turned over upon its
+mouth; so he raised it from the ground and found under it a
+horse's tail, freshly cut off, and the blood oozing from it;
+whereby he knew that the cook adulterated his meat with horses'
+flesh. When he discovered this default, he rejoiced therein and
+washing his hands, bowed his head and went out; and when the cook
+saw that he went and gave him nought, he cried out, saying,
+'Stay, O sneak, O slink-thief!' So the lackpenny stopped and said
+to him, 'Dost thou cry out upon me and becall [me] with these
+words, O cuckold?' Whereat the cook was angry and coming down
+from the shop, said, 'What meanest thou by thy speech, O thou
+that devourest meat and kouskoussou and bread and seasoning and
+goest forth with "Peace[FN#13][be on thee!]," as it were the
+thing had not been, and payest down nought for it?' Quoth the
+lackpenny, 'Thou liest, O son of a cuckold!' Wherewith the cook
+cried out and laying hold of the lackpenny's collar, said, 'O
+Muslims, this fellow is my first customer[FN#14] this day and he
+hath eaten my food and given me nought.'
+
+So the folk gathered together to them and blamed the lackpenny
+and said to him, 'Give him the price of that which thou hast
+eaten.' Quoth he, 'I gave him a dirhem before I entered the
+shop;' and the cook said, 'Be everything I sell this day
+forbidden[FN#15] to me, if he gave me so much as the name of a
+piece of money! By Allah, he gave me nought, but ate my food and
+went out and [would have] made off, without aught [said I]'
+'Nay,' answered the lackpenny, 'I gave thee a dirhem,' and he
+reviled the cook, who returned his abuse; whereupon he dealt him
+a cuff and they gripped and grappled and throttled each other.
+When the folk saw them on this wise, they came up to them and
+said to them, 'What is this strife between you, and no cause for
+it?' 'Ay, by Allah,' replied the lackpenny, 'but there is a cause
+for it, and the cause hath a tail!' Whereupon, 'Yea, by Allah,'
+cried the cook, 'now thou mindest me of thyself and thy dirhem!
+Yes, he gave me a dirhem and [but] a quarter of the price is
+spent. Come back and take the rest of the price of thy dirhem.'
+For that he understood what was to do, at the mention of the
+tail; and I, O my brother," added Aboulhusn, "my story hath a
+cause, which I will tell thee."
+
+The Khalif laughed at his speech and said, "By Allah, this is
+none other than a pleasant tale! Tell me thy story and the
+cause." "With all my heart," answered Aboulhusn. "Know, O my
+lord, that my name is Aboulhusn el Khelia and that my father died
+and left me wealth galore, of which I made two parts. One I laid
+up and with the other I betook myself to [the enjoyment of the
+pleasures of] friendship [and conviviality] and consorting with
+comrades and boon-companions and with the sons of the merchants,
+nor did I leave one but I caroused with him and he with me, and I
+spent all my money on companionship and good cheer, till there
+remained with me nought [of the first half of my good]; whereupon
+I betook myself to the comrades and cup-companions upon whom I
+had wasted my wealth, so haply they might provide for my case;
+but, when I resorted to them and went round about to them all, I
+found no avail in one of them, nor broke any so much as a crust
+of bread in my face. So I wept for myself and repairing to my
+mother, complained to her of my case. Quoth she, 'On this wise
+are friends; if thou have aught, they make much of thee and
+devour thee, but, if thou have nought, they cast thee off and
+chase thee away.' Then I brought out the other half of my money
+and bound myself by an oath that I would never more entertain
+any, except one night, after which I would never again salute him
+nor take note of him; hence my saying to thee, 'Far be it that
+what is past should recur!' For that I will never again
+foregather with thee, after this night."
+
+When the Khalif heard this, he laughed heartily and said, "By
+Allah, O my brother, thou art indeed excused in this matter, now
+that I know the cause and that the cause hath a tail.
+Nevertheless if it please God, I will not sever myself from
+thee." "O my guest," replied Aboulhusn, "did I not say to thee,
+'Far be it that what is past should recur! For that I will never
+again foregather with any'?" Then the Khalif rose and Aboulhusn
+set before him a dish of roast goose and a cake of manchet-bread
+and sitting down, fell to cutting off morsels and feeding the
+Khalif therewith. They gave not over eating thus till they were
+content, when Aboulhusn brought bowl and ewer and potash[FN#16]
+and they washed their hands.
+
+Then he lighted him three candles and three lamps and spreading
+the drinking-cloth, brought clarified wine, limpid, old and
+fragrant, the scent whereof was as that of virgin musk. He filled
+the first cup and saying, "O my boon-companion, by thy leave, be
+ceremony laid aside between us! I am thy slave; may I not be
+afflicted with thy loss!" drank it off and filled a second cup,
+which he handed to the Khalif, with a reverence. His fashion
+pleased the Khalif and the goodliness of his speech and he said
+in himself, "By Allah, I will assuredly requite him for this!"
+Then Aboulhusn filled the cup again and handed it to the Khalif,
+reciting the following verses:
+
+Had we thy coming known, we would for sacrifice Have poured thee
+ out heart's blood or blackness of the eyes;
+Ay, and we would have spread our bosoms in thy way, That so thy
+ feet might fare on eyelids, carpet-wise.
+
+When the Khalif heard his verses, he took the cup from his hand
+and kissed it and drank it off and returned it to Aboulhusn, who
+made him an obeisance and filled and drank. Then he filled again
+and kissing the cup thrice, recited the following verses:
+
+ Thy presence honoureth us and we Confess thy magnanimity;
+ If thou forsake us, there is none Can stand to us instead of
+ thee.
+
+Then he gave the cup to the Khalif, saying, "Drink [and may]
+health and soundness [attend it]! It doth away disease and
+bringeth healing and setteth the runnels of health abroach."
+
+They gave not over drinking and carousing till the middle of the
+night, when the Khalif said to his host, "O my brother, hast thou
+in thy heart a wish thou wouldst have accomplished or a regret
+thou wouldst fain do away?" "By Allah," answered he, "there is no
+regret in my heart save that I am not gifted with dominion and
+the power of commandment and prohibition, so I might do what is
+in my mind!" Quoth the Khalif, "For God's sake, O my brother,
+tell me what is in thy mind!" And Aboulhusn said, "I would to God
+I might avenge myself on my neighbours, for that in my
+neighbourhood is a mosque and therein four sheikhs, who take it
+ill, whenas there cometh a guest to me, and vex me with talk and
+molest me in words and threaten me that they will complain of me
+to the Commander of the Faithful, and indeed they oppress me
+sore, and I crave of God the Most High one day's dominion, that I
+may beat each of them with four hundred lashes, as well as the
+Imam of the mosque, and parade them about the city of Baghdad and
+let call before them, 'This is the reward and the least of the
+reward of whoso exceedeth [in talk] and spiteth the folk and
+troubleth on them their joys.' This is what I wish and no more."
+
+Quoth the Khalif, "God grant thee that thou seekest! Let us drink
+one last cup and rise before the dawn draw near, and to-morrow
+night I will be with thee again." "Far be it!" said Aboulhusn.
+Then the Khalif filled a cup and putting therein a piece of
+Cretan henbane, gave it to his host and said to him, "My life on
+thee, O my brother, drink this cup from my hand!" "Ay, by thy
+life," answered Aboulhusn, "I will drink it from thy hand." So he
+took it and drank it off; but hardly had he done so, when his
+head forewent his feet and he fell to the ground like a slain
+man; whereupon the Khalif went out and said to his servant
+Mesrour, "Go in to yonder young man, the master of the house, and
+take him up and bring him to me at the palace; and when thou
+goest out, shut the door."
+
+So saying, he went away, whilst Mesrour entered and taking up
+Aboulhusn, shut the door after him, and followed his master, till
+he reached the palace, what while the night drew to an end and
+the cocks cried out, and set him down before the Commander of the
+Faithful, who laughed at him. Then he sent for Jaafer the
+Barmecide and when he came before him, he said to him, "Note this
+young man and when thou seest him to-morrow seated in my place of
+estate and on the throne of my Khalifate and clad in my habit,
+stand thou in attendance upon him and enjoin the Amirs and
+grandees and the people of my household and the officers of my
+realm to do the like and obey him in that which he shall command
+them; and thou, if he bespeak thee of anything, do it and hearken
+unto him and gainsay him not in aught in this coming day." Jaafer
+answered with, "Hearkening and obedience,"[FN#17] and withdrew,
+whilst the Khalif went in to the women of the palace, who came to
+him, and he said to them, "Whenas yonder sleeper awaketh
+to-morrow from his sleep, kiss ye the earth before him and make
+obeisance to him and come round about him and clothe him in the
+[royal] habit and do him the service of the Khalifate and deny
+not aught of his estate, but say to him, 'Thou art the Khalif.'"
+Then he taught them what they should say to him and how they
+should do with him and withdrawing to a privy place, let down a
+curtain before himself and slept.
+
+Meanwhile, Aboulhusn gave not over snoring in his sleep, till the
+day broke and the rising of the sun drew near, when a
+waiting-woman came up to him and said to him, "O our lord [it is
+the hour of] the morning- prayer." When he heard the girl's
+words, he laughed and opening his eyes, turned them about the
+place and found himself in an apartment the walls whereof were
+painted with gold and ultramarine and its ceiling starred with
+red gold. Around it were sleeping-chambers, with curtains of
+gold-embroidered silk let down over their doors, and all about
+vessels of gold and porcelain and crystal and furniture and
+carpets spread and lamps burning before the prayer-niche and
+slave-girls and eunuchs and white slaves and black slaves and
+boys and pages and attendants. When he saw this, he was
+confounded in his wit and said, "By Allah, either I am dreaming,
+or this is Paradise and the Abode of Peace!"[FN#18] And he shut
+his eyes and went to sleep again. Quoth the waiting-woman, "O my
+lord, this is not of thy wont, O Commander of the Faithful!"
+
+Then the rest of the women of the palace came all to him and
+lifted him into a sitting posture, when he found himself upon a
+couch, stuffed all with floss-silk and raised a cubit's height
+from the ground.[FN#19] So they seated him upon it and propped
+him up with a pillow, and he looked at the apartment and its
+greatness and saw those eunuchs and slave-girls in attendance
+upon him and at his head, whereat he laughed at himself and said,
+"By Allah, it is not as I were on wake, and [yet] I am not
+asleep!" Then he arose and sat up, whilst the damsels laughed at
+him and hid [their laughter] from him; and he was confounded in
+his wit and bit upon his finger. The bite hurt him and he cried
+"Oh!" and was vexed; and the Khalif watched him, whence he saw
+him not, and laughed.
+
+Presently Aboulhusn turned to a damsel and called to her;
+whereupon she came to him and he said to her, "By the protection
+of God, O damsel, am I Commander of the Faithful?" "Yes, indeed,"
+answered she; "by the protection of God thou in this time art
+Commander of the Faithful." Quoth he, "By Allah, thou liest, O
+thousandfold strumpet!" Then he turned to the chief eunuch and
+called to him, whereupon he came to him and kissing the earth
+before him, said, "Yes, O Commander of the Faithful." "Who is
+Commander of the Faithful?" asked Aboulhusn. "Thou," replied the
+eunuch and Aboulhusn said, "Thou liest, thousandfold catamite
+that thou art!" Then he turned to another eunuch and said to him,
+"O my chief,[FN#20] by the protection of God, am I Commander of
+the Faithful?" "Ay, by Allah, O my lord!" answered he. "Thou in
+this time art Commander of the Faithful and Vicar of the Lord of
+the Worlds." Aboulhusn laughed at himself and misdoubted of his
+reason and was perplexed at what he saw and said, "In one night I
+am become Khalif! Yesterday I was Aboulhusn the Wag, and to-day I
+am Commander of the Faithful." Then the chief eunuch came up to
+him and said, "O Commander of the Faithful, (the name of God
+encompass thee!) thou art indeed Commander of the Faithful and
+Vicar of the Lord of the Worlds!" And the slave-girls and eunuchs
+came round about him, till he arose and abode wondering at his
+case.
+
+Presently, one of the slave-girls brought him a pair of sandals
+wrought with raw silk and green silk and embroidered with red
+gold, and he took them and put them in his sleeve, whereat the
+slave cried out and said, "Allah! Allah! O my lord, these are
+sandals for the treading of thy feet, so thou mayst enter the
+draught-house." Aboulhusn was confounded and shaking the sandals
+from his sleeve, put them on his feet, whilst the Khalif
+[well-nigh] died of laughter at him. The slave forewent him to
+the house of easance, where he entered and doing his occasion,
+came out into the chamber, whereupon the slave- girls brought him
+a basin of gold and an ewer of silver and poured water on his
+hands and he made the ablution.
+
+Then they spread him a prayer-carpet and he prayed. Now he knew
+not how to pray and gave not over bowing and prostrating himself,
+[till he had prayed the prayers] of twenty inclinations,[FN#21]
+pondering in himself the while and saying, "By Allah, I am none
+other than the Commander of the Faithful in very sooth! This is
+assuredly no dream, for all these things happen not in a dream."
+And he was convinced and determined in himself that he was
+Commander of the Faithful; so he pronounced the Salutation[FN#22]
+and made an end[FN#23] of his prayers; whereupon the slaves and
+slave-girls came round about him with parcels of silk and
+stuffs[FN#24] and clad him in the habit of the Khalifate and gave
+him the royal dagger in his hand. Then the chief eunuch went out
+before him and the little white slaves behind him, and they
+ceased not [going] till they raised the curtain and brought him
+into the hall of judgment and the throne-room of the Khalifate.
+There he saw the curtains and the forty doors and El Ijli and Er
+Recashi[FN#25] and Ibdan and Jedim and Abou Ishac [FN#26] the
+boon-companions and beheld swords drawn and lions [FN#27]
+encompassing [the throne] and gilded glaives and death-dealing
+bows and Persians and Arabs and Turks and Medes and folk and
+peoples and Amirs and viziers and captains and grandees and
+officers of state and men of war, and indeed there appeared the
+puissance of the house of Abbas [FN#28] and the majesty of the
+family of the Prophet.
+
+So he sat down upon the throne of the Khalifate and laid the
+dagger in his lap, whereupon all [present] came up to kiss the
+earth before him and called down on him length of life and
+continuance [of glory and prosperity]. Then came forward Jaafer
+the Barmecide and kissing the earth, said, "May the wide world of
+God be the treading of thy feet and may Paradise be thy
+dwelling-place and the fire the habitation of thine enemies! May
+no neighbour transgress against thee nor the lights of fire die
+out for thee, [FN#29] O Khalif of [all] cities and ruler of [all]
+countries!"
+
+Therewithal Aboulhusn cried out at him and said, "O dog of the
+sons of Bermek, go down forthright, thou and the master of the
+police of the city, to such a place in such a street and deliver
+a hundred dinars to the mother of Aboulhusn the Wag and bear her
+my salutation. [Then, go to such a mosque] and take the four
+sheikhs and the Imam and beat each of them with four hundred
+lashes and mount them on beasts, face to tail, and go round with
+them about all the city and banish them to a place other than the
+city; and bid the crier make proclamation before them, saying,
+'This is the reward and the least of the reward of whoso
+multiplieth words and molesteth his neighbours and stinteth them
+of their delights and their eating and drinking!'" Jaafer
+received the order [with submission] and answered with
+["Hearkening and] obedience;" after which he went down from
+before Aboulhusn to the city and did that whereunto he had bidden
+him.
+
+Meanwhile, Aboulhusn abode in the Khalifate, taking and giving,
+ordering and forbidding and giving effect to his word, till the
+end of the day, when he gave [those who were present] leave and
+permission [to withdraw], and the Amirs and officers of state
+departed to their occasions. Then the eunuchs came to him and
+calling down on him length of life and continuance [of glory and
+prosperity], walked in attendance upon him and raised the
+curtain, and he entered the pavilion of the harem, where he found
+candles lighted and lamps burning and singing-women smiting [on
+instruments of music]. When he saw this, he was confounded in his
+wit and said in himself, "By Allah, I am in truth Commander of
+the Faithful!" As soon as he appeared, the slave-girls rose to
+him and carrying him up on to the estrade,[FN#30] brought him a
+great table, spread with the richest meats. So he ate thereof
+with all his might, till he had gotten his fill, when he called
+one of the slave-girls and said to her, "What is thy name?" "My
+name is Miskeh," replied she, and he said to another, "What is
+thy name?" Quoth she, "My name is Terkeh." Then said he to a
+third, "What is thy name?" "My name is Tuhfeh," answered she; and
+he went on to question the damsels of their names, one after
+another, [till he had made the round of them all], when he rose
+from that place and removed to the wine-chamber.
+
+He found it every way complete and saw therein ten great trays,
+full of all fruits and cakes and all manner sweetmeats. So he sat
+down and ate thereof after the measure of his sufficiency, and
+finding there three troops of singing-girls, was amazed and made
+the girls eat. Then he sat and the singers also seated
+themselves, whilst the black slaves and the white slaves and the
+eunuchs and pages and boys stood, and the slave-girls, some of
+them, sat and some stood. The damsels sang and warbled all manner
+melodies and the place answered them for the sweetness of the
+songs, whilst the pipes cried out and the lutes made accord with
+them, till it seemed to Aboulhusn that he was in Paradise and his
+heart was cheered and his breast dilated. So he sported and
+joyance waxed on him and he bestowed dresses of honour on the
+damsels and gave and bestowed, challenging this one and kissing
+that and toying with a third, plying one with wine and another
+with meat, till the night fell down.
+
+All this while the Khalif was diverting himself with watching him
+and laughing, and at nightfall he bade one of the slave-girls
+drop a piece of henbane in the cup and give it to Aboulhusn to
+drink. So she did as he bade her and gave Aboulhusn the cup,
+whereof no sooner had he drunken than his head forewent his feet
+[and he fell down, senseless]. Therewith the Khalif came forth
+from behind the curtain, laughing, and calling to the servant who
+had brought Aboulhusn to the palace, said to him, "Carry this
+fellow to his own place." So Mesrour took him up [and carrying
+him to his own house], set him down in the saloon. Then he went
+forth from him and shutting the saloon-door upon him, returned to
+the Khalif, who slept till the morrow.
+
+As for Aboulhusn, he gave not over sleeping till God the Most
+High brought on the morning, when he awoke, crying out and
+saying, "Ho, Tuffaheh! Ho, Rahet el Culoub! Ho, Miskeh! Ho,
+Tuhfeh!" And he gave not over calling upon the slave-girls till
+his mother heard him calling upon strange damsels and rising,
+came to him and said, "The name of God encompass thee! Arise, O
+my son, O Aboulhusn! Thou dreamest." So he opened his eyes and
+finding an old woman at his head, raised his eyes and said to
+her, "Who art thou?" Quoth she, "I am thy mother;" and he
+answered, "Thou liest! I am the Commander of the Faithful, the
+Vicar of God." Whereupon his mother cried out and said to him,
+"God preserve thy reason! Be silent, O my son, and cause not the
+loss of our lives and the spoiling of thy wealth, [as will
+assuredly betide,] if any hear this talk and carry it to the
+Khalif."
+
+So he rose from his sleep and finding himself in his own saloon
+and his mother by him, misdoubted of his wit and said to her, "By
+Allah, O my mother, I saw myself in a dream in a palace, with
+slave-girls and servants about me and in attendance upon me, and
+I sat upon the throne of the Khalifate and ruled. By Allah, O my
+mother, this is what I saw, and verily it was not a dream!" Then
+he bethought himself awhile and said, "Assuredly, I am Aboulhusn
+el Khelia, and this that I saw was only a dream, and [it was in a
+dream that] I was made Khalif and commanded and forbade." Then he
+bethought himself again and said, "Nay, but it was no dream and I
+am no other than the Khalif, and indeed I gave gifts and bestowed
+dresses of honour." Quoth his mother to him, "O my son, thou
+sportest with thy reason: thou wilt go to the hospital and become
+a gazing-stock. Indeed, that which thou hast seen is only from
+the Devil and it was a delusion of dreams, for whiles Satan
+sporteth with men's wits in all manner ways."
+
+Then said she to him, "O my son, was there any one with thee
+yesternight?" And he bethought himself and said, "Yes; one lay
+the night with me and I acquainted him with my case and told him
+my story. Doubtless, he was from the Devil, and I, O my mother,
+even as thou sayst truly, am Aboulhusn el Khelia." "O my son,"
+rejoined she, "rejoice in tidings of all good, for yesterday's
+record is that there came the Vivier Jaafer the Barmecide [and
+his company] and beat the sheikhs of the mosque and the Imam,
+each four hundred lashes; after which they paraded them about the
+city, making proclamation before them and saying, 'This is the
+reward and the least of the reward of whoso lacketh of goodwill
+to his neighbours and troubleth on them their lives!' and
+banished them from Baghdad. Moreover, the Khalif sent me a
+hundred dinars and sent to salute me." Whereupon Aboulhusn cried
+out and said to her, "O old woman of ill-omen, wilt thou
+contradict me and tell me that I am not the Commander of the
+Faithful? It was I who commanded Jaafer the Barmecide to beat the
+sheikhs and parade them about the city and make proclamation
+before them and who sent thee the hundred dinars and sent to
+salute thee, and I, O beldam of ill-luck, am in very deed the
+Commander of the Faithful, and thou art a liar, who would make me
+out a dotard."
+
+So saying, he fell upon her and beat her with a staff of
+almond-wood, till she cried out, "[Help], O Muslims!" and he
+redoubled the beating upon her, till the folk heard her cries and
+coming to her, [found] Aboulhusn beating her and saying to her,
+"O old woman of ill-omen, am I not the Commander of the Faithful?
+Thou hast enchanted me!" When the folk heard his words, they
+said, "This man raveth," and doubted not of his madness. So they
+came in upon him and seizing him, pinioned him and carried him to
+the hospital. Quoth the superintendant, "What aileth this youth?"
+And they said, "This is a madman." "By Allah," cried Aboulhusn,
+"they lie against me! I am no madman, but the Commander of the
+Faithful." And the superintendant answered him, saying, "None
+lieth but thou, O unluckiest of madmen!"
+
+Then he stripped him of his clothes and clapping on his neck a
+heavy chain, bound him to a high lattice and fell to drubbing him
+two bouts a day and two anights; and on this wise he abode the
+space of ten days. Then his mother came to him and said, "O my
+son, O Aboulhusn, return to thy reason, for this is the Devil's
+doing." Quoth he, "Thou sayst sooth, O my mother, and bear thou
+witness of me that I repent [and forswear] that talk and turn
+from my madness. So do thou deliver me, for I am nigh upon
+death." So his mother went out to the superintendant and procured
+his release and he returned to his own house.
+
+Now this was at the beginning of the month, and when it was the
+end thereof, Aboulhusn longed to drink wine and returning to his
+former usance, furnished his saloon and made ready food and let
+bring wine; then, going forth to the bridge, he sat there,
+expecting one whom he should carouse withal, as of his wont. As
+he sat thus, behold, up came the Khalif [and Mesrour] to him; but
+Aboulhusn saluted them not and said to them, "No welcome and no
+greeting to the perverters![FN#31] Ye are no other than devils."
+However, the Khalif accosted him and said to him, "O my brother,
+did I not say to thee that I would return to thee?" Quoth
+Aboulhusn, "I have no need of thee; and as the byword says in
+verse:
+
+'Twere fitter and better my loves that I leave, For, if the eye
+ see not, the heart will not grieve.
+
+And indeed, O my brother, the night thou camest to me and we
+caroused together, I and thou, it was as if the Devil came to me
+and troubled me that night." "And who is he, the Devil?" asked
+the Khalif. "He is none other than thou," answered Aboulhusn;
+whereat the Khalif smiled and sitting down by him, coaxed him and
+spoke him fair, saying, "O my brother, when I went out from thee,
+I forgot [to shut] the door [and left it] open, and belike Satan
+came in to thee." Quoth Aboulhusn, "Ask me not of that which hath
+betided me. What possessed thee to leave the door open, so that
+the Devil came in to me and there befell me with him this and
+that?" And he related to him all that had befallen him, from
+first to last, aud there is no advantage in the repetition of it;
+what while the Khalif laughed and hid his laughter.
+
+Then said he to Aboulhusn, "Praised be God who hath done away
+from thee that which irked thee and that I see thee in weal!" And
+Aboulhusn said, "Never again will I take thee to boon-companion
+or sitting-mate; for the byword saith, 'Whoso stumbleth on a
+stone and returneth thereto, blame and reproach be upon him.' And
+thou, O my brother, nevermore will I entertain thee nor use
+companionship with thee, for that I have not found thy commerce
+propitious to me."[FN#32] But the Khalif blandished him and
+conjured him, redoubling words upon him with "Verily, I am thy
+guest; reject not the guest," till Aboulhusn took him and
+[carrying him home], brought him into the saloon and set food
+before him and friendly entreated him in speech. Then he told him
+all that had befallen him, whilst the Khalif was like to die of
+hidden laughter; after which Aboulhusn removed the tray of food
+and bringing the wine-tray, filled a cup and emptied it out three
+times, then gave it to the Khalif, saying, "O boon-companion
+mine, I am thy slave and let not that which I am about to say irk
+thee, and be thou not vexed, neither do thou vex me." And he
+recited these verses:
+
+No good's in life (to the counsel list of one who's
+ purpose-whole,) An if thou be not drunken still and gladden
+ not thy soul.
+Ay, ne'er will I leave to drink of wine, what while the night on
+ me Darkens, till drowsiness bow down my head upon my bowl.
+In wine, as the glittering sunbeams bright, my heart's
+ contentment is, That banishes hence, with various joys, all
+ kinds of care and dole.
+
+When the Khalif heard these his verses, he was moved to exceeding
+delight and taking the cup, drank it off, and they ceased not to
+drink and carouse till the wine rose to their heads. Then said
+Aboulhusn to the Khalif, "O boon-companion mine, of a truth I am
+perplexed concerning my affair, for meseemed I was Commander of
+the Faithful and ruled and gave gifts and largesse, and in very
+deed, O my brother, it was not a dream." "These were the
+delusions of sleep," answered the Khalif and crumbling a piece of
+henbane into the cup, said to him, "By my life, do thou drink
+this cup." And Aboulhusn said, "Surely I will drink it from thy
+hand." Then he took the cup from the Khalifs hand and drank it
+off, and no sooner had it settled in his belly than his head
+forewent his feet [and he fell down senseless].
+
+Now his parts and fashions pleased the Khalif and the excellence
+of his composition and his frankness, and he said in himself, "I
+will assuredly make him my cup- companion and sitting-mate." So
+he rose forthright and saying to Mesrour, "Take him up,"
+[returned to the palace]. Accordingly, Mesrour took up Aboulhusn
+and carrying him to the palace of the Khalifate, set him down
+before Er Reshid, who bade the slaves and slave- girls encompass
+him about, whilst he himself hid in a place where Aboulhusn could
+not see him.
+
+Then he commanded one of the slave-girls to take the lute and
+strike it at Aboulhusn's head, whilst the rest smote upon their
+instruments. [So they played and sang,] till Aboulhusn awoke at
+the last of the night and heard the noise of lutes and tabrets
+and the sound of the pipes and the singing of the slave-girls,
+whereupon he opened his eyes and finding himself in the palace,
+with the slave-girls and eunuchs about him, exclaimed, 'There is
+no power and no virtue but in God the Most High, the Supreme!
+Verily, I am fearful of the hospital and of that which I suffered
+therein aforetime, and I doubt not but the Devil is come to me
+again, as before. O my God, put thou Satan to shame!" Then he
+shut his eyes and laid his head in his sleeve and fell to
+laughing softly and raising his head [bytimes], but [still] found
+the apartment lighted and the girls singing.
+
+Presently, one of the eunuchs sat down at his head and said to
+him, "Sit up, O Commander of the Faithful, and look on thy palace
+and thy slave-girls." Quoth Aboulhusn, "By the protection of God,
+am I in truth Commander of the Faithful and dost thou not lie?
+Yesterday, I went not forth neither ruled, but drank and slept,
+and this eunuch cometh to rouse me up." Then he sat up and
+bethought himself of that which had betided him with his mother
+and how he had beaten her and entered the hospital, and he saw
+the marks of the beating, wherewithal the superintendant of the
+hospital had beaten him, and was perplexed concerning his affair
+and pondered in himself, saying, "By Allah, I know not how my
+case is nor what is this that betideth me!"
+
+Then he turned to a damsel of the damsels and said to her, "Who
+am I?" Quoth she, "Thou art the Commander of the Faithful;" and
+he said, "Thou liest, O calamity![FN#33] If I be indeed the
+Commander of the Faithful, bite my finger." So she came to him
+and bit it with her might, and he said to her, "It sufficeth."
+Then he said to the chief eunuch, "Who am I?" And he answered,
+"Thou art the Commander of the Faithful." So he left him and
+turning to a little white slave, said to him, "Bite my ear;" and
+he bent down to him and put his ear to his mouth. Now the slave
+was young and lacked understanding; so he closed his teeth upon
+Aboulhusn's ear with his might, till he came near to sever it;
+and he knew not Arabic, so, as often as Aboulhusn said to him,
+"It sufficeth," he concluded that he said, "Bite harder," and
+redoubled his bite and clenched his teeth upon the ear, whilst
+the damsels were diverted from him with hearkening to the
+singing-girls, and Aboulhusn cried out for succour from the boy
+and the Khalif [well-nigh] lost his senses for laughter.
+
+Then he dealt the boy a cuff and he let go his ear, whereupon
+Aboulhusn put off his clothes and abode naked, with his yard and
+his arse exposed, and danced among the slave-girls. They bound
+his hands and he wantoned among them, what while they [well-nigh]
+died of laughing at him and the Khalif swooned away for excess of
+laughter. Then he came to himself and going forth to Aboulhusn,
+said to him, "Out on thee, O Aboulhusn! Thou slayest me with
+laughter." So he turned to him and knowing him, said to him, "By
+Allah, it is thou slayest me and slayest my mother and slewest
+the sheikhs and the Imam of the Mosque!"
+
+Then the Khalif took him into his especial favour and married him
+and bestowed largesse on him and lodged him with himself in the
+palace and made him of the chief of his boon-companions, and
+indeed he was preferred with him above them and the Khalif
+advanced him over them all. Now they were ten in number, to wit,
+El Ijli and Er Recashi and Ibdan and Hassan el Feresdec and El
+Lauz and Es Seker and Omar et Tertis and Abou Nuwas[FN#34] and
+Abou Ishac en Nedim and Aboulhusn el Khelia, and by each of them
+hangeth a story that is told in other than this book. And indeed
+Aboulhusn became high in honour with the Khalif and favoured
+above all, so that he sat with him and the Lady Zubeideh bint el
+Casim and married the latter's treasuress, whose name was Nuzhet
+el Fuad.
+
+Aboulhusn abode with his wife in eating and drinking and all
+delight of life, till all that was with them was spent, when he
+said to her, "Harkye, O Nuzhet el Fuad!" "At thy service,"
+answered she, and he said, "I have it in mind to play a trick on
+the Khalif and thou shalt do the like with the Lady Zubeideh, and
+we will take of them, in a twinkling, two hundred dinars and two
+pieces of silk." "As thou wilt," answered she; "but what thinkest
+thou to do?" And he said,"We will feign ourselves dead and this
+is the trick. I will die before thee and lay myself out, and do
+thou spread over me a kerchief of silk and loose [the muslin of]
+my turban over me and tie my toes and lay on my heart a knife,
+and a little salt.[FN#35] Then let down thy hair and betake
+thyself to thy mistress Zubeideh, tearing thy dress and buffeting
+thy face and crying out. She will say to thee, 'What aileth
+thee?' and do thou answer her, saying, 'May thy head outlive
+Aboulhusn el Khelia! For he is dead." She will mourn for me and
+weep and bid her treasuress give thee a hundred dinars and a
+piece of silk and will say to thee, 'Go lay him out and carry him
+forth [to burial].' So do thou take of her the hundred dinars and
+the piece of silk and come back, and when thou returnest to me, I
+will rise up and thou shalt lie down in my place, and I will go
+to the Khalif and say to him, 'May thy head outlive Nuzhet el
+Fuad!' and tear my dress and pluck at my beard. He will mourn for
+thee and say to his treasurer, 'Give Aboulhusn a hundred dinars
+and a piece of silk.' Then he will say to me, 'Go; lay her out
+and carry her forth;' and I will come back to thee."
+
+Therewith Nuzhet el Fuad rejoiced and said, "Indeed, this is an
+excellent device." [Then Aboulhusn stretched himself out]
+forthright and she shut his eyes and tied his feet and covered
+him with the kerchief and did what [else] her lord had bidden
+her; after which she rent her dress and uncovering her head, let
+down her hair and went in to the Lady Zubeideh, crying out and
+weeping, When the princess saw her in this case, she said to her,
+"What plight is this [in which I see thee]? What is thy story and
+what maketh thee weep?" And Nuzhet el Fuad answered, weeping and
+crying out the while, "O my lady, may thy head live and mayst
+thou survive Aboulhusn el Khelia! For he is dead." The Lady
+Zubeideh mourned for him and said, "Alas for Aboulhusn el
+Khelia!" And she wept for him awhile. Then she bade her
+treasuress give Nuzhet el Fuad a hundred dinars and a piece of
+silk and said to her, "O Nuzhet el Fuad, go, lay him out and
+carry him forth."
+
+So she took the hundred dinars and the piece of silk and returned
+to her dwelling, rejoicing, and went in to Aboulhusn and told him
+what had befallen, whereupon he arose and rejoiced and girt his
+middle and danced and took the hundred dinars and the piece of
+silk and laid them up. Then he laid out Nuzhet el Fuad and did
+with her even as she had done with him; after which he rent his
+clothes and plucked out his beard and disordered his turban [and
+went forth] and gave not over running till he came in to the
+Khalif, who was sitting in the hall of audience, and he in this
+plight, beating upon his breast. Quoth the Khalif to him, "What
+aileth thee, O Aboulhusn!" And he wept and said, "Would thy
+boon-companion had never been and would his hour had never come!"
+"Tell me [thy case,]" said the Khalif; and Aboulhusn said, "O my
+lord, may thy head outlive Nuzhet el Fuad!" Quoth the Khalif,
+"There is no god but God!" And he smote hand upon hand. Then he
+comforted Aboulhusn and said to him, "Grieve not, for we will
+give thee a concubine other than she." And he bade the treasurer
+give him a hundred dinars and a piece of silk. So the treasurer
+gave him what the Khalif bade him, and the latter said to
+him,"Go, lay her out and carry her forth and make her a handsome
+funeral." So Aboulhusn took that which he had given him and
+returning to his house, rejoicing, went in to Nuzhet el Fuad and
+said to her, "Arise, for the wish is accomplished unto us." So
+she arose and he laid before her the hundred dinars and the piece
+of silk, whereat she rejoiced, and they added the gold to the
+gold and the silk to the silk and sat talking and laughing at one
+another.
+
+Meanwhile, when Aboulhusn went out from the presence of the
+Khalif and went to lay out Nuzhet el Fuad, the prince mourned for
+her and dismissing the divan, arose and betook himself, leaning
+upon Mesrour, the swordsman of his vengeance, [to the pavilion of
+the harem, where he went in] to the Lady Zubeideh, that he might
+condole with her for her slave-girl. He found the princess
+sitting weeping and awaiting his coming, so she might condole
+with him for [his boon-companion] Aboulhusn el Khelia. So he said
+to her, "May thy head outlive thy slave-girl Nuzhet el Fuad!" And
+she answered, saying, "O my lord, God preserve my slave-girl!
+Mayst thou live and long survive thy boon-companion Aboulhusn el
+Khelia! For he is dead."
+
+The Khalif smiled and said to his eunuch, "O Mesrour, verily
+women are little of wit. I conjure thee, by Allah, say, was not
+Aboulhusn with me but now?" ["Yes, O Commander of the Faithful,"
+answered Mesrour] Quoth the Lady Zubeideh, laughing from a heart
+full of wrath, "Wilt thou not leave thy jesting? Is it not enough
+that Aboulhusn is dead, but thou must kill my slave-girl also and
+bereave us of the two and style me little of wit?" "Indeed,"
+answered the Khalif, "it is Nuzhet el Fuad who is dead." And
+Zubeideh said, "Indeed he hath not been with thee, nor hast thou
+seen him, and none was with me but now but Nuzhet el Fuad, and
+she sorrowful, weeping, with her clothes torn. I exhorted her to
+patience and gave her a hundred dinars and a piece of silk; and
+indeed I was awaiting thy coming, so I might condole with thee
+for thy boon- companion Aboulhusn el Khelia, and was about to
+send for thee." The Khalif laughed and said, "None is dead but
+Nuzhet el Fuad;" and she, "No, no, my lord; none is dead but
+Aboulhusn."
+
+With this the Khalif waxed wroth, and the Hashimi vein[FN#36]
+started out from between his eyes and he cried out to Mesrour and
+said to him, "Go forth and see which of them is dead." So Mesrour
+went out, running, and the Khalif said to Zubeideh, "Wilt thou
+lay me a wager?" "Yes," answered she; "I will wager, and I say
+that Aboulhusn is dead." "And I," rejoined the Khalif, "wager and
+say that none is dead save Nuzhet el Fuad; and the stake shall be
+the Garden of Pleasance against thy palace and the Pavilion of
+Pictures." So they [agreed upon this and] abode awaiting Mesrour,
+till such time as he should return with news.
+
+As for Mesrour, he gave not over running till he came to the
+by-street, [wherein was the house] of Aboulhusn el Khelia. Now
+the latter was sitting reclining at the lattice, and chancing to
+look round, saw Mesrour running along the street and said to
+Nuzhet el Fuad, "Meseemeth the Khalif, when I went forth from
+him, dismissed the Divan and went in to the Lady Zubeideh, to
+condole with her [for thee;] whereupon she arose and condoled
+with him [for me,] saying, 'God greaten thy recompence for [the
+loss of] Aboulhusn el Khelia!' And he said to her, 'None is dead
+save Nuzhet el Fuad, may thy head outlive her!' Quoth she, 'It is
+not she who is dead, but Aboulhusn el Khelia, thy
+boon-companion.' And he to her, 'None is dead but Nuzhet el
+Fuad.' And they gainsaid one another, till the Khalif waxed wroth
+and they laid a wager, and he hath sent Mesrour the sword- bearer
+to see who is dead. Wherefore it were best that thou lie down, so
+he may see thee and go and acquaint the Khalif and confirm my
+saying." So Nuzhet el Fuad stretched herself out and Aboulhusn
+covered her with her veil and sat at her head, weeping.
+
+Presently, in came Mesrour the eunuch to him and saluted him and
+seeing Nuzhet el Fuad stretched out, uncovered her face and said,
+"There is no god but God! Our sister Nuzhet el Fuad is dead. How
+sudden was the [stroke of] destiny! May God have mercy on thee
+and acquit thee of responsibility!" Then he returned and related
+what had passed before the Khalif and the Lady Zubeideh, and he
+laughing. "O accursed one,' said the Khalif, "is this a time for
+laughter? Tell us which is dead of them." "By Allah, O my lord,"
+answered Mesrour, "Aboulhusn is well and none is dead but Nuzhet
+el Fuad." Quoth the Khalif to Zubeideh, "Thou hast lost thy
+pavilion in thy play," and he laughed at her and said to Mesrour,
+"O Mesrour, tell her what thou sawest." "Verily, O my lady," said
+the eunuch, "I ran without ceasing till I came in to Aboulhusn in
+his house and found Nuzhet el Fuad lying dead and Aboulhusn
+sitting at her head, weeping. I saluted him and condoled with him
+and sat down by his side and uncovered the face of Nuzhet el Fuad
+and saw her dead and her face swollen. So I said to him, 'Carry
+her out forthright [to burial], so we may pray over her.' He
+answered, 'It is well;' and I left him to lay her out and came
+hither, that I might tell you the news."
+
+The Khalif laughed and said, "Tell it again and again to thy lady
+lack-wit." When the Lady Zubeideh heard Mesrour's words [and
+those of the Khalif,] she was wroth and said, "None lacketh wit
+but he who believeth a black slave." And she reviled Mesrour,
+whilst the Khalif laughed. Mesrour was vexed at this and said to
+the Khalif, "He spoke sooth who said, 'Women lack wit and
+religion.'" Then said the Lady Zubeideh to the Khalif, "O
+Commander of the Faithful, thou sportest and jestest with me, and
+this slave hoodwinketh me, to please thee; but I will send and
+see which is dead of them." And he answered, saying, "Send one
+who shall see which is dead of them." So the Lady Zubeideh cried
+out to an old woman, a stewardess, and said to her, "Go to the
+house of Nuzhet el Fuad in haste and see who is dead and loiter
+not." And she railed at her.
+
+The old woman went out, running, whilst the Khalif and Mesrour
+laughed, and gave not over running till she came into the street.
+Aboulhusn saw her and knowing her, said to his wife, "O Nuzhet el
+Fuad, meseemeth the Lady Zubeideh hath sent to us to see who is
+dead and hath not given credence to Mesrour's report of thy
+death; so she hath despatched the old woman, her stewardess, to
+discover the truth; wherefore it behoveth me to be dead in my
+turn, for the sake of thy credit with the Lady Zubeideh."
+Accordingly, he lay down and stretched himself out, and she
+covered him and bound his eyes and feet and sat at his head,
+weeping.
+
+Presently, the old woman came in to her and saw her sitting at
+Aboulhusn's head, weeping and lamenting; and when she saw the old
+woman, she cried out and said to her, "See what hath betided me!
+Indeed, Aboulhusn is dead and hath left me alone and forlorn!"
+Then she cried out and tore her clothes and said to the old
+woman, "O my mother, how good he was!" Quoth the other, "Indeed
+thou art excused, for thou wast used to him and he to thee." Then
+she considered what Mesrour had reported to the Khalif and the
+Lady Zubeideh and said to her, "Indeed, Mesrour goeth about to
+sow discord between the Khalif and the Lady Zubeideh." "And what
+is the [cause of] discord, O my mother?" asked Nuzhet el Fuad. "O
+my daughter," answered the old woman, "Mesrour came to the Khalif
+and the Lady Zubeideh and gave them news of thee that thou wast
+dead and that Aboulhusn was well. "And Nuzhet el Fuad said to
+her, "O my aunt, I was with my lady but now and she gave me a
+hundred dinars and a piece of silk; and now see my condition and
+that which hath befallen me! Indeed, I am bewildered, and how
+shall I do, and I alone, forlorn? Would God I had died and he had
+lived!"
+
+Then she wept and the old woman with her and the latter went up
+to Aboulhusn and uncovering his face, saw his eyes bound and
+swollen for the binding. So she covered him again and said,
+"Indeed, O Nuzhet el Fuad, thou art afflicted in Aboulhusn!" Then
+she condoled with her and going out from her, ran without ceasing
+till she came in to the Lady Zubeideh and related to her the
+story; and the princess said to her, laughing, "Tell it over
+again to the Khalif, who maketh me out scant of wit and lacking
+of religion, and to this ill-omened slave, who presumeth to
+contradict me." Quoth Mesrour, "This old woman lieth; for I saw
+Aboulhusn well and Nuzhet el Fuad it was who lay dead." "It is
+thou that liest," rejoined the stewardess, "and wouldst fain sow
+discord between the Khalif and the Lady Zubeideh." And he said,
+"None lieth but thou, O old woman of ill-omen, and thy lady
+believeth thee, and she doteth." Whereupon the Lady Zubeideh
+cried out at him, and indeed she was enraged at him and at his
+speech and wept.
+
+Then said the Khalif to her, "I lie and my eunuch lieth, and thou
+liest and thy waiting-woman lieth; so methinks we were best go,
+all four of us together, that we may see which of us telleth the
+truth." Quoth Mesrour, "Come, let us go, that I may put this
+ill-omened old woman to shame[FN#37] and deal her a sound
+drubbing for her lying." And she answered him, saying, "O dotard,
+is thy wit like unto my wit? Indeed, thy wit is as the hen's
+wit." Mesrour was incensed at her words and would have laid
+violent hands on her, but the Lady Zubeideh warded him off from
+her and said to him, "Her sooth-fastness will presently be
+distinguished from thy sooth-fastness and her leasing from thy
+leasing."
+
+Then they all four arose, laying wagers with one another, and
+went forth, walking, from the palace-gate [and fared on] till
+they came in at the gate of the street in which Aboulhusn el
+Khelia dwelt. He saw them and said to his wife Nuzhet el Fuad,
+"Verily, all that is sticky is not a pancake and not every time
+cometh the jar off safe.[FN#38]' Meseemeth the old woman hath
+gone and told her lady and acquainted her with our case and she
+hath disputed with Mesrour the eunuch and they have laid wagers
+with one another about our death and are come to us, all four,
+the Khalif and the eunuch and the Lady Zubeideh and the old
+woman." When Nuzhet el Fuad heard this, she started up from her
+lying posture and said, "How shall we do?" And he said, "We will
+both feign ourselves dead and stretch ourselves out and hold our
+breath." So she hearkened unto him and they both lay down on the
+siesta[-carpet] and bound their feet and shut their eyes and
+covered themselves with the veil and held their breath.
+
+Presently, up came the Khalif and the Lady Zubeideh and Mesrour
+and the old woman and entering, found Aboulhusn and his wife both
+stretched out [apparently] dead; which when the Lady Zubeideh
+saw, she wept and said, "They ceased not to bring [ill] news of
+my slave- girl, till she died; methinketh Aboulhusn's death was
+grievous to her and that she died after him."[FN#39]. Quoth the
+Khalif, "Thou shalt not forestall me with talk and prate. She
+certainly died before Aboulhusn, for he came to me with his
+clothes torn and his beard plucked out, beating his breast with
+two bricks, and I gave him a hundred dinars and a piece of silk
+and said to him, 'Go, carry her forth [and bury her] and I will
+give thee a concubine other than she and handsomer, and she shall
+be in stead of her.' But it would appear that her death was no
+light matter to him and he died after her;[FN#40] so it is I who
+have beaten thee and gotten thy stake."
+
+The Lady Zubeideh answered him many words and the talk waxed
+amain between them. At last the Khalif sat down at the heads of
+the pair and said, "By the tomb of the Apostle of God (may He
+bless and preserve him!) and the sepulchres of my fathers and
+forefathers, whoso will tell me which of them died before the
+other, I will willingly give him a thousand dinars!" When
+Aboulhusn heard the Khalifs words, he sprang up in haste and
+said, "I died first, O Commander of the Faithful! Hand over the
+thousand dinars and quit thine oath and the conjuration by which
+thou sworest." Then Nuzhet el Fuad rose also and stood up before
+the Khalif and the Lady Zubeideh, who both rejoiced in this and
+in their safety, and the princess chid her slave-girl. Then the
+Khalif and the Lady Zubeideh gave them joy at their well-being
+and knew that this [pretended] death was a device to get the
+money; and the princess said to Nuzhet el Fuad, "Thou shouldst
+have sought of me that which thou desiredst, without this
+fashion, and not have consumed my heart for thee." And she said,
+"Indeed, I was ashamed, O my lady."
+
+As for the Khalif, he swooned away for laughing and said, "O
+Aboulhusn, thou wilt never cease to be a wag and do rarities and
+oddities!" Quoth he, "O Commander of the Faithful, I played off
+this trick, for that the money was exhausted, which thou gavest
+me, and I was ashamed to ask of thee again. When I was single, I
+could never keep money; but since thou marriedst me to this
+damsel here, if I possessed thy wealth, I should make an end of
+it. So, when all that was in my hand was spent, I wrought this
+trick, so I might get of thee the hundred dinars and the piece of
+silk; and all this is an alms from our lord. But now make haste
+to give me the thousand dinars and quit thee of thine oath."
+
+The Khalif and the Lady Zubeideh laughed and returned to the
+palace; and he gave Aboulhusn the thousand dinars, saying, "Take
+them as a thank-offering for thy preservation from death," whilst
+the princess did the like with Nuzhet el Fuad. Moreover, the
+Khalif increased Aboulhusn in his stipends and allowances, and he
+[and his wife] ceased not [to live] in joy and contentment, till
+there came to them the Destroyer of Delights and Sunderer of
+Companies, he who layeth waste the palaces and peopleth the
+tombs.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF OMAR BEN ABDULAZIZ AND THE
+ POETS.[FN#41]
+
+
+
+It is said that, when the Khalifate devolved on Omar ben
+Abdulaziz[FN#42] (of whom God accept), the poets [of the time]
+resorted to him, as they had been used to resort to the Khalifs
+before him, and abode at his door days and days, but he gave them
+not leave to enter, till there came to Omar Adi ben Artah,[FN#43]
+who stood high in esteem with him. Jerir[FN#44] accosted him and
+begged him to crave admission for them [to the Khalif]. "It is
+well," answered Adi and going in to Omar, said to him, "The poets
+are at thy door and have been there days and days; yet hast thou
+not given them leave to enter, albeit their sayings are
+abiding[FN#45] and their arrows go straight to the mark." Quoth
+Omar, "What have I to do with the poets?" And Adi answered,
+saying, "O Commander of the Faithful, the Prophet (whom God bless
+and preserve) was praised [by a poet] and gave [him largesse,]
+and therein[FN#46] is an exemplar to every Muslim." Quoth Omar,
+"And who praised him?" "Abbas ben Mirdas[FN#47] praised him,"
+replied Adi, "and he clad him with a suit and said, 'O
+Bilal,[FN#48] cut off from me his tongue!'" "Dost thou remember
+what he said?" asked the Khalif; and Adi said, "Yes." "Then
+repeat it," rejoined Omar. So Adi recited the following verses:
+
+I saw thee, O thou best of all the human race, display A book
+ that came to teach the Truth to those in error's way.
+Thou madest known to us therein the road of righteousness, When
+ we had wandered from the Truth, what while in gloom it lay.
+A dark affair thou littest up with Islam and with proof
+ Quenchedst the flaming red-coals of error and dismay.
+Mohammed, then, I do confess, God's chosen prophet is, And every
+ man requited is for that which he doth say.
+The road of right thou hast made straight, that erst was crooked
+ grown; Yea, for its path of old had fall'n to ruin and
+ decay.
+Exalted mayst thou be above th' empyrean heaven of joy And may
+ God's glory greater grow and more exalted aye!
+
+"And indeed," continued Adi, "this ode on the Prophet (may God
+bless and keep him!) is well known and to comment it would be
+tedious." Quoth Omar, "Who is at the door?" "Among them is Omar
+ibn [Abi] Rebya the Cureishite,"[FN#49] answered Adi, and the
+Khalif said, "May God show him no favour neither quicken him! Was
+it not he who said ... ?" And he recited the following verses:
+
+Would God upon that bitterest day, when my death calls for me,
+ What's 'twixt thine excrement and blood[FN#50] I still may
+ smell of thee!
+Yea, so but Selma in the dust my bedfellow may prove, Fair fall
+ it thee! In heaven or hell I reck not if it be.
+
+"Except," continued the Khalif, "he were the enemy of God, he had
+wished for her in this world, so he might after [repent and]
+return to righteous dealing. By Allah, he shall not come in to
+me! Who is at the door other than he?" Quoth Adi, "Jemil ben
+Mamer el Udhri[FN#51] is at the door;" and Omar said, "It is he
+who says in one of his odes" ... [And he recited the following:]
+
+Would we may live together and when we come to die, God grant the
+ death-sleep bring me within her tomb to lie!
+For if "Her grave above her is levelled" it be said, Of life and
+ its continuance no jot indeed reck I.
+
+"Away with him from me! Who is at the door?" "Kutheiyir
+Azzeh,"[FN#52] replied Adi, and Omar said, "It is he who says in
+one of his odes ... " [And he repeated the following verses:]
+
+Some with religion themselves concern and make it their business
+ all; Sitting,[FN#53] they weep for the pains of hell and
+ still for mercy bawl!
+If they could hearken to Azzeh's speech, as I, I hearken to it,
+ They straight would humble themselves to her and prone
+ before her fall.
+
+"Leave the mention of him. Who is at the door?" Quoth Adi, "El
+Akhwes el Ansari."[FN#54] "God the Most High put him away and
+estrange him from His mercy!" cried Omar. "Is it not he who said,
+berhyming on a man of Medina his slave-girl, so she might outlive
+her master ... ?" [And he repeated the following line:]
+
+God [judge] betwixt me and her lord! Away With her he flees me
+ and I follow aye.
+
+"He shall not come in to me. Who is at the door, other than he?"
+"Heman ben Ghalib el Ferezdec,"[FN#55] answered Adi; and Omar
+said, "It is he who saith, glorying in adultery ..." [And he
+repeated the following verses:]
+
+The two girls let me down from fourscore fathoms' height, As
+ swoops a hawk, with wings all open in full flight;
+And when my feet trod earth, "Art slain, that we should fear,"
+ Quoth they, "or live, that we may hope again thy sight?"
+
+"He shall not come in to me. Who is at the door, other than he?"
+"El Akhtel et Teghlibi,"[FN#56] answered Adi; and Omar said, "He
+is the unbeliever who says in his verse ..." [And he repeated the
+following:]
+
+Ramazan in my life ne'er I fasted, nor e'er Have I eaten of
+ flesh, save in public[FN#57] it were.
+No exhorter am I to abstain from the fair, Nor to love Mecca's
+ vale for my profit I care;
+Nor, like others a little ere morning appear who bawl, "Come to
+ safety!"[FN#58] I stand up to prayer.
+Nay, at daybreak I drink of the wind-freshened wine And prostrate
+ me[FN#59] instead in the dawn-whitened air.
+
+"By Allah, he treadeth no carpet of mine! Who is at the door
+other than he?" "Jerir ibn el Khetefa," answered Adi; and Omar
+said, "It is he who saith ... " [And he recited as follows:]
+
+But for the spying of the eyes [ill-omened,] we had seen Wild
+ cattle's eyes and antelopes' tresses of sable sheen.
+The huntress of th' eyes[FN#60] by night came to me. "Turn in
+ peace," [Quoth I to her;] "This is no time for visiting, I
+ ween."
+
+"If it must be and no help, admit Jerir." So Adi went forth and
+admitted Jerir, who entered, saying:
+
+He, who Mohammed sent, as prophet to mankind, Hath to a just
+ high-priest[FN#61] the Khalifate assigned.
+His justice and his truth all creatures do embrace; The erring he
+ corrects and those of wandering mind.
+I hope for present[FN#62] good [and bounty at thy hand,] For
+ souls of men are still to present[FN#63] good inclined.
+
+Quoth Omar, "O Jerir, keep the fear of God before thine eyes and
+say nought but the truth." And Jerir recited the following
+verses:
+
+How many, in Yemameh,[FN#64] dishevelled widows plain! How many a
+ weakling orphan unsuccoured doth remain,
+For whom is thy departure even as a father's loss! To fly or
+ creep, like nestlings, alone, they strive in vain.
+Now that the clouds have broken their promise to our hope, We
+ trust the Khalif's bounty will stand to us for rain.[FN#65]
+
+When the Khalif heard this, he said, "By Allah, O Jerir, Omar
+possesseth but a hundred dirhems."[FN#66] [And he cried out to
+his servant, saying,] "Ho, boy! give them to him." Moreover, he
+gave him the ornaments of his sword; and Jerir went forth to the
+[other] poets, who said to him, "What is behind thee?"[FN#67] And
+he answered, "A man who giveth to the poor and denieth the poets,
+and I am well-pleased with him."[FN#68]
+
+
+
+
+
+ EL HEJJAJ AND THE THREE YOUNG MEN.[FN#69]
+
+
+
+They tell that El Hejjaj[FN#70] once commanded the Master of
+Police [of Bassora] to go round about [the city] by night, and
+whomsoever he found [abroad] after nightfall, that he should
+strike off his head. So he went round one night of the nights and
+came upon three youths staggering from side to side, and on them
+signs of [intoxication with] wine. So the officers laid hold of
+them and the captain of the watch said to them, "Who are ye that
+ye transgress the commandment of the [lieutenant of the]
+Commander of the Faithful and come abroad at this hour?" Quoth
+one of the youths, "I am the son of him to whom [all]
+necks[FN#71] abase themselves, alike the nose-pierced[FN#72] of
+them and the [bone-]breaker;[FN#73] they come to him in their own
+despite, abject and submissive, and he taketh of their
+wealth[FN#74] and of their blood."
+
+The master of police held his hand from him, saying, "Belike he
+is of the kinsmen of the Commander of the Faithful," and said to
+the second, "Who art thou?" Quoth he, "I am the son of him whose
+rank[FN#75] time abaseth not, and if it descend[FN#76] one day,
+it will assuredly return [to its former height]; thou seest the
+folk [crowd] in troops to the light of his fire, some standing
+around it and some sitting." So the master of the police
+refrained from slaying him and said to the third, "Who art thou?"
+Quoth he, "I am the son of him who plungeth through the
+ranks[FN#77] with his might and correcteth[FN#78] them with the
+sword,[FN#79] so that they stand straight;[FN#80] his feet are
+not loosed from the stirrup,[FN#81] whenas the horsemen on the
+day of battle are weary." So the master of police held his hand
+from him also, saying, "Belike, he is the son of a champion of
+the Arabs."
+
+Then he kept them under guard, and when the morning morrowed, he
+referred their case to El Hejjaj, who caused bring them before
+him and enquiring into their affair, found that the first was the
+son of a barber-surgeon, the second of a [hot] bean-seller and
+the third of a weaver. So he marvelled at their readiness of
+speech[FN#82] and said to his session-mates, "Teach your sons
+deportment;[FN#83] for, by Allah, but for their ready wit, I had
+smitten off their heads!"
+
+
+
+
+
+ HAROUN ER RESHID AND THE WOMAN OF THE
+ BARMECIDES.[FN#84]
+
+
+
+They tell that Haroun er Reshid was sitting one day to do away
+grievances, when there came up to him a woman and said to him, "O
+Commander of the Faithful, may God accomplish thine affair and
+cause thee rejoice in that which He hath given thee and increase
+thee in elevation! Indeed, thou hast done justice[FN#85] and
+wrought equitably."[FN#86] Quoth the Khalif to those who were
+present with him, "Know ye what this woman meaneth by her
+saying?" And they answered, "Of a surety, she meaneth not
+otherwise than well, O Commander of the Faithful." "Nay,"
+rejoined Haroun; "she purposeth only in this an imprecation
+against me. As for her saying, 'God accomplish thine affair!' she
+hath taken it from the saying of the poet, 'When an affair is
+accomplished, its abatement[FN#87] beginneth. Beware of
+cessation, whenas it is said, "It is accomplished."' As for her
+saying 'God cause thee rejoice in that which He hath given thee,'
+she took it from the saying of God the Most High, 'Till, whenas
+they rejoiced in that which they were given, we took them
+suddenly and lo, they were confounded!'[FN#88] As for her saying,
+'God increase thee in elevation!' she took it from the saying of
+the poet, 'No bird flieth and riseth up on high, but, like as he
+flieth, he falleth.' And as for her saying, 'Indeed, thou hast
+done justice and wrought equitably,' it is from the saying of the
+Most High, '[If ye deviate[FN#89] or lag behind or turn aside,
+verily, God of that which ye do is aware;'[FN#90] and] 'As for
+the transgressors,'[FN#91] they are fuel for hell[-fire]."[FN#92]
+
+Then he turned to the woman and said to her, "Is it not thus?"
+"Yes, O Commander of the Faithful," answered she; and he said,
+"What prompted thee to this?" Quoth she, "Thou slewest my father
+and my mother and my kinsfolk and tookest their goods." "Whom
+meanest thou?" asked the Khalif, and she replied, "I am of the
+house of Bermek."[FN#93] Then said he to her, "As for the dead,
+they are of those who are past away, and it booteth not to speak
+of them; but, as for that which I took of wealth, it shall be
+restored to thee, yea, and more than it." And he was bountiful to
+her to the utmost of munificence.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE TEN VIZIERS; OR THE HISTORY OF KING
+ AZADBEKHT AND HIS SON.[FN#94]
+
+
+
+There was once, of old days, a king of the kings, whose name was
+Azadbekht; his [capital] city was called Kuneim Mudoud and his
+kingdom extended to the confines of Seistan and from the
+frontiers of Hindustan to the sea He had ten viziers, who ordered
+his state and his dominion, and he was possessed of judgment and
+exceeding wisdom. One day he went forth with certain of his
+guards to the chase and fell in with an eunuch on horseback,
+holding in his hand the halter of a mule, which he led along. On
+the mule's back was a litter of gold-inwoven brocade, garded
+about with an embroidered band set with gold and jewels, and over
+against the litter was a company of horsemen. When King Azadbekht
+saw this, he separated himself from his companions and making for
+the mule and the horsemen, questioned the latter, saying, "To
+whom belongeth this litter and what is therein?". The eunuch
+answered, (for he knew not that he was King Azadbekht,) saying,
+"This litter belongeth to Isfehend, vizier to King Azadbekht, and
+therein is his daughter, whom he purposeth to marry to Zad Shah
+the King."
+
+As the eunuch was speaking with the king, behold, the damsel
+raised a corner of the curtain that shut in the litter, so she
+might look upon the speaker, and saw the king. When Azadbekht
+beheld her and noted her fashion and her loveliness (and indeed
+never set story-teller[FN#95] eyes on her like,) his soul
+inclined to her and she took hold upon his heart and he was
+ravished by her sight. So he said to the eunuch, "Turn the mule's
+head and return, for I am King Azadbekht and I will marry her
+myself, for that Isfehend her father is my vizier and he will
+accept of this affair and it will not be grievous to him." "O
+king," answered the eunuch, "may God prolong thy continuance,
+have patience till I acquaint my lord her father, and thou shalt
+take her in the way of approof, for it befitteth thee not neither
+is it seemly unto thee that thou take her on this wise, seeing
+that it will be an affront to her father if thou take her without
+his knowledge." Quoth Azadbekht, "I have not patience [to wait]
+till thou go to her father and return, and no dishonour will
+betide him, if I marry her." "O my lord," rejoined the eunuch,
+"nought that is done in haste is long of durance nor doth the
+heart rejoice therein; and indeed it behoveth thee not to take
+her on this foul wise. Whatsoever betideth thee, destroy not
+thyself with [undue] haste, for I know that her father's breast
+will be straitened by this affair and this that thou dost will
+not profit thee." But the king said, "Verily, Isfehend is [my
+boughten] servant and a slave of my slaves, and I reck not of her
+father, if he be vexed or pleased." So saying, he drew the reins
+of the mule and carrying the damsel, whose name was Behrjaur, to
+his house, married her.
+
+Meanwhile, the eunuch betook himself, he and the horsemen, to her
+father and said to him, "O my lord, the king is beholden to thee
+for many years' service and thou hast not failed him a day of the
+days; and now, behold, he hath taken thy daughter against thy
+wish and without thy permission." And he related to him what had
+passed and how the king had taken her by force. When Isfehend
+heard the eunuch's story, he was exceeding wroth and assembling
+many troops, said to them, "Whenas the king was occupied with his
+women [and concerned not himself with the affairs of his
+kingdom], we took no reck of him; but now he putteth out his hand
+to our harem; wherefore methinketh we should do well to look us
+out a place, wherein we may have sanctuary."
+
+Then he wrote a letter to King Azadbekht, saying to him, "I am a
+servant of thy servants and a slave of thy slaves and my daughter
+is a handmaid at thy service, and may God the Most High prolong
+thy days and appoint thy times [to be] in delight and
+contentment! Indeed, I still went girded of the waist in thy
+service and in caring for the preservation of thy dominion and
+warding off thine enemies from thee; but now I abound yet more
+than before in zeal and watchfulness, for that I have taken this
+to charge upon myself, since my daughter is become thy wife." And
+he despatched a messenger to the king with the letter and a
+present.
+
+When the messenger came to King Azadbekht and he read the letter
+and the present was laid before him, he rejoiced with an
+exceeding joy and occupied himself with eating and drinking, hour
+after hour. But the chief Vizier of his Viziers came to him and
+said, "0 king, know that Isfehend the Vizier is thine enemy, for
+that his soul liketh not that which thou hast done with him, and
+the message that he hath sent thee [is a trick; so] rejoice thou
+not therein, neither be thou deluded by the sweetness of his
+words and the softness of his speech." The king hearkened [not]
+to his Vizier's speech, but made light of the matter and
+presently, [dismissing it from his thought], busied himself with
+that which he was about of eating and drinking and merrymaking
+and delight
+
+Meanwhile, Isfehend the Vizier wrote a letter and despatched it
+to all the Amirs, acquainting them with that which had betided
+him with King Azadbekht and how he had taken his daughter by
+force and adding, "And indeed he will do with you more than he
+hath done with me." When the letter reached the chiefs [of the
+people and troops], they all assembled together to Isfehend and
+said to him, "What is to do with him?"[FN#96] So he discovered to
+them the affair of his daughter and they all agreed, of one
+accord, that they should endeavour for the slaughter of the king
+and taking horse with their troops, set out, intending for him.
+Azadbekht knew not [of their design] till the noise [of the
+invasion] beset his capital city, when he said to his wife
+Behrjaur, "How shall we do?" And she answered, saying, "Thou
+knowest best and I am at thy commandment." So he let bring two
+swift horses and bestrode one himself, whilst his wife mounted
+the other. Then they took what they might of gold and went forth,
+fleeing, in the night, to the desert of Kerman; what while
+Isfehend entered the city and made himself king.
+
+Now King Azadbekht's wife was big with child and the pains of
+labour took her in the mountain; so they alighted at the
+mountain-foot, by a spring of water, and she gave birth to a boy
+as he were the moon. Behrjaur his mother pulled off a gown of
+gold-inwoven brocade and wrapped the child therein, and they
+passed the night [in that place], what while she gave him suck
+till the morning. Then said the king to her, "We are hampered by
+this child and cannot abide here nor can we carry him with us; so
+methinks we were better leave him here and go, for Allah is able
+to send him one who shall take him and rear him." So they wept
+over him exceeding sore and left him beside the spring, wrapped
+in the gown of brocade: then they laid at his head a thousand
+dinars in a bag and mounting their horses, departed, fleeing.
+
+Now, by the ordinance of God the Most High, a company of thieves
+fell in upon a caravan hard by that mountain and made prize of
+that which was with them of merchandise. Then they betook
+themselves to the mountain, so they might share their booty, and
+looking at the foot thereof, espied the gown of brocade. So they
+descended, to see what it was, and finding the child wrapped
+therein and the gold laid at his head, marvelled and said,
+"Extolled be the perfection of God! By what wickedness cometh
+this child here?" Then they divided the money between them and
+the captain of the thieves took the boy and made him his son and
+fed him with sweet milk and dates, till he came to his house,
+when he appointed him a nurse, who should rear him.
+
+Meanwhile, King Azadbekht and his wife stayed not in their flight
+till they came to [the court of] the King of Fars,[FN#97] whose
+name was Kutrou.[FN#98] When they presented themselves to him, he
+entreated them with honour and entertained them handsomely, and
+Azadbekht told him his story, first and last. So he gave him a
+great army and wealth galore and he abode with him some days,
+till he was rested, when he made ready with his host and setting
+out for his own dominions, waged war upon Isfehend and falling in
+upon the capital, defeated the rebel vizier and slew him. Then he
+entered the city and sat down on the throne of his kingship; and
+whenas he was rested and the kingdom was grown peaceful for him,
+he despatched messengers to the mountain aforesaid in quest of
+the child; but they returned and informed the king that they had
+not found him.
+
+As time went on, the boy, the son of the king, grew up and fell
+to stopping the way[FN#99] with the thieves, and they used to
+carry him with them, whenas they went a-thieving. They sallied
+forth one day upon a caravan in the land of Seistan, and there
+were in that caravan strong and valiant men and with them
+merchandise galore. Now they had heard that in that land were
+thieves; so they gathered themselves together and made ready
+their arms and sent out spies, who returned and gave them news of
+the thieves. Accordingly, they prepared for battle, and when the
+robbers drew near the caravan, they fell in upon them and they
+fought a sore battle. At last the folk of the caravan
+overmastered the thieves, by dint of numbers, and slew some of
+them, whilst the others fled. Moreover they took the boy, the son
+of King Azadbekht, and seeing him as he were the moon, possessed
+of beauty and grace, brightfaced and comely of fashion,
+questioned him, saying, "Who is thy father, and how camest thou
+with these thieves?" And he answered, saying, "I am the son of
+the captain of the thieves." So they took him and carried him to
+the capital of his father King Azadbekht
+
+When they reached the city, the king heard of their coming and
+commanded that they should attend him with what befitted [of
+their merchandise]. So they presented themselves before him, [and
+the boy with them,] whom when the king saw, he said to them, "To
+whom belongeth this boy?" And they answered, "O king, we were
+going in such a road, when there came out upon us a sort of
+robbers; so we made war upon them and overcame them and took this
+boy prisoner. Then we questioned him, saying, 'Who is thy
+father?' and he answered, 'I am the captain's son of the
+thieves.'" Quoth the king, "I would fain have this boy." And the
+captain of the caravan said, "God maketh thee gift of him, O king
+of the age, and we all are thy slaves." Then the king dismissed
+[the people of] the caravan and let carry the youth into his
+palace and he became as one of the servants, what while his
+father the king knew not that he was his son. As time went on,
+the king observed in him good breeding and understanding and
+knowledge[FN#100] galore and he pleased him; so he committed his
+treasuries to his charge and straitened the viziers' hand
+therefrom, commanding that nought should be taken forth therefrom
+except by leave of the youth. On this wise he abode a number of
+years and the king saw in him nought but fidelity and
+studiousness in well-doing.
+
+Now the treasuries aforetime had been in the viziers' hand, so
+they might do with them what they would, and when they came under
+the youth's hand, that of the viziers was straitened from them,
+and the youth became dearer to the king than a son and he could
+not brook to be separated from him. When the viziers saw this,
+they were jealous of him and envied him and cast about for a
+device against him whereby they might oust him from the king's
+favour, but found no opportunity. At last, when came the destined
+hour,[FN#101] it chanced that the youth one day drank wine and
+became drunken and wandered from his wits; so he fell to going
+round about within the palace of the king and fate led him to the
+lodging of the women, in which there was a little
+sleeping-chamber, where the king lay with his wife. Thither came
+the youth and entering the chamber, found there a couch spread,
+to wit, a sleeping place, and a candle burning. So he cast
+himself on the couch, marvelling at the paintings that were in
+the chamber, and slept and slumbered heavily till eventide, when
+there came a slave-girl, bringing with her all the dessert,
+eatables and drinkables, that she was wont to make ready for the
+king and his wife, and seeing the youth lying on his back, (and
+none knowing of his case and he in his drunkenness unknowing
+where he was,) thought that he was the king asleep on his bed; so
+she set the censing-vessel and laid the essences by the couch,
+then shut the door and went away.
+
+Presently, the king arose from the wine-chamber and taking his
+wife by the hand, repaired with her to the chamber in which he
+slept. He opened the door and entering, saw the youth lying on
+the bed, whereupon he turned to his wife and said to her, "What
+doth this youth here? This fellow cometh not hither but on thine
+account." Quoth she, "I have no knowledge of him." With this, the
+youth awoke and seeing the king, sprang up and prostrated himself
+before him, and Azadbekht said to him, "O vile of origin,[FN#102]
+O lack-loyalty, what hath prompted thee to outrage my dwelling?"
+And he bade imprison him in one place and the woman in another.
+
+
+
+
+
+ The First Day.
+
+
+
+ OF THE USELESSNESS OF ENDEAVOUR AGAINST
+ PERSISTENT ILL FORTUNE.
+
+
+
+When the morning morrowed and the king sat on the throne of his
+kingship, he summoned the chief of his viziers and said to him,
+"What deemest thou of this that yonder robber-youth hath done?
+Behold, he hath entered my house and lain down on my bed and I
+fear lest there be an intrigue between him and the woman. How
+deemest thou of the affair?" "God prolong the king's
+continuance!" replied the vizier. "What sawest thou in this youth
+[to make thee trust in him]? Is he not vile of origin, the son of
+thieves? Needs must a thief revert to his vile origin, and whoso
+reareth the young of the serpent shall get of them nought but
+biting. As for the woman, she is not at fault; for, since [the]
+time [of her marriage with thee] till now, there hath appeared
+from her nought but good breeding and modesty; and now, if the
+king give me leave, I will go to her and question her, so I may
+discover to thee the affair."
+
+The king gave him leave for this and the vizier betook himself to
+the queen and said to her, "I am come to thee, on account of a
+grave reproach, and I would have thee be truthful with me in
+speech and tell me how came the youth into the sleeping-chamber."
+Quoth she, "I have no knowledge whatsoever [of it]" and swore to
+him a solemn oath thereof, whereby he knew that she had no
+knowledge of the matter and that she was not at fault and said to
+her, "I will teach thee a device, where- with thou mayst acquit
+thyself and thy face be whitened before the king." "What is it?"
+asked she; and he answered, saying, "When the king calleth for
+thee and questioneth thee of this, say thou to him, 'Yonder youth
+saw me in the privy-chamber and sent me a message, saying, "I
+will give thee a hundred jewels, to whose price money may not
+avail, so thou wilt suffer me to foregather with thee." I laughed
+at him who bespoke me with these words and rebuffed him; but he
+sent again to me, saying, "An thou fall not in with my wishes, I
+will come one of the nights, drunken, and enter and lie down in
+the sleeping-chamber, and the king will see me and kill me; so
+wilt thou be put to shame and thy face will be blackened with him
+and thine honour abased."' Be this thy saying to the king, and I
+will presently go to him and repeat this to him." Quoth the
+queen, "And I also will say thus."
+
+So the vizier returned to the king and said to him, "Verily, this
+youth hath merited grievous punishment, after abundance of bounty
+[bestowed on him], and it may not be that a bitter kernel should
+ever become sweet; but, as for the woman, I am certified that
+there is no fault in her." Then he repeated to the king the story
+which he had taught the queen, which when Azadbekht heard, he
+rent his clothes and bade fetch the youth. So they brought him
+and stationed him before the king, who let bring the headsman,
+and the folk all fixed their eyes upon the youth, so they might
+see what the king should do with him.
+
+Then said Azadbekht to him (and indeed his words were [prompted]
+by anger and those of the youth by presence of mind and good
+breeding), "I bought thee with my money and looked for fidelity
+from thee, wherefore I chose thee over all my grandees and
+servants and made thee keeper of my treasuries. Why, then, hast
+thou outraged my honour and entered my house and played the
+traitor with me and tookest no thought unto that which I have
+done thee of benefits?" "O king," answered the youth, "I did this
+not of my choice and freewill and I had no [evil] intent in being
+there; but, of the littleness of my luck, I was driven thither,
+for that fate was contrary and fair fortune lacking. Indeed, I
+had striven with all endeavour that nought of foul should proceed
+from me and kept watch over myself, lest default appear in me;
+but none may avail to make head against ill fortune, nor doth
+endeavour profit in case of lack of luck, as appeareth by the
+example of the merchant who was stricken with ill luck and his
+endeavour profited him not and he succumbed to the badness of his
+fortune." "What is the story of the merchant," asked the king,
+"and how was his luck changed upon him by the sorriness of his
+fortune?" "May God prolong the king's continuance!" answered the
+youth.
+
+
+
+
+
+Story of the Unlucky Merchant.
+
+
+
+"There was once a man, a merchant, who was fortunate in trade,
+and at one time his [every] dirhem profited [him] fifty.
+Presently, his luck turned against him and he knew it not; so he
+said in himself, 'I have wealth galore, yet do I weary myself and
+go round about from country to country; I were better abide in my
+own country and rest myself in my house from this travail and
+affliction and sell and buy at home.' Then he made two parts of
+his money, with one whereof he bought wheat in summer, saying,
+'When the winter cometh, I will sell it at a great profit.' But,
+when the winter came, wheat became at half the price for which he
+had bought it, whereat he was sore concerned and left it till the
+next year. However, next year, the price fell yet lower and one
+of his friends said to him, 'Thou hast no luck in this wheat; so
+do thou sell it at whatsoever price.' Quoth the merchant, 'This
+long while have I profited and it is allowable that I lose this
+time. God is all- knowing! If it abide [with me] half a score
+years, I will not sell it save at a profit.'
+
+Then, in his anger, he walled up the door of the granary with
+clay, and by the ordinance of God the Most High, there came a
+great rain and descended from the roofs of the house wherein was
+the wheat [so that the latter rotted]; and needs must the
+merchant give the porters five hundred dirhems from his purse, so
+they should carry it forth and cast it without the city, for that
+the smell of it was noisome. So his friend said to him, 'How
+often did I tell thee thou hadst no luck in wheat? But thou
+wouldst not give ear to my speech, and now it behoveth thee to go
+to the astrologer and question him of thy star.' Accordingly the
+merchant betook himself to the astrologer and questioned him of
+his star, and the astrologer said to him, 'Thy star is
+unpropitious. Put not thy hand to any business, for thou wilt not
+prosper therein.' However, he paid no heed to the astrologer's
+words and said in himself, 'If I do my occasion,[FN#103] I am not
+afraid of aught.' Then he took the other part of his money, after
+he had spent therefrom three years, and built [therewith] a ship,
+which he loaded with all that seemed good to him and all that was
+with him and embarked on the sea, so he might travel.
+
+The ship tarried with him some days, till he should be certified
+what he would do,[FN#104] and he said, 'I will enquire of the
+merchants what this merchandise profiteth and in what country it
+lacketh and how much is the gain thereon.' [So he questioned them
+and] they directed him to a far country, where his dirhem should
+profit a hundredfold. Accordingly, he set sail and steered for
+the land in question; but, as he went, there blew on him a
+tempestuous wind and the ship foundered. The merchant saved
+himself on a plank and the wind cast him up, naked as he was, on
+the sea-shore, hard by a town there. So he praised God and gave
+Him thanks for his preservation; then, seeing a great village
+hard by, he betook himself thither and saw, seated therein, a
+very old man, whom he acquainted with his case and that which had
+betided him. The old man grieved sore for him, when he heard his
+story, and set food before him. So he ate and the old man said to
+him, 'Abide here with me, so I may make thee my steward and
+factor over a farm I have here, and thou shall have of me five
+dirhems [FN#105] a day.' 'God make fair thy reward,' answered the
+merchant, 'and requite thee with benefits!'
+
+So he abode in this employ, till he had sowed and reaped and
+threshed and winnowed, and all was sheer in his hand and the
+owner appointed neither inspector nor overseer, but relied
+altogether upon him. Then he bethought himself and said, '_I_*
+misdoubt me the owner of this grain will not give me my due; so I
+were better take of it, after the measure of my hire; and if he
+give me my due, I will restore him that which I have taken.' So
+he took of the grain, after the measure of that which fell to
+him, and hid it in a privy place. Then he carried the rest to the
+old man and meted it out to him, and he said to him, 'Come, take
+[of the grain, after the measure of] thy hire, for which I agreed
+with thee, and sell it and buy with the price clothes and what
+not else; and though thou abide with me half a score years, yet
+shall thou still have this wage and I will acquit it to thee
+thus.' Quoth the merchant in himself, 'Indeed, I have done a foul
+thing in that I look it without his leave.'
+
+Then he went to fetch that which he had hidden of the grain, but
+found it not and returned, perplexed and sorrowful, to the old
+man, who said to him, 'What aileth thee to be sorrowful?' And he
+answered, 'Methought thou wouldst not pay me my due; so I took of
+the grain, after the measure of my hire; and now thou hast paid
+me my due and I went to bring back to thee that which I had
+hidden from thee, but found it gone, for those who had happened
+upon it had stolen it.' The old man was wroth, when he heard
+this, and said to the merchant, 'There is no device [can cope]
+with ill luck! I had given thee this, but, of the sorriness of
+thy luck and thy fortune, thou hast done this deed, O oppressor
+of thine own self! Thou deemedst I would not acquit thee thy
+wage; but, by Allah, nevermore will I give thee aught.' And he
+drove him away from him.
+
+So the merchant went forth, afflicted, sorrowful, weeping, [and
+wandered on along the sea-shore], till he came to a sort of
+divers diving in the sea for pearls. They saw him weeping and
+mourning and said to him, 'What is thy case and what maketh thee
+weep?' So he acquainted them with his history, from first to
+last, whereby they knew him and said to him, 'Art thou [such an
+one] son of such an one?' 'Yes,' answered he; whereupon they
+condoled with him and wept sore for him and said to him, 'Abide
+here till we dive for thy luck this next time and whatsoever
+betideth us shall be between us and thee.' Accordingly, they
+dived and brought up ten oysters, in each two great pearls;
+whereat they marvelled and said to him, 'By Allah, thy luck hath
+returned and thy good star is in the ascendant!' Then they gave
+him ten pearls and said to him, 'Sell two of them and make them
+thy capital [whereon to trade]; and hide the rest against the
+time of thy straitness.' So he took them, joyful and contented,
+and addressed himself to sew eight of them in his gown, keeping
+the two others in his mouth; but a thief saw him and went and
+advertised his mates of him; whereupon they gathered together
+upon him and took his gown and departed from him. When they were
+gone away, he arose, saying, 'These two pearls [in my mouth] will
+suffice me,' and made for the [nearest] city, where he brought
+out the pearls [and repairing to the jewel- market, gave them to
+the broker], that he might sell them.
+
+Now, as destiny would have it, a certain jeweller of the town had
+been robbed of ten pearls, like unto those which were with the
+merchant; so, when he saw the two pearls in the broker's hand, he
+said to him, 'To whom do these pearls belong?' and the broker
+answered, 'To yonder man.' [The jeweller looked at the merchant
+and] seeing him in sorry case and clad in tattered clothes,
+misdoubted of him and said to him (purposing to surprise him into
+confession), 'Where are the other eight pearls?' The merchant
+thought he asked him of those which were in the gown and
+answered, 'The thieves stole them from me.' When the jeweller
+heard his reply, he doubted not but that it was he who had taken
+his good; so he laid hold of him and haling him before the chief
+of the police, said to him, 'This is the man who stole my pearls:
+I have found two of them upon him and he confesseth to the other
+eight.'
+
+Now the magistrate knew of the theft of the pearls; so he bade
+clap the merchant in prison. Accordingly they imprisoned him and
+flogged him, and he abode in the prison a whole year, till, by
+the ordinance of God the Most High, the Master of Police arrested
+one of the divers aforesaid and imprisoned him in the prison
+where the merchant lay. He saw the latter and knowing him,
+questioned him of his case; whereupon he told them his story and
+that which had befallen him, and the diver marvelled at the
+sorriness of his luck. So, when he came forth of the prison, he
+acquainted the Sultan with the merchant's case and told him that
+it was he who had given him the pearls. The Sultan bade bring him
+forth of the prison and questioned him of his story, whereupon he
+told him all that had befallen him and the Sultan pitied him and
+assigned him a lodging in his own palace, together with an
+allowance for his living.
+
+Now the lodging in question adjoined the king's house, and whilst
+the merchant was rejoicing in this and saying, 'Verily, my luck
+hath returned and I shall live in this king's shadow the rest of
+my life,' he espied an opening walled up with stones and clay. So
+he pulled out the stones and clearing away the earth from the
+opening, found that it was a window giving upon the lodging of
+the king's women. When he saw this, he was affrighted and rising
+in haste, fetched clay and stopped it up again. But one of the
+eunuchs saw him and misdoubting of him, repaired to the Sultan
+and told him of this. So he came and seeing the stones pulled
+out, was wroth with the merchant and said to him, 'Is this my
+recompense from thee, that thou seekest to violate my harem?' And
+he bade pluck out his eyes. So they did as he commanded and the
+merchant took his eyes in his hand and said, 'How long [wilt thou
+afflict me], O star of ill-omen? First my wealth and now my
+life!' And he bewailed himself, saying, 'Endeavour profiteth me
+nought against evil fortune. The Compassionate aided me not and
+endeavour was useless.'
+
+On like wise, O king," continued the youth, "whilst fortune was
+favourable to me, all that I did came to good; but now that it is
+grown contrary to me, everything turneth against me."
+
+When the youth had made an end of his story, the king's anger
+subsided a little and he said, "Restore him to the prison, for
+the day draweth to an end, and tomorrow we will took into his
+affair."
+
+
+
+
+
+ OF LOOKING TO THE ISSUES OF AFFAIRS.
+
+
+
+When it was the second day, the second of the king's viziers,
+whose name was Beheroun, came in to him and said, "God advance
+the king! This that yonder youth hath done is a grave matter and
+a foul deed and a heinous against the household of the king." So
+Azadbekht bade fetch the youth, because of the saying of the
+vizier; and when he came into his presence, he said to him, "Out
+on thee, O youth! Needs must I slay thee by the worst of deaths,
+for indeed thou hast committed a grave crime, and I will make
+thee a warning to the folk." "O king," answered the youth,
+"hasten not, for the looking to the issues of affairs is a pillar
+of the realm and [a cause of] continuance and sure stablishment
+for the kingship. Whoso looketh not to the issues of affairs,
+there befalleth him that which befell the merchant, and whoso
+looketh to the issues of affairs, there betideth him of joyance
+that which betided the merchant's son." "And what is the story of
+the merchant and his son?" asked the king. "O king," answered the
+youth,
+
+
+
+
+
+Story of the Merchant and His Sons.
+
+
+
+"There was once a man, a merchant, who had a wife and abundant
+wealth. He set out one day on a journey with merchandise, leaving
+his wife big with child, and said to her, 'If it be the will of
+God the Most High, I will return before the birth of the child.'
+Then he took leave of her and setting out, journeyed from country
+to country till he came to the court of one of the kings and
+foregathered with him. Now this king was in need of one who
+should order his affairs and those of his kingdom and seeing the
+merchant well-bred and intelligent, he charged him abide with him
+and entreated him with honour and munificence. After awhile, he
+sought of the king leave to go to his own house, but the latter
+would not consent to this; whereupon he said to him, 'O king,
+suffer me go and see my children and come again.' So he gave him
+leave for this and took surety of him for his return. Moreover,
+he gave him a purse, wherein were a thousand gold dinars, and the
+merchant embarked in a ship and set sail, intending for his own
+country.
+
+Meanwhile, news came to his wife that her husband had taken
+service with King Such-an-one; so she arose and taking her two
+sons, (for she had given birth to twin boys in his absence,) set
+out for those parts. As fate would have it, they happened upon an
+island and her husband came thither that very night in the ship.
+[When the woman heard of the coming of the ship], she said to her
+children, 'This ship cometh from the country where your father
+is; so go ye to the sea-shore, that ye may enquire of him.' So
+they repaired to the sea-shore and [going up into the ship], fell
+to playing about it and occupied themselves with their play till
+the evening.
+
+Now the merchant their father lay asleep in the ship, and the
+crying of the boys troubled him; so he rose to call out to them
+[and silence them] and let the purse [with the thousand dinars
+therein] fall among the bales of merchandise. He sought for it
+and finding it not, buffeted his head and seized upon the boys,
+saying, 'None took the purse but you. Ye were playing about the
+bales, so ye might steal somewhat, and there was none here but
+you.' Then he took a staff and laying hold of the children, fell
+to beating them and flogging them, whilst they wept, and the
+sailors came round about them and said, 'The boys of this island
+are all thieves and robbers.' Then, of the greatness of the
+merchant's wrath, he swore that, if they brought not out the
+purse, he would drown them in the sea; so when [by reason of
+their denial] his oath became binding upon him, he took the two
+boys and lashing them [each] to a bundle of reeds, cast them into
+the sea.
+
+Presently, the mother of the two boys, finding that they tarried
+from her, went searching for them, till she came to the ship and
+fell to saying, 'Who hath seen two boys of mine? Their fashion is
+thus and thus and their age thus and thus.' When they heard her
+words, they said, 'This is the description of the two boys who
+were drowned in the sea but now.' Their mother heard and fell to
+calling on them and saying, 'Alas, my anguish for your loss, O my
+sons! Where was the eye of your father this day, that it might
+have seen you?' Then one of the crew questioned her, saying,
+'Whose wife art thou?' And she answered, 'I am the wife of such
+an one the merchant. I was on my way to him, and there hath
+befallen me this calamity.' When the merchant heard her speech,
+he knew her and rising to his feet, rent his clothes and buffeted
+his head and said to his wife, 'By Allah, I have destroyed my
+children with mine own hand! This is the end of whoso looketh not
+to the issues of affairs.' Then he fell a-wailing and weeping
+over them, he and his wife, and he said, 'By Allah, I shall have
+no ease of my life, till I light upon news of them!' And he
+betook himself to going round about the sea, in quest of them,
+but found them not.
+
+Meanwhile, the wind carried the two children [out to sea and
+thence driving them] towards the land, cast them up on the
+sea-shore. As for one of them, a company of the guards of the
+king of those parts found him and carried him to their master,
+who marvelled at him with an exceeding wonderment and adopted him
+to his son, giving out to the folk that he was his [very] son,
+whom he had hidden,[FN#106] of his love for him. So the folk
+rejoiced in him with an exceeding joy, for the king's sake, and
+the latter appointed him his heir-apparent and the inheritor of
+his kingdom. On this wise, a number of years passed, till the
+king died and they crowned the youth king in his room. So he sat
+down on the throne of his kingship and his estate flourished and
+his affairs prospered.
+
+Meanwhile, his father and mother had gone round about all the
+islands of the sea in quest of him and his brother, hoping that
+the sea might have cast them up, but found no trace of them; so
+they despaired of finding them and took up their abode in one of
+the islands. One day, the merchant, being in the market, saw a
+broker, and in his hand a boy he was calling for sale, and said
+in himself, 'I will buy yonder boy, so I may console myself with
+him for my sons.' So he bought him and carried him to his house;
+and when his wife saw him, she cried out and said, 'By Allah,
+this is my son!' So his father and mother rejoiced in him with an
+exceeding joy and questioned him of his brother; but he answered,
+'The sea parted us and I knew not what became of him.' Therewith
+his father and mother consoled themselves with him and on this
+wise a number of years passed.
+
+Now the merchant and his wife had taken up their abode in a city
+in the land whereof their [other] son was king, and when the boy
+[whom they had found] grew up, his father assigned unto him
+merchandise, so he might travel therewith. So he set out and
+entered the city wherein his brother was king. News reached the
+latter that there was a merchant come thither with merchandise
+befitting kings. So he sent for him and the young merchant obeyed
+the summons and going in to him, sat down before him. Neither of
+them knew the other; but blood stirred between them and the king
+said to the young merchant, 'I desire of thee that thou abide
+with me and I will exalt thy station and give thee all that thou
+desirest and cravest.' So he abode with him awhile, quitting him
+not; and when he saw that he would not suffer him to depart from
+him, he sent to his father and mother and bade them remove
+thither to him. So they addressed them to remove to that island,
+and their son increased still in honour with the king, albeit he
+knew not that he was his brother.
+
+It chanced one night that the king sallied forth without the city
+and drank and the wine got the mastery of him and he became
+drunken. So, of the youth's fearfulness for him, he said, 'I will
+keep watch myself over the king this night, seeing that he
+deserveth this from me, for that which he hath wrought with me of
+kindnesses.' So he arose forthright and drawing his sword,
+stationed himself at the door of the king's pavilion. Now one of
+the royal servants saw him standing there, with the drawn sword
+in his hand, and he was of those who envied him his favour with
+the king; so he said to him, 'Why dost thou on this wise at this
+season and in the like of this place?' Quoth the youth, 'I am
+keeping watch over the king myself, in requital of his bounties
+to me.'
+
+The servant said no more to him, but, when it was morning, he
+acquainted a number of the king's servants with this and they
+said, 'This is an opportunity for us. Come let us assemble
+together and acquaint the king with this, so the young merchant
+may lose favour with him and he rid us of him and we be at rest
+from him.' So they assembled together and going in to the king,
+said to him, 'We have a warning we would give thee.' Quoth he,
+'And what is your warning?' And they said, 'Yonder youth, the
+merchant, whom thou hast taken into favour and whose rank thou
+hast exalted above the chiefs of the people of thy household, we
+saw yesterday draw his sword and offer to fall upon thee, so he
+might slay thee.' When the king heard this, his colour changed
+and he said to them, 'Have ye proof of this?' Quoth they, 'What
+proof wouldst thou have? If thou desire this, feign thyself
+drunken again this night and lie down, as if asleep, and watch
+him, and thou wilt see with thine eyes all that we have named to
+thee.'
+
+Then they went to the youth and said to him, 'Know that the king
+thanketh thee for thy dealing yesternight and exceedeth in
+[praise of] thy good deed;' and they prompted him to do the like
+again. So, when the next night came, the king abode on wake;
+watching the youth; and as for the latter, he went to the door of
+the pavilion and drawing his sword, stood in the doorway. When
+the king saw him do thus, he was sore disquieted and bade seize
+him and said to him, 'Is this my requital from thee? I showed
+thee favour more than any else and thou wouldst do with me this
+vile deed.' Then arose two of the king's servants and said to
+him, 'O our lord, if thou command it, we will strike off his
+head.' But the king said, 'Haste in slaying is a vile thing, for
+it[FN#107] is a grave matter; the quick we can slay, but the
+slain we cannot quicken, and needs must we look to the issue of
+affairs. The slaying of this [youth] will not escape us.'[FN#108]
+Therewith he bade imprison him, whilst he himself returned [to
+the city] and despatching his occasions, went forth to the chase.
+
+Then he returned to the city and forgot the youth; so the
+servants went in to him and said to him, 'O king, if thou keep
+silence concerning yonder youth, who would have slain thee, all
+thy servants will presume upon thee, and indeed the folk talk of
+this matter.' With this the king waxed wroth and saying, 'Fetch
+him hither,' commanded the headsman to strike off his head. So
+they [brought the youth and] bound his eyes; and the headsman
+stood at his head and said to the king, 'By thy leave, O my lord,
+I will strike off his head.' But the king said, 'Stay, till I
+look into his affair. Needs must I put him to death and the
+slaying of him will not escape [me].' So he restored him to the
+prison and there he abode till it should be the king's will to
+put him to death.
+
+Presently, his father and his mother heard of the matter;
+whereupon the former arose and going up to the place, wrote a
+letter and [presented it to the king, who] read it, and behold,
+therein was written, saying, 'Have pity on me, so may God have
+pity on thee, and hasten not in the slaughter [of my son]; for
+indeed I acted hastily in a certain affair and drowned his
+brother in the sea, and to this day I drink the cup of his
+anguish. If thou must needs kill him, kill me in his stead.'
+Therewith the old merchant prostrated himself before the king and
+wept; and the latter said to him, 'Tell me thy story.' 'O my
+lord,' answered the merchant, 'this youth had a brother and I [in
+my haste] cast them both into the sea.' And he related to him his
+story from first to last, whereupon the king cried out with an
+exceeding great cry and casting himself down from the throne,
+embraced his father and brother and said to the former, 'By
+Allah, thou art my very father and this is my brother and thy
+wife is our mother.' And they abode weeping, all three.
+
+Then the king acquainted the people [of his court] with the
+matter and said to them,' O folk, how deem ye of my looking to
+the issues of affairs?' And they all marvelled at his wisdom and
+foresight. Then he turned to his father and said to him, 'Hadst
+thou looked to the issue of thine affair and dealt deliberately
+in that which thou didst, there had not betided thee this
+repentance and grief all this time.' Then he let bring his mother
+and they rejoiced in each other and lived all their days in joy
+and gladness. What then," continued the young treasurer, "is more
+grievous than the lack of looking to the issues of affairs?
+Wherefore hasten thou not in the slaying of me, lest repentance
+betide thee and sore concern."
+
+When the king heard this, he said, "Restore him to the prison
+till the morrow, so we may look into his affair; for that
+deliberation in affairs is advisable and the slaughter of this
+[youth] shall not escape [us]."
+
+ The Third Day.
+
+
+
+ OF THE ADVANTAGES OF PATIENCE.
+
+
+
+When it was the third day, the third vizier came in to the king
+and said to him, "O king, delay not the affair of this youth, for
+that his deed hath caused us fall into the mouths of the folk,
+and it behoveth that thou slay him presently, so the talk may be
+estopped from us and it be not said, 'The king saw on his bed a
+man with his wife and spared him.'"* The king was chagrined by
+this speech and bade bring the youth. So they brought him in
+shackles, and indeed the king's anger was roused against him by
+the speech of the vizier and he was troubled; so he said to him,
+"O base of origin, thou hast dishonoured us and marred our
+repute, and needs must I do away thy life from the world." Quoth
+the youth, "O king, make use of patience in all thine affairs, so
+wilt thou attain thy desire, for that God the Most High hath
+appointed the issue of patience [to be] in abounding good, and
+indeed by patience Abou Sabir ascended from the pit and sat down
+upon the throne." "Who was Abou Sabir," asked the king, "and what
+is his story?" And the youth answered, saying, "O king,
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF ABOU SABIR.
+
+
+
+There was once a man, a headman [of a village], by name Abou
+Sabir, and he had much cattle and a fair wife, who had borne him
+two sons. They abode in a certain village and there used to come
+thither a lion and devour Abou Sabir's cattle, so that the most
+part thereof was wasted and his wife said to him one day, 'This
+lion hath wasted the most part of our cattle. Arise, mount thy
+horse and take thy men and do thine endeavour to kill him, so we
+may be at rest from him.' But Abou Sabir said, 'Have patience, O
+woman, for the issue of patience is praised. This lion it is that
+transgresseth against us, and the transgressor, needs must Allah
+destroy him. Indeed, it is our patience that shall slay him, and
+he that doth evil, needs must it revert upon him.' A little
+after, the king went forth one day to hunt and falling in with
+the lion, he and his troops, gave chase to him and ceased not [to
+follow] after him till they slew him. This came to Abou Sabir's
+knowledge and he said to his wife, 'Said I not to thee, O woman,
+that whoso doth evil, it shall revert upon him? Belike, if I had
+sought to slay the lion myself, I had not availed against him,
+and this is the issue of patience.'
+
+It befell, after this, that a man was slain in Abou Sabir's
+village; wherefore the Sultan caused plunder the village, and
+they plundered the headman's goods with the rest So his wife said
+to him, 'All the Sultan's officers know thee; so do thou prefer
+thy plaint to the king, that he may cause thy beasts to be
+restored to thee.' But he said to her, 'O woman, said I not to
+thee that he who doth evil shall suffer it? Indeed, the king hath
+done evil, and he shall suffer [the consequences of] his deed,
+for whoso taketh the goods of the folk, needs must his goods be
+taken.' A man of his neighbours heard his speech, and he was an
+envier of his; so he went to the Sultan and acquainted him
+therewith, whereupon he sent and plundered all [the rest of] his
+goods and drove him forth from the village, and his wife [and
+children] with him. So they went wandering in the desert and his
+wife said to him, 'All that hath befallen us cometh of thy
+slothfulness in affairs and thy default.' But he said to her,
+'Have patience, for the issue of patience is good.'
+
+Then they went on a little, and thieves met them and despoiling
+them of that which remained with them, stripped them of their
+raiment and took the children from them; whereupon the woman wept
+and said to her husband, 'O man, put away from thee this folly
+and arise, let us follow the thieves, so haply they may have
+compassion on us and restore the children to us.' 'O woman,'
+answered he, 'have patience, for he who doth evil shall be
+requited with evil and his wickedness shall revert upon him. Were
+I to follow them, most like one of them would take his sword and
+smite off my head and slay me; but have patience, for the issue
+of patience is praised.' Then they fared on till they drew near a
+village in the land of Kirman, and by it a river of water. So he
+said to his wife, 'Abide thou here, whilst I enter the village
+and look us out a place wherein we may take up our lodging.' And
+he left her by the water and entered the village.
+
+Presently, up came a horseman in quest of water, so he might
+water his horse. He saw the woman and she was pleasing in his
+sight; so he said to her, 'Arise, mount with me and I will take
+thee to wife and entreat thee kindly.' Quoth she, 'Spare me, so
+may God spare thee! Indeed, I have a husband.' But he drew his
+sword and said to her, 'An thou obey me not, I will smite thee
+and kill thee.' When she saw his malice, she wrote on the ground
+in the sand with her finger, saying, 'O Abou Sabir, thou hast not
+ceased to be patient, till thy wealth is gone from thee and thy
+children and [now] thy wife, who was more precious in thy sight
+than everything and than all thy wealth, and indeed thou abidest
+in thy sorrow all thy life long, so thou mayst see what thy
+patience will profit thee.' Then the horseman took her, and
+setting her behind him, went his way.
+
+As for Abou Sabir, when he returned, he saw not his wife and read
+what was written on the ground, wherefore he wept and sat
+[awhile] sorrowing. Then said he to himself, 'O Abou Sabir, it
+behoveth thee to be patient, for belike there shall betide [thee]
+an affair yet sorer than this and more grievous;' and he went
+forth wandering at a venture, like to the love-distraught, the
+madman, till he came to a sort of labourers working upon the
+palace of the king, by way of forced labour. When [the overseers]
+saw him, they laid hold of him and said to him, 'Work thou with
+these folk at the palace of the king; else will we imprison thee
+for life.' So he fell to working with them as a labourer and
+every day they gave him a cake of bread. He wrought with them a
+month's space, till it chanced that one of the labourers mounted
+a ladder and falling, broke his leg; whereupon he cried out and
+wept. Quoth Abou Sabir to him, 'Have patience and weep not; for
+thou shall find ease in thy patience.' But the man said to him,
+'How long shall I have patience?' And he answered, saying,
+'Patience bringeth a man forth of the bottom of the pit and
+seateth him on the throne of the kingdom.'
+
+Now the king was seated at the lattice, hearkening to their talk,
+and Abou Sabir's words angered him; so he bade bring him before
+him and they brought him forthright. Now there was in the king's
+palace an underground dungeon and therein a vast deep pit, into
+which the king caused cast Abou Sabir, saying to him, 'O lackwit,
+now shall we see how thou wilt come forth of the pit to the
+throne of the kingdom.' Then he used to come and stand at the
+mouth of the pit and say, 'O lackwit, O Abou Sabir, I see thee
+not come forth of the pit and sit down on the king's throne!' And
+he assigned him each day two cakes of bread, whilst Abou Sabir
+held his peace and spoke not, but bore with patience that which
+betided him.
+
+Now the king had a brother, whom he had imprisoned in that pit of
+old time, and he had died [there]; but the folk of the realm
+thought that he was alive, and when his [supposed] imprisonment
+grew long, the king's officers used to talk of this and of the
+tyranny of the king, and the report spread abroad that the king
+was a tyrant, wherefore they fell upon him one day and slew him.
+Then they sought the well and brought out Abou Sabir therefrom,
+deeming him the king's brother, for that he was the nearest of
+folk to him [in favour] and the likest, and he had been long in
+the prison. So they doubted not but that he was the prince in
+question and said to him, 'Reign thou in thy brother's room, for
+we have slain him and thou art king in his stead.' But Abou Sabir
+was silent and spoke not a word; and he knew that this was the
+issue of his patience. Then he arose and sitting down on the
+king's throne, donned the royal raiment and discovered justice
+and equity and the affairs [of the realm] prospered [in his
+hand]; wherefore the folk obeyed him and the people inclined to
+him and many were his troops.
+
+Now the king, who had plundered Abou Sabir['s goods] and driven
+him forth of his village, had an enemy; and the latter took horse
+against him and overcame him and captured his [capital] city;
+wherefore he addressed himself to flight and came to Abou Sabir's
+city, craving protection of him and seeking that he should
+succour him. He knew not that the king of the city was the
+headman whom he had despoiled; so he presented himself before him
+and made complaint to him; but Abou Sabir knew him and said to
+him, 'This is somewhat of the issue of patience. God the Most
+High hath given me power over thee.' Then he bade his guards
+plunder the [unjust] king and his attendants; so they plundered
+them and stripping them of their clothes, put them forth of his
+country. When Abou Sabir's troops saw this, they marvelled and
+said, 'What is this deed that the king doth? There cometh a king
+to him, craving protection, and he despoileth him! This is not of
+the fashion of kings.' But they dared not [be]speak [him] of
+this.
+
+After this, news came to the king of robbers in his land; so he
+set out in quest of them and ceased not to follow after them,
+till he seized on them all, and behold, they were the [very]
+thieves who had despoiled him [and his wife] by the way and taken
+his children. So he bade bring them before him, and when they
+came into his presence, he questioned them, saying, 'Where are
+the two boys ye took on such a day?' Quoth they, 'They are with
+us and we will present them to our lord the king for slaves to
+serve him and give him wealth galore that we have gotten together
+and divest ourselves of all that we possess and repent from sin
+and fight in thy service.' Abou Sabir, however, paid no heed to
+their speech, but took all their good and bade put them all to
+death. Moreover, he took the two boys and rejoiced in them with
+an exceeding joy, whereat the troops murmured among themselves,
+saying, 'Verily, this is a greater tyrant than his brother! There
+come to him a sort of robbers and seek to repent and proffer two
+boys [by way of peace-offering], and he taketh the two boys and
+all their good and slayeth them!'
+
+After this came the horseman, who had taken Abou Sabir's wife,
+and complained of her to the king that she would not give him
+possession of herself, avouching that she was his wife. The king
+bade bring her before him, that he might hear her speech and
+pronounce judgment upon her. So the horseman came with her before
+him, and when the king saw her, he knew her and taking her from
+her ravisher, bade put the latter to death. Then he became aware
+of the troops, that they murmured against him and spoke of him as
+a tyrant; so he turned to his officers and viziers and said to
+them, 'As for me, by God the Great, I am not the king's brother!
+Nay, I am but one whom the king imprisoned upon a word he heard
+from me and used every day to taunt me therewith. Ye think that I
+am the king's brother; but I am Abou Sabir and God hath given me
+the kingship in virtue of my patience. As for the king who sought
+protection of me and I despoiled him, it was he who first wronged
+me, for that he despoiled me aforetime and drove me forth of my
+native land and banished me, without due [cause]; wherefore I
+requited him with that which he had done to me, in the way of
+lawful vengeance. As for the thieves who proffered repentance,
+there was no repentance for them with me, for that they began
+upon me with foul [dealing] and waylaid me by the road and
+despoiled me and took my good and my sons. Now these two boys,
+that I took of them and whom ye deemed slaves, are my very sons;
+so I avenged myself on the thieves of that which they did with me
+aforetime and requited them with equity. As for the horseman whom
+I slew, the woman I took from him was my wife and he took her by
+force, but God the Most High hath restored her [to me]; so this
+was my right, and my deed that I have done was just, albeit ye,
+[judging] by the outward of the matter, deemed that I had done
+this by way of tyranny.' When the folk heard this, they marvelled
+and fell prostrate before him; and they redoubled in esteem for
+him and exceeding affection and excused themselves to him,
+marvelling at that which God had done with him and how He had
+given him the kingship by reason of his longsuffering and his
+patience and how he had raised himself by his patience from the
+bottom of the pit to the throne of the kingdom, what while God
+cast down the [late] king from the throne into the pit.[FN#109]
+Then Abou Sabir foregathered with his wife and said to her, 'How
+deemest thou of the fruit of patience and its sweetness and the
+fruit of haste and its bitterness? Verily, all that a man doth of
+good and evil, he shall assuredly abide.' On like wise, O king,"
+continued the young treasurer, "it behoveth thee to practise
+patience, whenas it is possible to thee, for that patience is of
+the fashion of the noble, and it is the chiefest of their
+reliance, especially for kings."
+
+When the king heard this from the youth, his anger subsided; so
+he bade restore him to the prison, and the folk dispersed that
+day.
+
+ The Fourth Day.
+
+
+
+ OF THE ILL EFFECTS OF PRECIPITATION.
+
+
+
+When it was the fourth day, the fourth vizier, whose name was
+Zoushad, made his appearance and prostrating himself to the king,
+said to him, "O king, suffer not the talk of yonder youth to
+delude thee, for that he is not a truth-teller. So long as he
+abideth on life, the folk will not give over talking nor will thy
+heart cease to be occupied with him." "By Allah," cried the king,
+"thou sayst sooth and I will cause fetch him this day and slay
+him before me." Then he commanded to bring the youth; so they
+brought him in shackles and he said to him, "Out on thee!
+Thinkest thou to appease my heart with thy prate, whereby the
+days are spent in talk? I mean to slay thee this day and be quit
+of thee." "O king," answered the youth, "it is in thy power to
+slay me whensoever thou wilt, but haste is of the fashion of the
+base and patience of that of the noble. If thou put me to death,
+thou wilt repent, and if thou desire to bring me back to life,
+thou wilt not be able thereunto. Indeed, whoso acteth hastily in
+an affair, there befalleth him what befell Bihzad, son of the
+king." Quoth the king, "And what is his story?" "O king," replied
+the young treasurer,
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF PRINCE BIHZAD.
+
+
+
+"There was once, of old time, a king and he had a son [named
+Bihzad], there was not in his day a goodlier than he and he loved
+to consort with the folk and to sit with the merchants and
+converse with them. One day, as he sat in an assembly, amongst a
+number of folk, he heard them talking of his own goodliness and
+grace and saying, 'There is not in his time a goodlier than he.'
+But one of the company said, 'Indeed, the daughter of King
+Such-an-one is handsomer than he.' When Bihzad heard this saying,
+his reason fled and his heart fluttered and he called the last
+speaker and said to him, 'Repeat to me that which thou saidst and
+tell me the truth concerning her whom thou avouchest to be
+handsomer than I and whose daughter she is.' Quoth the man, 'She
+is the daughter of King Such-an-one;' whereupon Bihzad's heart
+clave to her and his colour changed.
+
+The news reached his father, who said to him, 'O my son, this
+damsel to whom thy heart cleaveth is at thy commandment and we
+have power over her; so wait till I demand her [in marriage] for
+thee.' But the prince said, 'I will not wait.' So his father
+hastened in the matter and sent to demand her of her father, who
+required of him a hundred thousand dinars to his daughter's
+dowry. Quoth Bihzad's father, 'So be it,' and paid down what was
+in his treasuries, and there remained to his charge but a little
+of the dower. So he said to his son, 'Have patience, O my son,
+till we gather together the rest of the money and send to fetch
+her to thee, for that she is become thine.' Therewith the prince
+waxed exceeding wroth and said, 'I will not have patience;' so he
+took his sword and his spear and mounting his horse, went forth
+and fell to stopping the way, [so haply that he might win what
+lacked of the dowry].
+
+It chanced one day that he fell in upon a company of folk and
+they overcame him by dint of numbers and taking him prisoner,
+pinioned him and carried him to the lord of that country. The
+latter saw his fashion and grace and misdoubting of him, said,
+'This is no robber's favour. Tell me truly, O youth, who thou
+art.' Bihzad thought shame to acquaint him with his condition and
+chose rather death for himself; so he answered, 'I am nought but
+a thief and a bandit.' Quoth the king, 'It behoveth us not to act
+hastily in the matter of this youth, but that we look into his
+affair, for that haste still engendereth repentance.' So he
+imprisoned him in his palace and assigned him one who should
+serve him.
+
+Meanwhile, the news spread abroad that Bihzad, son of the king,
+was lost, whereupon his father sent letters in quest of him [to
+all the kings and amongst others to him with whom he was
+imprisoned]. When the letter reached the latter, he praised God
+the Most High for that he had not anydele hastened in Bihzad's
+affair and letting bring him before himself, said to him, 'Art
+thou minded to destroy thyself?' Quoth Bihzad, '[I did this] for
+fear of reproach;' and the king said, 'An thou fear reproach,
+thou shouldst not practise haste [in that thou dost]; knowest
+thou not that the fruit of haste is repentance? If we had hasted,
+we also, like unto thee, we had repented.'
+
+Then he conferred on him a dress of honour and engaged to him for
+the completion of the dowry and sent to his father, giving him
+the glad news and comforting his heart with [the tidings of] his
+son's safety; after which he said to Bihzad, Arise, O my son, and
+go to thy father.' 'O king,' rejoined the prince, 'complete thy
+kindness to me by [hastening] my going-in to my wife; for, if I
+go back to my father, till he send a messenger and he return,
+promising me, the time will be long.' The king laughed and
+marvelled at him and said to him, 'I fear for thee from this
+haste, lest thou come to shame and attain not thy desire.' Then
+he gave him wealth galore and wrote him letters, commending him
+to the father of the princess, and despatched him to them. When
+he drew near their country, the king came forth to meet him with
+the people of his realm and assigned him a handsome lodging and
+bade hasten the going-in of his daughter to him, in compliance
+with the other king's letter. Moreover, he advised the prince's
+father [of his son's coming] and they busied themselves with the
+affair of the damsel.
+
+When it was the day of the going-in,[FN#110] Bihzad, of his haste
+and lack of patience, betook himself to the wall, which was
+between himself and the princess's lodging and in which there was
+a hole pierced, and looked, so he might see his bride, of his
+haste. But the bride's mother saw him and this was grievous to
+her; so she took from one of the servants two red-hot iron spits
+and thrust them into the hole through which the prince was
+looking. The spits ran into his eyes and put them out and he fell
+down aswoon and joyance was changed and became mourning and sore
+concern. See, then, O king," continued the youth, "the issue of
+the prince's haste and lack of deliberation, for indeed his haste
+bequeathed him long repentance and his joy was changed to
+mourning; and on like wise was it with the woman who hastened to
+put out his eyes and deliberated not. All this was the doing of
+haste; wherefore it behoveth the king not to be hasty in putting
+me to death, for that I am under the grasp of his hand, and what
+time soever thou desirest my slaughter, it shall not escape
+[thee]."
+
+When the king heard this, his anger subsided and he said, "Carry
+him back to prison till to-morrow, to we may look into his
+affair."
+
+ The Fifth Day
+
+
+
+ OF THE ISSUES OF GOOD AND EVIL ACTIONS.
+
+
+
+When it was the fifth day, the fifth Vizier, whose name was
+Jehrbaur, came in to the king and prostrating himself before him,
+said, "O king, it behoveth thee, if thou see or hear that one
+look on thy house,[FN#111] that thou put out his eyes. How then
+should it be with him whom thou sawest midmost thy house and on
+thy very bed, and he suspected with thy harem, and not of thy
+lineage nor of thy kindred? Wherefore do thou away this reproach
+by putting him to death. Indeed, we do but urge thee unto this
+for the assurance of thine empire and of our zeal for thy loyal
+counselling and of our love to thee. How can it be lawful that
+this youth should live for a single hour?"
+
+Therewith the king was filled with wrath and said, "Bring him
+forthright," So they brought the youth before him, shackled, and
+the king said to him, "Out on thee! Thou hast sinned a great sin
+and the time of thy life hath been long;[FN#112] but needs must
+we put thee to death, for that there is for us no ease in thy
+life after this," "O king," answered he, "know that I, by Allah,
+am guiltless, and by reason of this I hope for life, for that he
+who is guiltless of offence goeth not in fear of punishment
+neither maketh great his mourning and his concern; but whoso hath
+sinned, needs must his sin be expiated upon him, though his life
+be prolonged, and it shall overtake him, even as it overtook
+Dadbin the king and his vizier." "How was that?" asked Azadbekht,
+and the youth said,
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF KING DADBIN AND HIS VIZIERS.
+
+
+
+"There was once a king in the land of Teberistan, by name Dadbin,
+and he had two viziers, called one Zourkhan and the other Kardan.
+The Vizier Zourkhan had a daughter, there was not in her time a
+handsomer than she nor yet a chaster nor a more pious, for she
+was a faster, a prayer and a worshipper of God the Most High, and
+her name was Arwa. Now Dadbin heard tell of her charms; so his
+heart clave to her and he called the vizier [her father] and said
+to him, 'I desire of thee that thou marry me to thy daughter.'
+Quoth Zourkhan, 'Allow me to consult her, and if she consent, I
+will marry thee with her.' And the king said, 'Hasten unto this.'
+
+So the vizier went in to his daughter and said to her, 'O my
+daughter, the king seeketh thee of me and desireth to marry
+thee.' 'O my father,' answered she 'I desire not a husband and if
+thou wilt marry me, marry me not but with one who shall be below
+me in rank and I nobler than he, so he may not turn to other than
+myself nor lift his eyes upon me, and marry me not to one who is
+nobler than I, lest I be with him as a slave-girl and a
+serving-woman.' So the vizier returned to the king and acquainted
+him with that which his daughter had said, whereat he redoubled
+in desire and love-liking for her and said to her father, 'An
+thou marry me not to her of good grace, I will take her by force
+in thy despite.' The vizier again betook himself to his daughter
+and repeated to her the king's words, but she replied, 'I desire
+not a husband.' So he returned to the king and told him what she
+said, and he was wroth and threatened the vizier, whereupon the
+latter took his daughter and fled with her.
+
+When this came to the king's knowledge, he despatched troops in
+pursuit of Zourkhan, to stop the road upon him, whilst he himself
+went out and overtaking the vizier, smote him on the head with
+his mace and slew him. Then he took his daughter by force and
+returning to his dwelling-place, went in to her and married her.
+Arwa resigned herself with patience to that which betided her and
+committed her affair to God the Most High; and indeed she was
+used to serve Him day and night with a goodly service in the
+house of King Dabdin her husband.
+
+It befell one day that the king had occasion to make a journey;
+so he called his Vizier Kardan and said to him, 'I have a trust
+to commit to thy care, and it is yonder damsel, my wife, the
+daughter of the Vizier [Zourkhan], and I desire that thou keep
+her and guard her thyself, for that there is not in the world
+aught dearer to me than she.' Quoth Kardan in himself, 'Of a
+truth, the king honoureth me with an exceeding honour [in
+entrusting me] with this damsel.' And he answered 'With all my
+heart.'
+
+When the king had departed on his journey, the vizier said in
+himself, 'Needs must I look upon this damsel whom the king loveth
+with all this love.' So he hid himself in a place, that he might
+look upon her, and saw her overpassing description; wherefore he
+was confounded at her and his wit was dazed and love got the
+mastery of him, so that he said to her, saying, 'Have pity on me,
+for indeed I perish for the love of thee.' She sent back to him,
+saying, 'O vizier, thou art in the place of trust and confidence,
+so do not thou betray thy trust, but make thine inward like unto
+thine outward[FN#113] and occupy thyself with thy wife and that
+which is lawful to thee. As for this, it is lust and [women are
+all of] one taste.[FN#114] And if thou wilt not be forbidden from
+this talk, I will make thee a byword and a reproach among the
+folk.' When the vizier heard her answer, he knew that she was
+chaste of soul and body; wherefore he repented with the utmost of
+repentance and feared for himself from the king and said, 'Needs
+must I contrive a device wherewithal I may destroy her; else
+shall I be disgraced with the king.'
+
+When the king returned from his journey, he questioned his vizier
+of the affairs of his kingdom and the latter answered, 'All is
+well, O king, save a vile matter, which I have discovered here
+and wherewith I am ashamed to confront the king; but, if I hold
+my peace thereof, I fear lest other than I discover it and I [be
+deemed to] have played traitor to the king in the matter of my
+[duty of] loyal warning and my trust.' Quoth Dabdin, 'Speak, for
+thou art none other than a truth-teller, a trusty one, a loyal
+counsellor in that which thou sayest, undistrusted in aught.' And
+the vizier said, 'O king, this woman to whose love thy heart
+cleaveth and of whose piety thou talkest and her fasting and
+praying, I will make plain to thee that this is craft and guile.'
+At this, the king was troubled and said, 'What is to do?' 'Know,'
+answered the vizier, 'that some days after thy departure, one
+came to me and said to me, "Come, O vizier, and look." So I went
+to the door of the [queen's] sleeping-chamber and beheld her
+sitting with Aboulkhair, her father's servant, whom she
+favoureth, and she did with him what she did, and this is the
+manner of that which I saw and heard.'
+
+When Dabdin heard this, he burnt with rage and said to one of his
+eunuchs,[FN#115] 'Go and slay her in her chamber.' But the eunuch
+said to him, 'O king, may God prolong thy continuance! Indeed,
+the killing of her may not be at this time; but do thou bid one
+of thine eunuchs take her up on a camel and carry her to one of
+the trackless deserts and cast her down there; so, if she be at
+fault, God shall cause her to perish, and if she be innocent, He
+will deliver her, and the king shall be free from sin against
+her, for that this damsel is dear to thee and thou slewest her
+father by reason of thy love for her.' Quoth the king, 'By Allah,
+thou sayst sooth!' Then he bade one of his eunuchs carry her on a
+camel to one of the far-off deserts and there leave her and go
+away, and he forbade [him] to prolong her torment. So he took her
+up and betaking himself with her to the desert, left her there
+without victual or water and returned, whereupon she made for one
+of the [sand-]hills and ranging stones before her [in the form of
+a prayer-niche], stood praying.
+
+Now it chanced that a camel-driver, belonging to Kisra the king,
+lost certain camels and the king threatened him, if he found them
+not, that he would slay him. So he set out and plunged into the
+deserts till he came to the place where the damsel was and seeing
+her standing praying, waited till she had made an end of her
+prayer, when he went up to her and saluted her, saying, 'Who art
+thou?' Quoth she, 'I am a handmaid of God.' 'What dost thou in
+this desolate place?' asked he, and she said, 'I serve God the
+Most High.' When he saw her beauty and grace, he said to her,
+'Harkye! Do thou take me to husband and I will be tenderly
+solicitous over thee and use thee with exceeding compassion and I
+will further thee in obedience to God the Most High.' But she
+answered, saying, 'I have no need of marriage and I desire to
+abide here [alone] with my Lord and His service; but, if thou
+wouldst deal compassionately with me and further me in the
+obedience of God the Most High, carry me to a place where there
+is water and thou wilt have done me a kindness.'
+
+So he carried her to a place wherein was running water and
+setting her down on the ground, left her and went away,
+marvelling at her. After he left her, he found his camels, by her
+blessing, and when he returned, King Kisra asked him, 'Hast thou
+found the camels?' ['Yes,' answered he] and acquainted him with
+the affair of the damsel and set out to him her beauty and grace;
+whereupon the king's heart clave to her and he mounted with a few
+men and betook himself to that place, where he found the damsel
+and was amazed at her, for that he saw her overpassing the
+description wherewith the camel-driver had described her to him.
+So he accosted her and said to her, 'I am King Kisra, greatest of
+the kings. Wilt thou not have me to husband?' Quoth she, 'What
+wilt thou do with me, O king, and I a woman abandoned in the
+desert?' And he answered, saying, 'Needs must this be, and if
+thou wilt not consent to me, I will take up my sojourn here and
+devote myself to God's service and thine and worship Him with
+thee.'
+
+Then he bade set up for her a tent and another for himself,
+facing hers, so he might worship God with her, and fell to
+sending her food; and she said in herself, 'This is a king and it
+is not lawful for me that I suffer him forsake his subjects and
+his kingdom for my sake. So she said to the serving-woman, who
+used to bring her the food, 'Speak to the king, so he may return
+to his women, for he hath no need of me and I desire to abide in
+this place, so I may worship God the Most High therein.' The
+slave-girl returned to the king and told him this, whereupon he
+sent back to her, saying, 'I have no need of the kingship and I
+also desire to abide here and worship God with thee in this
+desert.' When she found this earnestness in him, she consented to
+his wishes and said, 'O king, I will consent unto thee in that
+which thou desirest and will be to thee a wife, but on condition
+that thou bring me Dadbin the king and his Vizier Kardan and his
+chamberlain[FN#116] and that they be present in thine assembly,
+so I may speak a word with them in thy presence, to the intent
+that thou mayest redouble in affection for me.' Quoth Kisra, 'And
+what is thine occasion unto this?' So she related to him her
+story from first to last, how she was the wife of Dadbin the king
+and how the latter's vizier had miscalled her honour.
+
+When King Kisra heard this, he redoubled in loveliking for her
+and affection and said to her, 'Do what thou wilt.' So he let
+bring a litter and carrying her therein to his dwelling-place,
+married her and entreated her with the utmost honour. Then he
+sent a great army to King Dadbin and fetching him and his vizier
+and the chamberlain, caused bring them before him, unknowing what
+he purposed with them. Moreover, he caused set up for Arwa a
+pavilion in the courtyard of his palace and she entered therein
+and let down the curtain before herself. When the servants had
+set their seats and they had seated themselves, Arwa raised a
+corner of the curtain and said, 'O Kardan, rise to thy feet, for
+it befitteth not that thou sit in the like of this assembly,
+before this mighty King Kisra.' When the vizier heard these
+words, his heart quaked and his joints were loosened and of his
+fear, he rose to his feet. Then said she to him, 'By the virtue
+of Him who hath made thee stand in this place of standing [up to
+judgment], and thou abject and humiliated, I conjure thee speak
+the truth and say what prompted thee to lie against me and cause
+me go forth from my house and from the hand of my husband and
+made thee practise thus against a man,[FN#117] a true believer,
+and slay him. This is no place wherein leasing availeth nor may
+prevarication be therein.'
+
+When the vizier was ware that she was Arwa and heard her speech,
+he knew that it behoved him not to lie and that nought would
+avail him but truth-speaking; so he bowed [his head] to the
+ground and wept and said, 'Whoso doth evil, needs must he abide
+it, though his day be prolonged. By Allah, I am he who hath
+sinned and transgressed, and nought prompted me unto this but
+fear and overmastering desire and the affliction written upon my
+forehead;[FN#118] and indeed this woman is pure and chaste and
+free from all fault.' When King Dadbin heard this, he buffeted
+his face and said to his vizier, 'God slay thee! It is thou that
+hast parted me and my wife and wronged me!' But Kisra the king
+said to him, 'God shall surely slay thee, for that thou
+hastenedst and lookedst not into thine affair and knewest not the
+guilty from the guiltless. Hadst thou wrought deliberately, the
+false had been made manifest to thee from the true; so where was
+thy judgment and thy sight?"
+
+Then said he to Arwa, "What wilt thou that I do with them?" And
+she answered, saying, "Accomplish on them the ordinance of God
+the Most High;[FN#119] the slayer shall be slain and the
+transgressor transgressed against, even as he transgressed
+against us; yea, and the well-doer, good shall be done unto him,
+even as he did unto us." So she gave [her officers] commandment
+concerning Dadbin and they smote him on the head with a mace and
+slew him, and she said, "This is for the slaughter of my father."
+Then she bade set the vizier on a beast [and carry him] to the
+desert whither he had caused carry her [and leave him there
+without victual or water]; and she said to him, "An thou be
+guilty, thou shalt abide [the punishment of] thy guilt and perish
+of hunger and thirst in the desert; but, if there be no guilt in
+thee, thou shalt be delivered, even as I was delivered."
+
+As for the eunuch, the chamberlain, who had counselled King
+Dadbin [not to slay her, but] to [cause] carry her to the desert
+[and there abandon her], she bestowed on him a sumptuous dress of
+honour and said to him, "The like of thee it behoveth kings to
+hold in favour and set in high place, for that thou spokest
+loyally and well, and a man is still requited according to his
+deed." And Kisra the king invested him with the governance of one
+of the provinces of his empire. Know, therefore, O king,"
+continued the youth, "that whoso doth good is requited therewith
+and he who is guiltless of sin and reproach feareth not the issue
+of his affair. And I, O king, am free from guilt, wherefore I
+trust in God that He will show forth the truth and vouchsafe me
+the victory over enemies and enviers."
+
+When the king heard this, his wrath subsided and he said, "Carry
+him back to the prison till the morrow, so we may look into his
+affair."
+
+ The Sixth Day
+
+
+
+ OF TRUST IN GOD.
+
+
+
+When it was the sixth day, the viziers' wrath redoubled, for that
+they had not compassed their desire of the youth and they feared
+for themselves from the king; so three of them went in to him and
+prostrating themselves before him, said to him, "O king, indeed
+we are loyal counsellors to thy dignity and tenderly solicitous
+for thee. Verily, thou persistest long in sparing this youth
+alive and we know not what is thine advantage therein. Every day
+findeth him yet on life and the talk redoubleth suspicions on
+thee; so do thou put him to death, that the talk may be made an
+end of." When the king heard this speech, he said, "By Allah,
+indeed, ye say sooth and speak rightly!" Then he let bring the
+young treasurer and said to him, "How long shall I look into
+thine affair and find no helper for thee and see them all athirst
+for thy blood?"
+
+"O king," answered the youth, "I hope for succour only from God,
+not from created beings: if He aid me, none can avail to harm me,
+and if He be with me and on my side, because of the truth, who is
+it I shall fear, because of falsehood? Indeed, I have made my
+intent with God a pure and sincere intent and have severed my
+expectation from the help of the creature; and whoso seeketh help
+[of God] findeth of his desire that which Bekhtzeman found."
+Quoth the king, "Who was Bekhtzeman and what is his story?" "O
+king," replied the youth,
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF KING BEKHTZEMAN.
+
+
+
+"There was once a king of the kings, whose name was Bekhtzeman,
+and he was a great eater and drinker and carouser. Now enemies of
+his made their appearance in certain parts of his realm and
+threatened him; and one of his friends said to him, 'O king, the
+enemy maketh for thee: be on thy guard against him.' Quoth
+Bekhtzeman, 'I reck not of him, for that I have arms and wealth
+and men and am not afraid of aught.' Then said his friends to
+him, 'Seek aid of God, O king, for He will help thee more than
+thy wealth and thine arms and thy men.' But he paid no heed to
+the speech of his loyal counsellors, and presently the enemy came
+upon him and waged war upon him and got the victory over him and
+his trust in other than God the Most High profited him nought. So
+he fled from before him and seeking one of the kings, said to
+him, 'I come to thee and lay hold upon thy skirts and take refuge
+with thee, so thou mayst help me against mine enemy.'
+
+The king gave him money and men and troops galore and Bekhtzeman
+said in himself, 'Now am I fortified with this army and needs
+must I conquer my enemy therewith and overcome him;' but he said
+not, 'With the aid of God the Most High.' So his enemy met him
+and overcame him again and he was defeated and put to the rout
+and fled at a venture. His troops were dispersed from him and his
+money lost and the enemy followed after him. So he sought the sea
+and passing over to the other side, saw a great city and therein
+a mighty citadel. He asked the name of the city and to whom it
+belonged and they said to him, 'It belongeth to Khedidan the
+king.' So he fared on till he came to the king's palace aud
+concealing his condition, passed himself off for a
+horseman[FN#120] and sought service with King Khedidan, who
+attached him to his household and entreated him with honour; but
+his heart still clave to his country and his home.
+
+Presently, it chanced that an enemy attacked King Khedidan; so he
+sent out his troops to him and made Bekhtzeman head of the army.
+Then they went forth to the field and Khedidan also came forth
+and ranged his troops and took the spear and sallied out in
+person and fought a sore battle and overcame his enemy, who fled,
+he and his troops, ignominiously. When the king and his army
+returned in triumph, Bekhtzeman said to him, 'Harkye, O king!
+Meseemeth this is a strange thing of thee that thou art compassed
+about with this vast army, yet dost thou apply thyself in person
+to battle and adventurest thyself.' Quoth the king, 'Dost thou
+call thyself a cavalier and a man of learning and deemest that
+victory is in abundance of troops?' 'Ay,' answered Bekhtzeman;
+'that is indeed my belief.' And Khedidan said, 'By Allah, then,
+thou errest in this thy belief! Woe and again woe to him whose
+trust is in other than God! Indeed, this army is appointed only
+for adornment and majesty, and victory is from God alone. I too,
+O Bekhtzeman, believed aforetime that victory was in the
+multitude of men, and an enemy came out against me with eight
+hundred men, whilst I had eight hundred thousand. I trusted in
+the number of my troops, whilst mine enemy trusted in God; so he
+defeated me and routed me and I was put to a shameful flight and
+hid myself in one of the mountains, where I met with a recluse,
+[who had] withdrawn [himself from the world]. So I joined myself
+to him and complained to him of my case and acquainted him with
+all that had befallen me. Quoth he, "Knowest thou why this befell
+thee and thou wast defeated?" "I know not," answered I, and he
+said, "Because thou puttest thy trust in the multitude of thy
+troops and reliedst not upon God the Most High. Hadst thou put
+thy trust in God and believed in Him that it is He [alone] who
+advantageth and endamageth thee, thine enemy had not availed to
+cope with thee. Return unto God." So I returned to myself and
+repented at the hands of the solitary, who said to me, "Turn back
+with what remaineth to thee of troops and confront thine enemies,
+for, if their intents be changed from God, thou wilt overcome
+them, wert thou alone." When I heard these words, I put my trust
+in God the Most High, and gathering together those who remained
+with me, fell upon mine enemies at unawares in the night. They
+deemed us many and fled on the shamefullest wise, whereupon I
+entered my city and repossessed myself of my place by the might
+of God the Most High, and now I fight not but [trusting] in His
+aid.'
+
+When Bekhtzeman heard this, he awoke from his heedlessness and
+said, 'Extolled be the perfection of God the Great! O king, this
+is my case and my story, nothing added and nought diminished, for
+I am King Bekhtzeman and all this happened to me; wherefore I
+will seek the gate of God['s mercy] and repent unto Him.' So he
+went forth to one of the mountains and there worshipped God
+awhile, till one night, as he slept, one appeared to him in a
+dream and said to him, 'O Bekhtzeman, God accepteth thy
+repentance and openeth on thee [the gate of succour] and will
+further thee against thine enemy.' When he was certified of this
+in the dream, he arose and turned back, intending for his own
+city; and when he drew near thereunto, he saw a company of the
+king's retainers, who said to him, 'Whence art thou? We see that
+thou art a stranger and fear for thee from this king, for that
+every stranger who enters this city, he destroys him, of his fear
+of King Bekhtzeman.' Quoth Bekhtzeman, 'None shall hurt him nor
+advantage him save God the Most High.' And they answered, saying,
+'Indeed, he hath a vast army and his heart is fortified in the
+multitude of his troops.'
+
+When King Bekhtzeman heard this, his heart was comforted and he
+said in himself, 'I put my trust in God. If He will, I shall
+overcome mine enemy by the might of God the Most High.' So he
+said to the folk, ' Know ye not who I am?' and they answered, '
+No, by Allah.' Quoth he, 'I am King Bekhtzeman.' When they heard
+this and knew that it was indeed he, they dismounted from their
+horses and kissed his stirrup, to do him honour, and said to him,
+'O king, why hast thou thus adventured thyself?' Quoth he,
+'Indeed, my life is a light matter to me and I put my trust in
+God the Most High, looking to Him for protection.' And they
+answered him, saying, 'May this suffice thee! We will do with
+thee that which is in our power and whereof thou art worthy:
+comfort thy heart, for we will succour thee with our goods and
+our lives, and we are his chief officers and the most in favour
+with him of all folk. So we will take thee with us and cause the
+folk follow after thee, for that the inclination of the people,
+all of them, is to thee.' Quoth he, 'Do that unto which God the
+Most High enableth you.'
+
+So they carried him into the city and hid him with them.
+Moreover, they agreed with a company of the king's chief
+officers, who had aforetime been those of Bekhtzeman, and
+acquainted them with this; whereat they rejoiced with an
+exceeding joy. Then they assembled together to Bekhtzeman and
+made a covenant and handfast [of fealty] with him and fell upon
+the enemy at unawares and slew him and seated King Bekhtzeman
+again on the throne of his kingship. And his affairs prospered
+and God amended his estate and restored His bounty to him, and he
+ruled his subjects justly and abode in the obedience of the Most
+High. On this wise, O king," continued the young treasurer, "he
+with whom God is and whose intent is pure, meeteth nought but
+good. As for me, I have no helper other than God, and I am
+content to submit myself to His ordinance, for that He knoweth
+the purity of my intent."
+
+With this the king's wrath subsided and he said, "Restore him to
+the prison till the morrow, so we may look into his affair."
+
+ The Seventh Day.
+
+
+
+ OF CLEMENCY.
+
+
+
+When it was the seventh day, the seventh vizier, whose name was
+Bihkemal, came in to the king and prostrating himself to him,
+said, "O king, what doth thy long-suffering with this youth
+advantage thee? Indeed the folk talk of thee and of him. Why,
+then, dost thou postpone the putting him to death?" The vizier's
+words aroused the king's anger and he bade bring the youth. So
+they brought him before him, shackled, and Azadbekht said to him,
+"Out on thee! By Allah, after this day there abideth no
+deliverance for thee from my hand, for that thou hast outraged
+mine honour, and there can be no forgiveness for thee."
+
+"O king," answered the youth, "there is no great forgiveness save
+in case of a great crime, for according as the offence is great,
+in so much is forgiveness magnified and it is no dishonour to the
+like of thee if he spare the like of me. Verily, Allah knoweth
+that there is no fault in me, and indeed He commandeth unto
+clemency, and no clemency is greater than that which spareth from
+slaughter, for that thy forgiveness of him whom thou purposest to
+put to death is as the quickening of a dead man; and whoso doth
+evil shall find it before him, even as it was with King Bihkerd."
+"And what is the story of King Bihkerd?" asked the king. "O
+king," answered the youth,
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF KING BIHKERD.
+
+
+
+"There was once a king named Bihkerd aed he had wealth galore and
+many troops; but his deeds were evil and he would punish for a
+slight offence and never forgave. He went forth one day to hunt
+and one of his servants shot an arrow, which lit on the king's
+ear and cut it off. Quoth Bihkerd, 'Who shot that arrow?' So the
+guards brought him in haste the offender, whose name was Yetrou,
+and he of his fear fell down on the ground in a swoon. Then said
+the king, 'Put him to death;' but Yetrou said, 'O King, this that
+hath befallen was not of my choice nor of my knowledge; so do
+thou pardon me, in the hour of thy power over me, for that
+clemency is of the goodliest of things and belike it shall be [in
+this world] a provision and a good work [for which thou shall be
+requited] one of these days, and a treasure [laid up to thine
+account] with God in the world to come. Pardon me, therefore, and
+fend off evil from me, so shall God fend off from thee evil the
+like thereof.' When the king heard this, it pleased him and he
+pardoned the servant, albeit he had never before pardoned any.
+
+Now this servant was of the sons of the kings and had fled from
+his father, on account of an offence he had committed. Then he
+went and took service with King Bihkerd and there happened to him
+what happened. After awhile, it chanced that a man recognized him
+and went and told his father, who sent him a letter, comforting
+his heart and mind and [beseeching him] to return to him. So he
+returned to his father, who came forth to meet him and rejoiced
+in him, and the prince's affairs were set right with him.
+
+It befell, one day of the days, that King Bihkerd embarked in a
+ship and put out to sea, so he might fish; but the wind blew on
+them and the ship foundered. The king won ashore on a plank,
+unknown of any, and came forth, naked, on one of the coasts; and
+it chanced that he landed in the country whereof the father of
+the youth aforesaid, [his sometime servant], was king. So he came
+in the night to the gate of the latter's city and [finding it
+shut], took up his lodging [for the night] in a burying-place
+there.
+
+When the morning morrowed and the folk came forth of the city,
+they found a murdered man cast down in a corner of the
+burial-ground and seeing Bihkerd there, doubted not but it was he
+who had slain him; so they laid hands on him and carried him up
+to the king and said to him, 'This fellow hath slain a man.' The
+king bade imprison him; [so they clapped him in prison] and he
+fell a-saying in himself, what while he was in the prison, 'All
+that hath befallen me is of the abundance of my sins and my
+tyranny, for, indeed, I have slain much people unrighteously and
+this is the requital of my deeds and that which I have wrought
+aforetime of oppression.' As he was thus pondering in himself,
+there came a bird and lighted down on the coign of the prison,
+whereupon, of his much eagerness in the chase, he took a stone
+and cast it at the bird.
+
+Now the king's son was playing in the exercise-ground with the
+ball and the mall, and the stone lit on his ear and cut it off,
+whereupon the prince fell down in a swoon. So they enquired who
+had thrown the stone and [finding that it was Bihkerd,] took him
+and carried him before the prince, who bade put him to death.
+Accordingly, they cast the turban from his head and were about to
+bind his eyes, when the prince looked at him and seeing him
+cropped of an ear, said to him, 'Except thou wert a lewd fellow,
+thine ear had not been cut off.' 'Not so, by Allah!' answered
+Bihkerd. 'Nay, but the story [of the loss] of my ear is thus and
+thus, and I pardoned him who smote me with an arrow and cut off
+my ear.' When the prince heard this, he looked in his face and
+knowing him, cried out and said, 'Art thou not Bihkerd the king?'
+'Yes,' answered he, and the prince said to him 'What bringeth
+thee here?' So he told him all that had betided him and the folk
+marvelled and extolled the perfection of God the Most High.
+
+Then the prince rose to him and embraced him and kissed him and
+entreated him with honour. Moreover, he seated him in a chair and
+bestowed on him a dress of honour; and he turned to his father
+and said to him, 'This is the king who pardoned me and this is
+his ear that I cut off with an arrow; and indeed he deserveth
+pardon from me, for that he pardoned me.' Then said he to
+Bihkerd, 'Verily, the issue of clemency hath been a provision for
+thee [in thine hour of need].' And they entreated him with the
+utmost kindness and sent him back to his own country in all
+honour and worship Know, then, O King," continued the youth,
+"that there is no goodlier thing than clemency and that all thou
+dost thereof, thou shalt find before thee, a treasure laid up for
+thee."
+
+When the king heard this, his wrath subsided and he said, "Carry
+him back to the prison till the morrow, so we may look into his
+affair."
+
+ The Eighth Day.
+
+
+
+ OF ENVY AND MALICE.
+
+
+
+When it was the eighth day, the viziers all assembled and took
+counsel together and said, "How shall we do with this youth, who
+baffleth us with his much talk? Indeed, we fear lest he be saved
+and we fall [into perdition]. Wherefore, let us all go in to the
+king and unite our efforts to overcome him, ere he appear without
+guilt and come forth and get the better of us." So they all went
+in to the king and prostrating themselves before him, said to
+him, "O king, have a care lest this youth beguile thee with his
+sorcery and bewitch thee with his craft. If thou heardest what we
+hear, thou wouldst not suffer him live, no, not one day. So pay
+thou no heed to his speech, for we are thy viziers, [who
+endeavour for] thy continuance, and if thou hearken not to our
+word, to whose word wilt thou hearken? See, we are ten viziers
+who testify against this youth that he is guilty and entered not
+the king's sleeping-chamber but with evil intent, so he might put
+the king to shame and outrage his honour; and if the king slay
+him not, let him banish him his realm, so the tongue of the folk
+may desist from him."
+
+When the king heard his viziers' words, he was exceeding wroth
+and bade bring the youth, and when he came in to the king, the
+viziers all cried out with one voice, saying, "O scant o' grace,
+thinkest thou to save thyself from slaughter by craft and guile,
+that thou beguilest the king with thy talk and hopest pardon for
+the like of this great crime which thou hast committed?" Then the
+king bade fetch the headsman, so he might smite off his head;
+whereupon each of the viziers fell a-saying, "I will slay him;"
+and they sprang upon him. Quote the youth, "O king, consider and
+ponder these men's eagerness. Is this of envy or no? They would
+fain make severance between thee and me, so there may fall to
+them what they shall plunder, as aforetime." And the king said to
+him, "Consider their testimony against thee." "O king," answered
+the young man, "how shall they testify of that which they saw
+not? This is but envy and rancour; and thou, if thou slay me,
+thou wilt regret me, and I fear lest there betide thee of
+repentance that which betided Ilan Shah, by reason of the malice
+of his viziers." "And what is his story?" asked Azadbekht. "O
+king," replied the youth,
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF ILAN SHAH AND ABOU TEMAM.
+
+
+
+"There was once a merchant named Abou Temam, and he was a man of
+understanding and good breeding, quick-witted and truthful in all
+his affairs, and he had wealth galore. Now there was in his land
+an unjust king and a jealous, and Abou Temam feared for his
+wealth from this king and said, 'I will remove hence to another
+place where I shall not be in fear.' So he made for the city of
+Ilan Shah and built himself a palace therein and transporting his
+wealth thither, took up his abode there. Presently, the news of
+him reached King Ilan Shah; so he sent to bid him to his presence
+and said to him, 'We know of thy coming to us and thine entry
+under our allegiance, and indeed we have heard of thine
+excellence and wit and generosity; so welcome to thee and fair
+welcome! The land is thy land and at thy commandment, and
+whatsoever occasion thou hast unto us, it is [already]
+accomplished unto thee; and it behoveth that thou be near our
+person and of our assembly.' Abou Temam prostrated himself to the
+king and said to him, 'O king, I will serve thee with my wealth
+and my life, but do thou excuse me from nearness unto thee, for
+that, [if I took service about thy person], I should not be safe
+from enemies and enviers.' Then he addressed himself to serve the
+king with presents and largesses, and the king saw him to be
+intelligent, well-bred and of good counsel; so he committed to
+him the ordinance of his affairs and in his hand was the power to
+bind and loose.
+
+Now Ilan Shah had three viziers, in whose hands the affairs [of
+the kingdom] were [aforetime] and they had been used to leave not
+the king night nor day; but they became shut out from him by
+reason of Abou Temam and the king was occupied with him to their
+exclusion. So they took counsel together upon the matter and
+said, 'What counsel ye we should do, seeing that the king is
+occupied from us with yonder man, and indeed he honoureth him
+more than us? But now come, let us cast about for a device,
+whereby we may remove him from the king.' So each of them spoke
+forth that which was in his mind, and one of them said, 'The king
+of the Turks hath a daughter, whose like there is not in the
+world, and whatsoever messenger goeth to demand her in marriage,
+her father slayeth him. Now our king hath no knowledge of this;
+so, come, let us foregather with him and bring up the talk of
+her. When his heart is taken with her, we will counsel him to
+despatch Abou Temam to seek her hand in marriage; whereupon her
+father will slay him and we shall be quit of him, for we have had
+enough of his affair."
+
+Accordingly, they all went in to the king one day (and Abou Temam
+was present among them,) and mentioned the affair of the damsel,
+the king's daughter of the Turks, and enlarged upon her charms,
+till the king's heart was taken with her and he said to them, 'We
+will send one to demand her in marriage for us; but who shall be
+our messenger?' Quoth the viziers, 'There is none for this
+business but Abou Temam, by reason of his wit and good breeding;'
+and the king said, 'Indeed, even as ye say, none is fitting for
+this affair but he.' Then he turned to Abou Temam and said to
+him, 'Wilt thou not go with my message and seek me [in marriage]
+the king's daughter of the Turks?' and he answered, 'Hearkening
+and obedience, O king.'
+
+So they made ready his affair and the king conferred on him a
+dress of honour, and he took with him a present and a letter
+under the king's hand and setting out, fared on till he came to
+the [capital] city of Turkestan. When the king of the Turks knew
+of his coming, he despatched his officers to receive him and
+entreated him with honour and lodged him as befitted his rank.
+Then he entertained him three days, after which he summoned him
+to his presence and Abou Temam went in to him and prostrating
+himself before him, as beseemeth unto kings, laid the present
+before him and gave him the letter.
+
+The king read the letter and said to Abou Temam, "We will do what
+behoveth in the matter; but, O Abou Temam, needs must thou see my
+daughter and she thee, and needs must thou hear her speech and
+she thine.' So saying, he sent him to the lodging of the
+princess, who had had notice of this; so that they had adorned
+her sitting-chamber with the costliest that might be of utensils
+of gold and silver and the like, and she seated herself on a
+throne of gold, clad in the most sumptuous of royal robes and
+ornaments. When Abou Temam entered, he bethought himself and
+said, 'The wise say, he who restraineth his sight shall suffer no
+evil and he who guardeth his tongue shall hear nought of foul,
+and he who keepeth watch over his hand, it shall be prolonged and
+not curtailed.'[FN#121] So he entered and seating himself on the
+ground, [cast down his eyes and] covered his hands and feet with
+his dress.[FN#122] Quoth the king's daughter to him, 'Lift thy
+head, O Abou Temam, and look on me and speak with me.' But he
+spoke not neither raised his head, and she continued, 'They sent
+thee but that thou mightest look on me and speak with me, and
+behold, thou speakest not at all. Take of these pearls that be
+around thee and of these jewels and gold and silver. But he put
+not forth his hand unto aught, and when she saw that he paid no
+heed to anything, she was angry and said, 'They have sent me a
+messenger, blind, dumb and deaf.'
+
+Then she sent to acquaint her father with this; whereupon the
+king called Abou Temam to him and said to him, 'Thou camest not
+but to see my daughter. Why, then, hast thou not looked upon
+her?' Quoth Abou Temam, 'I saw everything.' And the king said,
+'Why didst thou not take somewhat of that which thou sawest of
+jewels and the like? For they were set for thee.' But he
+answered, 'It behoveth me not to put out my hand to aught that is
+not mine.' When the king heard his speech, he gave him a
+sumptuous dress of honour and loved him exceedingly and said to
+him, 'Come, look at this pit.' So Abou Temam went up [to the
+mouth of the pit] and looked, and behold, it was full of heads of
+men; and the king said to him, 'These are the heads of
+ambassadors, whom I slew, for that I saw them without loyalty to
+their masters, and I was used, whenas I saw an ambassador without
+breeding, [FN#123] to say, "He who sent him is less of breeding
+than he, for that the messenger is the tongue of him who sendeth
+him and his breeding is of his master's breeding; and whoso is on
+this wise, it befitteth not that he be akin to me."[FN#124] So,
+because of this, I used to put the messengers to death; but, as
+for thee, thou hast overcome us and won my daughter, of the
+excellence of thy breeding; so be of good heart, for she is thy
+master's.' Then he sent him back to king Ilan Shah with presents
+and rarities and a letter, saying, 'This that I have done is in
+honour of thee and of thine ambassador.'
+
+When Abou Temam returned with [news of] the accomplishment of his
+errand and brought the presents and the letter, King Ilan Shah
+rejoiced in this and redoubled in showing him honour and made
+much of him. Some days thereafterward, the king of Turkestan sent
+his daughter and she went in to King Ilan Shah, who rejoiced in
+her with an exceeding joy and Abou Temam's worth was exalted in
+his sight. When the viziers saw this, they redoubled in envy and
+despite and said, 'An we contrive us not a device to rid us of
+this man, we shall perish of rage.' So they bethought them [and
+agreed upon] a device they should practise.
+
+Then they betook themselves to two boys affected to the [special]
+service of the king, who slept not but on their knee,[FN#125] and
+they lay at his head, for that they were his pages of the
+chamber, and gave them each a thousand dinars of gold, saying,
+'We desire of you that ye do somewhat for us and take this gold
+as a provision against your occasion.' Quoth the boys, 'What is
+it ye would have us do?' And the viziers answered, 'This Abou
+Temam hath marred our affairs for us, and if his case abide on
+this wise, he will estrange us all from the king's favour; and
+what we desire of you is that, when ye are alone with the king
+and he leaneth back, as he were asleep, one of you say to his
+fellow, "Verily, the king hath taken Abou Temam into his especial
+favour and hath advanced him to high rank with him, yet is he a
+transgressor against the king's honour and an accursed one." Then
+let the other of you ask, "And what is his transgression?" And
+the first make answer, "He outrageth the king's honour and saith,
+'The King of Turkestan was used, whenas one went to him to seek
+his daughter in marriage, to slay him; but me he spared, for that
+she took a liking to me, and by reason of this he sent her
+hither, because she loved me.'" Then let his fellow say, "Knowest
+thou this for truth?" And the other reply, "By Allah, this is
+well known unto all the folk, but, of their fear of the king,
+they dare not bespeak him thereof; and as often as the king is
+absent a-hunting or on a journey, Abou Temam comes to her and is
+private with her."' And the boys answered, 'We will say this.'
+
+Accordingly, one night, when they were alone with the king and he
+leant back, as he were asleep, they said these words and the king
+heard it all and was like to die of rage and said in himself,
+'These are young boys, not come to years of discretion, and have
+no intrigue with any; and except they had heard these words from
+some one, they had not spoken with each other thereof.' When it
+was morning, wrath overmastered him, so that he stayed not
+neither deliberated, but summoned Abou Temam and taking him
+apart, said to him, 'Whoso guardeth not his lord's
+honour,[FN#126] what behoveth unto him?' Quoth Abou Temam, 'It
+behoveth that his lord guard not his honour.' 'And whoso entereth
+the king's house and playeth the traitor with him,' continued the
+king, 'what behoveth unto him?' And Abou Temam answered, 'He
+shall not be left on life.' Whereupon the king spat in his face
+and said to him, 'Both these things hast thou done.' Then he drew
+his dagger on him in haste and smiting him in the belly, slit it
+and he died forthright; whereupon the king dragged him to a well
+that was in his palace and cast him therein.
+
+After he had slain him, he fell into repentance and mourning and
+chagrin waxed upon him, and none, who questioned him, would he
+acquaint with the cause thereof, nor, of his love for his wife,
+did he tell her of this, and whenas she asked him of [the cause
+of] his grief, he answered her not. When the viziers knew of Abou
+Temam's death, they rejoiced with an exceeding joy and knew that
+the king's grief arose from regret for him. As for Ilan Shah, he
+used, after this, to betake himself by night to the
+sleeping-chamber of the two boys and spy upon them, so he might
+hear what they said concerning his wife. As he stood one night
+privily at the door of their chamber, he saw them spread out the
+gold before them and play with it and heard one of them say, 'Out
+on us! What doth this gold profit us? For that we cannot buy
+aught therewith neither spend it upon ourselves. Nay, but we have
+sinned against Abou Temam and done him to death unjustly.' And
+the other answered, 'Had we known that the king would presently
+kill him, we had not done what we did.'
+
+When the king heard this, he could not contain himself, but
+rushed in upon them and said to them, 'Out on you! What did ye?
+Tell me.' And they said, 'Pardon, O king.' Quoth he, 'An ye would
+have pardon from God and me, it behoveth you to tell me the
+truth, for nothing shall save you from me but truth-speaking.' So
+they prostrated themselves before him and said, 'By Allah, O
+king, the viziers gave us this gold and taught us to lie against
+Abou Teman, so thou mightest put him to death, and what we said
+was their words.' When the king heard this, he plucked at his
+beard, till he was like to tear it up by the roots and bit upon
+his fingers, till he well-nigh sundered them in twain, for
+repentance and sorrow that he had wrought hastily and had not
+delayed with Abou Temam, so he might look into his affair.
+
+Then he sent for the viziers and said to them, 'O wicked viziers,
+ye thought that God was heedless of your deed, but your
+wickedness shall revert upon you. Know ye not that whoso diggeth
+a pit for his brother shall fall into it? Take from me the
+punishment of this world and to-morrow ye shall get the
+punishment of the world to come and requital from God.' Then he
+bade put them to death; so [the headsman] smote off their heads
+before the king, and he went in to his wife and acquainted her
+with that wherein he had transgressed against Abou Temam;
+whereupon she grieved for him with an exceeding grief and the
+king and the people of his household left not weeping and
+repenting all their lives. Moreover, they brought Abou Temam
+forth of the well and the king built him a dome[FN#127] in his
+palace and buried him therein.
+
+See, then, O august king," continued the youth, "what envy doth
+and injustice and how God caused the viziers' malice revert upon
+their own necks; and I trust in God that He will succour me
+against all who envy me my favour with the king and show forth
+the truth unto him. Indeed, I fear not for my life from death;
+only I fear lest the king repent of my slaughter, for that I am
+guiltless of offence, and if I knew that I were guilty of aught,
+my tongue would be mute."
+
+When the king heard this, he bowed [his head] in perplexity and
+confusion and said, "Carry him back to the prison till the
+morrow, so we may look into his affair."
+
+ The Ninth Day
+
+
+
+ OF DESTINY OR THAT WHICH IS WRITTEN ON THE
+ FOREHEAD.
+
+
+
+When it was the ninth day, the viziers [foregathered and] said,
+one to another, "Verily, this youth baffleth us, for as often as
+the king is minded to put him to death, he beguileth him and
+ensorcelleth him with a story; so what deem ye we should do, that
+we may slay him and be at rest from him?" Then they took counsel
+together and were of accord that they should go to the king's
+wife [and prompt her to urge the king to slaughter the youth. So
+they betook themselves to her] and said to her, "Thou art
+heedless of this affair wherein thou art and this heedlessness
+will not profit thee; whilst the king is occupied with eating and
+drinking and diversion and forgetteth that the folk beat upon
+tabrets and sing of thee and say, 'The king's wife loveth the
+youth;' and what while he abideth on life, the talk will increase
+and not diminish." Quoth she, "By Allah, it was ye set me on
+against him, and what shall I do [now]?" And they answered, "Do
+thou go in to the king and weep and say to him, 'Verily, the
+women come to me and tell me that I am become a byword in the
+city, and what is thine advantage in the sparing of this youth?
+If thou wilt not slay him, slay me, so this talk may be estopped
+from us.'"
+
+So she arose and tearing her clothes, went in to the king, in the
+presence of the viziers, and cast herself upon him, saying, "O
+king, falleth my shame not upon thee and fearest thou not
+reproach? Indeed, this is not of the behoof of kings that their
+jealousy over their women should be thus [laggard]. Thou art
+heedless and all the folk of the realm prate of thee, men and
+women. So either slay him, that the talk may be cut off, or slay
+me, if thy soul will not consent to his slaughter." Thereupon the
+king's wrath waxed hot and he said to her, "I have no pleasure in
+his continuance [on life] and needs must I slay him this day. So
+return to thy house and comfort thy heart."
+
+Then he bade fetch the youth; so they brought him before him and
+the viziers said, "O base of origin, out on thee! Thy term is at
+hand and the earth hungereth for thy body, so it may devour it."
+But he answered them, saying, "Death is not in your word nor in
+your envy; nay, it is an ordinance written upon the forehead;
+wherefore, if aught be written upon my forehead, needs must it
+come to pass, and neither endeavour nor thought-taking nor
+precaution will deliver me therefrom; [but it will surely happen]
+even as happened to King Ibrahim and his son." Quoth the king,
+"Who was King Ibrahim and who was his son?" And the youth said,
+"O king,
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF KING IBRAHIM AND HIS SON.
+
+
+
+There was once a king of the kings, by name Ibrahim, to whom the
+kings abased themselves and did obedience; but he had no son and
+was straitened of breast because of this, fearing lest the
+kingship go forth of his hand. He ceased not vehemently to desire
+a son and to buy slave-girls and lie with them, till one of them
+conceived, whereat he rejoiced with an exceeding joy and gave
+gifts and largesse galore. When the girl's months were
+accomplished and the season of her delivery drew near, the king
+summoned the astrologers and they watched for the hour of her
+child-bearing and raised astrolabes [towards the sun] and took
+strait note of the time. The damsel gave birth to a male child,
+whereat the king rejoiced with an exceeding joy, and the people
+heartened each other with the glad news of this.
+
+Then the astrologers made their calculations and looked into his
+nativity and his ascendant, whereupon their colour changed and
+they were confounded. Quoth the king to them, 'Acquaint me with
+his horoscope and ye shall have assurance and fear ye not of
+aught' 'O king,' answered they, 'this child's nativity denotes
+that, in the seventh year of his age, there is to be feared for
+him from a lion, which will attack him; and if he be saved from
+the lion, there will betide an affair yet sorer and more
+grievous.' 'What is that?' asked the king; and they said, 'We
+will not speak, except the king command us thereto and give us
+assurance from [that which we] fear.' Quoth the king, 'God assure
+you!' And they said, 'If he be saved from the lion, the king's
+destruction will be at his hand.' When the king heard this, his
+colour changed and his breast was straitened; but he said in
+himself, 'I will be watchful and do my endeavour and suffer not
+the lion to eat him. It cannot be that he will kill me, and
+indeed the astrologers lied.'
+
+Then he caused rear him among the nurses and matrons; but withal
+he ceased not to ponder the saying of the astrologers and indeed
+his life was troubled. So he betook himself to the top of a high
+mountain and dug there a deep pit and made in it many
+dwelling-places and closets and filled it with all that was
+needful of victual and raiment and what not else and made in it
+conduits of water from the mountain and lodged the boy therein,
+with a nurse who should rear him. Moreover, at the first of each
+month he used to go to the mountain and stand at the mouth of the
+pit and let down a rope he had with him and draw up the boy to
+him and strain him to his bosom and kiss him and play with him
+awhile, after which he would let him down again into the pit to
+his place and return; and he used to count the days till the
+seven years should pass by.
+
+When came the time [of the accomplishment] of the foreordered
+fate and the fortune graven on the forehead and there abode for
+the boy but ten days till the seven years should be complete,
+there came to the mountain hunters hunting wild beasts and seeing
+a lion, gave chase to him. He fled from them and seeking refuge
+in the mountain, fell into the pit in its midst. The nurse saw
+him forthright and fled from him into one of the closets;
+whereupon the lion made for the boy and seizing upon him, tore
+his shoulder, after which he sought the closet wherein was the
+nurse and falling upon her, devoured her, whilst the boy abode
+cast down in a swoon. Meanwhile, when the hunters saw that the
+lion had fallen into the pit, they came to the mouth thereof and
+heard the shrieking of the boy and the woman; and after awhile
+the cries ceased, whereby they knew that the lion had made an end
+of them.
+
+Presently, as they stood by the mouth of the pit, the lion came
+scrambling up the sides and would have issued forth; but, as
+often as he showed his head, they pelted him with stones, till
+they beat him down and he fell; whereupon one of the hunters
+descended into the pit and despatched him and saw the boy
+wounded; after which he went to the cabinet, where he found the
+woman dead, and indeed the lion had eaten his fill of her. Then
+he noted that which was therein of clothes and what not else, and
+advising his fellows thereof, fell to passing the stuff up to
+them. Moreover, he took up the boy and bringing him forth of the
+pit, carried him to their dwelling-place, where they dressed his
+wounds and he grew up with them, but acquainted them not with his
+affair; and indeed, when they questioned him, he knew not what he
+should say, for that he was little, when they let him down into
+the pit. The hunters marvelled at his speech and loved him with
+an exceeding love and one of them took him to son and abode
+rearing him with him [and instructing him] in hunting and riding
+on horseback, till he attained the age of twelve and became a
+champion, going forth with the folk to the chase and to the
+stopping of the way.
+
+It chanced one day that they sallied forth to stop the way and
+fell in upon a caravan in the night; but the people of the
+caravan were on their guard; so they joined battle with the
+robbers and overcame them and slew them and the boy fell wounded
+and abode cast down in that place till the morrow, when he opened
+his eyes and finding his comrades slain, lifted himself up and
+rose to walk in the way. Presently, there met him a man, a
+treasure-seeker, and said to him, 'Whither goest thou, O youth?'
+So he told him what had betided him and the other said, 'Be of
+good heart, for that [the season of] thy fair fortune is come and
+God bringeth thee joy and solace. I am one who am in quest of a
+hidden treasure, wherein is vast wealth. So come with me, that
+thou mayst help me, and I will give thee wealth, wherewith thou
+shalt provide thyself thy life long.' Then he carried the youth
+to his dwelling and dressed his wound, and he abode with him some
+days, till he was rested; when he took him and two beasts and all
+that he needed, and they fared on till they came to a precipitous
+mountain.
+
+Here the treasure-seeker brought out a book and reading therein,
+dug in the crest of the mountain five cubits deep, whereupon
+there appeared to him a stone. He pulled it up and behold, it was
+a trap-door covering the mouth of a pit. So he waited till the
+[foul] air was come forth from the midst of the pit, when he
+bound a rope about the boy's middle and let him down to the
+bottom, and with him a lighted flambeau. The boy looked and
+beheld, at the upper end of the pit, wealth galore; so the
+treasure-seeker let down a rope and a basket and the boy fell to
+filling and the man to drawing up, till the latter had gotten his
+sufficiency, when he loaded his beasts and did his occasion,
+whilst the boy looked for him to let down to him the rope and
+draw him up; but he rolled a great stone to the mouth of the pit
+and went away.
+
+When the boy saw what the treasure-seeker had done with him he
+committed his affair to God (extolled be His perfection and
+exalted be He!) and abode perplexed concerning his case and said,
+'How bitter is this death!' For that indeed the world was
+darkened on him and the pit was blinded to him. So he fell
+a-weeping and saying, 'I was delivered from the lion and the
+thieves and now is my death [appointed to be] in this pit, where
+I shall die lingeringly.' And he abode confounded and looked for
+nothing but death. As he pondered [his affair], behold, he heard
+a sound of water running with a mighty noise; so he arose and
+walked in the pit, following after the sound, till he came to a
+corner and heard the mighty running of water. So he laid his ear
+to the sound of the current and hearing it a great strength, said
+in himself, 'This is the running of a mighty water and needs must
+I die in this place, be it to-day or to-morrow; so I will cast
+myself into the water and not die a lingering death in this pit.'
+
+Then he braced up his courage and gathering his skirts about him,
+threw himself into the water, and it bore him along with an
+exceeding might and carrying him under the earth, stayed not till
+it brought him out into a deep valley, wherethrough ran a great
+river, that welled up from under the earth. When he found himself
+on the surface of the earth, he abode perplexed and dazed all
+that day; after which he came to himself and rising, fared on
+along the valley, till he came to an inhabited land and a great
+village in the dominions of the king his father. So he entered
+the village and foregathered with its inhabitants, who questioned
+him of his case; whereupon he related to them his history and
+they marvelled at him, how God had delivered him from all this.
+Then he took up his abode with them and they loved him
+exceedingly.
+
+To return to the king his father. When he went to the pit, as of
+his wont, and called the nurse, she returned him no answer,
+whereat his breast was straitened and he let down a man who
+[found the nurse dead and the boy gone and] acquainted the king
+therewith; which when he heard, he buffeted his head and wept
+passing sore and descended into the midst of the pit, so he might
+see how the case stood. There he found the nurse slain and the
+lion dead, but saw not the boy; so he [returned and] acquainted
+the astrologers with the verification of their words, and they
+said, 'O king, the lion hath eaten him; destiny hath been
+accomplished upon him and thou art delivered from his hand; for,
+had he been saved from the lion, by Allah, we had feared for thee
+from him, for that the king's destruction should have been at his
+hand.' So the king left [sorrowing for] this and the days passed
+by and the affair was forgotten.
+
+Meanwhile, the boy [grew up and] abode with the people of the
+village, and when God willed the accomplishment of His ordinance,
+the which endeavour availeth not to avert, he went forth with a
+company of the villagers, to stop the way. The folk complained of
+them to the king, who sallied out with a company of his men and
+surrounded the highwaymen and the boy with them, whereupon the
+latter drew forth an arrow and launched it at them, and it smote
+the king in his vitals and wounded him. So they carried him to
+his house, after they had laid hands upon the youth and his
+companions and brought them before the king, saying, 'What
+biddest thou that we do with them?' Quoth he, 'I am presently in
+concern for myself; so bring me the astrologers.' Accordingly,
+they brought them before him and He said to them, 'Ye told me
+that my death should be by slaying at the hand of my son: how,
+then, befalleth it that I have gotten my death-wound on this wise
+of yonder thieves?' The astrologers marvelled and said to him, 'O
+king, it is not impossible to the lore of the stars, together
+with the fore-ordinance of God, that he who hath smitten thee
+should be thy son.'
+
+When Ibrahim heard this, he let fetch the thieves and said to
+them, 'Tell me truly, which of you shot the arrow that wounded
+me.' Quoth they, 'It was this youth that is with us.' Whereupon
+the king fell to looking upon him and said to him, 'O youth,
+acquaint me with thy case and tell me who was thy father and thou
+shalt have assurance from God.' 'O my lord,' answered the youth,
+'I know no father; as for me, my father lodged me in a pit [when
+I was little], with a nurse to rear me, and one day, there fell
+in upon us a lion, which tore my shoulder, then left me and
+occupied himself with the nurse and rent her in pieces; and God
+vouchsafed me one who brought me forth of the pit.' Then he
+related to him all that had befallen him, first and last; which
+when Ibrahim heard, he cried out and said, 'By Allah, this is my
+very son!' And he said to him, 'Uncover thy shoulder.' So he
+uncovered it and behold, it was scarred.
+
+Then the king assembled his nobles and commons and the
+astrologers and said to them, 'Know that what God hath graven
+upon the forehead, be it fair fortune or calamity, none may avail
+to efface, and all that is decreed unto a man he must needs
+abide. Indeed, this my caretaking and my endeavour profited me
+nought, for that which God decreed unto my son, he hath abidden
+and that which He decreed unto me hath betided me. Nevertheless,
+I praise God and thank Him for that this was at my son's hand and
+not at the hand of another, and praised be He for that the
+kingship is come to my son!' And he strained the youth to his
+breast and embraced him and kissed him, saying, 'O my son, this
+matter was on such a wise, and of my care and watchfulness over
+thee from destiny, I lodged thee in that pit; but caretaking
+availed not.' Then he took the crown of the kingship and set it
+on his son's head and caused the folk and the people swear fealty
+to him and commended the subjects to his care and enjoined him to
+justice and equity. And he took leave of him that night and died
+and his son reigned in his stead.
+
+On like wise, O king," continued the young treasurer, "is it with
+thee. If God have written aught on my forehead, needs must it
+befall me and my speech to the king shall not profit me, no, nor
+my adducing to him of [illustrative] instances, against the
+fore-ordinance of God. So with these viziers, for all their
+eagerness and endeavour for my destruction, this shall not profit
+them; for, if God [be minded to] save me, He will give me the
+victory over them."
+
+When the king heard these words, he abode in perplexity and said,
+"Restore him to the prison till the morrow, so we may look into
+his affair, for the day draweth to an end and I mean to put him
+to death on exemplary wise, and [to-morrow] we will do with him
+that which he meriteth."
+
+ The Tenth Day.
+
+
+
+ OF THE APPOINTED TERM,[FN#128] WHICH, IF IT BE
+ ADVANCED, MAY NOT BE DEFERRED AND IF IT BE
+ DEFERRED, MAY NOT BE ADVANCED.
+
+
+
+When it was the tenth day, (now this day was called El
+Mihrjan[FN#129] and it was the day of the coming in of the folk,
+gentle and simple, to the king, so they might give him joy and
+salute him and go forth), the counsel of the viziers fell of
+accord that they should speak with a company of the notables of
+the city [and urge them to demand of the king that he should
+presently put the youth to death]. So they said to them, "When ye
+go in to-day to the king and salute him, do ye say to him, 'O
+king, (to God be the praise!) thou art praiseworthy of policy and
+governance, just to all thy subjects; but this youth, to whom
+thou hast been bountiful, yet hath he reverted to his base origin
+and wrought this foul deed, what is thy purpose in his
+continuance [on life]? Indeed, thou hast prisoned him in thy
+house, and every day thou hearest his speech and thou knowest not
+what the folk say.'" And they answered with "Hearkening and
+obedience."
+
+So, when they entered with the folk and had prostrated themselves
+before the king and given him joy and he had raised their rank,
+[they sat down]. Now it was the custom of the folk to salute and
+go forth, so, when they sat down, the king knew that they had a
+word that they would fain say. So he turned to them and said,
+"Ask your need." And the viziers also were present. Accordingly,
+they bespoke him with all that these latter had taught them and
+the viziers also spoke with them; and Azadbekht said to them, "O
+folk, I know that this your speech, there is no doubt of it,
+proceedeth from love and loyal counsel to me, and ye know that,
+were I minded to slay half these folk, I could avail to put them
+to death and this would not be difficult to me; so how shall I
+not slay this youth and he in my power and under the grip of my
+hand? Indeed, his crime is manifest and he hath incurred pain of
+death and I have only deferred his slaughter by reason of the
+greatness of the offence; for, if I do this with him and my proof
+against him be strengthened, my heart is healed and the heart of
+the folk; and if I slay him not to-day, his slaughter shall not
+escape me to-morrow."
+
+Then he bade fetch the youth and when he was present before him,
+he prostrated himself to him and prayed for him; whereupon quoth
+the king to him, "Out on thee! How long shall the folk upbraid me
+on thine account and blame me for delaying thy slaughter? Even
+the people of my city blame me because of thee, so that I am
+grown a talking-stock among them, and indeed they come in to me
+and upbraid me [and urge me] to put thee to death. How long shall
+I delay this? Indeed, this very day I mean to shed thy blood and
+rid the folk of thy prate."
+
+"O king," answered the youth, "if there have betided thee talk
+because of me, by Allah, by Allah the Great, those who have
+brought on thee this talk from the folk are these wicked viziers,
+who devise with the folk and tell them foul things and evil
+concerning the king's house; but I trust in God that He will
+cause their malice to revert upon their heads. As for the king's
+menace of me with slaughter, I am in the grasp of his hand; so
+let not the king occupy his mind with my slaughter, for that I am
+like unto the sparrow in the hand of the fowler; if he will, he
+slaughtereth him, and if he will, he looseth him. As for the
+delaying of my slaughter, it [proceedeth] not [from] the king,
+but from Him in whose hand is my life; for, by Allah, O king, if
+God willed my slaughter, thou couldst not avail to postpone it,
+no, not for a single hour. Indeed, man availeth not to fend off
+evil from himself, even as it was with the son of King Suleiman
+Shah, whose anxiety and carefulness for the accomplishment of his
+desire of the new-born child [availed him nothing], for his last
+hour was deferred how many a time! and God saved him until he had
+accomplished his [foreordained] period and had fulfilled [the
+destined term of] his life."
+
+"Out on thee!" exclaimed the king. "How great is thy craft and
+thy talk! Tell me, what was their story." And the youth said, "O
+king,
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF KING SULEIMAN SHAH AND HIS SONS.
+
+
+
+There was once a king named Suleiman Shah, who was goodly of
+polity and judgment, and he had a brother who died and left a
+daughter. So Suleiman Shah reared her on the goodliest wise and
+the girl grew up, endowed with reason and perfection, nor was
+there in her time a fairer than she. Now the king had two sons,
+one of whom he had appointed in himself that he would marry her
+withal, and the other purposed in himself that he would take her.
+The elder son's name was Belehwan and that of the younger Melik
+Shah, and the girl was called Shah Khatoun.
+
+One day, King Suleiman Shah went in to his brother's daughter and
+kissing her head, said to her, 'Thou art my daughter and dearer
+to me than a child, for the love of thy father deceased;
+wherefore I am minded to marry thee to one of my sons and appoint
+him my heir apparent, so he may be king after me. Look, then,
+which thou wilt have of my sons, for that thou hast been reared
+with them and knowest them.' The damsel arose and kissing his
+hand, said to him, 'O my lord, I am thine handmaid and thou art
+the ruler over me; so whatsoever pleaseth thee, do, for that thy
+wish is higher and more honourable and nobler [than mine] and if
+thou wouldst have me serve thee, [as a handmaid], the rest of my
+life, it were liefer to me than any [husband].'
+
+The king approved her speech and bestowed on her a dress of
+honour and gave her magnificent gifts; after which, for that his
+choice had fallen upon his younger son, Melik Shah, he married
+her with him and made him his heir apparent and caused the folk
+swear fealty to him. When this came to the knowledge of his
+brother Belehwan and he was ware that his younger brother had
+been preferred over him, his breast was straitened and the affair
+was grievous to him and envy entered into him and rancour; but he
+concealed this in his heart, whilst fire raged therein because of
+the damsel and the kingship.
+
+Meanwhile Shah Khatoun went in to the king's son and conceived by
+him and bore a son, as he were the resplendent moon. When
+Belehwan saw this that had betided his brother, jealousy and envy
+overcame him; so he went in one night to his father's house and
+coming to his brother's lodging, saw the nurse sleeping at the
+chamber-door, with the cradle before her and therein his
+brother's child asleep. Belehwan stood by him and fell to looking
+upon his face, the radiance whereof was as that of the moon, and
+Satan insinuated himself into his heart, so that he bethought
+himself and said, 'Why is not this child mine? Indeed, I am
+worthier of him than my brother, [yea], and of the damsel and the
+kingship.' Then envy got the better of him and anger spurred him,
+so that he took out a knife and setting it to the child's gullet,
+cut his throat and would have severed his windpipe.
+
+So he left him for dead and entering his brother's chamber, saw
+him asleep, with the damsel by his side, and thought to slay her,
+but said in himself, 'I will leave the damsel for myself.' Then
+he went up to his brother and cutting his throat, severed his
+head from his body, after which he left him and went away.
+Therewithal the world was straitened upon him and his life was a
+light matter to him and he sought his father Suleiman Shah's
+lodging, that he might slay him, but could not win to him. So he
+went forth from the palace and hid himself in the city till the
+morrow, when he repaired to one of his father's strengths and
+fortified himself therein.
+
+Meanwhile, the nurse awoke, that she might give the child suck,
+and seeing the bed running with blood, cried out; whereupon the
+sleepers and the king awoke and making for the place, found the
+child with his throat cut and the cradle running over with blood
+and his father slain and dead in his sleeping chamber. So they
+examined the child and found life in him and his windpipe whole
+and sewed up the place of the wound. Then the king sought his son
+Belehwan, but found him not and saw that he had fled; whereby he
+knew that it was he who had done this deed, and this was grievous
+to the king and to the people of his realm and to the lady Shah
+Katoun. So the king laid out his son Melik Shah and buried him
+and made him a mighty funeral and they mourned passing sore;
+after which he addressed himself to the rearing of the infant
+
+As for Belehwan, when he fled and fortified himself, his power
+waxed amain and there remained for him but to make war upon his
+father, who had cast his affection upon the child and used to
+rear him on his knees and supplicate God the Most High that he
+might live, so he might commit the commandment to him. When he
+came to five years of age, the king mounted him on horseback and
+the people of the city rejoiced in him and invoked on him length
+of life, so he might take his father's leavings[FN#130] and
+[heal] the heart of his grandfather.
+
+Meanwhile, Belehwan the froward addressed himself to pay court to
+Caesar, King of the Greeks,[FN#131] and seek help of him in
+making war upon his father, and he inclined unto him and gave him
+a numerous army. His father the king heard of this and sent to
+Caesar, saying, 'O king of illustrious might, succour not an
+evil-doer. This is my son and he hath done thus and thus and cut
+his brother's throat and that of his brother's son in the
+cradle.' But he told not the King of the Greeks that the child
+[had recovered and] was alive. When Caesar heard [the truth] of
+the matter, it was grievous to him and he sent back to Suleiman
+Shah, saying, 'If it be thy will, O king, I will cut off his head
+and send it to thee.' But he made answer, saying, 'I reck not of
+him: the reward of his deed and his crimes shall surely overtake
+him, if not to-day, then to-morrow.' And from that day he
+continued to correspond with Caesar and to exchange letters and
+presents with him.
+
+Now the king of the Greeks heard tell of the damsel[FN#132] and
+of the beauty and grace wherewith she was gifted, wherefore his
+heart clave to her and he sent to seek her in marriage of
+Suleiman Shah, who could not refuse him. So he arose and going in
+to Shah Khatoun, said to her, 'O my daughter, the king of the
+Greeks hath sent to me to seek thee in marriage. What sayst
+thou?' She wept and answered, saying, 'O king, how canst thou
+find it in thy heart to bespeak me thus? Abideth there husband
+for me, after the son of my uncle?' 'O my daughter,' rejoined the
+king, 'it is indeed as thou sayest; but let us look to the issues
+of affairs. Needs must I take account of death, for that I am an
+old man and fear not but for thee and for thy little son; and
+indeed I have written to the king of the Greeks and others of the
+kings and said, "His uncle slew him," and said not that he [hath
+recovered and] is living, but concealed his affair. Now hath the
+king of the Greeks sent to demand thee in marriage, and this is
+no thing to be refused and fain would we have our back
+strengthened with him."[FN#133] And she was silent and spoke not.
+
+So King Suleiman Shah made answer unto Caesar with 'Hearkening
+and obedience.' Then he arose and despatched her to him, and
+Cassar went in to her and found her overpassing the description
+wherewithal they had described her to him; wherefore he loved her
+with an exceeding love and preferred her over all his women and
+his love for Suleiman Shah was magnified; but Shah Khatoun's
+heart still clave to her son and she could say nought. As for
+Suleiman Shah's rebellious son, Belehwan, when he saw that Shah
+Khatoun had married the king of the Greeks, this was grievous to
+him and he despaired of her. Meanwhile, his father Suleiman Shah
+kept strait watch over the child and cherished him and named him
+Melik Shah, after the name of his father. When he reached the age
+of ten, he made the folk swear fealty to him and appointed him
+his heir apparent, and after some days, [the hour of] the old
+king's admission [to the mercy of God] drew near and he died.
+
+Now a party of the troops had banded themselves together for
+Belehwan; so they sent to him and bringing him privily, went in
+to the little Melik Shah and seized him and seated his uncle
+Belehwan on the throne of the kingship. Then they proclaimed him
+king and did homage to him all, saying, 'Verily, we desire thee
+and deliver to thee the throne of the kingship; but we wish of
+thee that thou slay not thy brother's son, for that on our
+consciences are the oaths we swore to his father and grandfather
+and the covenants we made with them.' So Belehwan granted them
+this and imprisoned the boy in an underground dungeon and
+straitened him. Presently, the heavy news reached his mother and
+this was grievous to her; but she could not speak and committed
+her affair to God the Most High, daring not name this to King
+Caesar her husband, lest she should make her uncle King Suleiman
+Shah a liar.
+
+So Belehwan the froward abode king in his father's room and his
+affairs prospered, what while the young Melik Shah lay in the
+underground dungeon four full-told years, till his charms faded
+and his favour changed. When God (extolled be His perfection and
+exalted be He!) willed to relieve him and bring him forth of the
+prison, Belehwan sat one day with his chief officers and the
+grandees of his state and discoursed with them of the story of
+King Suleiman Shah and what was in his heart. Now there were
+present certain viziers, men of worth, and they said to him, 'O
+king, verily God hath been bountiful unto thee and hath brought
+thee to thy wish, so that thou art become king in thy father's
+stead and hast gotten thee that which thou soughtest. But, as for
+this boy, there is no guilt in him, for that, from the day of his
+coming into the world, he hath seen neither ease nor joyance, and
+indeed his favour is faded and his charms changed [with long
+prison]. What is his offence that he should merit this
+punishment? Indeed, it is others than he who were to blame, and
+God hath given thee the victory over them, and there is no fault
+in this poor wight.' Quoth Belehwan, 'Indeed, it is as ye say;
+but I am fearful of his craft and am not assured from his
+mischief; belike the most part of the folk will incline unto
+him.' 'O king,' answered they, 'what is this boy and what power
+hath he? If thou fear him, send him to one of the frontiers.' And
+Belehwan said, 'Ye say sooth: we will send him to be captain over
+such an one of the marches.'
+
+Now over against the place in question was a host of enemies,
+hard of heart, and in this he purposed the youth's slaughter. So
+he bade bring him forth of the underground dungeon and caused him
+draw near to him and saw his case. Then he bestowed on him a
+dress of honour and the folk rejoiced in this. Moreover, he tied
+him an ensign[FN#134] and giving him a numerous army, despatched
+him to the region aforesaid, whither all who went were still
+slain or made prisoners. So Melik Shah betook himself thither
+with his army and when it was one of the days, behold, the enemy
+fell in upon them in the night; whereupon some of his men fled
+and the rest the enemy took; and they took Melik Shah also and
+cast him into an underground dungeon, with a company of his men.
+There he abode a whole year in evil plight, whilst his fellows
+mourned over his beauty and grace.
+
+Now it was the enemy's wont, at every year's end, to bring forth
+their prisoners and cast them down from the top of the citadel to
+the bottom. So they brought them forth, at the end of the year,
+and cast them down, and Melik Shah with them. However, he fell
+upon the [other] men and the earth touched him not, for his term
+was [God-]guarded. Now those that were cast down there were slain
+and their bodies ceased not to lie there till the wild beasts ate
+them and the winds dispersed them. Melik Shah abode cast down in
+his place, aswoon, all that day and night, and when he recovered
+and found himself whole, he thanked God the Most High for his
+safety [and rising, fared on at a venture]. He gave not over
+walking, unknowing whither he went and feeding upon the leaves of
+the trees; and by day he hid himself whereas he might and fared
+on all his night at hazard; and thus he did some days, till he
+came to an inhabited land and seeing folk there, accosted them
+and acquainted them with his case, giving them to know that he
+had been imprisoned in the fortress and that they had cast him
+down, but God the Most High had delivered him and brought him off
+alive.
+
+The folk took compassion on him and gave him to eat and drink and
+he abode with them awhile. Then he questioned them of the way
+that led to the kingdom of his uncle Belehwan, but told them not
+that he was his uncle. So they taught him the way and he ceased
+not to go barefoot, till he drew near his uncle's capital, and he
+naked and hungry, and indeed his body was wasted and his colour
+changed. He sat down at the gate of the city, and presently up
+came a company of King Belehwan's chief officers, who were out
+a-hunting and wished to water their horses. So they lighted down
+to rest and the youth accosted them, saying, 'I will ask you of
+somewhat, wherewith do ye acquaint me.' Quoth they, 'Ask what
+thou wilt.' And he said, 'Is King Belehwan well?' They laughed at
+him and answered, 'What a fool art thou, O youth! Thou art a
+stranger and a beggar, and what concern hast thou with the king's
+health?' Quoth he, 'Indeed, he is my uncle;' whereat they
+marvelled and said, 'It was one question[FN#135] and now it is
+become two.' Then said they to him, 'O youth, it is as thou wert
+mad. Whence pretendest thou to kinship with the king? Indeed, we
+know not that he hath aught of kinsfolk, except a brother's son,
+who was prisoned with him, and he despatched him to wage war upon
+the infidels, so that they slew him.' 'I am he,' answered Melik
+Shah, 'and they slew me not, but there betided me this and that.'
+
+They knew him forthright and rising to him, kissed his hands and
+rejoiced in him and said to him, 'O our lord, in good sooth, thou
+art a king and the son of a king, and we desire thee nought but
+good and beseech [God to grant] thee continuance. Consider how
+God hath rescued thee from this thy wicked uncle, who sent thee
+to a place whence none came ever off alive, purposing not in this
+but thy destruction; and indeed thou fellest into [peril of]
+death and God delivered thee therefrom. So how wilt thou return
+and cast thyself again into thine enemy's hand? By Allah, save
+thyself and return not to him again. Belike thou shall abide upon
+the face of the earth till it please God the Most High [to
+vouchsafe thee relief]; but, if thou fall again into his hand, he
+will not suffer thee live a single hour.'
+
+The prince thanked them and said to them, 'God requite you with
+all good, for indeed ye give me loyal counsel; but whither would
+ye have me go?' Quoth they, 'Get thee to the land of the Greeks,
+the abiding-place of thy mother.' And he said, 'My grandfather
+Suleiman Shah, when the King of the Greeks wrote to him,
+demanding my mother in marriage, concealed my affair and hid my
+secret; [and she hath done the like,] and I cannot make her a
+liar.' 'Thou sayst sooth,' rejoined they; 'but we desire thine
+advantage, and even if thou tookest service with the folk, it
+were a means of thy continuance [on life].' Then each of them
+brought out to him money and gave to him and clad him and fed him
+and fared on with him a parasang's distance till they brought him
+far from the city, and giving him to know that he was safe,
+departed from him, whilst he fared on till he came forth of the
+dominions of his uncle and entered those [of the king] of the
+Greeks. Then he entered a village and taking up his abode
+therein, betook himself to serving one there in ploughing and
+sowing and the like.
+
+As for his mother, Shah Khatoun, great was her longing for her
+son and she [still] thought of him and news of him was cut off
+from her, wherefore her life was troubled and she forswore sleep
+and could not make mention of him before King Caesar her husband.
+Now she had an eunuch who had come with her from the court of her
+uncle King Suleiman Shah, and he was intelligent, quickwitted, a
+man of good counsel. So she took him apart one day and said to
+him, 'Thou hast been my servant from my childhood to this day;
+canst thou not therefore avail to get me news of my son, for that
+I cannot speak of his matter?' 'O my lady,' answered he, 'this is
+an affair that thou hast concealed from the first, and were thy
+son here, it would not be possible for thee to harbour him, lest
+thine honour fall into suspicion with the king; for they would
+never credit thee, since the news hath been spread abroad that
+thy son was slain by his uncle.' Quoth she, 'The case is even as
+thou sayst and thou speakest truly; but, provided I know that my
+son is alive, let him be in these parts pasturing sheep and let
+me not see him nor he me.' And he said to her, 'How shall we
+contrive in this affair?' 'Here are my treasures and my wealth,'
+answered she. 'Take all thou wilt and bring me my son or else
+news of him.'
+
+Then they agreed upon a device between them, to wit, that they
+should feign an occasion in their own country, under pretext that
+she had there wealth buried from the time of her husband Melik
+Shah and that none knew of it but this eunuch who was with her,
+wherefore it behoved that he should go and fetch it. So she
+acquainted the king her husband with this and sought of him leave
+for the eunuch to go: and the king granted him permission for the
+journey and charged him cast about for a device, lest any get
+wind of him. Accordingly, the eunuch disguised himself as a
+merchant and repairing to Belehwan's city, began to enquire
+concerning the youth's case; whereupon they told him that he had
+been prisoned in an underground dungeon and that his uncle had
+released him and dispatched him to such a place, where they had
+slain him. When the eunuch heard this, it was grievous to him and
+his breast was straitened and he knew not what he should do.
+
+It chanced one day that one of the horsemen, who had fallen in
+with the young Melik Shah by the water and clad him and given him
+spending-money, saw the eunuch in the city, disguised as a
+merchant, and recognizing him, questioned him of his case and of
+[the reason of] his coming. Quoth he, 'I come to sell
+merchandise.' And the horseman said, 'I will tell thee somewhat,
+if thou canst keep it secret.' 'It is well,' answered the eunuch;
+'what is it?' And the other said, 'We met the king's son Melik
+Shah, I and certain of the Arabs who were with me, and saw him by
+such a water and gave him spending-money and sent him towards the
+land of the Greeks, near his mother, for that we feared for him,
+lest his uncle Belehwan should kill him.' Then he told him all
+that had passed between them, whereupon the eunuch's countenance
+changed and he said to the cavalier, 'Assurance!' 'Thou shalt
+have assurance,' answered the other, 'though thou come in quest
+of him.' And the eunuch rejoined, saying, 'Truly, that is my
+errand, for there abideth no repose for his mother, lying down or
+rising up, and she hath sent me to seek news of him.' Quoth the
+cavalier, 'Go in safety, for he is in a [certain] part of the
+land of the Greeks, even as I said to thee.'
+
+The eunuch thanked him and blessed him and mounting, returned
+upon his way, following the trace, whilst the cavalier rode with
+him to a certain road, when he said to him, 'This is where we
+left him.' Then he took leave of him and returned to his own
+city, whilst the eunuch fared on along the road, enquiring of the
+youth in every village he entered by the description which the
+cavalier had given him, and he ceased not to do thus till he came
+to the village where the young Melik Shah was. So he entered and
+lighting down therein, made enquiry after the prince, but none
+gave him news of him; whereat he abode perplexed concerning his
+affair and addressed himself to depart. Accordingly he mounted
+his horse [and set out homeward]; but, as he passed through the
+village, he saw a cow bound with a rope and a youth asleep by her
+side, with the end of the halter in his hand; so he looked at him
+and passed on and took no heed of him in his heart; but presently
+he stopped and said in himself; 'If he of whom I am in quest be
+come to the like [of the condition] of yonder sleeping youth, by
+whom I passed but now, how shall I know him? Alas, the length of
+my travail and weariness! How shall I go about in quest of a
+wight whom I know not and whom, if I saw him face to face, I
+should not know?'
+
+Then he turned back, pondering upon that sleeping youth, and
+coming to him, as he slept, lighted down from his horse and sat
+down by him. He fixed his eyes upon his face and considered him
+awhile and said in himself, 'For aught I know, this youth may be
+Melik Shah.' And he fell a-hemming and saying, 'Harkye, O youth!'
+Whereupon the sleeper awoke and sat up; and the eunuch said to
+him, 'Who is thy father in this village and where is thy
+dwelling?' The youth sighed and answered, 'I am a stranger;' and
+the eunuch said, 'From what land art thou and who is thy father?'
+Quoth the other, 'I am from such a land,' and the eunuch ceased
+not to question him and he to answer him, till he was certified
+of him and knew him. So he rose and embraced him and kissed him
+and wept over his case. Moreover, he told him that he was going
+about in quest of him and informed him that he was come privily
+from the king his mother's husband and that his mother would be
+content [to know] that he was alive and well, though she saw him
+not.
+
+Then he re-entered the village and buying the prince a horse,
+mounted him thereon and they ceased not going, till they came to
+the frontier of their own country, where there fell robbers upon
+them by the way and took all that was with them and pinioned
+them; after which they cast them into a pit hard by the road and
+went away and left them to die there, and indeed they had cast
+many folk into that pit and they had died.
+
+The eunuch fell a-weeping in the pit and the youth said to him,
+'What is this weeping and what shall it profit here?' Quoth the
+eunuch, 'I weep not for fear of death, but of pity for thee and
+the sorriness of thy case and because of thy mother's heart and
+for that which thou hast suffered of horrors and that thy death
+should be this abject death, after the endurance of all manner
+stresses.' But the youth said, 'That which hath betided me was
+forewrit to me and that which is written none hath power to
+efface; and if my term be advanced, none may avail to defer
+it.'[FN#136] Then they passed that night and the following day
+and the next night and the next day [in the pit], till they were
+weak with hunger and came near upon death and could but groan
+feebly.
+
+Now it befell, by the ordinance of God the Most High and His
+providence, that Caesar, king of the Greeks, the husband of Melik
+Shah's mother Shah Khatoun, [went forth to the chase that day].
+He started a head of game, he and his company, and chased it,
+till they came up with it by that pit, whereupon one of them
+lighted down from his horse, to slaughter it, hard by the mouth
+of the pit. He heard a sound of low moaning from the bottom of
+the pit} so he arose and mounting his horse, waited till the
+troops were assembled. Then he acquainted the king with this and
+he bade one of his servants [descend into the pit]. So the man
+descended and brought out the youth [and the eunuch], aswoon.
+
+They cut their bonds and poured wine into their gullets, till
+they came to themselves, when the king looked at the eunuch and
+recognizing him, said, 'Harkye, such an one!' 'Yes, O my lord the
+king,' replied the man and prostrated himself to him; whereat the
+king marvelled with an exceeding wonder and said to him, 'How
+earnest thou to this place and what hath befallen thee?" Quoth
+the eunuch, 'I went and took out the treasure and brought it
+hither; but the [evil] eye was behind me and I unknowing. So the
+thieves took us alone here and seized the money and cast us into
+this pit, so we might die of hunger, even as they had done with
+other than we; but God the Most High sent thee, in pity to us.'
+
+The king marvelled, he and his company, and praised God the Most
+High for that he had come thither; after which he turned to the
+eunuch and said to him, 'What is this youth thou hast with thee?'
+'O king,' answered he, 'this is the son of a nurse who belonged
+to us and we left him little. I saw him to-day and his mother
+said to me, 'Take him with thee.' So I brought him with me, that
+he might be a servant to the king, for that he is an adroit and
+quickwitted youth.' Then the king fared on, he and his company,
+and the eunuch and the youth with them, what while he questioned
+the former of Belehwan and his dealing with his subjects, and he
+answered, saying, 'As thy head liveth, O king, the folk with him
+are in sore straits and not one of them desireth to look on him,
+gentle or simple.'
+
+[When the king returned to his palace,] he went in to his wife
+Shah Khatoun and said to her, 'I give thee the glad news of thine
+eunuch's return.' And he told her what had betided and of the
+youth whom he had brought with him. When she heard this, her wits
+fled and she would have cried out, but her reason restrained her,
+and the king said to her, 'What is this? Art thou overcome with
+grief for [the loss of] the treasure or [for that which hath
+befallen] the eunuch?' 'Nay, as thy head liveth, O king!'
+answered she. 'But women are fainthearted.' Then came the servant
+and going in to her, told her all that had befallen him and
+acquainted her with her son's case also and with that which he
+had suffered of stresses and how his uncle had exposed him to
+slaughter and he had been taken prisoner and they had cast him
+into the pit and hurled him from the top of the citadel and how
+God had delivered him from these perils, all of them; and he went
+on to tell her [all that had betided him], whilst she wept.
+
+Then said she to him, 'When the king saw him and questioned thee
+of him, what saidst thou to him?' And he answered, 'I said to
+him, "This is the son of a nurse who belonged to us. We left him
+little and he grew up; so I brought him, that he might be servant
+to the king,"' Quoth she, 'Thou didst well.' And she charged him
+to be instant in the service of the prince. As for the king, he
+redoubled in kindness to the eunuch and appointed the youth a
+liberal allowance and he abode going in to the king's house and
+coming out therefrom and standing in his service, and every day
+he grew in favour with him; whilst, as for Shah Khatoun, she used
+to stand a-watch for him at the windows and balconies and gaze
+upon him, and she on coals of fire on his account, yet could she
+not speak.
+
+On this wise she abode a great while and indeed yearning for him
+came nigh to slay her; so she stood and watched for him one day
+at the door of her chamber and straining him to her bosom, kissed
+him on the cheek and breast. At this moment, out came the master
+of the king's household and seeing her embracing the youth, abode
+amazed. Then he asked to whom that chamber belonged and was
+answered, 'To Shah Khatoun, wife of the king,' whereupon he
+turned back, trembling as [one smitten by] a thunderbolt. The
+king saw him quaking and said to him, 'Out on thee! what is the
+matter?' 'O king,' answered he, 'what matter is graver than that
+which I see?' 'What seest thou?' asked the king and the officer
+said, 'I see that yonder youth, who came with the eunuch, he
+brought not with him but on account of Shah Khatoun; for that I
+passed but now by her chamber door, and she was standing,
+watching; [and when the youth came up,] she rose to him and
+clipped him and kissed him on his cheek.'
+
+When the king heard this, he bowed [his head] in amazement and
+perplexity and sinking into a seat, clutched at his beard and
+shook it, till he came nigh to pluck it out. Then he arose
+forthright and laid hands on the youth and clapped him in prison.
+Moreover, he took the eunuch also and cast them both into an
+underground dungeon in his house, after which he went in to Shah
+Khatoun and said to her, 'Thou hast done well, by Allah, O
+daughter of nobles, O thou whom kings sought in marriage, for the
+excellence of thy repute and the goodliness of the reports of
+thee! How fair is thy semblance! May God curse her whose inward
+is the contrary of her outward, after the likeness of thy base
+favour, whose outward is comely and its inward foul, fair face
+and foul deeds! Verily, I mean to make of thee and of yonder
+good-for-nought an example among the folk, for that thou sentest
+not thine eunuch but of intent on his account, so that he took
+him and brought him into my house and thou hast trampled my head
+with him; and this is none other than exceeding hardihood; but
+thou shall see what I will do with you.'
+
+So saying, he spat in her face and went out from her; whilst Shah
+Khatoun made him no answer, knowing that, if she spoke at that
+time, he would not credit her speech. Then she humbled herself in
+supplication to God the Most High and said, 'O God the Great,
+Thou knowest the hidden things and the outward parts and the
+inward' If an advanced term[FN#137] be [appointed] to me, let it
+not be deferred, and if a deferred one, let it not be advanced!'
+On this wise she passed some days, whilst the king fell into
+perplexity and forswore meat and drink and sleep and abode
+knowing not what he should do and saying [in himself], 'If I kill
+the eunuch and the youth, my soul will not be solaced, for they
+are not to blame, seeing that she sent to fetch him, and my heart
+will not suffer me to slay them all three. But I will not be
+hasty in putting them to death, for that I fear repentance.' Then
+he left them, so he might look into the affair.
+
+Now he had a nurse, a foster-mother, on whose knees he had been
+reared, and she was a woman of understanding and misdoubted of
+him, but dared not accost him [with questions]. So she went in to
+Shah Khatoun and finding her in yet sorrier plight than he, asked
+her what was to do; but she refused to answer. However, the nurse
+gave not over coaxing and questioning her, till she exacted of
+her an oath of secrecy. So the old woman swore to her that she
+would keep secret all that she should say to her, whereupon the
+queen related to her her history from first to last and told her
+that the youth was her son. With this the old woman prostrated
+herself before her and said to her, 'This is an easy matter.' But
+the queen answered, saying, 'By Allah, O my mother, I choose my
+destruction and that of my son rather than defend myself by
+avouching a thing whereof they will not credit me; for they will
+say, "She avoucheth this, but that she may fend off reproach from
+herself" And nought will avail me but patience.' The old woman
+was moved by her speech and her intelligence and said to her,
+'Indeed, O my daughter, it is as thou sayst, and I hope in God
+that He will show forth the truth. Have patience and I will
+presently go in to the king and hear what he saith and contrive
+somewhat in this matter, if it be the will of God the Most High.'
+
+Then she arose and going in to the king, found him with his head
+between his knees, and he lamenting. So she sat down by him
+awhile and bespoke him with soft words and said to him, 'Indeed,
+O my son, thou consumest mine entrails, for that these [many]
+days thou hast not mounted to horse, and thou lamentest and I
+know not what aileth thee.' 'O my mother,' answered he, '[this my
+chagrin] is due to yonder accursed woman, of whom I still deemed
+well and who hath done thus and thus.' Then he related to her the
+whole story from first to last, and she said to him, 'This thy
+concern is on account of a worthless woman.' Quoth he, 'I was but
+considering by what death I should slay them, so the folk may [be
+admonished by their fate and] repent.' And she said, 'O my son,
+beware of haste, for it engendereth repentance and the slaying of
+them will not escape [thee]. When thou art assured of this
+affair, do what thou wilt.' 'O my mother,' rejoined he; 'there
+needeth no assurance concerning him for whom she despatched her
+eunuch and he fetched him.'
+
+But she said, 'There is a thing wherewith we will make her
+confess, and all that is in her heart shall be discovered to
+thee.' 'What is that?' asked the king, and she answered, 'I will
+bring thee a hoopoe's heart,[FN#138] which, when she sleepeth, do
+thou lay upon her heart and question her of all thou wilt, and
+she will discover this unto thee and show forth the truth to
+thee." The king rejoiced in this and said to his nurse, 'Hasten
+and let none know of thee.' So she arose and going in to the
+queen, said to her, 'I have done thine occasion and it is on this
+wise. This night the king will come in to thee and do thou feign
+thyself asleep; and if he ask thee of aught, do thou answer him,
+as if in thy sleep.' The queen thanked her and the old woman went
+away and fetching the hoopoe's heart, gave it to the king.
+
+Hardly was the night come, when he went in to his wife and found
+her lying back, [apparently] asleep; so he sat down by her side
+and laying the hoopoe's heart on her breast, waited awhile, so he
+might be certified that she slept. Then said he to her, 'Shah
+Khatoun, Shah Khatoun, is this my recompense from thee?' Quoth
+she, 'What offence have I committed?' And he, 'What offence can
+be greater than this? Thou sentest after yonder youth and
+broughtest him hither, on account of the desire of thy heart, so
+thou mightest do with him that for which thou lustedst.' 'I know
+not desire,' answered she. 'Verily, among thy servants are those
+who are comelier and handsomer than he; yet have I never desired
+one of them.' 'Why, then,' asked he, 'didst thou lay hold of him
+and kiss him!' And she said, 'This is my son and a piece of my
+heart; and of my longing and love for him, I could not contain
+myself, but sprang upon him and kissed him.' When the king heard
+this, he was perplexed and amazed and said to her, 'Hast thou a
+proof that this youth is thy son? Indeed, I have a letter from
+thine uncle King Suleiman Shah, [wherein he giveth me to know]
+that his unck Belehwan cut his throat.' 'Yes,' answered she, 'he
+did indeed cut his throat, but severed not the windpipe; so my
+uncle sewed up the wound and reared him, [and he lived,] for that
+his hour was not come.'
+
+When the king heard this, he said, 'This proof sufficeth me,' and
+rising forthright in the night, let bring the youth and the
+eunuch. Then he examined the former's throat with a candle and
+saw [the scar where] it [had been] cut from ear to ear, and
+indeed the place had healed up and it was like unto a
+stretched-out thread. Therewithal the king fell down prostrate to
+God, [in thanksgiving to Him] for that He had delivered the
+prince from all these perils and from the stresses that he had
+undergone, and rejoiced with an exceeding joy for that he had
+wrought deliberately and had not made haste to slay him, in which
+case sore repentance had betided him. As for the youth,"
+continued the young treasurer, "he was not saved but because his
+term was deferred, and on like wise, O king, is it with me; I too
+have a deferred term, which I shall attain, and a period which I
+shall accomplish, and I trust in God the Most High that He will
+give me the victory over these wicked viziers."
+
+When the youth had made an end of his speech, the king said,
+"Carry him back to the prison;" and when they had done this, he
+turned to the viziers and said to them, "Yonder youth looseth his
+tongue upon you, but I know your affectionate solicitude for the
+welfare of my empire and your loyal counsel to me; so be of good
+heart, for all that ye counsel me I will do." When they heard
+tnese words, they rejoiced and each of them said his say Then
+said the king, "I have not deferred his slaughter but to the
+intent that the talk might be prolonged and that words might
+abound, and I desire [now] that ye sit up for him a gibbet
+without the town and make proclamation among the folk that they
+assemble and take him and carry him in procession to the gibbet,
+with the crier crying before him and saying, 'This is the
+recompense of him whom the king delighted to favour and who hath
+betrayed him!'" The viziers rejoiced, when they heard this, and
+slept not that night, of their joy; and they made proclamation in
+the city and set up the gibbet.
+
+ The Eleventh Day.
+
+
+
+ OF THE SPEEDY RELIEF OF GOD.
+
+
+
+When it was the eleventh day, the viziers betook them early in
+the morning to the king's gate and said to him, "O king, the folk
+are assembled from the king's gate to the gibbet, so they may see
+[the execution of] the king's commandment on the youth." So the
+king bade fetch the prisoner and they brought him; whereupon the
+viziers turned to him and said to him, "O vile of origin, doth
+any hope of life remain with thee and lookest thou still for
+deliverance after this day?" "O wicked viziers," answered he,
+"shall a man of understanding renounce hope in God the Most High?
+Indeed, howsoever a man be oppressed, there cometh to him
+deliverance from the midst of stress and life from the midst of
+death, [as is shown by the case of] the prisoner and how God
+delivered him." "What is his story?" asked the king; and the
+youth answered, saying, "O king, they tell that
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF THE PRISONER AND HOW GOD GAVE
+ HIM RELIEF.
+
+
+
+There was once a king of the kings, who had a high palace,
+overlooking a prison of his, and he used to hear in the night one
+saying, 'O Ever-present Deliverer, O Thou whose relief is nigh,
+relieve Thou me!' One day the king waxed wroth and said, "Yonder
+fool looketh for relief from [the consequences of] his crime.
+'Then said he to his officers, 'Who is in yonder prison?' And
+they answered, 'Folk upon whom blood hath been found.'[FN#139] So
+the king bade bring the man in question before him and said to
+him, 'O fool, little of wit, how shall thou be delivered from
+this prison, seeing that thine offence is great?' Then he
+committed him to a company of his guards and said to them, 'Take
+this fellow and crucify him without the city.'
+
+Now it was the night-season. So the soldiers carried him without
+the city, thinking to crucify him, when, behold, there came out
+upon them thieves and fell in on them with swords and [other]
+weapons. Thereupon the guards left him whom they purposed to put
+to death [and took to flight], whilst the man who was going to
+slaughter fled forth at a venture and plunging into the desert,
+knew not whither he went before he found himself in a thicket and
+there came out upon him a lion of frightful aspect, which
+snatched him up and set him under him. Then he went up to a tree
+and tearing it up by the roots, covered the man therewith and
+made off into the thicket, in quest of the lioness.
+
+As for the man, he committed his affair to God the Most High,
+relying upon Him for deliverance, and said in himself, 'What is
+this affair?' Then he did away the leaves from himself and
+rising, saw great plenty of men's bones there, of those whom the
+lion had devoured. He looked again and saw a heap of gold lying
+alongside a girdle;[FN#140] whereat he marvelled and gathering up
+the gold in his skirts, went forth of the thicket and fled in
+affright at hazard, turning neither to the right nor to the left,
+in his fear of the lion; till he came to a village and cast
+himself down, as he were dead. He lay there till the day appeared
+and he was rested from his fatigue, when he arose and burying the
+gold, entered the village. Thus God gave him relief and he came
+by the gold."
+
+Then said the king, "How long wilt thou beguile us with thy
+prate, O youth? But now the hour of thy slaughter is come." And
+he bade crucify him upon the gibbet. [So they carried him to the
+place of execution] and were about to hoist him up [upon the
+cross,] when, behold, the captain of the thieves, who had found
+him and reared him,[FN#141] came up at that moment and asked what
+was that assembly and [the cause of] the crowds gathered there.
+They told him that a servant of the king had committed a great
+crime and that he was about to put him to death. So the captain
+of the thieves pressed forward and looking upon the prisoner,
+knew him, whereupon he went up to him and embraced him and
+clipped him and fell to kissing him upon his mouth. Then said he,
+"This is a boy whom I found under such a mountain, wrapped in a
+gown of brocade, and I reared him and he fell to stopping the way
+with us. One day, we set upon a caravan, but they put us to
+flight and wounded some of us and took the boy and went their
+way. From that day to this I have gone round about the lands in
+quest of him, but have not lighted on news of him [till now;] and
+this is he."
+
+When the king heard this, he was certified that the youth was his
+very son; so he cried out at the top of his voice and casting
+himself upon him, embraced him and wept and said, "Had I put thee
+to death, as was my intent, I should have died of regret for
+thee." Then he cut his bonds and taking his crown from his head,
+set it on that of his son, whereupon the people raised cries of
+joy, whilst the trumpets sounded and the drums beat and there
+befell a great rejoicing. They decorated the city and it was a
+glorious day; the very birds stayed their flight in the air, for
+the greatness of the clamour and the noise of the crying. The
+army and the folk carried the prince [to the palace] in
+magnificent procession, and the news came to his mother Behrjaur,
+who came forth and threw herself upon him. Moreover, the king
+bade open the prison and bring forth all who were therein, and
+they held high festival seven days and seven nights and rejoiced
+with a mighty rejoicing; whilst terror and silence and confusion
+and affright fell upon the viziers and they gave themselves up
+for lost.
+
+After this the king sat, with his son by his side and the viziers
+sitting before him, and summoned his chief officers and the folk
+of the city. Then the prince turned to the viziers and said to
+them, "See, O wicked viziers, that which God hath done and the
+speedy [coming of] relief." But they answered not a word and the
+king said, "It sufficeth me that there is nothing alive but
+rejoiceth with me this day, even to the birds in the sky, but ye,
+your breasts are straitened. Indeed, this is the greatest of
+ill-will in you to me, and had I hearkened to you, my regret had
+been prolonged and I had died miserably of grief." "O my father,"
+quoth the prince, "but for the fairness of thy thought and thy
+judgment and thy longanimity and deliberation in affairs, there
+had not bedded thee this great joyance. Hadst thou slain me in
+haste, repentance would have been sore on thee and long grief,
+and on this wise doth he who ensueth haste repent."
+
+Then the king sent for the captain of the thieves and bestowed on
+him a dress of honour,[FN#142] commanding that all who loved the
+king should put off [their raiment and cast it] upon him.[FN#143]
+So there fell dresses of honour [and other presents] on him, till
+he was wearied with their much plenty, and Azadbekht invested him
+with the mastership of the police of his city. Then he bade set
+up other nine gibbets beside the first and said to his son, "Thou
+art guiltless, and yet these wicked viziers endeavoured for thy
+slaughter." "O my father," answered the prince, "I had no fault
+[in their eyes] but that I was a loyal counsellor to thee and
+still kept watch over thy good and withheld their hands from thy
+treasuries; wherefore they were jealous and envied me and plotted
+against me and sought to slay me," Quoth the king, "The time [of
+retribution] is at hand, O my son; but what deemest thou we
+should do with them in requital of that which they did with thee?
+For that they have endeavoured for thy slaughter and exposed thee
+to public ignominy and soiled my honour among the kings."
+
+Then he turned to the viziers and said to them, "Out on ye! What
+liars ye are! What excuse is left you?" "O king," answered they,
+"there abideth no excuse for us and our sin hath fallen upon us
+and broken us in pieces. Indeed we purposed evil to this youth
+and it hath reverted upon us, and we plotted mischief against him
+and it hath overtaken us; yea, we digged a pit for him and have
+fallen ourselves therein." So the king bade hoist up the viziers
+upon the gibbets and crucify them there, for that God is just and
+ordaineth that which is right. Then Azadbekht and his wife and
+son abode in joyance and contentment, till there came to them the
+Destroyer of Delights and they died all; and extolled be the
+perfection of the [Ever-]Living One, who dieth not, to whom be
+glory and whose mercy be upon us for ever and ever! Amen.
+
+
+
+
+
+ JAAFER BEN YEHYA AND ABDULMEILIK BEN
+ SALIH THE ABBASIDE.[FN#144]
+
+
+
+It is told of Jaafer ben Yehya the Barmecide that he sat down one
+day to drink and being minded to be private (with his friends),
+sent for his boon-companions, in whom he delighted, and charged
+the chamberlain[FN#145] that he should suffer none of the
+creatures of God the Most High to enter, save a man of his
+boon-companions, by name Abdulmelik ben Salih,[FN#146] who was
+behindhand with them. Then they donned coloured clothes,[FN#147]
+for that it was their wont, whenas they sat in the wine-chamber,
+to don raiment of red and yellow and green silk, and sat down to
+drink, and the cups went round and the lutes pulsed.
+
+Now there was a man of the kinsfolk of the Khalif [Haroun er
+Reshid], by name Abdulmelik ben Salih ben Ali ben Abdallah ben el
+Abbas,[FN#148] who was great of gravity and piety and
+decorousness, and Er Reshid was used instantly to require of him
+that he should keep him company in his carousals and drink with
+him and had proffered him, to this end, riches galore, but he
+still refused. It chanced that this Abdulmelik es Salih came to
+the door of Jaafer ben Yehya, that he might bespeak him of
+certain occasions of his, and the chamberlain, doubting not but
+he was the Abdulmelik ben Salih aforesaid, whom Jaafer had
+charged him admit and that he should suffer none but him to
+enter, allowed him to go in to his master.
+
+When Jaafer saw him, his reason was like to depart for shame and
+he knew that the chamberlain had been deceived by the likeness of
+the name; and Abdulmelik also perceived how the case stood and
+confusion was manifest to him in Jaafer's face. So he put on a
+cheerful favour and said, "No harm be upon you![FN#149] Bring us
+of these dyed clothes." So they brought him a dyed gown[FN#150]
+and he put it on and sat discoursing cheerily with Jaafer and
+jesting with him. Then said he, "Give us to drink of your wine."
+So they poured him out a pint and he said, "Be ye indulgent with
+us, for we have no wont of this." Then he chatted and jested with
+them till Jaafer's breast dilated and his constraint ceased from
+him and his shamefastness, and he rejoiced in this with an
+exceeding joy and said to Abdulmelik, "What is thine errand?"
+Quoth the other, "I come (may God amend thee!) on three
+occasions, whereof I would have thee bespeak the Khalif; to wit,
+firstly, I have on me a debt to the amount of a thousand thousand
+dirhems,[FN#151] which I would have discharged; secondly, I
+desire for my son the office of governor of a province, whereby
+his rank may be raised; and thirdly, I would fain have thee marry
+him to a daughter of the Khalif, for that she is his cousin and
+he is a match for her." And Jaafer said, "God accomplished! unto
+thee these three occasions. As for the money, it shall presently
+be carried to thy house; as for the government, I make thy son
+viceroy of Egypt; and as for the marriage, I give him to wife
+such an one, the daughter of our Lord the Commander of the
+Faithful, at a dowry of such and such a sum. So depart in the
+assurance of God the Most High."
+
+So Abdulmelik went away to his house, whither he found that the
+money had foregone him, and on the morrow Jaafer presented
+himself before the Khalif and acquainted him with what had passed
+and that he had appointed Abdulmelik's son governor of Egypt and
+had promised him his daughter in marriage. Er Reshid approved of
+this and confirmed the appointment and the marriage. [Then he
+sent for the young man] and he went not forth of the palace of
+the Khalif till he wrote him the patent [of investiture with the
+government] of Egypt; and he let bring the Cadis and the
+witnesses and drew up the contract of marriage.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ER RESHID AND THE BARMECIDES.[FN#152]
+
+
+
+It is said that the most extraordinary of that which happened to
+Er Reshid was as follows: His brother El Hadi,[FN#153] when he
+succeeded to the Khalifate, enquired of a seal-ring of great
+price, that had belonged to his father El Mehdi,[FN#154] and it
+came to his knowledge that Er Reshid had taken it. So he required
+it of the latter, who refused to give it up, and El Hadi insisted
+upon him, but he still denied the seal-ring of the Khalifate. Now
+this was on the bridge [over the Tigris], and he threw the ring
+into the river. When El Hadi died and Er Reshid succeeded to the
+Khalifate, he came in person to that bridge, with a seal-ring of
+lead, which he threw into the river at the same place, and bade
+the divers seek it. So they did [his bidding] and brought up the
+first ring, and this was reckoned [an omen] of Er Reshid's good
+fortune and [a presage of] the continuance of his reign.[FN#155]
+
+When Er Reshid came to the throne, he invested Jaafer ben Yehya
+ben Khalid el Bermeki[FN#156] with the vizierate. Now Jaafer was
+eminently distinguished for generosity and munificence, and the
+stories of him to this effect are renowned and are written in the
+books. None of the viziers attained to the rank and favour which
+he enjoyed with Er Reshid, who was wont to call him
+brother[FN#157] and used to carry him with him into his house.
+The period of his vizierate was nineteen years,[FN#158] and Yehya
+one day said to his son Jaafer, "O my son, what time thy reed
+trembleth, water it with kindness."[FN#159] Opinions differ
+concerning the reason of Jaafer's slaughter, but the better is as
+follows. Er Reshid could not brook to be parted from Jaafer nor
+from his [own] sister Abbaseh, daughter of El Mehdi, a single
+hour, and she was the loveliest woman of her time; so he said to
+Jaafer, "I will marry thee to her, that it may be lawful to thee
+to look upon her, but thou shalt not touch her." [Accordingly,
+they were married] and they used both to be present in Er
+Reshid's sitting chamber. Now the Khalif would rise bytimes [and
+go forth] from the chamber, and they being both young and filled
+with wine, Jaafer would rise to her and swive her. She conceived
+by him and bore a handsome boy and fearing Er Reshid, despatched
+the newborn child by one of her confidants to Mecca the Holy, may
+God the Most High advance it in honour and increase it in
+venerance and nobility and magnification! The affair abode
+concealed till there befell despite between Abbaseh and one of
+her slave-girls, whereupon the latter discovered the affair of
+the child to Er Reshid and acquainted him with its abiding-place.
+So, when the Khalif made the pilgrimage, he despatched one who
+brought him the boy and found the affair true, wherefore he
+caused befall the Barmecides that which befell.[FN#160]
+
+
+
+
+
+ IBN ES SEMMAK AND ER RESHID.[FN#161]
+
+
+
+It is related that Ibn es Semmak[FN#162] went in one day to Er
+Reshid and the Khalif, being athirst, called for drink. So his
+cup was brought him, and when he took it, Ibn es Semmak said to
+him, "Softly, O Commander of the Faithful! If thou wert denied
+this draught, with what wouldst thou buy it?" "With the half of
+my kingdom," answered the Khalif; and Ibn es Semmak said, "Drink
+and God prosper it to thee!" Then, when he had drunken, he said
+to him, "If thou wert denied the going forth of the draught from
+thy body, with what wouldst thou buy its issue?" "With the whole
+of my kingdom," answered Er Reshid: and Ibn es Semmak said, "O
+Commander of the Faithful, verily, a kingdom that weigheth not in
+the balance against a draught [of water] or a voiding of urine is
+not worth the striving for." And Haroun wept.
+
+
+
+
+
+ EL MAMOUN AND ZUBEIDEH[FN#163]
+
+
+
+It is said that El Mamoun[FN#164] came one day upon Zubeideh,
+mother of El Amin,[FN#165] and saw her moving her lips and
+muttering somewhat he understood not; so he said to her, "O
+mother mine, dost thou imprecate [curses] upon me, for that I
+slew thy son and despoiled him of his kingdom?" "Not so, by
+Allah, O Commander of the Faithful!" answered she, and he said,
+"What then saidst thou?" Quoth she, "Let the Commander of the
+Faithful excuse me." But he was instant with her, saying, "Needs
+must thou tell it." And she replied, "I said, 'God confound
+importunity!'" "How so?" asked the Khalif, and she said, "I
+played one day at chess with the Commander of the Faithful
+[Haroun er Reshid] and he imposed on me the condition of
+commandment and acceptance.[FN#166] He beat me and bade me put
+off my clothes and go round about the palace, naked; so I did
+this, and I incensed against him. Then we fell again to playing
+and I beat him; so I bade him go to the kitchen and swive the
+foulest and sorriest wench of the wenches thereof. [I went to the
+kitchen] and found not a slave-girl fouler and filthier than thy
+mother;[FN#167] so I bade him swive her. He did as I bade him and
+she became with child by him of thee, and thus was I [by my
+unlucky insistance] the cause of the slaying of my son and the
+despoiling him of his kingdom." When El Mamoun heard this, he
+turned away, saying, "God curse the importunate!" to wit,
+himself, who had importuned her till she acquainted him with that
+matter.
+
+
+
+
+
+ EN NUMAN AND THE ARAB OF THE BENOU
+ TAI.[FN#168]
+
+
+
+It is said that En Numan[FN#169] had two boon-companions, one of
+whom was called Ibn Saad and the other Amrou ben el Melik, and he
+became one night drunken and bade bury them alive; so they buried
+them. When he arose on the morrow, he enquired for them and was
+acquainted with their case, whereupon he built over them a
+monument and appointed to himself a day of ill-luck and a day of
+good-luck. If any met him on his day of ill-omen, he slew him and
+with his blood he washed the monument aforesaid, the which is a
+place well known in Cufa; and if any met him on his day of grace,
+he enriched him.
+
+Now there accosted him once, on his day of ill-omen, an Arab of
+the Benou Tai,[FN#170] and En Numan would have put him to death;
+but the Arab said, "God quicken the king! I have two little girls
+and have made none guardian over them; so, if the king see fit to
+grant me leave to go to them, I will give him the covenant of
+God[FN#171] that I will return to him, whenas I have appointed
+them a guardian." En Numan had compassion on him and said to him,
+"If a man will be surety for thee of those who are with us, [I
+will let thee go], and if thou return not, I will put him to
+death." Now there was with En Numan his vizier Sherik ben Amrou;
+so the Tai[FN#172] looked at him and said,
+
+Sherik ben Amrou, what device avails the hand of death to stay? O
+ brother of the brotherless, brother of all th' afflicted,
+ say.
+Brother of En Numan, with thee lies an old man's anguish to
+ allay, A graybeard slain, may God make fair his deeds upon
+ the Reckoning-Day!
+Quoth Sherik, "On me be his warranty, may God assain the king!"
+ So the Tai departed, after a term had been assigned him for
+ his coming.
+
+When the appointed day arrived, En Numan sent for Sherik and said
+to him, "Verily the first part of this day is past." And Sherik
+answered, "The king hath no recourse against me till it be
+eventide." When it evened, there appeared one afar off and En
+Numan fell to looking upon him and on Sherik, and the latter said
+to him, "Thou hast no right over me till yonder fellow come, for
+belike he is my man." As he spoke, up came the Tai in haste and
+En Numan said "By Allah, never saw I [any] more generous than you
+two! I know not whether of you is the more generous, this one who
+became warrant for thee in [danger of] death or thou who
+returnest unto slaughter." Then said he to Sherik, "What prompted
+thee to become warrant for him, knowing that it was death?" And
+he said, "[I did this] lest it be said, 'Generosity hath departed
+from viziers.'" Then said En Numan to the Tai, "And thou, what
+prompted thee to return, knowing that therein was death and thine
+own destruction?" Quoth the Arab, "[I did this] lest it be said,
+'Fidelity hath departed from the folk.'" And En Numan said, "By
+Allah, I will be the third of you,[FN#173] lest it be said,
+'Clemency hath departed from kings.'" So he pardoned him and bade
+abolish the day of ill-omen; whereupon the Arab recited the
+following verses:
+
+Full many a man incited me to infidelity, But I refused, for all
+ the talk wherewith they set on me.
+I am a man in whom good faith's a natural attribute; The deeds of
+ every upright man should with his speech agree.
+
+Quoth En Numan, "What prompted thee to keep faith, the case being
+as thou sayest?" "O king," answered the Arab, "it was my
+religion." And En Numan said, "What is thy religion?" "The
+Christian," replied the other. Quoth the king, "Expound it unto
+me." [So the Tai expounded it to him] and En Numan became a
+Christian.[FN#174]
+
+
+
+
+
+ FIROUZ AND HIS WIFE[FN#175]
+
+
+
+A certain king sat one day on the roof of his palace, diverting
+himself with looking about him, and presently, chancing to look
+aside, he espied, on [the roof of] a house over against his
+palace, a woman, never saw his eyes her like. So he turned to
+those who were present and said to them, "To whom belongeth
+yonder house?" "To thy servant Firouz," answered they, "and that
+is his wife." So he went down, (and indeed love had made him
+drunken and he was passionately enamoured of her), and calling
+Firouz, said to him, "Take this letter and go with it to such a
+city and bring me the answer." Firouz took the letter and going
+to his house, laid it under his head and passed that night. When
+the morning morrowed, he took leave of his wife and set out for
+the city in question, unknowing what the king purposed against
+him.
+
+As for the king, he arose in haste and disguising himself,
+repaired to the house of Firouz and knocked at the door. Quoth
+Firouz's wife, "Who is at the door?" And he answered, saying, "I
+am the king, thy husband's master." So she opened the door and he
+entered and sat down, saying, "We are come to visit thee." Quoth
+she, "I seek refuge [with God] from this visitation, for indeed I
+deem not well thereof." And the king said, "O desire of hearts, I
+am thy husband's master and methinks thou knowest me not." "Nay,"
+answered she, "I know thee, O my lord and master, and I know thy
+purpose and that which thou seekest and that thou art my
+husband's lord. I understand what thou wishest, and indeed the
+poet hath forestalled thee in his saying of the following verses,
+in reference to thy case:
+
+Your water I'll leave without drinking, for there Too many
+ already have drunken whilere.
+When the flies light on food, from the platter my hand I raise,
+ though my spirit should long for the fare;
+And whenas the dogs at a fountain have lapped, The lions to drink
+ of the water forbear."
+
+Then said she, "O king, comest thou to a [watering-]place whereat
+thy dog hath drunken and wilt thou drink thereof?" The king was
+abashed at her and at her words and went out from her, but forgot
+his sandal in the house.
+
+As for Firouz, when he went forth from his house, he sought the
+letter, but found it not; so he returned home. Now his return
+fell in with the king's going forth and he found the latter's
+sandal in his house, whereat his wit was dazed and he knew that
+the king had not sent him away but for a purpose of his own.
+However, he held his peace and spoke not a word, but, taking the
+letter, went on his errand and accomplished it and returned to
+the king, who gave him a hundred dinars. So Firouz betook himself
+to the market and bought what beseemeth women of goodly gifts and
+returning to his wife, saluted her and gave her all that he had
+brought and said to her, "Arise [go] to thy father's house."
+"Wherefore?" asked she, and he said, "Verily, the king hath been
+bountiful to me and I would have thee show forth this, so thy
+father may rejoice in that which he seeth upon thee." "With all
+my heart," answered she and arising forthright, betook herself to
+the house of her father, who rejoiced in her coming and in that
+which he saw upon her; and she abode with him a month's space,
+and her husband made no mention of her.
+
+Then came her brother to him and said, "O Firouz, an thou wilt
+not acquaint me with the reason of thine anger against thy wife,
+come and plead with us before the king." Quoth he, "If ye will
+have me plead with you, I will do so." So they went to the king
+and found the cadi sitting with him; whereupon quoth the damsel's
+brother, "God assist our lord the cadi! I let this man on hire a
+high-walled garden, with a well in good case and trees laden with
+fruit; but he beat down its walls and ruined its well and ate its
+fruits, and now he desireth to return it to me." The cadi turned
+to Firouz and said to him, "What sayst thou, O youth?" And he
+answered, "Indeed, I delivered him the garden in the goodliest of
+case." So the cadi said to the brother, "Hath he delivered thee
+the garden, as he saith?" And the other replied, "No; but I
+desire to question him of the reason of his returning it." Quoth
+the cadi, "What sayst thou, O youth?" And Firouz answered, "I
+returned it in my own despite, for that I entered it one day and
+saw the track of the lion; wherefore I feared lest, if I entered
+it again, the lion should devour me. So that which I did, I did
+of reverence to him and for fear of him."
+
+Now the king was leaning back upon the cushion, when he heard the
+man's words, he knew the purport thereof; so he sat up and said,
+"Return to thy garden in all assurance and ease of heart; for, by
+Allah, never saw I the like of thy garden nor stouter of ward
+than its walls over its trees!" So Firouz returned to his wife,
+and the cadi knew not the truth of the affair, no, nor any of
+those who were in that assembly, save the king and the husband
+and the damsel's brother.[FN#176]
+
+
+
+
+
+ KING SHAH BEKHT AND HIS VIZIER ER
+ REHWAN.[FN#177]
+
+
+
+There was once, of old days and in bygone ages and times, a king
+of the kings of the time, by name Shah Bekht, who had troops and
+servants and guards galore and a vizier called Er Rehwan, who was
+wise, understanding, a man of good counsel and a cheerful
+acceptor of the commandments of God the Most High, to whom belong
+might and majesty. The king committed to him the affairs of his
+kingdom and his subjects and said according to his word, and on
+this wise he abode a long space of time.
+
+Now this vizier had many enemies, who envied him his high place
+and still sought to do him hurt, but found no way thereunto, and
+God, in His fore-knowledge and His fore-ordinance from time
+immemorial, decreed that the king dreamt that the Vizier Er
+Rehwan gave him a fruit from off a tree and he ate it and died.
+So he awoke, affrighted and troubled, and when the vizier had
+presented himself before him [and withdrawn] and the king was
+alone with those in whom he trusted, he related to them his dream
+and they counselled him to send for the astrologers and
+interpreters [of dreams] and commended to him a sage, for whose
+skill and wisdom they vouched. So the king sent for him and
+entreated him with honour and made him draw near to himself. Now
+there had been private with the sage in question a company of the
+vizier's enemies, who besought him to slander the vizier to the
+king and counsel him to put him to death, in consideration of
+that which they promised him of wealth galore; and he agreed with
+them of this and told the king that the vizier would slay him in
+the course of the [ensuing] month and bade him hasten to put him
+to death, else would he surely slay him.
+
+Presently, the vizier entered and the king signed to him to cause
+avoid the place. So he signed to those who were present to
+withdraw, and they departed; whereupon quoth the king to him,
+"How deemest thou, O excellent vizier, O loyal counsellor in all
+manner of governance, of a vision I have seen in my sleep?" "What
+is it, O king?" asked the vizier, and Shah Bekht related to him
+his dream, adding, "And indeed the sage interpreted it to me and
+said to me, 'An thou put not the vizier to death within a month,
+he will slay thee.' Now I am exceeding both to put the like of
+thee to death, yet do I fear to leave thee on life. What then
+dost thou counsel me that I should do in this matter?" The vizier
+bowed his head awhile, then raised it and said, "God prosper the
+king! Verily, it skills not to continue him on life of whom the
+king is afraid, and my counsel is that thou make haste to put me
+to death."
+
+When the king heard his speech, he turned to him and said, "It is
+grievous to me, O vizier of good counsel." And he told him that
+the [other] sages testified [to the correctness of their fellow's
+interpretation of the dream]; whereupon Er Rehwan sighed and knew
+that the king went in fear of him; but he showed him fortitude
+and said to him, "God assain the king! My counsel is that the
+king accomplish his commandment and execute his ordinance, for
+that needs must death be and it is liefer to me that I die,
+oppressed, than that I die, an oppressor. But, if the king see
+fit to defer the putting of me to death till the morrow and will
+pass this night with me and take leave of me, when the morrow
+cometh, the king shall do what he will."
+
+Then he wept till he wet his gray hairs and the king was moved to
+compassion for him and granted him that which he sought and
+vouchsafed him that night's respite.
+
+ The First Night of the Month
+
+When it was eventide, the king caused avoid his sitting chamber
+and summoned the vizier, who presented himself and making his
+obeisance to the king, kissed the earth before him and bespoke
+him as follows:
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF THE MAN OF KHORASSAN, HIS SON AND
+ HIS GOVERNOR.
+
+
+
+"There was once a man of Khorassan and he had a son, whose
+improvement he ardently desired; but the young man sought to be
+alone and to remove himself from his father's eye, so he might
+give himself up to pleasance and delight. So he sought of his
+father [leave to make] the pilgrimage to the Holy House of God
+and to visit the tomb of the Prophet (whom God bless and keep!).
+Now between them and Mecca was a journey of five hundred
+parasangs; but his father could not gainsay him, for that the law
+of God made this[FN#178] incumbent on him and because of that
+which he hoped for him of improvement [therefrom]. So he joined
+unto him a governor, in whom he trusted, and gave him much money
+and took leave of him. The son set out on the holy
+pilgrimage[FN#179] with the governor and abode on that wise,
+spending freely and using not thrift.
+
+Now there was in his neighbourhood a poor man, who had a
+slave-girl of surpassing beauty and loveliness, and the youth
+became enamoured of her and suffered grief and concern for the
+love of her and her loveliness, so that he was like to perish for
+passion; and she also loved him with a love yet greater than his
+love for her. So she called an old woman who used to visit her
+and acquainted her with her case, saying, 'An I foregather not
+with him, I shall die.' The old woman promised her that she would
+do her endeavour to bring her to her desire; so she veiled
+herself and repairing to the young man, saluted him and
+acquainted him with the girl's case, saying, 'Her master is a
+covetous man; so do thou invite him [to thy lodging] and tempt
+him with money, and he will sell thee the damsel.'
+
+Accordingly, he made a banquet, and stationing himself in the
+man's way, invited him and carried him to his house, where they
+sat down and ate and drank and abode in discourse. Presently, the
+young man said to the other, 'I hear that thou hast with thee a
+slave-girl, whom thou desirest to sell.' And he answered, saying,
+'By Allah, O my lord, I have no mind to sell her!' Quoth the
+youth, 'I hear that she cost thee a thousand dinars, and I will
+give thee six hundred, to boot.' And the other said, 'I sell her
+to thee [at that price].' So they fetched notaries, who drew up
+the contract of sale, and the young man counted out to the girl's
+master half the purchase money, saying, 'Let her be with thee
+till I complete to thee the rest of the price and take my
+slave-girl.' The other consented to this and took of him a bond
+for the rest of the money, and the girl abode with her master, on
+deposit.
+
+As for the youth, he gave his governor a thousand dirhems and
+despatched him to his father, to fetch money from him, so he
+might pay the rest of the girl's price, saying to him, 'Be not
+[long] absent.' But the governor said in himself, 'How shall I go
+to his father and say to him, "Thy son hath wasted thy money and
+wantoned it away"?[FN#180] With what eye shall I look on him, and
+indeed, I am he in whom he confided and to whom he hath entrusted
+his son? Indeed, this were ill seen. Nay, I will fare on to the
+pilgrimage[FN#181] [with the caravan of pilgrims], in despite of
+this fool of a youth; and when he is weary [of waiting], he will
+demand back the money [he hath already paid] and return to his
+father, and I shall be quit of travail and reproach.' So he went
+on with the caravan to the pilgrimage[FN#182] and took up his
+abode there.
+
+Meanwhile, the youth abode expecting his governor's return, but
+he returned not; wherefore concern and chagrin waxed upon him,
+because of his mistress, and his longing for her redoubled and he
+was like to slay himself. She became aware of this and sent him a
+messenger, bidding him to her. So he went to her and she
+questioned him of the case; whereupon he told her what was to do
+of the matter of his governor, and she said to him, 'With me is
+longing the like of that which is with thee, and I misdoubt me
+thy messenger hath perished or thy father hath slain him; but I
+will give thee all my trinkets and my clothes, and do thou sell
+them and pay the rest of my price, and we will go, I and thou, to
+thy father.'
+
+So she gave him all that she possessed and he sold it and paid
+the rest of her price; after which there remained to him a
+hundred dirhems. These he spent and lay that night with the
+damsel in all delight of life, and his soul was like to fly for
+joy; but when he arose in the morning, he sat weeping and the
+damsel said to him, 'What aileth thee to weep?' And he said, 'I
+know not if my father be dead, and he hath none other heir but
+myself; and how shall I win to him, seeing I have not a dirhem?'
+Quoth she, 'I have a bracelet; do thou sell it and buy small
+pearls with the price. Then bray them and fashion them into great
+pearls, and thereon thou shalt gain much money, wherewith we may
+make our way to thy country.' So he took the bracelet and
+repairing to a goldsmith, said to him, 'Break up this bracelet
+and sell it.' But he said, 'The king seeketh a good[FN#183]
+bracelet; I will go to him and bring thee the price thereof.' So
+he carried the bracelet to the Sultan and it pleased him greatly,
+by reason of the goodliness of its workmanship. Then he called an
+old woman, who was in his palace, and said to her, 'Needs must I
+have the mistress of this bracelet, though but for a single
+night, or I shall die.' And the old woman answered, 'I will bring
+her to thee.'
+
+So she donned a devotee's habit and betaking herself to the
+goldsmith, said to him, 'To whom belongeth the bracelet that is
+in the king's hand?' Quoth he, 'It belongeth to a man, a
+stranger, who hath bought him a slave-girl from this city and
+lodgeth with her in such a place.' So the old woman repaired to
+the young man's house and knocked at the door. The damsel opened
+to her and seeing her clad in devotee's apparel,[FN#184] saluted
+her and said to her, ' Belike thou hast an occasion with us?'
+'Yes,' answered the old woman; 'I desire privacy and
+ablution.'[FN#185] Quoth the girl, 'Enter.' So she entered and
+did her occasion and made the ablution and prayed. Then she
+brought out a rosary and began to tell her beads thereon, and the
+damsel said to her, 'Whence comest thou, O pilgrim?'[FN#186]
+Quoth she '[I come] from [visiting] the Idol[FN#187] of the
+Absent in such a church.[FN#188] There standeth up no woman [to
+prayer] before him, who hath an absent friend and discovereth to
+him her need, but he acquainteth her with her case and giveth her
+tidings of her absent one.' 'O pilgrim,' said the damsel, 'we
+have an absent one, and my lord's heart cleaveth to him and I
+desire to go to the idol and question him of him.' Quoth the old
+woman, '[Wait] till to-morrow and ask leave of thy husband, and I
+will come to thee and go with thee in weal.'
+
+Then she went away, and when the girl's master came, she sought
+his leave to go with the old woman and he granted her leave. So
+the beldam took her and carried her to the king's door. The
+damsel entered with her, unknowing whither she went, and beheld a
+goodly house and chambers adorned [with gold and colours] that
+were no idol's chambers. Then came the king and seeing her beauty
+and grace, went up to her, to kiss her; whereupon she fell down
+in a fit and strove with her hands and feet. When he saw this, he
+was solicitous for her and held aloof from her and left her; but
+the thing was grievous to her and she refused meat and drink, and
+as often as the king drew near her, she fled from him in
+affright, wherefore he swore by Allah that he would not approach
+her, save with her consent, and fell to guerdoning her with
+trinkets and raiment, but she only redoubled in aversion to him.
+
+Meanwhile, the youth her master abode expecting her; but she
+returned not and his heart forbode him of the draught [of
+separation]; so he went forth at hazard, distraught and knowing
+not what he should do, and fell to strewing dust upon his head
+and crying out, 'The old woman hath taken her and gone away!' The
+boys followed him with stones and pelted him, saying, 'A madman!
+A madman!' Presently, the king's chamberlain, who was a man of
+age and worth, met him, and when he saw his youth, he forbade the
+boys and drove there away from him, after which he accosted him
+and questioned him of his case. So he told him how it was with
+him and the chamberlain said to him, 'Fear not: all shall yet be
+well with thee. I will deliver thy slave-girl for thee: so calm
+thy trouble.' And he went on to speak him fair and comfort him,
+till he put faith in his speech.
+
+Then he carried him to his house and stripping him of his
+clothes, clad him in rags; after which he called an old woman,
+who was his stewardess, and said to her. 'Take this youth and
+clap on his neck this iron chain and go round about with him in
+all the thoroughfares of the city; and when thou hast made an end
+of this, go up with him to the palace of the king.' And he said
+to the youth, 'In whatsoever place thou seest the damsel, speak
+not a syllable, but acquaint me with her place and thou shall owe
+her deliverance to none but me.' The youth thanked him and went
+with the old woman on such wise as the chamberlain bade him. She
+fared on with him till they entered the city [and made the round
+thereof]; after which she went up to the palace of the king and
+fell to saying, 'O people of affluence, look on a youth whom the
+devils take twice in the day and pray for preservation from [a
+like] affliction!' And she ceased not to go round about with him
+till she came to the eastern wing[FN#189] of the palace,
+whereupon the slave-girls came out to look upon him and when they
+saw him they were amazed at his beauty and grace and wept for
+him.
+
+Then they told the damsel, who came forth and looked upon him and
+knew him not. But he knew her; so he bowed his head and wept. She
+was moved to compassion for him and gave him somewhat and
+returned to her place, whilst the youth returned with the
+stewardess to the chamberlain and told him that she was in the
+king's house, whereat he was chagrined and said, 'By Allah, I
+will assuredly contrive a device for her and deliver her!'
+Whereupon the youth kissed his hands and feet. Then he turned to
+the old woman and bade her change her apparel and her favour. Now
+this old woman was goodly of speech and nimble of wit; so he gave
+her costly and delicious perfumes and said to her, 'Get thee to
+the king's slave girls and sell them these [perfumes] and make
+thy way to the damsel and question her if she desire her master
+or not.' So the old woman went out and making her way to the
+palace, went in to the damsel and drew near her and recited the
+following verses:
+
+God keep the days of love-delight! How dearly sweet they were!
+ How joyous and how solaceful was life in them whilere!
+Would he were not who sundered us upon the parting day! How many
+ a body hath he slain, how many a bone laid bare?
+Sans fault of mine, my blood and tears he shed and beggared me Of
+ him I love, yet for himself gained nought thereby whate'er.
+
+
+When the damsel heard these verses, she wept till her clothes
+were drenched and drew near the old woman, who said to her,
+'Knowest thou such an one?' And wept and said, 'He is my lord.
+Whence knowest thou him?' 'O my lady,' answered the old woman,
+'sawst thou not the madman who came hither yesterday with the old
+woman? He was thy lord. But this is no time for talk. When it is
+night, get thee to the top of the palace [and wait] on the roof
+till thy lord come to thee and contrive for thy deliverance.'
+Then she gave her what she would of perfumes and returning to the
+chamberlain, acquainted him with that which had passed, and he
+told the youth.
+
+When it was eventide, the chamberlain let bring two horses and
+great store of water and victual and a saddle-camel and a man to
+show them the way. These he hid without the town, whilst he and
+the young man took with them a long rope, made fast to a staple,
+and repaired to the palace. When they came thither, they looked
+and beheld the damsel standing on the roof. So they threw her the
+rope and the staple; whereupon she [made the latter fast to the
+parapet and] wrapping her sleeves about her hands, slid down [the
+rope] and landed with them. They carried her without the town,
+where they mounted, she and her lord, and fared on, whilst the
+guide forewent them, directing them in the way, and they gave not
+over going night and day till they entered his father's house.
+The young man saluted his father, who rejoiced in him, and he
+related to him all that had befallen him, whereupon he rejoiced
+in his safety.
+
+As for the governor, he wasted all that was with him and returned
+to the city, where he saw the youth and excused himself to him.
+Then he questioned him of what had befallen him and he told him,
+whereat he marvelled and returned to companionship with him; but
+the youth ceased to have regard for him and gave him not
+stipends, as of his [former] wont, neither discovered to him
+aught of his secrets. When the governor saw that there was no
+profit for him with the young Khorassani, he returned to the
+king, the ravisher of the damsel, and told him what the
+chamberlain had done and counselled him to slay the latter and
+incited him to recover the damsel, [promising] to give his friend
+to drink of poison and return. So the king sent for the
+chamberlain and upbraided him; whereupon he fell upon him and
+slew him and the king's servants fell upon the chamberlain and
+slew him.
+
+Meanwhile, the governor returned to the youth, who questioned him
+of his absence, and he told him that he had been in the city of
+the king who had taken the damsel. When the youth heard this, he
+misdoubted of the governor and never again trusted him in aught,
+but was still on his guard against him. Then the governor made
+great store of sweetmeats and put in them deadly poison and
+presented them to the youth. When the latter saw the sweetmeats,
+he said in himself, 'This is an extraordinary thing of the
+governor! Needs must there be mischief in this sweetmeat, and I
+will make proof of it upon himself.' So he made ready victual and
+set on the sweetmeat amongst it and bade the governor to his
+house and set food before him. He ate and amongst the rest, they
+brought him the poisoned sweetmeat; so he ate thereof and died
+forthright; whereby the youth knew that this was a plot against
+himself and said, 'He who seeketh his fortune of his own
+[unaided] might[FN#190] attaineth it not.' Nor (continued the
+vizier) is this, O king of the age, more extraordinary than the
+story of the druggist and his wife and the singer."
+
+When King Shah Bekht heard his vizier's story, he gave him leave
+to withdraw to his own house and he abode there the rest of the
+night and the next day till the evening.
+
+ The Second Night of the Month
+
+When the evening evened, the king sat in his privy
+sitting-chamber and his mind was occupied with the story of the
+singer and the druggist. So he called the vizier and bade him
+tell the story. "It is well," answered he, "They tell, O my lord,
+that
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF THE SINGER AND THE DRUGGIST.
+
+
+
+There was once in the city of Hemadan[FN#191] a young man of
+comely aspect and excellently skilled in singing to the lute, and
+he was well seen of the people of the city. He went forth one day
+of his city, with intent to travel, and gave not over journeying
+till his travel brought him to a goodly city. Now he had with him
+a lute and what pertained thereto,[FN#192] so he entered and went
+round about the city till he fell in with a druggist, who, when
+he espied him, called to him. So he went up to him and he bade
+him sit down. Accordingly, he sat down by him and the druggist
+questioned him of his case. The singer told him what was in his
+mind and the other took him up into his shop and brought him food
+and fed him. Then said he to him, 'Arise and take up thy lute and
+beg about the streets, and whenas thou smellest the odour of
+wine, break in upon the drinkers and say to them, "I am a
+singer." They will laugh and say, "Come, [sing] to us." And when
+thou singest, the folk will know thee and bespeak one another of
+thee; so shall thou become known in the city and thine affairs
+will prosper.'
+
+So he went round about, as the druggist bade him, till the sun
+grew hot, but found none drinking. Then he entered a by-street,
+that he might rest himself, and seeing there a handsome and lofty
+house, stood in its shade and fell to observing the goodliness of
+its ordinance. As he was thus engaged, behold, a window opened
+and there appeared thereat a face, as it were the moon. Quoth
+she,[FN#193] 'What aileth thee to stand there? Dost thou want
+aught?' And he answered, 'I am a stranger,' and acquainted her
+with his case; whereupon quoth she, 'What sayst thou to meat and
+drink and the enjoyment of a fair-face[d one] and getting thee
+what thou mayst spend?' 'O my lady,' answered he, 'this is my
+desire and that in quest whereof I am going about.'
+
+So she opened the door to him and brought him in. Then she seated
+him at the upper end of the room and set food before him. So he
+ate and drank and lay with her and swived her. Then she sat down
+in his lap and they toyed and laughed and kissed till the day was
+half spent, when her husband came home and she could find nothing
+for it but to hide the singer in a rug, in which she rolled him
+up. The husband entered and seeing the place disordered[FN#194]
+and smelling the odour of wine, questioned her of this. Quoth
+she, 'I had with me a friend of mine and I conjured her [to drink
+with me]; so we drank a jar [of wine], she and I, and she went
+away but now, before thy coming in.' Her husband, (who was none
+other than the singer's friend the druggist, that had invited him
+and fed him), deemed her words true and went away to his shop,
+whereupon the singer came forth and he and the lady returned to
+their sport and abode on this wise till eventide, when she gave
+him money and said to him, 'Come hither to-morrow in the
+forenoon.' 'It is well,' answered he and departed; and at
+nightfall he went to the bath.
+
+On the morrow, he betook himself to the shop of his friend the
+druggist, who welcomed him and questioned him of his case and how
+he had fared that day. Quoth the singer, 'May God requite thee
+with good, O my brother! For that thou hast directed me unto
+easance!' And he related to him his adventure with the woman,
+till he came to the mention of her husband, when he said, 'And at
+midday came the cuckold her husband and knocked at the door. So
+she wrapped me in the mat, and when he had gone about his
+business, I came forth and we returned to what we were about.'
+This was grievous to the druggist and he repented of having
+taught him [how he should do] and misdoubted of his wife. So he
+said to the singer, 'And what said she to thee at thy going
+away?' And the other answered, 'She bade me come back to her on
+the morrow. So, behold, I am going to her and I came not hither
+but that I might acquaint thee with this, lest thy heart be
+occupied with me.' Then he took leave of him and went his way. As
+soon as the druggist was assured that he had reached the house,
+he cast the net over his shop[FN#195] and made for his house,
+misdoubting of his wife, and knocked at the door.
+
+Now the singer had entered and the druggist's wife said to him,
+'Arise, enter this chest.' So he entered it and she shut the lid
+on him and opened to her husband, who came in, in a state of
+bewilderment, and searched the house, but found none and
+overlooked the chest. So he said in himself, 'The house [of which
+the singer spoke] is one which resembleth my house and the woman
+is one who resembles my wife,' and returned to his shop;
+whereupon the singer came forth of the chest and falling upon the
+druggist's wife, did his occasion and paid her her due and
+weighed down the scale for her.[FN#196] Then they ate and drank
+and kissed and clipped, and on this wise they abode till the
+evening, when she gave him money, for that she found his weaving
+good,[FN#197] and made him promise to come to her on the morrow.
+
+So he left her and slept his night and on the morrow he repaired
+to the shop of his friend the druggist and saluted him. The other
+welcomed him and questioned him of his case; whereupon he told
+him how he had fared, till he came to the mention of the woman's
+husband, when he said, 'Then came the cuckold her husband and she
+clapped me into the chest and shut the lid on me, whilst her
+addlepated pimp of a husband went round about the house, top and
+bottom; and when he had gone his way, we returned to what we were
+about.' With this, the druggist was certified that the house was
+his house and the wife his wife, and he said, 'And what wilt thou
+do to-day?' Quoth the singer, 'I shall return to her and weave
+for her and full her yarn,[FN#198] and I came but to thank thee
+for thy dealing with me.'
+
+Then he went away, whilst the fire was loosed in the heart of the
+druggist and he shut his shop and betaking himself to his house,
+knocked at the door. Quoth the singer, 'Let me get into the
+chest, for he saw me not yesterday.' 'Nay,' answered she, 'wrap
+thyself up in the rug.' So he wrapped himself up in the rug and
+stood in a corner of the room, whilst the druggist entered and
+went straight to the chest, but found it empty. Then he went
+round about the house and searched it from top to bottom, but
+found nothing and no one and abode between belief and disbelief,
+and said in himself, 'Belike, I suspect my wife of that which is
+not in her.' So he was certified of her innocence and returned to
+his shop, whereupon out came the singer and they abode on their
+former case, as of wont, till eventide, when she gave him one of
+her husband's shirts and he took it and going away, passed the
+night in his lodging.
+
+On the morrow, he repaired to the druggist, who saluted him and
+came to meet him and rejoiced in him and smiled in his face,
+deeming his wife innocent. Then he questioned him of his
+yesterday's case and he told him how he had fared, saying, 'O my
+brother, when the cuckold knocked at the door, I would have
+entered the chest; but his wife forbade me and rolled me up in
+the rug. The man entered and thought of nothing but the chest; so
+he broke it open and abode as he were a madman, going up and
+coming down. Then he went his way and I came out and we abode on
+our wonted case till eventide, when she gave me this shirt of her
+husband's; and behold, I am going to her.'
+
+When the druggist heard the singer's words, he was certified of
+the case and knew that the calamity, all of it, was in his own
+house and that the wife was his wife; and he saw the shirt,
+whereupon he redoubled in certainty and said to the singer, 'Art
+thou now going to her?' 'Yes, O my brother,' answered he and
+taking leave of him, went away; whereupon the druggist started
+up, as he were a madman, and ungarnished his shop.[FN#199] Whilst
+he was thus engaged, the singer won to the house, and presently
+up came the druggist and knocked at the door. The singer would
+have wrapped himself up in the rug, but she forbade him and said
+to him, 'Get thee down to the bottom of the house and enter the
+oven[FN#200] and shut the lid upon thyself.' So he did as she
+bade him and she went down to her husband and opened the door to
+him, whereupon he entered and went round about the house, but
+found no one and overlooked the oven. So he stood meditating and
+swore that he would not go forth of the house till the morrow.
+
+As for the singer, when his [stay in the oven] grew long upon
+him, he came forth therefrom, thinking that her husband had gone
+away. Then he went up to the roof and looking down, beheld his
+friend the druggist; whereat he was sore concerned and said in
+himself, 'Alas, the disgrace of it! This is my friend the
+druggist, who dealt kindly with me and wrought me fair and I have
+requited him with foul' And he feared to return to the druggist;
+so he went down and opened the first door and would have gone
+out; but, when he came to the outer door, he found it locked and
+saw not the key. So he stole up again to the roof and cast
+himself down into the [next] house. The people of the house heard
+him and hastened to him, deeming him a thief. Now the house in
+question belonged to a Persian; so they laid hands on him and the
+master of the house began to beat him, saying to him, 'Thou art a
+thief.' 'Nay,' answered he, 'I am no thief, but a singing-man, a
+stranger. I heard your voices and came to sing to you.'
+
+When the folk heard his words, they talked of letting him go; but
+the Persian said, 'O folk, let not his speech beguile you. This
+fellow is none other than a thief who knoweth how to sing, and
+when he happeneth on the like of us, he is a singer.' 'O our
+lord,' answered they, 'this man is a stranger, and needs must we
+release him.' Quoth he, 'By Allah, my heart revolteth from this
+fellow! Let me make an end of him with beating.' But they said,
+'Thou mayst nowise do that' So they delivered the singer from the
+Persian, the master of the house, and seated him amongst them,
+whereupon he fell to singing to them and they rejoiced in him.
+
+Now the Persian had a mameluke,[FN#201] as he were the full moon,
+and he arose [and went out], and the singer followed him and wept
+before him, professing love to him and kissing his hands and
+feet. The mameluke took compassion on him and said to him, 'When
+the night cometh and my master entereth [the harem] and the folk
+go away, I will grant thee thy desire; and I lie in such a
+place.' Then the singer returned and sat with the
+boon-companions, and the Persian rose and went out, he and the
+mameluke beside him. [Then they returned and sat down.][FN#202]
+Now the singer knew the place that the mameluke occupied at the
+first of the night; but it befell that he rose from his place and
+the candle went out. The Persian, who was drunken, fell over on
+his face, and the singer, supposing him to be the mameluke, said,
+'By Allah, it is good!' and threw himself upon him and clipped
+him, whereupon the Persian started up, crying out, and laying
+hands on the singer, pinioned him and beat him grievously, after
+which he bound him to a tree that was in the house.[FN#203]
+
+Now there was in the house a fair singing-girl and when she saw
+the singer pinioned and bound to the tree, she waited till the
+Persian lay down on his couch, when she arose and going to the
+singer, fell to condoling with him over what had betided him and
+ogling him and handling his yard and rubbing it, till it rose on
+end. Then said she to him, 'Do thou swive me and I will loose thy
+bonds, lest he return and beat thee again; for he purposeth thee
+evil.' Quoth he, 'Loose me and I will do.' But she said, 'I fear
+that, [if I loose thee], thou wilt not do. But I will do, and
+thou standing; and when I have done, I will loose thee.' So
+saying, she pulled up her clothes and sitting down on the
+singer's yard, fell to going and coming.
+
+Now there was in the house a ram, with which the Persian used to
+butt, and when he saw what the woman did, he thought she would
+butt with him; so he broke his halter and running at her, butted
+her and broke her head. She fell on her back and cried out;
+whereupon the Persian started up from sleep in haste and seeing
+the singing-girl [cast down on her back] and the singer with his
+yard on end, said to the latter, 'O accursed one, doth not what
+thou hast already done suffice thee?' Then he beat him soundly
+and opening the door, put him out in the middle of the night.
+
+He lay the rest of the night in one of the ruins, and when he
+arose in the morning, he said, 'None is to blame. I sought my own
+good, and he is no fool who seeketh good for himself; and the
+druggist's wife also sought good for herself; but destiny
+overcometh precaution and there remaineth no abiding for me in
+this town.' So he went forth from the city. Nor (added the
+vizier) is this story, extraordinary though it be, more
+extraordinary than that of the king and his son and that which
+bedded them of wonders and rarities."
+
+When the king heard this story, he deemed it pleasant and said,
+"This story is near unto that which I know and meseemeth I should
+do well to have patience and hasten not to slay my vizier, so I
+may get of him the story of the king and his son." Then he gave
+the vizier leave to go away to his own house; so he thanked him
+and abode in his house all that day.
+
+ The Third Night of the Month
+
+When it was the time of the evening meal, the king repaired to
+the sitting-chamber and summoning the vizier, sought of him the
+story he had promised him; and the vizier said, "They avouch, O
+king, that
+
+ STORY OF THE KING WHO KNEW THE
+ QUINTESSENCE[FN#204] OF THINGS.
+
+There came to a king of the kings, in his old age, a son, who
+grew up comely, quick-witted and intelligent, and when he came to
+years of discretion and became a young man, his father said to
+him, 'Take this kingdom and govern it in my stead, for I desire
+to flee [from the world] to God the Most High and don the gown of
+wool and give myself up to devotion.' Quoth the prince, 'And I
+also desire to take refuge with God the Most High.' And the king
+said, 'Arise, let us flee forth and make for the mountains and
+worship in them, for shamefastness before God the Most High.'
+
+So they gat them raiment of wool and clothing themselves
+therewith, went forth and wandered in the deserts and wastes;
+but, when some days had passed over them, they became weak for
+hunger and repented them of that which they had done, whenas
+repentance profited them not, and the prince complained to his
+father of weariness and hunger. 'Dear my son,' answered the king,
+'I did with thee that which behoved me,[FN#205] but thou wouldst
+not hearken to me, and now there is no means of returning to thy
+former estate, for that another hath taken the kingdom and become
+its defender; but I will counsel thee of somewhat, wherein do
+thou pleasure me.' Quoth the prince, 'What is it?' And his father
+said, 'Take me and go with me to the market and sell me and take
+my price and do with it what thou wilt, and I shall become the
+property of one who will provide for my support,' 'Who will buy
+thee of me,' asked the prince, 'seeing thou art a very old man?
+Nay, do thou rather sell me, for the demand for me will be
+greater.' But the king said, 'An thou wert king, thou wouldst
+require me of service.'
+
+So the youth obeyed his father's commandment and taking him,
+carried him to the slave-dealer and said to the latter, 'Sell me
+this old man.' Quoth the dealer, 'Who will buy this fellow, and
+he a man of fourscore?' Then said he to the king, 'In what crafts
+dost thou excel?' Quoth he, 'I know the quintessence of jewels
+and I know the quintessence of horses and that of men; brief, I
+know the quintessence of all things.' So the dealer took him and
+went about, offering him for sale to the folk; but none would
+buy. Presently, up came the overseer of the [Sultan's] kitchen
+and said, 'What is this man?' And the dealer answered, 'This is a
+slave for sale.' The cook marvelled at this and bought the king
+for ten thousand dirhems, after questioning him of what he could
+do. Then he paid down the money and carried him to his house, but
+dared not employ him in aught of service; so he appointed him an
+allowance, such as should suffice for his livelihood, and
+repented him of having bought him, saying, 'What shall I do with
+the like of this fellow?'
+
+Presently, the king [of the city] was minded to go forth to his
+garden,[FN#206] a-pleasuring, and bade the cook forego him
+thither and appoint in his stead one who should dress meat for
+the king, so that, when he returned, he might find it ready. So
+the cook fell a-considering of whom he should appoint and was
+bewildered concerning his affair. As he was on this wise, the old
+man came to him and seeing him perplexed how he should do, said
+to him, 'Tell me what is in thy mind; belike, I may avail to
+relieve thee.' So he acquainted him with the king's wishes and he
+said, 'Have no care for this, but leave me one of the serving-men
+and go thou in peace and surety, for I will suffice thee of
+this.' So the cook departed with the king, after he had brought
+the old man what he needed and left him a man of the guards.
+
+When he was gone, the old man bade the trooper wash the
+kitchen-vessels and made ready passing goodly food. When the king
+returned, he set the meat before him, and he tasted food whose
+like he had never known; whereat he marvelled and asked who had
+dressed it. So they acquainted him with the old man's case and he
+summoned him to his presence and awarded him a handsome
+recompense.[FN#207] Moreover, he commanded that they should cook
+together, he and the cook, and the old man obeyed his
+commandment.
+
+Awhile after this, there came two merchants to the king with two
+pearls of price and each of them avouched that his pearl was
+worth a thousand dinars, but there was none who availed to value
+them. Then said the cook, 'God prosper the king! Verily, the old
+man whom I bought avouched that he knew the quintessence of
+jewels and that he was skilled in cookery. We have made proof of
+him in cookery and have found him the skilfullest of men; and
+now, if we send after him and prove him on jewels, [the truth or
+falsehood of] his pretension will be made manifest to us.'
+
+So the king bade fetch the old man and he came and stood before
+the Sultan, who showed him the two pearls. Quoth he, 'As for this
+one, it is worth a thousand dinars.' And the king said, 'So saith
+its owner.' 'But for this other,' continued the old man, 'it is
+worth but five hundred.' The folk laughed and marvelled at his
+saying, and the merchant, [the owner of the second pearl], said
+to him, 'How can this, which is greater of bulk and purer of
+water and more perfect of rondure, be less of worth than that?'
+And the old man answered, 'I have said what is with me.'[FN#208]
+Then said the king to him, 'Indeed, the outward appearance
+thereof is like unto that of the other pearl; why then is it
+worth but the half of its price?' 'Yes,' answered the old man,
+'[its outward resembleth the other]; but its inward is corrupt.'
+'Hath a pearl then an outward and an inward?' asked the merchant,
+and the old man said, 'Yes. In its inward is a boring worm; but
+the other pearl is sound and secure against breakage.' Quoth the
+merchant, 'Give us a token of this and prove to us the truth of
+thy saying.' And the old man answered, 'We will break the pearl.
+If I prove a, liar, here is my head, and if I speak truth, thou
+wilt have lost thy pearl.' And the merchant said, 'I agree to
+that.' So they broke the pearl and it was even as the old man had
+said, to wit, in its midst was a boring worm.
+
+The king marvelled at what he saw and questioned him of [how he
+came by] the knowledge of this. 'O king,' answered the old man,
+'this [kind of] jewel is engendered in the belly of a creature
+called the oyster and its origin is a drop of rain and it is firm
+to the touch [and groweth not warm, when held in the hand]; so,
+when [I took the second pearl and felt that] it was warm to the
+touch, I knew that it harboured some living thing, for that live
+things thrive not but in heat.'[FN#209] So the king said to the
+cook, 'Increase his allowance.' And he appointed to him [fresh]
+allowances.
+
+Awhile after this, two merchants presented themselves to the king
+with two horses, and one said, 'I ask a thousand dinars for my
+horse,' and the other, 'I seek five thousand for mine.' Quoth the
+cook, 'We have experienced the old man's just judgment; what
+deemeth the king of fetching him?' So the king bade fetch him,
+and when he saw the two horses, he said, 'This one is worth a
+thousand and the other two thousand dinars.' Quoth the folk,
+'This [horse that thou judgeth the lesser worth] is an evident
+thoroughbred and he is younger and swifter and more compact of
+limb than the other, ay, and finer of head and clearer of skin
+and colour. What token, then, hast thou of the truth of thy
+saying?' And the old man said, 'This ye say is all true, but his
+sire is old and this other is the son of a young horse. Now, when
+the son of an old horse standeth still [to rest,] his breath
+returneth not to him and his rider falleth into the hand of him
+who followeth after him; but the son of a young horse, if thou
+put him to speed and make him run, [then check him] and alight
+from off him, thou wilt find him untired, by reason of his
+robustness.'
+
+Quoth the merchant, 'Indeed, it is as the old man avoucheth and
+he is an excellent judge.' And the king said, 'Increase his
+allowance.' But the old man stood still and did not go away. So
+the king said to him, 'Why dost thou not go about thy business?'
+And he answered, 'My business is with the king.' 'Name what thou
+wouldst have,' said the king, and the other replied, 'I would
+have thee question me of the quintessences of men, even as thou
+hast questioned me of the quintessences of horses.' Quoth the
+king, 'We have no occasion to question thee of [this].' But the
+old man replied, 'I have occasion to acquaint thee.' 'Say what
+thou pleasest,' rejoined the king, and the old man said, 'Verily,
+the king is the son of a baker.' Quoth the king 'How knowest thou
+that?' And the other replied, 'Know, O king, that I have examined
+into degrees and dignities[FN#210] and have learnt this.'
+
+Thereupon the king went in to his mother and questioned her of
+his father, and she told him that me king her husband was
+weak;[FN#211] 'wherefore,' quoth she, 'I feared for the kingdom,
+lest it pass away, after his death; so I took to my bed a young
+man, a baker, and conceived by him [and bore a son]; and the
+kingship came into the hand of my son, to wit, thyself.' So the
+king returned to the old man and said to him, 'I am indeed the
+son of a baker; so do thou expound to me the means whereby thou
+knewest me for this.' Quoth the other, 'I knew that, hadst thou
+been a king's son, thou wouldst have given largesse of things of
+price, such as rubies [and the like]; and wert thou the son of a
+Cadi, thou hadst given largesse of a dirhem or two dirhems, and
+wert thou the son of a merchant, thou hadst given wealth galore.
+But I saw that thou guerdonest me not but with cakes of bread
+[and other victual], wherefore I knew that thou wast the son of a
+baker.' Quoth the king, 'Thou hast hit the mark.' And he gave him
+wealth galore and advanced him to high estate."
+
+This story pleased King Shah Bekht and he marvelled thereat; but
+the vizier said to him, "This story is not more extraordinary
+than that of the rich man who married his fair daughter to the
+poor old man." The king's mind was occupied with the [promised]
+story and he bade the vizier withdraw to his lodging. So he
+[returned to his house and] abode there the rest of the night and
+the whole of the following day.
+
+ The Fourth Night of the Month.
+
+When the evening evened, the king withdrew to his privy
+sitting-chamber and bade fetch the vizier. When he presented
+himself before him, he said to him, "Tell me the story of the
+wealthy man who married his daughter to the poor old man." "It is
+well," answered the vizier. "Know, O puissant king, that
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF THE RICH MAN WHO GAVE HIS FAIR
+ DAUGHTER IN MARRIAGE TO THE POOR OLD
+ MAN.
+
+
+
+A certain wealthy merchant had a fair daughter, who was as the
+full moon, and when she attained the age of fifteen, her father
+betook himself to an old man and spreading him a carpet in his
+sitting-chamber, gave him to eat and caroused with him. Then said
+he to him, 'I desire to marry thee to my daughter.' The other
+excused himself, because of his poverty, and said to him, 'I am
+not worthy of her nor am I a match for thee.' The merchant was
+instant with him, but he repeated his answer to him, saying, 'I
+will not consent to this till thou acquaint me with the reason of
+thy desire for me. If I find it reasonable, I will fall in with
+thy wish; and if not, I will not do this ever.'
+
+'Know, then,' said the merchant, 'that I am a man from the land
+of China and was in my youth well-favoured and well-to-do. Now I
+made no account of womankind, one and all, but followed after
+boys, and one night I saw, in a dream, as it were a balance set
+up, and it was said by it, "This is the portion of such an one."
+Presently, I heard my own name; so I looked and beheld a woman of
+the utmost loathliness; whereupon I awoke in affright and said,
+"I will never marry, lest haply this loathly woman fall to my
+lot." Then I set out for this city with merchandise and the
+voyage was pleasant to me and the sojourn here, so that I took up
+my abode here awhile and got me friends and factors, till I had
+sold all my merchandise and taken its price and there was left me
+nothing to occupy me till the folk[FN#212] should depart and
+depart with them.
+
+One day, I changed my clothes and putting money in my sleeve,
+sallied forth to explore the holes and corners of this city, and
+as I was going about, I saw a handsome house. Its goodliness
+pleased me; so I stood looking on it, and behold, a lovely woman
+[at the lattice]. When she saw me, she made haste and descended,
+whilst I abode confounded. Then I betook myself to a tailor there
+and questioned him of the house and to whom it belonged. Quoth
+he, "It belongeth to such an one the notary, may God curse him!"
+"Is he her father?" asked I; [and he replied, "Yes."] So I
+repaired in haste to a man, with whom I had been used to deposit
+my goods for sale, and told him that I desired to gain access to
+such an one the notary. Accordingly he assembled his friends and
+we betook ourselves to the notary's house. When we came in to
+him, we saluted him and sat with him, and I said to him, "I come
+to thee as a suitor, desiring the hand of thy daughter in
+marriage." Quoth he, "I have no daughter befitting this man." And
+I rejoined, "God aid thee! My desire is for thee and not for
+her."[FN#213] But he still refused and his friends said to him,
+"This is an honourable man and thine equal in estate, and it is
+not lawful to thee that thou hinder the girl of her fortune."
+Quoth he to them, "Verily, my daughter whom ye seek is passing
+foul-favoured and in her are all blameworthy qualities." And I
+said, "I accept her, though she be as thou sayest." Then said the
+folk, "Extolled be the perfection of God! A truce to talk! [The
+thing is settled;] so say the word, how much wilt thou have [to
+her dowry]?" Quoth he, "I must have four thousand dinars." And I
+said, "Hearkening and obedience."
+
+So the affair was concluded and we drew up the contract of
+marriage and I made the bride-feast; but on the wedding-night I
+beheld a thing[FN#214] than which never made God the Most High
+aught more loathly. Methought her people had contrived this by
+way of sport; so I laughed and looked for my mistress, whom I had
+seen [at the lattice], to make her appearance; but saw her not.
+When the affair was prolonged and I found none but her, I was
+like to go mad for vexation and fell to beseeching my Lord and
+humbling myself in supplication to Him that He would deliver me
+from her. When I arose in the morning, there came the
+chamber-woman and said to me, "Hast thou occasion for the bath?"
+"No," answered I; and she said, "Art thou for breakfast?" But I
+replied, "No;" and on this wise I abode three days, tasting
+neither meat nor drink.
+
+When the damsel[FN#215] saw me in this plight, she said to me, "O
+man, tell me thy story, for, by Allah, an I may avail to thy
+deliverance, I will assuredly further thee thereto." I gave ear
+to her speech and put faith in her loyalty and told her the story
+of the damsel whom I had seen [at the lattice] and how I had
+fallen in love with her; whereupon quoth she, "If the girl belong
+to me, that which I possess is thine, and if she belong to my
+father, I will demand her of him and deliver her to thee." Then
+she fell to calling slave-girl after slave-girl and showing them
+to me, till I saw the damsel whom I loved and said, "This is
+she." Quoth my wife, "Let not thy heart be troubled, for this is
+my slave-girl. My father gave her to me and I give her to thee.
+So comfort thyself and be of good heart and cheerful eye."
+
+Then, when it was night, she brought her to me, after she had
+adorned her and perfumed her, and said to her, "Gainsay not this
+thy lord in aught that he shall seek of thee." When she came to
+bed with me, I said in myself, "Verily, this damsel[FN#216] is
+more generous than I!" Then I sent away the slave-girl and drew
+not nigh unto her, but arose forthright and betaking myself to my
+wife, lay with her and did away her maidenhead. She straightway
+conceived by me and accomplishing the time of her pregnancy, gave
+birth to this dear little daughter; in whom I rejoiced, for that
+she was lovely to the utterest, and she hath inherited her
+mother's wit and her father's comeliness.
+
+Indeed, many of the notables of the people have sought her of me
+in marriage, but I would not marry her to any, for that, one
+night, I saw, in a dream, the balance aforesaid set up and men
+and women being weighed, one against the other, therein, and
+meseemed I saw thee [and her] and it was said to me, "This is
+such a man,[FN#217] the allotted portion of such a
+woman."[FN#218] Wherefore I knew that God the Most High had
+allotted unto her none other than thyself, and I choose rather to
+marry thee to her in my lifetime than that thou shouldst marry
+her after my death.'
+
+When the poor man heard the merchant's story, he became desirous
+of marrying his daughter. So he took her to wife and was
+vouchsafed of her exceeding love. Nor," added the vizier, "is
+this story more extraordinary than that of the rich man and his
+wasteful heir."
+
+When the king heard his vizier's story, he was assured that he
+would not slay him and said, "I will have patience with him, so I
+may get of him the story of the rich man and his wasteful heir."
+And he bade him depart to his own house.
+
+ The Fifth Night of the Month
+
+When the evening evened, the king sat in his privy closet and
+summoning the vizier, required of him the promised story. So Er
+Rehwan said, "Know, O king, that
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF THE RICH MAN AND HIS WASTEFUL
+ SON.
+
+
+
+There was once a sage of the sages, who had three sons and sons'
+sons, and when they waxed many and their posterity multiplied,
+there befell dissension between them. So he assembled them and
+said to them, 'Be ye one hand[FN#219] against other than you and
+despise[FN#220] not [one another,] lest the folk despise you, and
+know that the like of you is as the rope which the man cut, when
+it was single; then he doubled [it] and availed not to cut it; on
+this wise is division and union. And beware lest ye seek help of
+others against yourselves[FN#221] or ye will fall into perdition,
+for by whosesoever means ye attain your desire,[FN#222] his
+word[FN#223] will have precedence of[FN#224] your word. Now I
+have wealth which I will bury in a certain place, so it may be a
+store for you, against the time of your need.'
+
+Then they left him and dispersed and one of the sons fell to
+spying upon his father, so that he saw him hide the treasure
+without the city. When he had made an end of burying it, he
+returned to his house; and when the morning morrowed, his son
+repaired to the place where he had seen his father bury the
+treasure and dug and took it and went his way. When the [hour of
+the] old man's admission [to the mercy of God] drew nigh, he
+called his sons to him and acquainted them with the place where
+he had hidden his riches. As soon as he was dead, they went and
+dug up the treasure and found wealth galore, for that the money,
+which the first son had taken by stealth, was on the surface and
+he knew not that under it was other money. So they took it and
+divided it and the first son took his share with the rest and
+laid it to that which he had taken aforetime, behind [the backs
+of] his father and his brethren. Then he took to wife the
+daughter of his father's brother and was vouchsafed by her a male
+child, who was the goodliest of the folk of his time.
+
+When the boy grew up, his father feared for him from poverty and
+change of case, so he said to him, 'Dear my son, know that in my
+youth I wronged my brothers in the matter of our father's good,
+and I see thee in weal; but, if thou [come to] need, ask not of
+one of them nor of any other, for I have laid up for thee in
+yonder chamber a treasure; but do not thou open it until thou
+come to lack thy day's food.' Then he died, and his wealth, which
+was a great matter, fell to his son. The young man had not
+patience to wait till he had made an end of that which was with
+him, but rose and opened the chamber, and behold, it was [empty
+and its walls were] whitened, and in its midst was a rope hanging
+down and half a score bricks, one upon another, and a scroll,
+wherein was written, 'Needs must death betide; so hang thyself
+and beg not of any, but kick away the bricks, so there may be no
+escape[FN#225] for thee, and thou shall be at rest from the
+exultation of enemies and enviers and the bitterness of poverty.'
+
+When the youth saw this, he marvelled at that which his father
+had done and said, 'This is a sorry treasure.' Then he went forth
+and fell to eating and drinking with the folk, till nothing was
+left him and he abode two days without tasting food, at the end
+of which time he took a handkerchief and selling it for two
+dirhems, bought bread and milk with the price and left it on the
+shelf [and went out. Whilst he was gone,] a dog came and took the
+bread and spoiled the milk, and when the man returned and saw
+this, he buffeted his face and went forth, distraught, at a
+venture. Presently, he met a friend of his, to whom he discovered
+his case, and the other said to him, 'Art thou not ashamed to
+talk thus? How hast thou wasted all this wealth and now comest
+telling lies and saying, "The dog hath mounted on the shelf," and
+talking nonsense?' And he reviled him.
+
+So the youth returned to his house, and indeed the world was
+grown black in his eyes and he said, 'My father said sooth.' Then
+he opened the chamber door and piling up the bricks under his
+feet, put the rope about his neck and kicked away the bricks and
+swung himself off; whereupon the rope gave way with him [and he
+fell] to the ground and the ceiling clove in sunder and there
+poured down on him wealth galore, So he knew that his father
+meant to discipline[FN#226] him by means of this and invoked
+God's mercy on him. Then he got him again that which he had sold
+of lands and houses and what not else and became once more in
+good case. Moreover, his friends returned to him and he
+entertained them some days.
+
+Then said he to them one day, 'There was with us bread and the
+locusts ate it; so we put in its place a stone, a cubit long and
+the like broad, and the locusts came and gnawed away the stone,
+because of the smell of the bread.' Quoth one of his friends (and
+it was he who had given him the lie concerning the dog and the
+bread and milk), 'Marvel not at this, for mice do more than
+that.' And he said, 'Go to your houses. In the days of my
+poverty, I was a liar [when I told you] of the dog's climbing
+upon the shelf and eating the bread and spoiling the milk; and
+to-day, for that I am rich again, I say sooth [when I tell you]
+that locusts devoured a stone a cubit long and a cubit broad.'
+They were confounded at his speech and departed from him; and the
+youth's good flourished and his case was amended.[FN#227] Nor,"
+added the vizier,"is this stranger or more extraordinary than the
+story of the king's son who fell in love with the picture."
+
+Quoth the king, "Belike, if I hear this story, I shall gain
+wisdom from it; so I will not hasten in the slaying of this
+vizier, nor will I put him to death before the thirty days have
+expired." Then he gave him leave to withdraw, and he went away to
+his own house.
+
+
+ The Sixth Night of the Month
+
+When the day departed and the evening came, the king sat in his
+privy chamber and summoned the vizier, who presented himself to
+him and he questioned him of the story. So the vizier said,
+"Know, O august king, that
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KING'S SON WHO FELL IN LOVE WITH THE
+ PICTURE.
+
+
+
+There was once, in a province of Persia, a king of the kings, who
+was mighty of estate, endowed with majesty and venerance and
+having troops and guards at his command; but he was childless.
+Towards the end of his life, his Lord vouchsafed him a male
+child, and the boy grew up and was comely and learned all manner
+of knowledge. He made him a private place, to wit, a lofty
+palace, builded with coloured marbles and [adorned with] jewels
+and paintings. When the prince entered the palace, he saw in its
+ceiling the picture [of a woman], than whom he had never beheld a
+fairer of aspect, and she was compassed about with slave-girls;
+whereupon he fell down in a swoon and became distraught for love
+of her. Then he sat under the picture, till, one day, his father
+came in to him and finding him wasted of body and changed of
+colour, by reason of his [continual] looking on that picture,
+thought that he was ill and sent for the sages and physicians,
+that they might medicine him. Moreover, he said to one of his
+boon- companions, 'If thou canst learn what aileth my son, thou
+shalt have of me largesse.' So the courtier went in to the prince
+and spoke him fair and cajoled him, till he confessed to him that
+his malady was caused by the picture. Then he returned to the
+king and told him what ailed his son, whereupon he transported
+the prince to another palace and made his former lodging the
+guest-house; and whosoever of the Arabs was entertained therein,
+he questioned of the picture, but none could give him tidings
+thereof.
+
+One day, there came a traveller and seeing the picture, said,
+'There is no god but God! My brother wrought this picture.' So
+the king sent for him and questioned him of the affair of the
+picture and where was he who had wrought it. 'O my lord,'
+answered the traveller, 'we are two brothers and one of us went
+to the land of Hind and fell in love with the king's daughter of
+the country, and it is she who is the original of the portrait.
+In every city he entereth, he painteth her portrait, and I follow
+him, and long is my journey.' When the king's son heard this, he
+said,'Needs must I travel to this damsel.' So he took all manner
+rarities and store of riches and journeyed days and nights till
+he entered the land of Hind, nor did he win thereto save after
+sore travail. Then he enquired of the King of Hind and he also
+heard of him.
+
+When the prince came before him, he sought of him his daughter in
+marriage, and the king said, 'Indeed, thou art her equal, but
+none dare name a man to her, because of her aversion to men.' So
+the prince pitched his tents under the windows of the princess's
+palace, till one day he got hold of one of her favourite
+slave-girls and gave her wealth galore. Quoth she to him, 'Hast
+thou a wish?' ‘Yes,' answered he and acquainted her with his
+case; and she said, 'Indeed thou puttest thyself in peril.' Then
+he abode, flattering himself with false hopes, till all that he
+had with him was gone and the servants fled from him; whereupon
+quoth he to one in whom he trusted, 'I am minded to go to my
+country and fetch what may suffice me and return hither.' And the
+other answered, 'It is for thee to decide.' So they set out to
+return, but the way was long to them and all that the prince had
+with him was spent and his company died and there abode but one
+with him, on whom he loaded what remained of the victual and they
+left the rest and fared on. Then there came out a lion and ate
+the servant, and the prince abode alone. He went on, till his
+beast stood still, whereupon he left her and fared on afoot till
+his feet swelled.
+
+Presently he came to the land of the Turks,[FN#228] and he naked
+and hungry and having with him nought but somewhat of jewels,
+bound about his fore-arm. So he went to the bazaar of the
+goldsmiths and calling one of the brokers, gave him the jewels.
+The broker looked and seeing two great rubies, said to him,
+'Follow me.' So he followed him, till he brought him to a
+goldsmith, to whom he gave the jewels, saying, 'Buy these.' Quoth
+he, 'Whence hadst thou these?' And the broker replied, 'This
+youth is the owner of them.' Then said the goldsmith to the
+prince, 'Whence hadst thou these rubies?' And he told him all
+that had befallen him and that he was a king's son. The goldsmith
+marvelled at his story and bought of him the rubies for a
+thousand dinars.
+
+Then said the prince to him, 'Make ready to go with me to my
+country.' So he made ready and went with the prince till he drew
+near the frontiers of his father's kingdom, where the people
+received him with the utmost honour and sent to acquaint his
+father with his son's coming. The king came out to meet him and
+they entreated the goldsmith with honour. The prince abode awhile
+with his father, then set out, [he and the goldsmith] to return
+to the country of the fair one, the daughter of the King of Hind;
+but there met him robbers by the way and he fought the sorest of
+battles and was slain. The goldsmith buried him and marked his
+grave[FN#229] and returned, sorrowing and distraught to his own
+country, without telling any of the prince's death.
+
+To return to the king's daughter of whom the prince went in quest
+and on whose account he was slain. She had been used to look out
+from the top of her palace and gaze on the youth and on his
+beauty and grace; so she said to her slave-girl one day, 'Harkye!
+What is come of the troops that were encamped beside my palace?'
+Quoth the maid, 'They were the troops of the youth, the king's
+son of the Persians, who came to demand thee in marriage, and
+wearied himself on thine account, but thou hadst no compassion on
+him.' 'Out on thee!' cried the princess. 'Why didst thou not tell
+me?' And the damsel answered, 'I feared thy wrath.' Then she
+sought an audience of the king her father and said to him, 'By
+Allah, I will go in quest of him, even as he came in quest of me;
+else should I not do him justice.'
+
+So she made ready and setting out, traversed the deserts and
+spent treasures till she came to Sejestan, where she called a
+goldsmith to make her somewhat of trinkets. [Now the goldsmith in
+question was none other than the prince's friend]; so, when he
+saw her, he knew her (for that the prince had talked with him of
+her and had depictured her to him) and questioned her of her
+case. She acquainted him with her errand, whereupon he buffeted
+his face and rent his clothes and strewed dust on his head and
+fell a-weeping. Quoth she, 'Why dost thou thus?' And he
+acquainted her with the prince's case and how he was his comrade
+and told her that he was dead; whereat she grieved for him and
+faring on to his father and mother, [acquainted them with the
+case].
+
+So the prince's father and his uncle and his mother and the
+grandees of the realm repaired to his tomb and the princess made
+lamentation over him, crying aloud. She abode by the tomb a whole
+month; then she let fetch painters and caused them limn her
+portraiture and that of the king's son. Moreover, she set down in
+writing their story and that which had befallen them of perils
+and afflictions and set it [together with the pictures], at the
+head of the tomb; and after a little, they departed from the
+place. Nor," added the vizier, "is this more extraordinary, O
+king of the age, than the story of the fuller and his wife and
+the trooper and what passed between them."
+
+With this the king bade the vizier go away to his lodging, and
+when he arose in the morning, he abode his day in his house.
+
+ The Seventh Night of the Month.
+
+At eventide the king sat [in his privy sitting-chamber] and
+sending for the vizier, said to him, "Tell me the story of the
+fuller and his wife." "With all my heart," answered the vizier.
+So he came forward and said, "Know, O king of the age, that
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF THE FULLER AND HIS WIFE.
+
+
+
+There was once in a certain city a woman fair of favour, who had
+to lover a trooper. Her husband was a fuller, and when he went
+out to his business, the trooper used to come to her and abide
+with her till the time of the fuller's return, when he would go
+away. On this wise they abode awhile, till one day the trooper
+said to his mistress, 'I mean to take me a house near unto thine
+and dig an underground passage from my house to thy house, and do
+thou say to thy husband, "My sister hath been absent with her
+husband and now they have returned from their travels; and I have
+made her take up her sojourn in my neighbourhood, so I may
+foregather with her at all times. So go thou to her husband the
+trooper and offer him thy wares [for sale], and thou wilt see my
+sister with him and wilt see that she is I and I am she, without
+doubt. So, Allah, Allah, go to my sister's husband and give ear
+to that which he shall say to thee."'
+
+Accordingly, the trooper bought him a house near at hand and made
+therein an underground passage communicating with his mistress's
+house. When he had accomplished his affair, the wife bespoke her
+husband as her lover had lessoned her and he went out to go to
+the trooper's house, but turned back by the way, whereupon quoth
+she to him, 'By Allah, go forthright, for that my sister asketh
+of thee.' So the dolt of a fuller went out and made for the
+trooper's house, whilst his wife forewent him thither by the
+secret passage, and going up, sat down beside her lover.
+Presently, the fuller entered and saluted the trooper and his
+[supposed] wife and was confounded at the coincidence of the
+case.[FN#230] Then doubt betided him and he returned in haste to
+his dwelling; but she forewent him by the underground passage to
+her chamber and donning her wonted clothes, sat [waiting] for him
+and said to him, 'Did I not bid thee go to my sister and salute
+her husband and make friends with them?' Quoth he, 'I did this,
+but I misdoubted of my affair, when I saw his wife.' And she
+said, 'Did I not tell thee that she resembleth me and I her, and
+there is nought to distinguish between us but our clothes? Go
+back to her.'
+
+So, of the heaviness of his wit, he believed her and turning
+back, went in to the trooper; but she had foregone him, and when
+he saw her beside her lover, he fell to looking on her and
+pondering. Then he saluted her and she returned him the
+salutation; and when she spoke, he was bewildered. So the trooper
+said to him, 'What ails thee to be thus?' And he answered, 'This
+woman is my wife and the voice is her voice.' Then he rose in
+haste and returning to his own house, saw his wife, who had
+foregone him by the secret passage. So he went back to the
+trooper's house and saw her sitting as before; whereupon he was
+abashed before her and sitting down in the trooper's
+sitting-chamber, ate and drank with him and became drunken and
+abode without sense all that day till nightfall, when the trooper
+arose and shaving off some of the fuller's hair (which was long
+and flowing) after the fashion of the Turks, clipped the rest
+short and clapped a tarboush on his head.
+
+Then he thrust his feet into boots and girt him with a sword and
+a girdle and bound about his middle a quiver and a bow and
+arrows. Moreover, he put money in his pocket and thrust into his
+sleeve letters-patent addressed to the governor of Ispahan,
+bidding him assign to Rustem Khemartekeni a monthly allowance of
+a hundred dirhems and ten pounds of bread and five pounds of meat
+and enrol him among the Turks under his commandment. Then he took
+him up and carrying him forth, left him in one of the mosques.
+
+The fuller gave not over sleeping till sunrise, when he awoke and
+finding himself in this plight, misdoubted of his affair and
+imagined that he was a Turk and abode putting one foot forward
+and drawing the other back. Then said he in himself, 'I will go
+to my dwelling, and if my wife know me, then am I Ahmed the
+fuller; but, if she know me not, I am a Turk.' So he betook
+himself to his house; but when the artful baggage his wife saw
+him, she cried out in his face, saying, 'Whither away, O trooper?
+Wilt thou break into the house of Ahmed the fuller, and he a man
+of repute, having a brother-in-law a Turk, a man of high standing
+with the Sultan? An thou depart not, I will acquaint my husband
+and he will requite thee thy deed.'
+
+When he heard her words, the dregs of the drunkenness wrought in
+him and he imagined that he was indeed a Turk. So he went out
+from her and putting his hand to his sleeve, found therein a
+scroll and gave it to one who read it to him. When he heard that
+which was written in the scroll, his mind was confirmed in the
+false supposition; but he said in himself, 'Maybe my wife seeketh
+to put a cheat on me; so I will go to my fellows the fullers; and
+if they know me not, then am I for sure Khemartekeni the Turk.'
+So he betook himself to the fullers and when they espied him afar
+off, they thought that he was one of the Turks, who used to wash
+their clothes with them without payment and give them nothing.
+
+Now they had complained of them aforetime to the Sultan, and he
+said, 'If any of the Turks come to you, pelt them with stones.'
+So, when they saw the fuller, they fell upon him with sticks and
+stones and pelted him; whereupon quoth he [in himself], 'Verily,
+I am a Turk and knew it not.' Then he took of the money in his
+pocket and bought him victual [for the journey] and hired a
+hackney and set out for Ispahan, leaving his wife to the trooper.
+Nor," added the vizier, "is this more extraordinary than the
+story of the merchant and the old woman and the king."
+
+The vizier's story pleased King Shah Bekht and his heart clave to
+the story of the merchant and the old woman; so he bade Er Rehwan
+withdraw to his lodging, and he went away to his house and abode
+there the next day.
+
+ The Eight Night of the Month
+
+When the evening evened, the king sat in his privy chamber and
+bade fetch the vizier, who presented himself before him, and the
+king required of him the promised story. So the vizier answered,
+"With all my heart. Know, O king, that
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF THE OLD WOMAN, THE MERCHANT AND
+ THE KING.
+
+
+
+There was once in a city of Khorassan a family of affluence and
+distinction, and the townsfolk used to envy them for that which
+God had vouchsafed them. As time went on, their fortune ceased
+from them and they passed away, till there remained of them but
+one old woman. When she grew feeble and decrepit, the townsfolk
+succoured her not with aught, but put her forth of the city,
+saying, 'This old woman shall not harbour with us, for that we do
+her kindness and she requiteth us with evil.' So she took shelter
+in a ruined place and strangers used to bestow alms upon her, and
+on this wise she abode a while of time.
+
+Now the uncle's son of the king of the city had aforetime
+disputed [the kingship] with him, and the people misliked the
+king; but God the Most High decreed that he should get the better
+of his cousin. However, jealousy of him abode in his heart and he
+acquainted the vizier, who hid it not and sent [him] money.
+Moreover, he fell to summoning [all strangers who came to the
+town], man after man, and questioning them of their faith and
+their worldly estate, and whoso answered him not [to his liking],
+he took his good.[FN#231] Now a certain wealthy man of the
+Muslims was on a journey and it befell that he arrived at that
+city by night, unknowing what was to do, and coming to the ruin
+aforesaid, gave the old woman money and said to her, 'No harm
+upon thee.' Whereupon she lifted up her voice and prayed [for
+him], He set down his merchandise by her [and abode with her] the
+rest of the night and the next day.
+
+Now thieves had followed him, so they might rob him of his good,
+but availed not unto aught; wherefore he went up to the old woman
+and kissed her head and exceeded in munificence to her. Then she
+[warned him of that which awaited strangers entering the town
+and] said to him, 'I like not this for thee and I fear mischief
+for thee from these questions that the vizier hath appointed for
+the confrontation of the ignorant.' And she expounded to him the
+case according to its fashion. Then said she to him, 'But have no
+concern: only carry me with thee to thy lodging, and if he
+question thee of aught, whilst I am with thee, I will expound the
+answers to thee.' Se he carried her with him to the city and
+established her in his lodging and entreated her kindly.
+
+Presently, the vizier heard of the merchant's coming; so he sent
+to him and let bring him to his house and talked with him awhile
+of his travels and of that which he had abidden therein, and the
+merchant answered him thereof. Then said the vizier, 'I will put
+certain questions to thee, which if thou answer me, it will be
+well [for thee].' And the merchant rose and made him no answer.
+Quoth the vizier, 'What is the weight of the elephant?' The
+merchant was perplexed and returned him no answer and gave
+himself up for lost. Then said he, 'Grant me three days' time.'
+So the vizier granted him the delay he sought and he returned to
+his lodging and related what had passed to the old woman, who
+said, 'When the morrow cometh, go to the vizier and say to him,
+"Make a ship and launch it on the sea and put in it an elephant,
+and when it sinketh in the water, [under the beast's weight],
+mark the place to which the water riseth. Then take out the
+elephant and cast in stones in its place, till the ship sink to
+the mark aforesaid; whereupon do thou take out the stones and
+weigh them and thou wilt know the weight of the elephant"'
+
+So, when he arose in the morning, he repaired to the vizier and
+repeated to him that which the old woman had taught him; whereat
+the vizier marvelled and said to him, 'What sayst thou of a man,
+who seeth in his house four holes, and in each a viper offering
+to come out and kill him, and in his house are four staves and
+each hole may not be stopped but with the ends of two staves? How
+shall he stop all the holes and deliver himself from the vipers?'
+When the merchant heard this, there betided him [of concern] what
+made him forget the first and he said to the vizier, 'Grant me
+time, so I may consider the answer.' 'Go out,' replied the
+vizier, 'and bring me the answer, or I will seize thy good.'
+
+The merchant went out and returned to the old woman, who, seeing
+him changed of colour, said to him, 'What did he ask thee, [may
+God confound] his hoariness?' So he acquainted her with the case
+and she said to him, 'Fear not; I will bring thee forth of this
+[strait].' Quoth he, 'God requite thee with good!' And she said,
+'To-morrow go to him with a stout heart and say, "The answer to
+that whereof thou askest me is that thou put the heads of two
+staves into one of the holes; then take the other two staves and
+lay them across the middle of the first two and stop with their
+heads the second hole and with their butts the fourth hole. Then
+take the butts of the first two staves and stop with them the
+third hole."'[FN#232]
+
+So he repaired to the vizier and repeated to him the answer; and
+he marvelled at its justness and said to him, 'Go; by Allah, I
+will ask thee no more questions, for thou with thy skill marrest
+my foundation.'[FN#233] Then he entreated him friendly and the
+merchant acquainted him with the affair of the old woman;
+whereupon quoth the vizier, 'Needs must the man of understanding
+company with those of understanding.' Thus did this weak woman
+restore to that man his life and good on the easiest wise. Nor,"
+added the vizier, "is this more extraordinary than the story of
+the credulous husband."
+
+When the king heard this story, he said, "How like is this to our
+own case!" Then he bade the vizier retire to his lodging; so he
+withdrew to his house and on the morrow he abode at home [till
+the king should summon him to his presence.]
+
+ The Ninth Night of the Month.
+
+When the night came, the king sat in his privy chamber and
+sending after the vizier, sought of him the promised story; and
+he said, "Know, O august king, that
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF THE CREDULOUS HUSBAND
+
+
+
+There was once of old time a foolish, ignorant man, who had
+wealth galore, and his wife was a fair woman, who loved a
+handsome youth. The latter used to watch for her husband's
+absence and come to her, and on this wise he abode a long while.
+One day, as the woman was private with her lover, he said to her,
+'O my lady and my beloved, if thou desire me and love me, give me
+possession of thyself and accomplish my need in thy husband's
+presence; else will I never again come to thee nor draw near
+thee, what while I abide on life.' Now she loved him with an
+exceeding love and could not brook his separation an hour nor
+could endure to vex him; so, when she heard his words, she said
+to him, ['So be it,] in God's name, O my beloved and solace of
+mine eyes, may he not live who would vex thee!' Quoth he,
+'To-day?' And she said, 'Yes, by thy life,' and appointed him of
+this.
+
+When her husband came home, she said to him, 'I desire to go
+a-pleasuring.' And he said, ' With all my heart.' So he went,
+till he came to a goodly place, abounding in vines and water,
+whither he carried her and pitched her a tent beside a great
+tree; and she betook herself to a place beside the tent and made
+her there an underground hiding-place, [in which she hid her
+lover]. Then said she to her husband, 'I desire to mount this
+tree.' And he said, 'Do so.' So she climbed up and when she came
+to the top of the tree, she cried out and buffeted her face,
+saying, 'Lewd fellow that thou art, are these thy usages? Thou
+sworest [fidelity to me] and liedst.' And she repeated her speech
+twice and thrice.
+
+Then she came down from the tree and rent her clothes and said,
+'O villain, if these be thy dealings with me before my eyes, how
+dost thou when thou art absent from me?' Quoth he, 'What aileth
+thee?' and she said, 'I saw thee swive the woman before my very
+eyes.' 'Not so, by Allah!' cried he. 'But hold thy peace till I
+go up and see.' So he climbed the tree and no sooner did he begin
+to do so than up came the lover [from his hiding-place] and
+taking the woman by the legs, [fell to swiving her]. When the
+husband came to the top of the tree, he looked and beheld a man
+swiving his wife. So he said, 'O strumpet, what doings are
+these?' And he made haste to come down from the tree to the
+ground; [but meanwhile the lover had returned to his hiding-
+place] and his wife said to him, 'What sawest thou?' 'I saw a man
+swive thee,' answered he; and she said, 'Thou liest; thou sawest
+nought and sayst this but of conjecture.'
+
+On this wise they did three times, and every time [he climbed the
+tree] the lover came up out of the underground place and bestrode
+her, whilst her husband looked on and she still said, 'O liar,
+seest thou aught?' 'Yes,' would he answer and came down in haste,
+but saw no one and she said to him, 'By my life, look and say
+nought but the truth!' Then said he to her, 'Arise, let us depart
+this place,[FN#234] for it is full of Jinn and Marids.' [So they
+returned to their house] and passed the night [there] and the man
+arose in the morning, assured that this was all but imagination
+and illusion. And so the lover accomplished his desire.[FN#235]
+Nor, O king of the age," added the vizier, "is this more
+extraordinary than the story of the king and the tither."
+
+When the king heard this from the vizier, he bade him go away
+[and he withdrew to his house].
+
+ The Tenth Night of the Month.
+
+When it was eventide, the king summoned the vizier and sought of
+him the story of the King and the Tither, and he said, "Know, O
+king, that
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF THE UNJUST KING AND THE TITHER.
+
+
+
+There was once a king of the kings of the earth, who dwelt in a
+populous[FN#236] city, abounding in good; but he oppressed its
+people and used them foully, so that he ruined[FN#237] the city;
+and he was named none other than tyrant and misdoer. Now he was
+wont, whenas he heard of a masterful man[FN#238] in another land,
+to send after him and tempt him with money to take service with
+him; and there was a certain tither, who exceeded all his
+brethren in oppression of the people and foulness of dealing. So
+the king sent after him and when he stood before him, he found
+him a mighty man[FN#239] and said to him, 'Thou hast been praised
+to me, but meseemeth thou overpassest the description. Set out to
+me somewhat of thy sayings and doings, so I may be dispensed
+therewith from [enquiring into] all thy circumstance.' 'With all
+my heart,' answered the other. 'Know, O king, that I oppress the
+folk and people[FN#240] the land, whilst other than I
+wasteth[FN#241] it and peopleth it not.'
+
+Now the king was leaning back; so he sat up and said, 'Tell me of
+this.' 'It is well,' answered the tither. 'I go to the man whom I
+purpose to tithe and circumvent him and feign to be occupied with
+certain business, so that I seclude myself therewith from the
+folk; and meanwhile the man is squeezed after the foulest
+fashion, till nothing is left him. Then I appear and they come in
+to me and questions befall concerning him and I say, "Indeed, I
+was ordered worse than this, for some one (may God curse him!)
+hath slandered him to the king." Then I take half of his good and
+return him the rest publicly before the folk and send him away to
+his house, in all honour and worship, and he causeth the money
+returned to be carried before him, whilst he and all who are with
+him call down blessings on me. So is it published in the city
+that I have returned him his money and he himself saith the like,
+so he may have a claim on me for the favour due to whoso praiseth
+me. Then I feign to forget him till some time[FN#242] hath passed
+over him, when I send for him and recall to him somewhat of that
+which hath befallen aforetime and demand [of him] somewhat
+privily. So he doth this and hasteneth to his dwelling and
+sendeth what I bid him, with a glad heart. Then I send to another
+man, between whom and the other is enmity, and lay hands upon him
+and feign to the first man that it is he who hath traduced him to
+the king and taken the half of his good; and the people praise
+me.'[FN#243]
+
+The king marvelled at this and at his dealing and contrivance and
+invested him with [the control of] all his affairs and of his
+kingdom and the land abode [under his governance] and he said to
+him, 'Take and people.'[FN#244] One day, the tither went out and
+saw an old man, a woodcutter, and with him wood; so he said to
+him, 'Pay a dirhem tithe for thy load.' Quoth the old man,
+'Behold, thou killest me and killest my family.' 'What [meanest
+thou]?' said the tither. 'Who killeth the folk?' And the other
+answered, 'If thou suffer me enter the city, I shall sell the
+wood there for three dirhems, whereof I will give thee one and
+buy with the other two what will support my family; but, if thou
+press me for the tithe without the city, the load will sell but
+for one dirhem and thou wilt take it and I shall abide without
+food, I and my family. Indeed, thou and I in this circumstance
+are like unto David and Solomon, on whom be peace!' ['How so?'
+asked the tither, and the woodcutter said], 'Know that
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF DAVID AND SOLOMON.
+
+
+
+Certain husbandmen once made complaint to David (on whom be
+peace!) against certain owners of sheep, whose flocks had fallen
+upon their crops by night and devoured them, and he bade value
+the crops [and that the shepherds should make good the amount].
+But Solomon (on whom be peace!) rose and said, "Nay, but let the
+sheep be delivered to the husbandmen, so they may take their milk
+and wool, till they have repaid themselves the value of their
+crops; then let the sheep return to their owners." So David
+withdrew his own ordinance and caused execute that of Solomon;
+yet was David no oppressor; but Solomon's judgment was more
+pertinent and he showed himself therein better versed in
+jurisprudence.'[FN#245]
+
+When the tither heard the old man's speech, he relented towards
+him and said to him, 'O old man, I make thee a present of that
+which is due from thee, and do thou cleave to me and leave me
+not, so haply I may get of thee profit that shall do away from me
+my errors and guide me into the way of righteousness.' So the old
+man followed him, and there met him another with a load of wood.
+Quoth the tither to him, 'Pay what is due from thee.' And he
+answered, 'Have patience with me till to-morrow, for I owe the
+hire of a house, and I will sell another load of wood and pay
+thee two days' tithe.' But he refused him this and the old man
+said to him, 'If thou constrain him unto this, thou wilt enforce
+him quit thy country, for that he is a stranger here and hath no
+domicile; and if he remove on account of one dirhem, thou wilt
+lose [of him] three hundred and threescore dirhems a year. Thus
+wilt thou lose the much in keeping the little.' Quoth the tither,
+'I give him a dirhem every month to the hire of his lodging.'
+
+Then he went on and presently there met him a third woodcutter
+and he said to him, 'Pay what is due from thee.' And he answered,
+'I will pay thee a dirhem when I enter the city; or take of me
+four danics[FN#246] [now].' Quoth the tither, 'I will not do it,'
+but the old man said to him, 'Take of him the four danics
+presently, for it is easy to take and hard to restore.' 'By
+Allah,' quoth the tither, 'it is good!' and he arose and went on,
+crying out, at the top of his voice and saying, 'I have no power
+to-day [to do evil].' Then he put off his clothes and went forth
+wandering at a venture, repenting unto his Lord. Nor," added the
+vizier, "is this story more extraordinary than that of the thief
+who believed the woman and sought refuge with God against falling
+in with her like, by reason of her cunning contrivance for
+herself."
+
+When the king heard this, he said in himself, "Since the tither
+repented, in consequence of the admonitions [of the woodcutter],
+it behoves that I spare this vizier, so I may hear the story of
+the thief and the woman." And he bade Er Rehwan withdraw to his
+lodging.
+
+ The Eleventh Night of the Month.
+
+When the evening came and the king sat in his privy chamber, he
+summoned the vizier and required of him the story of the thief
+and the woman. Quoth the vizier, "Know, O king, that
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF THE THIEF AND THE WOMAN.
+
+
+
+A certain thief was a [cunning] workman and used not to steal
+aught, till he had spent all that was with him; moreover, he
+stole not from his neighbours, neither companied with any of the
+thieves, lest some one should come to know him and his case get
+wind. On this wise he abode a great while, in flourishing case,
+and his secret was concealed, till God the Most High decreed that
+he broke in upon a poor man, deeming that he was rich. When he
+entered the house, he found nought, whereat he was wroth, and
+necessity prompted him to wake the man, who was asleep with his
+wife. So he aroused him and said to him, 'Show me thy treasure.'
+
+Now he had no treasure; but the thief believed him not and
+insisted upon him with threats and blows. When he saw that he got
+no profit of him, he said to him, 'Swear by the oath of divorce
+from thy wife[FN#247] [that thou hast nothing].' So he swore and
+his wife said to him, 'Out on thee! Wilt thou divorce me? Is not
+the treasure buried in yonder chamber?' Then she turned to the
+thief and conjured him to multiply blows upon her husband, till
+he should deliver to him the treasure, concerning which he had
+sworn falsely. So he drubbed him grievously, till he carried him
+to a certain chamber, wherein she signed to him that the treasure
+was and that he should take it up.
+
+So the thief entered, he and the husband; and when they were both
+in the chamber, she locked on them the door, which was a stout
+one, and said to the thief, 'Out on thee, O fool! Thou hast
+fallen [into the trap] and now I have but to cry out and the
+officers of the police will come and take thee and thou wilt lose
+thy life, O Satan!' Quoth he, 'Let me go forth;' and she said,
+'Thou art a man and I am a woman; and in thy hand is a knife and
+I am afraid of thee.' Quoth he, 'Take the knife from me.' So she
+took the knife from him and said to her husband, 'Art thou a
+woman and he a man? Mar his nape with beating, even as he did
+with thee; and if he put out his hand to thee, I will cry out and
+the police will come and take him and cut him in sunder.' So the
+husband said to him, 'O thousand-horned,[FN#248] O dog, O
+traitor, I owe thee a deposit,[FN#249] for which thou dunnest
+me.' And he fell to beating him grievously with a stick of
+live-oak, whilst he called out to the woman for help and besought
+her of deliverance; but she said, 'Abide in thy place till the
+morning, and thou shalt see wonders.' And her husband beat him
+within the chamber, till he [well- nigh] made an end of him and
+he swooned away.
+
+Then he left beating him and when the thief came to himself, the
+woman said to her husband, 'O man, this house is on hire and we
+owe its owners much money, and we have nought; so how wilt thou
+do?' And she went on to bespeak him thus. Quoth the thief, 'And
+what is the amount of the rent?' 'It will be fourscore dirhems,'
+answered the husband; and the thief said, 'I will pay this for
+thee and do thou let me go my way.' Then said the wife, 'O man,
+how much do we owe the baker and the greengrocer?' Quoth the
+thief, 'What is the sum of this?' And the husband said, 'Sixscore
+dirhems.' 'That makes two hundred dirhems,' rejoined the other;
+'let me go my way and I will pay them.' But the wife said, 'O my
+dear one, and the girl groweth up and needs must we marry her and
+equip her and [do] what else is needful' So the thief said to the
+husband, 'How much dost thou want?' And he answered, 'A hundred
+dirhems, in the way of moderation.'[FN#250] Quoth the thief,
+'That makes three hundred dirhems.' And the woman said, 'O my
+dear one, when the girl is married, thou wilt need money for
+winter expenses, charcoal and firewood and other necessaries.'
+'What wouldst thou have?' asked the thief; and she said, 'A
+hundred dirhems.' 'Be it four hundred dirhems,' rejoined he; and
+she said, 'O my dear one and solace of mine eyes, needs must my
+husband have capital in hand, wherewith he may buy merchandise
+and open him a shop.' 'How much will that be?' asked he, and she
+said, 'A hundred dirhems.' Quoth the thief, '[That makes five
+hundred dirhems; I will pay it;] but may I be divorced from my
+wife if all my possessions amount to more than this, and that the
+savings of twenty years! Let me go my way, so I may deliver them
+to thee.' 'O fool,' answered she, 'how shall I let thee go thy
+way? Give me a right token.' [So he gave her a token for his
+wife] and she cried out to her young daughter and said to her,
+'Keep this door.'
+
+Then she charged her husband keep watch over the thief, till she
+should return, and repairing to his wife, acquainted her with his
+case and told her that her husband the thief had been taken and
+had compounded for his release, at the price of seven hundred
+dirhems, and named to her the token. So she gave her the money
+and she took it and returned to her house. By this time, the dawn
+had broken; so she let the thief go his way, and when he went
+out, she said to him, 'O my dear one, when shall I see thee come
+and take the treasure?' 'O indebted one,' answered he, 'when thou
+needest other seven hundred dirhems, wherewithal to amend thy
+case and that of thy children and to discharge thy debts.' And he
+went out, hardly believing in his deliverance from her. Nor,"
+added the vizier, "is this more extraordinary than the story of
+the three men and our Lord Jesus."
+
+And the king bade him depart to his own house.
+
+ The Twelfth Night of the Month.
+
+When it was eventide, the king summoned the vizier and bade him
+tell the [promised] story, "Hearkening and obedience," answered
+he. "Know, O king, that
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF THE THREE MEN AND OUR LORD JESUS.
+
+
+
+Three men once went out in quest of riches and came upon a block
+of gold, weighing a hundred pounds. When they saw it, they took
+it up on their shoulders and fared on with it, till they drew
+near a certain city, when one of them said, 'Let us sit in the
+mosque, whilst one of us goes and buys us what we may eat." So
+they sat down in the mosque and one of them arose and entered the
+city. When he came therein, his soul prompted him to play his
+fellows false and get the gold for himself alone. So he bought
+food and poisoned it; but, when he returned to his comrades, they
+fell upon him and slew him, so they might enjoy the gold without
+him. Then they ate of the [poisoned] food and died, and the gold
+abode cast down over against them.
+
+Presently, Jesus, son of Mary (on whom be peace!) passed by and
+seeing this, besought God the Most High for tidings of their
+case; so He told him what had betided them, whereat great was his
+wonderment and he related to his disciples what he had seen.
+Quoth one of them, 'O Spirit of God,[FN#251] nought resembleth
+this but my own story.' 'How so?' asked Jesus, and the other
+said,
+
+
+
+
+ THE DISCIPLE'S STORY.
+
+
+
+'I was aforetime in such a city and hid a thousand dirhems in a
+monastery there. After awhile, I went thither and taking the
+money, bound it about my middle. [Then I set out to return] and
+when I came to the desert, the carrying of the money was
+burdensome to me. Presently, I espied a horseman pricking after
+me; so I [waited till he came up and] said to him, "O horseman,
+carry this money [for me] and earn reward and recompense [from
+God]." "Nay," answered he; "I will not do it, for I should weary
+myself and weary my horse." Then he went on, but, before he had
+gone far, he said in himself, "If I take up the money and spur my
+horse and forego him, how shall he overtake me?" And I also said
+in myself, "Verily, I erred [in asking him to carry the money];
+for, had he taken it and made off, I could have done nought."
+Then he turned back to me and said to me, "Hand over the money,
+that I may carry it for thee." But I answered him, saying, "That
+which hath occurred to thy mind hath occurred to mine also; so go
+in peace."'
+
+Quoth Jesus (on whom be peace!), 'Had these dealt prudently, they
+had taken thought for themselves; but they neglected the issues
+of events; for that whoso acteth prudently is safe and
+conquereth,[FN#252] and whoso neglecteth precaution perisheth and
+repenteth.' Nor," added the vizier," is this more extraordinary
+nor goodlier than the story of the king, whose kingdom was
+restored to him and his wealth, after he had become poor,
+possessing not a single dirhem."
+
+When the king heard this, he said in himself "How like is this to
+my own story in the matter of the vizier and his slaughter! Had I
+not used precaution, I had put him to death." And he bade Er
+Rehwan depart to his own house.
+
+ The Thirteenth Night of the Month.
+
+When the evening evened, the king sent for the vizier to his
+privy sitting chamber and bade him [tell] the [promised] story.
+So he said, "Hearkening and obedience. They avouch, O king, that
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF THE DETHRONED KING WHOSE
+ KINGDOM AND GOOD WERE RESTORED TO HIM.
+
+
+
+There was once, in a city of Hind, a just and beneficent king,
+and he had a vizier, a man of understanding, just in his
+judgment, praiseworthy in his policy, in whose hand was the
+governance of all the affairs of the realm; for he was firmly
+stablished in the king's favour and high in esteem with the folk
+of his time, and the king set great store by him and committed
+himself to him in all his affairs, by reason of his contrivance
+for his subjects, and he had helpers[FN#253] who were content
+with him.
+
+Now the king had a brother, who envied him and would fain have
+been in his place; and when he was weary of looking for his death
+and the term of his life seemed distant unto him, he took counsel
+with certain of his partisans and they said, 'The vizier is the
+king's counsellor and but for him, there would be left the king
+no kingdom.' So the king's brother cast about for the ruin of the
+vizier, but could find no means of accomplishing his design; and
+when the affair grew long upon him, he said to his wife, 'What
+deemest thou will advantage us in this?' Quoth she, 'What is it?'
+And he replied, 'I mean in the matter of yonder vizier, who
+inciteth my brother to devoutness with all his might and biddeth
+him thereto, and indeed the king is infatuated with his counsel
+and committeth to him the governance of all things and matters.'
+Quoth she, 'Thou sayst truly; but how shall we do with him?' And
+he answered, 'I have a device, so thou wilt help me in that which
+I shall say to thee.' Quoth she, 'Thou shall have my help in
+whatsoever thou desirest.' And he said, 'I mean to dig him a pit
+in the vestibule and dissemble it artfully.'
+
+So he did this, and when it was night, he covered the pit with a
+light covering, so that, whenas the vizier stepped upon it, it
+would give way with him. Then he sent to him and summoned him to
+the presence in the king's name, and the messenger bade him enter
+by the privy door. So he entered in thereat, alone, and when he
+stepped upon the covering of the pit, it gave way with him and he
+fell to the bottom; whereupon the king's brother fell to pelting
+him with stones. When the vizier saw what had betided him, he
+gave himself up for lost; so he stirred not and lay still. The
+prince, seeing him make no motion, [deemed him dead]; so he took
+him forth and wrapping him up in his clothes, cast him into the
+billows of the sea in the middle of the night. When the vizier
+felt the water, he awoke from the swoon and swam awhile, till a
+ship passed by him, whereupon he cried out to the sailors and
+they took him up.
+
+When the morning morrowed, the people went seeking for him, but
+found him not; and when the king knew this, he was perplexed
+concerning his affair and abode unknowing what he should do. Then
+he sought for a vizier to fill his room, and the king's brother
+said, 'I have a vizier, a sufficient man.' 'Bring him to me,'
+said the king. So he brought him a man, whom he set at the head
+of affairs; but he seized upon the kingdom and clapped the king
+in irons and made his brother king in his stead. The new king
+gave himself up to all manner of wickedness, whereat the folk
+murmured and his vizier said to him, 'I fear lest the Indians
+take the old king and restore him to the kingship and we both
+perish; wherefore, if we take him and cast him into the sea, we
+shall be at rest from him; and we will publish among the folk
+that he is dead.' And they agreed upon this. So they took him up
+and carrying him out to sea, cast him in.
+
+When he felt the water, he struck out, and gave not over swimming
+till he landed upon an island, where he abode five days, finding
+nothing which he might eat or drink; but, on the sixth day, when
+he despaired of himself, he caught sight of a passing ship; so he
+made signals to the crew and they came and took him up and fared
+on with him to an inhabited country, where they set him ashore,
+naked as he was. There he saw a man tilling; so he sought
+guidance of him and the husbandman said, 'Art thou a stranger?'
+'Yes,' answered the king and sat with him and they talked. The
+husbandman found him quickwitted and intelligent and said to him,
+'If thou sawest a comrade of mine, thou wouldst see him the like
+of what I see thee, for his case is even as thy case, and he is
+presently my friend.'
+
+Quoth the king, 'Verily, thou makest me long to see him. Canst
+thou not bring us together?' 'With all my heart,' answered the
+husbandman, and the king sat with him till he had made an end of
+his tillage, when he carried him to his dwelling-place and
+brought him in company with the other stranger, aud behold, it
+was his vizier. When they saw each other, they wept and embraced,
+and the husbandman wept for their weeping; but the king concealed
+their affair and said to him, 'This is a man from my country and
+he is as my brother.' So they abode with the husbandman and
+helped him for a wage, wherewith they supported themselves a long
+while. Meanwhile, they sought news of their country and learned
+that which its people suffered of straitness and oppression.
+
+One day, there came a ship and in it a merchant from their own
+country, who knew them and rejoiced in them with an exceeding joy
+and clad them in goodly apparel. Moreover, he acquainted them
+with the manner of the treachery that had been practised upon
+them and counselled them to return to their own land, they and he
+with whom they had made friends,[FN#254] assuring them that God
+the Most High would restore them to their former estate. So the
+king returned and the folk joined themselves to him and he fell
+upon his brother and his vizier and took them and clapped them in
+prison.
+
+Then he sat down again upon the throne of his kingship, whilst
+the vizier stood before him, and they returned to their former
+estate, but they had nought of the [goods of the world]. So the
+king said to his vizier, 'How shall we avail to abide in this
+city, and we in this state of poverty?' And he answered, 'Be at
+thine ease and have no concern.' Then he singled out one of the
+soldiers[FN#255] and said to him, 'Send us thy service[FN#256]
+for the year.' Now there were in the city fifty thousand
+subjects[FN#257] and in the hamlets and villages a like number;
+and the vizier sent to each of these, saying, 'Let each of you
+get an egg and lay it under a hen.' So they did this and it was
+neither burden nor grievance to them.
+
+When twenty days had passed by, each [egg] was hatched, and the
+vizier bade them pair the chickens, male and female, and rear
+them well. So they did this and it was found a charge unto no
+one. Then they waited for them awhile and after this the vizier
+enquired of the chickens and was told that they were become
+fowls. Moreover, they brought him all their eggs and he bade set
+them; and after twenty days there were hatched from each [pair]
+of them thirty or five-and-twenty or fifteen [chickens] at the
+least. The vizier let note against each man the number of
+chickens that pertained to him, and after two months, he took the
+old hens and the cockerels, and there came to him from each man
+nigh half a score, and he left the [young] hens with them. On
+like wise he sent to the country folk and let the cocks abide
+with them. So he got him young ones [galore] and appropriated to
+himself the sale of the fowls, and on this wise he got him, in
+the course of a year, that which the regal estate required of the
+king and his affairs were set right for him by the vizier's
+contrivance. And he peopled[FN#258] the country and dealt justly
+by his subjects and returned to them all that he took from them
+and lived a happy and prosperous life. Thus good judgment and
+prudence are better than wealth, for that understanding profiteth
+at all times and seasons. Nor," added the vizier, "is this more
+extraordinary than the story of the man whose caution slew him."
+
+When the king heard his vizier's words, he marvelled with the
+utmost wonderment and bade him retire to his lodging. [So Er
+Rehwan withdrew to his house and abode there till eventide of the
+next day, when he again presented himself before the king.]
+
+ The Fourteenth Night of the Month.
+
+When the vizier returned to the king, the latter sought of him
+the story of the man whose caution slew him and be said, "Know, O
+august king, that
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF THE MAN WHOSE CAUTION WAS THE
+ CAUSE OF HIS DEATH.
+
+
+
+There was once a man who was exceeding cautious over himself, and
+he set out one day on a journey to a land abounding in wild
+beasts. The caravan wherein he was came by night to the gate of a
+city; but the warders refused to open to them; so they passed the
+night without the city, and there were lions there. The man
+aforesaid, of the excess of his caution, could not fix upon a
+place wherein he should pass the night, for fear of the wild
+beasts and reptiles; so he went about seeking an empty place
+wherein he might lie.
+
+Now there was a ruined building hard by and he climbed up on to a
+high wall and gave not over clambering hither and thither, of the
+excess of his carefulness, till his feet betrayed him and he
+slipped [and fell] to the bottom and died, whilst his companions
+arose in the morning in health [and weal]. Now, if he had
+overmastered his corrupt[FN#259] judgment and submitted himself
+to fate and fortune fore-ordained, it had been safer and better
+[for him]; but he made light of the folk and belittled their wit
+and was not content to take example by them; for his soul
+whispered him that he was a man of understanding and he imagined
+that, if he abode with them, he would perish; so his folly cast
+him into perdition. Nor," added the vizier, "is this more
+extraordinary than the story of the man who was lavish of his
+house and his victual to one whom he knew not"
+
+When the king heard this, he said, "I will not isolate myself
+from the folk and slay my vizier." And he bade him depart to his
+dwelling.
+
+ The Fifteenth Night of the Month.
+
+When the evening evened, the king let fetch the vizier and
+required of him the [promised] story. So he said, "Know, O king,
+that
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF THE MAN WHO WAS LAVISH OF HIS
+ HOUSE AND HIS VICTUAL TO ONE WHOM HE
+ KNEW NOT.
+
+
+
+There was once an Arab of [high] rank and [goodly] presence, a
+man of exalted generosity and magnanimity, and he had brethren,
+with whom he consorted and caroused, and they were wont to
+assemble by turns in each other's houses. When it came to his
+turn, he made ready in his house all manner goodly and pleasant
+meats and dainty drinks and exceeding lovely flowers and
+excellent fruits, and made provision of all kinds of instruments
+of music and store of rare apothegms and marvellous stories and
+goodly instances and histories and witty anedotes and verses and
+what not else, for there was none among those with whom he was
+used to company but enjoyed this on every goodly wise, and in the
+entertainment he had provided was all whereof each had need. Then
+he sallied forth and went round about the city, in quest of his
+friends, so he might assemble them; but found none of them in his
+house.
+
+Now in that town was a man of good breeding and large generosity,
+a merchant of condition, young of years and bright of face, who
+had come to that town from his own country with great store of
+merchandise and wealth galore. He took up his abode therein and
+the place was pleasant to him and he was lavish in expenditure,
+so that he came to the end of all his good and there remained
+with him nothing save that which was upon him of raiment. So he
+left the lodging wherein he had abidden in the days of his
+affluence, after he had wasted[FN#260] that which was therein of
+furniture, and fell to harbouring in the houses of the townsfolk
+from night to night.
+
+One day, as he went wandering about the streets, he espied a
+woman of the utmost beauty and grace, and what he saw of her
+charms amazed him and there betided him what made him forget his
+present plight. She accosted him and jested with him and he
+besought her of foregathering and companionship. She consented to
+this and said to him, 'Let us go to thy lodging.' With this he
+repented and was perplexed concerning his affair and grieved for
+that which must escape him of her company by reason of the
+straitness of his hand,[FN#261] for that he had no jot of
+spending money. But he was ashamed to say, 'No,' after he had
+made suit to her; so he went on before her, bethinking him how he
+should rid himself of her and casting about for an excuse which
+he might put off on her, and gave not over going from street to
+street, till he entered one that had no issue and saw, at the
+farther end, a door, whereon was a padlock.
+
+So he said to her, 'Do thou excuse me, for my servant hath locked
+the door, and who shall open to us?' Quoth she, 'O my lord, the
+padlock is worth [but] half a score dirhems.' So saying, she
+tucked up [her sleeves] from fore-arms as they were crystal and
+taking a stone, smote upon the padlock and broke it. Then she
+opened the door and said to him, 'Enter, O my lord.' So he
+entered, committing his affair to God, (to whom belong might and
+majesty,) and she entered after him and locked the door from
+within. They found themselves in a pleasant house, comprising
+all[FN#262] weal and gladness; and the young man went on, till he
+came to the sitting-chamber, and behold, it was furnished with
+the finest of furniture [and arrayed on the goodliest wise for
+the reception of guests,] as hath before been set out, [for that
+it was the house of the man aforesaid].
+
+He [seated himself on the divan and] leant upon a cushion, whilst
+she put out her hand to her veil and did it off. Then she put off
+her heavy outer clothes and discovered her charms, whereupon he
+embraced her and kissed her and swived her; after which they
+washed and returned to their place and he said to her, 'Know that
+I have little knowledge [of what goes on] in my house, for that I
+trust to my servant; so arise thou and see what the boy hath made
+ready in the kitchen.' Accordingly, she arose and going down into
+the kitchen, saw cooking pots over the fire, wherein were all
+manner of dainty meats, and manchet-bread and fresh
+almond-and-honey cakes. So she set bread on a dish and ladled out
+[what she would] from the pots and brought it to him.
+
+They ate and drank and sported and made merry awhile of the day;
+and as they were thus engaged, up came the master of the house,
+with his friends, whom he had brought with him, that they might
+carouse together, as of wont. He saw the door opened and knocked
+lightly, saying to his friends, 'Have patience with me, for some
+of my family are come to visit me; wherefore excuse belongeth
+[first] to God the Most High, and then to you.'[FN#263] So they
+took leave of him and went their ways, whilst he gave another
+light knock at the door. When the young man heard this, he
+changed colour and the woman said to him, 'Methinks thy servant
+hath returned.' 'Yes,' answered he; and she arose and opening the
+door to the master of the house, said to him, 'Where hast thou
+been? Indeed, thy master is wroth with thee.' 'O my lady,'
+answered he, 'I have but been about his occasions.'
+
+Then he girt his middle with a handkerchief and entering, saluted
+the young merchant, who said to him, 'Where hast thou been?'
+Quoth he, 'I have done thine errands;' and the youth said, 'Go
+and eat and come hither and drink.' So he went away, as he bade
+him, and ate. Then he washed and returning to the saloon, sat
+down on the carpet and fell to talking with them; whereupon the
+young merchant's heart was comforted and his breast dilated and
+he addressed himself to joyance. They abode in the most
+delightsome life and the most abounding pleasance till a third
+part of the night was past, when the master of the house arose
+and spreading them a bed, invited them to lie down. So they lay
+down and the youth abode on wake, pondering their affair, till
+daybreak, when the woman awoke and said to her companion, 'I wish
+to go.' So he bade her farewell and she departed; whereupon the
+master of the house followed her with a purse of money and gave
+it to her, saying, 'Blame not my master,' and made his excuse to
+her for the young merchant.
+
+Then he returned to the youth and said to him, 'Arise and come to
+the bath.' And he fell to shampooing his hands and feet, whilst
+the youth called down blessings on him and said, 'O my lord, who
+art thou? Methinks there is not in the world the like of thee,
+no, nor a pleasanter than thy composition.' Then each of them
+acquainted the other with his case and condition and they went to
+the bath; after which the master of the house conjured the young
+merchant to return with him and summoned his friends. So they ate
+and drank and he related to them the story, wherefore they
+praised the master of the house and glorified him; and their
+friendship was complete, what while the young merchant abode in
+the town, till God vouchsafed him a commodity of travel,
+whereupon they took leave of him and he departed; and this is the
+end of his story. Nor," added the vizier, "O king of the age, is
+this more marvellous than the story of the rich man who lost his
+wealth and his wit."
+
+When the king heard the vizier's story, it pleased him and he
+bade him go to his house.
+
+ The Sixteenth Night of the Month.
+
+When the evening evened, the king sat in his sitting- chamber and
+sending for his vizier, bade him relate the story of the wealthy
+man who lost his wealth and his wit. So he said, "Know, O king,
+that
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF THE IDIOT AND THE SHARPER.
+
+
+
+There was once a man of fortune, who lost his wealth, and chagrin
+and melancholy got the mastery of him, so that he became an idiot
+and lost his wit. There abode with him of his wealth about a
+score of dinars and he used to beg alms of the folk, and that
+which they gave him he would gather together and lay to the
+dinars that were left him. Now there was in that town a vagabond,
+who made his living by sharping, and he knew that the idiot had
+somewhat of money; so he fell to spying upon him and gave not
+over watching him till he saw him put in an earthen pot that
+which he had with him of money and enter a deserted ruin, where
+he sat down, [as if] to make water, and dug a hole, in which he
+laid the pot and covering it up, strewed earth upon the place.
+Then he went away and the sharper came and taking what was in the
+pot, covered it up again, as it was.
+
+Presently, the idiot returned, with somewhat to add to his hoard,
+but found it not; so he bethought him who had followed him and
+remembered that he had found the sharper aforesaid assiduous in
+sitting with him and questioning him. So he went in quest of him,
+assured that he had taken the pot, and gave not over looking for
+him till he espied him sitting; whereupon he ran to him and the
+sharper saw him. [Then the idiot stood within earshot] and
+muttered to himself and said, 'In the pot are threescore dinars
+and I have with me other score in such a place and to-day I will
+unite the whole in the pot.' When the sharper heard him say this
+to himself, muttering and mumbling after his fashion, he repented
+him of having taken the dinars and said, 'He will presently
+return to the pot and find it empty; wherefore that[FN#264] for
+which I am on the look-out will escape me; and meseemeth I were
+best restore the dinars [to their place], so he may see them and
+leave all that is with him in the pot, and I can take the whole.'
+
+Now he feared [to return to the pot then and there], lest the
+idiot should follow him to the place and find nothing and so his
+plan be marred. So he said to him, 'O Ajlan,[FN#265] I would have
+thee come to my lodging and eat bread with me." So the idiot went
+with him to his lodging and he seated him there and going to the
+market, sold somewhat of his clothes and pawned somewhat from his
+house and bought dainty food. Then he betook himself to the ruin
+and replacing the money in the pot, buried it again; after which
+he returned to his lodging and gave the idiot to eat and drink,
+and they went out together. The sharper went away and hid
+himself, lest the idiot should see him, whilst the latter
+repaired to his hiding- place and took the pot
+
+Presently, the sharper came to the ruin, rejoicing in that which
+he deemed he should get, and dug in the place, but found nothing
+and knew that the idiot had tricked him. So he buffeted his face,
+for chagrin, and fell to following the other whithersoever he
+went, so he might get what was with him, but availed not unto
+this, for that the idiot knew what was in his mind and was
+certified that he spied upon him, [with intent to rob him]; so he
+kept watch over himself. Now, if the sharper had considered [the
+consequences of] haste and that which is begotten of loss
+therefrom, he had not done thus. Nor," continued the vizier, "is
+this story, O king of the age, rarer or more extraordinary or
+more diverting than the story of Khelbes and his wife and the
+learned man and that which befell between them."
+
+When the king heard this story, he renounced his purpose of
+putting the vizier to death and his soul prompted him to continue
+him on life. So he bade him go away to his house.
+
+ The Seventeenth Night of the Month.
+
+When the evening evened, the king summoned the vizier, and when
+he presented himself, he required of him the [promised] story. So
+he said, "Hearkening and obedience. Know, O august king, that
+
+
+
+
+
+ STORY OF KHELBES AND HIS WIFE AND THE
+ LEARNED MAN.
+
+
+
+There was once a man hight Khelbes, who was a lewd fellow, a
+calamity, notorious for this fashion, and he had a fair wife,
+renowned for beauty and loveliness. A man of his townsfolk fell
+in love with her and she also loved him. Now Khelbes was a crafty
+fellow and full of tricks, and there was in his neighbourhood a
+learned man, to whom the folk used to resort every day and he
+told them stories and admonished them [with moral instances]; and
+Khelbes was wont to be present in his assembly, for the sake of
+making a show before the folk.
+
+Now this learned man had a wife renowned for beauty and
+loveliness and quickness of wit and understanding and the lover
+cast about for a device whereby he might win to Khelbes's wife;
+so he came to him and told him, as a secret, what he had seen of
+the learned man's wife and confided to him that he was enamoured
+of her and besought him of help in this. Khelbes told him that
+she was distinguished to the utterest for chastity and continence
+and that she exposed herself not to suspicion; but the other
+said, 'I cannot renounce her, [firstly,] because the woman
+inclineth to me and coveteth my wealth, and secondly, because of
+the greatness of my love for her; and nothing is wanting but thy
+help.' Quoth Khelbes, 'I will do thy will;' and the other said,
+'Thou shalt have of me two dirhems a day, on condition that thou
+sit with the learned man and that, when he riseth from the
+assembly, thou speak a word notifying the breaking up of the
+session.' So they agreed upon this and Khelbes entered and sat in
+the assembly, whilst the lover was assured in his heart that the
+secret was safe with him, wherefore he rejoiced and was content
+to pay the two dirhems.
+
+Then Khelbes used to attend the learned man's assembly, whilst
+the other would go in to his wife and abide with her, on such
+wise as he thought good, till the learned man arose from his
+session; and when Khelbes saw that he purposed rising, he would
+speak a word for the lover to hear, whereupon he went forth from
+Khelbes's wife, and the latter knew not that calamity was in his
+own house. At last the learned man, seeing Khelbes do on this
+wise every day, began to misdoubt of him, more by token of that
+which he knew of his character, and suspicion grew upon him; so,
+one day, he advanced the time of his rising before the wonted
+hour and hastening up to Khelbes, laid hold of him and said to
+him, 'By Allah, an thou speak a single syllable, I will do thee a
+mischief!' Then he went in to his wife, with Khelbes in his
+grasp, and behold, she was sitting, as of her wont, nor was there
+about her aught of suspicious or unseemly.
+
+The learned man bethought him awhile of this, then made for
+Khelbes's house, which adjoined his own, still holding the
+latter; and when they entered, they found the young man lying on
+the bed with Khelbes's wife; whereupon quoth he to him, 'O
+accursed one, the calamity is with thee and in thine own house!'
+So Khelbes put away his wife and went forth, fleeing, and
+returned not to his own land. This, then," continued the vizier,
+"is the consequence of lewdness, for whoso purposeth in himself
+craft and perfidy, they get possession of him, and had Khelbes
+conceived of himself that[FN#266] which he conceived of the folk
+of dishonour and calamity, there had betided him nothing of this.
+Nor is this story, rare and extraordinary though it be, more
+extraordinary or rarer than that of the pious woman whose
+husband's brother accused her of lewdness."
+
+When the king heard this, wonderment gat hold of him and his
+admiration for the vizier redoubled; so he bade him go to his
+house and return to him [on the morrow], according to his wont.
+Accordingly, the vizier withdrew to his lodging, where he passed
+the night and the ensuing day.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Vol. I.
+
+
+
+
+ Tales from the Arabic, Volume 1
+ Endnotes
+
+
+
+[FN#1] Breslau Text, vol. iv. pp. 134-189, Nights
+cclxxii.-ccxci. This is the story familiar to readers of the old
+"Arabian Nights" as "Abon Hassan, or the Sleeper Awakened" and is
+the only one of the eleven tales added by Galland to his version
+of the (incomplete) MS. of the Book of the Thousand Nights and
+One Night procured by him from Syria, the Arabic original of
+which has yet been discovered. (See my "Book of the Thousand
+Nights and One Night," Vol. IX. pp. 264 et seq.) The above title
+is of course intended to mark the contrast between the everyday
+(or waking) hours of Aboulhusn and his fantastic life in the
+Khalif's palace, supposed by him to have passed in a dream, and
+may also be rendered "The Sleeper and the Waker."
+
+[FN#2] i.e. The Wag.
+
+[FN#3] Always noted for debauchery.
+
+[FN#4] i.e. the part he had taken for spending money.
+
+[FN#5] i.e. "those," a characteristic Arab idiom.
+
+[FN#6] Lit. draw thee near (to them).
+
+[FN#7] i.e. that over the Tigris.
+
+[FN#8] "Platter bread," i.e. bread baked in a platter, instead
+of, as usual with the Arabs, in an oven or earthen jar previously
+heated, to the sides of which the thin cakes of dough are
+applied, "is lighter than oven bread, especially if it be made
+thin and leavened."--Shecouri, a medical writer quoted by Dozy.
+
+[FN#9] Or cooking-pots.
+
+[FN#10] Or fats for frying.
+
+[FN#11] Or clarified.
+
+[FN#12] Taam, lit. food, the name given by the inhabitants of
+Northern Africa to the preparation of millet-flour (something
+like semolina) called kouskoussou, which forms the staple food of
+the people.
+
+[FN#13] Or "In peace."
+
+[FN#14] Eastern peoples attach great importance, for good or evil
+omen, to the first person met or the first thing that happens in
+the day.
+
+[FN#15] Or "attributed as sin."
+
+[FN#16] A common Eastern substitute for soap.
+
+[FN#17] This common formula of assent is an abbreviation of
+"Hearkening and obedience are due to God and to the Commander of
+the Faithful" or other the person addressed.
+
+[FN#18] Dar es Selam, one of the seven "Gardens" into which the
+Mohammedan Paradise is divided.
+
+[FN#19] i.e. a mattrass eighteen inches thick.
+
+[FN#20] Complimentary form of address to eunuchs, generally used
+by inferiors only.
+
+[FN#21] The morning-prayer consists of four inclinations (rekäat)
+only. A certain fixed succession of prayers and acts of adoration
+is called a rekah (sing, of rekäat) from the inclination of the
+body that occurs in it.
+
+[FN#22] i.e. the terminal formula of prayer, "Peace be on us and
+on all the righteous servants of God!"
+
+[FN#23] i.e. said "I purpose to make an end of prayer."
+
+[FN#24] Or "linen."
+
+[FN#25] A well-known poet of the time.
+
+[FN#26] i.e. Ibrahim of Mosul, the greatest musician of his day.
+
+[FN#27] i.e., doughty men of war, guards.
+
+[FN#28] The Abbaside Khalifs traced their descent from Abbas, the
+uncle of Mohammed, and considered themselves, therefore, as
+belonging to the family of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#29] i.e. May thy dwelling-place never fall into ruin.
+
+[FN#30] i.e. the raised recess situate at the upper end of an
+Oriental saloon, wherein is the place of honour.
+
+[FN#31] ie, the necromancers.
+
+[FN#32] Lit. I have not found that thou hast a heel blessed (or
+propitious) to me.
+
+[FN#33] i.e. O thou who art a calamity to those who have to do
+with thee!
+
+[FN#34] Abou Nuwas ibn Hani, the greatest poet of the time.
+
+[FN#35] As a charm against evil spirits.
+
+[FN#36] i.e. the vein said to have been peculiar to the
+descendants of Hashim, grandfather of Abbas and great-grandson of
+Mohammed, and to have started out between their eyes in moments
+of anger.
+
+[FN#37] Lit. that I may do upon her sinister deeds.
+
+[FN#38] "The pitcher comes not always back unbroken from the
+well."--English proverb.
+
+[FN#39] i.e. of sorrow for his loss.
+
+[FN#40] i.e. of grief for her loss.
+
+[FN#41] Breslau Text, vol. vl. pp. 182-188, Nights
+ccccxxxii-ccccxxxiv.
+
+[FN#42] The eighth Khalif (A.D. 717-720) of the house of Umeyyeh
+and the best and most single-hearted of all the Khalifs, with the
+exception of the second, Omar ben Khettab, from whom he was
+descended.
+
+[FN#43] A celebrated statesman of the time, afterwards governor
+of Cuia* and Bassora under Omar ben Abdulaziz.
+
+[FN#44] The most renowned poet of the first century of the
+Hegira. He is said to have been equally skilled in all styles of
+composition grave and gay.
+
+[FN#45] Or eternal.
+
+[FN#46] Or "in him."
+
+[FN#47] Chief of the tribe of the Benou Suleim. Et Teberi tells
+this story in a different way. According to him, Abbas ben Mirdas
+(who was a well-known poet), being dissatisfied with the portion
+of booty allotted to him by the Prophet, refused it and composed
+a lampoon against Mohammed, who said to Ali, "Cut off this tongue
+which attacketh me," i.e. "Silence him by giving what will
+satisfy him," whereupon Ali doubled the covetous chief's share.
+
+[FN#48] Bilal ibn Rebeh was the Prophet's freedman and crier. The
+word bilal signifies "moisture" or (metonymically) "beneficence"
+and it may well be in this sense (and not as a man's name) that
+it is used in the text.
+
+[FN#49] Said to have been the best poet ever produced by the
+tribe of Cureish. His introduction here is an anachronism, as he
+died A.D. 712, five years before Omar's accession.
+
+[FN#50] i.e. odorem pudendorum amicæ?
+
+[FN#51] A famous poet of the tribe of the Benou Udhreh, renowned
+for their passionate sincerity in love-matters. He is celebrated
+as the lover of Butheineh, as Petrarch of Laura, and died A.D.
+701, sixteen years before Omar's accession.
+
+[FN#52] A friend of Jemil and a poet of equal renown. He is
+celebrated as the lover of Azzeh, whose name is commonly added to
+his, and kept a grocer's shop at Medina.
+
+[FN#53] i.e. in the attitude of prayer.
+
+[FN#54] A famous satirical poet of the time, afterwards banished
+by Omar for the virulence of his lampoons. His name is wrongly
+given by the text; it should be El Ahwes. He was a descendant of
+the Ansar or (Medinan) helpers of Mohammed.
+
+[FN#55] A famous poet of the tribe of the Benou Temim and a rival
+of Jerir, to whom he was by some preferred. He was a notorious
+debauchee and Jerir, in one of the satires that were perpetually
+exchanged between himself and El Ferezdec, accuses his rival of
+having "never been a guest in any house, but he departed with
+ignominy and left behind him disgrace."
+
+[FN#56] A Christian and a celebrated poet of the time.
+
+[FN#57] The poet apparently meant to insinuate that those who
+professed to keep the fast of Ramazan ate flesh in secret. The
+word rendered "in public," i.e. openly, avowedly, may also
+perhaps be translated "in the forenoon," and in this El Akhtel
+may have meant to contrast his free-thinking disregard of the
+ordinances of the fast with the strictness of the orthodox
+Muslim, whose only meals in Ramazan-time are made between sunset
+and dawn-peep. As soon as a white thread can be distinguished
+from a black, the fast is begun and a true believer must not even
+smoke or swallow his saliva till sunset.
+
+[FN#58] Prominent words of the Muezzin's fore-dawn call to
+prayer.
+
+[FN#59] i.e. fall down drunk.
+
+[FN#60] i.e. she who ensnares [all] eyes.
+
+[FN#61] Imam, the spiritual title of the Khalif, as head of the
+Faith and leader (lit. "foreman") of the people at prayer.
+
+[FN#62] Or "worldly."
+
+[FN#63] Or "worldly."
+
+[FN#64] A town and province of Arabia, of which (inter alia) Omar
+ben Abdulaziz was governor, before he came to the Khalifate.
+
+[FN#65] Syn. munificence.
+
+[FN#66] About 2 pounds sterling 10 s.
+
+[FN#67] i.e. what is thy news?
+
+[FN#68] Or "I approve of him."
+
+[FN#69] Breslau Text, vol. vi. pp. 188-9, Night ccccxxxiv.
+
+[FN#70] El Hejjaj ben Yousuf eth Thekefi, a famous statesman and
+soldier of the seventh and eighth centuries. He was governor of
+Chaldaea (Irak Arabi), under the fifth and sixth Khalifs of the
+Ommiade dynasty, and was renowned for his cruelty, but appears to
+have been a prudent and capable administrator, who used no more
+rigour than was necessary to restrain the proverbially turbulent
+populations of Bassora and Cufa, Most of the anecdotes of his
+brutality and tyranny, which abound in Arab authors, are, in all
+probability, apocryphal.
+
+[FN#71] Used, by synecdoche, for "heads."
+
+[FN#72] i.e. the governed, to wit, he who is led by a halter
+attached (metaphorically of course) to a ring passed through his
+nose, as with a camel.
+
+[FN#73] i.e. the governor or he who is high of rank.
+
+[FN#74] i.e. their hair, which may be considered the wealth of
+the head. This whole passage is a description a double-entente of
+a barber-surgeon.
+
+[FN#75] Syn. cooking-pot.
+
+[FN#76] Syn. be lowered. This passage is a similar description of
+an itinerant hot bean-seller.
+
+[FN#77] The rows of threads on a weaver's loom.
+
+[FN#78] Syn. levelleth.
+
+[FN#79] i.e. that of wood used by the Oriental weaver to govern
+the warp and weft.
+
+[FN#80] Syn. behave aright.
+
+[FN#81] The loop of thread so called in which the weaver's foot
+rests.
+
+[FN#82] Syn. eloquence.
+
+[FN#83] Adeb, one of the terribly comprehensive words which
+abound in Arabic literature for the confusion of translators. It
+signifies generally all kinds of education and means of mental
+and moral discipline and seems here to mean more particularly
+readiness of wit and speech or presence of mind.
+
+[FN#84] Breslau Text, vol. vi. pp. 189-191, Night ccccxxxiv.
+
+[FN#85] Syn. (Koranic) "Thou hast swerved from justice" or "been
+unjust" (adeita).
+
+[FN#86] Syn. (Koranic) "Thou hast transgressed" (caset-ta).
+
+[FN#87] Or falling-away.
+
+[FN#88] Koran vi. 44.
+
+[FN#89] Or do injustice, tadilou (syn. do justice).
+
+[FN#90] Koran iv. 134.
+
+[FN#91] El casitouna (syn. those who act righteously or
+equitably).
+
+[FN#92] Koran lxxii. 15.
+
+[FN#93] Name of the Persian ancestor of the Barmecide (properly
+Bermeki) family.
+
+[FN#94] Breslau Text, vol. vi. pp. 191-343, Nights
+ccccxxv-cccclxxxvii. This is the Arab version of the well-known
+story called, in Persian, the Bekhtyar Nameh, i.e. the Book of
+Bekhtyar, by which name the prince, whose attempted ruin by the
+envious viziers is the central incident of the tale, is
+distinguished in that language. The Arab redaction of the story
+is, to my mind, far superior to the Persian, both in general
+simplicity and directness of style and in the absence of the
+irritating conceits and moral digressions with which Persian (as
+well as Indian) fiction is so often overloaded. The Persian
+origin of the story is apparent, not only in the turn of the
+incidents and style and the names of the personages, but in the
+fact that not a single line of verse occurs in it.
+
+[FN#95] Rawi; this is probably a copyist's mistake for raai, a
+beholder, one who seeth.
+
+[FN#96] Lit. what was his affair? It may be here observed that
+the word keif (how?) is constantly used in the Breslau Text in
+the sense of ma (what?).
+
+[FN#97] A district of Persia, here probably Persia itself.
+
+[FN#98] Probably a corruption of Kisra (Chosroës).
+
+[FN#99] i.e. waylaying travellers, robbing on the high road.
+
+[FN#100] Or skill.
+
+[FN#101] Lit. the descended fate.
+
+[FN#102] The Arabs attribute to a man's parentage absolute power
+in the determination of his good and evil qualities; eg. the son
+of a slave, according to them, can possess none of the virtues of
+the free-born, whilst good qualities are in like manner
+considered congenitally inherent in the latter.
+
+[FN#103] Or "business."
+
+[FN#104] i.e. whither he should travel.
+
+[FN#105] About half-a-crown.
+
+[FN#106] It is a common practice with Eastern nations to keep a
+child (especially a son and one of unusual beauty) concealed
+until a certain age, for fear of the evil eye. See my "Book of
+the Thousand Nights and One Night," Vol. III. p. 234; Vol. IX. p.
+67, etc., etc.
+
+[FN#107] i.e. killing a man.
+
+[FN#108] i.e., it will always be in our power to slay him, when
+we will.
+
+[FN#109] i.e. the grave.
+
+[FN#110] i.e. the wedding-day.
+
+[FN#111] i.e. thy women
+
+[FN#112] i.e. hath been unduly prolonged.
+
+[FN#113] i.e. Let thy secret thoughts and purposes be righteous,
+even as thine outward profession.
+
+[FN#114] See my "Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night," Vol.
+V. p. 264.
+
+[FN#115] Afterwards called his "chamberlain," i.e. the keeper of
+the door of the harem or chief eunuch. See post, p. III.
+
+[FN#116] i.e. the eunuch who had dissuaded Dadbin from putting
+her to death.
+
+[FN#117] Apparently referring to Aboulkhair (see ante p. 107),
+whom Dabdin would seem to have put to death upon the vizier's
+false accusation, although no previous mention of this occurs.
+
+[FN#118] The Arabs believe that each man's destiny is
+charactered, could we decipher it, in the sutures of his skull.
+
+[FN#119] ie. the lex talionis, which is the essence of Muslim
+jurisprudence.
+
+[FN#120] i.e. a soldier of fortune, going about from court to
+court, in quest of service.
+
+[FN#121] This phrase refers to the Arab idiom, "His hand (or arm)
+is long or short," i.e. he is a man of great or little puissance.
+
+[FN#122] The Arabs consider it a want of respect to allow the
+hands or feet to remain exposed in the presence of a superior.
+
+[FN#123] Adeb. See ante, p. 54, note 9.
+
+[FN#124] i.e. that he become my son-in-law.
+
+[FN#125] It is a common Eastern practice to have the feet kneaded
+and pressed (shampooed) for the purpose of inducing sleep, and
+thus the king would habitually fall asleep with his feet on the
+knees of his pages.
+
+[FN#126] Syn. whoso respecteth not his lord's women.
+
+[FN#127] i.e. a domed tomb.
+
+[FN#128] Of a man's life. The Muslims believe each man's last
+hour to be written in a book called "The Preserved Tablet."
+
+[FN#129] i.e, the Autumnal Equinox, one of the two great festival
+days (the other being the New Year) of the Persians. See my "Book
+of the Thousand Nights and One Night," Vol. IV. p. 144.
+
+[FN#130] i.e. heritage.
+
+[FN#131] i.e. The Emperor of the Romans of the Lower Empire, so
+called by the Arabs. "Caesar" is their generic term for the
+Emperors of Constantinople, as is Kisra (Chosroës) for the
+ancient Kings of Persia.
+
+[FN#132] i.e. Shah Khatoun.
+
+[FN#133] i.e. our power increased by his alliance, a. familiar
+Arab idiom.
+
+[FN#134] In token of deputation of authority, a ceremony usual on
+the appointment of a governor of a province.
+
+[FN#135] Or enigma.
+
+[FN#136] i.e. if my death be ordained of destiny to befall on an
+early day none may avail to postpone it to a later day.
+
+[FN#137] Of life. See supra, note, p. 147.
+
+[FN#138] The hoopoe is fabled by the Muslim chroniclers to have
+been to Solomon what Odin's ravens were to the Norse god. It is
+said to have known all the secrets of the earth and to have
+revealed them to him; hence the magical virtues attributed by the
+Mohammedans to its heart.
+
+[FN#139] This phrase may be read either literally or in its
+idiomatic sense, i.e., "Folk convicted or suspected of murder or
+complicity in murder."
+
+[FN#140] Or purse-belt.
+
+[FN#141] See supra, p. 66.
+
+[FN#142] Khilaah, lit. that which one takes off from one's own
+person, to bestow upon a messenger of good tidings or any other
+whom it is desired especially to honour. The literal meaning of
+the phrase, here rendered "he bestowed on him a dress of honour,"
+is "he put off on him [that which was upon himself." A Khilaah
+commonly includes a horse, a sword, a girdle or waist-cloth and
+other articles, according to the rank of the recipient, and might
+more precisely be termed "a complete equipment of honour."
+
+[FN#143] An economical mode of rewarding merit, much in favour
+with Eastern monarchs.
+
+[FN#144] Breslau Text, vol. vii. pp. 251-4, Night dlxv.
+
+[FN#145] Syn. doorkeper (hajib).
+
+[FN#146] Ibn Khelbkan, who tells this story in a somewhat
+different style, on the authority of Er Reshid's brother Ibrahim
+ben El Mehdi, calls the person whom Jaafer expected "Abdulmelik
+ben Behran, the intendant of his demesnes."
+
+[FN#147] The wearing of silk and bright colours is forbidden to
+the strict Muslim and it is generally considered proper, in a man
+of position, to wear them only on festive occasions or in
+private, as in the text.
+
+[FN#148] The Abbasides or descendants of El Abbas, the Prophet's
+uncle, were noted for their excessive pride and pretensions to
+strict orthodoxy in all outward observances. Abdulmelik ben
+Salih, who was a well-known general and statesman of the time,
+was especially renowned for pietism and austerity of manners.
+
+[FN#149] i.e. Do not let my presence trouble you.
+
+[FN#150] As a member of the reigning family, he of course wore
+black clothes, that being the especial colour of the house of
+Abbas, adopted by them in opposition to the rival (and fallen)
+dynasty of the Benou Umeyyeh, whose family colour was white, that
+of the house of Ali being green.
+
+[FN#151] About £25,000. Ibn Khellikan makes the debt four
+millions of dirhems or about £100,000
+
+[FN#152] Breslau text, vol vii, pp.258-60, Night dlxvii.
+
+[FN#153] Fourth Khalif of the house of Abbas, A.D. 785-786.
+
+[FN#154] Third Khalif of the house of Abbas, A.D. 775-785.
+
+[FN#155] The following is Et Teberi's version of this anecdote.
+El Mehdi had presented his son Haroun with a ruby ring, worth a
+hundred thousand dinars, and the latter being one day with his
+brother [the then reigning Khalif], El Hadi saw the ring on his
+finger and desired it. So, when Haroun went out from him, he sent
+after him, to seek the ring of him. The Khalif's messenger
+overtook Er Reshid on the bridge over the Tigris and acquainted
+him with his errand; whereupon the prince enraged at the demand,
+pulled off the ring and threw it into the river. When El Hadi
+died and Er Reshid succeeded to the throne, he went with his
+suite to the bridge in question and bade his Vizier Yehya ben
+Khalid send for divers and cause them make search for the ring.
+It had then been five months in the water and no one believed it
+would be found. However, the divers plunged into the river and
+found the ring in the very place where he had thrown it in,
+whereat Haroun rejoiced with an exceeding joy, regarding it as a
+presage of fair fortune.
+
+[FN#156] This is an error. Jaafer's father Yehya was appointed by
+Haroun his vizier and practically continued to exercise that
+office till the fall of the Barmecides (A.D. 803), his sons Fezl
+and Jaafer acting only as his assistants or lieutenants. See my
+Essay on the History and Character of the Book of the Thousand
+Nights and One Night.
+
+[FN#157] Another mistake. It was Fezl, the Khalif's
+foster-brother, to whom he used to give this title.
+
+[FN#158] A third mistake. The whole period during which the
+empire was governed by Yehya and his sons was only seventeen
+years, i.e. A.D 786-803, but see my Essay.
+
+[FN#159] The apparent meaning of this somewhat obscure saying is,
+"Since fortune is uncertain, conciliate the favour of those with
+whom thou hast to do by kind offices, so thou mayst find refuge
+with them in time of need."
+
+[FN#160] For a detailed account of the Barmecides and of their
+fall, see my Essay.
+
+[FN#161] Breslau Text, vol. vii. pp. 260-1, Night dlxviii.
+
+[FN#162] Aboulabbas Mohammed Ibn Sabih, surnamed Ibn es Semmak
+(son of the fishmonger), a well-known Cufan jurisconsult and
+ascetic of the time. He passed the latter part of his life at
+Baghdad and enjoyed high favour with Er Reshid, as the only
+theological authority whom the latter could induce to promise him
+admission to Paradise.
+
+[FN#163] Breslau Text, vol. vii. pp. 261-2, Night dlxviii.
+
+[FN#164] Seventh Khalif of the house of Abbas, A.D. 813-33.
+
+[FN#165] Sixth Khalif of the house of Abbas, A.D. 809-13, a
+sanguinary and incapable prince, whose contemplated treachery
+against his brother El Mamoun, (whom, by the advice of his
+vizier, the worthless intriguer Fezl ben Rebya, the same who was
+one of the prime movers in the ruin of the illustrious Barmecide
+family and who succeeded Yehya and his sons in the vizierate (see
+my Essay), he contemplated depriving of his right of succession
+and murdering,) was deservedly requited with the loss of his own
+kingdom and life. He was, by the way, put to death by El Mamoun's
+general, in contravention of the express orders of that generous
+and humane prince, who wished his brother to be sent prisoner to
+him, on the capture of Baghdad.
+
+[FN#166] i.e. forfeits. It is a favourite custom among the Arabs
+to impose on the loser of a game, in lieu of stakes, the
+obligation of doing whatsoever the winner may command him. For an
+illustration of this practice, see my "Book of the Thousand
+Nights and One Night," Vol. V. pp. 336-41, Story of the
+Sandalwood Merchant and the Sharpers.
+
+[FN#167] El Mamoun was of a very swarthy complexion and is said
+to have been the son of a black slave-girl. Zubeideh was Er
+Reshid's cousin, and El Amin was, therefore, a member of the
+house of Abbas, both on the father's and mother's side. Of this
+purity of descent from the Prophet's family (in which he is said
+to have stood alone among the Khalifs of the Abbaside dynasty)
+both himself and his mother were exceedingly proud, and it was
+doubtless this circumstance which led Er Reshid to prefer El Amin
+and to assign him the precedence in the succession over the more
+capable and worthier El Mamoun.
+
+[FN#168] Breslau Text, vol. viii. pp. 226-9, Nights dclx-i.
+
+[FN#169] A pre-Mohammedan King of the Arab kingdom of Hireh (a
+town near Cufa on the Euphrates), under the suzerainty of the
+Chosroes of Persia, and a cruel and fantastic tyrant.
+
+[FN#170] The tribe to which belonged the renowned pre-Mohammedan
+chieftain and poet, Hatim Tal, so celebrated in the East for his
+extravagant generosity and hospitality.
+
+[FN#171] i.e. I will make a solemn covenant with him before God.
+
+[FN#172] i.e. he of the tribe of Tai.
+
+[FN#173] In generosity.
+
+[FN#174] A similar anecdote is told of Omar ben el Khettab,
+second successor of Mohammed, and will be found in my "Book of
+the Thousand Nights and One Night," Vol. IV. p. 239.
+
+[FN#175] Breslau Text, vol. viii. pp. 273-8, Nights dclxxv--vi.
+
+[FN#176] A similar story will be found in my "Book of the
+Thousand Nights and One Night", Vol. V. p. 263.
+
+[FN#177] Breslau Text, vol xi. pp. 84-318, Nights
+dccclxxv-dccccxxx.
+
+[FN#178] i.e. A pilgrimage. Pilgrimage is one of a Muslim's
+urgent duties.
+
+[FN#179] By a rhetorical figure, Mecca is sometimes called El
+Hejj (the Pilgrimage) and this appears to be the case here. It is
+one of the dearest towns in the East and the chief occupation of
+its inhabitants a the housing and fleecing of pilgrims. An Arab
+proverb says, "There is no place in which money goes [so fast] as
+it goes in Mecca."
+
+[FN#180] lit. loved with it.
+
+[FN#181] It is not clear what is here meant by El Hejj; perhaps
+Medina, though this is a "visitation" and not an obligatory part
+of the pilgrimage. The passage is probably corrupt.
+
+[FN#182] It is not clear what is here meant by El Hejj; perhaps
+Medina, though this is a "visitation" and not an obligatory part
+of the pilgrimage. The passage is probably corrupt.
+
+[FN#183] Syn. whole or perfect (sehik).
+
+[FN#184] i.e. in white woollen garments.
+
+[FN#185] i.e. I desire a privy place, where I may make the
+preliminary ablution and pray.
+
+[FN#186] It is customary in the East to give old men and women
+the complimentary title of "pilgrim," assuming, as a matter of
+course, that they have performed the obligatory rite of
+pilgrimage.
+
+[FN#187] Or saint.
+
+[FN#188] Keniseh, a Christian or other non-Muslim place of
+worship.
+
+[FN#189] Apparently the harem.
+
+[FN#190] i.e. otherwise than according to God's ordinance.
+
+[FN#191] A city of Persian Irak.
+
+[FN#192] Lit. its apparatus, i.e. spare strings, etc.?
+
+[FN#193] i.e. the woman whose face he saw.
+
+[FN#194] Lit. the place of battle, i.e. that where they had lain.
+
+[FN#195] A common Eastern fashion of securing a shop, when left
+for a short time. The word shebekeh (net) may also be tendered a
+grating or network of iron or other metal.
+
+[FN#196] i.e. gave her good measure.
+
+[FN#197] i.e. she found him a good workman. Equivoque erotique,
+apparently founded on the to-and-fro movement of the shuttle in
+weaving.
+
+[FN!198] Equivoque érotique.
+
+[FN#199] i.e. removed the goods exposed for sale and laid them up
+in the inner shop or storehouse.
+
+[FN#200] The Eastern oven is generally a great earthenware jar
+sunken in the earth.
+
+[FN#201] i.e. a boughten white slave (memlouk).
+
+[FN#202] Apparently changing places. The text is here fearfully
+corrupt and (as in many other parts of the Breslau Edition) so
+incoherent as to be almost unintelligible.
+
+[FN#203] i.e. in the (inner) courtyard.
+
+[FN#204] i.e. the essential nature, lit. jewel.
+
+[FN#205] i.e. in proffering thee the kingship.
+
+[FN#206] Without the city.
+
+[FN#207] According to the conclusion of the story, this
+recompense consisted in an augmentation of the old man's
+allowances of food. See post, p. 245.
+
+[FN#208] i.e. I have given my opinion.
+
+[FN#209] This passage is evidently corrupt. I have amended it, on
+conjecture, to the best of my power.
+
+[FN#210] The words ruteb wa menazil, here rendered "degrees and
+dignities," may also be rendered, "stations and mansions (of the
+moon and planets)."
+
+[FN#211] Syn. "ailing" or "sickly."
+
+[FN#212] i.e. the caravan with which he came.
+
+[FN#213] i.e. I seek to marry thy daughter, not for her own sake,
+but because I desire thine alliance.
+
+[FN#214] i.e. the face of his bride.
+
+[FN#215] i.e. his wife.
+
+[FN#216] i.e. his wife.
+
+[FN#217] Naming the poor man.
+
+[FN#218] Naming his daughter.
+
+[FN#219] i.e. united.
+
+[FN#220] Or "humble."
+
+[FN#221] i.e. one another.
+
+[FN#222] Or "conquer."
+
+[FN#223] Or "commandment."
+
+[FN#224] Lit. "will be higher than."
+
+[FN#225] Syn. device or resource (hileh).
+
+[FN#226] Syn. chasten or instruct.
+
+[FN#227] Students of our old popular poetry will recognize, in
+the principal incident of this story, the subject of the
+well-known ballad, "The Heir of Linne."
+
+[FN#228] i.e. Turcomans; afterwards called Sejestan.
+
+[FN#229] With a pile of stones or some such landmark.
+
+[FN#230] i.e. the extraordinary resemblance of the supposed
+sister to his wife.
+
+[FN#231] The foregoing passage is evidently very corrupt and the
+meaning is by no means plain, but, in the absence of a parallel
+version, it is impossible to clear up the obscurity of the text.
+
+[FN#232] This appears to be the sense of the text; but the whole
+passage is to obscure and corrupt that it is impossible to make
+sure of its exact meaning.
+
+[FN#233] Meaning apparently, "thou puttest my devices to nought"
+or (perhaps) "thou art so skilful that I fear lest thou undermine
+my favour with the king and oust me from my post of vizier."
+
+[FN#234] Lit. "land;" but the meaning is evidently as in the
+text.
+
+[FN#235] The reader will recognize the well-known story used by
+Chaucer, Boccaccio and La Fontaine.
+
+[FN#236] Syn. flourishing.
+
+[FN#237] Syn. depopulated.
+
+[FN#238] Lit. an oppressor.
+
+[FN#239] i.e. a man of commanding presence.
+
+[FN#240] Syn. cause flourish.
+
+[FN#241] Syn. depopulateth.
+
+[FN#242] Lit. the year.
+
+[FN#243] The whole of the tither's account of himself is terribly
+obscure and so corrupt that it is hardly possible to make sense
+of it. The same remark applies to much of the rest of the story.
+
+[FN#244] Or "cause flourish."
+
+[FN#245] Lit. a better theologian. The Muslim law being entirely
+based on the Koran and the Traditions of the Prophet, the terms
+"lawyer" and "theologian" are necessarily synonymous among
+Mohammedan peoples.
+
+[FN#246] A danic is the sixth of a dirhem, i.e. about one penny.
+
+[FN#247] i.e. say, "May I be [triply] divorced from my wife, if
+etc.!" By the Muslim law, a divorce three times pronounced is
+irrevocable, and in case of its appearing that the user of such
+an oath as the above had sworn falsely, his wife would become
+divorced by operation of law, without further ceremony. Hence the
+frequency and binding nature of the oath in question.
+
+[FN#248] i.e. thousandfold cuckold.
+
+[FN#249] i.e. the blows which the thief had given him.
+
+[FN#250] i.e. at least, at the most moderate reckoning.
+
+[FN#251] Or "Breath of God," a title given to Jesus by the
+Mohammedans.
+
+[FN#252] i.e. attaineth his desire.
+
+[FN#253] Syn. guards.
+
+[FN#254] i.e. the husbandman.
+
+[FN#255] i.e. those bound to render suit and service to the king,
+as holders of fiefs.
+
+[FN#256] Syn. the revenue or rent-charge of thy fief.
+
+[FN#257] Heads of families?
+
+[FN#258] Or "caused flourish."
+
+[FN#259] Or froward.
+
+[FN#260] i.e. sold and spent the price of.
+
+[FN#261] i.e. his lack of means to entertain her.
+
+[FN#262] i.e. all that can conduce to.
+
+[FN#263] i.e. it is for you (after God) to excuse me.
+
+[FN#264] i.e. the [supposed] rest of his hoard.
+
+[FN#265] Apparently the idiot's name.
+
+[FN#266] i.e. had he been on his own guard against that, etc.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, TALES FROM THE ARABIC VOLUME 1 ***
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