summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--8658-8.txt14728
-rw-r--r--8658-8.zipbin0 -> 278306 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/41001107a.txt14683
-rw-r--r--old/41001107a.zipbin0 -> 277502 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/41001108a.txt14683
-rw-r--r--old/41001108a.zipbin0 -> 277550 bytes
9 files changed, 44110 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/8658-8.txt b/8658-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1fe9d26
--- /dev/null
+++ b/8658-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,14728 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Book Of The Thousand Nights And One
+Night, Volume IV, by Anonymous
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
+other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
+the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
+to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
+
+Title: The Book Of The Thousand Nights And One Night, Volume IV
+
+Author: Anonymous
+
+Translator: John Payne
+
+Posting Date: February 26, 2015 [EBook #8658]
+Release Date: August, 2005
+First Posted: July 30, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 1001 NIGHTS, VOL IV ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by JC Byers, Graeme Houston, Renate Preuss, Coralee
+Sheehan, Marryann Short, and Anne Soulard
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Editorial Note: Project Gutenberg also has the translation of this work by
+ Richard F. Burton in 16 volumes.
+
+
+
+
+ THE BOOK OF THE THOUSAND NIGHTS AND ONE NIGHT:
+
+ Now First Completely Done Into English
+ Prose and Verse, From The Original Arabic,
+
+ By John Payne
+(Author of "The Masque of Shadows," "Intaglios: Sonnets," "Songs
+ of Life and Death,"
+ "Lautrec," "The Poems of Master Francis Villon of Paris," "New
+ Poems," Etc, Etc.).
+
+ In Nine Volumes:
+
+
+
+ VOLUME THE FOURTH.
+
+
+
+ 1901
+
+ Delhi Edition
+
+
+ Contents of The Fourth Volume.
+
+
+
+1. The Imam Abou Yousuf With Haroun er Reshid and his Vizier
+ Jaafer
+2. The Lover Who Feigned Himself a Thief to save His Mistress's
+ Honour
+3. Jaafer the Barmecide and the Bean-seller
+4. Abou Mohammed the Lazy
+5. Yehya Ben Khalid and Mensour
+6. Yehya Ben Khalid and the Man Who Forged a Letter in His Name
+7. The Khalif el Mamoun and the Strange Doctor
+8. Ali Shar and Zumurrud
+9. The Loves of Jubeir Ben Umeir and the Lady Budour
+10. The Man of Yemen and His Six Slave Girls
+11. Haroun er Reshid with the Damsel and Abou Nuwas
+12. The Man Who Stole The Dog's Dish of Gold
+13. The Sharper of Alexandria and the Master of Police
+14. El Melik en Nasir and the Three Masters of Police
+ a. Story of the Chief of the New Cairo Police
+ b. Story of the Chief of the Boulac Police
+ c. Story of the chief of the Old Cairo Police
+15. The Thief and the Money-Changer
+16. The Chief of the Cous Police and the Sharper
+17. Ibrahim Ben el Mehdi and the Merchant's Sister
+18. The Woman Whose Hands Were Cut Off For Almsgiving
+19. The Devout Israelite
+20. Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi and the Man From Khorassan
+21. The Poor Man and his Generous Friend
+22. The Ruined Man Who Became Rich Again Through a Dream
+23. El Mutawekkil and his Favourite Mehboubeh
+24. Werdan the Butcher's Adventure with the Lady and the Bear
+25. The King's Daughter and the Ape
+26. The Enchanted Horse
+27. Uns El Eoujoud and the Vizier's Daughter Rose-in-Bud
+28. Abou Nuwas with the Three Boys and the Khalif Haroun er
+ Reshid
+29. Abdallah Ben Maamer with the Man of Bassora and His Slave
+ Girl
+30. The Lovers of the Benou Udhreh
+31. The Vizier of Yemen and His Young Brother
+32. Loves of the Boy and Girl at School
+33. El Mutelemmis and His Wife Umeimeh
+34. Haroun er Reshid and Zubeideh in the Bath
+35. Haroun er Reshid and the Three Poets
+36. Musab Ben ez Zubeir and Aaisheh His Wife
+37. Aboulasweh and His Squinting Slave Girl
+38. Haroun er Reshid ad the Two Girls
+39. Hroun er Reshid and the Three Girls
+40. The Miller and his Wife
+41. The Simpleton and the Sharper
+42. The Imam Abou Yousuf with Haroun er Reshid and Zubeideh
+43. The Khalif el Hakim and the Merchant
+44. King Kisra Anoushirwan and the Village Damsel
+45. The Water-Carrier and the Goldsmith's Wife
+46. Khusrau and Shirin and the Fisherman
+47. Yehya Ben Khalid and the Poor Man
+48. Mohammed El Amin and Jaafer Ben el Hadi
+49. Said Ben Salim and the Barmecides
+50. The Woman's Trick Against Her Husband
+51. The Devout Woman and the Two Wicked Elders
+52. Jaafer the Barmecide and the Old Bedouin
+53. Omar Ben Khettab and the Young Bedouin
+54. El Mamoun and the Pyramids of Egypt
+55. The Thief Turned Merchant and the Other Thief
+56. Mesrour and Ibn El Caribi
+57. The Devout Prince
+58. The Schoolmaster Who Fell in Love by Report
+59. The Foolish Schoolmaster
+60. The Ignorant Man Who Set up For a Schoolmaster
+61. The King and the Virtuous Wife
+62. Abdurrehman the Moor's Story of the Roc
+63. Adi Ben Zeid and the Princess Hind
+64. Dibil el Khuzai With the Lady and Muslim Ben el Welid
+65. Isaac of Mosul and the Merchant
+66. The Three Unfortunate Lovers
+67. The Lovers of the Benou Tai
+68. The Mad Lover
+69. The Apples of Paradise
+70. The Loves of Abou Isa and Current El Ain
+71. El Amin and His Uncle Ibrahim Ben el Mehdi
+72. El Feth Ben Khacan and El Mutawekkil
+73. The Man's Dispute with the Learned Woman of the Relative
+ Excellence of the Male and the Female
+74. Abou Suweid and the Handsome Old Woman
+75. Ali Ben Tahir and the Birl Mounis
+76. The Woman Who Has a Boy and the Other Who Had a Man to Lover
+77. The Haunted House in Baghdad
+78. The Pilgrim and the Old Woman Who Dwelt in the Desert
+79. Aboulhusn and His Slave Girl Taweddud
+
+
+
+
+ THE BOOK OF THE THOUSAND NIGHTS
+ AND ONE NIGHT
+
+
+
+
+ HOW THE IMAM ABOU YOUSUF EXTRICATED THE
+ KHALIF HAROUN ER RESHID AND HIS VIZIER
+ JAAFER FROM A DILEMMA.
+
+
+
+It is said that Jaafer the Barmecide was one night carousing with
+Er Reshid, when the latter said to him, 'O Jaafer, I hear that
+thou hast bought such and such a slave-girl. Now I have long
+sought her and my heart is taken up with love of her, for she is
+passing fair; so do thou sell her to me.' 'O Commander of the
+Faithful,' replied Jaafer, 'I will not sell her.' 'Then give her
+to me,' rejoined the Khalif. 'Nor will I give her,' answered
+Jaafer. 'Be Zubeideh triply divorced,' exclaimed Haroun, 'if
+thou shalt not either sell or give her to me!' Quoth Jaafer, 'Be
+my wife triply divorced, if I either sell or give her to thee!'
+After awhile they recovered from their intoxication and were ware
+that they had fallen into a grave dilemma, but knew not how to
+extricate themselves. Then said Er Reshid, 'None can help us in
+this strait but Abou Yousuf.'[FN#1] So they sent for him, and
+this was in the middle of the night. When the messenger reached
+the Imam, he arose in alarm, saying in himself, 'I should not be
+sent for at this hour, save by reason of some crisis in Islam.'
+So he went out in haste and mounted his mule, saying to his
+servant, 'Take the mule's nose-bag with thee; it may be she has
+not finished her feed; and when we come to the Khalif's palace,
+put the bag on her, that she may eat what is left of her fodder,
+whilst I am with the Khalif.' 'I hear and obey,' replied the man.
+
+So the Imam rode to the palace and was admitted to the presence
+of Er Reshid, who made him sit down on the couch beside himself,
+whereas he was used to seat none but him, and said to him, 'We
+have sent for thee at this hour to advise us upon a grave matter,
+with which we know not how to deal' And he expounded to him the
+case. 'O Commander of the Faithful,' replied Abou Yousuf, 'this
+is the easiest of things.' Then he turned to Jaafer and said to
+him, 'O Jaafer, sell half of her to the Commander of the Faithful
+and give him the other half; so shall ye both be quit of your
+oaths.' The Khalif was delighted with this and they did as he
+prescribed. Then said Er Reshid, 'Bring me the girl at once, for
+I long for her exceedingly.' So they brought her and the Khalif
+said to Abou Yousuf, 'I have a mind to lie with her forthright;
+for I cannot endure to abstain from her during the prescribed
+period of purification; how is this to be done?' 'Bring me one of
+thine unenfranchised male slaves,' answered the Imam, 'and give
+me leave to marry her to him; then let him divorce her before
+consummation. So shall it be lawful for thee to lie with her
+before purification.' This expedient pleased the Khalif yet more
+than the first and he sent for the slave. When he came, Er Reshid
+said to the Imam, 'I authorize thee to marry her to him.' So the
+Imam proposed the marriage to the slave, who accepted it, and
+performed the due ceremony; after which he said to the slave,
+'Divorce her, and thou shalt have a hundred diners.' But he
+refused to do this and the Imam went on to increase his offer,
+till he bid him a thousand diners. Then said the slave to him,
+'Doth it rest with me to divorce her, or with thee or the
+Commander of the Faithful?' 'With thee,' answered the Imam.
+'Then, by Allah,' quoth the slave, 'I will never do it!'
+
+At this the Khalif was exceeding wroth and said to the Imam,
+'What is to be done, O Abou Yousuf?' 'Be not concerned, O
+Commander of the Faithful,' replied the Imam; 'the thing is easy.
+Make this slave the damsel's property.' Quoth Er Reshid, 'I give
+him to her;' and the Imam said to the girl, 'Say, "I accept."' So
+she said, 'I accept:' whereupon quoth Abou Yousuf, 'I pronounce
+divorce between them, for that he hath become her property, and
+so the marriage is annulled.' With this, Er Reshid sprang to his
+feet and exclaimed, 'It is the like of thee that shall be Cadi in
+my time.' Then he called for sundry trays of gold and emptied
+them before Abou Yousuf, to whom he said, 'Hast thou wherein to
+put this ?' The Imam bethought him of the mule's nose-bag; so he
+sent for it and filling it with gold, took it and went home; and
+on the morrow, he said to his friends, 'There is no easier or
+shorter road to the goods of this world and the next, than that
+of learning; for, see, I have received all this money for
+answering two or three questions.' Consider, then, O polite
+[reader], the pleasantness of this anecdote, for it comprises
+divers goodly features, amongst which are the complaisance of
+Jaafer to Er Reshid and the wisdom[FN#2] of the Khalif and the
+exceeding wisdom of Abou Yousuf, may God the Most High have mercy
+on all their souls!
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVER WHO FEIGNED HIMSELF A THIEF TO
+ SAVE HIS MISTRESS'S HONOUR.
+
+
+
+There came one day to Khalid ibn Abdallah el Kesri,[FN#3]
+governor of Bassora, a company of men dragging a youth of
+exceeding beauty and lofty bearing, whose aspect expressed good
+breeding and dignity and abundant wit They brought him before the
+governor, who asked what was to do with him, and they replied,
+'This fellow is a thief, whom we caught last night in our
+dwelling.' Khalid looked at him and was struck with wonder at his
+well-favouredness and elegance; so he said to the others, 'Loose
+him,' and going up to the young man, asked what he had to say for
+himself. 'The folk have spoken truly,' answered he; 'and the case
+is as they have said.' 'And what moved thee to this,' asked
+Khalid, 'and thou so noble and comely of aspect?' 'The lust
+after worldly good,' replied the other, 'and the ordinance of
+God, glorified and exalted be He!' 'May thy mother be bereaved of
+thee!' rejoined Khalid. 'Hadst thou not, in thy fair face and
+sound sense and good breeding, what should restrain thee from
+thieving?' 'O Amir,' answered the young man, 'leave this talk
+and proceed to what God the Most High hath ordained; this is
+what my hands have earned, and God is no oppressor of His
+creatures.'[FN#4] Khalid was silent awhile, considering the
+matter; then he said to the young man, 'Verily, thy confession
+before witnesses perplexes me, for I cannot believe thee to be a
+thief. Surely thou hast some story that is other than one of
+theft. Tell it me'. 'O Amir,' replied the youth, 'deem thou
+nought save what I have confessed; for I have no story other than
+that I entered these folk's house and stole what I could lay
+hands on, and they caught me and took the stuff from me and
+carried me before thee.' Then Khalid bade clap him in prison and
+commanded a crier to make proclamation throughout Bassora,
+saying, 'Ho, whoso is minded to look upon the punishment of such
+an one, the thief, and the cutting off of his hand, let him be
+present tomorrow morning at such a place!'
+
+When the youth found himself in prison, with irons on his feet,
+he sighed heavily and repeated the following verses, whilst the
+tears streamed from his eyes:
+
+Khalid doth threaten me with cutting off my hand, Except I do
+ reveal to him my mistress' case.
+But, "God forbid," quoth I, "that I should e'er reveal That which
+ of love for her my bosom doth embrace!"
+The cutting-off my hand, for that I have confessed Unto, less
+ grievous were to me than her disgrace.
+
+The warders heard him and went and told Khalid, who sent for the
+youth after nightfall and conversed with him. He found him
+well-bred and intelligent and of a pleasant and vivacious wit; so
+he ordered him food and he ate. Then said Khalid, 'I know thou
+hast a story to tell that is no thief's; so, when the Cadi comes
+to-morrow morning and questions thee before the folk, do thou
+deny the charge of theft and avouch what may avert the cutting-off
+of thy hand; for the Prophet (whom God bless and preserve) saith,
+"In cases of doubt, eschew [or defer] punishment."' Then he sent
+him back to the prison, where he passed the night.
+
+On the morrow, the folk assembled to see his hand cut off, nor
+was there man or woman in Bassora but came forth to look upon his
+punishment. Then Khalid mounted in company of the notables of the
+city and others and summoning the Cadi, sent for the young man,
+who came, hobbling in his shackles. There none saw him but wept
+for him, and the women lifted up their voices in lamentation. The
+Cadi bade silence the women and said to the prisoner, 'These
+folk avouch that thou didst enter their dwelling and steal their
+goods: belike thou stolest less than a quarter dinar?'[FN#5]
+'Nay,' replied he, 'I stole more than that.' 'Peradventure,'
+rejoined the Cadi, 'thou art partner with them in some of the
+goods?' 'Not so,' replied the young man; 'it was all theirs. I
+had no right in it.' At this Khalid was wroth and rose and smote
+him on the face with his whip, applying this verse to his own
+case:
+
+Man wisheth and seeketh his wish to fulfil, But Allah denieth
+ save that which He will.
+
+Then he called for the executioner, who came and taking the
+prisoner's hand, set the knife to it and was about to cut it off,
+when, behold, a damsel, clad in tattered clothes, pressed through
+the crowd of women and cried out and threw herself on the young
+man. Then she unveiled and showed a face like the moon; whereupon
+the people raised a mighty clamour and there was like to have
+been a riot amongst them. But she cried out her loudest, saying,
+'I conjure thee, by Allah, O Amir, hasten not to cut off this
+man's hand, till thou have read what is in this scroll!' So
+saying, she gave him a scroll, and he took it and read therein
+the following verses:
+
+O Khalid, this man is love-maddened, a cave of desire, Transfixed
+ by the glances that sped from the bows of my eye.
+The shafts of my looks 'twas that pierced him and slew him;
+ indeed, He a bondsman of love, sick for passion and like for
+ to die.
+Yea, rather a crime, that he wrought not, he choose to confess
+ Than suffer on her whom he cherished dishonour to lie.
+Have ruth on a sorrowful lover; indeed he's no thief, But the
+ noblest and truest of mortals for passion that sigh.
+
+When he had read this, he called the girl apart and questioned
+her; and she told him that the young man was her lover and she
+his mistress. He came to the dwelling of her people, thinking to
+visit her, and threw a stone into the house, to warn her of his
+coming. Her father and brothers heard the noise of the stone and
+sallied out on him; but he, hearing them coming, caught up all
+the household stuff and made as if he would have stolen it, to
+cover his mistress's honour. 'So they seized him,' continued she,
+'saying, "A thief!" and brought him before thee, whereupon he
+confessed to the robbery and persisted in his confession, that he
+might spare me dishonour; and this he did, making himself a
+thief, of the exceeding nobility and generosity of his nature.'
+
+'He is indeed worthy to have his desire,' replied Khalid and
+calling the young man to him, kissed him between the eyes. Then
+he sent for the girl's father and bespoke him, saying, 'O elder,
+we thought to punish this young man by cutting off his hand; but
+God (to whom belong might and majesty) hath preserved us from
+this! and I now adjudge him the sum of ten thousand dirhems, for
+that he would have sacrificed his hand for the preservation of
+thine honour and that of thy daughter and the sparing you both
+reproach. Moreover, I adjudge other ten thousand dirhems to thy
+daughter, for that she made known to me the truth of the case;
+and I ask thy leave to marry him to her.' 'O Amir,' rejoined the
+old man, 'thou hast my consent.' So Khalid praised God and
+thanked Him and offered up a goodly exhortation and prayer; after
+which he said to the young man, 'I give thee this damsel to wife,
+with her own and her father's consent; and her dowry shall be
+this money, to wit, ten thousand dirhems. 'I accept this marriage
+at thy hands,' replied the youth and Khalid let carry the money
+on trays in procession to the young man's house, whilst the
+people dispersed, full of gladness. And surely [quoth he who
+tells the tale[FN#6]] never saw I a rarer day than this, for that
+its beginning was weeping and affliction and its end joy and
+gladness.
+
+
+
+
+ JAAFER THE BARMECIDE AND THE BEANSELLER.
+
+
+
+When Haroun er Reshid put Jaafer the Barmecide to death, he
+commanded that all who wept or made moan for him should be
+crucified; so the folk abstained from this. Now there was a
+Bedouin from a distant desert, who used every year to make and
+bring to Jaafer an ode in his honour, for which he rewarded him
+with a thousand diners; and the Bedouin took them and returning
+to his own country, lived upon them, he and his family, for the
+rest of the year. Accordingly, he came with his ode at the wonted
+time and finding Jaafer done to death, betook himself to the
+place where his body was hanging, and there made his camel kneel
+down and wept sore and mourned grievously. Then he recited his
+ode and fell asleep. In his sleep Jaafer the Barmecide appeared
+to him and said, 'Thou hast wearied thyself to come to us and
+findest us as thou seest; but go to Bassora and ask for such a
+man there of the merchants of the town and say to him, "Jaafer
+the Barmecide salutes thee and bids thee give me a thousand
+diners, by the token of the bean."'
+
+When the Bedouin awoke, he repaired to Bassora, where he sought
+out the merchant and repeated to him what Jaafer had said in the
+dream; whereupon he wept sore, till he was like to depart the
+world. Then he welcomed the Bedouin and entertained him three
+days as an honoured guest; and when he was minded to depart, he
+gave him a thousand and five hundred diners, saying, 'The
+thousand are what is commanded to thee, and the five hundred are
+a gift from me to thee; and every year thou shalt have of me a
+thousand diners.' When the Bedouin was about to take leave, he
+said to the merchant, 'I conjure thee, by Allah, tell me the
+story of the bean, that I may know the origin of all this.' 'In
+the early part of my life,' replied the merchant, 'I was
+miserably poor and hawked hot boiled beans about the streets of
+Baghdad for a living.
+
+I went out one cold, rainy day, without clothes enough on my body
+to protect me from the weather, now shivering for excess of cold
+and now stumbling into the pools of rain-water, and altogether in
+so piteous a plight as would make one shudder to look upon. Now
+it chanced that Jaafer was seated that day, with his officers and
+favourites, in an upper chamber overlooking the street, and his
+eye fell on me; so he took pity on my case and sending one of his
+servants to fetch me to him, said to me, "Sell thy beans to my
+people." So I began to mete out the beans with a measure I had
+with me, and each who took a measure of beans filled the vessel
+with gold pieces, till the basket was empty. Then I gathered
+together the money I had gotten, and Jaafer said to me, "Hast
+thou any beans left?" "I know not," answered I and sought in the
+basket, but found only one bean. This Jaafer took and splitting
+it in twain, kept one half himself and gave the other to one of
+his favourites, saying, "For how much wilt thou buy this
+half-bean?" "For the tale of all this money twice-told," replied
+she; whereat I was confounded and said in myself, "This is
+impossible." But, as I stood wondering, she gave an order to one
+of her handmaids and the girl brought me the amount twice-told.
+Then said Jaafer, "And I will buy my half for twice the sum of
+the whole. Take the price of thy bean." And he gave an order to
+one of his servants, who gathered together the whole of the money
+and laid it in my basket; and I took it and departed. Then I
+betook myself to Bassora, where I traded with the money and God
+prospered me, to Him be the praise and the thanks! So, if I give
+thee a thousand diners a year of the bounty of Jaafer, it will in
+no wise irk me.' Consider then the munificence of Jaafer's nature
+and how he was praised both alive and dead, the mercy of God the
+Most High be upon him!
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOU MOHAMMED THE LAZY.
+
+
+
+It is told that Haroun er Reshid was sitting one day on the
+throne of the Khalifate, when there came in to him a youth of his
+eunuchs, bearing a crown of red gold, set with pearls and rubies
+and all manner other jewels, such as money might not buy, and
+kissing the ground before him, said, 'O Commander of the
+Faithful, the lady Zubeideh kisses the earth before thee and
+saith to thee, thou knowest she hath let make this crown, which
+lacks a great jewel for its top; and she hath made search among
+her treasures, but cannot find a jewel to her mind.' Quoth the
+Khalif to his chamberlains and officers, 'Make search for a
+great jewel, such as Zubeideh desires.' So they sought, but found
+nothing befitting her and told the Khalif, who was vexed thereat
+and exclaimed, 'Am I Khalif and king of the kings of the earth
+and lack of a jewel? Out on ye! Enquire of the merchants.' So
+they enquired of the merchants, who replied, 'Our lord the Khalif
+will not find a jewel such as he requires save with a man of
+Bassora, by name Abou Mohammed the Lazy.' They acquainted the
+Khalif with this and he bade his Vizier Jaafer send a letter to
+the Amir Mohammed ez Zubeidi, governor of Bassora, commanding him
+to equip Abou Mohammed the Lazy and bring him to Baghdad.
+
+Jaafer accordingly wrote a letter to that effect and despatched
+it by Mesrour, who set out forthright for Bassora and went in to
+the governor, who rejoiced in him and entreated him with the
+utmost honour. Then Mesrour read him the Khalif's mandate, to
+which he replied, 'I hear and obey,' and forthwith despatched
+him, with a company of his followers, to Abou Mohammed's house.
+When they reached it, they knocked at the door, whereupon a
+servant came out and Mesrour said to him, 'Tell thy master that
+the Commander of the Faithful calls for him.' The servant went in
+and told his master, who came out and found Mesrour, the Khalif's
+chamberlain, and a company of the governor's men at the door. So
+he kissed the earth before Mesrour and said, 'I hear and obey the
+summons of the Commander of the Faithful; but enter ye my house.'
+'We cannot do that,' replied Mesrour, 'save in haste; for the
+Commander of the Faithful awaits thy coming.' But he said, 'Have
+patience with me a little, till I set my affairs in order.' So,
+after much pressure and persuasion, they entered and found the
+corridor hung with curtains of blue brocade, figured with gold,
+and Abou Mohammed bade one of his servants carry Mesrour to the
+bath. Now this bath was in the house and Mesrour found its walls
+and floor of rare and precious marbles, wrought with gold and
+silver, and its waters mingled with rose-water. The servants
+served Mesrour and his company on the most perfect wise and clad
+them, on their going forth of the bath, in robes of honour of
+brocade, interwoven with gold.
+
+Then they went in to Abou Mohammed and found him seated in his
+upper chamber upon a couch inlaid with jewels. Over his head hung
+curtains of gold brocade, wrought with pearls and jewels, and the
+place was spread with cushions, embroidered in red gold. When he
+saw Mesrour, he rose to receive him and bidding him welcome,
+seated him by his side. Then he called for food: so they brought
+the table of food, which when Mesrour saw, he exclaimed, 'By
+Allah, never saw I the like of this in the palace of the
+Commander of the Faithful!' For indeed it comprised all manner of
+meats, served in dishes of gilded porcelain. So they ate and
+drank and made merry till the end of the day, when Abou Mohammed
+gave Mesrour and each of his company five thousand diners; and on
+the morrow he clad them in dresses of honour of green and
+gold and entreated them with the utmost honour. Then said
+Mesrour to him, 'We can abide no longer, for fear of the Khalif's
+displeasure.' 'O my lord,' answered Abou Mohammed, 'have patience
+with us till to-morrow, that we may equip ourselves, and we will
+then depart with you.' So they tarried that day and night with
+him; and next morning, Abou Mohammed's servants saddled him a
+mule with housings and trappings of gold, set with all manner
+pearls and jewels; whereupon quoth Mesrour in himself, 'I wonder
+if, when he presents himself in this equipage before the
+Commander of the Faithful, he will ask him how he came by all
+this wealth.'
+
+Then they took leave of Ez Zubeidi and setting out from Bassora,
+fared on, without stopping, till they reached Baghdad and
+presented themselves before the Khalif who bade Abou Mohammed be
+seated. So he sat down and addressing the Khalif in courtly wise,
+said to him, 'O Commander of the Faithful, I have brought with me
+a present by way of homage: have I thy leave to produce it?'
+'There is no harm in that,' replied the Khalif; whereupon Abou
+Mohammed caused bring in a chest, from which he took a number of
+rarities and amongst the rest, trees of gold, with leaves of
+emerald and fruits of rubies and topazes and pearls. Then he
+fetched another chest and brought out of it a pavilion of
+brocade, adorned with pearls and rubies and emeralds and
+chrysolites and other precious stones; its poles were of the
+finest Indian aloes-wood, and its skirts were set with emeralds.
+Thereon were depicted all manner beasts and birds and other
+created things, spangled with rubies and emeralds and chrysolites
+and balass rubies and other precious stones.
+
+When Er Reshid saw these things, he rejoiced exceedingly, and
+Abou Mohammed said to him, 'O Commander of the Faithful, deem not
+that I have brought these to thee, fearing aught or coveting
+aught; but I knew myself to be but a man of the people and that
+these things befitted none save the Commander of the Faithful.
+And now, with thy leave, I will show thee, for thy diversion,
+something of what I can do.' 'Do what thou wilt,' answered Er
+Reshid, 'that we may see.' 'I hear and obey,' said Abou Mohammed
+and moving his lips, beckoned to the battlements of the palace,
+whereupon they inclined to him; then he made another sign to
+them, and they returned to their place. Then he made a sign with
+his eye, and there appeared before him cabinets with closed
+doors, to which he spoke, and lo, the voices of birds answered
+him [from within]. The Khalif marvelled exceedingly at this and
+said to him, 'How camest thou by all this, seeing that thou art
+only known as Abou Mohammed the Lazy, and they tell me that thy
+father was a barber-surgeon, serving in a public bath, and left
+thee nothing?' 'O Commander of the Faithful,' answered he,
+'listen to my story, for it is an extraordinary one and its
+particulars are wonderful; were it graven with needles upon the
+corners of the eye, it would serve as a lesson to him who can
+profit by admonition.' 'Let us hear it,' said the Khalif.
+
+'Know then, O Commander of the Faithful,' replied Abou Mohammed,
+'(may God prolong to thee glory and dominion,) that the report of
+the folk, that I am known as the Lazy and that my father left me
+nothing, is true; for he was, as thou hast said, but a barber-
+surgeon in a bath. In my youth I was the laziest wight on the
+face of the earth; indeed, so great was my sluggishness that,
+if I lay asleep in the sultry season and the sun came round upon
+me, I was too lazy to rise and remove from the sun to the shade;
+and thus I abode till I reached my fifteenth year, when my father
+was admitted to the mercy of God the Most High and left me
+nothing. However, my mother used to go out to service and feed me
+and give me to drink, whilst I lay on my side.
+
+
+One day, she came in to me, with five silver dirhems, and said to
+me, "O my son, I hear that the Sheikh Aboul Muzeffer is about to
+go a voyage to China." (Now this Sheikh was a good and charitable
+man and loved the poor.) "So come, let us carry him these five
+dirhems and beg him to buy thee therewith somewhat from the land
+of China, so haply thou mayst make a profit of it, by the bounty
+of God the Most High!" I was too lazy to move; but she swore by
+Allah that, except I rose and went with her, she would neither
+bring me meat nor drink nor come in to me, but would leave me to
+die of hunger and thirst. When I heard this, O Commander of the
+Faithful, I knew she would do as she said; so I said to her,
+"Help me to sit up." She did so, and I wept the while and said to
+her, "Bring me my shoes." Accordingly, she brought them and I
+said, "Put them on my feet." She put them on my feet and I said,
+"Lift me up." So she lifted me up and I said, "Support me, that I
+may walk." So she supported me and I went along thus, still
+stumbling in my skirts, till we came to the river-bank, where we
+saluted the Sheikh and I said to him, "O uncle, art thou Aboul
+Muzeffer?" "At thy service," answered he, and I said, "Take these
+dirhems and buy me somewhat from the land of China: haply, God
+may vouchsafe me a profit of it." Quoth the Sheikh to his
+companions, "Do ye know this youth?" "Yes," replied they; "he is
+known as Abou Mohammed the Lazy, and we never saw him stir from
+his house till now." Then said he to me, "O my son, give me the
+dirhems and the blessing of God the Most High go with them!" So
+he took the money, saying, "In the name of God!" and I returned
+home with my mother.
+
+Meanwhile the Sheikh set sail, with a company of merchants, and
+stayed not till they reached the land of China, where they bought
+and sold, and having done their intent, set out on their homeward
+voyage. When they had been three days at sea, the Sheikh said to
+his company, "Stay the ship!" And they asked him what was to do
+with him. "Know," replied he, "that I have forgotten the
+commission with which Abou Mohammed the Lazy charged me; so let
+us turn back, that we may buy him somewhat whereby he may
+profit." "We conjure thee, by God the Most High," exclaimed they,
+"turn not back with us; for we have traversed an exceeding great
+distance and endured sore hardship and many perils." Quoth he,
+"There is no help for it;" and they said "Take from us double the
+profit of the five dirhems and turn not back with us." So he
+agreed to this and they collected for him a great sum of money.
+
+Then they sailed on, till they came to an island, wherein was
+much people; so they moored thereto and the merchants went
+ashore, to buy thence precious metals and pearls and jewels and
+so forth. Presently, Aboul Muzeffer saw a man seated, with many
+apes before him, and amongst them one whose hair had been plucked
+off. As often as the man's attention was diverted from them, the
+other apes fell upon the plucked one and beat him and threw him
+on their master; whereupon the latter rose and beat them and
+bound them and punished them for this; and all the apes were
+wroth with the plucked ape therefor and beat him the more. When
+Aboul Muzeffer saw this, he took compassion upon the plucked ape
+and said to his master, "Wilt thou sell me yonder ape?" "Buy,"
+replied the man, and Aboul Muzeffer rejoined, "I have with me
+five dirhems, belonging to an orphan lad. Wilt thou sell me the
+ape for that sum?" "He is thine," answered the ape-merchant. "May
+God give thee a blessing of him!" So the Sheikh paid the money
+and his slaves took the ape and tied him up in the ship.
+
+Then they loosed sail and made for another island, where they
+cast anchor; and there came down divers, who dived for pearls and
+corals and other jewels. So the merchants hired them for money
+and they dived. When the ape saw this, he did himself loose from
+his bonds and leaping off the ship's side, dived with them;
+whereupon quoth Aboul Muzeffer, "There is no power and no virtue
+but in God the Most High, the Supreme! The ape is lost to us, by
+the [ill] fortune of the poor fellow for whom we bought him." And
+they despaired of him; but, after awhile, the company of divers
+rose to the surface, and with them the ape, with his hands full
+of jewels of price, which he threw down before Aboul Muzeffer,
+who marvelled at this and said, "There hangs some great mystery
+by this ape!"
+
+Then they cast off and sailed till they came to a third island,
+called the Island of the Zunonj,[FN#7] who are a people of the
+blacks, that eat human flesh. When the blacks saw them, they
+boarded them in canoes and taking all in the ship, pinioned them
+and carried them to their king who bade slaughter certain of the
+merchants. So they slaughtered them and ate their flesh; and the
+rest passed the night in prison and sore concern. But, when it
+was [mid]night, the ape arose and going up to Aboul Muzeffer, did
+off his bonds. When the others saw him free, they said, "God
+grant that our deliverance may be at thy hands, O Aboul
+Muzeffer!" But he replied, "Know that he who at delivered me, by
+God's leave, was none other than this ape; and I buy my release
+of him at a thousand dinars." "And we likewise," rejoined the
+merchants, "will pay him a thousand diners each, if he release
+us." With this, the ape went up to them and loosed their bonds,
+one by one, till he had freed them all, when they made for the
+ship and boarding her, found all safe and nothing missing. So
+they cast off and set sail; and presently Aboul Muzeffer said to
+them, "O merchants, fulfil your promise to the ape." "We hear and
+obey," answered they and paid him a thousand diners each, whilst
+Aboul Muzeffer brought out to him the like sum of his own monies,
+so that there was a great sum of money collected for the ape.
+
+Then they fared on till they reached the city of Bassora, where
+their friends came out to meet them; and when they had landed,
+the Sheikh said, "Where is Abou Mohammed the Lazy?" The news
+reached my mother, who came to me, as I lay asleep, and said to
+me, "O my son, the Sheikh Aboul Muzeffer has come back and is now
+in the city; so go thou to him and salute him and enquire what he
+hath brought thee; it may be God hath blessed thee with
+somewhat." "Lift me from the ground," quoth I, "and prop me up,
+whilst I walk to the river-bank." So she lifted me up and I went
+out and walked on, stumbling in my skirts, till I met the Sheikh,
+who exclaimed, at sight of me, "Welcome to him whose money has
+been the means of my delivery and that of these merchants, by
+the will of God the Most High! Take this ape that I bought for
+thee and carry him home and wait till I come to thee." So I
+took the ape, saying in myself, "By Allah, this is indeed rare
+merchandise!" and drove it home, where I said to my mother,
+"Whenever I lie down to sleep, thou biddest me rise and trade;
+see now this merchandise with thine own eyes."
+
+Then I sat down, and presently up came Aboul Muzeffer's slaves
+and said to me, "Art thou Abou Mohammed the Lazy?" "Yes,"
+answered I; and behold, Aboul Muzeffer appeared behind them. So I
+went up to him and kissed his hands; and he said to me, "Come
+with me to my house." "I hear and obey," answered I and followed
+him to his house, where he bade his servants bring me the money
+[and what not else the ape had earned me]. So they brought it and
+he said to me, "O my son, God hath blessed thee with this wealth,
+by way of profit on thy five dirhems." Then the slaves laid the
+treasure in chests, which they set on their heads, and Aboul
+Muzeffer gave me the keys of the chests, saying, "Go before the
+slaves to thy house; for all this wealth is thine." So I returned
+to my mother, who rejoiced in this and said to me, "O my son, God
+hath blessed thee with this much wealth; so put off thy laziness
+and go down to the bazaar and sell and buy." So I shook off my
+sloth, and opened a shop in the bazaar, where the ape used to sit
+on the same divan with me, eating with me when I ate and drinking
+when I drank. But, every day, he was absent from daybreak till
+noon-day, when he came back, bringing with him a purse of a
+thousand diners, which he laid by my side, and sat down. Thus did
+he a great while, till I amassed much wealth, wherewith I bought
+houses and lands and planted gardens and got me slaves, black and
+white and male and female.
+
+One day, as I sat in my shop, with the ape at my side, he began
+to turn right and left, and I said in myself, "What ails the
+beast?" Then God made the ape speak with a glib tongue, and he
+said to me, "O Abou Mohammed!" When I heard him speak, I was sore
+afraid; but he said to me, "Fear not; I will tell thee my case.
+Know that I am a Marid of the Jinn and came to thee, because of
+thy poor estate; but to-day thou knowest not the tale of thy
+wealth; and now I have a need of thee, wherein it thou do my
+will, it shall be well for thee." "What is it?" asked I, and he
+said, "I have a mind to marry thee to a girl like the full moon."
+"How so?" quoth I. "To. morrow," replied he, "don thou thy
+richest clothes and mount thy mule, with the saddle of gold, and
+ride to the forage-market. There enquire for the shop of the
+Sherif[FN#8] and sit down beside him and say to him, 'I come to
+thee a suitor for thy daughter's hand.' If he say to thee, 'Thou
+hast neither money nor condition nor family,' pull out a thousand
+diners and give them to him; and if he ask more, give him more
+and tempt him with money." "I hear and obey," answered I;
+"to-morrow, if it please God, I will do thy bidding."
+
+So on the morrow I donned my richest clothes and mounting my mule
+with trappings of gold, rode, attended by half a score slaves,
+black and white, to the forage-market, where I found the Sherif
+sitting in his shop. I alighted and saluting him, seated myself
+beside him. Quoth he, "Haply, thou hast some business with us,
+which we may have the pleasure of transacting?" "Yes," answered
+I; "I have business with thee." "And what is it?" asked he. Quoth
+I, "I come to thee as a suitor for thy daughter's hand." And he
+said, "Thou hast neither money nor condition nor family;"
+whereupon I pulled out a thousand diners of red gold and said to
+him, "This is my rank and family; and he whom God bless and keep
+hath said, 'The best of ranks is wealth.' And how well saith the
+poet:
+
+Whoso hath money, though it be but dirhems twain, his lips Have
+ learnt all manner speech and he can speak and fear no
+ slight.
+His brethren and his mates draw near and hearken to his word And
+ 'mongst the folk thou seest him walk, a glad and prideful
+ wight.
+But for the money, in the which he glorieth on this wise,
+ Thou'dst find him, midst his fellow-men, in passing sorry
+ plight.
+Yea, whensoe'er the rich man speaks, though in his speech he err,
+ 'Thou hast not spoken a vain thing,' they say; 'indeed,
+ thou'rt right.'
+But, for the poor man, an he speak, albeit he say sooth, They
+ say, 'Thou liest,' and make void his speech and hold it
+ light
+For money, verily, in all the lands beneath the sun, With
+ goodliness and dignity cloth its possessors dight.
+A very tongue it is for him who would be eloquent And eke a
+ weapon to his hand who hath a mind to fight."
+
+When he heard this, he bowed his head awhile, then, raising it,
+said, "If it must be so, I will have of thee other three thousand
+diners." "I hear and obey," answered I and sent one of my
+servants to my house for the money. When he came back with it, I
+handed it to the Sherif, who rose and bidding his servants shut
+his shop, invited his brother-merchants to the wedding; after
+which he carried me to his house and drew up the contract of
+marriage between his daughter and myself, saying to me, "After
+ten days, I will bring thee in to her." So I went home rejoicing
+and shutting myself up with the ape, told him what had passed;
+and he said, "Thou hast done well."
+
+When the time appointed by the Sherif drew near, the ape said to
+me, "There is a thing I would fain have thee do for me; and
+after, thou shalt have of me what thou wilt." "What is that?"
+asked I. Quoth he, "At the upper end of the bridechamber stands a
+cabinet, on whose door is a padlock of brass and the keys under
+it. Take the keys and open the cabinet, in which thou wilt find a
+coffer of iron, with four talismanic flags at its angles. In its
+midst is a brass basin full of money, wherein is tied a white
+cock with a cleft comb; and on one side of the coffer are eleven
+serpents and on the other a knife. Take the knife and kill the
+cock; cut away the flags and overturn the chest; then go back to
+the bride and do away her maidenhead. This is what I have to ask
+of thee." "I hear and obey," answered I and betook myself to the
+Sherif's house.
+
+As soon as I entered the bridechamber, I looked for the cabinet
+and found it even as the ape had described it. Then I went in to
+the bride and marvelled at her beauty and grace and symmetry, for
+indeed they were such as no tongue can set forth. So I rejoiced
+in her with an exceeding joy; and in the middle of the night,
+when she slept, I rose and taking the keys, opened the cabinet.
+Then I took the knife and killed the cock and threw down the
+flags and overturned the coffer, whereupon the girl awoke and
+seeing the closet open and the cock slain, exclaimed, "There is
+no power and no virtue but in God the Most High, the Supreme! The
+Marid hath gotten me!" Hardly had she made an end of speaking,
+when the Marid came down upon the house and seizing the bride,
+flew away with her; whereupon there arose a great clamour and in
+came the Sherif, buffeting his face. "O Abou Mohammed," said he,
+"what is this thou hast done? Is it thus thou requitest us? I
+made the talisman in the cabinet in my fear for my daughter from
+this accursed one; for these six years hath he sought to steal
+away the girl, but could not. But now there is no more abiding
+for thee with us; so go thy ways."
+
+So I went out and returned to my own house, where I made search
+for the ape, but could find no trace of him; whereby I knew that
+he was the Marid, who had taken my wife and had tricked me into
+destroying the talisman that hindered him from taking her, and
+repented, rending my clothes and buffeting my face; and there was
+no land but was straitened upon me. So I made for the desert,
+knowing not whither I should go, and wandered on, absorbed in
+melancholy thought, till night overtook me. Presently, I saw two
+serpents fighting, a white one and a tawny. So I took up a stone
+and throwing it at the tawny serpent, which was the aggressor,
+killed it; whereupon the white serpent made off, but returned
+after awhile accompanied by ten others of the same colour, which
+went up to the dead serpent and tore it in pieces, till but the
+head was left. Then they went their ways and I fell prostrate for
+weariness on the ground where I stood; but, as I lay, pondering
+my case, I heard a voice repeat the following verses, though I
+saw no one:
+
+Let destiny with slackened rein its course appointed fare And lie
+ thou down by night to sleep with heart devoid of care.
+For, twixt the closing of the eyes and th' opening thereof, God
+ hath it in His power to change a case from foul to fair.
+
+When I heard this, great concern got hold of me and I was beyond
+measure troubled; and I heard a voice from behind me repeat these
+verses also:
+
+Muslim, whose guide's the Koran and his due, Rejoice, for succour
+ cometh thee unto.
+Let not the wiles of Satan make thee rue, For we're a folk whose
+ creed's the One, the True.
+
+Then said I, "I conjure thee by Him whom thou worshippest, let me
+know who thou art!" Thereupon the unseen speaker appeared to me,
+in the likeness of a man, and said, "Fear not; for the report of
+thy good deed hath reached us, and we are a people of the
+true-believing Jinn. So, if thou lack aught, let us know it, that
+we may have the pleasure of fulfilling thy need." "Indeed,"
+answered I, "I am in sore need, for there hath befallen me a
+grievous calamity, whose like never yet befell man." Quoth he,
+"Surely, thou art Abou Mohammed the Lazy?" And I answered, "Yes."
+"O Abou Mohammed," rejoined the genie, "I am the brother of the
+white serpent, whose enemy thou slewest. We are four brothers, by
+one father and mother, and we are all indebted to thee for thy
+kindness. Know that he who played this trick on thee, in the
+likeness of an ape, is a Marid of the Marids of the Jinn; and had
+he not used this artifice, he had never been able to take the
+girl; for he hath loved her and had a mind to take her this long
+while, but could not win at her, being hindered of the talisman;
+and had it remained as it was, he could never have done so.
+However, fret not thyself for that; we will bring thee to her and
+kill the Marid; for thy kindness is not lost upon us."
+
+Then he cried out with a terrible voice, and behold, there
+appeared a company of Jinn, of whom he enquired concerning the
+ape; and one of them said, "I know his abiding-place; it is in
+the City of Brass, upon which the sun riseth not." Then said the
+first genie to me, "O Abou Mohammed, take one of these our
+slaves, and he will carry thee on his back and teach thee how
+thou shalt get back the girl: but know that he is a Marid and
+beware lest thou utter the name of God, whilst he is carrying
+thee; or he will flee from thee, and thou wilt fall and be
+destroyed." "I hear and obey," answered I and chose out one of
+the slaves, who bent down and said to me, "Mount." So I mounted
+on his back, and he flew up with me into the air, till I lost
+sight of the earth and saw the stars as they were fixed mountains
+and heard the angels glorifying God in heaven, what while the
+Marid held me in converse, diverting me and hindering me from
+pronouncing the name of God. But, as we flew, behold, one clad in
+green raiment, with streaming tresses and radiant face, holding
+in his hand a javelin whence issued sparks of fire, accosted me,
+saying, "O Abou Mohammed, say, 'There is no god but God and
+Mohammed is His apostle;' or I will smite thee with this
+javelin."
+
+Now I was already sick at heart of my [forced] abstention from
+calling on the name of God; so I said, "There is no god but God
+and Mohammed is His apostle." Whereupon the shining one smote the
+Marid with his javelin and he melted away and became ashes;
+whilst I was precipitated from his back and fell headlong toward
+the earth, till I dropped into the midst of a surging sea,
+swollen with clashing billows. Hard by where I fell was a ship
+and five sailors therein, who, seeing me, made for me and took me
+up into the boat. They began to speak to me in some tongue I knew
+not; but I signed to them that I understood not their speech. So
+they fared on till ended day, when they cast out a net and caught
+a great fish and roasting it, gave me to eat; after which they
+sailed on, till they reached their city and carried me in to
+their king, who understand Arabic. So I kissed the ground before
+him, and he bestowed on me a dress of honour and made me one of
+his officers. I asked him the name of the city, and he replied,
+"It is called Henad and is in the land of China." Then he
+committed me to his Vizier, bidding him show me the city, which
+was formerly peopled by infidels, till God the Most High turned
+them into stones; and there I abode a month's space, diverting
+myself with viewing the place, nor saw I ever greater plenty of
+trees and fruits than there.
+
+One day, as I sat on the bank of a river, there accosted me a
+horseman, who said to me, "Art thou not Abou Mohammed the Lazy?"
+"Yes," answered I; whereupon, "Fear not," said he; "for the
+report of thy good deed hath reached us." Quoth I, "Who art
+thou?" And he answered, "I am a brother of the white serpent, and
+thou art hard by the place where is the damsel whom thou
+seekest." So saying, he took off his [outer] clothes and clad me
+therein, saying, "Fear not; for he, that perished under thee, was
+one of our slaves." Then he took me up behind him and rode on
+with me, till we came to a desert place, when he said to me,
+"Alight now and walk on between yonder mountains till thou seest
+the City of Brass; then halt afar off and enter it not, till I
+return to thee and teach thee how thou shalt do." "I hear and
+obey," replied I and alighting, walked on till I came to the
+city, the walls whereof I found of brass. I went round about it,
+looking for a gate, but found none; and presently, the serpent's
+brother rejoined me and gave me a charmed sword that should
+hinder any from seeing me, then went his way.
+
+He had been gone but a little while, when I heard a noise of
+cries and found myself in the midst of a multitude of folk whose
+eyes were in their breasts. Quoth they, "Who art thou and what
+brings thee hither?" So I told them my story, and they said, "The
+girl thou seekest is in the city with the Marid; but we know not
+what he hath done with her. As for us, we are brethren of the
+white serpent. But go to yonder spring and note where the water
+enters, and enter thou with it; for it will bring thee into the
+city." I did as they bade me and followed the water-course, till
+it brought me to a grotto under the earth, from which I ascended
+and found myself in the midst of the city. Here I saw the damsel
+seated upon a throne of gold, under a canopy of brocade, midmost
+a garden full of trees of gold, whose fruits were jewels of
+price, such as rubies and chrysolites and pearls and coral.
+
+When she saw me, she knew me and accosted me with the
+[obligatory] salutation, saying, "O my lord, who brought thee
+hither?" So I told her all that had passed and she said, "Know
+that the accursed Marid, of the greatness of his love for me,
+hath told me what doth him hurt and what profit and that there is
+here a talisman by means whereof he could, an he would, destroy
+this city and all that are therein. It is in the likeness of an
+eagle, with I know not what written on it, and whoso possesses
+it, the Afrits will do his commandment in everything. It stands
+upon a column in such a place; so go thou thither and take it.
+Then set it before thee and taking a chafing-dish, throw into it
+a little musk, whereupon there will arise a smoke, that will draw
+all the Afrits to thee, and they will all present themselves
+before thee, nor shall one be absent; and whatsoever thou biddest
+them, that will they do. Arise therefore and do this thing, with
+the blessing of God the Most High."
+
+"I hear and obey," answered I and going to the column, did what
+she bade me, whereupon the Afrits presented themselves, saying,
+"Here are we, O our lord! Whatsoever thou biddest us, that will
+we do." Quoth I, "Bind the Marid that brought the damsel hither."
+"We hear and obey," answered they and disappearing, returned
+after awhile and informed me that they had done my bidding. Then
+I dismissed them and returning to my wife, told her what had
+happened and said to her, "Wilt thou go with me?" "Yes," answered
+she. So I carried her forth of the city, by the underground
+channel, and we fared on, till we fell in with the folk who had
+shown me the way into the city. I besought them to teach me how I
+should return to my native land; so they brought us to the
+seashore and set us aboard a ship, which sailed on with us with a
+fair wind, till we reached the city of Bassora. Here we landed,
+and I carried my wife to her father's house; and when her people
+saw her, they rejoiced with an exceeding joy. Then I fumigated
+the eagle with musk and the Afrits flocked to me from all sides,
+saying, "At thy service; what wilt thou have us do?" I bade them
+transport all that was in the City of Brass of gold and silver
+and jewels and precious things to my house in Bassora, which they
+did; and I then ordered them to fetch the ape. So they brought
+him before me, abject and humiliated, and I said to him, "O
+accursed one, why hast thou dealt thus perfidiously with me?"
+Then I commanded the Afrits to shut him in a brazen vessel: so
+they put him in a strait vessel of brass and sealed it with lead.
+But I abode with my wife in joy and delight; and now, O Commander
+of the Faithful, I have under my hand such stores of precious
+things and rare jewels and other treasure as neither reckoning
+may comprise nor measure suffice unto. All this is of the bounty
+of God the Most High, and if thou desire aught of money or what
+not, I will bid the Jinn bring it to thee forthright.'
+
+The Khalif wondered greatly at his story and bestowed on him
+royal gifts, in exchange for his presents, and entreated him with
+the favour he deserved.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE GENEROUS DEALING OF YEHYA BEN KHALID
+ THE BARMECIDE WITH MENSOUR.
+
+
+
+It is told that Haroun er Reshid, in the days before he became
+jealous of the Barmecides, sent once for one of his guards, Salih
+by name, and said to him, 'O Salih, go to Mensour[FN#9] and say
+to him, "Thou owest us a thousand thousand dirhems and we require
+of thee immediate payment of the amount." And I charge thee, O
+Salih, an he pay it not before sundown, sever his head from his
+body and bring it to me.' 'I hear and obey,' answered Salih and
+going to Mensour, acquainted him with what the Khalif had said,
+whereupon quoth he, 'By Allah, I am a lost man; for all my estate
+and all my hand owns, if sold for their utmost value, would not
+fetch more than a hundred thousand dirhems. Whence then, O Salih,
+shall I get the other nine hundred thousand?' 'Contrive how thou
+mayst speedily acquit thyself,' answered Salih; 'else art thou a
+dead man; for I cannot grant thee a moment's delay after the time
+appointed me by the Khalif, nor can I fail of aught that he hath
+enjoined on me. Hasten, therefore, to devise some means of saving
+thyself ere the time expire.' 'O Salih,' quoth Mensour, 'I beg
+thee of thy favour to bring me to my house, that I may take
+leave of my children and family and give my kinsfolk my last
+injunctions.'
+
+So he carried him to his house, where he fell to bidding his
+family farewell, and the house was filled with a clamour of
+weeping and lamentation and calling on God for help. Then Salih
+said to him, 'I have bethought me that God may peradventure
+vouchsafe thee relief at the hands of the Barmecides. Come, let
+us go to the house of Yehya ben Khalid.' So they went to Yehya's
+house, and Mensour told him his case, whereat he was sore
+concerned and bowed his head awhile; then raising it, he called
+his treasurer and said to him, 'How much money have we in our
+treasury?' 'Five thousand dirhems,' answered the treasurer, and
+Yehya bade him bring them and sent a message to his son Fezl,
+saying, 'I am offered for sale estates of great price, that may
+never be laid waste; so send me somewhat of money.' Fezl sent him
+a thousand thousand dirhems, and he despatched a like message to
+his son Jaafer, who also sent him a thousand thousand dirhems;
+nor did he leave sending to his kinsmen of the Barmecides, till
+he had collected from them a great sum of mosey for Mensour. But
+the latter and Salih knew not of this; and Mensour said to Yehya,
+'O my lord, I have laid hold upon thy skirt for I know not
+whither to look for the money but to thee; so discharge thou the
+rest of my debt for me, in accordance with thy wonted generosity,
+and make me thy freed slave.' Thereupon Yehya bowed his head and
+wept; then he said to a page, 'Harkye, boy, the Commander of the
+Faithful gave our slave-girl Denanir a jewel of great price: go
+thou to her and bid her send it us.' The page went out and
+presently returned with the jewel, whereupon quoth Yehya, 'O
+Mensour, I bought this jewel of the merchants for the Commander
+of the Faithful, for two hundred thousand diners, and he gave it
+to our slave-girl Denanir the lutanist. When he sees it with
+thee, he will know it and spare thy life and do thee honour for
+our sake; and now thy money is complete.'
+
+So Salih took the money and the jewel and carried them to the
+Khalif, together with Mensour; but on the way? he heard the
+latter repeat this verse, applying it to his own case:
+
+It was not love, indeed, my feet to them that led; Nay, but
+ because the stroke of th' arrows I did dread.
+
+When Salih heard this, he marvelled at the baseness and
+ingratitude of Mensour's nature, and turning upon him, said,
+'There is none on the face of the earth better than the
+Barmecides, nor any baser nor more depraved than thou; for they
+bought thee off from death and saved thee from destruction,
+giving thee what should deliver thee; yet thou thankest them not
+nor praisest them, neither acquittest thee after the manner of
+the noble; nay, thou requitest their benevolence with this
+speech.' Then he went to Er Reshid and acquainted him with all
+that had passed; and he marvelled at the generosity and
+benevolence of Yehya ben Khalid and the baseness and ingratitude
+of Mensour and bade restore the jewel to Yehya, saying, 'That
+which we have given, it befits not that we take again.'
+
+So Salih returned to Yehya, and acquainted him with Mensour's ill
+conduct; whereupon, 'O Salih,' replied he, 'when a man is in
+distress, sick at heart and distracted with melancholy thought.
+he is not to be blamed for aught that falls from him; for it
+comes not from the heart.' And he fell to seeking excuse for
+Mensour. But Salih wept [in telling the tale] and exclaimed,
+'Never shall the revolving sphere bring forth into being the like
+of thee, O Yehya! Alas, that one of such noble nature and
+generosity should be buried beneath the earth! 'And he repeated
+the following verses:
+
+Hasten to do the kindnesses thou hast a mind unto; For bounty is
+ not possible at every tide and hour.
+How many a man denies his soul to do the generous deed, To which
+ it's fain, till lack of means deprive him of the power!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE GENEROUS DEALING OF YEHYA BEN KHALID
+ WITH A MAN WHO FORGED A LETTER IN HIS
+ NAME.
+
+
+
+There was between Yehya ben Khalid and Abdallah ben Malik el
+Khuzai[FN#10] a secret enmity, the reason whereof was that Haroun
+er Reshid loved the latter with an exceeding love, so that Yehya
+and his sons were wont to say that he had bewitched the Khalif;
+and thus they abode a long while, with rancour in their hearts,
+till it fell out that the Khalif invested Abdallah with the
+government of Armenia and sent him thither. Soon after he had
+established himself in his seat of government, there came to him
+one of the people of Irak, a man of excellent parts and good
+breeding, who had lost his wealth and wasted his substance, and
+his estate was come to nought; so he forged a letter to Abdallah
+in Yehya's name and set out therewith for Armenia. When he came
+to the governor's gate, he gave the letter to one of the
+chamberlains, who carried it to his master. Abdallah read it and
+considering it attentively, knew it to be forged; so he sent for
+the man, who presented himself before him and called down
+blessings upon him and praised him and those of his court. Quoth
+Abdallah to him, 'What moved thee to weary thyself thus and bring
+me a forged letter? But be of good heart; for we will not
+disappoint thy travail.' 'God prolong the life of our lord the
+Vizier!' replied the other. 'If my coming irk thee, cast not
+about for a pretext to repel me, for God's earth is wide and the
+Divine Provider liveth. Indeed, the letter I bring thee from
+Yehya ben Khalid is true and no forgery.' Quoth Abdallah, 'I will
+write a letter to my agent at Baghdad and bid him enquire
+concerning the letter. If it be true, as thou sayest, I will
+bestow on thee the government of one of my cities; or, if thou
+prefer a present, I will give thee two hundred thousand dirhems,
+besides horses and camels of price and a robe of honour. But, if
+the letter prove a forgery, I will have thee beaten with two
+hundred blows of a stick and thy beard shaven.'
+
+Accordingly, he bade confine him in a privy chamber and furnish
+him therein with all he needed, till his case should be made
+manifest. Then he despatched a letter to his agent at Baghdad, to
+the following purport: 'There is come to me a man with a letter
+purporting to be from Yehya ben Khalid. Now I have my doubts of
+this letter: so delay thou not, but go thyself and learn the
+truth of the case and let me have an answer in all speed.' When
+the letter reached the agent, he mounted at once and betook
+himself to the house of Yehya ben Khalid, whom he found sitting
+with his officers and boon-companions. So he gave him the letter
+and he read it and said to the agent, 'Come back to me to-morrow,
+against I write thee an answer.'
+
+When the agent had gone away, Yehya turned to his companions and
+said, 'What doth he deserve who forgeth a letter in my name and
+carrieth it to my enemy?' They all answered, saying this and
+that, each proposing some kind of punishment; but Yehya said, 'Ye
+err in that ye say and this your counsel is of the meanness and
+baseness of your spirits. Ye all know the close favour of
+Abdallah with the Khalif and what is between him and us of
+despite and enmity; and now God the Most High hath made this man
+an intermediary, to effect a reconciliation between us, and hath
+appointed him to quench the fire of hate in our hearts, which
+hath been growing this score years; and by his means our
+differences shall be accorded. Wherefore it behoves me to requite
+him by confirming his expectation and amending his estate; so I
+will write him a letter to Abdallah, to the intent that he may
+use him with increase of honour and liberality.'
+
+When his companions heard what he said, they called down
+blessings on him and marvelled at his generosity and the
+greatness of his magnanimity. Then he called for paper and ink
+and wrote Abdallah a letter in his own hand, to the following
+effect: 'In the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful! Thy
+letter hath reached me (may God give thee long life!) and I have
+read it and rejoice in thy health and well-being. It was thy
+thought that yonder worthy man had forged a letter in my name and
+that he was not the bearer of any message from me; but the case
+is not so, for the letter I myself wrote, and it was no forgery;
+and I hope, of thy courtesy and benevolence and the nobility of
+thy nature, that thou wilt fulfil this generous and excellent man
+of his hope and wish and use him with the honour he deserves and
+bring him to his desire and make him the special object of thy
+favour and munificence. Whatever thou dost with him, it is to me
+that thou dost it, and I am beholden to thee accordingly.' Then
+he superscribed the letter and sealing it, delivered it to the
+agent, who despatched it to Abdallah.
+
+When the latter read it, he was charmed with its contents and
+sending for the man, said to him, 'Now will I give thee which
+thou wilt of the two things I promised thee.' 'The gift were more
+acceptable to me than aught else,' replied the man; whereupon
+Abdallah ordered him two hundred thousand dirhems and ten Arab
+horses, five with housings of silk and other five with richly
+ornamented saddles of state, besides twenty chests of clothes and
+ten mounted white slaves and a proportionate quantity of jewels
+of price. Moreover, he bestowed on him a dress of honour and sent
+him to Baghdad in great state. When he came thither, he repaired
+to Yehya's house, before he went to his own folk, and sought an
+audience of him. So the chamberlain went in to Yehya and said to
+him, 'O my lord, there is one at our door who craves speech of
+thee; and he is a man of apparent wealth and consideration,
+comely of aspect and attended by many servants.' Yehya bade admit
+him; so he entered and kissed the ground before him. 'Who art
+thou?' asked Yehya; and he answered, 'O my lord, I am one who was
+dead from the tyranny of fortune; but thou didst raise me again
+from the grave of calamities and preferredst me to the paradise
+of [my] desires. I am he who forged a letter in thy name and
+carried it to Abdallah ben Malek el Khuzai.' 'How hath he dealt
+with thee,' asked Yehya, 'and what did he give thee?' Quoth the
+man, 'He hath made me rich and overwhelmed me with presents and
+favours, thanks to thee and thy great generosity and magnanimity
+and to thine exceeding goodness and abounding munificence and
+thine all-embracing liberality. And now, behold, I have brought
+all that he gave me, and it is at thy door; for it is thine to
+command, and the decision is in thy hand.' 'Thou hast done me
+better service than I thee,' rejoined Yehya; 'and I owe thee
+thanks without stint and abundant largesse, for that thou hast
+changed the enmity that was between me and yonder man of worship
+into love and friendship. Wherefore I will give thee the like of
+what Abdallah gave thee.' Then he ordered him money and horses
+and apparel, such as Abdallah had given him; and thus that man's
+fortune was restored to him by the munificence of these two
+generous men.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF EL MAMOUN AND THE STRANGE
+ DOCTOR
+
+
+
+It is said that there was none, among the Khalifs of the house of
+Abbas, more accomplished in all branches of knowledge than El
+Mamoun. On two days in each week, he was wont to preside at
+conferences of the learned, when the doctors and theologians met
+and sitting, each in his several rank and room, disputed in his
+presence. One day, as he sat thus, there came into the assembly a
+stranger, clad in worn white clothes, and sat down in an obscure
+place, behind the doctors of the law. Then the assembled scholars
+began to speak and expound difficult questions, it being the
+custom that the various propositions should be submitted to each
+in turn and that whoso bethought him of some subtle addition or
+rare trait, should make mention of it. So the question went round
+till it came to the stranger, who spoke in his turn and made a
+goodlier answer than that of any of the doctors; and the Khalif
+approved his speech and bade advance him to a higher room. When
+the second question came round to him, he made a still more
+admirable answer, and the Khalif ordered him to be preferred to a
+yet higher place. When the third question reached him, he made
+answer more justly and appropriately than on the two previous
+occasions, and El Mamoun bade him come up and sit near himself.
+When the conference broke up, water was brought and they washed
+their hands; after which food was set on and they ate. Then the
+doctors arose and withdrew; but El Mamoun forbade the stranger to
+depart with them and calling him to himself, entreated him with
+especial favour and promised him honour and benefits.
+
+Presently, they made ready the banquet of wine; the fair-faced
+boon-companions came and the cup went round amongst them till it
+came to the stranger, who rose to his feet and said, 'If the
+Commander of the Faithful permit me, I will say one word.' 'Say
+what thou wilt,' answered the Khalif. Quoth the stranger,
+'Verily, the Exalted Intelligence[FN#11] (whose eminence God
+increase!) knoweth that his slave was this day, in the august
+assembly, one of the unknown folk and of the meanest of the
+company, and the Commander of the Faithful distinguished him and
+brought him near to himself, little as was the wit he showed,
+preferring him above the rest and advancing him to a rank whereto
+his thought aspired not: and now he is minded to deprive him of
+that small portion of wit that raised him from obscurity and
+augmented him, after his littleness. God forfend that the
+Commander of the Faithful should envy his slave what little he
+hath of understanding and worth and renown! But, if his slave
+should drink wine, his reason would depart from him and ignorance
+draw near to him and steal away his good breeding; so would he
+revert to that low degree, whence he sprang, and become
+contemptible and ridiculous in the eyes of the folk. I hope,
+therefore, that the August Intelligence, of his power and bounty
+and royal generosity and magnanimity, will not despoil his slave
+of this jewel.'
+
+When the Khalif heard his speech, he praised him and thanked him
+and making him sit down again in his place, showed him high
+honour and ordered him a present of a hundred thousand diners.
+Moreover he mounted him upon a horse and gave him rich apparel;
+and in every assembly he exalted him and showed him favour over
+all the other doctors, till he became the highest of them all in
+rank.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ALI SHAR AND ZUMURRUD.
+
+
+
+There lived once, of old days, in the land of Khorassan, a
+merchant called Mejdeddin, who had great wealth and many slaves
+and servants, black and white; but he was childless until he
+reached the age of threescore, when God the Most High vouchsafed
+him a son, whom he named Ali Shar. The boy grew up like the moon
+on the night of its full, and when he came to man's estate and
+was endowed with all kinds of perfection, his father fell sick of
+a mortal malady and calling his son to him, said to him, 'O my
+son, the hour of my death is at hand, and I desire to give thee
+my last injunctions.' 'And what are they, O my father?' asked
+Ali. 'O my son,' answered Mejdeddin, 'I charge thee, be not [too]
+familiar with any and eschew what leads to evil and mischief.
+Beware lest thou company with the wicked; for he is like the
+blacksmith; if his fire burn thee not, his smoke irks thee: and
+how excellent is the saying of the poet:
+
+There is no man in all the world whose love thou shouldst desire,
+ No friend who, if fate play thee false, will true and
+ constant be.
+Wherefore I'd have thee live apart and lean for help on none. In
+ this I give thee good advice; so let it profit thee.
+
+And what another saith:
+
+Men are a latent malady; Count not on them, I counsel thee.
+An if thou look into their case, They're full of guile and
+ perfidy.
+
+And yet a third:
+
+The company of men will profit thee in nought, Except to pass
+ away the time in idle prate;
+So spare thou to converse with them, except it be For gain of
+ lore and wit or mending of estate.
+
+And a fourth
+
+If a quickwitted man have made proof of mankind, I have eaten of
+ them, where but tasted hath he,
+And have seen their affection but practice and nought But
+ hypocrisy found their religion to be.'
+
+'O my father,' said Ali, 'I hear and obey: what more shall I do?'
+'Do good when thou art able thereto,' answered his father; 'be
+ever courteous and succourable to men and profit by all occasions
+of doing a kindness; for a design is not always easy of
+accomplishment; and how well saith the poet:
+
+'Tis not at every time and season that to do Kind offices,
+ indeed, is easy unto you;
+So, when the occasion serves, make haste to profit by't, Lest by
+ and by the power should fail thee thereunto.'
+
+'I hear and obey,' answered Ali; 'what more?' 'Be mindful of
+God,' continued Mejdeddin, 'and He will be mindful of thee.
+Husband thy wealth and squander it not; for, if thou do, thou
+wilt come to have need of the least of mankind. Know that the
+measure of a man's worth is according to what his right hand
+possesses: and how well saith the poet:
+
+If wealth should fail, there is no friend will bear me company,
+ But whilst my substance yet abounds, all men are friends to
+ me.
+How many a foe for money's sake hath companied with me! How many
+ a friend for loss thereof hath turned mine enemy!'
+
+'What more?' asked Ali. 'O my son,' said Mejdeddin, 'take counsel
+of those who are older than thou and hasten not to do thy heart's
+desire. Have compassion on those that are below thee, so shall
+those that are above thee have compassion on thee; and oppress
+none, lest God set over thee one who shall oppress thee. How well
+saith the poet:
+
+Add others' wit to thine and counsel still ensue; For that the
+ course of right is not concealed from two.
+One mirror shows a man his face, but, if thereto Another one he
+ add, his nape thus can he view.
+
+And as saith another:
+
+Be slow to move and hasten not to match thy heart's desire: Be
+ merciful to all, as thou on mercy reckonest;
+For no hand is there but the hand of God is over it, And no
+ oppressor but shall be with worse than he opprest.
+
+And yet another:
+
+Do no oppression, whilst the power thereto is in thine hand; For
+ still in peril of revenge the sad oppressor goes.
+Thine eyes will sleep anon, what while the opprest, on wake, call
+ down Curses upon thee, and God's eye shuts never in repose.
+
+Beware of drinking wine, for it is the root of all evil: it does
+away the reason and brings him who uses it into contempt; and how
+well saith the poet:
+
+By Allah, wine shall never invade me, whilst my soul Endureth in
+ my body and my thoughts my words control!
+Not a day long will I turn me to the zephyr-freshened bowl, And
+ for friend I'll choose him only who of wine-bibbing is
+ whole.
+
+This, then,' added Mejdeddin, 'is my charge to thee; keep it
+before thine eyes, and may God stand to thee in my stead.' Then
+he swooned away and kept silence awhile. When he came to himself,
+he besought pardon of God and making the profession of the Faith,
+was admitted to the mercy of the Most High. His son wept and
+lamented for him and made due preparation for his burial. Great
+and small attended him to the grave and the readers recited the
+Koran about his bier; nor did Ali Shar omit aught of what was due
+to the dead. Then they prayed over him and committed him to the
+earth, graving these words upon his tomb:
+
+Created of the dust thou wast and cam'st to life And eloquence
+ didst learn and spokest many a word;
+Then to the dust again returnedst and wast dead, As 'twere from
+ out the dust, indeed, thou'dst never stirred.
+
+His son Ali Shar grieved for him and mourned him after the wont
+of men of condition; nor did he cease therefrom till his mother
+died also, not long afterward, when he did with her as he had
+done with his father. Then he sat in the shop, selling and buying
+and consorting with none of God's creatures, in accordance with
+his father's injunction.
+
+On this wise he abode for a year, at the end of which time there
+came in to him certain whoreson fellows by craft and companied
+with him, till he turned with them to lewdness and swerved from
+the right way, drinking wine in goblets and frequenting the fair
+night and day; for he said in himself, 'My father amassed this
+wealth for me, and if I spend it not, to whom shall I leave it?
+By Allah, I will not do save as saith the poet:
+
+If all the days of thy life thou get And heap up treasure, to
+ swell thy hoard,
+When wilt thou use it and so enjoy That thou hast gathered and
+ gained and stored?'
+
+Then he ceased not to squander his wealth all tides of the day
+and watches of the night, till he had made away with it all and
+abode in evil case and troubled at heart. So he sold his shop and
+lands and so forth, and after this he sold the clothes off his
+body, leaving himself but one suit. Then drunkenness left him and
+thought came to him, and he fell into melancholy.
+
+One day, when he had sat from day-break to mid-afternoon without
+breaking his fast, he said in himself, 'I will go round to those
+on whom I spent my wealth: it may be one of them will feed me
+this day.' So he went the round of them all; but, as often as he
+knocked at any one's door, the man denied himself and hid from
+him, till he was consumed with hunger. Then he betook himself to
+the bazaar, where he found a crowd of people, assembled in a ring
+round somewhat, and said in himself, 'I wonder what ails the folk
+to crowd together thus? By Allah, I will not remove hence, till I
+see what is within yonder ring!' So he made his way into the ring
+and found that the crowd was caused by a damsel exposed for sale.
+She was five feet high, slender of shape, rosy-cheeked and high-
+bosomed and surpassed all the people of her time in beauty and
+grace and elegance and perfection; even as saith one, describing
+her:
+
+As she wished, she was created, after such a wise that lo! She in
+ beauty's mould was fashioned, perfect, neither less no mo'.
+Loveliness itself enamoured of her lovely aspect is; Coyness
+ decks her and upon her, pride and pudour sweetly show.
+In her face the full moon glitters and the branch is as her
+ shape; Musk her breath is, nor midst mortals is her equal,
+ high or low.
+'Tis as if she had been moulded out of water of pure pearls; In
+ each member of her beauty is a very moon, I trow.
+
+And her name was Zumurrud.
+
+When Ali Shar saw her, he marvelled at her beauty and grace and
+said, 'By Allah, I will not stir hence till I see what price this
+girl fetches and know who buys her!' So he stood with the rest of
+the merchants, and they thought he had a mind to buy her, knowing
+the wealth he had inherited from his parents. Then the broker
+stood at the damsel's head and said, 'Ho, merchants! Ho, men of
+wealth! Who will open the biddings for this damsel, the mistress
+of moons, the splendid pearl, Zumurrud the Curtain-maker, the aim
+of the seeker and the delight of the desirous? Open the biddings,
+and on the opener be nor blame nor reproach.'
+
+So one merchant said, 'I bid five hundred dinars for her.' 'And
+ten,' said another. 'Six hundred,' cried an old man named
+Reshideddin, blue-eyed and foul of face. 'And ten,' quoth
+another. 'I bid a thousand,' rejoined Reshideddin; whereupon the
+other merchants were silent and the broker took counsel with the
+girl's owner, who said, 'I have sworn not to sell her save to
+whom she shall choose; consult her.' So the broker went up to
+Zumurrud and said to her, 'O mistress of moons, yonder merchant
+hath a mind to buy thee.' She looked as Reshideddin and finding
+him as we have said, replied, 'I will not be sold to a grey-
+beard, whom decrepitude hath brought to evil plight.' 'Bravo,'
+quoth I, 'for one who saith:
+
+I asked her for a kiss one day, but she my hoary head Saw, though
+ of wealth and worldly good I had great plentihead;
+So, with a proud and flouting air, her back she turned on me And,
+ "No, by Him who fashioned men from nothingness!" she said.
+"Now, by God's truth, I never had a mind to hoary hairs, And
+ shall my mouth be stuffed, forsooth, with cotton, ere I'm
+ dead?"
+
+'By Allah,' quoth the broker, 'thou art excusable, and thy value
+is ten thousand dinars!' So he told her owner that she would not
+accept of Reshideddin, and he said, 'Ask her of another.'
+Thereupon another man came forward and said, 'I will take her at
+the same price.' She looked at him and seeing that his beard was
+dyed, said, 'What is this lewd and shameful fashion and
+blackening of the face of hoariness?' And she made a great show
+of amazement and repeated the following verses:
+
+A sight, and what a sight, did such a one present To me! A neck,
+ to beat with shoes, by Allah, meant!
+And eke a beard for lie a coursing-ground that was And brows for
+ binding on of ropes all crook'd and bent.[FN#12]
+Thou that my cheeks and shape have ravished, with a lie Thou dost
+ disguise thyself and reck'st not, impudent;
+Dyeing thy hoary hairs disgracefully with black[FN#13] And hiding
+ what appears, with fraudulent intent;
+As of the puppet-men thou wert, with one beard go'st And with
+ another com'st again, incontinent.
+
+And how well saith another:
+
+Quoth she to me, "I see thou dy'st thy hoariness;" and I, "I do
+ but hide it from thy sight, O thou my ear and eye!"[FN#14]
+She laughed out mockingly and said, "A wonder 'tis indeed! Thou
+ so aboundest in deceit that even thy hair's a lie."
+
+'By Allah,' quoth the broker, 'thou hast spoken truly!' The
+merchant asked what she said: so the broker repeated the verses
+to him, and he knew that she was in the right and desisted from
+buying her. Then another came forward and would have bought her
+at the same price; but she looked at him and seeing that he had
+but one eye, said, 'This man is one-eyed; and it is of such as he
+that the poet saith:
+
+Consort not with him that is one-eyed a day, And be on thy guard
+ 'gainst his mischief and lies:
+For God, if in him aught of good had been found, Had not curst
+ him with blindness in one of his eyes.'
+
+Then the broker brought her another bidder and said to her, 'Wilt
+thou be sold to this man?' She looked at him and seeing that he
+was short of stature and had a beard that reached to his navel,
+said, 'This is he of whom the poet speaks, when he says:
+
+I have a friend, who has a beard, that God Caused flourish
+ without profit, till, behold.
+'Tis, as it were, to look upon, a night Of middle winter, long
+ and dark and cold.'
+
+'O my lady,' said the broker, 'look who pleases thee of these
+that are present, and point him out, that I may sell thee to
+him.' So she looked round the ring of merchants, examining them
+one by one, till her eyes rested on Ali Shar. His sight cost her
+a thousand sighs and her heart was taken with him: for that he
+was passing fair of favour and more pleasant than the northern
+zephyr; and she said, 'O broker, I will be sold to none but my
+lord there, he of the handsome face and slender shape, whom the
+poet describes in the following verses:
+
+They showed thy lovely face and railed At her whom ravishment
+ assailed.
+Had they desired to keep me chaste, Thy face so fair they should
+ have veiled.
+
+None shall possess me but he,' added she; 'for his cheek is
+smooth and the water of his mouth sweet as Selsebil;[FN#15] his
+sight is a cure for the sick and his charms confound poet and
+proser, even as saith one of him:
+
+The water of his mouth is wine, and very musk The fragrance of
+ his breath; his teeth are camphor white.
+Rizwan hath put him our from paradise, for fear The black-eyed
+ girls of heaven be tempted with the wight.
+Men blame him for his pride; but the full moon's excuse, How
+ proud so'er it be, finds favour in our sight.
+
+Him of the curling locks and rose-red cheeks and enchanting
+glances, of whom saith the poet:
+
+A slender loveling promised me his favours fair and free; So my
+ heart's restless and my eye looks still his sight to see.
+His eyelids warranted me the keeping of his troth; But how shall
+ they, that bankrupt[FN#16] are, fulfil their warranty?
+
+And as saith another:
+
+"The script of whiskers on his cheek," quoth they, "is plain to
+ see: How canst thou then enamoured be of him, and whiskered
+ he?"
+Quoth I, "Have done with blame and leave your censuring, I pray.
+ As if it be a very script, it is a forgery.
+Lo, in the gathering of his cheeks the meads of Eden be, And more
+ by token that his lips are Kauther,[FN#17], verily."
+
+When the broker heard the verses she repeated on the charms of
+Ali Shar, he marvelled at her eloquence, no less than at the
+brightness of her beauty; but her owner said to him, 'Marvel not
+at her beauty, that shames the sun of day, nor that her mind is
+stored with the choicest verses of the poets; for, besides this,
+she can repeat the glorious Koran, according to the seven
+readings, and the august Traditions, after the authentic text;
+and she writes the seven hands and is versed in more branches of
+knowledge than the most learned doctor. Moreover, her hands are
+better than gold and silver; for she makes curtains of silk and
+sells them for fifty dinars each; and it takes her eight days to
+make a curtain.' 'Happy the man,' exclaimed the broker, 'who hath
+her in his house and maketh her of his privy treasures!' And her
+owner said, 'Sell her to whom she will.' So the broker went up to
+Ali Shar and kissing his hands, said to him, 'O my lord, buy thou
+this damsel, for she hath made choice of thee.' Then he set forth
+to him all her charms and accomplishments, and added: 'I give
+thee joy, if thou buy her, for she is a gift from Him who is no
+niggard of His giving.'
+
+Ali bowed his head awhile, laughing to himself and saying
+inwardly, 'Up to now I have not broken my fast; yet I am ashamed
+to own before the merchants that I have no money wherewith to buy
+her.' The damsel, seeing him hang down his head, said to the
+broker, 'Take my hand and lead me to him, that I may show myself
+to him and tempt him to buy me; for I will not be sold to any but
+him.' So the broker took her hand and stationed her before Ali
+Shar, saying, 'What is thy pleasure, O my lord?' But he made him
+no answer, and the girl said to him, 'O my lord and darling of my
+heart, what ails thee that thou wilt not bid for me? Buy me for
+what thou wilt, and I will bring thee good fortune.' Ali raised
+his eyes to her and said, 'Must I buy thee perforce? Thou art
+dear at one thousand dinars.' 'Then buy me for nine hundred,'
+answered she. 'Nay,' rejoined he; and she said, 'Then for eight
+hundred;' and ceased not to abate the price, till she came to a
+hundred dinars. Quoth he, 'I have not quite a hundred dinars.'
+'How much dost thou lack of a hundred?' asked she, laughing. 'By
+Allah,' replied he, 'I have neither a hundred dinars, nor any
+other sum; for I own neither white money nor red, neither dinar
+nor dirhem. So look out for another customer.' When she knew that
+he had nothing, she said to him, 'Take me by the hand and carry
+me aside into a passage, as if thou wouldst examine me privily.'
+He did so and she took from her bosom a purse containing a
+thousand dinars, which she gave him saying, 'Pay down nine
+hundred to my price and keep the rest to provide us withal.'
+
+He did as she bade him and buying her for nine hundred dinars,
+paid down the price from the purse and carried her to his house,
+which when she entered, she found nothing but bare floors,
+without carpets or vessels. So she gave him other thousand
+dinars, saying, 'Go to the bazaar and buy three hundred dinars'
+worth of furniture and vessels for the house and three dinars'
+worth of meat and drink, also a piece of silk, the size of a
+curtain, and gold and silver thread and [sewing] silk of seven
+colours.' He did her bidding, and she furnished the house and
+they sat down to eat and drink; after which they went to bed and
+took their pleasure, one of the other. And they lay the night
+embraced and were even as saith the poet:
+
+Cleave fast to her thou lov'st and let the envious rail amain;
+ For calumny and envy ne'er to favour love were fain.
+Lo, whilst I slept, in dreams I saw thee lying by my side And
+ from thy lips the sweetest, sure, of limpid springs did
+ drain.
+Yea, true and certain all I saw is, as I will avouch, And 'spite
+ the envier, thereto I surely will attain.
+There is no goodlier sight, indeed, for eyes to look upon, Than
+ when one couch in its embrace enfoldeth lovers twain,
+Each to the other's bosom clasped, clad in their twinned delight,
+ Whilst hand with hand and arm with arm about their necks
+ enchain.
+Lo, when two hearts are straitly knit in passion and desire, But
+ on cold iron smite the folk who chide at them in vain.
+Thou, that for loving censurest the votaries of love, Canst thou
+ assain a heart diseased or heal a cankered brain?
+If in thy time thou find but one to love thee and be true, I rede
+ thee cast the world away and with that one remain.
+
+They lay together till the morning and love for the other was
+stablished in the heart of each of them. On the morrow, Zumurrud
+took the curtain and embroidered it with coloured silks and gold
+and silver thread, depicting thereon all manner birds and beasts;
+nor is there in the world a beast but she wrought on the curtain
+the semblant thereof. Moreover, she made thereto a band, with
+figures of birds, and wrought at it eight days, till she had made
+an end of it, when she trimmed it and ironed it and gave it to
+Ali, saying, 'Carry it to the bazaar and sell it to one of the
+merchants for fifty dinars; but beware lest thou sell it to a
+passer-by, for this would bring about a separation between us,
+because we have enemies who are not unmindful of us.' 'I hear and
+obey,' answered he and repairing to the bazaar, sold the curtain
+to a merchant, as she bade him; after which he bought stuff for
+another curtain and silk and gold and silver thread as before and
+what they needed of food, and brought all this to her, together
+with the rest of the money.
+
+They abode thus a whole year, and every eight days she made a
+curtain, which he sold for fifty dinars. At the end of the year,
+he went to the bazaar, as usual, with a curtain, which he gave to
+the broker; and there came up to him a Christian, who bid him
+threescore dinars for the curtain; but he refused, and the
+Christian went on to bid higher and higher, till he came to a
+hundred dinars and bribed the broker with ten gold pieces. So the
+latter returned to Ali and told him of this and urged him to
+accept the offer, saying, 'O my lord, be not afraid of this
+Christian, for he can do thee no hurt.' The merchants also were
+instant with him to accept the offer; so he sold the curtain to
+the Christian, though his heart misgave him, and taking the
+price, set off to return home.
+
+Presently, he found the Christian walking behind him; so he said
+to him, 'O Nazarene, why dost thou follow me?' 'O my lord,'
+answered the other, 'I have a need at the end of the street, may
+God never bring thee to need!' Ali went on, but, as he came to
+the door of his house, the Christian overtook him; so he said to
+him, 'O accursed one, what ails thee to follow me wherever I go?'
+'O my lord,' replied the other, 'give me a draught of water, for
+I am athirst; and with God the Most High be thy reward!' Quoth
+Ali in himself, 'Verily, this man is a tributary [of the
+Khalifate] and seeks a draught of water of me; by Allah, I will
+not disappoint him!' So he entered the house and took a mug of
+water; but Zumurrud saw him and said to him, 'O my love, hast
+thou sold the curtain?' 'Yes,' answered he. 'To a merchant or a
+passer-by?' asked she. 'For my heart forethinketh me of
+separation.' 'To a merchant, of course,' replied he. But she
+rejoined, 'Tell me the truth of the case, that I may order my
+affair; and what wantest thou with the mug of water?' 'To give
+the broker a drink,' answered he; whereupon she exclaimed, 'There
+is no power and no virtue but in God the Most High, the Supreme!'
+And repeated the following verses:
+
+O thou that seekest parting, stay thy feet: Let clips and kisses
+ not delude thy spright.
+Softly, for fortune's nature is deceit And parting is the end of
+ love-delight.
+
+Then he took the mug and going out, found the Christian within
+the vestibule and said to him, 'O dog, how darest thou enter my
+house without my leave?' 'O my lord,' answered he, 'there is no
+difference between the door and the vestibule and I will not
+budge hence, save to go out; and I am beholden to thee for thy
+kindness.' Then he took the mug and emptying it, returned it to
+Ali, who took it and waited for him to go; but he did not move.
+So Ali said to him, 'Why dost thou not rise and go thy way?' 'O
+my lord,' answered the Christian, 'be not of those that do a
+kindness and after make a reproach of it, nor one of whom saith
+the poet:
+
+Gone, gone are they who, if thou stoodst before their door of
+ old, Had, at thy seeking, handselled thee with benefits
+ untold!
+And if thou stoodest at their door who follow after them, These
+ latter would begrudge to thee a draught of water cold.
+
+O my lord,' continued he, 'I have drunk, and now I would have
+thee give me to eat of whatever is in the house, though it be but
+a crust of bread or a biscuit and an onion.' 'Begone, without
+more talk,' replied Ali; 'There is nothing in the house.' 'O my
+lord,' insisted the Christian, 'if there be nothing in the house,
+take these hundred dinars and fetch us somewhat from the market,
+if but a cake of bread, that bread and salt may pass between us.'
+With this, quoth Ali to himself, 'This Christian is surely mad; I
+will take the hundred dinars and bring somewhat worth a couple of
+dirhems and laugh at him.' 'O my lord,' added the Christian, 'I
+want but somewhat to stay my hunger, were it but a cake of dry
+bread and an onion; for the best food is that which does away
+hunger, not rich meats; and how well saith the poet:
+
+A cake of dry stale bread will hunger out to flight: Why then are
+ grief and care so heavy on my spright?
+Death is, indeed, most just, since, with an equal hand, Khalif
+ and beggar-wretch, impartial, it doth smite.'
+
+Then said Ali, 'Wait here, whilst I lock the saloon and fetch
+thee somewhat from the market.' 'I hear and obey,' said the
+Christian. So Ali shut up the saloon and locking the door with a
+padlock, put the key in his pocket: after which he repaired to
+the market and bought fried cheese and virgin honey and bananas
+and bread, with which he returned to the Christian. When the
+latter saw this, he said, 'O my lord, this is [too] much; thou
+hast brought enough for half a score men and I am alone; but
+belike thou wilt eat with me.' 'Eat by thyself,' replied Ali; 'I
+am full.' 'O my lord,' rejoined the Christian, 'the wise say, "He
+who eats not with his guest is a base-born churl."'
+
+When Ali heard this, he sat down and ate a little with him, after
+which he would have held his hand: but [whilst he was not
+looking] the Christian took a banana and peeled it, then,
+splitting it in twain, put into one half concentrated henbane,
+mixed with opium, a drachm whereof would overthrow an elephant.
+This half he dipped in the honey and gave to Ali Shar, saying, 'O
+my lord, I swear by thy religion that thou shalt take this.' Ali
+was ashamed to make him forsworn; so he took the half banana and
+swallowed it; but hardly had it reached his stomach, when his
+head fell down in front of his feet and he was as though he had
+been a year asleep.
+
+When the Nazarene saw this, he rose, as he had been a bald wolf
+or a baited cat, and taking the saloon key, made off at a run,
+leaving Ali Shar prostrate. Now this Christian was the brother of
+the decrepit old man who thought to buy Zumurrud for a thousand
+dinars, but she would have none of him and flouted him in verse.
+He was an infidel at heart, though a Muslim in outward show, and
+called himself Reshideddin;[FN#18] and when Zumurrud mocked him
+and would not accept of him to her lord, he complained to his
+brother, the aforesaid Christian, Bersoum by name, who said to
+him, 'Fret not thyself about this affair; for I will make shift
+to get her for thee, without paying a penny.'
+
+Now he was a skilful sorcerer crafty and wicked; so he watched
+his time and played Ali Shar the trick aforesaid; then, taking
+the key, he went to his brother and told him what had passed,
+whereupon Reshideddin mounted his mule and repaired with his
+servants to Ali Shar's house, taking with him a purse of a
+thousand dinars, wherewith to bribe the master of police, should
+he meet him. He unlocked the saloon door, and the men who were
+with him rushed in upon Zumurrud and seized her, threatening her
+with death if she spoke; but they left the house as it was and
+took nothing therefrom. Moreover, they laid the key by Ali's side
+and leaving him lying in the vestibule, shut the door on him and
+went away. The Christian carried the girl to his own house and
+setting her amongst his women and concubines, said to her, 'O
+strumpet, I am the old man, whom thou did reject and lampoon; but
+now I have thee, without paying a penny.' 'God requite thee, O
+wicked old man,' replied she, with her eyes full of tears, 'for
+sundering my lord and me!' 'Wanton doxy that thou art,' rejoined
+he,' thou shalt see how I will punish thee! By the virtue of the
+Messiah and the Virgin, except thou obey me and embrace my faith,
+I will torture thee with all manner of torture!' 'By Allah,'
+answered she, 'though thou cut me in pieces, I will not forswear
+the faith of Islam! It may be God the Most High will bring me
+speedy relief, for He is all-powerful, and the wise say, "Better
+hurt in body than in religion."'
+
+Thereupon the old man called out to his eunuchs and women,
+saying, 'Throw her down!' So they threw her down and he beat her
+grievously, whilst she cried in vain for help, but presently
+stinted and fell to saying, 'God is my sufficiency, and He is
+indeed sufficient!' till her breath failed her and she swooned
+away. When he had taken his fill of beating her, he said to the
+eunuchs, 'Drag her forth by the feet and cast her down in the
+kitchen, and give her nothing to eat.' They did his bidding, and
+on the morrow the accursed old man sent for her and beat her
+again, after which he bade return her to her place. When the pain
+of the blows had subsided, she said, 'There is no god but God and
+Mohammed is His Apostle! God is my sufficiency and excellent is
+He in whom I put my trust!' And she called upon our lord Mohammed
+(whom God bless and preserve) for succour.
+
+Meanwhile, Ali Shar slept on till next day, when the fumes of the
+henbane quitted his brain and he awoke and cried out, 'O
+Zumurrud!' But none answered him. So he entered the saloon and
+found 'the air empty and the place of visitation distant;'[FN#19]
+whereby he knew that it was the Nazarene, who had played him this
+trick. And he wept and groaned and lamented and repeated the
+following verses:
+
+O Fate, thou sparest not nor dost desist from me: Lo, for my soul
+ is racked with dolour and despite!
+Have pity, O my lords, upon a slave laid low, Upon the rich made
+ poor by love and its unright.
+What boots the archer's skill, if, when the foe draw near, His
+ bowstring snap and leave him helpless in the fight?
+And when afflictions press and multiply on man, Ah, whither then
+ shall he from destiny take flight?
+How straitly did I guard 'gainst severance of our loves! But,
+ when as Fate descends, it blinds the keenest sight.
+
+Then he sobbed and repeated these verses also:
+
+Her traces on the encampment's sands a robe of grace bestow: The
+ mourner yearneth to the place where she dwelt whiles ago.
+Towards her native land she turns; a camp in her doth raise
+ Longing, whose very ruins now are scattered to and fro.
+She stops and questions of the place; but with the case's tongue
+ It answers her, "There is no way to union, I trow.
+'Tis as the lost a Levin were, that glittered on the camp Awhile,
+ then vanished and to thee appeareth nevermo'."
+
+And he repented, whenas repentance availed him not, and wept and
+tore his clothes. Then he took two stones and went round the
+city, beating his breast with the stones and crying out, 'O
+Zumurrud!' whilst the children flocked round him, calling out, 'A
+madman! A madman!' and all who knew him wept for him, saying,
+'Yonder is such an one: what hath befallen him?' This he did all
+that day, and when night darkened on him, he lay down in one of
+the by-streets and slept till morning. On the morrow, he went
+round about the city with the stones till eventide, when he
+returned to his house, to pass the night. One of his neighbours,
+a worthy old woman, saw him and said to him, 'God keep thee, O my
+son! How long hast thou been mad?' And he answered her with the
+following verse:
+
+Quoth they, "Thou'rt surely mad for her thou lov'st;" and I
+ replied, "Indeed the sweets of life belong unto the raving
+ race.
+My madness leave and bring me her for whom ye say I'm mad; And if
+ she heal my madness, spare to blame me for my case."
+
+Therewith she knew him for a lover who had lost his mistress and
+said, 'There is no power and no virtue but in God the Most High,
+the Supreme! O my son, I would have thee acquaint me with the
+particulars of thine affliction. Peradventure God may enable me
+to help thee against it, if it so please Him.' So he told her all
+that had happened and she said, 'O my son, indeed thou hast
+excuse.' And her eyes ran over with tears and she repeated the
+following verses:
+
+Torment, indeed, in this our world, true lovers do aby; Hell
+ shall not torture them, by God, whenas they come to die!
+Of love they died and to the past their passions chastely hid; So
+ are they martyrs, as, indeed, traditions[FN#20] testify.
+
+Then she said, 'O my son, go now and buy me a basket, such as the
+jewel-hawkers carry, and stock it with rings and bracelets and
+ear-rings and other women's gear, and spare not money. Bring all
+this to me and I will set it on my head and go round about, in
+the guise of a huckstress, and make search for her in all the
+houses, till I light on news of her, if it be the will of God the
+Most High.' Ali rejoiced in her words and kissed her hands, then,
+going out, speedily returned with all she required; whereupon she
+rose and donning a patched gown and a yellow veil, took a staff
+in her hand and set out, with the basket on her head.
+
+She ceased not to go from quarter to quarter and street to street
+and house to house, till God the Most High led her to the house
+of the accursed Reshideddin the Nazarene. She heard groans within
+and knocked at the door, whereupon a slave-girl came down and
+opening the door to her, saluted her. Quoth the old woman, 'I
+have these trifles for sale: is there any one with you who will
+buy aught of them?' 'Yes,' answered the girl and carrying her
+indoors, made her sit down; whereupon all the women came round
+her and each bought something of her. She spoke to them fair and
+was easy with them as to price, so that they rejoiced in her,
+because of her pleasant speech and easiness. Meanwhile, she
+looked about to see who it was she had heard groaning, till her
+eyes fell on Zumurrud, when she knew her and saw that she was
+laid prostrate. So she wept and said to the girls, 'O my
+children, how comes yonder damsel in this plight?' And they told
+her what had passed, adding, 'Indeed, the thing is not of our
+choice; but our master commanded us to do this, and he is now
+absent on a journey.' 'O my children,' said the old woman, 'I
+have a request to make of you, and it is that you loose this
+unhappy woman of her bonds, till you know of your lord's return,
+when do ye bind her again as she was; and you shall earn a reward
+from the Lord of all creatures.' 'We hear and obey,' answered
+they and loosing Zumurrud, gave her to eat and drink.
+
+Then said the old woman, 'Would my leg had been broken, ere I
+entered your house!' And she went up to Zumurrud and said to her,
+'O my daughter, take heart; God will surely bring thee relief.'
+Then she told her [privily] that she came from her lord Ali Shar
+and appointed her to be on the watch that night, saying, 'Thy
+lord will come to the bench under the gallery and whistle to
+thee; and when thou hearest him, do thou whistle back to him and
+let thyself down to him by a rope from the window, and he will
+take thee and go away.' Zumurrud thanked the old woman, and the
+latter returned to Ali Shar and told him what she had done,
+saying, 'Go to-night, at midnight, to such a quarter,--for the
+accursed fellow's house is there and its fashion is thus and
+thus. Stand under the window of the upper chamber and whistle;
+whereupon she will let herself down to thee; then do thou take
+her and carry her whither thou wilt.' He thanked her for her good
+offices and repeated the following verses, with the tears running
+down his cheeks:
+
+Let censors cease to rail and chide and leave their idle prate:
+ My body's wasted and my heart weary and desolate;
+And from desertion and distress my tears, by many a chain Of true
+ traditions handed down, do trace their lineage straight.
+Thou that art whole of heart and free from that which I endure Of
+ grief and care, cut short thy strife nor question of my
+ state.
+A sweet-lipped maiden, soft of sides and moulded well of shape,
+ With her soft speech my heart hath ta'en, ay, and her
+ graceful gait.
+My heart, since thou art gone, no rest knows nor my eyes do
+ sleep, Nor can the hunger of my hopes itself with patience
+ sate.
+Yea, thou hast left me sorrowful, the hostage of desire, 'Twixt
+ enviers and haters dazed and all disconsolate.
+As for forgetting, 'tis a thing I know not nor will know; For
+ none but thou into my thought shalt enter, soon or late.
+
+Then he sighed and shed tears and repeated these also:
+
+May God be good to him who brought me news that ye were come! For
+ never more delightful news unto my ears was borne.
+If he would take a worn-out wede for boon, I'd proffer him A
+ heart that at the parting hour was all in pieces torn.
+
+He waited until the appointed time, then went to the street,
+where was the Christian's house, and recognizing it from the old
+woman's description, sat down on the bench under the gallery.
+Presently, drowsiness overcame him, for it was long since he had
+slept, for the violence of his passion, and he became as one
+drunken with sleep. Glory be to Him who sleepeth not!
+
+Meanwhile, chance led thither a certain thief, who had come out
+that night to steal somewhat and prowled about the skirts of the
+city, till he happened on Reshideddin's house. He went round
+about it, but found no way of climbing up into it and presently
+came to the bench, where he found Ali Shar asleep and took his
+turban. At that moment, Zumurrud looked out and seeing the thief
+standing in the darkness, took him for her lord; so she whistled
+to him and he whistled back to her; whereupon she let herself
+down to him, with a pair of saddle-bags full of gold. When the
+robber saw this, he said to himself, 'This is a strange thing,
+and there must needs be some extraordinary cause to it.' Then,
+snatching up the saddle-bags, he took Zumurrud on his shoulders
+and made off with both like the blinding lightning.
+
+Quoth she, 'The old woman told me that thou wast weak with
+illness on my account; and behold, thou art stronger than a
+horse.' He made her no reply; so she put her hand to his face and
+felt a beard like a bath-broom,[FN#21] as he were a hog that had
+swallowed feathers and they had come out at his gullet; whereat
+she took fright and said to him, 'What art thou?' 'O strumpet,'
+answered he, 'I am the sharper Jewan the Kurd, of the band of
+Ahmed ed Denef; we are forty sharpers, who will all tilt at thy
+tail this night, from dusk to dawn.' When she heard his words,
+she wept and buffeted her face, knowing that Fate had gotten the
+better of her and that there was nothing for it but to put her
+trust in God the Most High. So she took patience and submitted
+herself to the ordinance of God, saying, 'There is no god but
+God! As often as we escape from one trouble, we fall into a
+worse.'
+
+Now the manner of Jewan's coming thither was thus: he had said to
+Ahmed ed Denef, 'O captain, I have been here before and know a
+cavern without the town, that will hold forty souls; so I will go
+before you thither and set my mother therein. Then will I enter
+the city and steal somewhat on your account and keep it till you
+come; so shall you be my guests this day.' 'Do what thou wilt,'
+replied Ahmed. So Jewan forewent them to the cavern and left his
+mother there; but, as he came out, he found a trooper lying
+asleep, with his horse tethered beside him; so he slew him and
+taking his clothes and arms, hid them with his mother in the
+cave, where also he tied up the horse. Then he betook himself to
+the city and prowled about, till he happened on the Christian's
+house and did with Ali Shar and Zumurrud as we have said. He
+ceased not to run, with Zumurrud on his back, till he came to the
+cavern, where he gave her in charge of his mother, saying, 'Keep
+watch over her till I come back to thee at point of day,' and
+went away.
+
+Meanwhile Zumurrud said to herself, 'Now is the time to cast
+about for a means of escape. If I wait till these forty men come,
+they will take their turns at me, till they make me like a water-
+logged ship.' Then she turned to the old woman and said to her,
+'O my aunt, wilt thou not come without the cave, that I may louse
+thee in the sun?' 'Ay, by Allah, O my daughter!' replied the old
+woman. 'This long time have I been out of reach of the bath; for
+these hogs cease not to hale me from place to place.' So they
+went without the cavern, and Zumurrud combed out the old woman's
+hair and killed the vermin in her head, till this soothed her and
+she fell asleep; whereupon Zumurrud arose and donning the clothes
+of the murdered trooper, girt herself with his sword and covered
+her head with his turban, so that she became as she were a man.
+Then she took the saddle-bags full of gold and mounted the horse,
+saying in herself, 'O kind Protector, I adjure thee by the glory
+of Mohammed, (whom God bless and preserve,) protect me! If I
+enter the city, belike one of the trooper's folk will see me, and
+no good will befall me.' So she turned her back on the city and
+rode forth into the desert.
+
+She fared on ten days, eating of the fruits of the earth and
+drinking of its waters, she and her horse; and on the eleventh
+day, she came in sight of a pleasant and safe city, stablished in
+good; the season of winter had departed from it with its cold and
+the spring-tide came to it with its roses and orange-blossoms;
+its flowers blew bright, its streams welled forth and its birds
+warbled. As she drew near, she saw the troops and Amirs and
+notables of the place drawn up before the gate, at which she
+marvelled and said to herself, 'The people of the city are all
+collected at the gate: there must needs be a reason for this.'
+Then she made towards them; but, as she drew near, the troops
+hastened forward to meet her and dismounting, kissed the ground
+before her and said, 'God aid thee, O our lord the Sultan!'
+
+Then the grandees ranked themselves before her, whilst the troops
+ranged the people in order, saying, 'God aid thee and make thy
+coming a blessing to the Muslims, O Sultan of all men! God
+stablish thee, O king of the age and pearl of the day and the
+time!' 'What ails you, O people of the city?' asked Zumurrud; and
+the chamberlain answered, 'Verily, He who is no niggard in giving
+hath been bountiful to thee and hath made thee Sultan of this
+city and ruler over the necks of all that are therein; for know
+that it is the custom of the citizens, when their king dies,
+leaving no son, that the troops should sally forth of the pace
+and abide there three days; and whoever cometh from the quarter
+whence thou hast come, they make him king over them. So praised
+be God who hath sent us a well-favoured man of the sons of the
+Turks; for had a lesser than thou presented himself, he had been
+Sultan.'
+
+Now Zumurrud was well-advised in all she did; so she said, 'Think
+not that I am of the common folk of the Turks; nay, I am a man of
+condition; but I was wroth with my family, so I went forth and
+left them. See these saddle-bags full of gold I brought with me,
+that I might give alms thereof to the poor and needy by the way.'
+So they called down blessings upon her and rejoiced in her with
+an exceeding joy and she also rejoiced in them and said in
+herself, 'Now that I have attained to this estate, it may be God
+will reunite me with my lord in this place, for He can do what He
+will.' Then the troops escorted her to the city and dismounting,
+walked before her to the palace. Here she alighted and the Amirs
+and grandees, taking her under the armpits, carried her into the
+palace and seated her on the throne; after which they all kissed
+the ground before her. Then she bade open the treasuries and gave
+largesse to the troops, who offered up prayers for the continuance
+of her reign, and all the townsfolk and the people of the kingdom
+accepted her rule.
+
+She abode thus awhile, ordering and forbidding, and remitted
+taxes and released prisoners and redressed grievances, so that
+all the people came to hold her in exceeding reverence and to
+love her, by reason of her generosity and continence; but, as
+often as she bethought her of her lord, she wept and besought God
+to reunite them; and one night, as she was thinking of him and
+calling to mind the days she had passed with him, her eyes ran
+over with tears and she repeated the following verses:
+
+My longing, 'spite of time, for thee is ever new; My weeping
+ wounds my lids and tears on tears ensue.
+Whenas I weep, I weep for anguish of desire; For grievous
+ severance is a lover's heart unto.
+
+Then she wiped away her tears and rising, betook herself to the
+harem, where she appointed to the slave-girls and concubines
+separate lodgings and assigned them pensions and allowances,
+giving out that she was minded to live apart and devote herself
+to works of piety. So she betook herself to fasting and praying,
+till the Amirs said, 'Verily, this Sultan is exceeding devout.'
+Nor would she suffer any attendants about her, save two little
+eunuchs, to serve her.
+
+She held the throne thus a whole year, during which time she
+heard no news of Ali Shar, and this was exceeding grievous to
+her; so, when her distress became excessive, she summoned her
+Viziers and chamberlains and bid them fetch architects and
+builders and make her a tilting ground, a parasang long and the
+like broad, in front of the palace. They hastened to do her
+bidding, and when the place was competed to her liking, she went
+down into it and they pitched her there a great pavilion, wherein
+the chairs of the Amirs were set in their order. Then she bade
+spread in the tilting-ground tables with all manner rich meats
+and ordered the grandees to eat. So they ate and she said to
+them, 'It is my will that, on the first day of each month, ye do
+on this wise and proclaim in the city that none shall open his
+shop, but that all the people shall come and eat of the king's
+banquet, and that whoso disobeyeth shall be hanged over his own
+door.'
+
+They did as she bade them, and when came the first day of the
+next month, Zumurrud went down into the tilting-ground and the
+crier proclaimed aloud, saying, 'Ho, all ye people, great and
+small, whoso openeth shop or house or magazine shall straightway
+be hanged over his own door; for it behoves you all to come and
+eat of the king's banquet.' Then they laid the tables and the
+people came in troops; so she bade them sit down at the tables
+and eat their fill of all the dishes. So they sat down and she
+sat on her chair of estate, watching them, whilst each thought
+she was looking at none but him. Then they fell to eating and the
+Amirs said to them, 'Eat and be not ashamed; for this is pleasing
+to the King.' So they ate their fill and went away, blessing the
+King and saying, one to the other, 'Never saw we a Sultan that
+loved the poor as doth this Sultan.' And they wished her length
+of life, whilst Zumurrud returned to the palace, rejoicing in her
+device and saying in herself, 'If it please God the Most High, I
+shall surely by this means happen on news of my lord Ali Shar.'
+
+When the first day of the second month came round, she made the
+banquet as before and the folk came and sat down at the tables,
+company by company and one by one. As she sat on her throne, at
+the head of the tables, watching the people eat, her eye fell on
+Bersoum, the Nazarene who had bought the curtain of Ali Shar; and
+she knew him and said in herself, 'This is the first of my solace
+and of the accomplishment of my desire.' Bersoum came up to the
+table and sitting down with the rest to eat, espied a dish of
+sweet rice, sprinkled with sugar; but it was far from him. So he
+pushed up to it and putting out his hand to it, took it and set
+it before himself. His next neighbour said to him, 'Why dost thou
+not eat of what is before thee? Art thou not ashamed to reach
+over for a dish that is distant from thee?' Quoth Bersoum, 'I
+will eat of none but this dish.' 'Eat then,' rejoined the other,
+'and small good may it do thee!' But another man, a hashish-
+eater, said, 'Let him eat of it, that I may eat with him.' 'O
+unluckiest of hashish-eaters,' replied the first speaker, 'this
+is no meat for thee; it is eating for Amirs. Let it be, that it
+may return to those for whom it is meant and they eat it.'
+
+But Bersoum heeded him not and putting his hand to the rice, took
+a mouthful and put it in his mouth. He was about to take a second
+mouthful, when Zumurrud, who was watching him, cried out to
+certain of her guards, saying, 'Bring me yonder man with the dish
+of sweet rice before him and let him not eat the mouthful he hath
+ready, but throw it from his hand.' So four of the guards went up
+to Bersoum and throwing the mouthful of rice from his hand, haled
+him forthright before Zumurrud, whilst all the people left eating
+and said to one another, 'By Allah, he did wrong in not eating of
+the food meant for the like of him.' 'For me,' quoth one, 'I was
+content with this frumenty that is before me.' And the hashish-
+eater said, 'Praised be God who hindered me from eating of the
+dish of sweet rice, for I looked for it to stand before him and
+was only waiting for him to have stayed his hunger of it, to eat
+with him, when there befell him what we see.' And they said, one
+to another, 'Wait till we see what befalls him.'
+
+Then said Zumurrud to Bersoum, 'Out on thee, O blue eyes! What is
+thy name and why comest thou hither?' But the accursed fellow
+miscalled himself, having a white turban,[FN#22] and answered, 'O
+King, my name is Ali; I am a weaver and came hither to trade.'
+'Bring me a table of sand and a pen of brass,' quoth Zumurrud,
+and they brought her what she sought. She levelled the sand and
+taking the pen, drew a geomantic figure, in the likeness of an
+ape; then, raising her head, she considered Bersoum straitly and
+said to him, 'O dog, how darest thou lie to kings? Art thou not a
+Nazarene, Bersoum by name, and comest thou not hither in quest of
+somewhat? Speak the truth, or, by the splendour of the Deity, I
+will strike off thy head?' At this, Bersoum was confounded and
+the Amirs and bystanders said, 'Verily, the King understands
+geomancy: blessed be He who hath gifted him!' Then Zumurrud cried
+out upon Bersoum and said, 'Tell me the truth, or I will make an
+end of thee!' 'Pardon, O King of the age,' replied Bersoum; 'the
+table hath told thee aright; thy slave is indeed a Nazarene.'
+Whereupon all present wondered at the King's skill in geomancy,
+saying, 'Verily, the King is a diviner, whose like there is not
+in the world.'
+
+Then Zumurrud bade flay the Christian and stuff his skin with
+straw and hang it over the gate of the tilting-ground. Moreover,
+she commanded to dig a pit without the city and burn his flesh
+and bones therein and throw over his ashes offal and rubbish. 'We
+hear and obey,' answered they and did with him as she bade. When
+the people saw what had befallen the Christian, they said, 'He
+hath his deserts; but what an unlucky mouthful was that for him!'
+And another said, 'Be my wife triply divorced if ever I eat of
+sweet rice as long as I live!' 'Praised be God,' quoth the
+hashish-eater, 'who saved me from this fellow's fate by hindering
+me from eating of the rice!' Then they all went out, minded
+thenceforth to leave sitting in the Christian's place, over
+against the dish of sweet rice.
+
+When the first day of the third month came, they laid the tables
+as of wont, and Queen Zumurrud came down and sat on her throne,
+with her guards in attendance on her, fearing her danger. Then
+the townsfolk entered, as usual, and went round about the tables,
+looking for the place of the dish of sweet rice, and quoth one to
+another, 'Hark ye, Hajji Khelef!' 'At thy service, O Hajji
+Khalid,' answered the other. 'Avoid the dish of sweet rice,' said
+Khalid, 'and look thou eat not thereof; for if thou do, thou wilt
+be hanged.' Then they sat down to meat; and as they were eating,
+Zumurrud chanced to look at the gate of the tilting-ground and
+saw a man come running in. So she considered him and knew him for
+Jewan the Kurd.
+
+Now the manner of his coming was on this wise. When he left his
+mother, he went to his comrades and said to them, 'I had fine
+purchase yesterday; for I slew a trooper and took his horse.
+Moreover there fell to me last night a pair of saddle-bags, full
+of gold, and a girl worth more than the money; and I have left
+them all with my mother in the cave.' At this they rejoiced and
+repaired to the cavern at nightfall, whilst they forewent them,
+that he might fetch them the booty. But he found the place empty
+and questioned his mother, who told him what had befallen;
+whereupon he bit his hands for despite and exclaimed, 'By Allah,
+I will make search for yonder harlot and take her, wherever she
+is, though it be in the shell of a pistachio-nut, and quench my
+malice on her!' So he went forth in quest of her and journeyed
+from place to place, till he came to Queen Zumurrud's city. He
+found the town deserted and enquiring of some women whom he saw
+looking from the windows, learnt that it was the Sultan's custom
+to make a banquet for all the people on the first of each month
+and was directed to the tilting-ground, where the feast was
+spread.
+
+So he came running in and finding no place empty, save that
+before the dish of sweet rice, took his seat there and put out
+his hand to the dish; whereupon the folk cried out to him,
+saying, 'O brother, what wilt thou do?' Quoth he, 'I mean to eat
+my fill of this dish.' 'If thou eat of it,' rejoined one of the
+people, 'thou wilt assuredly be hanged.' But Jewan said, 'Hold
+thy peace and talk not thus.' Then he stretched out his hand to
+the dish aforesaid and drew it to him.
+
+Now the hashish-eater, of whom we have before spoken, was sitting
+by him; but when he saw him do this, the fumes of the hashish
+left his head and he fled from his place and sat down afar off,
+saying, 'I will have nothing to do with yonder dish.' Then Jewan
+put out his hand, as it were a crow's foot, and dipping it in the
+dish, scooped up therewith half the dishful and drew it out, as
+it were a camel's hoof, and the bottom of the dish appeared. He
+rolled the rice in his hand, till it was like a great orange, and
+threw it ravenously into his mouth; and it rolled down his
+gullet, with a noise like thunder. 'Praised by God,' quoth his
+neighbour, 'who hath not made me meat before thee; for thou hast
+emptied the dish at one mouthful.' 'Let him eat,' said the
+hashish-eater; 'methinks he hath a gallows-face.' Then, turning
+to Jewan, 'Eat,' added he, 'and small good may it do thee!'
+
+Jewan put out his hand again and taking another mouthful, was
+rolling it in his hands like the first, when Zumurrud cried out
+to the guards, saying, 'Bring me yonder man in haste and let him
+not eat the mouthful in his hand.' So they ran and seizing him,
+as he bent over the dish, brought him to her, whilst the people
+exulted over him and said, one to the other, 'He hath his
+deserts, for we warned him, but he would not take warning.
+Verily, this place is fated to be the death of whoso sits
+therein, and yonder rice is fatal to all who eat of it.'
+
+Then said Zumurrud to Jewan, 'What is thy name and condition and
+why comest thou hither?' 'O our lord the Sultan,' answered he,
+'my name is Othman; I am a gardener and am come hither in quest
+of somewhat I have lost.' 'Bring me a table of sand,' said
+Zumurrud. So they brought it, and she took the pen and drawing a
+geomantic figure, considered it awhile, then raising her head,
+exclaimed, 'Out on thee, thou sorry knave! How darest thou lie to
+kings? This sand tells me that thy name is Jewan the Kurd and
+that thou art by trade a robber, taking men's goods in the way of
+unright and slaying those whom God hath forbidden to slay, save
+for just cause.' And she cried out upon him, saying, 'O hog, tell
+me the truth of thy case or I will cut off thy head!'
+
+When he heard this, he turned pale and his teeth chattered; then,
+deeming that he might save himself by telling the truth, he
+replied, 'O King, thou sayest sooth; but I repent at thy hands
+henceforth and turn to God the Most High!' Quoth she, 'I may not
+leave a pest in the way of the true-believers.' And she said to
+her guards, 'Take him and flay him and do with him as ye did by
+his like last month.' And they did her commandment. When the
+hashish-eater saw this, he turned his back upon the dish of rice,
+saying, 'It is unlawful to present my face to thee.' Then, when
+they had made an end of eating, they dispersed and Zumurrud
+returned to her palace and dismissed her attendants.
+
+When the fourth month came round, they made the banquet, as of
+wont, and the folk sat awaiting leave to begin. Presently
+Zumurrud entered and sitting down on her throne, looked at the
+tables and saw that room for four people was left void before the
+dish of rice, at which she wondered. As she sat, looking around,
+she saw a man come running in at the gate, who stayed not till he
+reached the tables and finding no room, save before the dish of
+rice, took his seat there. She looked at him and knowing him for
+the accursed Christian, who called himself Reshideddin, said in
+herself, 'How blessed is this device of the food, into whose
+toils this infidel hath fallen!'
+
+Now the manner of his coming was extraordinary, and it was on
+this wise. When he returned from his journey, the people of the
+house told him that Zumurrud was missing and with her a pair of
+saddle-bags full of gold; whereupon he rent his clothes and
+buffeted his face and plucked out his beard. Then he despatched
+his brother Bersoum in quest of her, and when he was weary of
+awaiting news of him, he went forth himself, to seek for him and
+for Zumurrud, and fate led him to the latter's city. He entered
+it on the first day of the month and finding the streets deserted
+and the shops shut, enquired of the women at the windows, who
+told him that the King made a banquet on the first of each month
+for the people, all of whom were bound to attend it, nor might
+any abide in his house or shop that day; and they directed him to
+the tilting-ground.
+
+So he betook himself thither and sitting down before the rice,
+put out his hand to eat thereof, whereupon Zumurrud cried out to
+her guards, saying, 'Bring me him who sits before the dish of
+rice.' So they laid hands on him and brought him before Queen
+Zumurrud, who said to him, 'Out on thee! What is thy name and
+occupation, and what brings thee hither?' 'O King of the age,'
+answered he, 'my name is Rustem and I have no occupation, for
+I am a poor dervish.' Then said she to her attendants, 'Bring
+me a table of sand and pen of brass.' So they brought her what
+she sought, as usual; and she took the pen and drawing a
+geomantic figure, considered it awhile, then raising her head to
+Reshideddin, said, 'O dog, how darest thou lie to kings? Thy name
+is Reshideddin the Nazarene; thou art outwardly a Muslim, but a
+Christian at heart, and thine occupation is to lay snares for the
+slave-girls of the Muslims and take them. Speak the truth, or
+I will smite off thy head.' He hesitated and stammered, then
+replied, 'Thou sayest sooth, O King of the age!' Whereupon she
+commanded to throw him down and give him a hundred blows on each
+sole and a thousand on his body; after which she bade flay him
+and stuff his skin with hards of flax and dig a pit without the
+city, wherein they should burn his body and cast dirt and rubbish
+on his ashes. They did as she bade them and she gave the people
+leave to eat.
+
+So they ate their fill and went their ways, whilst Zumurrud
+returned to her palace, thanking God for that He had solaced her
+heart of those who had wronged her. Then she praised the Creator
+of heaven and earth and repeated the following verses:
+
+Lo, these erst had power and used it with oppression and unright!
+ In a little, their dominion was as it ne'er had been.
+Had they used their power with justice, they had been repaid the
+ like; But they wrought unright and Fortune guerdoned them
+ with dole and teen.
+So they perished and the moral of the case bespeaks them thus,
+ "This is what your crimes have earnt you: Fate is not to
+ blame, I ween."
+
+Then she called to mind her lord Ali Shar and wept, but presently
+recovered herself and said, 'Surely God, who hath given mine
+enemies into my hand, will vouchsafe me speedy reunion with my
+beloved; for He can do what He will and is generous to His
+servants and mindful of their case!' Then she praised God (to
+whom belong might and majesty) and besought forgiveness of Him,
+submitting herself to the course of destiny, assured that to each
+beginning there is an end, and repeating the saying of the poet:
+
+Be at thine ease, for all things' destiny Is in His hands who
+ fashioned earth and sea.
+Nothing of Him forbidden shall befall Nor aught of Him appointed
+ fail to thee.
+
+And what another saith:
+
+Let the days pass, as they list, and fare, And enter thou not the
+ house of despair.
+Full oft, when the quest of a thing is hard, The next hour brings
+ us the end of our care.
+
+And a third:
+
+Be mild what time thou'rt ta'en with anger and despite And
+ patient, if there fall misfortune on thy head.
+Indeed, the nights are quick and great with child by Time And of
+ all wondrous things are hourly brought to bed.
+
+And a fourth:
+
+Take patience, for therein is good; an thou be learn'd in it,
+ Thou shalt be calm of soul nor drink of anguish any whit.
+And know that if, with a good grace, thou do not thee submit, Yet
+ must thou suffer, will or nill, that which the Pen hath
+ writ.
+
+She abode thus another whole month's space, judging the folk and
+commanding and forbidding by day, and by night weeping and
+bewailing her separation from her lord Ali Shar. On the first day
+of the fifth month, she bade spread the banquet as usual and sat
+down at the head of the tables, whilst the people awaited the
+signal to fall to, leaving the space before the dish of rice
+vacant. She sat with eyes fixed upon the gate of the tilting-
+ground, noting all who entered and saying, 'O Thou that
+restoredst Joseph
+to Jacob and didst away the affliction of Job, vouchsafe of Thy
+power and greatness to restore me my lord Ali Shar; for Thou
+canst all things! O Lord of all creatures, O Guide of the erring,
+O Hearer of those that cry, O Answerer of prayer, answer Thou my
+prayer, O Lord of all creatures!'
+
+Hardly had she made an end of her prayer, when she saw entering
+the gate a young man, in shape like the willow wand, the
+comeliest and most accomplished of youths, save that his face was
+sallow and his form wasted. He came up to the tables and finding
+no seat vacant save before the dish of rice, sat down there;
+whereupon Zumurrud's heart fluttered and observing him narrowly,
+she knew him for her lord Ali Shar and was like to have cried out
+for joy, but restrained herself, fearing disgrace before the
+folk. Her bowels were troubled and her heart throbbed; but she
+concealed that which she suffered.
+
+Now the manner of his coming thither was on this wise. When
+he awoke and found himself lying on the bench outside the
+Christian's house, with his head bare, he knew that some one had
+come upon him and robbed him of his turban, whilst he slept. So
+he spoke the word, which whoso saith shall never be confounded,
+that is to say, 'Verily, we are God's and to Him we return!' and
+going back to the old woman's house, knocked at the door. She
+came out and he wept before her, till he swooned away. When he
+came to himself, he told her all that had passed, and she blamed
+him and chid him for his heedlessness, saying, 'Thou hast but
+thyself to thank for thine affliction and calamity.' And she
+gave not over reproaching him, till the blood streamed from his
+nostrils and he again fainted away. When he revived, he saw her
+weeping over him; so he bewailed himself and repeated the
+following verses:
+
+How bitter is parting to friends, and how sweet Reunion to
+ lovers, for sev'rance that sigh!
+May God all unite them and watch over me, For I'm of their number
+ and like for to die.
+
+The old woman mourned over him and said to him, 'Sit here, whilst
+I go in quest of news and return to thee in haste.' 'I hear and
+obey,' answered he. So she left him and was absent till midday,
+when she returned and said to him, 'O Ali, I fear me thou must
+die in thy grief; thou wilt never see thy beloved again save on
+Es Sirat;[FN#23] for the people of the Christian's house, when
+they arose in the morning, found the window giving on the garden
+broken in and Zumurrud missing, and with her a pair of saddle-
+bags, full of the Christian's money. When I came thither, I found
+the Master of Police and his officers standing at the door, and
+there is no power and no virtue save in God the Most High, the
+Supreme!'
+
+When he heard this, the light in his eyes was changed to darkness
+and he despaired of life and made sure of death; nor did he leave
+weeping, till he lost his senses. When he recovered, love and
+longing were sore upon him; there befell him a grievous sickness
+and he kept his house a whole year; during which time the old
+woman ceased not to bring him doctors and ply him with diet-
+drinks and make him broths, till his life returned to him. Then
+he recalled what had passed and repeated the following verses:
+
+Union is parted; in its stead, of grief I am possessed: My tears
+ flow still, my heart's on fire for yearning and unrest.
+Longing redoubles on a wight who hath no peace, so sore Of love
+ and wakefulness and pain he's wasted and oppressed.
+Lord, I beseech Thee, if there be relief for me in aught,
+ Vouchsafe it, whilst a spark of life abideth in my breast.
+
+When the second year began, the old woman said to him, 'O my son,
+all this thy sadness and sorrowing will not bring thee back thy
+mistress. Rise, therefore, take heart and seek for her in the
+lands: haply thou shalt light on some news of her.' And she
+ceased not to exhort and encourage him, till he took heart and
+she carried him to the bath. Then she made him drink wine and eat
+fowls, and thus she did with him for a whole month, till he
+regained strength and setting out, journeyed without ceasing till
+he arrived at Zumurrud's city, when he went to the tilting-ground
+and sitting down before the dish of sweet rice, put out his hand
+to eat of it.
+
+When the folk saw this, they were concerned for him and said to
+him, 'O young man, eat not of that dish, for whoso eats thereof,
+misfortune befalls him.' 'Leave me to eat of it,' answered he,
+'and let them do with me as they list, so haply I may be at rest
+from this weary life.' Then he ate a first mouthful, and Zumurrud
+was minded to have him brought to her; but bethought her that
+belike he was anhungred and said in herself, 'It were well to let
+him eat his fill.' So he went on eating, whilst the people looked
+on in astonishment, waiting to see what would befall him; and
+when he had done, Zumurrud said to certain of her eunuchs, 'Go to
+yonder youth that eateth of the rice and bring him to me on
+courteous wise, saying, 'The King would have speech of thee on
+some slight matter.' 'We hear and obey,' answered they and going
+up to Ali Shar, said to him, 'O my lord, the King desires the
+favour of a word with thee, and let thy heart be easy.' 'I hear
+and obey,' replied he and followed the eunuchs, who carried him
+before Zumurrud, whilst the people said to one another, 'There is
+no power and no virtue save in God the Most High, the Supreme! I
+wonder what the King will do with him!' And others said, 'He will
+do him nought but good; for, were he minded to harm him, he had
+not suffered him to eat his fill.'
+
+When he came before Zumurrud, he saluted and kissed the earth
+before her, whilst she returned his greeting and received him
+with honour. Then said she to him, 'What is thy name and
+condition and what brought thee hither?' 'O King,' answered he,
+'my name is Ali Shar; I am of the sons of the merchants of
+Khorassan and the object of my coming hither is to seek for a
+slave-girl whom I have lost; for she was dearer to me than my
+sight and my hearing, and indeed my soul cleaves to her, since I
+lost her.' And he wept, till he swooned away. She caused sprinkle
+rose-water on his face, till he came to himself, when she said,
+'Bring me the table of sand and the pen.' So they brought them
+and she took the pen and drew a geomantic figure, which she
+considered awhile; then, 'Thou hast spoken sooth,' quoth she.
+'God will grant thee speedy reunion with her; so be not
+troubled.' Then she bade her chamberlain carry him to the bath
+and after clothe him in a handsome suit of royal apparel, and
+mount him an one of the best of the King's horses and bring him
+to the palace at end of day. So the chamberlain took him away,
+whilst the folk said to one another, 'What makes the King deal
+thus courteously with yonder youth?' And one said, 'Did I not
+tell you that he would do him no hurt? For he is fair of aspect;
+and this I knew, when the King suffered him to eat his fill.' And
+each said his say; after which they all dispersed and went their
+ways.
+
+As for Zumurrud, she thought the night would never come, that she
+might be alone with the beloved of her heart. As soon as it was
+dusk, she withdrew to her sleeping-chamber and made as she were
+overcome with sleep; and it was her wont to suffer none to pass
+the night with her, save the two little eunuchs that waited upon
+her. After a little, she sent for Ali Shar and sat down upon the
+bed, with candles burning at her head and feet and the place
+lighted with hanging lamps of gold that shone like the sun. When
+the people heard of her sending for Ali Shar, they marvelled and
+said, 'Algates, the King is enamoured of this young man, and to-
+morrow he will make him commander of the troops.' And each
+thought his thought and said his say. When they brought him in to
+her, he kissed the earth before her and called down blessings on
+her, and she said in herself, 'Needs must I jest with him awhile,
+ere I make myself known to him.' Then said she to him, 'O Ali,
+hast thou been to the bath?' 'Yes, O my lord,' answered he.
+'Come, eat of this fowl and meat and drink of this wine and
+sherbet of sugar,' said she; 'for thou art weary; and after come
+hither.' 'I hear and obey,' replied he and did as she bade him.
+
+When he had made an end of eating and drinking, she said to him,
+'Come up with me on the couch and rub my feet.' So he fell to
+rubbing her feet and legs and found them softer than silk. Then
+said she, 'Go higher with the rubbing;' and he, 'Pardon me, O my
+lord, I will go no higher than the knee.' Whereupon, 'Wilt thou
+gainsay me?' quoth she. 'It shall be an ill-omened night for
+thee! Nay, but it behoves thee to do my bidding and I will make
+thee my minion and appoint thee one of my Amirs.' 'And in what
+must I do thy bidding, O King of the age?' asked Ali. 'Put off
+thy trousers,' answered she, 'and lie down on thy face.' Quoth
+he, 'That is a thing I never in my life did; and if thou force me
+thereto, I will accuse thee thereof before God on the Day of
+Resurrection. Take all thou hast given me and let me go to my own
+city.' And he wept and lamented. But she said, 'Put off thy
+trousers and lie down on thy face, or I will strike off thy
+head.' So he did as she bade him and she mounted upon his back.
+And he felt what was softer than silk and fresher than cream and
+said in himself, 'Of a truth, this King is better than all the
+women!'
+
+She abode a while on his back, then turned over on to the ground,
+and he said [in himself], 'Praised be God! It seems his yard is
+not in point.' Then said she, 'O Ali, it is of the wont of my
+yard that it standeth not on end, except it be rubbed with the
+hand; so, some, rub it with thy hand, till it be in point, else
+will I kill thee.' So saying, she lay down on her back and taking
+his hand, set it to her kaze, and he found it a kaze softer than
+silk, white, plump and great, resembling for heat the hot room of
+the bath or the heart of a lover, whom passion hath wasted. Quoth
+Ali in himself, 'Verily, this King hath a kaze. This is a wonder
+of wonders!' And desire got hold on him and his yard stood on end
+to the utmost; which when Zumurrud saw, she burst out laughing
+and said to him, 'O my lord, all this betideth and yet thou
+knowest me not!' 'And who art thou, O King?' asked he; and she
+said, 'I am thy slave-girl Zumurrud.'
+
+When he knew this and was certified that she was indeed his very
+slave-girl Zumurrud, he threw himself upon her, as the lion upon
+the sheep, and kissed her and embraced her. Then he thrust his
+yard into her poke and stinted not to play the porter at her door
+and the Imam[FN#24] at her prayer-niche, whilst she with him
+ceased not from inclination and prostration and rising up and
+sitting down,[FN#25] accompanying her canticles of praise[FN#26]
+with motitations and other amorous gestures, till the [two
+little] eunuchs [aforesaid] heard [the noise]. So they came and
+peeping out from behind the curtains, saw the King lying [on his
+back] and Ali Shar upon him, thrusting and thronging amain,
+whilst she puffed and blew and wriggled. Quoth they, 'This is no
+man's wriggle; belike this King is a woman.' But they concealed
+their affair and discovered it to none.
+
+On the morrow, Zumurrud summoned all the troops and the grandees
+of the realm and said to them, 'I am minded to journey to this
+man's country; so choose a deputy, who shall rule over you, till
+I return to you.' And they answered, 'We hear and obey.' Then she
+applied herself to making ready for the journey and furnished
+herself with victual and treasure and camels and mules and so
+forth; after which she set out with Ali Shar, and they fared on,
+till they arrived at his native place, where he entered his house
+and gave alms and largesse. God vouchsafed him children by her,
+and they both lived the happiest of lives, till there came to
+them the Destroyer of Delights and Sunderer of Companies. Glory
+be to God, the Eternal without cease, and praised be He in every
+case!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVES OF JUBEIR BEN UMEIR AND THE LADY
+ BUDOUR
+
+
+
+It is related the Khalif Haroun er Reshid was restless one night
+and could not sleep; so that he ceased not to toss from side to
+side for very restlessness, till, growing weary of this, he
+called Mesrour and said to him, 'O Mesrour, look what may solace
+me of this my restlessness.' 'O Commander of the Faithful,'
+answered Mesrour, 'wilt thou walk in the garden of the palace and
+divert thyself with the sight of its flowers and gaze upon the
+stars and note the beauty of their ordinance and the moon among
+them, shining on the water?' 'O Mesrour,' replied the Khalif, 'my
+heart inclines not to aught of this.' 'O my lord,' continued
+Mesrour, 'there are in thy palace three hundred concubines, each
+of whom hath her separate lodging. Do thou bid retire each into
+her own apartment and then go thou about and divert thyself with
+gazing on them, without their knowledge.' 'O Mesrour,' answered
+Haroun, 'the palace is mine and the girls are my property:
+moreover, my soul inclineth not to aught of this.' 'O my lord,'
+said Mesrour, 'summon the doctors and sages and poets and bid
+them contend before thee in argument and recite verses and tell
+thee tales and anecdotes.' 'My soul inclines not to aught of
+this,' answered the Khalif; and Mesrour said, 'O my lord, bid the
+minions and wits and boon-companions attend thee and divert thee
+with witty sallies.' 'O Mesrour,' replied the Khalif, 'indeed my
+soul inclineth not to aught of this.' 'Then, O my lord,' rejoined
+Mesrour, 'strike off my head; maybe, that will dispel thine
+unease and do away the restlessness that is upon thee.'
+
+At this the Khalif laughed and said, 'See which of the boon-
+companions is at the door.' So Mesrour went out and returning,
+said, 'O my lord, he who sits without is Ali ben Mensour of
+Damascus, the Wag.' 'Bring him to me,' quoth Haroun; and Mesrour
+went out and returned with Ibn Mensour, who said, on entering,
+'Peace be on thee, O Commander of the Faithful!' The Khalif
+returned his salutation and said to him, 'O Ibn Mensour, tell us
+one of thy stories.' 'O Commander of the Faithful,' said the
+other, 'shall I tell thee what I have seen with my eyes or what I
+have only heard tell?' 'If thou have seen aught worth telling,'
+replied the Khalif, 'let us hear it; for report is not like eye-
+witness.' 'O Commander of the Faithful,' said Ibn Mensour, 'lend
+me thine ear and thy heart.' 'O Ibn Mensour,' answered the
+Khalif, 'behold, I am listening to thee with mine ears and
+looking at thee with mine eyes and attending to thee with my
+heart.'
+
+'Know then, O Commander of the Faithful,' began Ibn Mensour,
+'that I receive a yearly allowance from Mohammed ben Suleiman el
+Hashimi, Sultan[FN#27] of Bassora; so I went to him, once upon a
+time, as usual, and found him about to ride out a-hunting. I
+saluted him, and he returned my salute and would have me mount and
+go a-hunting with him; but I said, "O my lord, I cannot ride; so
+do thou stablish me in the guest-house and give thy chamberlains
+and officers charge over me." And he did so and departed for the
+chase. His officers entreated me with the utmost honour and
+hospitality; but I said in myself, "By Allah, it is a strange
+thing that I should have used so long to come from Baghdad to
+Bassora, yet know no more of the town than from the palace to
+the garden and back again! When shall I find an occasion like
+this to view the different parts of Bassora? I will rise at once
+and walk forth alone and divert myself and digest what I have
+eaten."
+
+So I donned my richest clothes and went out a-walking in Bassora.
+Now it is known to thee, O Commander of the Faithful, that it
+hath seventy streets, each seventy parasangs long of Irak
+measure; and I lost myself in its by-streets and thirst overcame
+me. Presently, as I went along, I came to a great door, on which
+were two rings of brass, with curtains of red brocade drawn
+before it. Over the door was a trellis, covered with a creeping
+vine, that hung down and shaded the doorway; and on either side
+the porch was a stone bench. I stood still, to gaze upon the
+place, and presently heard a sorrowful voice, proceeding from a
+mourning heart, warbling melodiously and chanting the following
+verses:
+
+My body is become th' abode of sickness and dismay, By reason of
+ a fawn, whose land and stead are far away.
+O zephyr of the waste, that roused my pain in me, I pray, By God
+ your Lord, to him, with whom my heart dwells, take your way
+ And prithee chide him, so reproach may soften him,
+ maybe.
+And if to you he do incline and hearken, then make fair Your
+ speech and tidings unto him of lovers, 'twixt you, bear.
+Yea, and vouchsafe to favour me with service debonair And unto
+ him I love make known my case and my despair,
+ Saying, "What ails thy bounden slave that, for
+ estrangement, she
+Should die without offence of her committed or despite Or
+ disobedience or breach of plighted faith or slight
+Or fraud or turning of her heart to other or unright?" And if he
+ smile, with dulcet speech bespeak ye thus the wight:
+ "An thou thy company wouldst grant to her, 'twere well
+ of thee;
+For she for love of thee's distraught, as needs must be the case;
+ Her eyes are ever void of sleep; she weeps and wails apace."
+If he show favour and incline to grant the wished-for grace, 'Tis
+ well and good; but, if ye still read anger in his face,
+ Dissemble then with him and say, "We know her not, not
+ we."
+
+Quoth I to myself, "Verily, if the owner of this voice be fair,
+she unites beauty of person and eloquence and sweetness of
+voice." Then I drew near the door, and raising the curtain little
+by little, beheld a damsel, white as the moon, when it rises on
+its fourteenth night, with joined eyebrows and languorous
+eyelids, breasts like twin pomegranates and dainty lips like twin
+corn-marigolds,[FN#28] mouth as it were Solomon's seal and teeth
+that sported with the reason of rhymester and proser, even as
+saith the poet:
+
+O mouth of the beloved, who set thy pearls arow And eke with
+ wine fulfilled thee and camomiles like show,
+And lent the morning-glory unto thy smile, and who Hath with a
+ padlock sealed thee of rubies sweet of show?
+Whoso but looks upon thee is mad for joy and pride. How should
+ it fare with him, who kisseth thee, heigho!
+
+And as saith another:
+
+O pearls of the teeth of my love, Have ruth on cornelian and
+ spare To vie with it! Shall it not find You peerless and
+ passing compare?
+
+In fine, she comprised all manner of loveliness and was a
+ravishment to men and women, nor could the beholder satisfy
+himself with the sight of her beauty; for she was as the poet
+hath said of her:
+
+If, face to face, she do appear, unveiled, she slays; and if
+ She turn her back, she makes all men her lovers far and
+ near.
+Like the full moon and eke the sun she is, but cruelty And
+ inhumanity belong not to her nature dear.
+The garden-gates of Paradise are opened with her shift And the
+ full moon revolveth still upon her neck-rings' sphere.
+
+As I looked at her through the opening of the curtains, she
+turned and seeing me standing at the door, said to her maid,
+"See who stands at the door." So the maid came up to me and
+said, "O old man, hast thou no shame, or do gray hairs and
+impudence go together?" "O my mistress," answered I, "I confess
+to the gray hairs, but as for unmannerliness, I think not to be
+guilty of it." "And what can be more unmannerly," rejoined her
+mistress, "than to intrude thyself upon a house other than thy
+house and gaze on a harem other than thy harem?" "O my lady,"
+said I, "I have an excuse." "And what is thine excuse?" asked
+she. Quoth I, "I am a stranger and well-nigh dead of thirst."
+"We accept thine excuse," answered she and calling one of her
+maids, said to her, "O Lutf, give him to drink in the golden
+tankard."
+
+So she brought me a tankard of red gold, set with pearls and
+jewels, full of water mingled with odoriferous musk and covered
+with a napkin of green silk; and I addressed myself to drink
+and was long about it, casting stolen glances at her the while,
+till I could prolong it no longer. Then I returned the tankard
+to the maid, but did not offer to go; and she said to me, "O old
+man, go thy way." "O my lady," replied I, "I am troubled in mind."
+"For what?" asked she; and I answered, "For the uncertainty of
+fortune and the vicissitudes of events." "Well mayst thou be
+troubled thereanent," replied she, "for Time[FN#29] is the
+mother of wonders. But what hast thou seen of them that thou
+shouldst muse upon?" Quoth I, "I was thinking of the former
+owner of this house, for he was my good friend in his lifetime."
+"What was his name?" asked she. "Mohammed ben Ali the Jeweller,"
+answered I; "and he was a man of great wealth. Did he leave
+any children?" "Yes," said she; "he left a daughter, Budour
+by name, who inherited all his wealth." Quoth I, "Meseems
+thou art his daughter?" "Yes," answered she, laughing; then
+added, "O old man, thou hast talked long enough; go thy ways."
+"Needs must I go," replied I; "but I see thou art out of health.
+Tell me thy case; it may be God will give thee solace at
+my hands." "O old man," rejoined she, "if thou be a man of
+discretion, I will discover to thee my secret; but first
+tell me who thou art, that I may know whether thou art worthy
+of confidence or not; for the poet saith:
+
+None keepeth secrets but the man who's trusty and discreet: A
+ secret's ever safely placed with honest fold and leal;
+For me, my secrets I preserve within a locked-up house, Whose
+ key is lost and on whose door is set the Cadi's seal."
+
+"O my lady," answered I, "an thou wouldst know who I am, I am
+Ali ben Mensour of Damascus, the Wag, boon-companion to the
+Khalif Haroun er Reshid." When she heard my name she came down
+from her seat and saluting me, said, "Welcome, O Ibn Mensour!
+Now will I tell thee my case and entrust thee with my secret.
+Know that I am a lover separated from her beloved." "O my
+lady," rejoined I, "thou art fair and shouldst love none but
+the fair. Whom then dost thou love?" Quoth she, "I love Jubeir
+ben Umeir es Sheibani, Prince of the Benou Sheiban;"[FN#30] and
+she described to me a young man than whom there was none
+handsomer in Bassora. "O my lady," asked I, "have letters or
+interviews passed between you?" "Yes," answered she; "but his
+love for me was of the tongue, not of the heart; for he kept
+not his covenant nor was faithful to his troth." "And what was
+the cause of your separation?" asked I.
+
+"I was sitting one day," replied she, "whilst my maid here
+combed my hair. When she had made an end of combing it, she
+plaited my tresses, and my beauty and grace pleased her; so she
+bent down to me and kissed my cheek. At that moment, he came
+in, unawares, and seeing her kiss my cheek, turned away in
+anger, vowing eternal separation and repeating the following
+verses:
+
+If any share with me in her I love, incontinent, I'll cast her
+ off from me and be to live alone content.
+A mistress, sure, is nothing worth, if, in the way of love, She
+ wish for aught but that to which the lover doth consent.
+
+And from that time to this, O Ibn Mensour," continued she, "he
+hath neither written to me nor answered my letters." "And what
+thinkest thou to do?" asked I. Quoth she, "I have a mind to send
+him a letter by thee. If thou bring me back an answer, thou shalt
+have of me five hundred dinars; and if not, then a hundred for
+thy pains." "Do what seemeth good to thee," answered I. So she
+called for inkhorn and paper and wrote the following verses:
+
+Whence this estrangement and despite, beloved of my soul?
+ Whither have kindliness and love between us taken flight?
+What makes thee with aversion turn from me? Indeed, thy face Is
+ not the face I used to know, when we our troth did plight.
+Belike, the slanderers have made a false report of me, And thou
+ inclin'dst to them, and they redoubled in despite.
+If thou believedst their report, far, far it should have been
+ From thee, that art too whole of wit at such a bait to
+ bite!
+Yea, I conjure thee by thy life, tell me what thou hast heard:
+ For lo! thou knowest what was said and wilt not do
+ unright.
+If aught I've said that angered thee, a speech of change
+ admits; Ay, and interpreting, I trow, may change its
+ meaning quite,
+Were it a word sent down from God; for even the Pentateuch Hath
+ falsified and garbled been of this and th' other
+ wight.[FN#31]
+Whilst, as for lies, how many were of folk before us told!
+ Joseph to Jacob was traduced and blackened in his sight.
+Yea, for the slanderer and myself and thee, an awful day Of
+ standing up shall come, when God to judgment all shall
+ cite.
+
+Then she sealed the letter and gave it to me. I took it and
+carried it to the house of Jubeir ben Umeir, whom I found
+absent hunting. So I sat down, to wait for him, and presently
+he returned; and when I saw him come riding up, my wit was
+confounded by his beauty ands grace. As soon as he saw me
+sitting at the door, he dismounted and coming up to me, saluted
+and embraced me; and meseemed I embraced the world and all that
+therein is. Then he carried me into his house and seating me on
+his own couch, called for food. So they brought a table of
+khelenj[FN#32] wood of Khorassan, with feet of gold, whereon
+were all manner of meats, fried and roasted and the like. So I
+seated myself at the table and examining it, found the following
+verses engraved upon it:
+
+Weep for the cranes that erst within the porringers did lie And
+ for the stews and partridges evanished heave a sigh!
+Mourn for the younglings of the grouse; lament unceasingly, As,
+ for the omelettes and the fowls browned in the pan, do I.
+How my heart yearneth for the fish that, in its different
+ kinds, Upon a paste of wheaten flour, lay hidden in the
+ pie!
+Praised be God for the roast meat, as in the dish it lay, With
+ pot-herbs, soaked in vinegar, in porringers hard by,
+And eke the rice with buffaloes' milk dressed and made savoury,
+ Wherein the hands were plunged and arms were buried
+ bracelet high!
+O soul, I rede thee patient be, for God is bountiful: What
+ though thy fortunes straitened be, His succour's ever
+ nigh.
+
+Then said Jubeir, "Put thy hand to our food and ease our heart
+by eating of our victual." "By Allah," answered I, "I will not
+eat a mouthful, till thou grant me my desire." "What is thy
+desire?" asked he. So I brought out the letter and gave it to
+him; but, when he had read it, he tore it into pieces and
+throwing it on the floor, said to me, "O Ibn Mensour, I will
+grant thee whatever thou askest, save this that concerns the
+writer of this letter, for I have no answer to make to her." At
+this, I rose in anger; but he caught hold of my skirts, saying,
+"O Ibn Mensour, I will tell thee what she said to thee, for all
+I was not present with you." "And what did she say to me?"
+asked I. "Did she not say to thee," rejoined he, "'If thou bring
+me back an answer, thou shalt have of me five hundred dinars;
+and if not, a hundred for thy pains?'" "Yes," answered I; and
+he said, "Abide with me this day and eat and drink and make
+merry, and thou shalt have five hundred dinars."
+
+So I sat with him and ate and drank and made merry and
+entertained him with converse; after which I said to him, "O my
+master, is there no music in thy house?" "Indeed," answered he,
+"we have drunk this long while without music." Then he called
+out, saying, "Ho, Shejeret ed Durr!" Whereupon a slave-girl
+answered him from her chamber and came in to us, with a lute of
+Indian make, wrapped in a silken bag. She sat down and laying
+the lute in her lap, preluded in one-and-twenty modes, then,
+returning to the first, sang the following verses to a lively
+measure:
+
+Who hath not tasted the sweet and the bitter of passion, I
+ trow, The presence of her whom he loves from her absence
+ he hardly shall know.
+So he, from the pathway of love who hath wandered and fallen
+ astray, The smooth knoweth not from the rough of the
+ roadway, wherein he doth go.
+I ceased not the votaries of love and of passion to cross and
+ gainsay, Till I too must taste of its sweet and its
+ bitter, its gladness and woe.
+Then I drank a full draught of the cup of its bitters, and
+ humbled was I, and thus to the bondman of Love and its
+ freedman therein was brought low.
+How many a night have I passed with the loved one, carousing
+ with him, Whilst I drank from his lips what was sweeter
+ than nectar and colder than snow!
+How short was the life of the nights of our pleasance! It
+ seemed to us still, No sooner was night fallen down than
+ the daybreak to eastward did glow.
+But Fortune had vowed she would sever our union and sunder our
+ loves; And now, in good sooth, she her vow hath
+ accomplished. Fate ordered it so;
+Fate ordered it thus, and against its ordaining, appeal there
+ is none; For who shall gainsay a supreme one's
+ commandments or causes him forego?
+
+Hardly had she made an end of these verses, when Jubeir gave a
+great cry and fell down in a swoon; whereupon, "May God not
+punish thee, O old man!" exclaimed the damsel. "This long time
+have we drunk without music, for fear the like of this should
+befall our master. But go now to yon chamber and sleep there."
+So I went to the chamber in question and slept till the
+morning, when a page brought me a purse of five hundred dinars
+and said to me, "This is what my master promised thee; but
+return thou not to her who sent thee and let it be as if
+neither thou nor we had heard of this affair." "I hear and
+obey," answered I and taking the purse, went my way.
+
+However, I said in myself, "The lady will have expected me
+since yesterday; and by Allah, I must needs return to her and
+tell her what passed between me and him; or she will curse me
+and all who come from my country." So I went to her and found
+her standing behind the door; and when she saw me, she said, "O
+Ibn Mensour, thou hast gotten me nought." "Who told thee of
+this?" asked I; and she answered, "O Ibn Mensour, yet another
+thing hath been revealed to me; and it is that, when thou
+gavest hum the letter, he tore it in pieces and throwing it on
+the floor, said to thee, 'O Ibn Mensour, ask me anything but
+what relates to the writer of this letter; for I have no reply
+to make to her.' Then didst thou rise from beside him in anger;
+but he laid hold of thy skirts, saying, 'Abide with me to-day,
+for thou art my guest, and eat and drink and make merry; and
+thou shalt have five hundred dinars.' So thou didst sit with
+him, eating and drinking and making merry, and entertainedst
+him with converse; and a slave-girl sand such an air and such
+verses, whereupon he fell down in a swoon." Quoth I, "Wast thou
+then with us?" "O Ibn Mensour," replied she, "hast thou not
+heard the saying of the poet:
+
+The heart of the lover hath eyes, well I wot, That see what the
+ eyes of beholders see not.
+
+But," added she, "day and night alternate not upon aught, but they
+change it." Then she raised her eyes to heaven and said, "O my
+God and my Master and my Lord, like as Thou hast afflicted me
+with love of Jubeir ben Umeir, even so do Thou afflict him with
+love of me and transfer the passion from my heart to his!" Then
+she gave me a hundred dinars for my pains and I took it and
+returned to the palace, when I found the Sultan come back from
+hunting; so I took my pension of him and made my way back to
+Baghdad.
+
+Next year, I repaired to Bassora, as usual, to seek my pension,
+and the Sultan paid it to me; but as I was about to return to
+Baghdad, I bethought me of the lady Budour and said to myself,
+"By Allah, I must needs go and see what hath befallen between
+her and her lover!" So I went to her house and finding the
+porch swept and sprinkled and slaves and servants and pages
+standing before the door, said to myself, "Most like grief hath
+broken the lady's heart and she is dead, and some Amir or other
+hath taken up his abode in her house." So I went on to Jubeir's
+house, where I found the benches of the porch broken down and
+no pages at the door, as of wont, and said to myself, "Belike
+he too is dead." Then I took up my station before the door of
+his house and with my eyes running over with tears, bemoaned it
+in the following verses:
+
+Lords, that are gone, but whom my heart doth evermore ensue,
+ Return; so shall my festal says return to me with you.
+I stand before your sometime stead, bewailing your abodes, With
+ quivering lids, from which the tears rain down, like
+ summer dew.
+Weeping, I question of the house and ruins, "Where is he Who
+ was the source of benefits and bounties ever new?"
+[They answer] "Go thy ways, for those thou lov'st from the
+ abode Departed are and neath the dust are buried; so
+ adieu!"
+May God not stint us of the sight [in dreams] of all their
+ charms Nor be their noble memories aye absent from men's
+ view!
+
+As I was thus bewailing the folk of the house, there came a
+black slave thereout and said to me, "Hold thy peace, O old
+man! May thy mother be bereft of thee! What ails thee to bemoan
+the house thus?" Quoth I, "I knew it of yore, when it belonged
+to a good friend of mine." "What was his name?" asked the
+slave. And I answered, "Jubeir ben Umeir the Sheibani." "And
+what hath befallen him?" rejoined he. "Praised be God, he is
+yet in the enjoyment of wealth and rank and prosperity, except
+that God hath stricken him with love of a damsel called the
+lady Budour; and he is overcome with love of her, that, for the
+violence of his passion and torment, he is like a great rock
+overthrown. If he hunger, he saith not, 'Feed me;' nor, if he
+thirst, doth he say, 'Give me to drink.'" Quoth I, "Ask leave
+me to go in to him." "O my lord," said the slave, "Wilt thou go
+in to him who understands or to him who understands not?" "I
+must needs see him, whatever be his case," answered I.
+
+Se he went in and presently returned with permission for me to
+enter, whereupon I went in to Jubeir and found him like a rock
+overthrown, understanding neither sign nor speech. I spoke to
+him, but he answered me not; and one of his servants said to
+me, "O my lord, if thou know aught of verse, repeat it, and
+raise thy voice; and he will be aroused by this and speak with
+thee." So I recited the following verses:
+
+Budour's love hast thou forgotten or art deaf still to her
+ sighs? Wak'st anights, or do thine eyelids close upon thy
+ sleeping eyes?
+If thy tears flow fast and freely, night and day long, torrent-
+ wise, Know thou, then, that thou shalt sojourn evermore in
+ Paradise.[FN#33]
+
+When he heard this, he opened his eyes and said, "Welcome, O
+Ibn Mensour! Verily, the jest is become earnest." "O my lord,"
+said I, "is there aught thou wouldst have me do for thee?"
+"Yes," answered he; "I would fain write her a letter and send
+it to her by thee. If thou bring me back an answer, thou shalt
+have of me a thousand dinars; and if not, two hundred for thy
+pains." "Do what seemeth good to thee," said I. So he called to
+one of his slave-girls for inkhorn and paper and wrote the
+following verses:
+
+By Allah, O my lady, have ruth on me, I pray! For all my wit by
+ passion is ravished quite away.
+Yea, love for thee and longing have mastered me and clad With
+ sickness and bequeathed me abjection and dismay.
+Aforetime, O my lady, by love I set small store And deemed it
+ light and easy to bear, until to-day;
+But now that Love hath shown me the billows of its sea, Those I
+ excuse, repenting, who languish neath its sway.
+Vouchsafe thy grace to grant me; or, if thou wilt me slay, At
+ least, then, for thy victim forget thou not to pray.
+
+Then he sealed the letter and gave it to me. I took it and
+repairing to Budour's house, raised the curtain of the door,
+little by little, as of wont, and looking in, saw ten damsels,
+high-bosomed maids, like moons, and the lady Budour sitting in
+their midst, as she were the full moon among stars or the sun,
+when it is clear of clouds; nor was there on her any trace of
+pain or care. As I looked and marvelled at her case, she turned
+and seeing me standing at the gate, said to me, "Welcome and
+fair welcome to thee, O Ibn Mensour! Come in." So I entered and
+saluting her, gave her the letter. She read it and laughing,
+said to me, "O Ibn Mensour, the poet lied not when he said:
+
+The love of thee I will endure with patient constancy, Till
+ such time as a messenger shall come to me from thee.
+
+O Ibn Mensour," added she, "I will write thee an answer that
+he may give thee what he promised thee." "May God requite thee
+with good!" answered I. So she called for inkhorn and paper and
+wrote the following verses:
+
+How comes it my vows I fulfilled and thou, thou wast false to
+ thy plight? Thou sawst me do justice and truth, and yet
+ thou thyself didst unright.
+'Twas thou that begannest on me with rupture and rigour, I
+ trow; 'Twas thou that play'dst foul, and with thee began
+ the untruth and the slight.
+Yea, still I was true to my troth and cherished but thee among
+ men And ceased not thine honour to guard and keep it
+ unsullied and bright,
+Till tidings of fashions full foul I heard, as reported of
+ thee, And saw with mine eyes what thou didst, to harm me
+ and work me despite.
+Shall I then abase my estate, that thine may exalted become? By
+ God, hadst thou generous been, the like should thy conduct
+ requite!
+So now unto solace I'll turn my heart, with forgetting, from
+ thee And washing my hands of thy thought, blot despair for
+ thee out of my spright.
+
+"By Allah, O my lady," said I, "there needs but the reading of
+this letter, to kill him!" So I tore it in pieces and said to
+her, "Write him other than this." "I hear and obey," answered
+she and wrote the following:
+
+Indeed, I am consoled and sleep is pleasant to mine eyes; For I
+ have heard what came of prate of slanderers and spies.
+My heart my summons hath obeyed, thee to forget; and eke My
+ lids to stint from wake for thee have seen it good and
+ wise.
+He lies who says that severance is bitterness; for me I find
+ its taste none otherwise than sweet; indeed he lies.
+I've grown to turn away from those who bring me news of thee
+ And look upon it as a thing at which my gorge doth rise.
+Behold, I have forgotten thee with every part of me. Let then
+ the spy and who will else this know and recognise.
+
+"By Allah, O my lady," said I, "when he reads these verses, his
+soul will depart his body!" "O Ibn Mensour," quoth she, "is
+passion indeed come to such a pass with him as thou sayst?"
+"Had I said more than this," replied I, "it were but the truth:
+but clemency is of the nature of the noble." When she heard
+this, her eyes filled with tears and she wrote him a letter, O
+Commander of the Faithful, there is none in thy court could
+avail to write the like of it; and therein were these verses:
+
+How long shall this despite continue and this pride? My enviers'
+ spite on me thou sure hast satisfied.
+Mayhap, I did amiss and knew it not; so tell Me what thou heardst
+ of me, that did our loves divide.
+Even as I welcome sleep unto mine eyes and lids, So would I
+ welcome thee, beloved, to my side.
+I've quaffed the cup of love for thee, unmixed and pure; So, if
+ thou see me drunk, reproach me not nor chide.
+
+Then she sealed it and gave it to me; and I said, "O my lady,
+this thy letter will heal the sick and ease the thirsting soul."
+Then I took it and was going away, when she called me back and
+said to me, "Tell me that I will be his guest this night." At
+this I rejoiced greatly and carried the letter to Jubeir, whom I
+found with his eyes fixed on the door, expecting the reply. I
+gave him the letter and he opened and read it, then gave a great
+cry and fell down in a swoon. When he came to himself, he said to
+me, "O Ibn Mensour, did she indeed write this letter with her
+hand and touch it with her fingers?" "O my lord," answered I, "do
+folk write with their feet?" And by Allah, O Commander of the
+Faithful, I had not done speaking, when we heard the chink of her
+anklets in the vestibule and she entered.
+
+When he saw her, he sprang to his feet, as thou there ailed him
+nought, and embraced her as the letter Lam embraces Alif,[FN#34]
+and the malady, that would not depart, ceased from him. Then he
+sat down, but she abode standing and I said to her, "O my lady,
+why dost thou not sit?" Quoth she, "I will not sit, O Ibn
+Mensour, save on a condition that is between us." "And what is
+that?" asked I. "None may know lovers' secrets," answered she and
+putting her mouth to Jubeir's ear, whispered to him; whereupon,
+"I hear and obey," replied he and rising, said somewhat privily
+to one of his slaves, who went out and returned, in a little,
+with a Cadi and two witnesses. Then Jubeir rose and taking a bag
+containing a hundred thousand dinars, said, "O Cadi, marry me to
+this young lady and write this sum to her dowry." Quoth the Cadi
+to her, "Say, 'I consent to this.'" "I consent to this," said
+she, whereupon he drew up the contract of marriage, and she
+opened the bag and taking out a handful of gold, gave it to the
+Cadi and the witnesses and handed the rest to Jubeir.
+
+Then the Cadi and the witnesses withdrew, and I sat with them, in
+mirth and delight, till the most part of the night was past, when
+I said in myself, "These are lovers and have been this long while
+separated. I will go now and sleep in some place afar from them
+and leave them to be private, one with the other." So I rose, but
+she laid hold of my skirts, saying, "What thinkest thou to do?"
+"So and so," answered I. But she rejoined, "Sit still, when we
+would be rid of thee, we will send thee away." So I sat with them
+till near daybreak, when she said to me, "O Ibn Mensour, go to
+yonder chamber; for we have furnished it for thee, and it is thy
+sleeping-place." So I went thither and slept till morning, when a
+page brought me basin and ewer, and I made the ablution and
+prayed the morning-prayer. Then I sat down and presently, Jubeir
+and his mistress came out of the bath in the house, wringing
+their locks.
+
+I wished them good morning and gave them joy of their safety and
+reunion, saying to Jubeir, "That which began with constraint hath
+ended in contentment." "Thou sayst well," replied he; "and indeed
+thou deservest largesse." And he called his treasurer and bade
+him fetch three thousand dinars. So he brought a purse containing
+that sum, and Jubeir gave it to me, saying, "Favour us by
+accepting this." "I will not take it," answered I, "till thou
+tell me the manner of the transfer of love from her to thee,
+after so great an aversion." "I hear and obey," said he. "Know
+that we have a festival, called the festival of the New Year,
+when all the people use to take boat and go a-pleasuring on the
+river. So I went out, with my comrades, and saw a boat, wherein
+were half a score damsels like moons, and amongst them, the lady
+Budour, with her lute in her hand. She preluded in eleven modes,
+then returning to the first, sang the following verses:
+
+Fire is not so fierce and so hot as the fires in my heart that
+ glow, And granite itself is less hard than the heart of my
+ lord, I trow.
+Indeed, when I think on his make and his fashion, I marvel to see
+ A heart that is harder than rock in a body that's softer
+ than snow.
+
+Quoth I to her, 'Repeat the verses and the air.' But she would
+not; so I bade the boatmen pelt her with oranges, and they pelted
+her till we feared her boat would sink. Then she went her way,
+and this is how the love was transferred from her breast to
+mine." So I gave them joy of their reunion and taking the purse,
+with its contents, returned to Baghdad.
+
+When the Khalif heard Ibn Mensour's story, his heart was
+lightened and the restlessness and oppression from which he
+suffered forsook him.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE MAN OF YEMEN AND HIS SIX SLAVE-GIRLS
+
+
+
+The Khalif El-Mamoun was sitting one day in his palace,
+surrounded by his grandees and officers of state, and there were
+present also before him all his poets and minions, amongst the
+rest one named Mohammed of Bassora. Presently, the Khalif turned
+to the latter and said to him, 'O Mohammed, I wish thee to tell
+me something that I have never before heard.' 'O Commander of the
+Faithful,' answered Mohammed, 'shall I tell thee a thing that I
+have heard with my ears of a thing that I have seen with my
+eyes?' 'Tell me whichever is the rarer,' said El Mamoun.
+
+'Know then, O Commander of the Faithful,' began Mohammed, 'that
+there lived once a wealthy man, who was a native of Yemen; but he
+left his native land and came to this city of Baghdad, whose
+sojourn so pleased him that he transported hither his family and
+possessions. Now he had six slave-girls, the first fair, the
+second dark, the third fat, the fourth thin, the fifth yellow and
+the sixth black, all fair of face and perfectly accomplished and
+skilled in the arts of singing and playing upon instruments of
+music. One day he sent for them all and called for meat and
+drink; and they ate and drank and made merry. Then he filled the
+cup and taking it in his hand, said to the blonde, "O new-moon-
+face, let us hear somewhat pleasing." So she took the lute and
+tuning it, made music thereon with such melodious trills and
+modulations that the place danced to the rhythm; after which she
+played a lively measure and sang the following verses:
+
+I have a friend, whose form is mirrored in mine eye, And deep
+ within my breast, his name doth buried lie.
+Whenas I call him back to mind, I am all heart, And when on him I
+ gaze, all eyes indeed am I.
+"Forswear the love of him," my censor says; and I, "That which is
+ not to be, how shall it be?" reply.
+"Go forth from me," quoth I, "and leave me, censor mine: Feign
+ not that eath and light, that's grievous to aby."
+
+At this their master was moved to mirth and drinking off his cup,
+gave the damsels to drink, after which he said to the brunette,
+"O light of the brasier[FN#35] and delight of souls, let us hear
+thy lovely voice, wherewith all that hearken are ravished." So
+she took the lute and trilled upon it, till the place was moved
+to mirth; then, taking all hearts with her graceful bendings, she
+sang the following verses:
+
+As thy face liveth, none but thee I'll love nor cherish e'er,
+ Till death, nor ever to thy love will I be false, I swear.
+O full moon, shrouded, as it were a veil, with loveliness, All
+ lovely ones on earth that be beneath thy banners fare.
+Thou, that in pleasantness and grace excellest all the fair, May
+ God, the Lord of heaven and earth, be with thee everywhere!
+
+The man was pleased and drank off his cup; after which he filled
+again and taking the goblet in his hand, beckoned to the plump
+girl and bade her sing and play. So she took the lute and
+striking a grief-dispelling measure, sang as follows:
+
+If but thy consent be assured, O thou who art all my desire, Be
+ all the folk angered 'gainst me; I set not a whit by their
+ ire.
+And if thou but show me thy face, thy brilliant and beautiful
+ face, I reck not if all the kings of the earth from my
+ vision retire.
+Thy favour, O thou unto whom all beauty must needs be referred,
+ Of the goods and the sweets of the world is all that I seek
+ and require.
+
+The man was charmed and emptying his cup, gave the girls to
+drink. Then he beckoned to the slender girl and said to her, "O
+houri of Paradise, feed thou our ears with sweet sounds." So she
+took the lute and tuning it, preluded and sang the following
+verses:
+
+Is it not martyrdom that I for thine estrangement dree, Seeing,
+ indeed, I cannot live, if thou depart from me?
+Is there no judge, in Love its law, to judge betwixt us twain, to
+ do me justice on thy head and take my wreak of thee?
+
+Their lord rejoiced and emptying the cup, gave the girls to
+drink. Then he signed to the yellow girl and said to her, "O sun
+of the day, let us hear some pleasant verses." So she took the
+lute and preluding after the goodliest fashion, sang as follows:
+
+I have a lover, whenas I draw him nigh, He bares upon me a sword
+ from either eye.
+May God avenge me some whit of him! For lo, He doth oppress me,
+ whose heart in 's hand doth lie.
+Oft though, "Renounce him, my heart," I say, yet it Will to none
+ other than him itself apply.
+He's all I ask for, of all created things; Yet jealous Fortune
+ doth him to me deny.
+
+The man rejoiced and drank and gave the girls to drink; then he
+filled the cup and taking it in his hand, signed to the black
+girl, saying, "O apple of the eye, let us have a taste of thy
+fashion, though it be but two words." So she took the lute and
+preluded in various modes, then returned to the first and sang
+the following verses to a lively air:
+
+O eyes, be large with tears and pour them forth amain, For, lo,
+ for very love my senses fail and wane.
+All manner of desire I suffer for his sake I cherish, and my foes
+ make merry at my pain.
+My enviers me forbid the roses of a cheek; And yet I have a heart
+ that is to roses fain.
+Ay, once the cups went round with joyance and delight And to the
+ smitten lutes, the goblets did we drain,
+What time my love kept troth and I was mad for him And in faith's
+ heaven, the star of happiness did reign.
+But lo, he turned away from me, sans fault of mine! Is there a
+ bitterer thing than distance and disdain?
+Upon his cheeks there bloom a pair of roses red, Blown ready to
+ be plucked; ah God, those roses twain!
+Were't lawful to prostrate oneself to any else Than God, I'd sure
+ prostrate myself upon the swain.
+
+Then rose the six girls and kissing the ground before their lord,
+said to him, "Judge thou between us, O our lord!" He looked at
+their beauty and grace and the difference of their colours and
+praised God the Most High and glorified Him: then said he, "There
+is none of you but has read the Koran and learnt to sing and is
+versed in the chronicles of the ancients and the doings of past
+peoples; so it is my desire that each of you rise and pointing to
+her opposite, praise herself and dispraise her rival; that is to
+say, let the blonde point to the black, the plump to the slender
+and the yellow to the brunette; and after, the latter shall, each
+in turn, do the like with the former; and be this illustrated
+with citations from the Holy Koran and somewhat of anecdotes and
+verse, so as to show forth your culture and elegance of
+discourse." Quoth they, "We hear and obey."
+
+So the blonde rose first and pointing at the black, said to her,
+"Out on thee, blackamoor! It is told that whiteness saith, 'I am
+the shining light, I am the rising full moon.' My colour is
+patent and my forehead is resplendent, and of my beauty quoth the
+poet:
+
+A blonde with smooth and polished cheeks, right delicate and
+ fair, As if a pearl in beauty hid, as in a shell, she were.
+Her shape a splendid Alif[FN#36] is, her smile a medial
+ Mim[FN#37] And over it her eyebrows make inverted
+ Nouns,[FN#38] a pair.
+Yes, and the glances of her eyes are arrows, and her brows A bow
+ that therewithal is horned with death and with despair.
+If to her cheeks and shape thou pass, her cheeks are roses red,
+ Sweet basil, ay, and eglantine and myrtles rich and rare.
+'Tis of the saplings' wont, to be implanted in the meads But, in
+ the saplings of thy shape, how many meads are there!
+
+My colour is like the wholesome day and the newly-gathered
+orange-blossom and the sparkling star; and indeed quoth God the
+Most High, in His precious book, to His prophet Moses (on whom be
+peace), 'Put thy hand into thy bosom and it shall come forth
+white without hurt.'[FN#39] And again He saith, 'As for those
+whose faces are made white, they are in the mercy of God and
+dwell for ever therein.'[FN#40] My colour is a miracle and my
+grace an extreme and my beauty a term. It is in the like of me
+that clothes show fair and to the like of me that hearts incline.
+Moreover, in whiteness are many excellences; for instance, the
+snow falls white from heaven, and it is traditional that white is
+the most beautiful of colours. The Muslims also glory in white
+turbans; but I should be tedious, were I to repeat all that may
+be said in praise of white; little and enough is better than too
+much. So now I will begin with thy dispraise, O black, O colour
+of ink and blacksmith's dust, thou whose face is like the crow
+that brings about lovers' parting! Verily, the poet saith in
+praise of white and dispraise of black:
+
+Seest not that for their milky hue white pearls in price excel
+ And charcoal for a groat a load the folk do buy and sell?
+And eke white faces, 'tis well known, do enter Paradise, Whilst
+ faces black appointed are to fill the halls of Hell.
+
+And indeed it is told in certain histories, related on the
+authority of devout men, that Noah (on whom be peace) was
+sleeping one day, with his sons Ham and Shem seated at his head,
+when a wind sprang up and lifting his clothes, uncovered his
+nakedness; whereat Ham laughed and did not cover him; but Shem
+rose and covered him. Presently, Noah awoke and learning what had
+passed, blessed Shem and cursed Ham. So Shem's face was whitened
+and from him sprang the prophets and the orthodox Khalifs and
+Kings; whilst Ham's face was blackened and he fled forth to the
+land of Ethiopia, and of his lineage came the blacks. All people
+are of a mind in affirming the lack of understanding of the
+blacks, even as saith the adage, 'How shall one find a black
+having understanding?'"
+
+Quoth her master, "It sufficeth; sit down, thou hast been
+prodigal." And he signed to the negress, who rose, and pointing
+at the blonde, said, "Doth thou not know that, in the Koran sent
+down to His prophet and apostle, is transmitted the saying of God
+the Most High, 'By the night, when it veileth [the world with
+darkness], and by the day, when it appeareth in all its
+glory!'[FN#41] If the night were not more illustrious than the
+day, why should God swear by it and give it precedence of the
+day? And indeed those of sense and understanding accept this.
+Knowst now that black [hair] is the ornament of youth and that,
+when whiteness descends upon the head, delights pass away and the
+hour of death draws nigh? Were not black the most illustrious of
+things, God had not set it in the kernel of the heart and the
+apple of the eye; and how excellent is the saying of the poet:
+
+An if I cherish the dusky maids, this is the reason why; They
+ have the hue of the core of the heart and the apple of the
+ eye
+And youth; nor in error I eschew the whiteness of the blondes;
+ For 'tis the colour of hoary hair and shrouds in them shun
+ I.
+
+And that of another:
+
+The brown, not the white, are first in my love And worthiest
+ eke to be loved of me,
+For the colour of damask lips have they, Whilst the white have
+ the hue of leprosy.
+
+And of a third:
+
+Black women, white of deeds, are like indeed to eyne That, though
+ jet-black they be, with peerless splendours shine.
+If I go mad for her, be not amazed; for black The source of
+ madness is, when in the feminine.[FN#42]
+'Tis as my colour were the middle dark of night; For all no moon
+ it be, yet brings it light, in fine.
+
+Moreover, is the companying together of lovers good but in the
+night? Let this quality and excellence suffice thee. What
+protects lovers from spies and censors like the blackness of the
+shadows? And nought gives them cause to fear discovery like the
+whiteness of the dawn. So, how many claims to honour are there
+not in blackness and how excellent is the saying of the poet:
+
+I visit them, and the mirk of night doth help me to my will And
+ seconds me, but the white of dawn is hostile to me still.
+
+And that of another:
+
+How many a night in joy I've passed with the beloved one, What
+ while the darkness curtained us about with tresses dun!
+Whenas the light of morn appeared, it struck me with affright,
+ And I to him, 'The Magians lie, who worship fire and sun.'
+
+And saith a third:
+
+He came forth to visit me, shrouding himself in the cloak of the
+ night, And hastened his steps, as he wended, for caution and
+ fear and affright.
+Then rose I and laid in his pathway my cheek, as a carpet it
+ were, For abjection, and trailed o'er my traces my skirts,
+ to efface them from sight.
+But lo, the new moon rose and shone, like a nail-paring cleft
+ from the nail, And all but discovered our loves with the
+ gleam of her meddlesome light.
+And then there betided between us what I'll not discover, i'
+ faith: So question no more of the matter and deem not of ill
+ or unright.
+
+And a fourth:
+
+Foregather with thy lover, whilst night your loves may screen;
+ For that the sun's a telltale, the moon a go-between.
+
+And a fifth:
+
+I love not white women, with fat blown out and overlaid; The girl
+ of all girls for me is the slender dusky maid.
+Let others the elephant mount, if it like them; as for me, I'll
+ ride but the fine-trained colt on the day of the cavalcade.
+
+And a sixth:
+
+My loved one came to me by night And we did clip and interlace
+And lay together through the dark; But, lo, the morning broke
+ apace.
+To God, my Lord, I pray that He Will reunite us of His grace
+And make night last to me, what while I hold my love in my
+ embrace.
+
+Were I to set forth all the praise of blackness, I should be
+tedious; but little and enough is better than great plenty and
+too much. As for thee, O blonde, thy colour is that of leprosy
+and thine embrace is suffocation; and it is of report that frost
+and intense cold[FN#43] are in Hell for the torment of the
+wicked. Again, of black things is ink, wherewith is written the
+word of God; and were is not for black ambergris and black musk,
+there would be no perfumes to carry to kings. How many glories
+are there not in blackness and how well saith the poet:
+
+Dost thou not see that musk, indeed, is worth its weight in gold,
+ Whilst for a dirhem and no more a load of lime is sold?
+Black eyes cast arrows at men's hearts; but whiteness of the
+ eyes, In man, is judged of all to be unsightly to behold."
+
+"It sufficeth," said her master. "Sit down." So she sat down and
+he signed to the fat girl, who rose and pointing at the slim
+girl, uncovered her arms and legs and bared her stomach, showing
+its creases and the roundness of her navel. Then she donned a
+shift of fine stuff, that showed her whole body, and said,
+"Praised be God who created me, for that He beautified my face
+and made me fat and fair and likened me to branches laden with
+fruit and bestowed upon me abounding beauty and brightness; and
+praised be He no less, for that He hath given me the precedence
+and honoured me, when He speaks of me in His holy book! Quoth the
+Most High, 'And he brought a fat calf.'[FN#44] And indeed He hath
+made me like unto an orchard, full of peaches and pomegranates.
+Verily, the townsfolk long for fat birds and eat of them and love
+not lean birds; so do the sons of Adam desire fat meat and eat of
+it. How many precious attributes are there not in fatness, and
+how well saith the poet:
+
+Take leave of thy love, for the caravan, indeed, is on the
+ start. O man, canst thou bear to say farewell and thus
+ from her to part?
+'Tis as her going were, I trow, but to her neighbour's house,
+ The faultless gait of a fat fair maid, that never tires
+ the heart.
+
+Sawst thou ever one stop at a butcher's stall, but sought fat
+meat of him? The wise say, 'Pleasure is in three things, eating
+flesh and riding on flesh and the thrusting of flesh into
+flesh.' As for thee, O thin one, thy legs are like sparrow's
+legs or pokers, and thou art like a cruciform plank or a piece
+of poor meat; there is nought in thee to gladden the heart;
+even as saith of thee the poet:
+
+Now God forfend that aught enforce me take for bedfellow A
+ woman like a foot-rasp, wrapt in palm-fibres and tow!
+In every limb she has a horn, that butts me in my sleep, So
+ that at day-break, bruised and sore, I rise from her and
+ go."
+
+"It is enough," quoth her master. "Sit down." So she sat down
+and he signed to the slender girl, who rose, as she were a
+willow-wand or a bamboo-shoot or a plant of sweet basil, and
+said, "Praised be God who created me and beautified me and made
+my embraces the end of all desire and likened me to the branch,
+to which all hearts incline. If I rise, I rise lightly; if
+I sit, I sit with grace; I am nimble-witted at a jest and
+sweeter-souled than cheerfulness [itself]. Never heard I one
+describe his mistress, saying, 'My beloved is the bigness of an
+elephant or like a long wide mountain;' but rather, 'My lady
+hath a slender waist and a slim shape.'
+
+A little food contents me and a little water stays my thirst;
+my sport is nimble and my habit elegant; for I am sprightlier
+than the sparrow and lighter-footed than the starling. My
+favours are the desire of the longing and the delight of the
+seeker; for I am goodly of shape, sweet of smile and graceful
+as the willow-wand or the bamboo-cane of the basil-plant; nor
+is there any can compare with me in grace, even as saith one of
+me:
+
+Thy shape unto the sapling liken I And set my hope to win thee or
+ to die.
+Distraught, I follow thee, and sore afraid, Lest any look on thee
+ with evil eye.
+
+It is for the like of me that lovers run mad and that the longing
+are distracted. If my lover be minded to draw me to him, I am
+drawn to him, and if he would have me incline to him, I incline
+to him and not against him. But as for thee, O fat of body, thine
+eating is as that of an elephant, and neither much not little
+contents thee. When thou liest with a man, he hath no ease of
+thee, nor can he find a way to take his pleasure of thee; for the
+bigness of thy belly holds him off from clipping thee and the
+grossness of thy thighs hinders him from coming at thy kaze. What
+comeliness is there in thy grossness and what pleasantness or
+courtesy in thy coarse nature? Fat meat is fit for nought but
+slaughter, nor is there aught therein that calls for praise. If
+one joke with thee, thou art angry; if one sport with thee, thou
+art sulky; if thou sleep, thou snorest; if thou walk, thou
+pantest; if thou eat, thou art never satisfied. Thou art heavier
+than mountains and fouler than corruption and sin. Thou hast in
+thee nor movement nor blessing nor thinkest of aught but to eat
+and sleep. If thou make water, thou scatterest; if thou void,
+thou gruntest like a bursten wine-skin or a surly elephant. If
+thou go to the draught-house, thou needest one to wash out thy
+privy parts and pluck out the hairs; and this is the extreme of
+laziness and the sign of stupidity. In fine, there is no good
+thing in thee, and indeed the poet saith of thee:
+
+Heavy and swollen with fat, like a blown-out water-skin, With
+ thighs like the pillars of stone that buttress a mountain's
+ head,
+Lo, if she walk in the West, so cumbrous her corpulence is The
+ Eastern hemisphere hears the sound of her heavy tread."
+
+Quoth her master, "It is enough: sit down." So she sat down and
+he signed to the yellow girl, who rose to her feet and praised
+God and magnified His name, calling down peace and blessing on
+the best of His creatures;[FN#45] after which she pointed at the
+brunette and said to her, "I am praised in the Koran, and the
+Compassionate One hath described my colour and its excellence
+over all others in His manifest Book, where He saith, 'A yellow
+[heifer], pure yellow, whose colour rejoices the beholders.'
+[FN#46] Wherefore my colour is a portent and my grace an extreme
+and my beauty a term; for that my colour is the colour of a dinar
+and of the planets and moons and of apples. My fashion is the
+fashion of the fair, and the colour of saffron outvies all
+other colours; so my fashion is rare and my colour wonderful. I
+am soft of body, and of great price, comprising all attributes of
+beauty. My colour, in that which exists, is precious as virgin
+gold, and how many glorious qualities are there not in me! Of the
+like of me quoth the poet:
+
+Yellow she is, as is the sun that shineth in the sky, And like to
+ golden dinars, eke, to see, her beauties are.
+Nor with her brightness, anywise, can saffron hold compare, And
+ even the very moon herself her charms outvie by far.
+
+And now I will begin in thy dispraise, O brown of favour! Thy
+colour is that of the buffalo, and all souls shudder at thy
+sight. If thy colour be in aught, it is blamed; if it be in food,
+it is poisoned; for thy colour is that of flies and is a mark of
+ugliness in dogs. It is, among colours, one which strikes with
+amazement and is of the signs of mourning. Never heard I of brown
+gold or brown pearls or brown jewels. If thou enter the wardrobe,
+thy colour changes, and when thou comest out, thou addest a new
+ugliness to thine ugliness. Thou art neither black, that thou
+mayst be known, nor white, that thou mayst be described; and
+there is no good quality in thee, even as saith of thee the poet:
+
+As a complexion unto her, the hue of soot doth serve; Her mirky
+ colour is as dust on couriers' feet upcast.
+No sooner fall mine eyes on her, thou but a moment's space, Than
+ troubles and misgivings straight beset me thick and fast."
+
+"Enough," said her master. "Sit down." So she sat down and he
+signed to the brunette. Now she was endowed with grace and beauty
+and symmetry and perfection, delicate of body, with coal-back
+hair, slender shape, rosy, oval cheeks, liquid black eyes, fair
+face, eloquent tongue, slim waist and heavy buttocks. So she rose
+and said, "Praised be God who hath created me neither blameably
+fat nor lankily slender, neither white like leprosy nor yellow
+like colic nor black like coal, but hath made my colour to be
+beloved of men of wit; for all the poets praise brunettes in
+every tongue and exalt their colour over all others. Brown of
+hue, praiseworthy of qualities; and God bless him who saith:
+
+In the brunettes a meaning is, couldst read its writ aright,
+ Thine eyes would never again look on others, red or white.
+Free-flowing speech and amorous looks would teach Harout[FN#47]
+ himself The arts of sorcery and spells of magic and of
+ might.
+
+And saith another:
+
+Give me brunettes; the Syrian spears, so limber and so
+ straight, Tell of the slender dusky maids, so lithe and
+ proud of gait.
+Languid of eyelids, with a down like silk upon her cheek,
+ Within her wasting lover's heart she queens it still in
+ state.
+
+And yet another:
+
+Yea, by my life, such virtues in goodly brownness lie, One spot
+ thereof makes whiteness the shining moons outvie;
+But if the like of whiteness is borrowed, then, for sure, Its
+ beauty were transmuted unto reproach thereby.
+Not with her wine[FN#48] I'm drunken, but with her
+ tresses[FN#49] bright That make all creatures drunken that
+ dwell beneath the sky.
+Each of her charms doth envy the others; yea, and each To be
+ the down so silky upon her cheek doth sigh.
+
+And again:
+
+Why should I not incline me unto the silken down On the cheeks
+ of a dusky maiden, like the cane straight and brown,
+Seeing the spot of beauty in waterlilies' cups Is of the poets
+ fabled to be all beauty's crown?
+Yea, and I see all lovers the swarthy-coloured mole, Under the
+ ebon pupil, do honour and renown.
+Why, then, do censors blame me for loving one who's all A mole?
+ May Allah rid me of every railing clown!
+
+My form is beautiful and my shape slender; kings desire my colour
+and all love it, rich and poor. I am pleasant, nimble, handsome,
+elegant, soft of body and great of price. I am perfect in beauty
+and breeding and eloquence; my aspect is comely and my tongue
+fluent, my habit light and my sport graceful. As for thee,
+[O yellow girl,] thou art like unto a mallow of Bab el Louc,
+yellow and made all of sulphur. Perdition to thee, O pennyworth
+of sorrel, O rust of copper, O owl's face and food of the damned!
+Thy bedfellow, for oppression of spirit, is buried in the tombs,
+and there is no good thing in thee, even as saith the poet of the
+like of thee:
+
+Paleness[FN#50] is sore on her, for all no illness doth her
+ fret; My breast is straitened by its sight; ay, and my
+ head aches yet.
+If thou repent thee not, my soul, to punish thee, I vow, I'll
+ humble thee with a kiss of her face, my teeth on edge
+ shall set."
+
+"Enough," said her master; "sit down." Then he made peace
+between them and clad them all in sumptuous dresses of honour
+and handselled them with precious jewels of land and sea. And
+never, O Commander of the Faithful, in any place or time have I
+seen fairer than these six fair damsels.'
+
+When the Khalif El Mamoun heard this story from Mohammed of Bassora,
+he said to him, 'O Mohammed, knowest thou the abiding-place of
+these damsels and their master, and canst thou make shift to buy
+them of him for us?' 'O Commander of the Faithful,' answered he,
+'I have heard that their master is wrapped up in them and cannot
+endure to be parted from them.' 'Take threescore thousand dinars,
+--that is, ten thousand for each girl,--' rejoined the Khalif,
+'and go to his house and buy them of him.' So Mohammed took the
+money and betaking himself to the man of Yemen, acquainted him
+with the Khalif's wish. He consented to sell them at that price,
+to pleasure him, and despatched them to El Mamoun, who assigned
+them an elegant lodging and used to sit with them therein,
+marvelling at their beauty and grace, no less than at their varied
+colours and the excellence of their speech.
+
+After awhile, when their former owner could no longer endure separation
+from them, he sent a letter to the Khalif, complaining of his ardent
+love for them and containing, amongst the rest, the following verses:
+
+Six damsels fair and bright have captivated me; My blessing and
+ my peace the six fair maidens greet!
+My life, indeed, are they, my hearing and my sight, Yea, and my
+ very drink, my pleasance and my meat.
+No other love can bring me solace for their charms, And
+ slumber, after them, no more to me is sweet.
+Alas, my long regret, my weeping for their loss! Would I have
+ ne'er been born, to know this sore defeat!
+For eyes, bedecked and fair with brows like bended bows, Have
+ smitten me to death with arrows keen and fleet.
+
+When the letter came to El Mamoun's hands, he clad the six
+damsels in rich apparel and giving them threescore thousand
+dinars, sent them back to their master, who rejoiced in them
+with an exceeding joy,--more by token of the money they brought
+him,--and abode with them in all delight and pleasance of life,
+till there came to them the Destroyer of Delights and the
+Sunderer of Companies.
+
+
+
+
+
+ HAROUN ER RASHID AND THE DAMSEL AND
+ ABOU NUWAS.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid, being one night exceeding restless
+and oppressed with melancholy thought, went out and walked
+about his palace, till he came to a chamber, over whose doorway
+hung a curtain. He raised the curtain and saw, at the upper end
+of the room, a bed, on which lay something black, as it were a
+man asleep, with a candle on his right hand and another on his
+left and by his side a flagon of old wine, over against which
+stood the cup. The Khalif wondered at this, saying, 'How came
+yonder black by this wine-service?' Then, drawing near the bed,
+he found that it was a girl asleep there, veiled with her hair,
+and uncovering her face, saw that it was like the moon on the
+night of her full. So he filled a cup of wine and drank it to
+the roses of her cheeks; then bent over her and kissed a mole
+on her face, whereupon she awoke and cried out, saying, 'O
+Trusty One of God,[FN#51], what is to do?' 'A guest who knocks
+at thy dwelling by night,' replied the Khalif, '[hoping] that
+thou wilt give him hospitality till the dawn.' 'It is well,'
+answered she; 'I will grace the guest with my hearing and my
+sight.'
+
+So she brought the wine and they drank it together; after which
+she took the lute and tuning it, preluded in one-and-twenty
+modes, then returning to the first, struck a lively measure and
+sang the following verses:
+
+The tongue of passion in my heart bespeaks thee for my soul,
+ Telling I love thee with a love that nothing can control.
+I have an eye, that testifies unto my sore disease, And eke a
+ heart with parting wrung, a-throb for love and dole.
+Indeed, I cannot hide the love that frets my life away; Longing
+ increases still on me, my tears for ever roll.
+Ah me, before the love of thee, I knew not what love was; But
+ God's decree must have its course on every living soul.
+
+Then said she, 'O Commander of the Faithful, I am a wronged
+woman.' 'How so?' quoth he, 'and who hath wronged thee?' She
+answered, 'Thy son bought me awhile ago, for ten thousand
+dirhems, meaning to give me to thee; but the daughter of thine
+uncle[FN#52] sent him the price aforesaid and bade him shut me
+up from thee in this chamber.' Whereupon, 'Ask a boon of me,'
+said the Khalif; and she, 'I ask thee to lie to-morrow night
+with me.' 'If it be the will of God,' replied the Khalif, and
+leaving her, went away.
+
+Next morning, he repaired to his sitting-room and called for
+Abou Nuwas, but found him not and sent his chamberlain to seek
+for him. The chamberlain found him in pawn, in a tavern, for a
+score of a thousand dirhems, that he had spent on a certain
+boy, and questioned him. So he told him what had befallen him
+with the boy and how he had spent a thousand dirhems upon him;
+whereupon quoth the chamberlain, 'Show him to me; and if he be
+worth this, thou art excused.' 'Wait awhile,' replied the poet,
+'and thou shalt see him presently.' As they were talking, up
+came the boy, clad in a white tunic, under which was another of
+red and yet another of black. When Abou Nuwas saw him, he
+sighed and repeated the following verses:
+
+To me he appeared in a garment of white, His eyes and his
+ eyelids with languor bedight.
+Quoth I, "Dost thou pass and salutest me not? Though God knows
+ thy greeting were sweet to my spright.
+Be He blessed who mantled with roses thy cheeks, Who creates,
+ without let, what He will, of His might!"
+"Leave prating," he answered; "for surely my Lord Is wondrous
+ of working, sans flaw or dissight.
+Yea, truly, my garment is even as my face And my fortune, each
+ white upon white upon white."
+
+When the boy heard this, he put off the white tunic and
+appeared in the red one; whereupon Abou Nuwas redoubled in
+expressions of admiration and repeated the following verses:
+
+Appeared in a garment, the colour of flame, A foeman of mine,
+ "The beloved," by name.
+"Thou'rt a full moon," I said in my wonder, "And com'st In a
+ garment that putteth the roses to shame.
+Hath the red of thy cheek clad that vest upon thee Or in
+ heart's blood of lovers hast tinctured the same?"
+Quoth he, "'Twas the sun lately gave me the wede; From the
+ rubicund hue of his setting it came.
+So my garment and wine and the colour so clear Of my cheek are
+ as flame upon flame upon flame."
+
+Then the boy doffed the red tunic and abode in the black;
+whereupon Abou Nuwas redoubled in attention to him and repeated
+the following verses:
+
+He came in a tunic all sable of hue And shone out, thus veiled
+ in the dark, to men's view.
+"Thou passest," quoth I, "without greeting, and thus Givest
+ cause to exult to the rancorous crew.
+Thy garment resembles thy locks and my lot, Yea, blackness and
+ blackness and blackness thereto."
+
+Then the chamberlain returned to Haroun er Reshid and
+acquainted him with the poet's predicament, whereupon he bade
+him take a thousand dirhems and go and take him out of pawn. So
+he returned to Abou Nuwas and paying his score, carried him to
+the Khalif, who said, 'Make me some verses containing the
+words, "O Trusty One of God, what is to do?"' 'I hear and obey,
+O Commander of the Faithful,' answered he and improvised the
+following verses:
+
+My night was long for sleeplessness and care. Weary I was and
+ many my thoughts were.
+I rose and walked awhile in my own place, Then midst the
+ harem's cloistered courts did fare,
+Until I chanced on somewhat black and found It was a damsel
+ shrouded in her hair.
+God bless her for a shining moon! Her shape A willow-wand, and
+ pudour veiled the fair.
+I quaffed a cup to her; then, drawing near, I kissed the mole
+ upon her cheek so rare.
+She woke and swayed about in her amaze, Even as the branch
+ sways in the rain-fraught air;
+Then rose and said, "O Trusty One of God, What is to do, and
+ thou, what dost thou there?"
+"A guest", quoth I, "that sues to thee, by night, For shelter
+ till the hour of morning-prayer."
+"Gladly," she said; "with hearing and with sight To grace the
+ guest, my lord, I will not spare."
+
+'Confound thee!' cried the Khalif. 'It is as if thou hadst been
+present with us.' Then he took him by the hand and carried him
+to the damsel, who was clad in a dress and veil of blue. When
+Abou Nuwas saw her, he was profuse in expressions of admiration
+and recited the following verses:
+
+Say to the lovely maid, i' the veil of azure dight, "By Allah,
+ O my life, have pity on my plight!
+For when the fair entreats her lover cruelly, Sighs of all
+ longing rend his bosom day and night.
+So, by thy charms and by the whiteness of thy cheek, Have ruth
+ upon a heart for love consumed outright.
+Incline to him and be his stay 'gainst stress of love, Nor let
+ what fools may say find favour in thy sight."
+
+Then the damsel set wine before the Khalif and taking the lute,
+played a lively measure and sang the following verses:
+
+Wilt thou be just in thy love to others and deal with me
+ Unjustly and put me away, while others have joy in thee?
+Were there for lovers a judge, to whom I might complain Of
+ thee, he would do me justice and judge with equity.
+If thou forbid me to pass thy door, yet from afar To greet thee
+ and to bless, at least, I shall be free.
+
+The Khalif bade her ply Abou Nuwas with wine, till he lost his
+wits; when he gave him a full cup, and he drank a draught of it
+and held the cup in his hand. Er Reshid bade the girl take the
+cup from him and conceal it; so she took it and hid it between
+her thighs. Then he drew his sword and standing at the poet's
+head, pricked him with the point; whereupon he awoke and saw
+the Khalif standing over him, with a drawn sword. At this sight
+the fumes of the wine fled from his head and the Khalif said to
+him, 'Make me some verses and tell me therein what is come of
+thy cup; or I will cut off thy head.' So he improvised the
+following verses:
+
+My tale, indeed is hard to tell: The thief was none but yon
+ gazelle.
+She stole my cup of wine, whereof My lips had drunken but one
+ spell,
+And hid it in a place, for which My heart's desire's
+ unspeakable.
+I name it not, for awe of him, In whom the right thereof doth
+ dwell.
+
+'Confound thee!' quoth the Khalif. 'How knewst thou that? But
+we accept what thou sayst.' Then he ordered him a dress of
+honour and a thousand dinars, and he went away, rejoicing.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE MAN WHO STOLE THE DISH OF GOLD IN
+ WHICH THE DOG ATE.
+
+
+
+There was once a man, who was overborne with debt, and his case
+was straitened upon him, so that he left his people and family
+and went forth in distraction. He wandered on at random till he
+came to a high-walled and splendidly built city and entered it
+in a state of wretchedness and despair, gnawed with hunger and
+worn with the toil of his journey. As he passed through one of
+the streets, he saw a company of notables going along; so he
+followed them, till they entered a house like to a royal
+palace. He entered with them, and they stayed not till they
+came in presence of a man of the most dignified and majestic
+aspect, seated at the upper end of a saloon and surrounded by
+pages and servants, as he were of the sons of the Viziers. When
+he saw the visitors, he rose and received them with honour; but
+the poor man was confounded at the goodliness of the place and
+the crowd of servants and attendants and drawing back, in fear
+and perplexity, sat down apart in a place afar off, where none
+should see him.
+
+After awhile, in came a man with four hunting-dogs, clad in
+various kinds of silk and brocade and having on their necks
+collars of gold with chains of silver, and tied up each dog in a
+place set apart for him; after which he went out and presently
+returned with four dishes of gold, full of rich meats, one of
+which he set before each dog. Then he went away and left them,
+whilst the poor man began to eye the food, for stress of hunger,
+and would fain have gone up to one of the dogs and eaten with
+him; but fear of them withheld him. Presently, one of the
+dogs looked at him and God the Most High inspired him with a
+knowledge of his case; so he drew back from the platter and
+beckoned to the man, who came and ate, till he was satisfied.
+Then he would have withdrawn, but the dog pushed the dish
+towards him with his paw, signing to him to take it and what
+was left in it for himself. So the man took the dish and
+leaving the house, went his way, and none followed him. Then
+he journeyed to another city, where he sold the dish and buying
+goods with the price, returned to his own town. There he sold
+his stock and paid his debts; and he prospered and became rich
+and at his ease.
+
+After some years had passed, he said to himself, 'Needs must I
+repair to the city of the owner of the dish, which the dog
+bestowed on me, and carry him its price, together with a fit
+and handsome present.' So he took the price of the dish and a
+suitable present and setting out, journeyed night and day, till
+he came to the city and entering, went straight to the place
+where the man's house had been; but lo, he found there nothing
+but mouldering ruins and dwelling-places laid waste, over which
+the raven croaked; for the place was desert and the environs
+changed out of knowledge. At this, his heart and soul were
+troubled and he repeated the words of him who saith:
+
+The privy chambers are void of all their hidden store, As
+ hearts of the fear of God and the virtues all of yore.
+Changed is the vale and strange to me are its gazelles, And
+ those I knew of old its sandhills are no more.
+
+And those of another:
+
+The phantom of Saada came to me by night, near the break of
+ day, And roused me, whenas my comrades all in the desert
+ sleeping lay.
+But, when I awoke to the dream of the night, that came to visit
+ me, I found the air void and the wonted place of our
+ rendezvous far away.
+
+When he saw what the hand of time had manifestly done with the
+place, leaving but traces of the things that had been aforetime,
+the testimony of his eyes made it needless for him to enquire
+of the case; so he turned away and seeing a wretched man, in
+a plight that made the skin quake and would have moved the
+very rock to pity, said to him, 'Harkye, sirrah! What have
+time and fortune done with the master of this place? Where are
+his shining full moons[FN#53] and splendid stars;[FN#54] and
+what is the cause of the ruin that is come upon his abode, so
+that but the walls thereof remain?' Quoth the other, 'He is the
+miserable wretch thou seest bewailing that which hath befallen
+him. Knowest thou not the words of the Prophet (whom God bless
+and preserve), wherein is a lesson to him who will profit by it
+and an admonition to whoso will be guided thereby in the right
+way? "Verily it is the way of God the Most High to raise up
+nothing of this world, except He cast it down again." If thou
+enquire of the cause of this thing, indeed, it is no wonder,
+considering the vicissitudes of fortune. I was the master of
+this place and its builder and founder and owner and lord of
+its shining full moons and radiant damsels and of all its
+splendid circumstance an magnificent garniture; but Fortune
+turned and did away from me wealth and servants, overwhelming
+me unawares with disasters unforeseen and bringing me to this
+sorry plight. But there must needs be some reason for this thy
+question: tell it me and leave wondering.'
+
+So the other told him the whole story, sore concerned at what
+he heard and saw, and added, 'I have brought thee a present
+such as souls desire, and the price of thy dish of gold, that I
+took; for it was the cause of my becoming rich, after poverty,
+and of the reinstating of my dwelling-place, after desolation,
+and of the doing away of my trouble and straitness from me.'
+But the poor man shook his head, groaning and weeping and
+lamenting, and answered, 'O man, methinks thou art mad; for
+this is not the fashion of a man of understanding. How should a
+dog of mine make gift to thee of a dish of gold and I receive
+back its price? This were indeed a strange thing! By Allah,
+were I in the straitest misery and unease, I would not accept
+of thee aught, no, not the worth of a nail-paring! So return
+whence thou camest, in health and safety.'
+
+The merchant kissed his feet and taking leave of him, returned
+whence he came, praising him and reciting the following verse:
+
+The men and eke the dogs are gone and vanished all. Peace be
+ upon the men and dogs, whate'er befall!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE SHARPER OF ALEXANDRIA AND THE
+ MASTER OF POLICE.
+
+
+
+There was once, in the coast-fortress of Alexandria, a Master
+of Police, Husameddin by name, who was one night sitting in his
+seat of office, when there came in to him a trooper, who said
+to him, 'Know, O my lord, that I entered the city this night
+and alighted at such a khan and slept there, till a third part
+of the night was past, when I awoke and found my saddle-bags
+cut open and a purse of a thousand dinars stolen from them.' No
+sooner had he done speaking than the magistrate called his
+officers and bade them lay hands on all in the khan and clap
+them in prison till the morning; and on the morrow, he caused
+bring the instruments of torment and sending for the prisoners,
+was about to torture them, [to make them confess], in the
+presence of the owner of the stolen money, when, behold, a man
+pressed through the crowd and coming up to the chief of the
+police, said, 'O Amir, let these folk go, for they are wrongly
+accused. It was I who robbed the trooper, and here is the purse
+I stole from his saddle-bags.' So saying, he pulled out the
+purse from his sleeve and laid it before Husameddin, who said
+to the soldier, 'Take thy money; thou hast no ground of
+complaint now against the people of the khan.' Thereupon the
+latter and all who were present fell to blessing the thief and
+praising him; but he said, 'O Amir, the skill is not in that I
+came to thee and brought thee the purse, but in taking it a
+second time from the trooper.' 'And how didst thou take it, O
+sharper?' asked Husameddin.
+
+'O Amir,' replied the thief, 'I was standing in the
+money-changers' bazaar at Cairo, when I saw yonder man receive
+the gold and put it in his purse; so I followed him from street
+to street, but found no occasion of stealing it from him. Then
+he left Cairo and I followed him from place to place, casting
+about by the way to rob him, but without avail, till he entered
+this city and I followed him to the khan. I took up my lodging
+beside him and watched him till he fell asleep and I heard him
+snoring, when I went softly up to him and cutting open his
+saddlebags with this knife, took the purse thus--'
+
+So saying, he put out his hand and took the purse from before
+the chief of the police, whilst the latter and the trooper and
+the folk drew back, watching him and thinking he would show them
+how he took the purse from the saddle-bags; but, of a sudden,
+he broke into a run and threw himself into a reservoir hard by.
+The chief of the police called to his officers to pursue him,
+but before they could put off their clothes and descend the
+steps, he had made off; and they sought for him, but found him
+not; for the streets of Alexandria all communicate one with
+another. So they came back, empty-handed, and the chief of the
+police said to the trooper, 'Thou hast no recourse against the
+folk; for thou foundest him who robbed thee and receivedst back
+thy money, but didst not keep it.' So the trooper went away,
+having lost his money, whilst the folk were delivered from his
+hands and those of the chief of the police; and all this was of
+the favour of God the Most High.
+
+
+
+
+
+ EL MELIK EN NASIR AND THE THREE MASTERS
+ OF POLICE.
+
+
+
+El Melik en Nasir[FN#55] once sent for the chiefs of the police
+of New Cairo, Boulac and Old Cairo and said to them, 'I wish
+each of you to tell me the most remarkable thing that hath
+befallen him during his term of office.' 'We hear and obey,'
+answered they. Then said the chief of the police of New Cairo,
+'O our lord the Sultan, the most remarkable thing that befell
+me, during my term of office, was on this wise:
+
+
+
+
+
+Story of the Chief of the Police of New Cairo.
+
+
+
+There were once, in this city, two men apt to bear witness in
+matters of blood and wounds; but they were both given to wine
+and women and debauchery; nor, do what I would, could I succeed
+in bringing them to account. So I charged the vintners and
+confectioners and fruiterers and chandlers and bagnio-keepers
+to acquaint me of these two, when ever they should anywhere be
+engaged in drinking or debauchery, whether together or apart,
+and that, if they or either of them bought of them aught for
+the purpose of carousal, they should not conceal it from me.
+And they replied, "We hear and obey."
+
+One night, a man came to me and said, "O my lord, know that the
+two witnesses are in such a house in such a street, engaged
+in sore wickedness." So I disguised myself and went out,
+accompanied by none but my page, to the street in question.
+When I came to the house, I knocked at the door, whereupon a
+slave-girl came out and opened to me, saying, "Who art thou?" I
+made her no answer, but entered and saw the two witnesses and
+the master of the house sitting, and lewd women with them, and
+great plenty of wine before them. When they saw me, they rose to
+receive me, without showing the least alarm, and made much of me,
+seating me in the place of honour and saying to me, "Welcome for
+an illustrious guest and a pleasant cup-companion!"
+
+Presently, the master of the house went out and returning after
+awhile with three hundred dinars, said to me, without the least
+fear, "O my lord, it is, we know, in thy power both to disgrace
+and punish us; but this will bring thee nothing but weariness.
+So thou wouldst do better to take this money and protect us;
+for God the Most High is named the Protector and loveth those
+of His servants who protect each other; and thou shalt have thy
+reward in the world to come." The money tempted me and I said
+in myself, "I will take the money and protect them this once;
+but, if ever again I have them in my power, I will take my
+wreak of them."
+
+So I took the money and went away; but, next day, one of the
+Cadi's serjeants came to me and cited me before the court. I
+accompanied him thither, knowing not the meaning of the
+summons; and when I came into the Cadi's presence, I saw the
+two witnesses and the master of the house sitting by him. The
+latter rose and sued me for three hundred dinars, nor was it in
+my power to deny the debt; for he produced a written obligation
+and the two others testified against me that I owed the amount.
+
+Their evidence satisfied the Cadi and he ordered me to pay the
+money; nor did I leave the Court till they had of me the three
+hundred dinars. So I went away, in the utmost wrath and
+confusion, vowing vengeance against them and repenting that I
+had not punished them.'
+
+Then rose the chief of the Boulac police and said, 'As for me,
+O our lord the Sultan, the most remarkable thing that befell
+me, during my term of office, was as follows:
+
+
+
+
+
+Story of the Chief of the Boulac Police.
+
+
+
+I was once in debt to the amount of three hundred thousand
+dinars, and being distressed thereby, I sold what was behind me
+and what was before me and all I could lay my hands on, but
+could raise no more than a hundred thousand dinars and abode in
+great perplexity. One night, as I sat at home, in this state of
+mind, there came a knocking at the gate; so I said to one of my
+servants, "See who is at the door." He went out and returned,
+pale and trembling in every nerve; so I said to him, "What ails
+thee?" "There is a man at the door, seeking thee," answered he.
+"He is half naked, clad in skins, with a sword and a knife in
+his girdle, and with him are a company of the same fashion." So
+I took my sword and going out to see who these were, found them
+as the boy had reported and said to them, "What is your
+business?" "We are thieves," answered they, "and have made
+great purchase to-night and appointed it to thy use, that thou
+mayst pay therewith the debts that oppress thee and free
+thyself from thy distress." "Where is it?" asked I; and they
+brought me a great chest, full of vessels of gold and silver;
+which when I saw, I rejoiced and said in myself, "It were
+ungenerous to let them go away empty-handed."
+
+So I took the hundred thousand dinars I had by me and gave it
+to them, thanking them; and they took it and went their way,
+under cover of the night. But, on the morrow, when I examined
+the contents of the chest, I found them gilded brass and
+pewter, worth five hundred dirhems at the most; and this was
+grievous to me, for I had lost what money I had, and trouble
+was added to my trouble.'
+
+Then rose the chief of the police of Old Cairo and said, 'O our
+lord the Sultan, the most remarkable thing that befell me,
+during my term of office, was on this wise:
+
+
+
+
+
+Story of the Chief of the Old Cairo Police
+
+
+
+I once had ten thieves hanged, each on his own gibbet, and set
+guards to watch them and hinder the folk from taking them down.
+Next morning, when I came to look at them, I found two bodies
+hanging from one gibbet and said to the guards, "Who did this,
+and where is the tenth gibbet?" But they denied all knowledge
+of it, and I was about to beat them, when they said, "Know, O
+Amir, that we fell asleep last night, and when we awoke, we
+found one of the bodies gone, gibbet and all, whereat we were
+alarmed, fearing thy wrath. But, presently, up came a peasant,
+jogging along on his ass; so we laid hands on him and killing
+him, hung his body upon this gibbet, in the stead of the
+missing thief."
+
+When I heard this, I marvelled and said to them, "Had he aught
+with him?" "He had a pair of saddle-bags on the ass," answered
+they. "What was in them?" asked I and they said, "We know not."
+Quoth I, "Bring them hither." So they brought them to me and I
+bade open them, when, behold, therein was the body of a
+murdered man, cut in pieces. When I saw this, I marvelled and
+said in myself, "Glory be to God! The cause of the hanging of
+this peasant was no other but his crime against this murdered
+man; and the Lord is no unjust dealer with [His] servants."'
+[FN#56]
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE THIEF AND THE MONEY-CHANGER
+
+
+
+A money-changer, bearing a bag of money, once passed by a
+company of thieves, and one of the latter said to the others,
+'I know how to steal yonder bag of money.' 'How wilt thou do
+it?' asked they. 'Look,' answered he and followed the money-
+changer, till he entered his house, when he threw the bag on a
+shelf and went into the draught-house, to do an occasion,
+calling to the slave-girl to bring him an ewer of water. So she
+took the jug and followed him to the draught-house, leaving the
+door open, whereupon the thief entered and taking the bag of
+money, made off with it to his companions, to whom he related
+what had passed. 'By Allah,' said they, 'this was a clever
+trick! It is not every one could do it: but, presently, the
+money-changer will come out of the draught-house and missing
+the bag of money, will beat the slave-girl and torture her
+grievously. Meseems thou hast at present done nothing worthy of
+praise; but, if thou be indeed a sharper, thou wilt return and
+save the girl from being beaten.' 'If it be the will of God,'
+answered the thief, 'I will save both the girl and the purse.'
+
+Then he went back to the money-changer's house and found him
+beating the girl, because of the bag of money; so he knocked at
+the door and the man said, 'Who is there? Quoth the thief, 'I
+am the servant of thy neighbour in the bazaar.' So he came out
+to him and said, 'What is thy business?' 'My master salutes
+thee,' replied the thief, 'and says to thee, "Surely, thou art
+mad to cast the like of this bag of money down at the door of
+thy shop and go away and leave it! Had a stranger chanced on
+it, he had made off with it." And except my master had seen it
+and taken care of it, it had been lost to thee.' So saying, he
+pulled out the purse and showed it to the money-changer, who
+said, 'That is indeed my purse,' and put out his hand to take
+it; but the thief said, 'By Allah, I will not give it thee,
+till thou write me a receipt; for I fear my master will not
+believe that thou hast duly received the purse, except I bring
+him a writing to that effect, under thy hand and seal.' So the
+money-changer went in to write the receipt; but, in the
+meantime, the thief made off with the bag of money, having
+[thus] saved the slave-girl her beating.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE CHIEF OF THE COUS POLICE AND THE
+ SHARPER
+
+
+
+It is related that Alaeddin, chief of the police of
+Cous[FN#57], was sitting one night in his house, when a man of
+comely aspect and dignified port, followed by a servant bearing
+a chest upon his head, came to the door and said to one of the
+young men, 'Go in and tell the Amir that I would speak with him
+privily.' So the servant went in and told his master, who bade
+admit the visitor. When he entered the Amir saw him to be a man
+of good appearance and carriage; so he received him with
+honour, seating him beside himself, and said to him, 'What is
+thy business?' 'I am a highwayman,' replied the stranger, 'and
+am minded to repent at thy hands and turn to God the Most High
+but I would have thee help me to this, for that I am in thy
+district and under thine eye. I have here a chest, wherein is
+that which is worth nigh forty thousand dinars; and none hath
+so good a right to it as thou; so do thou take it and give me
+in exchange a thousand dinars of thy money, lawfully gotten,
+that I may have a little capital, to aid me in my repentance,
+and not be forced to resort to sin for subsistence; and with
+God the Most High be thy reward!' So saying he opened the chest
+and showed the Amir that it was full of trinkets and jewels and
+bullion and pearls, whereat he was amazed and rejoiced greatly.
+Then he cried out to his treasurer, to bring him a purse of a
+thousand dinars, and gave it to the highwayman, who thanked him
+and went his way, under cover of the night.
+
+On the morrow, the Amir sent for the chief of the goldsmiths and
+showed him the chest and what was therein; but the goldsmith
+found it nothing but pewter and brass and the jewels and pearls
+all of glass; at which Alaeddin was sore chagrined and sent in
+quest of the highwayman; but none could come at him.
+
+
+
+
+
+ IBRAHIM BEN EL MEHDI AND THE MERCHANT'S
+ SISTER.
+
+
+
+The Khalif El Mamoun once said to [his uncle] Ibrahim ben el
+Mehdi, 'Tell us the most remarkable thing that thou hast ever
+seen.' 'I hear and obey, O Commander of the Faithful,' answered
+he. 'Know that I went out one day, a-pleasuring, and my course
+brought me to a place where I smelt the odour of food. My soul
+longed for it and I halted, perplexed and unable either to go
+on or enter. Presently, I raised my eyes and saw a lattice
+window and behind it a hand and wrist, the like of which for
+beauty I never saw. The sight turned my brain and I forgot the
+smell of the food and began to cast about how I should get
+access to the house. After awhile, I espied a tailor hard by
+and going up to him, saluted him. He returned my greeting and I
+said to him, "Whose house is that?" "It belongs to a merchant
+called such an one," answered he, "who consorteth with none but
+merchants."
+
+As we were talking, up came two men of comely and intelligent
+aspect, riding on horseback; and the tailor told me their names
+and that they were the merchant's most intimate friends. So I
+spurred my horse towards them and said to them, "May I be your
+ransom! Abou such an one[FN#58] waits for you!" And I rode with
+them to the gate, where I entered and they also. When the
+master of the house saw me, he doubted not but I was their
+friend; so he welcomed me and made me sit down in the highest
+room. Then they brought the table of food and I said, "God hath
+granted me my desire of the food; and now there remain the hand
+and wrist." After awhile, we removed, for carousal, to another
+room, which I found full of all manner of rarities; and the
+host paid me particular attention, addressing his conversation
+to me, for that he deemed me a guest of his guests; whilst the
+latter, in like manner, made much of me, taking me for a friend
+of the master of the house.
+
+When we had drunk several cups of wine, there came in to us a
+damsel of the utmost beauty and elegance, as she were a
+willow-wand, who took a lute and playing a lively measure, sang
+the following verses:
+
+Is it not passing strange, indeed, one house should hold us
+ tway And still thou drawst not near to me nor yet a word
+ dost say,
+Except the secrets of the souls and hearts that broken be And
+ entrails blazing in the fires of love, the eye bewray
+With meaning looks and knitted brows and eyelids languishing
+ And hands that salutation sign and greeting thus convey?
+
+When I heard this, my entrails were stirred and I was moved to
+delight, for the excess of her grace and the beauty of the
+verses she sang; and I envied her her skill and said, "There
+lacketh somewhat to thee, O damsel!" Whereupon she threw the
+lute from her hand, in anger, and cried, "Since when do you use
+to bring ill-mannered fools into your assemblies?" Then I
+repented of what I had done, seeing that the others were vexed
+with me, and said in myself, "My hopes are at an end;" and I
+saw no way of quitting myself of reproach but to call for a
+lute, saying, "I will show you what escaped her in the air she
+sang." So they brought me a lute and I tuned it and sang the
+following verses:
+
+This is thy lover distraught, absorbed in his passion and pain;
+ Thy lover, the tears of whose eyes run down on his body
+ like rain.
+One hand to his heart ever pressed, whilst the other the
+ Merciful One Imploreth, so He of His grace may grant him
+ his hope to attain.
+O thou, that beholdest a youth for passion that's perished,
+ thine eye And thy hand are the cause of his death and yet
+ might restore him again.
+
+When the damsel heard this, she sprang up and throwing herself
+at my feet, kissed them and said, "It is thine to excuse, O my
+lord! By Allah, I knew not thy quality nor heard I ever the
+like of this fashion!" And they all extolled me and made much
+of me, being beyond measure delighted, and besought me to sing
+again. So I sang a lively air, whereupon they all became as
+drunken men, and their wits left them. Then the guests departed
+to their homes and I abode alone with the host and the girl.
+The former drank some cups with me, then said to me, "O my
+lord, my life hath been wasted, in that I have not known the
+like of thee till now. By Allah, then, tell me who thou art,
+that I may know who is the boon-companion whom God hath
+bestowed on me this night."
+
+I would not at first tell him my name and returned him evasive
+answers; but he conjured me, till I told him who I was;
+whereupon he sprang to his feet and said, "Indeed, I wondered
+that such excellence should belong to any but the like of thee;
+and Fortune hath done me a service for which I cannot avail to
+thank her. But, belike, this is a dream; for how could I hope
+that the family of the Khalifate should visit me in my own
+house and carouse with me this night?" I conjured him to be
+seated; so he sat down and began to question me, in the most
+courteous terms, as to the cause of my visit. So I told him the
+whole matter, concealing nothing, and said to him, "Verily, I
+have had my desire of the food, but not of the hand and wrist."
+Quoth he, "Thou shalt have thy desire of them also, so God
+will." Then said he to the slave-girl, "Bid such an one come
+down." And he called his slave-girls down, one by one and
+showed them to me; but I saw not my mistress among them, and he
+said, "O my lord, there is none left save my mother and sister;
+but, by Allah, I must needs have them also down and show them
+to thee."
+
+I marvelled at his courtesy and large-heartedness and said,
+"May I be thy ransom! Begin with thy sister." "Willingly,"
+replied he. So she came down and behold, it was she whose hand
+and wrist I had seen. "May God make me thy ransom!" said I.
+"This is the damsel whose hand and wrist I saw at the lattice."
+Then he sent at once for witnesses and bringing out two myriads
+of dinars, said to the witnesses, "This our lord Ibrahim ben el
+Mehdi, uncle of the Commander of the Faithful, seeks the hand
+of my sister such an one, and I call you to witness that I
+marry her to him and that he has endowed her with a dowry of
+ten thousand dinars." And he said to me, "I give thee my sister
+in marriage, at the dowry aforesaid." "I consent," answered I.
+Whereupon he gave one of the bags to her and the other to the
+witnesses, and said to me, "O my lord, I desire to array a
+chamber for thee; where thou mayst lie with thy wife." But I
+was abashed at his generosity and was ashamed to foregather
+with her in his house; so I said, "Equip her and send her to my
+house." And by thy life, O Commander of the Faithful, he sent
+me such an equipage with her, that my house was too strait to
+hold it, for all its greatness! And I begot on her this boy
+that stands before thee.'
+
+The Khalif marvelled at the merchant's generosity and said,
+'Gifted of God is he! Never heard I of his like.' And he bade
+Ibrahim bring him to court, that he might see him. So he
+brought him and the Khalif conversed with him; and his wit and
+good breeding so pleased him, that he made him one of his chief
+officers.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE WOMAN WHOSE HANDS WERE CUT OFF FOR
+ THAT SHE GAVE ALMS TO THE POOR.
+
+
+
+A certain King once made proclamation to the people of his
+realm, saying, 'If any of you give alms of aught, I will
+assuredly cut off his hand;' wherefore all the people abstained
+from alms-giving, and none could give to any.
+
+One day a beggar accosted a certain woman (and indeed hunger
+was sore upon him) and said to her, 'Give me an alms.' 'How can
+I give thee aught,' answered she, 'when the King cutteth off
+the hands of all who give alms?' But he said, 'I conjure thee
+by God the Most High, give me an alms.' So, when he adjured her
+by God, she had compassion on him and gave him two cakes of
+bread. The King heard of this; so he called her before him and
+cut off her hands, after which she returned to her house.
+
+A while after, the King said to his mother, 'I have a mind to
+take a wife; so do thou marry me to a fair woman.' Quoth she,
+'There is among our female slaves one who is unsurpassed in
+beauty; but she hath a grievous blemish.' 'What is that?' asked
+the King; and his mother answered, 'She hath had both her hands
+cut off.' Said he, 'Let me see her.' So she brought her to him,
+and he was ravished by her and married her and went in to her;
+and she brought him a son.
+
+Now this was the woman, who had her hands cut off for
+alms-giving; and when she became queen, her fellow-wives envied
+her and wrote to the King [who was then absent] that she was
+unchaste; so he wrote to his mother, bidding her carry the
+woman into the desert and leave her there. The old queen obeyed
+his commandment and abandoned the woman and her son in the
+desert; whereupon she fell to weeping and wailing exceeding
+sore for that which had befallen her. As she went along, with
+the child at her neck, she came to a river and knelt down to
+drink, being overcome with excess of thirst, for fatigue and
+grief; but, as she bent her head, the child fell into the
+water.
+
+Then she sat weeping sore for her child, and as she wept, there
+came up two men, who said to her, 'What makes thee weep?' Quoth
+she, 'I had a child at my neck, and he hath fallen into the
+water.' 'Wilt thou that we bring him out to thee?' asked they,
+and she answered, 'Yes.' So they prayed to God the Most High,
+and the child came forth of the water to her, safe and sound.
+Quoth they, 'Wilt thou that God restore thee thy hands as they
+were?' 'Yes,' replied she: whereupon they prayed to God,
+blessed and exalted be He! and her hands were restored to her,
+goodlier than before. Then said they, 'Knowst thou who we are?'
+'God [only] is all-knowing,' answered she; and they said, 'We
+are thy two cakes of bread, that thou gavest in alms to the
+beggar and which were the cause of the cutting off of thy
+hands. So praise thou God the Most High, for that He hath
+restored thee thy hands and thy child.' So she praised God the
+Most High and glorified Him.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE DEVOUT ISRAELITE.
+
+
+
+There was once a devout man of the children of Israel[FN#59],
+whose family span cotton; and he used every day to sell the
+yarn they span and buy fresh cotton, and with the profit he
+bought the day's victual for his household. One day, he went
+out and sold the day's yarn as usual, when there met him one of
+his brethren, who complained to him of want; so he gave him the
+price of the yarn and returned, empty-handed, to his family,
+who said to him, 'Where is the cotton and the food?' Quoth he,
+'Such an one met me and complained to me of want; so I gave him
+the price of the yarn.' And they said, 'How shall we do? We
+have nothing to sell.' Now they had a broken platter and a jar;
+so he took them to the market; but none would buy them of him.
+
+Presently, as he stood in the market, there came up a man with
+a stinking, swollen fish, which no one would buy of him, and he
+said to the Jew, 'Wilt thou sell me thine unsaleable ware for
+mine?' 'Yes,' answered the Jew and giving him the jar and
+platter, took the fish and carried it home to his family, who
+said, 'What shall we do with this fish?' Quoth he, 'We will
+broil it and eat of it, till it please God to provide for us.'
+So they took it and ripping open its belly, found therein a
+great pearl and told the Jew, who said, 'See if it be pierced.
+If so, it belongs to some one of the folk; if not, it is a
+provision of God for us.' So they examined it and found it
+unpierced.
+
+On the morrow, the Jew carried it to one of his brethren, who
+was skilled in jewels, and he said, 'Whence hadst thou this
+pearl?' 'It was a gift of God the Most High to us,' replied the
+Jew, and the other said, 'It is worth a thousand dirhems, and I
+will give thee that sum; but take it to such an one, for he
+hath more money and skill than I.' So the Jew took it to the
+jeweller, who said, 'It is worth threescore and ten thousand
+dirhems and no more. Then he paid him that sum and the Jew
+hired two porters to carry the money to his house. As he came
+to his door, a beggar accosted him, saying, 'Give me of that
+which God the Most High hath given thee.' Quoth the Jew, 'But
+yesterday, we were even as thou; take half the money.' So he
+made two parts of it, and each took his half. Then said the
+beggar, 'Take back thy money and God prosper thee in it; I am a
+messenger, whom thy Lord hath sent to try thee.' Quoth the Jew,
+'To God be the praise and the thanks!' and abode with his
+family in all delight of life, till death.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOU HASSAN EZ ZIYADI AND THE MAN FROM
+ KHORASSAN.
+
+
+
+Quoth Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi[FN#60], 'I was once in very needy
+case, and the baker and grocer and other purveyors importuned
+me, so that I was in sore straits and knew of no resource nor
+what to do. Things being thus, there came in to me one day one
+of my servants and said to me, "There is a man, a pilgrim, at
+the door, who seeks admission to thee." Quoth I, "Admit him."
+So he came in and behold, he was a native of Khorassan. We
+exchanged salutations and he said to me, "Art thou Abou Hassan
+ez Ziyadi?" "Yes," answered I. "What is thy business?" Quoth
+he, "I am a stranger and am minded to make the pilgrimage; but
+I have with me a great sum of money, which is burdensome to me.
+So I wish to deposit with thee these ten thousand dirhems,
+whilst I make the pilgrimage and return. If the caravan return
+and thou see me not, know that I am dead, in which case the
+money is a gift from me to thee; but if I come back, it shall
+be mine." "Be it as thou wilt," answered I, "so it please God
+the Most High." So he brought out a leather bag and I said to
+the servant, "Fetch the scales." He brought them and the man
+weighed out the money and handed it to me, after which he went
+his way. Then I called the tradesmen and paid them what I owed
+and spent freely, saying in myself, "By the time he returns,
+God will have succoured me with one or another of His bounties."
+However, next day, the servant came in to me and said, "Thy
+friend the man from Khorassan is at the door."
+
+"Admit him," answered I. So he came in and said to me, "I had
+thought to make the pilgrimage; but news hath reached me of the
+death of my father, and I have resolved to return; so give me
+the money I deposited with thee yesterday." When I heard this,
+I was troubled and perplexed beyond measure and knew not what
+reply to make him; for, if I denied it, he would put me to my
+oath, and I should be shamed in the world to come; whilst, if I
+told him that I had spent the money, he would make an outcry
+and disgrace me. So I said to him, "God give thee health! This
+my house is no stronghold nor place of safe custody for this
+money. When I received thy leather bag, I sent it to one with
+whom it now is; so do thou return to us to-morrow and take thy
+money, if it be the will of God."
+
+So he went away, and I passed the night in sore concern, because
+of his return to me. Sleep visited me not nor could I close my
+eyes: so I rose and bade the boy saddle me the mule. "O my lord,"
+answered he, "it is yet but the first watch of the night." So I
+returned to bed, but sleep was forbidden to me and I ceased not
+to awaken the boy and he to put me off, till break of day, when
+he saddled me the mule, and I mounted and rode out, not knowing
+whither to go. I threw the reins on the mule's shoulders and
+gave myself up to anxiety and melancholy thought, whilst she
+fared on with me to the eastward of Baghdad. Presently, as I
+went along, I saw a number of people in front and turned aside
+into another path to avoid them; but they, seeing that I wore
+a professor's hood, followed me and hastening up to me, said,
+"Knowest thou the lodging of Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi?" "I am he,"
+answered I; and they rejoined, "The Commander of the Faithful
+calls for thee." Then they carried me before El Mamoun, who
+said to me, "Who art thou?" Quoth I, "I am a professor of the
+law and traditions, and one of the associates of the Cadi Abou
+Yousuf." "How art thou called?" asked the Khalif. "Abou Hassan
+ez Ziyadi," answered I, and he said, "Expound to me thy case."
+
+So I told him how it was with me and he wept sore and said to
+me, "Out on thee! The Apostle of God (whom may He bless and
+preserve) would not let me sleep this night, because of thee;
+for he appeared to me in my first sleep and said to me,
+'Succour Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi.' Whereupon I awoke and knowing
+thee not, went to sleep again; but he came to me a second time
+and said to me, 'Woe to thee! Succour Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi.' I
+awoke a second time, but knew thee not, so went to sleep again;
+and he came to me a third time and still I knew thee not and
+went to sleep again. Then he came to me once more and said,
+'Out on thee! Succour Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi!' After that I
+dared not go to sleep again, but watched the rest of the night
+and aroused my people and sent them in all directions in quest
+of thee." Then he gave me ten thousand dirhems, saying, "This
+is for the Khorassani," and other ten thousand, saying, "Spend
+freely of this and amend thy case therewith, and set thine
+affairs in order." Moreover, he gave me yet thirty thousand
+dirhems, saying, "Furnish thyself with this, and when the day
+of estate comes round, come thou to me, that I may invest thee
+with an office."
+
+So I took the money and returned home, where I prayed the
+morning-prayer. Presently came the Khorassani, so I carried him
+into the house and brought out to him ten thousand dirhems,
+saying, "Here is thy money." "It is not my very money,"
+answered he. "How cometh this?" So I told him the whole story,
+and he wept and said, "By Allah, hadst thou told me the truth
+at first, I had not pressed thee! And now, by Allah, I will not
+accept aught of the money; and thou art quit of it." So saying,
+he went away and I set my affairs in order and repaired on the
+appointed day to the Divan, where I found the Khalif seated.
+When he saw me, he called me to him and bringing forth to me a
+paper from under his prayer-carpet, said to me, "This is a
+patent, conferring on thee the office of Cadi of the western
+division of the Holy City[FN#61] from the Bab es Selam[FN#62]
+to the end of the town; and I appoint thee such and such
+monthly allowances. So fear God (to whom belong might and
+majesty) and be mindful of the solicitude of His Apostle (whom
+may He bless and preserve) on thine account." The folk marvelled
+at the Khalif's words and questioned me of their meaning; so I
+told them the whole story and it spread abroad amongst the
+people.'
+
+And [quoth he who tells the tale] Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi ceased
+not to be Cadi of the Holy City, till he died in the days of El
+Mamoun, the mercy of God be on him!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE POOR MAN AND HIS GENEROUS FRIEND.
+
+
+
+There was once a rich man, who lost all he had and became poor,
+whereupon his wife counselled him to seek aid of one of his
+friends. So he betook himself to a certain friend of his and
+acquainted him with his strait; and he lent him five hundred
+dinars to trade withal. Now he had aforetime been a jeweller;
+so he took the money and went to the jewel-bazaar, where he
+opened a shop to buy and sell. Presently, three men accosted
+him, as he sat in his shop, and asked for his father. He told
+them that he was dead, and they said, 'Did he leave any
+offspring?' Quoth the jeweller, 'He left a son, your servant.'
+'And who knoweth thee for his son?' asked they. 'The people of
+the bazaar,' replied he; and they said, 'Call them together,
+that they may testify to us that thou art his son.' So he
+called them and they bore witness of this; whereupon the three
+men delivered to him a pair of saddle-bags, containing thirty
+thousand dinars, besides jewels and bullion, saying, 'This was
+deposited with us in trust by thy father.' Then they went away;
+and presently there came to him a woman, who sought of him
+certain of the jewels, worth five hundred dinars, and paid him
+three thousand for them.
+
+So he took five hundred dinars and carrying them to his friend,
+who had lent him the money, said to him, 'Take the five hundred
+dinars I borrowed of thee; for God hath aided and prospered
+me.' 'Not so,' quoth the other. 'I gave them to thee outright,
+for the love of God; so do thou keep them. And take this paper,
+but read it not, till thou be at home, and do according to that
+which is therein.' So he took the paper and returned home,
+where he opened it and read therein the following verses:
+
+The men who came to thee at first my kinsmen were, my sire, His
+ brother and my dam's, Salih ben Ali is his name.
+Moreover, she to whom thou soldst the goods my mother was, And
+ eke the jewels and the gold, from me, to boot, they came;
+Nor, in thus ordering myself to thee, aught did I seek Save of
+ the taking it from me to spare thee from the shame.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE RUINED MAN WHO BECAME RICH AGAIN
+ THROUGH A DREAM.
+
+
+
+There lived once in Baghdad a very wealthy man, who lost all
+his substance and became so poor, that he could only earn his
+living by excessive labour. One night, he lay down to sleep,
+dejected and sick at heart, and saw in a dream one who said to
+him, 'Thy fortune is at Cairo; go thither and seek it.' So he
+set out for Cairo; but, when he arrived there, night overtook
+him and he lay down to sleep in a mosque. Presently, as fate
+would have it, a company of thieves entered the mosque and made
+their way thence into an adjoining house; but the people of the
+house, being aroused by the noise, awoke and cried out;
+whereupon the chief of the police came to their aid with his
+officers. The robbers made off; but the police entered the
+mosque and finding the man from Baghdad asleep there, laid hold
+of him and beat him with palm rods, till he was well-nigh dead.
+Then they cast him into prison, where he abode three days,
+after which the chief of the police sent for him and said to
+him, 'Whence art thou?' 'From Baghdad,' answered he. 'And what
+brought thee to Cairo?' asked the magistrate. Quoth the
+Baghdadi, 'I saw in a dream one who said to me, "Thy fortune is
+at Cairo; go thither to it." But when I came hither, the
+fortune that he promised me proved to be the beating I had of
+thee.'
+
+The chief of the police laughed, till he showed his jaw-teeth,
+and said, 'O man of little wit, thrice have I seen in a dream
+one who said to me, "There is in Baghdad a house of such a
+fashion and situate so-and-so, in the garden whereof is a
+fountain and thereunder a great sum of money buried. Go thither
+and take it." Yet I went not; but thou, of thy little wit, hast
+journeyed from place to place, on the faith of a dream, which
+was but an illusion of sleep.' Then he gave him money, saying,
+'This is to help thee back to thy native land.' Now the house
+he had described was the man's own house in Baghdad; so the
+latter returned thither, and digging underneath the fountain in
+his garden, discovered a great treasure; and [thus] God gave
+him abundant fortune.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF EL MUTAWEKKIL AND HIS
+ FAVOURITE MEHBOUBEH.
+
+
+
+There were in the palace of the Khalif El Mutawekkil ala Allah
+[FN#63] four thousand concubines, whereof two thousand were
+Greeks [and other foreigners] and other two thousand native
+Arabians[FN#64] and Abyssinians; and Obeid ibn Tahir[FN#65]
+had given him two hundred white girls and a like number of
+Abyssinian and native girls[FN#66]. Among these latter was a
+girl of Bassora, Mehboubeh by name, who was of surpassing
+beauty and elegance and voluptuous grace. Moreover, she played
+upon the lute and was skilled in singing and making verses and
+wrote excellent well; so that El Mutawekkil fell passionately
+in love with her and could not endure from her a single hour.
+When she saw this, she presumed upon his favour to use him
+haughtily and capriciously, so that he waxed exceeding wroth
+with her and forsook her, forbidding the people of the palace
+to speak with her.
+
+On this wise she abode some days, but the Khalif still inclined
+to her; and he arose one morning and said to his courtiers,
+'I dreamt, last night, that I was reconciled to Mehboubeh.'
+'Would God this might be on wake!' answered they. As they were
+talking, in came one of the Khalif's maidservants and whispered
+him that they had heard a noise of singing and luting in
+Mehboubeh's chamber and knew not what this meant. So he rose
+and entering the harem, went straight to Mehboubeh's apartment,
+where he heard her playing wonder-sweetly upon the lute and
+singing the following verses:
+
+I wander through the halls, but not a soul I see, To whom I may
+ complain or who will speak with me.
+It is as though I'd wrought so grievous an offence, No
+ penitence avails myself therefrom to free.
+Will no one plead my cause with a king, who came to me In sleep
+ and took me back to favour and to gree;
+But with the break of day to rigour did revert And cast me off
+ from him and far away did flee?
+
+When the Khalif heard these verses, he marvelled at the strange
+coincidence of their dreams and entered the chamber. As soon as
+she was ware of him, she hastened to throw herself at his feet,
+and kissing them, said, 'By Allah, O my lord, this is what I
+dreamt last night; and when I awoke, I made the verses thou
+hast heard.' ''By Allah,' replied El Mutawekkil, 'I also dreamt
+the like!' Then they embraced and made friends and he abode
+with her seven days and nights.
+
+Now she had written upon her cheek, in musk, the Khalif's name,
+which was Jaafer: and when he saw this, he made the following
+verses:
+
+One wrote on her cheek, with musk, a name, yea, Jaafer to wit:
+ My soul be her ransom who wrote on her cheek what I see on
+ it!
+If her fingers, indeed, have traced a single line on her cheek,
+ I trow, in my heart of hearts full many a line she hath
+ writ
+O thou, whom Jaafer alone of men possesses, may God Grant
+ Jaafer to drink his fill of the wine of thy beauty and
+ wit!
+
+When El Mutawekkil died, all his women forgot him save
+Mehboubeh, who ceased not to mourn for him, till she died and
+was buried by his side, the mercy of God be on them both!
+
+
+
+
+
+ WERDAN THE BUTCHER HIS ADVENTURE WITH
+ THE LADY AND THE BEAR.
+
+
+
+There lived once in Cairo, in the days of the Khalif El Hakim
+bi Amrillah, a butcher named Werdan, who dealt in sheep's
+flesh; and there came to him every forenoon a lady and gave him
+a diner, whose weight was nigh two and a half Egyptian diners,
+saying, 'Give me a lamb.' So he took the money and gave her the
+lamb, which she delivered to a porter she had with her; and he
+put it in his basket and she went away with him to her own
+place. This went on for some time, the butcher profiting a
+dinar by her every day, till at last he began to be curious
+about her and said to himself, 'This woman buys a diner's worth
+of meat of me every day, paying ready money, and never misses a
+day. Verily, this is a strange thing!' So he took an occasion
+of questioning the porter, in her absence, and said to him,
+'Whither goest thou every day with yonder woman?' 'I know not
+what to make of her,' answered the porter; 'for, every day,
+after she hath taken the lamb of thee, she buys fresh and dried
+fruits and wax candles and other necessaries of the table, a
+dinar's worth, and takes of a certain Nazarene two flagons of
+wine, for which she pays him another diner. Then she loads me
+with the whole and I go with her to the Vizier's Gardens, where
+she blindfolds me, so that I cannot see where I set my feet,
+and taking me by the hand, leads me I know not whither.
+Presently, she says, "Set down here;" and when I have done so,
+she gives me an empty basket she has ready and taking my hand,
+leads me back to the place, where she bound my eyes, and there
+does off the bandage and gives me ten dirhems.' 'God be her
+helper!' quoth Werdan; but he redoubled in curiosity about her
+case; disquietude increased upon him and he passed the night in
+exceeding restlessness.
+
+Next morning, [quoth Werdan,] she came to me as of wont and
+taking the lamb, delivered it to the porter and went away. So I
+gave my shop in charge to a boy and followed her, unseen of
+her; nor did I cease to keep her in sight, hiding behind her,
+till she left Cairo and came to the Vizier's Gardens. Then I
+hid, whilst she bound the porter's eyes, and followed her again
+from place to place, till she came to the mountain and stopped
+at a place where there was a great stone. Here she made the
+porter set down his crate, and I waited, whilst she carried him
+back to the Vizier's Gardens, after which she returned and
+taking out the contents of the basket, disappeared behind the
+stone. Then I went up to the stone and pulling it away,
+discovered behind it an open trap-door of brass and a flight of
+steps leading downward. So I descended, little by little, into
+a long corridor, brilliantly lighted, and followed it, till I
+came to a [closed] door, as it were the door of a room. I
+looked about till I discovered a recess, with steps therein;
+then climbed up and found a little niche with an opening
+therein giving upon a saloon.
+
+So I looked in and saw the lady cut off the choicest parts of
+the lamb and laying them in a saucepan, throw the rest to a
+huge great bear, who ate it all to the last bit. When she had
+made an end of cooking, she ate her fill, after which she set
+on wine and fruits and confections and fell to drinking, using
+a cup herself and giving the bear to drink in a basin of gold,
+till she was heated with wine, when she put off her trousers
+and lay down. Thereupon the bear came up to her and served her,
+whilst she gave him the best of what belongeth to mankind, till
+he had made an end, when he sat down and rested. Presently, he
+sprang to her and served her again; and thus he did, till he
+had furnished half a score courses, and they both fell down in
+a swoon and abode without motion.
+
+Then said I to myself, "Now is my opportunity," and taking a
+knife I had with me, that would cut bones before flesh, went
+down to them and found them motionless, not a muscle of them
+moving for their much swink. So I put my knife to the bear's
+gullet and bore upon it, till I severed his head from his body,
+and he gave a great snort like thunder, whereat she started up
+in alarm and seeing the bear slain and me standing with the
+knife in my hand, gave such a shriek that I thought the soul
+had left her body. Then said she, "O Werdan, is this how thou
+requitest me my favours?" "O enemy of thine own soul," replied
+I, "dost thou lack of men that thou must do this shameful
+thing?" She made me no answer, but bent down to the bear, and
+finding his head divided from his body, said to me, "O Werdan,
+which were the liefer to thee, to hearken to what I shall say
+to thee and be the means of thine own safety and enrichment to
+the end of thy days, or gainsay me and so bring about thine own
+destruction?" "I choose rather to hearken unto thee," answered
+I. "Say what thou wilt." "Then," said she, "kill me, as thou
+hast killed this bear, and take thy need of this treasure and
+go thy way." Quoth I, "I am better than this bear. Return to
+God the Most High and repent, and I will marry thee, and we
+will live on this treasure the rest of our lives." "O Werdan,"
+rejoined she, "far be it from me! How shall I live after him?
+An thou kill me not, by Allah, I will assuredly do away thy
+life! So leave bandying words with me, or thou art a lost man.
+This is all I have to say to thee and peace be on thee." Then
+said I, "I will slay thee, and thou shalt go to the malediction
+of God." So saying, I caught her by the hair and cut her
+throat; and she went to the malediction of God and of the
+angels and of all mankind.
+
+Then I examined the place and found there gold and pearls and
+jewels, such as no king could bring together. So I filled the
+porter's crate with as much as I could carry and covered it
+with the clothes I had on me. Then I shouldered it and going up
+out of the underground place, set out homeward and fared on,
+till I came to the gate of Cairo, where I fell in with ten of
+the Khalif's body-guard, followed by El Hakim[FN#67] himself,
+who said to me. "Ho, Werdan!" "At thy service, O King," replied
+I. "Hast thou killed the woman and the bear?" asked he and I
+answered, "Yes." Quoth he, "Set down the basket and fear
+naught, for all the treasure thou hast with thee is thine, and
+none shall dispute it with thee." So I set down the basket, and
+he uncovered it and looked at it; then said to me, "Tell me
+their case, though I know it, as if I had been present with
+you." So I told him all that had passed and he said, "Thou hast
+spoken the truth, O Werdan. Come now with me to the treasure."
+
+So I returned with him to the cavern, where he found the
+trap-door closed and said to me, "O Werdan, lift it; none but
+thou can open the treasure, for it is enchanted in thy name and
+favour." "By Allah," answered I, "I cannot open it;" but he
+said, "Go up to it, trusting in the blessing of God." So I
+called upon the name of God the Most High and going up to the
+trap-door, put my hand to it; whereupon it came up, as it had
+been the lightest of things. Then said the Khalif, "Go down and
+bring up what is there; for none but one of thy name and favour
+and quality hath gone down there since the place was made, and
+the slaying of the bear and the woman was appointed to be at
+thy hand. This was recorded with me and I was awaiting its
+fulfilment." Accordingly, I went down and brought up all the
+treasure, whereupon the Khalif sent for beasts of burden and
+carried it away, after giving me the porter's crate, with what
+was therein. So I carried it home and opened me a shop in the
+market. And [quoth he who tells the tale] this market is still
+extant and is known as Werdan's Market.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KING'S DAUGHTER AND THE APE.
+
+
+
+There was once a King's daughter, whose heart was taken with
+love of a black slave: he did away her maidenhead, and she
+became passionately addicted to amorous dalliance, so that she
+could not endure from it a single hour and made moan of her
+case to one of her body women, who told her that no thing doth
+the deed of kind more abundantly than the ape. Now it chanced,
+one day, that an ape-leader passed under her lattice, with a
+great ape; so she unveiled her face and looking upon the ape,
+signed to him with her eyes, whereupon he broke his bonds and
+shackles and climbed up to the princess, who hid him in a place
+with her, and he abode, eating and drinking and cricketing,
+night and day. Her father heard of this and would have killed
+her; but she took the alarm and disguising herself in a [male]
+slave's habit, loaded a mule with gold and jewels and precious
+stuffs past count; then, taking horse with the ape, fled to
+Cairo, where she took up her abode in one of the houses without
+the city.
+
+Now, every day, she used to buy meat of a young man, a butcher,
+but came not to him till after noonday, pale and disordered in
+face; so that he said in himself, 'There hangs some mystery by
+this slave.' For she used to visit him in her slave's habit.
+[Quoth the butcher,] So, one day, when she came to me as usual,
+I went out after her, unseen, and ceased not to follow her from
+place to place, so as she saw me not, till she came to her
+lodging, without the city, and I looked in upon her, through a
+cranny, and saw her light a fire and cook the meat, of which
+she ate her fill and gave the rest to an ape she had with her.
+Then she put off her slave's habit and donned the richest of
+women's apparel; and so I knew that she was a woman. After this
+she set on wine and drank and gave the ape to drink; and he
+served her nigh half a score times, till she swooned away, when
+he threw a silken coverlet over her and returned to his place.
+
+Thereupon I went down into the midst of the place and the ape,
+becoming aware of me, would have torn me in pieces; but I made
+haste to pull out my knife and slit his paunch. The noise
+aroused the young lady, who awoke, terrified and trembling; and
+when she saw the ape in this plight, she gave such a shriek,
+that her soul well-nigh departed her body. Then she fell down
+in a swoon, and when she came to herself, she said to me, "What
+moved thee to do thus? By Allah, I conjure thee to send me after
+him!" But I spoke her fair and engaged to her that I would stand
+in the ape's stead, in the matter of much clicketing, till her
+trouble subsided and I took her to wife.
+
+However, I fell short in this and could not endure to it; so I
+complained of her case to a certain old woman, who engaged to
+manage the affair and said to me, "Thou must bring me a cooking-
+pot full of virgin vinegar and a pound of pyrethrum."[FN#68]
+So I brought her what she sought, and she laid the pyrethrum
+in the pot with the vinegar and set it on the fire, till it
+boiled briskly. Then she bade me serve the girl, and I served
+her, till she fainted away, when the old woman took her up, and
+she unknowing, and set her kaze to the mouth of the cooking-pot.
+The steam of the pot entered her poke and there fell from it
+somewhat, which I examined and behold, it was two worms, one
+black and the other yellow. Quoth the old woman, "The black was
+bred of the embraces of the negro and the yellow of those of
+the ape."
+
+When my wife recovered from her swoon, she abode with me, in
+all delight and solace of life, and sought not copulation, as
+before, for God the Most High had done away from her this
+appetite; whereat I marvelled and acquainted her with the case.
+Moreover, [quoth he who tells the tale,] she took the old woman
+to be to her in the stead of her mother, and she and Werdan and
+his wife abode in joy and cheer, till there came to them the
+Destroyer of Delights and the Sunderer of Companies; and glory
+be to the Living One, who dieth not and in whose hand is the
+empire of the Seen and the Unseen!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE ENCHANTED HORSE.
+
+
+
+There was once, of old time, a great and puissant King, of the
+Kings of the Persians, Sabour by name, who was the richest of
+all the Kings in store of wealth and dominion and surpassed them
+all in wit and wisdom. Generous, open-handed and beneficent, he
+gave to those who sought and repelled not those who resorted to
+him, comforted the broken-hearted and honourably entreated those
+who fled to him for refuge. Moreover, he loved the poor and was
+hospitable to strangers and did the oppressed justice upon those
+who oppressed them. He had three daughters, like shining full
+moons or flowered gardens, and a son as he were the moon; and it
+was his wont to keep two festivals in the year, those of the New
+Year and the Autumnal Equinox, on which occasions he threw open
+his palaces and gave gifts and made proclamation of safety and
+security and advanced his chamberlains and officers; and the
+people of his realm came in to him and saluted him and gave him
+joy of the festival, bringing him gifts and servants.
+
+Now he loved science and geometry, and one day, as he sat on
+his throne of kingship, during one of these festivals, there
+came in to him three sages, cunning artificers and past masters
+in all manner of crafts and inventions, skilled in making
+rarities, such as confound the wit, and versed in the knowledge
+of [occult] truths and subtleties; and they were of three
+different tongues and countries, the first an Indian, the
+second a Greek and the third a Persian. The Indian came forward
+and prostrating himself before the King, gave him joy of the
+festival and laid before him a present befitting [his dignity];
+that is to say, a figure of gold, set with precious stones and
+jewels of price and holding in its hand a golden trumpet. When
+Sabour saw this, he said, 'O sage, what is the virtue of this
+figure?' And the Indian answered, 'O my lord; if this figure be
+set at the gate of thy city, it will be a guardian over it;
+for, if an enemy enter the place, it will blow this trumpet
+against him, and so he will be known and laid hands on.' The
+King marvelled at this and said, 'By Allah, O sage, an this thy
+word be true, I will grant thee thy wish and thy desire.'
+
+Then came forward the Greek and prostrating himself before the
+King, presented him with a basin of silver, in whose midst was
+a peacock of gold, surrounded by four-and-twenty young ones of
+the same metal. Sabour looked at them and turning to the Greek,
+said to him, 'O sage, what is the virtue of this peacock?' 'O
+my lord,' answered he, 'as often as an hour of the day or night
+passes, it pecks one of its young [and cries out and flaps its
+wings,] till the four-and-twenty hours are accomplished; and
+when the month comes to an end, it will open its mouth and thou
+shalt see the new moon therein.' And the King said, 'An thou
+speak sooth, I will bring thee to thy wish and thy desire.'
+
+Then came forward the Persian sage and prostrating himself
+before the King, presented him with a horse of ebony wood,
+inlaid with gold and jewels, ready harnessed with saddle and
+bridle and stirrups such as befit kings; which when Sabour saw,
+he marvelled exceedingly and was confounded at the perfection
+of its form and the ingenuity of its fashion. So he said, 'What
+is the use of this horse of wood, and what is its virtue and
+the secret of its movement?' 'O my lord,' answered the Persian,
+'the virtue of this horse is that, if one mount him, it will
+carry him whither he will and fare with its rider through the
+air for the space of a year and a day.' The King marvelled and
+was amazed at these three wonders, following thus hard upon
+each other in one day, and turning to the sage, said to him,
+'By the Great God and the Bountiful Lord, who created all
+creatures and feedeth them with water and victual, an thy
+speech be true and the virtue of thy handiwork appear, I will
+give thee whatsoever thou seekest and will bring thee to thy
+wish and thy desire!'
+
+Then he entertained the three sages three days, that he might
+make trial of their gifts, after which they brought them before
+him and each took the creature he had wrought and showed him
+the secret of its movement. The trumpeter blew the trumpet, the
+peacock pecked its young and the Persian sage mounted the horse
+of ebony, whereupon it soared with him into the air and
+descended again. When the King saw all this, he was amazed and
+perplexed and was like to fly for joy and said to the three
+sages, 'Now am I certified of the truth of your words and it
+behoves me to quit me of my promise. Seek ye, therefore, what
+ye will, and I will give it you.' Now the report of the [beauty
+of the] King's daughters had reached the sages, so they
+answered, 'If the King be content with us and accept of our
+gifts and give us leave to ask a boon of him, we ask of him
+that he give us his three daughters in marriage, that we may be
+his sons-in-law; for that the stability of kings may not be
+gainsaid.' Quoth the King, 'I grant you that which you desire,'
+and bade summon the Cadi forthright, that he might marry each
+of the sages to one of his daughters.
+
+Now these latter were behind a curtain, looking on; and when they
+heard this, the youngest considered [him that was to be] her
+husband and saw him to be an old man, a hundred years of age,
+with frosted hair, drooping forehead, mangy eyebrows, slitten
+ears, clipped[FN#69] beard and moustaches, red, protruding eyes,
+bleached, hollow, flabby cheeks, nose like an egg-plant and face
+like a cobbler's apron, teeth overlapping one another,[FN#70]
+lips like camel's kidneys, loose and pendulous; brief, a monstrous
+favour; for he was the frightfullest of the folk of his time; his
+grinders had been knocked[FN#71] out and his teeth were like the
+tusks of the Jinn that fright the fowls in the hen-house. Now the
+princess was the fairest and most graceful woman of her time, more
+elegant than the tender gazelle, blander than the gentle zephyr
+and brighter than the moon at her full, confounding the branch
+and outdoing the gazelle in the flexile grace of her shape and
+movements; and she was fairer and sweeter than her sisters. So,
+when she saw her suitor, she went to her chamber and strewed dust
+on her head and tore her clothes and fell to buffeting her face
+and lamenting and weeping.
+
+Now the prince her brother, who loved her with an exceeding
+love, more than her sisters, was then newly returned from a
+journey and hearing her weeping and crying, came in to her and
+said, 'What ails thee? Tell me and conceal nought from me.' 'O
+my brother and my dear one,' answered she, 'if the palace be
+straitened upon thy father, I will go out; and if he be
+resolved upon a foul thing, I will separate myself from him,
+though he consent not to provide for me.' Quoth he, 'Tell me
+what means this talk and what has straitened thy breast and
+troubled thy humour.' 'O my brother and my dear one,' answered
+the princess, 'know that my father hath given me in marriage to
+a sorcerer, who brought him, as a gift, a horse of black wood,
+and hath stricken him with his craft and his sorcery; but, as
+for me, I will none of him, and would, because of him, I had
+never come into this world!' Her brother soothed her and
+comforted her, then betook himself to his father and said to
+him, 'What is this sorcerer to whom thou hast given my youngest
+sister in marriage, and what is this present that he hath
+brought thee, so that thou hast caused my sister to [almost]
+die of chagrin? It is not right that this should be.'
+
+Now the Persian was standing by and when he heard the prince's
+words, he was mortified thereby and filled with rage, and the
+King said, 'O my son, an thou sawest this horse, thy wit would
+be confounded and thou wouldst be filled with amazement.' Then
+he bade the slaves bring the horse before him and they did so;
+and when the prince, who was an accomplished cavalier, saw it,
+it pleased him. So he mounted it forthright and struck its
+belly with the stirrup-irons; but it stirred not and the King
+said to the sage, 'Go and show him its movement, that he also
+may help thee to thy wish.' Now the Persian bore the prince
+malice for that he willed not he should have his sister; so he
+showed him the peg of ascent on the right side [of the horse's
+neck] and saying to him, 'Turn this pin,' left him. So the
+prince turned the pin and forthwith the horse soared with him
+into the air, as it were a bird, and gave not over flying with
+him, till it disappeared from sight, whereat the King was
+troubled and perplexed about his affair and said to the
+Persian, 'O sage, look how thou mayst make him descend.' But he
+answered, 'O my lord, I can do nothing, and thou wilt never see
+him again till the Day of Resurrection, for that he, of his
+ignorance and conceit, asked me not of the peg of descent and I
+forgot to acquaint him therewith.' When the King heard this, he
+was sore enraged and bade beat the sorcerer and clap him in
+prison, whilst he himself cast the crown from his head and
+buffeted his face and beat upon his breast. Moreover, he shut
+the doors of his palaces and gave himself up to weeping and
+lamentation, he and his wife and daughters and all the folk of
+the city; and [thus] their joy was turned to mourning and their
+gladness changed into chagrin and sore affliction.
+
+Meanwhile, the horse gave not over soaring with the prince,
+till he drew near the sun, whereat he gave himself up for lost
+and was confounded at his case, repenting him of having mounted
+the horse and saying in himself, 'Verily, this was a plot of
+the sage to destroy me; but there is no power and no virtue but
+in God the Most High, the Supreme! I am lost without recourse;
+but, I wonder, did not he who made the peg of ascent make a peg
+of descent also?' Now he was a man of wit and intelligence; so
+he fell to examining all the parts of the horse, but saw
+nothing save a peg, like a cock's head, on its right shoulder
+and the like on the left, and turned the right-hand peg,
+whereupon the horse flew upward with increased speed. So he
+left it and turned the left-hand peg, and immediately the
+steed's upward motion ceased and he began to descend, little by
+little, towards the earth. When the prince saw this and knew
+the uses of the horse, he was filled with joy and gladness and
+thanked God the Most High for that He had vouchsafed to deliver
+him from destruction. Then he began to turn the horse's head
+whither he would, making him rise and fall at pleasure, till he
+had gotten complete command of his movement.
+
+He ceased not to descend the whole of that day, for that the
+steed's upward flight had borne him afar from the earth; and as
+he descended, he diverted himself with viewing the various
+towns and countries over which he passed and which he knew not,
+having never seen them in his life. Amongst the rest, he saw a
+city of the goodliest ordinance, in the midst of a green and
+smiling country, abounding in trees and streams; whereat he
+fell a-musing and said in himself, 'Would I knew the name of
+yonder city and in what country it is!' And he began to circle
+about it and observe it right and left. By this time, the day
+began to wane and the sun drew near to its setting; and he
+said, 'I see no goodlier place to pass the night in than this
+city; so I will lodge here this night and on the morrow I will
+return to my people and my kingdom and tell my father and
+family what has passed and what I have seen with my eyes.' Then
+he addressed himself to look for a place, where he might safely
+bestow himself and his horse and where none should see him, and
+presently espied a palace, surrounded by a great wall with
+lofty battlements, rising high into the air from the midst of
+the city and guarded by forty black slaves, clad in complete
+mail and armed with spears and swords and bows and arrows.
+Quoth he, 'This is a goodly place,' and turned the peg of
+descent, whereupon the horse sank down with him and alighted
+gently on the roof of the palace. So the prince dismounted and
+began to go round about the horse and examine it, saying, 'By
+Allah, he who fashioned thee was a cunning craftsman, and if God
+extend the term of my life and restore me to my country and family
+in safety and reunite me with my father, I will assuredly bestow
+upon him all manner of bounties and entreat him with the utmost
+favour.'
+
+By this time the night had overtaken him and he sat on the
+roof, till he was assured that all in the palace slept; and
+indeed hunger and thirst were sore upon him, for that he had
+not tasted food since he parted from his father. So he said in
+himself, 'Surely, the like of this palace will not lack of
+victual,' and leaving the horse there, went in quest of
+somewhat to eat. Presently, he came to a stair and descending
+it, found himself in a court paved with white marble and
+alabaster, that shone in the light of the moon. He marvelled at
+the place and the goodliness of its fashion, but heard no sound
+and saw no living soul and stood in perplexity, looking right
+and left and knowing not whither he should go. Then said he to
+himself, 'I cannot do better than return to where I left my
+horse and pass the night by it; and as soon as it is day, I
+will mount and depart.' However, as he stood talking to
+himself, he espied a light within the palace, and making
+towards it, found that it came from a candle that stood before
+a door of the palace, at the head of an eunuch, as he were one
+of the Afrits of Solomon or a tribesman of the Jinn, longer
+than a plank and wider than a bench. He lay asleep before the
+door, with the pommel of his sword gleaming in the flame of the
+candle, and at his head was a budget of leather[FN#72] hanging
+from a column of granite.
+
+When the prince saw this, he was affrighted and said, 'I crave
+help from God the Supreme! O my God, even as Thou hast [already]
+delivered me from destruction, vouchsafe me strength to quit
+myself of the adventure of this palace!' So saying, he put out
+his hand to the budget and taking it, carried it to a place
+apart and opened it and found in it food of the best. So he
+ate his fill and refreshed himself and drank water, after
+which he hung the budget up in its place and drawing the
+eunuch's sword from its sheath, took it, whilst the latter
+slept on, knowing not whence destiny should come to him. Then
+the prince fared on into the palace, till he came to another
+door, with a curtain drawn before it; so he raised the curtain
+and entering, saw a couch of ivory, inlaid with pearls and
+jacinths and jewels, and four slave-girls sleeping about it. He
+went up to the couch, to see what was therein, and found a
+young lady lying asleep, veiled with her hair, as she were the
+full moon at its rising, with flower-white forehead and
+shining parting and cheeks like blood-red anemones and dainty
+moles thereon.
+
+When he saw this, he was amazed at her beauty and grace and
+symmetry and recked no more of death. So he went up to her,
+trembling in every nerve, and kissed her on the right cheek;
+whereupon she awoke forthright and seeing the prince standing
+at her head, said to him, 'Who art thou and whence comest thou?'
+Quoth he, 'I am thy slave and thy lover.' 'And who brought thee
+hither?' asked she. 'My Lord and my fortune,' answered he; and
+she said, 'Belike thou art he who demanded me yesterday of my
+father in marriage and he rejected thee, pretending that thou
+wast foul of favour. By Allah he lied, when he spoke this thing,
+for thou art not other than handsome.'
+
+Now the son of the King of Hind[FN#73] had sought her in
+marriage, but her father had rejected him, for that he was ill-
+favoured, and she thought the prince was he. So, when she saw
+his beauty and grace, for indeed he was like the radiant moon,
+her heart was taken in the snare of his love, as it were a
+flaming fire, and they fell to talk and converse. Presently,
+her waiting-women awoke from their sleep and seeing the prince
+sitting with their mistress, said to her, 'O my lady, who is
+this with thee?' Quoth she, 'I know not; I found him sitting by
+me, when I awoke. Belike it is he who seeks me in marriage of
+my father.' 'O my lady,' answered they, 'by the Most Great God,
+this is not he who seeks thee in marriage, for he is foul and
+this man is fair and of high condition. Indeed, the other is
+not fit to be his servant.'
+
+Then they went out to the eunuch and finding him asleep, awoke
+him, and he started up in alarm. Quoth they, 'How comes it that
+thou art guardian of the palace and yet men come in to us,
+whilst we are asleep?' When the eunuch heard this, he sprang in
+haste to his sword, but found it not, and fear took him and
+trembling. Then he went in, confounded, to his mistress and
+seeing the prince sitting talking with her, said to the former,
+'O my lord, art thou a man or a genie?' 'O it on thee, O
+unluckiest of slaves!' replied the prince. 'How darest thou
+even a prince of the sons of the Chosroës with one of the
+unbelieving Satans?' Then he took the sword in his hand and
+said, 'I am the King's son-in-law, and he hath married me to
+his daughter and bidden me go in to her.' 'O my lord,' replied
+the eunuch, 'if thou be indeed a man, as thou avouchest, she is
+fit for none but thee, and thou art worthier of her than any
+other.'
+
+Then he ran to the King, shrieking out and rending his clothes
+and casting dust upon his head; and when the King heard his
+outcry, he said to him, 'What has befallen thee? Speak quickly
+and be brief; for thou troublest my heart.' 'O King,' answered
+the eunuch, 'come to thy daughter's succour; for a devil of the
+Jinn, in the likeness of a king's son, hath gotten possession
+of her; so up and at him!' When the King heard this, he thought
+to kill him and said, 'How camest thou to be careless of my
+daughter and let this demon come at her?' Then he betook
+himself to the princess's palace, where he found her women
+standing, [awaiting him] and said to them, 'What is come to my
+daughter?' 'O King,' answered they, 'sleep overcame us and when
+we awoke, we found a young man sitting talking with her, as he
+were the full moon, never saw we a fairer of favour than he. So
+we questioned him of his case and he avouched that thou hadst
+given him thy daughter in marriage. More than this we know not,
+nor do we know if he be a man or a genie; but he is modest and
+well bred, and doth nothing unseemly.'
+
+When the King heard this, his wrath cooled and he raised the
+curtain stealthily and looking in, saw a prince of the goodliest
+fashion, with a face like the shining full moon, sitting talking
+with his daughter. At this sight he could not contain himself,
+of his jealousy for his daughter, and putting the curtain aside,
+rushed in upon them, like a Ghoul, with his drawn sword in his
+hand. When the prince saw him, he said to the princess, 'Is this
+thy father?' 'Yes,' answered she; whereupon he sprang to his
+feet and taking his sword in his hand, cried out at the King
+with such a terrible cry, that he was confounded. Then he would
+have fallen on him with the sword; but the King, seeing that the
+prince was doughtier than he, sheathed his blade and stood till
+the latter came up to him, when he accosted him courteously and
+said to him, 'O youth, art thou a man or a genie?' Quoth the
+prince, 'Did I not respect thy right[FN#74] and thy daughter's
+honour, I would spill thy blood! How darest thou even me with
+devils, me that am a prince of the sons of the Chosroës, who,
+had they a mind to take thy kingdom, could shake thee from thy
+power and thy dominion and despoil thee of all thy possessions?'
+When the King heard his words, he was smitten with awe and fear
+of him and rejoined, 'If thou indeed be of the sons of the kings,
+as thou pretendest, how comes it that thou enterest my palace,
+without my leave, and soilest my honour, making thy way to my
+daughter and feigning that thou art her husband and that I have
+given her to thee to wife, I that have slain kings and kings'
+sons, who sought her of me in marriage? And now who shall save
+thee from my mischief, when, if I cried out to my slaves and
+servants and bade them put thee to death, they would slay thee
+forthright? Who then shall deliver thee out of my hand?'
+
+When the prince heard this speech of the King, he answered,
+'Verily, I wonder at thee and at the poverty of thy wit! Canst
+thou covet for thy daughter a goodlier mate than myself and
+hast ever seen a stouter of heart or a more sufficient or a
+more glorious in rank and dominion than I?' 'Nay, by Allah,'
+rejoined the King. 'But, O youth, I would have had thee make
+suit to me for her hand before witnesses, that I might marry
+her to thee publicly; and now, were I to marry her to thee
+privily, yet hast thou dishonoured me in her person.' 'Thou
+sayst well, O King,' replied the prince; 'but, if thy servants
+and soldiers should fall upon me and slay me, as thou pretendest,
+thou wouldst but publish thine own dishonour, and the folk
+would be divided between belief and disbelief with regard
+to thee. Wherefore, meseems thou wilt do well to turn from
+this thought to that which I shall counsel thee.' Quoth the
+King, 'Let me hear what thou hast to propose.' And the prince
+said, 'What I have to propose to thee is this: either do
+thou meet me in single combat and he who slays the other shall
+be held the worthier and having a better title to the kingdom;
+or else, let me be this night and on the morrow draw out
+against me thy horsemen and footmen and servants; but [first]
+tell me their number.' Quoth the King, 'They are forty thousand
+horse, besides my own slaves and their followers, who are the
+like of them in number.' 'When the day breaks, then,' continued
+the prince, 'do thou array them against me and say to them,
+"This fellow is a suitor to me for my daughter's hand, on
+condition that he shall do battle single-handed against you
+all; for he pretends that he will overcome you and put you to
+the rout and that ye cannot prevail against him." Then leave me
+to do battle with them. If they kill me, then is thy secret the
+safelier hidden and thine honour the better guarded; and if I
+overcome them, then is the like of me one whose alliance a King
+should covet.'
+
+The King approved of his counsel and accepted his proposition,
+despite his awe and amaze at the exorbitant pretension of the
+prince to do battle against his whole army, such as he had
+described it to him, being at heart assured that he would
+perish in the mellay and so he be quit of him and freed from
+the fear of dishonour. So he called the eunuch and bade him go
+forthright to his Vizier and bid him assemble the whole of the
+troops and cause them don their arms and mount their horses.
+The eunuch carried the King's order to the Vizier, who straightway
+summoned the captains of the army and the grandees of the realm
+and bade them don their harness of war and mount their horses
+and sally forth in battle array.
+
+Meanwhile, the King sat conversing with the prince, being
+pleased with his wit and good breeding, till daybreak, when he
+returned to his palace and seating himself on his throne,
+commanded the troops to mount and bade saddle one of the best
+of the royal horses with handsome housings and trappings and
+bring it to the prince. But the latter said, 'O King, I will
+not mount, till I come in sight of the troops and see them.'
+'Be it as thou wilt,' answered the King. Then they repaired to
+the tilting ground, where the troops were drawn up, and the
+prince looked upon them and noted their great number; after
+which the King cried out to them, saying, 'Ho, all ye men,
+there is come to me a youth who seeks my daughter in marriage,
+--never have I seen a goodlier than he, no, nor a stouter of
+heart nor a doughtier, for he pretends that he can overcome
+you, single-handed, and put you to the rout and that, were ye a
+hundred thousand in number, yet would ye be for him but little.
+But, when he charges upon you, do ye receive him upon the
+points of your lances and the edges of your sabres; for,
+indeed, he hath undertaken a grave matter.'
+
+Then said he to the prince, 'Up, O my son, and do thy will on
+them.' 'O King,' answered he, 'thou dealest not fairly with me.
+How shall I go forth against them, seeing that I am afoot and
+they are mounted?' 'I bade thee mount, and thou refusedst,'
+rejoined the King; 'but take which of my horses thou wilt.' But
+he said, 'None of thy horses pleases me, and I will ride none
+but that on which I came.' 'And where is thy horse?' asked the
+King. 'Atop of thy palace,' answered the prince, and the King
+said, 'In what part of my palace?' 'On the roof,' replied the
+prince. 'Out on thee!' quoth the King. 'This is the first sign
+thou hast given of madness. How can the horse be on the roof?
+But we shall soon see if thou speak truth or falsehood.' Then
+he turned to one of his chief officers and said to him, 'Go to
+my palace and bring me what thou findest on the roof.' And all
+the people marvelled at the prince's words, saying, 'How can a
+horse come down the steps from the roof? Verily this is a thing
+whose like we never heard.'
+
+Meanwhile, the King's messenger repaired to the palace,
+accompanied by other of the royal officers, and mounting to the
+roof, found the horse standing there,--never had they looked on
+a handsomer; but when they drew near and examined it, they saw
+that it was made of ebony and ivory; whereat they laughed to
+each other, saying, 'Was it of the like of this horse that the
+youth spoke? Surely, he must be mad; but we shall soon see the
+truth of his case. Belike, there hangs some great mystery by
+him.' Then they lifted up the horse and carrying it to the
+King, set it down before him, and all the people flocked round
+it, staring at it and marvelling at the beauty of its fashion
+and the richness of its saddle and bridle. The King also
+admired it and wondered at it extremely; and he said to the
+prince, 'O youth, is this thy horse?' 'Yes, O King,' answered
+the prince; 'this is my horse, and thou shalt soon see wonders
+of it.' 'Then take and mount it,' rejoined the King, and the
+prince said, 'I will not mount till the troops withdraw afar
+from it.' So the King bade them withdraw a bowshot from the
+horse; whereupon quoth the prince, 'O King, I am about to mount
+my horse and charge upon thy troops and scatter them right and
+left and cleave their hearts in sunder.' 'Do as thou wilt,'
+answered the King; 'and spare them not, for they will not spare
+thee.' Then the prince mounted, whilst the troops ranged
+themselves in ranks before him, and one said to another, 'When
+the youth comes between the ranks, we will take him on the
+points of our pikes and the edges of our swords.' 'By Allah,'
+quoth another, 'it were pity to kill so handsome and well-shaped
+a youth!' 'By Allah,' rejoined a third, 'ye will have hard work
+to get the better of him; for he had not done this, but for what
+he knew of his own prowess and valiantise.'
+
+Meanwhile, the prince, having settled himself in his saddle,
+whilst all eyes were strained to see what he would do, turned
+the peg of ascent; whereupon the horse began to sway to and fro
+and make the strangest of movements, after the manner of
+horses, till its belly was filled with air and it took flight
+with him and soared into the sky. When the King saw this, he
+cried out to his men, saying, 'Out on you! Take him, ere he
+escape you!' But his Viziers and officers said to him, 'O King,
+how shall we overtake the flying bird? This is surely none but
+some mighty enchanter, and God hath saved thee from him. So
+praise thou the Most High for thy deliverance from his hand.'
+Then the King returned to his palace and going in to his
+daughter, acquainted her with what had befallen. He found her
+sore afflicted for the prince and bewailing her separation from
+him; wherefore she fell grievously sick and took to her pillow.
+When her father saw her thus, he pressed her to his bosom and
+kissing her between the eyes, said to her, 'O my daughter,
+praise God and thank Him for that He hath delivered thee from
+this crafty enchanter!' And he repeated to her the story of the
+prince's disappearance; but she paid no heed to his word and
+did but redouble in her tears and lamentations, saying to
+herself, 'By Allah, I will neither eat nor drink, till God
+reunite me with him!' Her father was greatly concerned for her
+plight and mourned sore over her; but, for all he could do to
+comfort her, passion and love-longing still grew on her for the
+prince.
+
+Meanwhile, the King's son, whenas he had risen into the air,
+turned his horse's head towards his native land, musing upon
+the beauty and grace of the princess. Now he had enquired of
+the King's people the name of the princess and of the King her
+father and of the city, which was the city of Senaa of Yemen.
+So he journeyed homeward with all speed, till he drew near his
+father's capital and making a circuit about the city, alighted
+on the roof of the King's palace, where he left his horse, whilst
+he descended into the palace and finding its threshold strewn
+with ashes, bethought him that one of his family was dead. Then
+he entered, as of wont, and found his father and mother and
+sisters clad in mourning raiment of black, pale-faced and lean
+of body. When his father saw him and was assured that it was
+indeed his son, he gave a great cry and fell down in a swoon,
+but presently coming to himself, threw himself upon him and
+embraced him, straining him to his bosom and rejoicing in him
+exceedingly. His mother and sisters heard this; so they came
+in and seeing the prince, fell upon him, kissing him and weeping
+and rejoicing with an exceeding joy. Then they questioned him of
+his case; so he told them all that had befallen him from first
+to last and his father said to him, 'Praised be God for thy
+safety, O solace of my eyes and life-blood of my heart!'
+
+Then the King bade hold high festival, and the glad news flew
+through the city. So they beat the drums and the cymbals and
+putting off the raiment of mourning, donned that of joy and
+decorated the streets and markets; whilst the folk vied with
+one another who should be the first to give the King joy, and
+the latter proclaimed a general pardon and opening the prisons,
+released those who were therein. Moreover, he made banquets to
+the people seven days and nights and all creatures were glad;
+and he took horse with his son and rode out with him, that the
+folk might see him and rejoice. After awhile the prince
+enquired for the maker of the horse, saying, 'O my father, what
+hath fortune done with him?' 'May God not bless him,' answered
+the King, 'nor the hour in which I set eyes on him! For he was
+the cause of thy separation from us, O my son, and he hath lain
+in prison since the day of thy disappearance.' Then he bade
+release him from prison and sending for him, invested him in a
+dress of honour and entreated him with the utmost favour and
+munificence, save that he would not give him his daughter to
+wife; whereat he was sore enraged and repented of that which he
+had done, knowing that the prince had learnt the secret of the
+horse and the manner of its motion. Moreover, the King said to
+his son, 'Methinks thou wilt do well not to mount the horse
+neither go near it henceforth; for thou knowest not its
+properties, and it is perilous for thee to meddle with it.' Now
+the prince had told his father of his adventure with the King's
+daughter of Senaa, and he said, 'If the King had been minded to
+kill thee, he had done so; but thine hour was not yet come.'
+
+When the rejoicings were at an end, the people returned to
+their houses and the King and his son to the palace, where they
+sat down and fell to eating and drinking and making merry. Now
+the King had a handsome slave-girl, who was skilled in playing
+upon the lute; so she took it and began to play upon it and
+sing thereto of separation of lovers before the King and his
+son, and she chanted the following verses:
+
+Think not that absence ever shall win me to forget: For what
+ should I remember, if I'd forgotten you?
+Time passes, but my passion for you shall never end: In love of
+ you, I swear it, I'll die and rise anew.
+
+When the prince heard this, the fires of longing flamed up in
+his heart and passion redoubled upon him. Grief and regret were
+sore upon him and his entrails yearned in him for love of the
+King's daughter of Senaa; so he rose forthright and eluding his
+father's notice, went forth the palace to the horse and
+mounting it, turned the peg of ascent, whereupon it flew up
+into the air with him and soared towards the confines of the
+sky. Presently, his father missed him and going up to the
+summit of the palace, in great concern, saw the prince rising
+into the air; whereat he was sore afflicted and repented
+exceedingly that he had not taken the horse and hidden it: and
+he said in himself, 'By Allah, if but my son return to me, I
+will destroy the horse, that my heart may be at rest concerning
+my son.' And he fell again to weeping and bewailing himself for
+his son.
+
+Meanwhile, the prince flew on through the air till he came to
+the city of Senaa and alighted on the roof as before. Then he
+went down stealthily and finding the eunuch asleep, as of wont,
+raised the curtain and went on, little by little, till he came
+to the door of the princess's chamber and stopped to listen;
+when, behold, he heard her weeping plenteous tears and reciting
+verses, whilst her women slept round her. Presently, they heard
+her weeping and wailing and said, 'O our mistress, why wilt
+thou mourn for one who mourns not for thee?' 'O little of
+wit,' answered she, 'is he for whom I mourn of those who are
+forgotten?' And she fell again to weeping and wailing, till
+sleep overcame her.
+
+Now the prince's heart ached for her, so he entered and seeing
+her lying asleep, without covering, touched her with his hand;
+whereupon she opened her eyes and saw him standing by her.
+Quoth he, 'Why this weeping and mourning?' And when she knew
+him, she threw herself upon him and embraced him and kissed him
+and answered, 'For thy sake and because of my separation from
+thee.' 'O my lady,' said he, 'I have wearied for thee all this
+time!' But she answered, 'It is I who have wearied for thee,
+and hadst thou tarried longer, I had surely died!' 'O my lady,'
+rejoined he, 'what thinkest thou of my case with thy father and
+how he dealt with me? Were it not for my love of thee, O
+ravishment of all creatures, I had surely slain him and made
+him a warning to all beholders; but, even as I love thee, so I
+love him for thy sake.' Quoth she, 'How couldst thou leave me?
+Can life be sweet to me after thee?' Quoth he, 'Let what has
+happened suffice now: I am hungry and thirsty.' So she bade her
+maidens make ready meat and drink, [and they sat eating and
+drinking and conversing] till nigh upon daybreak, when he rose
+to take leave of her and depart, ere the eunuch should awake,
+and she said, 'Whither goest thou?' 'To my father's house,'
+answered he; 'and I plight thee my troth that I will come to
+thee once in every week.' But she wept and said, 'I conjure
+thee, by God the Supreme, take me with thee whither thou goest
+and make me not taste anew the bitterness of separation from
+thee.' Quoth he, 'Wilt thou indeed go with me?' and she
+answered, 'Yes.' 'Then,' said he, 'arise, that we may depart.'
+So she rose forthright and going to a chest, arrayed herself in
+what was richest and dearest to her of her trinkets of gold and
+jewels of price. Then he carried her up to the roof of the
+palace and mounting the horse, took her up behind him and bound
+her fast to himself; after which he turned the peg of ascent,
+and the horse rose with him into the air. When her women saw
+this, they shrieked aloud and told her father and mother, who
+rushed up to the roof of the palace and looking up, saw the
+ebony horse flying away with the prince and princess. At this
+the King was sore troubled and cried out, saying, 'O King's
+son, I conjure thee, by Allah, have compassion on me and my
+wife and bereave us not of our daughter!' The prince made him
+no reply, but, thinking that the princess repented of leaving
+her father and mother, said to her, 'O ravishment of the age,
+wilt thou that I restore thee to thy father and mother?' 'By
+Allah, O my lord, that is not my desire,' answered she; 'my
+only wish is to be with thee wherever thou art; for I am
+distracted by the love of thee from all else, even to my father
+and mother.' At this the prince rejoiced greatly and made
+the horse fare softly with them, so as not to disquiet the
+princess; nor did they stay their flight till they came in
+sight of a green meadow, in which was a spring of running
+water. Here they alighted and ate and drank; after which they
+took horse again and fared on, till they came in sight of his
+father's capital. At this, the prince was filled with joy and
+bethought himself to show her the seat of his dominion and his
+father's power and dignity and give her to know that it was
+greater than that of her father. So he set her down in one of
+his father's pleasance-gardens [without the city] and carrying
+her into a pavilion there, prepared for the King, left the
+horse at the door and charged her keep watch over it, saying,
+'Sit here, till my messenger come to thee; for I go now to my
+father, to make ready a palace for thee and show thee my royal
+estate.' 'Do as thou wilt,' answered she, for she was glad that
+she should not enter but with due honour and observance, as
+became her rank.
+
+Then he left her and betook himself to the palace of the King
+his father, who rejoiced in his return and welcomed him; and
+the prince said to him, 'Know that I have brought with me the
+princess of whom I told thee and have left her without the city
+in such a garden and come to tell thee, that thou mayest make
+ready and go forth to meet her in state and show her thy royal
+dignity and troops and guards.' 'With all my heart,' answered
+the King and straightway bade decorate the city after the
+goodliest fashion. Then he took horse and rode out in all state
+and splendour, he and his troops and household and grandees;
+whilst the prince made ready for her a litter of green and
+red and yellow brocade, in which he set Indian and Greek
+and Abyssinian slave-girls. Moreover, he took forth of his
+treasuries jewellery and apparel and what else of the things
+that kings treasure up and made a rare display of wealth and
+magnificence. Then he left the litter and those who were
+therein and rode forward to the pavilion, where he had left the
+princess; but found both her and the horse gone. When he saw
+this, he buffeted his face and rent his clothes and went round
+about the garden, as he had lost his wits; after which he came
+to his senses and said to himself, 'How could she have come at
+the secret of the horse, seeing I told her nothing of it? Maybe
+the Persian sage who made the horse has chanced upon her and
+stolen her away, in revenge for my father's treatment of him.'
+Then he sought the keepers of the garden and asked them if they
+had seen any enter the garden.
+
+Quoth they, 'We have seen none enter but the Persian sage, who
+came to gather simples.' So the prince was certified that it
+was indeed he that had taken away the princess and abode
+confounded and perplexed concerning his case. And he was
+abashed before the folk and returning to his father, [told him
+what had happened and] said to him, 'Take the troops and return
+to the city. As for me, I will never return till I have cleared
+up this affair.' When the King heard this, he wept and beat his
+breast and said to him, 'O my son, calm thyself and master thy
+chagrin and return with us and look what King's daughter thou
+wouldst fain have, that I may marry thee to her.' But the
+prince paid no heed to his words and bidding him farewell,
+departed, whilst the King returned to the city and their joy
+was changed into mourning.
+
+Now, as Fate would have it, when the prince left the princess
+in the pavilion and betook himself to his father's palace, for
+the ordering of his affair, the Persian entered the garden to
+pluck simples and scenting the fragrance of musk and essences,
+that exhaled from the princess's person and perfumed the whole
+place, followed it till he came to the pavilion and saw the horse,
+that he had made with his own hands, standing at the door. At
+this sight, his heart was filled with joy and gladness, for he
+had mourned sore for it, since it had gone out of his hand. So
+he went up to it and examining its every part, found it safe
+and sound; whereupon he was about to mount and ride away, when
+he bethought himself and said, 'Needs must I first look what
+the prince hath brought and left here with the horse.' So he
+entered the pavilion and seeing the princess sitting there, as
+she were the sun shining in the cloudless sky, knew her to be
+some high-born lady and doubted not but the prince had brought
+her thither on the horse and left her in the pavilion, whilst
+he went to the city, to make ready for her entry in state.
+
+Then he went up to her and kissed the earth before her,
+whereupon she raised her eyes to him and finding him exceeding
+foul of face and favour, said, 'Who art thou?' 'O my lady,'
+answered he, 'I am sent by the prince, who hath bidden me bring
+thee to another garden, nearer the city; for that my lady the
+queen cannot go so far a journey and is unwilling, of her joy
+in thee, that another should forestall her with thee.' 'Where
+is the prince?' asked she; and the Persian replied, 'He is in
+the city, with his father, and will presently come for thee in
+great state.' 'O fellow,' said she, 'could he find none to send
+to me but thee?' At this he laughed and answered, 'O my lady,
+let not the ugliness of my face and the foulness of my favour
+deceive thee. Hadst thou profited of me as hath the prince,
+thou wouldst praise my affair. Indeed, he chose me as his
+messenger to thee, because of my uncomeliness and forbidding
+aspect, in his jealousy and love of thee: else hath he slaves
+and pages and servants, white and black, out of number, each
+goodlier than the other.' When she heard this, it commended
+itself to her reason and she believed him; so she rose and
+putting her hand in his, said, 'O my father, what hast thou
+brought me to ride?' 'O my lady,' answered he, 'thou shalt ride
+the horse thou camest on.' Quoth she, 'I cannot ride it by
+myself.' Whereupon he smiled and knew that she was in his power
+and said, 'I myself will ride with thee.' So he mounted and
+taking her up behind him, bound her fast to himself, for she
+knew not what he would with her. Then he turned the peg of
+ascent, whereupon the belly of the horse became full of wind
+and it swayed to and fro and rose with them into the air nor
+slackened in its flight, till it was out of sight of the city.
+
+When the princess saw this, she said to him, 'O fellow, what
+didst thou tell me of the prince, that he sent thee to me?'
+'Foul befall the prince!' answered the Persian. 'He is a
+scurril knave.' And she said, 'Out on thee! How darest thou
+disobey thy lord's commandment!' 'He is no lord of mine,'
+rejoined the Persian. 'Knowst thou who I am?' 'I know nothing
+of thee,' replied the princess, 'save what thou toldest me.'
+Quoth he, 'What I told thee was a trick of mine against thee
+and the prince. I am he who made this horse under us, and I
+have long regretted its loss; for the prince made himself
+master of it. But now I have gotten possession of it and of
+thee too, and I will rack his heart, even as he hath racked
+mine; nor shall he ever have the horse again. So take comfort
+and be of good cheer, for I can be of more service to thee than
+he.' When she heard this, she buffeted her face and cried out,
+saying, 'Ah, woe is me! I have neither gotten my beloved nor
+kept my father and mother!' And she wept sore over what had
+befallen her, whilst the Persian fared on with her, without
+ceasing, till he came to the land of the Greeks and alighted in
+a verdant meadow, abounding in trees and streams.
+
+Now this meadow was near a city, in which was a king of great
+puissance, and it befell that he went forth that day to hunt
+and divert himself. As he passed by the meadow, he saw the
+Persian standing there, with the princess and the horse by his
+side, and before he was aware, the King's followers fell upon
+him and carried him, the lady and the horse to their master,
+who noting the foulness of his favour and the beauty and grace
+of the princess, said to the latter, 'O my lady, what kin is
+this old fellow to thee?' The Persian made haste to reply, 'She
+is my wife and the daughter of my father's brother.' But she
+gave him the lie and said, 'O King, by Allah, I know him not,
+nor is he my husband, but hath stolen me away by force and
+fraud.' Thereupon the King bade beat the Persian, and they beat
+him, till he was well-nigh dead; after which the King commanded
+to carry him to the city and cast him into prison, and taking
+the princess and the horse from him, set the former in his
+harem and laid up the latter in his treasury, though he knew
+not its properties nor the secret of its motion.
+
+Meanwhile, the prince donned a travelling-habit and taking what
+he needed of money, set out, in very sorry plight, in quest of
+the princess, and journeyed from country to country and city to
+city, enquiring after the ebony horse, whilst all who heard him
+marvelled at him and deemed his talk extravagant. Thus did he a
+long while; but, for all his enquiry and research, he could win
+at no news of her. At last, he came to the city of Senaa and
+there enquired for her, but could get no tidings of her and
+found her father mourning her loss. So he turned back and made
+for the land of the Greeks, pursuing his enquiries as he went,
+till, as chance would have it, he alighted at a certain khan
+and saw a company of merchants sitting talking. He sat down
+near them and heard one say to the others, 'O my friends, I
+happened lately upon a wonder of wonders.' 'What was that?'
+asked they, and he answered, 'I was late in such a city,'
+naming the city wherein was the princess, 'and heard its people
+speak of a strange thing that had lately befallen. It was that
+their King went out one day a-hunting, with a company of his
+courtiers and the grandees of his realm, and coming to a green
+meadow, espied there a man standing, with a horse of ebony, and
+a lady sitting hard by. The man was ugly and foul of favour,
+but the lady was a marvel of beauty and grace and symmetry; and
+as for the ebony horse, it was a wonder, never saw eyes aught
+goodlier than it nor more perfect than its fashion.' 'And
+what did the King with them?' asked the others. 'As for the
+man,' said the merchant, 'he questioned him of the lady and
+he pretended that she was his wife and the daughter of his
+father's brother; but she gave him the lie. So the King took
+her from him and bade beat him and cast him into prison. As
+for the horse, I know not what became of it.' When the prince
+heard this, he drew near unto the speaker and questioned him
+discreetly and courteously, till he told him the name of the
+city and of its king; which when he knew, he passed the night,
+full of joy.
+
+On the morrow, he set out and travelled till he reached the
+city; but, when he would have entered, the gatekeepers laid
+hands on him, that they might bring him before the King; for
+that it was his wont to question all strangers respecting their
+conditions and the crafts in which they were skilled and the
+reason of their coming thither. Now it was eventide, when he
+entered the city, and it was then too late to go in to the King
+or take counsel with him respecting him. So they carried him to
+the prison, thinking to lay him therein for the night; but,
+when the warders saw his beauty and grace, they could not find
+it in their hearts to imprison him, but made him sit with them,
+without the prison; and when food came to them, he ate his fill
+with them. When they had made an end of eating, they turned to
+him and said, 'What countryman art thou?' 'I come from Persia,'
+answered he, 'the land of the Chosroës.' When they heard this,
+they laughed and one of them said, 'O Chosroän, I have heard
+the talk of men and their histories and looked upon their
+conditions; but never saw or heard I a greater liar than the
+Chosroän that is with us in the prison.' 'Nor,' quoth another,
+'did I ever see fouler than his favour or more repulsive than
+his aspect.' 'What have ye seen of his lying?' asked the
+prince, and they answered, 'He pretends that he is a sage. Now
+the King came upon him, as he went a-hunting, and found with
+him a most beautiful lady and a horse of ebony, never saw I a
+handsomer. As for the lady, she is with the King, who is
+enamoured of her and would fain marry her; but she is mad, and
+were this man a physician, as he pretends, he would have cured
+her, for the King doth his utmost endeavour to find a remedy
+for her disease, and this whole year past hath he spent
+treasures upon physicians and astrologers, on her account; but
+none can avail to cure her. As for the horse, it is in the
+royal treasury, and the man is here with us in the prison; and
+all night long he weeps and bemoans himself and will not let us
+sleep.'
+
+When the prince heard this, he bethought himself of a device by
+which he might compass his desire; and presently the warders,
+being minded to sleep, clapped him into the prison and locked
+the door. He heard the Persian weeping and bemoaning himself,
+in his own tongue, and saying, 'Woe is me for my sin, that I
+sinned against myself and against the King's son, in that which
+I did with the damsel; for I neither left her nor got my desire
+of her! All this comes of my want of sense, in that I sought
+for myself that which I deserved not and which befitted not the
+like of me; for he, who seeks what befits him not, falleth into
+the like of my predicament.' When the prince heard this, he
+accosted him in Persian, saying, 'How long wilt thou keep up
+this weeping and wailing? Thinkst thou that there hath befallen
+thee what never befell other than thou?' When the Persian heard
+this, he made friends with him and began to complain to him of
+his case and misfortunes.
+
+As soon as it was day, the warders took the prince and carried
+him before the King, informing him that he had entered the city
+on the previous night, at a time when no audience could be had
+of him. Quoth the King to the prince, 'Whence comest thou and
+what is thy name and craft and why comest thou hither?' And he
+answered, 'I am called, in Persian, Herjeh. I come from the
+land of Fars and I am of the men of art and especially of the
+art of medicine and cure the sick and the mad. For this, I go
+round about all countries and cities, adding knowledge to my
+knowledge, and whenever I see a sick person, I heal him; and
+this is my craft.' When the King heard this, he rejoiced
+exceedingly and said, 'O excellent sage, thou hast come to us
+at a time when we have need of thee.' Then he acquainted him
+with the case of the princess, adding, 'If thou win to cure her
+and recover her of her madness, thou shalt have of me whatever
+thou seekest.' 'May God advance the King!' rejoined the prince.
+'Describe to me all thou hast seen of her madness and tell me
+how long it is since it attacked her; also how thou camest by
+her.' So the King told him the whole story, from first to last,
+adding, 'The sage is in prison.' 'O august King,' said the
+prince, 'and what hast thou done with the horse?' 'It is with
+me yet, laid up in one of my treasure-chambers,' replied the
+King; whereupon quoth the prince in himself, 'The first thing
+to do is to see the horse and assure myself of its condition.
+If it be whole and unhurt, all will be well; but, if its works
+be destroyed, I must find some other way of delivering my
+beloved.'
+
+So he turned to the King and said to him, 'O King, I must see
+the horse in question: haply I may find in it somewhat that
+will serve me for the recovery of the damsel.' 'With all my
+heart,' replied the King and taking him by the hand, led him to
+the place where the horse was. The prince went round about it,
+examining its condition, and found it whole and unhurt, whereat
+he rejoiced greatly and said to the King, 'May God exalt the
+King! I would fain go in to the damsel, that I may see how it
+is with her; for I hope, by God's grace, to cure her by means
+of the horse.' Then he bade take care of the horse and the King
+carried him to the princess's apartment, where he found her
+writhing and beating herself against the ground, as was her
+wont; but there was no madness in her, and she did this but
+that none might approach her. When the prince saw her thus, he
+said to her, 'No harm shall betide thee, O ravishment of all
+creatures;' and went on to soothe her and speak her fair, till
+he won to make himself known to her; whereupon she gave a loud
+cry and fell down in a swoon for excess of joy; but the King
+thought this came of her fear of him.
+
+Then the prince put his mouth to her ear and said to her, 'O
+seduction of the universe, have a care for thy life and mine
+and be patient and constant; for we have need of patience and
+skilful ordinance to make shift for our delivery from this
+tyrannical King. To begin with, I will now go out to him and
+tell him that thou art possessed of a genie, and hence thy
+madness; but, that if he will loose thee from thy bonds, I will
+engage to heal thee and drive away the evil spirit. So, when he
+comes in to thee, do thou give him fair words, that he may
+think I have cured thee, and all will be accomplished as we
+desire.' Quoth she, 'I hear and obey;' and he went out to the
+King, full of joy and happiness, and said to him, 'O august
+King, by thy good fortune I have discovered her disease and its
+remedy and have cured her for thee. So now do thou go in to her
+and speak softly to her and entreat her kindly, and promise her
+what may please her; so shall all thou desirest of her be
+accomplished to thee.' So he went in to her and when she saw
+him, she rose and kissing the ground, bade him welcome; whereat
+he was greatly rejoiced and bade the eunuchs and waiting-women
+attend her and carry her to the bath and make ready for her
+dresses and ornaments.
+
+So they went in to her and saluted her, and she returned their
+greeting, after the goodliest and pleasantest fashion; after
+which they clad her in royal apparel and clasping a collar of
+jewels about her neck, carried her to the bath and served her
+there. Then they brought her forth, as she were the full moon;
+and when she came into the King's presence, she saluted him and
+kissed the ground before him, whereupon he rejoiced in her with
+an exceeding joy and said to the prince, 'All this is of thy
+blessing, may God increase us of thy good offices!' Quoth the
+prince, 'O King, it behoves, for the completion of her cure,
+that thou carry her forth, together with the ebony horse, and
+attend her with all thy troops to the place where thou foundest
+her, that there I may expel from her the evil spirit, by whom
+she is possessed, and bind him and kill him, so he may never
+more return to her.' 'With all my heart,' answered the King.
+Then he caused carry out the horse to the meadow in question
+and mounting, rode thither with all his troops and the princess,
+knowing not the prince's purpose.
+
+When they came to the appointed place, the prince bade set the
+horse and the princess as far as the eye could reach from the
+King and his troops and said to the former, 'With thy leave, I
+will now proceed to the needful fumigations and conjurations
+and imprison the genie here, that he may nevermore return to
+her. After this, I shall mount the horse and take the damsel up
+behind me; whereupon it will sway to and fro and fare forward,
+till it come to thee, when the affair will be at an end; and
+after this thou mayst do with her as thou wilt.' And when the
+King heard his words, he rejoiced with an exceeding joy. So the
+prince mounted the horse and taking the princess up behind him,
+bound her fast to him, whilst the King and his troops watched
+him. Then he turned the peg of ascent and the horse took flight
+and soared with them into the air, till he disappeared from
+sight.
+
+The King abode half the day, expecting their return; but they
+returned not. So, when he despaired of them, he returned to the
+city with his troops, repenting him greatly of that which he
+had done and grieving sore for the loss of the damsel. He shut
+himself up in his palace, mourning and afflicted; but his
+Viziers came in to him and applied themselves to comfort him,
+saying, 'Verily, he who took the damsel is an enchanter, and
+praised be God who hath delivered thee from his craft and
+sorcery!' And they ceased not from him, till he was comforted
+for her loss.
+
+Meanwhile, the prince bent his course, in joy and cheer,
+towards his father's capital and stayed not, till he alighted
+on his own palace, where he set the princess in safety; after
+which he went in to his father and mother and acquainted them
+with her coming, whereat they rejoiced exceedingly. Then he
+made great banquets to the townsfolk and they held high
+festival a whole month, at the end of which time he went in to
+the princess and they rejoiced in one another with an exceeding
+joy. But his father broke the horse in pieces and destroyed its
+works. Moreover, the prince wrote a letter to the princess's
+father, advising him of all that had befallen her and how she
+was now married to him and in all health and happiness, and
+sent it by a messenger, together with costly presents and
+rarities. The messenger, in due course, arrived at the city of
+Senaa and delivered the letter and the presents to the King,
+who, when he read the former, rejoiced greatly and accepted the
+presents, rewarding the bearer handsomely. Moreover, he sent
+rich presents to his son-in-law by the same messenger, who
+returned to his master and acquainted him with what had passed,
+whereat he was much cheered. And after this the prince wrote a
+letter every year to his father-in-law and sent him a present,
+till, in course of time, his father King Sabour died and he
+reigned in his stead, ruling justly over his subjects and
+ordering himself well and righteously towards them, so that
+they submitted themselves to him and did him loyal service; and
+he and his wife abode in the enjoyment of all delight and
+solace of life, till there came to them the Destroyer of
+Delights and Sunderer of Companies, He that layeth waste the
+palaces and peopleth the tombs; and glory be to the Living One
+who dieth not and in whose hand is the dominion of the Seen and
+the Unseen!
+
+
+
+
+
+ UNS EL WUJOUD AND THE VIZIER'S DAUGHTER
+ ROSE-IN-BUD.
+
+
+
+
+There was once, of old days and in bygone ages and times, a
+King of great power and glory and dominion, who had a Vizier
+named Ibrahim, and this Vizier had a daughter of extraordinary
+beauty and grace, gifted with surpassing brilliancy and all
+perfection, possessed of abundant wit and perfectly accomplished.
+She loved wine and good cheer and fair faces and choice verses
+and rare stories; and the delicacy of her charms invited all
+hearts to love, even as Saith the poet, describing her:
+
+She shines out like the moon at full, that midst the stars doth
+ fare, And for a wrapping-veil she hath the ringlets of her
+ hair.
+The Eastern zephyr gives her boughs to drink of all its sweets
+ And like a jointed cane, she sways to every breath of air.
+She smiles in passing by. O thou that dost alike accord With
+ red and yellow and arrayed in each, alike art fair,
+Thou sportest with my wit in love, so that indeed meseems As if
+ a sparrow in the clutch of playful urchin 'twere.
+
+Her name was Rose-in-bud and she was so named for the exceeding
+delicacy and perfection of her beauty; and the King loved to
+carouse with her, because of her wit and good breeding.
+
+Now it was the King's custom yearly to gather together all the
+nobles of his realm and play with the ball. So, when the day
+came round, on which the folk assembled for ball-play, the
+Vizier's daughter seated herself at her lattice, to divert
+herself by looking on at the game; and as they were at play,
+her eyes fell upon a youth among them, never was seen a
+handsomer than he or a goodlier of favour, for he was bright of
+face, laughing-teethed, tall and broad-shouldered. She looked
+at him again and again and could not take her fill of gazing on
+him. Then she said to her nurse, 'What is the name of yonder
+handsome young man among the troops?' 'O my daughter,' replied
+the nurse, 'they are all handsome. Which of them dost thou
+mean?' 'Wait till he passes,' said Rose-in-bud, 'and I will
+point him out to thee.' So she took an apple and waited till he
+came under her window, when she dropped it on him, whereupon he
+raised his head, to see who did this, and saw the Vizier's
+daughter at the window, as she were the full moon in the
+darkness of the night; nor did he withdraw his eyes, till he
+had fallen passionately in love with her; and he recited the
+following verses:
+
+Was it an archer shot me or did thine eyes undo The lover's
+ heart that saw thee, what time thou metst his view?
+Did the notched arrow reach me from midst a host, indeed, Or
+ was it from a lattice that launched at me it flew?
+
+ When the game was at an end, he went away with the King,
+[whose servant and favourite he was,] with heart occupied with
+love of her; and she said to her nurse, 'What is the name of
+that youth I showed thee?' 'His name is Uns el Wujoud,'
+answered she; whereat Rose-in-bud shook her head and lay down
+on her couch, with a heart on fire for love. Then, sighing
+deeply, she improvised the following verses:
+
+He erred not who dubbed thee, "All creatures' delight,"[FN#75]
+ That pleasance and bounty[FN#76] at once dust unite.
+Full-moonlike of aspect, O thou whose fair face O'er all the
+ creation sheds glory and light,
+Thou'rt peerless midst mortals, the sovran of grace, And many a
+ witness to this I can cite.
+Thy brows are a Noun[FN#77] and shine eyes are a Sad,[FN#78]
+ That the hand of the loving Creator did write;
+Thy shape is the soft, tender sapling, that gives Of its
+ bounties to all that its favours invite.
+Yea, indeed, thou excellest the world's cavaliers In pleasance
+ and beauty and bounty and might.
+
+When she had finished, she wrote the verses on a sheet of
+paper, which she folded in a piece of gold-embroidered silk and
+laid under her pillow. Now one of her nurses saw her; so she
+came up to her and held her in talk, till she slept, when she
+stole the scroll from under her pillow and reading it, knew
+that she had fallen in love with Uns el Wujoud. Then she
+returned the scroll to its place and when her mistress awoke,
+she said to her, 'O my lady, indeed, I am to thee a faithful
+counsellor and am tenderly solicitous for thee. Know that
+passion is grievous and the hiding it melteth iron and causeth
+sickness and unease; nor is there reproach for whoso confesses
+it.' 'O my nurse,' rejoined Rose-in-bud,'and what is the remedy
+of passion?' 'The remedy of passion is enjoyment,' answered the
+nurse. 'And how may one come by enjoyment?' asked Rose-in-bud.
+'By letters and messages,' replied the nurse, 'and many a
+tender word and greeting; this brings lovers together and makes
+hard matters easy. So, if thou have aught at heart, mistress
+mine, I will engage to keep thy secret and do thy need and
+carry thy letters.'
+
+When the girl heard this, her reason fled for joy; but she
+restrained herself from speech, till she should see the issue
+of the matter, saying in herself, 'None knoweth this thing of
+me, nor will I trust this woman with my secret, till I have
+proved her.' Then said the nurse, 'O my lady, I saw in my sleep
+as though one came to me and said, "Thy mistress and Uns el
+Wujoud love one another; so do thou serve their loves by
+carrying their messages and doing their need and keeping their
+secrets; and much good shall befall thee." So now I have told
+thee my dream, and it is thine to decide.' 'O my nurse,' quoth
+Rose-in-bud, 'canst thou keep secrets?' 'And how should I not
+keep secrets,' answered the nurse, 'I that am of the flower of
+the free-born?' Then Rose-in-bud pulled out the scroll, on
+which she had written the verses afore said, and said to her,'
+Carry this my letter to Uns el Wujoud and bring me his answer.'
+
+So the nurse took the letter and repairing to Uns el Wujoud,
+kissed his hands and saluted him right courteously, then gave
+him the letter; and he read it and wrote on the back the
+following verses:
+
+I temper my heart in passion and hide my case as I may; But my
+ case interprets for me and doth my love bewray.
+And whenas my lids brim over with tears,--lest the spy should
+ see And come to fathom my secret,--"My eye is sore," I
+ say.
+Of old I was empty-hearted and knew not what love was; But now
+ I am passion's bondman, my heart to love's a prey.
+To thee I prefer my petition, complaining of passion and pain,
+ So haply thou mayst be softened and pity my dismay.
+With the tears of my eye I have traced it, that so unto thee it
+ may The tidings of what I suffer for thee to thee convey.
+God watch o'er a visage, that veileth itself with beauty, a
+ face That the full moon serves as a bondman and the stars
+ as slaves obey!
+Yea' Allah protect her beauty, whose like I ne'er beheld! The
+ boughs from her graceful carriage, indeed, might learn to
+ sway.
+I beg thee to grant me a visit; algates, if it irk thee nought.
+ An thou knewst how dearly I'd prize it, thou wouldst not
+ say me nay.
+I give thee my life, so haply thou mayst accept it: to me Thy
+ presence is life eternal and hell thy turning away.
+
+Then he folded the letter and kissing it, gave it to the nurse
+and said to her, 'O nurse, incline thy lady's heart to me.' 'I
+hear and obey,' answered she and carried the letter to her
+mistress, who kissed it and laid it on her head, then wrote at
+the foot of it these verses:
+
+Harkye, thou whose heart is taken with my grace and loveliness,
+ Have but patience, and right surely thou my favours shalt
+ possess.
+When we were assured the passion thou avouchedst was sincere
+ And that that which us betided had betided thee no less,
+Gladly had we then vouchsafed thee what thou sighedst for, and
+ more; But our guardians estopped us to each other from
+ access.
+When night darkens on the dwellings, fires are lighted in our
+ heart And our entrails burn within us, for desire and
+ love's excess.
+Yea, for love and longing, slumber is a stranger to our couch
+ And the burning pangs of fever do our body sore distress.
+'Twas a law of passion ever, love and longing to conceal; Lift
+ not thou the curtain from us nor our secret aye
+ transgress.
+Ah, my heart is overflowing with the love of yon gazelle; Would
+ it had not left our dwellings for the distant wilderness.
+
+Then she folded the letter and gave it to the nurse, who took
+it and went out to go to the young man; but as she went forth
+the door, her master met her and said to her, 'Whither away?'
+'To the bath,' answered she; but, in her trouble, she dropped
+the letter, without knowing it, and one of the servants, seeing
+it lying in the way, picked it up. When she came without the
+door, she sought for it, but found it not, so turned back to
+her mistress and told her of this and what had befallen her
+with the Vizier.
+
+Meanwhile, the latter came out of the harem and seated himself
+on his couch. Presently, the servant, who had picked up the
+letter, came in to him, with it in his hand, and said, 'O my
+lord, I found this paper lying on the floor and picked it up.'
+So the Vizier took it from his hand, folded as it was, and
+opening it, read the verses above set down. Then he examined
+the writing and knew it for his daughter's hand; whereupon he
+went in to her mother, weeping so sore that his beard was
+drenched. 'What makes thee weep, O my lord?' asked she; and he
+answered, 'Take this letter and see what is therein.' So she
+took it and saw it to be a love-letter from her daughter
+Rose-in-bud to Uns el Wujoud; whereupon the tears sprang to her
+eyes; but she mastered herself and swallowing her tears, said
+to her husband, 'O my lord, there is no profit in weeping: the
+right course is to cast about for a means of preserving thine
+honour and concealing thy daughter's affair.' And she went on
+to comfort him and lighten his trouble. Quoth he, 'I am fearful
+of what may ensue this passion of my daughter, and that for two
+reasons. The first concerns myself; it is, that she is my daughter;
+the second, that Uns el Wujoud is a favourite with the Sultan,
+who loves him with an exceeding love, and maybe great troubles
+shall come of this affair. What deemest thou of the matter?'
+'Wait,' answered she, 'whilst I pray to God for direction.'
+So she prayed a two-bow prayer, according to the prophetic
+ordinance of the prayer for divine guidance; after which she
+said to her husband, 'Amiddleward the Sea of Treasures stands
+a mountain called the Mount of the Bereaved Mother,' (the cause
+of which being so named shall follow in its place, if it be the
+will of God,) 'and thither can none come, save with difficulty;
+do thou make her an abiding-place there.'
+
+So the Vizier and his wife agreed to build, on the mountain in
+question, a strong castle and lodge his daughter therein with a
+year's victual, to be annually renewed, and attendants to serve
+and keep her company. Accordingly, he collected builders and
+carpenters and architects and despatched them to the mountain,
+where they builded her an impregnable castle, never saw eyes
+its like. Then he made ready victual and carriage for the
+journey and going in to his daughter by night, bade her make
+ready to set out on a pleasure-excursion. She refused to set
+out by night, but he was instant with her, till she went forth;
+and when she saw the preparations for the journey, her heart
+misgave her of separation from her beloved and she wept sore
+and wrote upon the door the following verses, to acquaint him
+with what had passed and with the transports of passion and
+grief that were upon her, transports such as would make the
+flesh quake, that would cause the hearts of stones to melt and
+eyes to overflow with tears:
+
+By Allah, O house, if the loved one pass in the morning-glow
+ And greet with the greeting of lovers, as they pass to and
+ fro,
+Give him our salutation, a pure and fragrant one, For that we
+ have departed, and whither he may not know.
+Why on this wise they hurry me off by stealth, anights And
+ lightly equipped, I know not, nor whither with me they go.
+Neath cover of night and darkness, they carry me forth, alack I
+ Whilst the birds in the brake bewail us and make their
+ moan for our woe;
+And the tongue of the case interprets their language and cries,
+ "Alas, Alas for the pain of parting from those that we
+ love, heigho!"
+When I saw that the cups of sev'rance were filled and that
+ Fate, indeed, Would give us to drink of its bitter,
+ unmingled, would we or no,
+I blended the draught with patience becoming, as best I might;
+ But patience avails not to solace my heart for your loss,
+ I trow.
+
+Then she mounted, and they set forward with her and fared on
+over desert and plain and hill, till they came to the shore of
+the Sea of Treasures, where they pitched their tents and built
+a great ship, in which they embarked her and her suite and
+carried them over to the mountain. Here they left them in the
+castle and making their way back to the shore, broke up the
+vessel, in obedience to the Vizier's commandment, and returned
+home, weeping over what had befallen.
+
+Meanwhile, Uns el Wujoud arose from sleep and prayed the
+morning prayer, after which he mounted and rode forth to wait
+upon the Sultan. On his way, he passed by the Vizier's house,
+thinking to see some of his followers, as of wont, but saw no
+one and drawing near the door, read the verses aforesaid
+written thereon. At this sight, his senses failed him; fire was
+kindled in his vitals and he returned to his lodging, where he
+passed the rest of the day in ceaseless trouble and anxiety,
+without finding ease or patience, till night darkened upon him,
+when his transport redoubled. So he put off his clothes and
+disguising himself in a fakir's habit, set out, at a venture,
+under cover of the night, distraught and knowing not whither he
+went.
+
+He wandered on all that night and next day, till the heat of
+the sun grew fierce and the mountains flamed like fire and
+thirst was grievous upon him. Presently, he espied a tree, by
+whose side was a spring of running water; so he made towards it
+and sitting down in the shade, on the bank of the rivulet,
+essayed to drink, but found that the water had no taste in his
+mouth. Then, [looking in the stream,] he saw that his body was
+wasted, his colour changed and his face grown pale and his,
+feet, to boot, swollen with walking and weariness. So he shed
+copious tears and repeated the following verses:
+
+The lover is drunken with love of his fair; In longing and heat
+ he redoubles fore'er.
+Love-maddened, confounded, distracted, perplexed, No dwelling
+ is pleasant to him and no fare.
+For how, to a lover cut off from his love, Can life be
+ delightsome? 'Twere strange an it were.
+I melt with the fire of my passion for her And the tears down
+ my cheek roll and never forbear.
+Shall I ever behold her or one from her stead, With whom I may
+ solace my heart in despair?
+
+And he wept till he wet the ground; after which he rose and
+fared on again over deserts and wilds, till there came out upon
+him a lion, with a neck buried in hair, a head the bigness of a
+dome, a mouth wider than the door [thereof] and teeth like
+elephants' tusks. When Uns el Wujoud saw him, he gave himself up
+for lost and turning towards Mecca, pronounced the professions
+of the faith and prepared for death.
+
+Now he had read in books that whoso will flatter the lion,
+beguileth him, for that he is lightly duped by fair words and
+glorieth in praise; so he began and said, 'O lion of the forest
+and the waste! O unconquerable warrior! O father of heroes and
+Sultan of wild beasts! Behold, I am a desireful lover, whom
+passion and severance have undone. Since I parted from my
+beloved, I have lost my reason; wherefore, do thou hearken to
+my speech and have ruth on my passion and love-longing.' When
+the lion heard this, he drew back from him and sitting down on
+his hind-quarters, raised his head to him and began to frisk
+his tail and paws to him; which when Uns el Wujoud saw, he
+recited these verses:
+
+Wilt slay me, O lord of the desert, before My enslaver I meet
+ with, e'en her I adore?
+No fat on me is; I'm no booty for thee; For the loss of my
+ loved one hath wasted me sore.
+Yea, my love's separation hath worn out my soul, And I'm grown
+ like a shape, with a shroud covered o'er.
+Give the railers not cause to exult in my woe, O prince of the
+ spoilers, O lion of war!
+A lover, all sleepless for loss of my dear, I'm drowned in the
+ tears from mine eyelids that pour;
+And my pining for her in the darkness of night Hath robbed me,
+ for passion, of reason and lore.
+
+When he had finished, the lion rose and coming softly up to
+him, with his eyes full of tears, licked him with his tongue,
+then walked on before him, signing to him, as who should say,
+'Follow me.' So he followed him, and he led him on till he
+brought him, over a mountain, to the farther side, where he
+came upon the track of a caravan and knew it to be that of
+Rose-in-bud and her company. When the lion saw that he knew the
+track and set himself to follow it, he turned back and went his
+way; whilst Uns el Wujoud followed the foot-marks, till they
+brought him to a surging sea, swollen with clashing billows. The
+trail led down to the water's edge and there broke off; whereby
+he knew that they had taken ship there and had continued their
+journey by sea. So he lost hope of finding his beloved and
+repeated the following verses, weeping sore:
+
+Far's the place of visitation and my patience faileth me For my
+ love; but how to reach her o'er the abysses of the sea?
+When, for love of her, my vitals are consumed and I've forsworn
+ Slumber, sleep for wake exchanging, ah, how can I patient
+ be?
+Since the day she left the homesteads and departed, hath my
+ heart Burnt with never-ceasing anguish, all a-fire with
+ agony.
+Oxus and Jaxartes, running like Euphrates, are my tears; More
+ than rain and flood abounding, run like rivers to the sea.
+Ulcerated are my eyelids with the running of the tears, And my
+ heart on fires of passion's burnt and wasted utterly.
+Yea, the armies of my longing and my transport on me pressed,
+ And the hosts of my endurance did before them break and
+ flee.
+Lavishly my life I've ventured for the love of her; for life Is
+ the lightest to a lover of all ventures, verily.
+Be an eye of God unpunished that beheld the beauteous one, Than
+ the moon how much more splendid, in the harem's sanctuary!
+Struck was I and smitten prostrate by wide-opened eyes, whose
+ shafts, From a bow all stringless loosened, pierced the
+ hapless heart of me.
+By the soft and flexile motions of her shape she captived me,
+ Swaying as the limber branches sway upon the cassia-tree.
+Union with her I covet, that therewith I may apply Solace to
+ the pains of passion, love and care and misery.
+For the love of her, afflicted, as I am, I have become; All
+ that's fallen on me betided from the evil eye, perdie.
+
+Then he wept, till he swooned away, and abode in his swoon a
+long while. When he came to himself, he looked right and left
+and seeing none in the desert, was fearful of the wild beasts;
+so he climbed to the top of a high mountain, where he heard a
+man's voice speaking within a cavern. He listened and found it
+to be that of a devotee, who had forsworn the world and given
+himself up to pious exercises. So he knocked thrice at the
+cavern door; but the hermit made him no answer, neither came
+forth to him; wherefore he sighed heavily and recited the
+following verses:
+
+What way is open unto me, to my desire to get And put off
+ weariness and toil and trouble and regret?
+All pains and terrors have combined on me, to make me hoar And
+ old of head and heart, whilst I a very child am yet.
+I find no friend to solace me of longing and unease' Nor one
+ 'gainst passion and its stress to aid me and abet.
+Alas, the torments I endure for waste and wistful love!
+ Fortune, meseems, 'gainst me is turned and altogether set.
+Ah, woe's me for the lover's pain, unresting, passion-burnt,
+ Him who in parting's bitter cup his lips perforce hath
+ wet!
+His wit is ravished clean away by separation's woe, Fire in his
+ heart and all consumed his entrails by its fret.
+Ah, what a dreadful day it was, when to her stead I came And
+ that, which on the door was writ, my eyes confounded met!
+I wept, until I gave the earth to drink of my despair; But
+ still from friend and foe I hid the woes that me beset.
+Then strayed I forth till, in the waste, a lion sprang on me
+ And would have slain me straight; but him with flattering
+ words I met
+And soothed him. So he spared my life and succoured me, as
+ 'twere He too had known love's taste and been entangled in
+ its net.
+Yet, for all this, could I but win to come to my desire, All,
+ that I've suffered and endured, straightway I should
+ forget.
+O thou, that harbour'st in thy cave, distracted from the world,
+ Meseems thou'st tasted love and been its slave, O
+ anchoret!
+
+Hardly had he made an end of these verses when, behold, the
+door of the cavern opened and he heard one say' 'Alas, the pity
+of it I' So he entered and saluted the hermit, who returned his
+greeting and said to him, 'What is thy name?' 'Uns el Wujoud,'
+answered the young man. 'And what brings thee hither?' asked
+the hermit. So he told him his whole story, whereat he wept and
+said' 'O Uns el Wujoud, these twenty years have I dwelt in this
+place, but never beheld I any here, till the other day, when I
+heard a noise of cries and weeping, and looking forth in the
+direction of the sound, saw much people and tents pitched on
+the sea-shore. They built a ship, in which they embarked and
+sailed away. Then some of them returned with the ship and
+breaking it up, went their way; and methinks those, who
+embarked in the ship and returned not, are they whom thou
+seekest. In that case, thy trouble must needs be grievous and
+thou art excusable; though never yet was lover but suffered
+sorrows.' Then he recited the following verses:
+
+Uns el Wujoud, thou deem'st me free of heart, but, wel-a-way!
+ Longing and transport and desire fold and unfold me aye.
+Yea, love and passion have I known even from my earliest years,
+ Since at my mother's nursing breast a suckling babe I lay.
+I struggled sore and long with Love, till I his power
+ confessed. If thou enquire at him of me, he will me not
+ unsay.
+I quaffed the cup of passion out, with languor and disease, And
+ as a phantom I became for pining and decay.
+Strong was I, but my strength is gone and neath the swords of
+ eyes, The armies of my patience broke and vanished clean
+ away.
+Hope not to win delight of love, without chagrin and woe; For
+ contrary with contrary conjoined is alway.
+But fear not change from lover true; do thou but constant be
+ Unto thy wish, and thou shalt sure be happy yet some day:
+For unto lovers passion hath ordained that to forget Is heresy,
+ forbidden all its mandates that obey.
+
+Then he rose and coming to the youth, embraced him, and they
+wept together, till the hills rang with their crying and they
+fell down in a swoon. When they revived, they swore brotherhood
+in God the Most High, and the hermit said to Uns el Wujoud,
+'This night will I pray to God and seek of Him direction what
+thou shouldst do to attain thy desire.'
+
+To return to Rose-in-bud. When they brought her into the castle
+and she beheld its ordinance, she wept and exclaimed, 'By
+Allah, thou art a goodly place, save that thou lackest the
+presence of the beloved in thee!' Then, seeing [many] birds in
+the island, she bade her people set snares for them and hang up
+all they caught in cages within the castle; and they did so. But
+she sat at a window of the castle and bethought her of what had
+passed, and passion and transport and love-longing redoubled
+upon her, till she burst into tears and repeated the following
+verses:
+
+To whom, of my desire complaining, shall I cry, To whom, for
+ loss of loves and parting's sorrow, sigh?
+Flames rage within my breast, but I reveal them not, For fear
+ lest they my case discover to the spy.
+I'm grown as thin as e'er a bodkin's wood, so worn With absence
+ and lament and agony am I.
+Where is the loved one's eye, to see how I'm become Even as a
+ blasted tree, stripped bare and like to die?
+They wronged me, when they shut me prisoner in a place, Wherein
+ my love, alas I may never come me nigh.
+Greetings a thousandfold I beg the sun to bear, What time he
+ riseth up and setteth from the sky,
+To a beloved one, who puts the moon to shame, For loveliness,
+ and doth the Indian cane outvie.
+If the rose ape his cheek, "Now God forfend," I say, "That of
+ my portion aught to pilfer thou shouldst try."
+Lo, in his mouth are springs of limpid water sweet, Refreshment
+ that would bring to those in flames who lie.
+How shall I one forget who is my heart and soul, My malady and
+ he that healing can apply?
+
+Then, as the shadows darkened upon her, her longing increased
+and she called to mind the past and recited these verses also:
+
+The shadows darken and passion stirs up my sickness amain And
+ longing rouses within me the old desireful pain.
+The anguish of parting hath taken its sojourn in my breast And
+ love and longing and sorrow have maddened heart and brain.
+Passion hath made me restless and yearning consumes my soul And
+ tears discover my secret, that else concealed had lain.
+I know of no way to ease me of sickness and care and woe; Nor
+ can my weak endeavour reknit Love's severed skein.
+My heart is a raging furnace, because of the heat whereof My
+ entrails are racked with anguish, that nothing can assain.
+O thou, that thinkest to blame me for what is fallen on me,
+ Enough, I suffer with patience whatever the Fates ordain.
+I swear I shall ne'er find comfort nor be consoled for them,
+ The oath of the children of passion, whose oaths are never
+ in vain!
+Bear tidings, O night, to my dear ones and greet them and
+ witness bear That thou knowest in thee I sleep not, but
+ ever to wake am fain.
+
+Meanwhile, the hermit said to Uns el Wujoud, 'Go down into the
+valley and fetch me palm-fibre.' So he went and returned with
+the palm-fibre, which the hermit took and twisting into ropes,
+made therewith a net, such as is used for carrying straw; after
+which he said to the youth, 'O Uns el Wujoud, in the heart of
+the valley grows a gourd, which springs up and dries upon its
+roots. Go thither and fill this net therewith; then tie it
+together and casting it into the water, embark thereon and make
+for the midst of the sea, so haply thou shalt come to thy
+desire; for he, who adventureth not himself, shall not attain
+that he seeketh.' 'I hear and obey,' answered Uns el Wujoud and
+bidding the hermit farewell after he had prayed for him, betook
+himself to the hollow of the valley, where he did as he had
+counselled him and launched out upon the water, supported by
+the net.
+
+Then there arose a wind, which drove him out to sea, till he
+was lost to the hermit's view; and he ceased not to fare on
+over the abysses of the ocean, one billow tossing him up on the
+crest of the wave and another bearing him down into the trough
+of the sea, and he beholding the while the terrors and wonders
+of the deep, for the space of three days, at the end of which
+time Fate cast him upon the Mount of the Bereft Mother, where
+he landed, weak and giddy as a fledgling bird, for hunger and
+thirst; but, finding there streams running and birds warbling
+on the branches and fruit-laden trees, growing in clusters and
+singly, he ate of the fruits and drank of the streams. Then he
+walked on till he saw some white thing alar off, and making for
+it, found that it was a strongly-fortified castle. So he went
+up to the gate and finding it locked, sat down by it.
+
+He sat thus three days and on the fourth, the gate opened and
+an eunuch came out, who seeing Uns el Wujoud seated there, said
+to him, 'Whence comest thou and who brought thee hither?' Quoth
+he, 'I come from Ispahan and was travelling by sea with
+merchandise, when my ship was wrecked and the waves cast me
+upon this island.' When the eunuch heard this, he wept and
+embraced him, saying, 'God preserve thee, O [thou that bringest
+me the] fragrance of the beloved! Ispahan is my own country and
+I have there a cousin, the daughter of my father's brother,
+whom I loved and cherished from a child; but a people stronger
+than we fell upon us and taking me among other booty, docked me
+and sold me for an eunuch, whilst I was yet a lad; and this is
+how I come to be what I am.' Then he carried him into the
+courtyard of the castle, where he saw a great basin of water,
+surrounded by trees, on whose branches hung cages of silver,
+with doors of gold, and therein birds warbling and singing the
+praises of the Requiting King. In the first cage he came to was
+a turtle dove which, seeing him, raised her voice and cried
+out, saying, 'O Bountiful One!'[FN#79] Whereat he fell down in
+a swoon, but, presently coming to himself, sighed heavily and
+recited the following verses:
+
+O turtle, art thou mad for love, as is my case? Then sing, 'O
+ Bountiful!' and seek the Lord His grace!
+Tell me, doth thy descant in joyance tale its rise Or in
+ desireful pain, that in thy heart hath place?
+If for desire thou moan'st of bygone loves or pin'st For dear
+ ones that have gone and left thee but their trace,
+Or if thou'st lost thy love, like me, ah, then, indeed,
+ Severance long-felt desire discovereth apace.
+God guard a lover true! Though my bones rot, nor time Nor
+ absence from my heart her image shall efface.
+
+Then he fainted again and presently coming to his senses, went
+on to the second cage, wherein he found a ring-dove. When it
+saw him, it sang out, 'O Eternal, I praise thee!' and he sighed
+and recited these verses:
+
+I heard a ring-dove say in her plaintive note, "Despite of my
+ woes, O Eternal, I praise Thee still!"
+And God, of His grace, reunion of our loves, in this my travel,
+ may yet to us fulfil.
+She visits me oft,[FN#80] with her dusk-red honeyed lips, And
+ lends to the passion within me an added thrill.
+And I cry, whilst the fires in my tortured heart flame high And
+ my soul for ardour consumes and my eyes distil
+Tears that resemble blood and withouten cease Pour down on my
+ wasted cheeks in many a rill,
+There's none created without affliction, and I Must bear with
+ patience my tribulations, until
+The hour of solace with her I love one day Unite me. Ah, then,
+ by God His power and will,
+In succouring lovers, I vow, I'll spend my good, For they're of
+ my tribe and category still;
+And eke from prison I'll loose the birds, to boot, And leave,
+ for joyance, the thought of every ill!
+
+Then he went on to the third cage, in which was a mocking-bird.
+When it saw him, it set up a song, and he recited the following
+verses:
+
+The mocking-bird delighteth me with his harmonious strain, As
+ 'twere a lover's voice that pines and wastes for love in
+ vain.
+Woe's me for those that lovers be! How many a weary night, For
+ love and anguish and desire, to waken they are fain!
+'Twould seem as if they had no part in morning or in sleep, For
+ all the stress of love and woe that holds their heart and
+ brain.
+When I became distraught for her I love and wistfulness Bound
+ me in fetters strait, the tears from out mine eyes did
+ rain
+So thick and fast, they were as chains, and I to her did say,
+ "My tears have fallen so thick, that now they've bound me
+ with a chain."
+The treasures of my patience fail, absence is long on me And
+ yearning sore; and passion's stress consumeth me amain.
+If God's protection cover me and Fortune be but just And Fate
+ with her whom I adore unite me once again,
+I'll doff my clothes, that she may see how worn my body is, For
+ languishment and severance and solitary pain.
+
+Then he went on to the fourth cage, where he found a
+nightingale, which, at sight of him, began to tune its
+plaintive note. When he heard its descant, he burst into tears
+and repeated the following verses:
+
+The nightingale's note, when the dawning is near, Distracts
+ from the lute-strings the true lover's ear.
+Complaineth, for love-longing, Uns el Wujoud, Of a passion that
+ blotteth his being out sheer.
+How many sweet notes, that would soften, for mirth, The
+ hardness of iron and stone, do I hear!
+The zephyr of morning brings tidings to me Of meadows,
+ full-flower'd for the blossoming year.
+The scents on the breeze and the music of birds, In the
+ dawning, transport me with joyance and cheer.
+But I think of a loved one, that's absent from me, And mine
+ eyes rain in torrents, with tear upon tear;
+And the ardour of longing flames high in my breast, As a fire
+ in the heart of a brasier burns clear.
+May Allah vouchsafe to a lover distraught To see and foregather
+ once more with his dear!
+Yea, for lovers, heart-sickness and longing and woe And wake
+ are excuses that plainly appear.
+
+Then he went on a little and came to a handsome cage, than
+which there was no goodlier there, and in it a culver, that is
+to Say, a wood-pigeon, the bird renowned among the birds as the
+singer of love-longing, with a collar of jewels about its neck,
+wonder-goodly of ordinance. He considered it awhile and seeing
+it mazed and brooding in its cage, shed tears and repeated
+these verses:
+
+O culver of the copse, may peace upon thee light, O friend of
+ all who love and every wistful wight!
+I love a young gazelle, a slender one, whose glance Than
+ sharpest sabre's point is keener and more bright.
+For love of her, my heart and entrails are a-fire And
+ sicknesses consume my body and my spright.
+The sweet of pleasant food's forbidden unto me, And eke I am
+ denied the taste of sleep's delight.
+Solace and fortitude have taken flight from me, And love and
+ longing lodge with me, both day and night.
+How shall my life be sweet to me, while she's afar, That is my
+ life, my wish, the apple of my sight?
+
+When the pigeon heard these verses, it awoke from its brooding
+and cooed and warbled and trilled, till it all but spoke; and
+the tongue of the case interpreted for it and recited the
+following verses:
+
+O lover, thy wailings recall to my mind The time when my youth
+ from me wasted and dwined,
+And A mistress, whose charms and whose grace I adored,
+ Seductive and fair over all of her kind;
+Whose voice, from the twigs of the sandhill upraised, Left the
+ strains of the flute, to my thought, far behind.
+A snare set the fowler and caught me, who cried, "Would he d
+ leave me to range at my will on the wind!"
+I had hoped he was clement or seeing that I Was a lover, would
+ pity my lot and be kind;
+But no, (may God smite him!) he tore me away From my dear and
+ apart from her harshly confined.
+Since then, my desire for her grows without cease, And my heart
+ with the fires of disjunction is mined.
+God guard a true lover, who striveth with love And hath
+ suffered the torments in which I have pined!
+When he seeth me languish for love in my cage, He will loose
+ me, in mercy, my loved one to find
+
+ Then Uns el Wujoud turned to his friend, the Ispahani and said
+to him, 'What palace is this? Who built it and who abideth in
+it?' Quoth the eunuch, 'The Vizier of King Shamikh built it
+for his daughter, fearing for her the assaults of fate and the
+vicissitudes of fortune, and lodged her therein, with her
+attendants; nor do we open it save once in every year, when our
+victual comes to us.' And Uns el Wujoud said in himself, 'I
+have gained my end' though after long travail.'
+
+Meanwhile, Rose-in-bud took no delight in eating nor drinking,
+sitting nor sleeping; but her transport and passion and
+love-longing redoubled on her, and she went wandering about the
+castle, but could find no issue; wherefore she shed plenteous
+tears and recited the following verses:
+
+They have prisoned me straitly from him I adore And given me to
+ eat of mine anguish galore.
+My heart with the flames of love-longing they fired, When me
+ from the sight of my loved one they bore.
+They have cloistered me close in a palace built high On a mount
+ in the midst of a sea without shore.
+If they'd have me forget, their endeavour is vain, For my love
+ but redoubles upon me the more.
+How can I forget him, when all I endure Arose from the sight of
+ his face heretofore?
+My days are consumed in lament, and my nights Pass in thinking
+ of him, as I knew him of yore.
+His memory my solace in solitude is, Since the lack of his
+ presence I needs must deplore.
+I wonder, will Fate grant my heart its desire And my love,
+ after all, to my wishes restore!
+
+Then she donned her richest clothes and trinkets and threw a
+necklace of jewels around her neck; after which she ascended to the
+roof of the castle and tying some strips of Baalbek stuff together,
+[to serve for a rope], made them fast to the battlements and let
+herself down thereby to the ground. Then she fared on over wastes
+and wilds, till she came to the sea-shore, where she saw a
+fishing-boat, and therein a fisherman, whom the wind had driven
+on to the island, as he went, fishing here and there, on the sea.
+When he saw her, he was affrighted, [ taking her for a Jinniyeh]
+and put out again to sea; but she cried out and made pressing
+signs to him to return, reciting the following verses:
+
+Harkye, O fisherman, fear thou no injury; I'm but an earthly
+ maid, a mortal like to thee.
+I do implore thee, stay, give ear unto my prayer And hearken to
+ my true and woeful history.
+Pity, (so God thee spare,) the ardour [of my love,] And say if
+ thou hast seen a loved one, fled from me.
+I love a fair-faced youth and goodly; brighter far Of aspect
+ than the face of sun or moon is he.
+The antelope, that sees his glances, cries, "His slave Am I,"
+ and doth confess inferiority.
+Yea, beauty on his brow these pregnant words hath writ In very
+ dust of musk, significant to see,
+"Who sees the light of love is in the way of right, And he who
+ strays commits foul sin and heresy."
+An thou have ruth on me and bring me to his sight, O rare!
+ Whate'er thou wilt thy recompense shall be;
+Rubies and precious stones and freshly gathered pearls And
+ every kind of gem that is in earth and sea.
+Surely, O friend, thou wilt with my desire comply; For all my
+ heart's on fire with love and agony.
+
+When the fisherman heard this, he wept and sighed and lamented;
+then, recalling what had betided himself in the days of his
+youth, when love had the mastery over him and transport and
+love-longing and distraction were sore upon him and the fires
+of passion consumed him, replied with these verses:
+
+Indeed, the lover's excuse is manifest, Wasting of body and
+ streaming tears, unrest,
+Eyes, in the darkness that waken still, and heart, As 'twere a
+ fire-box, bespeak him love-oppress.
+Passion, indeed, afflicted me in youth, And I good money from
+ bad learnt then to test.
+My soul I bartered, a distant love to win; To gain her favours,
+ I wandered East and West;
+And eke I ventured my life against her grace And deemed the
+ venture would bring me interest.
+For law of lovers it is that whoso buys His love's possession
+ with life, he profits best.
+
+Then he moored his boat to the shore and bade her embark,
+saying, 'I will carry thee whither thou wilt.' So she embarked
+and he put off with her; but they had not gone far, before
+there came out a stern-wind upon the boat and drove it swiftly
+out of sight of land. The fisherman knew not whither he went,
+and the wind blew without ceasing three days, at the end of
+which time it fell, by leave of God the Most High, and they
+sailed on, till they came in sight of a city builded upon the
+seashore, and the fisherman set about making fast to the land.
+
+Now the King of the city, a very powerful prince called Dirbas,
+was at that moment sitting, with his son, at a window in the
+palace giving upon the sea, and chancing to look out to
+sea-ward, they saw the fishing-boat enter the harbour. They
+observed it narrowly and espied therein a young lady, as she
+were the full moon in the mid-heaven, with pendants in her ears
+of fine balass rubies and a collar of precious stones about her
+neck. So the King knew that this must be the daughter of some
+king or great noble, and going forth of the sea-gate of the
+palace, went down to the boat, where he found the lady asleep
+and the fisherman busied in making fast to the shore. He went
+up to her and aroused her, whereupon she awoke, weeping; and he
+said to her, 'Whence comest thou and whose daughter art thou
+and what brings thee hither?' 'I am the daughter of Ibrahim,
+Vizier to King Shamikh,' answered she; 'and the manner of my
+coming hither is strange and the cause thereof extraordinary.'
+And she told him her whole story, hiding nought from him; then
+she sighed deeply and recited the following verses:
+
+Tears have mine eyelids wounded sore, and wonder-fast they flow
+ Adown my cheek for parting's pain and memory and woe,
+For a beloved's sake, who dwells for ever in my heart, Though
+ to foregather with himself I cannot win, heigho!
+Fair, bright and brilliant is his face, in loveliness and
+ grace, Turk, Arab and barbarian he cloth indeed o'ercrow.
+The full moon and the sun contend in deference to him, And when
+ he rises into sight, they, lover-like, bend low.
+His eyes with wondrous witchery are decked, as 'twere with
+ kohl; Even as a bow, that's bent to shoot its shafts, to
+ thee they show.
+O thou, to whom I have perforce revealed my case, have ruth On
+ one with whom the shifts of love have sported long eno'.
+Lo, broken-hearted, Love hath cast me up upon thy coast,
+ Wherefore I trust that thou on me fair favour wilt bestow.
+The noble who, when folk of worth alight within their bounds,
+ Do honour and protect them, win increase of glory so.
+Cover thou then, my lord, my hope, two lovers' follies up And
+ let them to thy succouring hand their loves' reunion owe.
+
+Then she shed plenteous tears and recited these verses also:
+
+I lived, a marvel till I saw in love, then lived no mo'; Each
+ month to thee as Rejeb[FN#81] be, as free from fear of
+ foe!
+Is it not strange that, on the morn they went away, I lit Fire
+ in my vitals with the tears that from mine eyes did flow?
+Indeed, mine eyelids ran with blood, and on the wasted plain Of
+ my sad cheek, that therewithal was watered, gold did grow.
+Yea, for the safflower hue, that thence o'erspread my cheeks,
+ they seem The shirt of Joseph, steeped in blood, to make a
+ lying show.
+
+When the King heard this, he was certified of her passion and
+love-longing and was moved to compassion for her; so he said to
+her, 'Fear nothing and be not troubled; thou hast attained the
+term of thy wishes; for needs must I bring thee to thy desire.'
+And he recited the following verses:
+
+Daughter if nobles, thou hast reached thy wishes' goal, I trow:
+ In happy presage then rejoice and fear not any woe.
+Treasures this very day, will I collect and neath escort Of
+ horsemen and of champions, to Shamikh they shall go.
+Brocade and bladders full of musk I will to him despatch And
+ eke white silver and red gold I'll send to him also.
+Yea, and a letter neath my hand my wish for ties of kin And for
+ alliance with himself shall give him eke to know;
+And all endeavour will I use, forthwith, that he thou lov'st
+ Once more with thee may be conjoined, to part from thee no
+ mo.
+I, too, have battened upon love and know the taste thereof And
+ can excuse the folk who've quaffed the self-same cup of
+ woe.
+
+Then, returning to his palace, he summoned his Vizier and
+causing pack him up countless treasure, bade him carry it to
+King Shamikh and say to him, 'The King is minded to ally
+himself with thee by marrying Uns el Wujoud, shine officer, to
+his daughter. So needs must thou send him with me, that the
+marriage may be solemnized in her father's kingdom.' And he
+wrote a letter to King Shamikh, to this effect, and gave it to
+the Vizier, charging him without fail bring back Uns el Wujoud,
+on pain of deposition from his office. 'I hear and obey,'
+answered the Vizier and setting out forthright, in due course
+arrived at the court of King Shamikh, to whom he delivered the
+letter and presents, saluting him in the name of King Dirbas.
+When Shamikh read the letter and saw the name of Uns el Wujoud,
+he burst into tears and said to the Vizier, 'And where is Uns
+el Wujoud? He went away, and we know not his place of abiding.
+Bring him to me, and I will give thee the sum of the presents
+thou hast brought me, twice told.' And he wept and sighed and
+groaned, reciting the following verses:
+
+Him whom I loved to me restore; By gold and gifts I set no
+ store.
+Nor do I crave largesse, indeed, Of pearls and gems and
+ precious ore.
+As 'twere a moon at full, for us, In beauty's heaven he did
+ soar.
+Passing in wit and grace, gazelles With him comparison gave
+ o'er.
+His shape was as a willow-wand, For fruits that sweet
+ seductions bore;
+But in the willow, to enslave The hearts of men, there is no
+ lore.
+I reared him from a child upon The bed of fondness evermore;
+And now I am at heart distraught For him and sorrow passing
+ sore.
+
+Then said he to the Vizier, 'Go back to thy master and tell him
+that Uns el Wujoud has been missing this year past, and his
+lord knoweth not whither he is gone nor hath any news of him.'
+'O my lord,' answered King Dirbas's Vizier, 'my master said to
+me, "An thou come back without him, thou shalt be ousted from
+the Vizierate and shall not enter my city." How then can I
+return without him?' So King Shamikh said to his Vizier
+Ibrahim, 'Take a company and go with him and make search for
+Uns el Wujoud everywhere.' 'I hear and obey,' answered Ibrahim,
+and taking a company of his own retainers, set out in quest of
+Uns el Wujoud, accompanied by King Dirbas's Vizier; and as
+often as they fell in with Bedouins or others, they enquired at
+them of Uns el Wujoud, saying, 'Have ye seen a man, whose name
+is so and so and his favour thus and thus?' But they answered,
+'We know him not.'
+
+So they fared on, enquiring in city and hamlet and seeking in
+hill and plain and desert and wold, till they came to the
+sea-shore, where they took ship and sailed, till they came to
+the Mountain of the Bereaved Mother; and King Dirbas's Vizier
+said to Ibrahim, 'Why is this mountain thus called?' 'There was
+once of old time,' answered the other Vizier, 'a Jinniych, of
+the Jinn of China, who fell passionately in love with a man and
+being in fear of her own people, searched all the earth for a
+place, where she might hide him from them, till she happened on
+this mountain and finding it inaccessible both to men and Jinn,
+carried off her beloved and lodged him therein. There she used
+to visit him privily, till she had borne him a number of
+children, and the merchants, sailing by the mountain, in their
+voyages over the sea, heard the weeping of the children, as it
+were the wailing of a woman who had lost her young, and said,
+"Is there here a mother bereaved of her children?" For which
+reason the place was named the Mountain of the Bereaved
+Mother.' And King Dirbas's Vizier marvelled at this.
+
+Then they landed and making for the castle, knocked at the gate,
+which was opened to them by an eunuch, who knew the Vizier
+Ibrahim and kissed his hands. Ibrahim entered and finding in
+the courtyard, among the serving men, a man in the habit of a
+fakir,[FN#82] said. 'Whence comes yonder fellow?' Quoth they,
+'He is a merchant, who hath lost his goods by shipwreck, but
+saved himself on a plank; and he is an ecstatic.'[FN#83] Now
+this was none other than Uns el Wujoud, [but the Vizier knew
+him not]; so he left him and went on into the castle. He found
+there no trace of his daughter and questioned her women, who
+answered, 'She abode with us but a little while and went away,
+how and whither we know not.' Whereupon he wept sore and
+repeated the following verses:
+
+O house, whose birds warbled for joyance whilere And whose
+ sills were resplendent with glory and pride,
+Till the lover came to thee, bemooning himself For his passion,
+ and found thy doors open and wide,
+Would I knew where my soul is, my soul that was late In a
+ house, where its masters no longer abide!
+Therein were all things that are costly and rich And with suits
+ of brocade it was decked, like a bride.
+Yea, happy and honoured its doorkeeper were. Would God I knew
+ whither its mistress hath tried!
+
+Then he wept and sighed and bemoaned himself, exclaiming,
+'There is no resource against the ordinance of God neither is
+there any escape from that which He hath decreed!' Then he went
+up to the roof and finding the strips of Baalbek stuff tied to
+the battlements and hanging down to the ground, knew that she
+had descended thence and had fled forth, as one distracted and
+mad with passion. Presently, he turned and seeing there two
+birds, an owl and a raven, deemed this an ill omen; so he
+groaned and recited these verses:
+
+Unto the loved ones' stead I came, as hoping, by their sight,
+ To quench the fire that burnt in me of love-longing and
+ woe;
+But no beloved found I there, nor aught, indeed, I found, Save
+ two ill-omened ones, an owl And eke a corby-crow.
+And quoth the tongue o' the case to me, "Thou hast been
+ tyrannous And hast two longing lovers torn, the one the
+ other fro!
+Taste of the anguish, then, of love what thou hast made them
+ taste And live, 'twixt agony and tears, in sorrow evermo."
+
+Then he descended, weeping, and bade the servants go forth and
+search the island for their mistress; so they sought for her,
+but found her not. As for Uns el Wujoud, when he was certified
+that Rose-in-bud was indeed gone, he gave a great cry and fell
+down in a swoon, nor came to himself for a long time, whilst
+the folk deemed that a ravishment from the Merciful One had
+taken him and that he was absorbed in contemplation of the
+splendour of the majesty of the Requiter of good and evil.
+Then, despairing of finding Uns el Wujoud and seeing that
+Ibrahim was distracted for the loss of his daughter, King
+Dirbas's Vizier addressed himself to return to his own country,
+for all he had not attained the object of his journey, and said
+to Ibrahim? 'I have a mind to take yonder fakir with me; it may
+be God, for his sake, will incline the King's heart to me, for
+that he is a holy man; and after, I will send him to Ispahan,
+which is near our country.' 'Do &as thou wilt,' answered
+Ibrahim.
+
+So they took leave of one another and departed, each for his
+own country, King Dirbas's Vizier carrying with him Uns el
+Wujoud, who was still insensible. They bore him with them on
+muleback, unknowing if he were carried or not, for three days,
+at the end of which time he came to himself and said, 'Where am
+I?' 'Thou art in company with King Dirbas's Vizier,' answered
+they and went and told the latter, who sent him rose-water and
+sherbet of sugar, of which they gave him to drink and restored
+him. Then they fared on till they drew near King Dirbas's
+capital and the King, being advised of his Vizier's coming,
+wrote to him, saying, 'An Uns el Wujoud be not with thee, come
+not to me ever.'
+
+When the Vizier read the royal mandate, it was grievous to him,
+for he knew not that Rose-in-bud was with the King nor why he
+had sent him in quest of Uns el Wujoud, neither knew he that
+the fakir he had with him was Uns el Wujoud himself; and the
+latter in like manner knew not whither they were bound nor that
+the Vizier had been despatched in quest of himself. So, when he
+saw him thus chagrined, he said to him, 'What ails thee?' And
+he answered, 'I was sent by the King on an errand, which I
+have not been able to accomplish. So, when he heard of my
+return, he wrote to me? saying, "Enter not my city, except thou
+have fulfilled my need."' 'And what is the King's need?' asked
+Uns el Wujoud. So the Vizier told him the case, and he said,
+'Fear nothing, but go boldly to the King and take me with thee;
+and I will be surety to thee for the coming of Uns el Wujoud.'
+At this the Vizier rejoiced and said, 'Is this true that thou
+sayest?' 'Yes,' answered he; whereupon the Vizier mounted and
+carried him to King Dirbas, who said to him, 'Where is Uns el
+Wujoud?' 'O King,' answered the young man, 'I know where he
+is.' So the King called him to him and said, 'Where?' 'Near at
+hand, replied Uns d Wujoud. 'Tell me what thou wouldst with
+him, and I will fetch him to thee.' 'With all my heart,'
+answered the King; 'but the case calls for privacy.'
+
+So he bade the folk withdraw and, carrying Uns el Wujoud into
+his closet, told him the whole story; whereupon quoth the
+youth, 'Clothe me in rice apparel, and I will eftsoons bring
+Uns el Wujoud to thee.' So they brought him a sumptuous dress,
+and he donned it and said, 'I am the Delight of the World[FN#84]
+and the Mortification of the Envious.' So saying, he transfixed
+ail hearts with his glances and recited the following verses:
+
+My loved one's memory cheers me still in this my solitude And
+ doth wanhope from me away, as I in absence brood.
+I have no helper but my tears; yet, when from out mine eyes
+ They flow, they lighten my despair and ease my drearihood.
+Sore is my longing; yea, it hath no like and my affair In love
+ and passion's marvellous, beyond all likelihood.
+I lie the night long, wakeiul-eyed,--no sleep is there for
+ me,--And pass, for love, from heaven to hell, according to
+ my mood.
+Yea, patience fair some time I had, but have it now no more;
+ And longing and chagrin increase upon me, like a flood.
+Indeed, my body's worn to nought, for severance from her;
+ Yearnings my aspect and my form to change have all
+ subdued.
+Mine eyelids ulcerated are with weeping, nor can I Avail to
+ stay the constant tears, wherewith they're still bedewed.
+Indeed, I can no more; my strength, my very vitals fail. How
+ many sorrows have I borne, on sorrows still renewed!
+My heart and head are grizzled grown, for loss of a princess In
+ beauty, sure, the fairest maid that ever lover wooed.
+In her despite, our parting was, for no desire hath she Save to
+ be joined with me and feed once more on lovers' food.
+I wonder, will my fate to me union vouchsafe with her I
+ cherish, after absence long and stress of lonelihood,
+And shut the book of severance up, that now is open wide, And
+ blot out troubles from my thought with love's supremest
+ good?
+Shall my beloved, in my land, my cup-companion be And sorrow
+ and affliction be by pure delight ensued?
+
+'By Allah,' exclaimed the King, 'ye are, indeed, a pair of true
+lovers and in the heaven of beauty two shining stars! Your
+story is marvellous and your case extraordinary.' Then he told
+him all that had befallen Rose-in-bud; and Uns el Wujoud said,
+'Where is she, O King of the age?' 'She is with me now,'
+answered Dirbas and sending for the Cadi and the witnesses,
+drew up the contract of marriage between her and him. Then he
+loaded Uns el Wujoud with favours and bounties and sent to King
+Shamikh, advising him of what had befallen, whereat the latter
+rejoiced with an exceeding joy and wrote back to him, saying,
+'Since the marriage contract hath been drawn up at thy court! it
+behoves that the wedding and consummation be at mine.' And he
+made ready camels and horses and men and sent them in quest of
+the lovers.
+
+When the embassy reached King Dirbas, he gave the pair great
+store of treasure and despatched them to King Shamikh's court
+with an escort of his own troops. The day of their arrival was
+a notable day, never was seen a greater; for the King assembled
+all the singers and players on instruments of music and made
+banquets and held high festival seven days; and on each day he
+gave largesse to the folk and bestowed on them sumptuous
+dresses of honour. Then Uns el Wujoud went in to Rose-in-bud,
+and they embraced and sat weeping for excess of joy and
+gladness, whilst she recited the following verses:
+
+Gladness is come, dispelling grief and putting care aside; We
+ are united now and have our enviers mortified.
+The fragrant breeze of union blows fresh and sweet for us,
+ Whereby our bodies, vitals, hearts are all revivified.
+The splendour of fulfilled delight in all its glory shines, And
+ for glad tidings beat the drums about us far and wide.
+Think not we weep for stress Of grief or for affliction; nay,
+ It is for joy our tears flow down and will not be denied.
+How many terrors have we seen, that now are past away! Yet we
+ each agonizing strait did patiently abide.
+In one hour of delight have we forgotten all the woes, Whose
+ stresses made us twain, whilom, grey-haired and
+ hollow-eyed.
+
+Then they clipped each other and ceased not from their embrace,
+till they fell down in a swoon, for the ecstasy of reunion; and
+when they came to themselves, Uns d Wujoud recited these
+verses:
+
+Ah, how peerlessly sweet are the nights of delight, When the
+ loved one to me keeps the troth she did plight,
+When enjoyment enjoyment ensues and the bonds Of estrangement
+ between us are sundered outright,
+And fortune is come to us, favouring and fair, After turning
+ away with aversion and spite!
+Fair fortune hath set up her standards for us And we drink from
+ her hand a cup pure of affright.
+United, our woes each to each we recount And the nights when in
+ torments we watched for the light.
+But now, O my lady, forgotten have we Our griefs, and God
+ pardon the past its upright!
+How pleasant, how lovesome, how joyous is life! Enjoyment my
+ passion doth only excite.
+
+Then they gave themselves up anew to the pleasures of the
+nuptial bed and passed seven whole days thus, carousing and
+conversing and reciting verses and telling pleasant tales and
+anecdotes, in the intervals of amorous dalliance; for so
+drowned were they in the sea of passion, that they knew not
+night from day and it was to them, for very stress of joy and
+gladness and pleasure and delight, as if the seven days were
+but one day, and that without a morrow. Nor did they know the
+seventh day, but by the coming of the singers and players on
+instruments of music;[FN#85] whereat Rose-in-bud was beyond
+measure wondered and improvised the following verses:
+
+Despite the enviers' rage and malice of the spy, I've won of
+ him I love my wish to satisfy;
+Yea, we have crowned our loves with many a close embrace, On
+ cushions of brocade and silken stuffs piled high
+Upon a couch full soft, of perfumed leather made And stuffed
+ with down of birds of rarest kind that fly.
+Thanks to the honeyed dews of my beloved's lips, Illustrious
+ past compare, no need of wine have I.
+Yea, for the sweet excess of our fulfilled delight, The present
+ from the past we know, nor far from nigh.
+A miracle indeed! Seven nights o'er us have passed, Without our
+ taking note of how they flitted by;
+Till, on the seventh day, they wished us joy and said, "Your
+ union God prolong to all eternity!"
+
+When she had finished, Uns el Wujoud kissed her, more than a
+hundred times, and recited the following verses:
+
+O day of pure delight and mutual happiness! The loved one came
+ and set me free from loneliness.
+She blest me with the sweets of all her glorious charms, What
+ while her converse filled my spirit with liesse.
+She plied me with the wine of amorous delight, Till all my
+ senses failed, for very drunkenness.
+Yea, merry each with each we made, together lay, Then fell to
+ wine and did, in song, our cheer express;
+Nor knew we, of the days that fleeted over us, The present from
+ the past, for very joy's excess.
+Fair fall all those that love of ease and twinned delight, And
+ joy to them fulfil its promise none the less!
+Ne'er may they know the taste of parting's bitter cup! God
+ succour them as me He succoured in my stress!
+
+Then they went forth and distributed to the folk alms and
+largesse of money and raiment and so forth; after which
+Rose-in-bud bade empty the bath for her and turning to Uns el
+Wujoud, said to him' 'O solace of my eyes, I have a mind to see
+thee in the bath; and we will be alone together therein.' He
+gladly consented to this, and she bade perfume the bath for
+them with all manner of scented woods and essences and light
+the candles. Then, of the excess of her contentment, she
+recited the following Verses:
+
+O thou aforetime of my heart that mad'st prize (And the present
+ for us on the past still relies),
+Thou, the only companion I crave, for to me None other the want
+ of thy presence supplies,
+To the bath,--that in midst of hell-fire we may see Even
+ Paradise shining,--come, light of mine eyes!
+We will scent it with ambergris, aloes and musk, Till the
+ fragrance in clouds from all quarters arise.
+Yea, Fortune we'll pardon her sins and give thanks, For His
+ grace, to the Merciful One, the All-Wise;
+And I'll say, when I see thee therein, "O my love, All delights
+ be thy lot in the earth and the skies!"
+
+So they went to the bath and took their pleasure there in;
+after which they returned to their palace and there abode in
+the fulness of delight, till there came to them the Destroyer
+of Delights and the Sunderer of Companies; and glory be to Him
+who changeth not neither ceaseth and in whom all things have
+their term!
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOU NUWAS WITH THE THREE BOYS AND THE
+ KHALIF HAROUN ER RESHID.
+
+
+
+Abou Nuwas one day shut himself up and making ready a richly-
+furnished saloon, set out therein a banquet of meats of all
+kinds and colours that lips and tongue can desire. Then he went
+forth, to seek a minion who should befit the entertainment,
+saying, 'O my God and my Master and my Lord, I beseech Thee to
+send me one worthy of this banquet and apt to carouse with me
+this day!' Hardly had he made an end of speaking, when he
+espied three handsome beardless youths, as they were of the
+children of Paradise, differing in complexion but equal in
+perfection of beauty; and all hearts yearned with desire to the
+graceful bending of their shapes, even to what saith the poet:
+
+Two beardless youths I happened on one day And said "I love
+ you." "Hast thou pelf?" asked they.
+"Yes," answered I, "and liberality." "Then is the matter easy,"
+ did they say.
+
+Now Abou Nuwas was on this wise given and loved to sport and
+make merry with the fair and cull the rose from every fresh-
+flowered cheek, even as saith the poet:
+
+Full many a graybeard is amorous and loves Fair faces and music
+ and dalliance and glee:
+From Mosul, the country of pureness,[FN#86] he comes, Yet
+ nought but Aleppo[FN#87] remembereth he.
+
+So he accosted them with the salutation, and they returned his
+greeting with all honour and civility and would have gone their
+way; but he stayed them, repeating these verses:
+
+To none but me your footsteps steer; For I have store of all
+ good cheer;
+Wine that the heart of convent monk Would glad, so bright it is
+ and clear;
+And flesh of sheep, to boot, have I And birds of land and sea
+ and mere.
+Eat ye of these and drink old wine, That doth away chagrin and
+ fear.
+
+The boys were beguiled by his verses and consented to his
+wishes, saying, 'We hear and obey.' So he carried them to his
+lodging, where they found all ready that he had set forth in
+his verses. They sat down and ate and drank and made merry
+awhile, after which they appealed to Abou Nuwas to decide which
+was the handsomest and most shapely of them. So he pointed to
+one of them, after having kissed him twice, and recited the
+following verses:
+
+With my life I will ransom the mole, on the cheek of the
+ loveling that is; For how should I ransom it else with
+ treasure or aught but my soul?
+And blessed for ever be He who fashioned his cheek without hair
+ And made, of His power and His might, all beauty to dwell
+ in yon mole!
+
+Then he pointed to another and kissing his lips, repeated these
+verses:
+
+There's a loveling hath a mole upon his cheek, As 'twere musk
+ on virgin camphor, so to speak.
+My eyes marvel when they see it. Quoth the mole, "Heaven's
+ blessing on the Prophet look ye seek!"[FN#88]
+
+Then he pointed to the third and repeated the following verses,
+after kissing him half a score times:
+
+All in a silver cup he melted gold full fine, A youth whose
+ hands were dyed in ruby-coloured wine,
+And with the skinkers went and handed round one cup Of wine,
+ whilst other two were proffered by his eyne.
+Fairer than all the Turks, an antelope, whose waist Together
+ would attract the mountains of Hunain.[FN#89]
+An if I were content with crooked[FN#90] womankind, Betwixt
+ attractions twain would be this heart of mine.
+One love towards Diyarbeker[FN#91] drawing it, and one That
+ draws it, otherguise, to the land of Jamiain.[FN#92]
+
+Now each of the youths had drunk two cups, and when it came to
+Abou Nuwas's turn, he took the goblet and repeated these
+verses:
+
+Drink not of wine except it be at the hands of a loveling slim,
+ Who in brightness of soul resembles it and it resembles
+ him.
+The drinker of wine, in very truth, hath no delight thereof,
+ Except the cheek of the fair be pure, who doth the goblet
+ brim.
+
+Then he drank off his cup, and when it came round to Him again,
+joyance got the mastery of him and he repeated The following
+verses:
+
+Make thou thy boon-fellow of cups, brimmed up as full as this,
+ And eke to follow cup with cup, I rede thee, do not miss,
+Poured by a damask-lipped one's hand, a wonder-lovely fair,
+ Whose mouth's sweet water, after sleep, as musk on apple
+ is.
+Drink not of wine, except it be from the hand of a gazelle,
+ Whose cheek is goodlier than itself and sweeter still his
+ kiss.
+
+Presently, the wine crept to his head, drunkenness mastered him
+and he knew not hand from head, so that he swayed about for
+mirth, inclining anon to this one, to kiss him, and anon to
+another. Then he fell to glorying in himself and his case and
+the goodliness of his entertainment and his companions, and
+recited these verses:
+
+None knoweth perfection of pleasure but he Who drinketh, with
+ fair ones to hearten him still.
+This sings to him, t'other, when cheer him would be, Revives
+ him forthright with the cups he doth fill;
+And whenever from one he hath need of a kiss, Long draughts
+ from his lips, at his case, he doth swill.
+God bless them! Right sweet has my day with them been, And
+ wonder delightsome and void of all ill!
+We drank of the wine cup, both mingled and pure, And agreed
+ whoso slept, we should touzle at will.
+
+At this moment, there came a knocking at the door; so they bade
+him who knocked enter, and behold, it was the Khalif Haroun er
+Reshid. When they saw him, they all rose to him and kissed the
+ground before him; and the fumes of the wine forsook Abou
+Nuwas's head for awe of the Khalif, who said to him, 'Hallo,
+Abou Nuwas!' 'At thy service, O Commander of the Faithful,'
+answered he, 'may God preserve thee!' 'What state is this I
+find thee in?' asked the Khalif; and the poet replied, 'O
+Commander of the Faithful, methinks my state dispenses with
+question.' Quoth the Khalif, 'O Abou Nuwas, I have sought
+direction of God the Most High and appoint thee Cadi of
+whoremasters.' 'Dost thou indeed invest me with that office, O
+Commander of the Faithful?' asked Abou Nuwas. 'I do,' replied
+the Khalif. 'Then, O Commander of the Faithful,' rejoined Abou
+Nuwas, 'hast thou any suit to prefer to me?' At this the Khalif
+was wroth and turned away and left them, full of rage, and
+passed the night, sore angered against Abou Nuwas, whilst the
+latter spent the merriest and most easeful of nights, till the
+day dawned and the morning-star appeared and shone, when he
+broke up the sitting and dismissing the boys, donned his court-
+dress and set out for the Khalif's palace.
+
+Now it was the latter's custom, when the Divan broke up, to
+withdraw to his sitting-chamber and summon thither his poets
+and minions and musicians, each having his own place, which he
+might not overpass. So, that day, he retired to his saloon, and
+the minions came and seated themselves, each in his place.
+Presently, in came Abou Nuwas and was about to take his usual
+seat, when the Khalif cried out to Mesrour the headsman and
+bade him strip the poet of his clothes and clap an ass's pannel
+on his back. Moreover, he charged him bind a halter about his
+head and a crupper under his rear and carry him round to all
+the lodgings of the slave-girls and the chambers of the harem,
+that the women might make mock of him; then cut off his head
+and bring it to him. 'I hear and obey,' replied Mesrour and
+accoutring Abou Nuwas, as the Khalif had bidden him, carried
+him round to all the lodgings of the harem, in number as the
+days of the year; but he made all the girls laugh with his
+buffooneries and each gave him something, so that he returned
+with a pocketful of money.
+
+Just then, Jaafer the Barmecide, who had been absent on an
+important business for the Khalif, entered and seeing the poet
+in this plight, said to him, 'Hallo, Abou Nuwas!' 'At thy
+service, O our lord,' answered he. 'What offence hast thou
+committed,' asked Jaafer, 'to bring this punishment on thee?'
+'None whatever,' answered the other, 'except that I made our
+lord the Khalif a present of the best of my verses, and he
+presented me, in return, with the best of his clothes.' When
+the Khalif heard this, he laughed, from a heart full of wrath,
+and [not only] pardoned Abou Nuwas, but gave him a myriad of
+money.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABDALLAH BEN MAAMER WITH THE MAN OF
+ BASSORA AND HIS SLAVE-GIRL.
+
+
+
+A certain man of Bassora once bought a slave-girl and reared
+and educated her excellent well. Moreover, he loved her very
+dearly and spent all his substance in pleasuring and making
+merry with her, till he had nothing left and want was very sore
+upon him. So she said to him, 'O my master, sell me; for thou
+needest my price and it makes my heart ache to see the sorry
+plight to which want hath brought thee. It thou sell me and
+make use of my price, it will be better for thee than keeping
+me, and haply God the Most High will prosper thee and mend thy
+fortune.' He agreed to this, of the straitness of his case, and
+carried her to the bazaar, where the broker offered her for
+sale to the Governor of Bassora, by name Abballah ben Maamer et
+Teimi, and she pleased him. So he bought her, for five hundred
+dinars, of her master, who took the money and was about to go
+away, when the girl burst into tears and repeated the following
+verses:
+
+May Allah prosper unto thee the money thou hast got! For me,
+ nought's left me but lament and memory and woe.
+I say to my afflicted soul, "Mourn little or mourn much; It
+ skills not, for the loved one's gone and will return no
+ mo."
+
+When he heard this, he sighed heavily and replied thus:
+
+Though there be no recourse for thee in this thy case and thou
+ Find nought but death to solace thee, excuse me yet and
+ know,
+Evening and morn the thought of thee will company with me,
+ Wherewith a heart I will console, that's all fulfilled of
+ woe.
+Peace be on thee! Henceforth for us no meeting shall there be
+ Nor any union more, except Ben Maamer will it so.
+
+When Abdallah heard these verses and saw their affliction, he
+exclaimed, 'By Allah, I will have no hand in separating you;
+for it is manifest to me that ye indeed love one another. So
+take the money and the damsel, O man, and may God bless thee in
+them! For parting is grievous to true lovers.' So they kissed
+his hand and going away, ceased not to dwell together, till
+death parted them; and glory be to Him whom death overtaketh
+not!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVERS OF THE BENOU UDHREH.
+
+
+
+There was once, among the Benou Udhreh, a handsome and
+accomplished man, who was never a day out of love, and it
+chanced that he became enamoured of a beautiful woman of his
+own tribe and sent her many messages; but she ceased not to use
+him with cruelty and disdain, till, for stress of passion and
+longing and distraction, he fell exceeding sick and took to his
+bed and forswore sleep. His sickness grew on him and his
+anguish redoubled upon him, till he was all but dead; and his
+case became known and his passion noised abroad among the folk.
+His family and hers were instant with her to visit him, but she
+refused, till he was at the point of death, when, being told of
+this, she relented towards him and vouchsafed him a visit. When
+he saw her, his eyes ran over with tears and he repeated the
+following verses, from a broken heart:
+
+If, by thy life, there pass thee by my funeral train, to wit, A
+ bier borne on the necks of four, wilt grudge to follow it?
+Wilt thou not follow in its track, that so thou mayst salute
+ The sepulchre of one who's dead, committed to the pit?
+
+When she heard this, she wept sore and said to him, 'By Allah,
+I thought not that passion had come to such a pass with thee,
+as to cast thee into the arms of death! Had I known this, I had
+been favourable to thee, and thou shouldst have enjoyed thy
+desire.' At this, his tears streamed down, like the cloud-
+showers, and he repeated the following verse:
+
+She draweth near to me, when death hath come betwixt us two And
+ proffereth union, when it no profit can me do.
+
+Then he gave one sigh and died, and she fell on him, kissing
+him and weeping, till she swooned away. When she came to
+herself she charged her people bury her in his grave and
+recited the following verses, with streaming eyes:
+
+We lived upon the earth a life of comfort and delight: Country
+ and tribe and dwelling-place alike of us were proud;
+But Fortune and the shifts of time did rend our loves apart,
+ And now the grave uniteth us within a single shroud.
+
+Then she fell again to weeping and ceased not from tears and
+lament, till she swooned away. She lay three days, senseless;
+then died and was buried in his grave. This is one of the
+strange chances of love.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE VIZIER OF YEMEN AND HIS YOUNG
+ BROTHER
+
+
+
+Bedreddin, Vizier of Yemen, had a young brother of singular
+beauty and kept strait watch over him. So he applied himself to
+seek a governor for him and coming upon an elder of dignified
+and reverend aspect, chaste and pious, lodged him in a house
+next his own, whence he used to come daily to the Vizier's
+dwelling, to teach the latter's brother. After awhile, the old
+man's heart was taken with love for his pupil and longing grew
+upon him and his entrails were troubled, till, one day, he made
+moan of his case to the boy, who said, 'What can I do, seeing
+that I may not leave my brother day or night? Thou seest how
+careful he is over me.' Quoth the governor, 'My lodging adjoins
+thine; so, when thy brother sleeps, do thou rise and entering
+the wardrobe, feign thyself asleep. Then come to the parapet of
+the roof and I will receive thee on the other side of the wall;
+so shalt thou sit with me awhile and return without thy
+brother's knowledge.' 'I hear and obey,' answered the boy. So,
+when awhile of the night was past, he entered the closet and
+waited till his brother lay down on his bed and was drowned in
+sleep, when he rose and going to the parapet of the roof, found
+the governor awaiting him, who gave him his hand and carried
+him to the sitting-chamber, where he had made ready various
+dainties for his entertainment, and they sat down to carouse.
+
+Now it was the night of the full moon, and as they sat, passing
+the wine-cup to one another, her rays shone upon them, and the
+governor fell to singing. But, whilst they were thus in mirth
+and joyance and good cheer, such as confounds the wit and the
+sight and defies description, the Vizier awoke and missing his
+brother, arose in affright and found the door open. So he went
+up to the roof and hearing a noise of talk, peeped over the
+parapet and saw a light shining in the governor's lodging. He
+looked in and espied his brother and his governor sitting
+carousing: but the latter became aware of him and sang the
+following verses, cup in hand, to a lively measure:
+
+He gave me wine to drink, of his mouth's nectar rare, Toasting
+ with down of cheeks and what adjoineth there;
+Then passed with me the night, embracing, cheek to cheek, A
+ loveling midst mankind unpeered and past compare.
+The full moon gazed on us all night; pray then to her, So to
+ his brother she to tell of us forbear.
+
+Now the Vizier was a merry man; so, when he heard this, he
+said, 'By Allah, I will not betray you!' And he went away and
+left them to their diversion.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVES OF THE BOY AND GIRL AT SCHOOL.
+
+
+
+A boy and a girl once learnt together in a school, and the boy
+fell passionately in love with the girl. So, one day, when the
+other boys were heedless, he took her tablet[FN#93] and wrote
+on it the following verses:
+
+Tell me, what sayst thou unto him, whom sickness for thy love
+ Hath worn and wasted, till he's grown distraught and
+ stupefied?
+Him who of passion maketh moan; for love and longing pain, That
+ which is in his heart, indeed, no longer can he hide.
+
+When the girl took her tablet, she read the verses and wept for
+pity of him; then wrote thereunder these others:
+
+An if we see one languishing for very love of us, Our favours,
+ surely, unto him shall nowise be denied.
+Yea, and of us he shall obtain that which he doth desire Of
+ love-delight, whate'er to us in consequence betide.
+
+Now it chanced that the teacher came in on them And taking the
+tablet, unnoticed, read what was written thereon. So he was
+moved to pity of their case and wrote on the tablet the
+following verses, in reply to those of the girl:
+
+Favour thy lover, for he's grown distracted for desire, And
+ reck thou not of punishment nor fear lest any chide.
+As for the master, have no dread of his authority, For he with
+ passion an its pains aforetime hath been tried.
+
+Presently, the girl's master entered the school and finding the
+tablet, read the above verses and wrote under them the following:
+
+May Allah never separate your loves, whilst time abide, And may
+ your slanderer be put to shame and mortified!
+But, for the master of the school, by Allah, all my life, A
+ busier go-between than he I never yet espied.
+
+Then he sent for the Cadi and the witnesses and married them on
+the spot. Moreover, he made them a marriage-feast and entreated
+them with exceeding munificence; and they abode together in joy
+and contentment, till there came to them the Destroyer of
+Delights and the Sunderer of Companies.
+
+
+
+
+
+ EL MUTELEMMIS AND HIS WIFE UMEIMEH.
+
+
+
+It is related that El Mutelemmis[FN#94] once fled from En Numan
+ben Mundhir[FN#95] and was absent so long that the folk deemed
+him dead. Now he had a handsome wife, Umeimeh by name, and her
+family pressed her to marry again; but she refused, for that
+she loved her husband El Mutelemmis very dearly. However, they
+were instant with her, because of the multitude of her suitors,
+and importuned her till she at last reluctantly consented and
+they married her to a man of her own tribe.
+
+On the night of the wedding, El Mutelemmis came back and
+hearing in the camp a noise of pipes and tabrets and seeing
+signs of festival, asked some of the children what was toward,
+to which they replied, 'They have married Umeimeh, widow of El
+Mutelemmis, to such an one, and he goes in to her this night.'
+When he heard this, he made shift to enter the house with the
+women and saw there the bride seated on her throne. By and by,
+the bridegroom came up to her, whereupon she sighed heavily and
+weeping, recited the following verses:
+
+Ah would, (but many are the shifts of good and evil fate), I
+ knew in what far land thou art, O Mutelemmis mine!
+
+Now El Mutelemmis was a renowned poet: so he answered her with
+the following verse:
+
+Right near at hand, Umeimeh! Know, whene'er the caravan Halted,
+ I never ceased for thee with longing heart to pine.
+
+When the bridegroom heard this, he guessed how the case stood
+and went forth from among them in haste, repeating the following
+verse:
+
+I was in luck, but now I'm fall'n into the contrary. A
+ hospitable house and room your reknit loves enshrine!
+
+So El Mutelemmis took his wife again and abode with her in all
+delight and solace of life, till death parted them. And glory
+be to Him at whose command the earth and the heavens shall
+arise!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF HAROUN ER RESHID AND THE
+ PRINCESS ZUBEIDEH IN THE BATH.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid loved the Princess Zubeideh with an
+exceeding love and laid out for her a pleasaunce, in which he
+made a great pool and led thither water from all sides.
+Moreover, he set thereabout a screen of trees, which so grew
+and interlaced over the pool, that one could go in and wash,
+without being seen of any, for the thickness of the leafage. It
+chanced, one day, that Zubeideh entered the garden and coming
+to the basin, gazed upon its goodliness, and the limpidity of
+the water and the interlacing of the trees over it pleased her.
+Now it was a day of exceeding heat; so she put off her clothes
+and entering the pool, which was not deep enough to cover her,
+fell to pouring the water over herself from an ewer of silver.
+
+
+The Khalif heard she was in the pool; so he left his palace and
+came down to spy upon her, through the screen of the leaves. He
+stood behind the trees and saw her naked, with all her secret
+charms displayed. Presently, she became aware of him and
+turning, saw him behind the trees and was ashamed that he
+should see her naked. So she laid her hands on her kaze, but it
+escaped from between them, by reason of its much greatness and
+plumpness; and the Khalif turned and went away, wondering and
+reciting the following verse:
+
+I looked on her whom I adore And longing rose in me full sore.
+
+But he knew not what to say next; so he sent for Abou Nuwas and
+bade him make a piece of verse commencing with the above line. 'I
+hear and obey,' replied the poet and in a twinkling extemporized
+the following lines:
+
+I looked on her whom I adore, And longing rose in me full sore
+For a gazelle that ravished me, By double lote-trees shaded
+ o'er.
+The water on her dainty part With silver ewer did she pour
+And would have hidden it, seeing me, But all too small her
+ hands therefor.
+Would I were on it, wel-a-way, An hour or liefer two or more!
+
+The Khalif smiled and made him a handsome present, and he went
+away rejoicing.
+
+
+
+
+
+ HAROUN ER RESHID AND THE THREE POETS.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid was exceeding restless one night;
+so he rose and walked about his palace, till he happened on a
+damsel overcome with wine. Now he was greatly enamoured of this
+damsel; so he toyed with her and pulled her to him, whereupon
+her girdle fell down and her trousers were unloosed and he
+besought her of amorous dalliance. But she said to him, 'O
+Commander of the Faithful, wait till to-morrow night, for I am
+unprepared for thee, knowing not of thy coming.' So he left her
+and went away.
+
+On the morrow, he sent a page to her to announce his visit to
+her apartment; but she sent back to him, saying, 'The day
+obliterates the promise of the night.' So he said to his
+minions, 'Make me somewhat of verse, introducing these words,
+"The day obliterates the promise of the night."' 'We hear and
+obey,' answered they; and Er Recashi[FN#96] came forward and
+recited the following:
+
+By Allah, an thou feltst my longing and my pain, Repose had
+ turned away from thee and taken flight.
+A maid hath made me love-distraught, nor visiting Nor being
+ visited, a sad and love-lorn wight.
+She promised me her grace, then turned away and said, "The day
+ obliterates the promise of the night."
+
+Then Abou Musab came forward and recited these verses:
+
+When wilt thou put away this dotage from thy spright? Thy heart
+ is dazed and rest to thee forbidden quite.
+Is't not enough for thee to have a weeping eye And vitals still
+ on fire for memory and despite?
+For self-conceit, indeed, he laugheth, when he saith, "The day
+ obliterates the promise of the night."
+
+Last came Abou Nuwas and recited the following:
+
+Love was prolonged and far was union out of sight, Nor skilled
+ it aught to feign aversion and despite.
+One day, she came into the palace, drunk with wine, But even
+ her drunkenness with pudour was bedight.
+Her upper garments dropped and left her shoulders bare And
+ loosened trousers showed the dwelling of delight;
+Yea, and the breeze shook hips, full heavy, and a shape, As
+ 'twere a branch, whereon pomegranates twain unite.
+"Give me a tryst," quoth I; and she replied, "The place Of
+ visiting will be to-morrow clean and right."
+Next day, I came and said, "Thy promise;" but quoth she, "The
+ day obliterates the promise of the night."
+
+The Khalif bestowed a myriad each on Er Recashi and Abou Musab,
+but bade strike off Abou Nuwas's head, saying, 'Thou west with
+us yesternight in the palace.' 'By Allah,' answered the poet,
+'I slept not but in my own house! I was directed to what I said
+by thine own words as to the subject of the poem; and indeed
+quoth God the Most High (and He is the truest of all speakers),
+"As for poets (devils ensue them!) dost thou not see how they
+run wild in each valley and say that they do not?"'[FN#97] So
+the Khalif forgave him and bestowed on him two myriads of gold.
+
+
+
+
+
+ MUSAB BEN EZ ZUBEIR AND AAISHEH
+ DAUGHTER OF TELHEH.
+
+
+
+It is told of Musab ben ez Zubeir[FN#98] that he met Izzeh, who
+was one of the shrewdest of women, in Medina and said to her,
+'I have a mind to marry Aaisheh,[FN#99] daughter of Telheh, and
+I would have thee go to her and spy out for me how she is
+made.' So she went and returning to Musab, said, 'I have seen
+her, and her face is more beautiful than health; she hath large
+and well-opened eyes, an aquiline nose and smooth, oval cheeks
+and a mouth like a cleft pomegranate, a neck like an ewer of
+silver and a bosom with two breasts like twin pomegranates, a
+slim waist and a slender belly, with a navel therein as it were
+a casket of ivory, and backside like a hummock of sand.
+Moreover, she hath plump thighs and legs like columns of
+alabaster; but I saw her feet to be large, and thou wilt fall
+short with her in time of amorous dalliance.' Upon this report,
+he married her and Izzeh invited Aaisheh and the women of the
+tribe of Kureish to her house, when Aaisheh sang the following,
+with Musab standing by:
+
+The mouths of girls, with their odoriferous, Sweet breath and
+ their witching smiles, are sweet to buss;
+Yet ne'er have I tasted them, but in thought of him; And by
+ thought, indeed, the Ruler rules over us.
+
+The night of his going in to her, he departed not from her,
+till after seven courses; and on the morrow, a freed-woman of
+his met him and said to him, 'May I be thy ransom! Thou art
+perfect, even in this.'
+
+Quoth a certain woman, 'I was with Aaisheh, when her husband
+came in to her, and she lusted to him; so he fell upon her and
+she puffed and snorted and made use of all manner of rare
+motions and strange inventions, and I the while within hearing.
+So when he came out from her, I said to her, "How canst thou,
+with thy rank and nobility and condition, do thus, and I in thy
+house?" Quoth she, "A woman should bring her husband all of
+which she is mistress, by way of excitations and rare motions.
+What mislikest thou of this?" And I answered, "I would have
+this anights." "Thus is it by day," rejoined she, "and by night
+I do more than this; for, when he sees me, desire stirs in him
+and he falls on heat; so he puts out his hand to me and I obey
+him, and it is as thou seest."'
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOUL ASWED AND HIS SQUINTING SLAVE-GIRL.
+
+
+
+Aboul Aswed bought a native-born slave-girl, who was squint-
+eyed, and she pleased him; but his people decried her to him;
+whereat he wondered and spreading out his hands, recited the
+following verses:
+
+They run her down to me, and yet no fault in her find I, Except
+ perhaps it be a speck she hath in either eye.
+To compensate this fault, if fault it be, o' the upper parts
+ She's slim and heavy of the parts beneath the waist that
+ lie.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ HAROUN ER RESHID AND THE TWO SLAVE-GIRLS.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid lay one night between two slave-girls,
+one from Medina and the other from Cufa, and the latter rubbed his
+hands, whilst the former rubbed his feet and made his yard to
+stand up. Quoth the Cufan girl, 'I see thou wouldst keep the whole
+of the stock-in-trade to thyself; give me my share of it.' And the
+other answered, 'I have been told by Malik, on the authority of
+Hisham ibn Orweh,[FN#100] who had it of his [grand]father,[FN#101]
+that the Prophet said, "Whoso bringeth the dead to life, it is
+his."' But the Cufan took her unawares and pushing her away, took
+it all in her own hand and said, 'El Aamesh[FN#102] tells us, on
+the authority of Kheithemeh,[FN#103] who had it of Abdallah ben
+Mesoud,[FN#104] that the Prophet said, "Game belongeth to him who
+taketh it, not to him who raiseth it."'
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF HAROUN ER RESHID AND THE THREE
+ SLAVE-GIRLS.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid lay once with three slave-girls, a
+Meccan, a Medinan and an Irakite. The Medina girl put her hand
+to his yard and handled it, whereupon it rose and the Meccan
+sprang up and drew it to herself. Quoth the other, 'What is
+this unjust aggression? I have heard of Malik,[FN#105] on the
+authority of Ez Zuhri,[FN#106] who had it of Abdallah ibn
+Salim,[FN#107] on the report of Said ben Zeid,[FN#108] that the
+Apostle (whom God bless and preserve) said, "Whoso revivifies a
+dead land, it is his."' And the Meccan answered, 'Sufyan[FN#109]
+tells us, on the authority of Abou Zenad,[FN#110] who had it of
+El Aarej,[FN#111] on the report of Abou Hureireh,[FN#112] that
+the Apostle of God said, "The game is his who catches it, not
+his who starts it."' But the Irak girl pushed them both away and
+taking it to herself, said, 'This is mine, till your contention
+be decided.'
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE MILLER AND HIS WIFE.
+
+
+
+
+There was a miller, who had an ass to turn his mill; and he was
+married to a wicked wife, whom he loved; but she hated him and
+loved a neighbour of hers, who liked her not and held aloof
+from her. One night, the miller saw, in his sleep, one who said
+to him, 'Dig in such a spot of the ass's circuit in the mill,
+and thou shalt find a treasure.' When he awoke, he told his
+wife the dream and charged her keep it secret; but she told her
+neighbour, thinking to win his favour, and he appointed with
+her to come to her by night. So he came and they dug in the
+mill and found the treasure and took it forth. Then said he to
+her, 'How shall we do with this?' 'We will share it equally
+between us,' answered she; 'and do thou leave thy wife and I
+will cast about to rid me of my husband. Then shalt thou marry
+me, and when we are united, we will add the two halves of the
+treasure, one to the other, and it will be [all] in our hands.'
+Quoth he, 'I fear lest Satan seduce thee and thou take some man
+other than myself; for gold in the house is like the sun in the
+world. Meseems, therefore, it were better that the money be all
+in my hands, so thou mayst study to win free of thy husband and
+come to me.' 'I fear the like of thee,' rejoined she, 'and I
+will not yield up my part to thee; for it was I directed thee
+to it.' When he heard this, covetise prompted him to kill her;
+so he killed her and threw her body into the empty hole; but
+the day overtook him and hindered him from covering it up; so
+he took the treasure and went away.
+
+Presently, the miller awoke and missing his wife, went into the
+mill, where he fastened the ass to the beam and shouted to it.
+It went on a little, then stopped; whereupon he beat it
+grievously; but the more he beat it, the more it drew back; for
+it was affrighted at the dead woman and could not go on. So he
+took out a knife and goaded it again and again, but still it
+would not budge. Then he was wroth with it, knowing not the
+cause of its obstinacy, and drove the knife into its flanks,
+and it fell down dead. When the sun rose, he saw his wife lying
+dead, in the place of the treasure, and great was his rage and
+sore his chagrin for the loss of the treasure and the death of
+his wife and his ass. All this came of his letting his wife
+into his secret and not keeping it to himself.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE SIMPLETON AND THE SHARPER.
+
+
+
+A certain simple fellow was once going along, haling his ass
+after him by the halter, when a couple of sharpers saw him and
+one said to his fellow, 'I will take that ass from yonder man.'
+'How wilt thou do that?' asked the other. 'Follow me and I will
+show thee,' replied the first. So he went up to the ass and
+loosing it from the halter, gave the beast to his fellow; then
+clapped the halter on his own head and followed the simpleton,
+till he knew that the other had got clean off with the ass,
+when he stood still. The man pulled at the halter, but the
+thief stirred not; so he turned and seeing the halter on a
+man's neck, said to him, 'Who art thou?' Quoth the sharper, 'I
+am thine ass and my story is a strange one. Know that I have a
+pious old mother and came in to her one day, drunk; and she
+said to me, "O my son, repent to God the Most High of these thy
+transgressions." But I took the cudgel and beat her, whereupon
+she cursed me and God the Most High changed me into an ass and
+caused me fall into thy hands, where I have remained till now.
+However, to-day, my mother called me to mind and her heart
+relented towards me; so she prayed for me, and God restored me
+to my former shape of a man.' 'There is no power and no virtue
+but in God the Most High, the Supreme!' cried the simpleton. 'O
+my brother, I conjure thee by Allah, acquit me of what I have
+done with thee, in the way of riding and so forth.'
+
+Then he let the sharper go and returned home, drunken with
+chagrin and concern. His wife asked him, 'What ails thee and
+where is the ass?' And he answered, 'Thou knowest not what was
+this ass; but I will tell thee.' So he told her the story, and
+she exclaimed, 'Woe worth us for God the Most High! How could
+we have used a man as a beast of burden, all this while?' And
+she gave alms and asked pardon of God. Then the man abode
+awhile at home, idle, till she said to him, 'How long wilt thou
+sit at home, idle? Go to the market and buy us an ass and do
+thy business with it.' Accordingly, he went to the market and
+stopping by the ass-stand, saw his own ass for sale. So he went
+up to it and clapping his mouth to its ear, said to it, 'Out on
+thee, thou good-for-nought! Doubtless thou hast been getting
+drunk again and beating thy mother! But, by Allah, I will never
+buy thee more!' And he left it and went away.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE IMAM ABOU YOUSUF WITH HAROUN ER
+ RESHID AND ZUBEIDEH.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid went up one noon-tide to his couch,
+to lie down, and mounting, found thereon fresh semen; whereat
+he was startled and sore perturbed and troubled. So he called
+the princess Zubeideh and said to her, 'What is that spilt on
+the bed?' She looked at it and replied, 'O Commander of the
+Faithful, it is semen.' 'Tell me truly what this means,' said he;
+'or I will lay violent hands on thee forthright.' 'O Commander of
+the Faithful,' answered she, 'indeed, I know not how it came
+there and I am guiltless of that whereof thou suspectest me.'
+So he sent for the Imam Abou Yousuf and told him the case. The
+Imam raised his eyes to the roof and seeing a crack therein,
+said to the Khalif, 'O Commander of the Faithful, the bat hath
+semen like that of a man, and this is bats' semen.' Then he
+called for a lance and thrust it into the crack, whereupon down
+fell the bat. In this manner the Khalif's suspicions were
+dispelled and Zubeideh's innocence was made manifest; whereat
+she gave vent to her joy and promised Abou Yousuf a liberal
+reward.
+
+Now there were with her magnificent fruits, out of their
+season, and she knew of others in the garden; so she said to
+Abou Yousuf, 'O Imam of the Faith, which wouldst thou rather of
+the two kinds of fruits, those that are here or those that are
+not here?' 'Our code forbids us to pronounce judgment on the
+absent,' answered he. 'When they are present, we will give
+judgment.' So she caused bring the two kinds of fruits before
+him, and he ate of both. Quoth she, 'What is the difference
+between them?' And he answered, 'As often as I think to praise
+one kind, the other puts in its claim.' The Khalif laughed at
+his answer and made him a present. Zubeideh also gave him what
+she had promised him, and he went away, rejoicing. See, then,
+the blessed qualities of this Imam and how at his hands were
+made manifest the truth and the innocence of the lady Zubeideh.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF EL HAKIM AND THE MERCHANT.
+
+
+
+The Khalif El Hakim bi Amrillah was riding out in state one day,
+when he came to a garden, in which he saw a man, surrounded by
+slaves and servants. He asked him for a draught of water, and
+the man gave him to drink, saying, 'Peradventure, the Commander
+of the Faithful will honour me by alighting in this my garden.'
+So the Khalif dismounted and entered the garden with his suite;
+whereupon the man brought out to them a hundred carpets and a
+hundred leather mats and a hundred cushions and set before them
+a hundred dishes of fruits, a hundred saucers of sweetmeats and
+a hundred bowls full of sherbets of sugar; whereat the Khalif
+marvelled and said to his host, 'O man, this thy case is a
+strange one. Didst thou know of our coming and make this
+preparation for us?' 'No, by Allah, O Commander of the Faithful,'
+answered the other, 'I knew not of thy coming and am but a
+merchant of the rest of thy subjects. But I have a hundred
+concubines; so, when the Commander of the Faithful honoured
+me by alighting with me, I sent to each of them, bidding her
+send me the morning-meal here. So they sent me each of her
+furniture and of the excess of her meat and drink: and every
+day each sends me a dish of meat and another of marinades, also
+a plate of fruits and a saucer of sweetmeats and a bowl of
+sherbet. This is my every- day noon-meal, nor have I added
+aught thereto for thee.'
+
+The Khalif prostrated himself in thanksgiving to God the Most
+High and said, 'Praised be God, who hath been so bountiful to
+one of our subjects, that he entertaineth the Khalif and his
+suite, without making ready for them, but of the surplus of his
+day's victual!' Then he sent for all the dirhems in the
+treasury, that had been struck that year,--and they were in
+number three thousand and seven hundred thousand;--nor did he
+mount, till the money came, when he gave it to the merchant,
+saying, 'Use this for the maintenance of thy state; and thy
+desert is more than this.' Then he mounted and rode away.
+
+
+
+
+
+ KING KISRA ANOUSHIRWAN AND THE VILLAGE
+ DAMSEL.
+
+
+
+
+The just King, Kisra Anoushirwan,[FN#113] was hunting one day
+and became separated from his suite, in pursuit of an antelope.
+Presently, he caught sight of a hamlet, near at hand, and being
+sore athirst, made for the door of a house, that stood by the
+wayside, and asked for a draught of water. A damsel came out
+and looked at him; then, going back into the house, pressed the
+juice from a sugar-cane into a tankard and mixed it with water;
+after which she strewed on the top somewhat of perfume, as it
+were dust, and carried it to the King. He took it and seeing in
+it what resembled dust, drank it, little by little, till he
+came to the end. Then said he to her, 'O damsel, the drink is
+good and sweet, but for this dust in it, that troubles it.' 'O
+guest,' answered she, 'I put that in, of intent.' 'And why
+didst thou thus?' asked he; and she replied, 'I saw that thou
+wast exceeding thirsty and feared that thou wouldst swallow the
+whole at one draught and that this would do thee a mischief;
+and so hadst thou done, but for this dust that troubled the
+drink.' The King wondered at her wit and good sense and said to
+her, 'How many sugar-canes didst thou press for this draught?'
+'One,' answered she; whereat the King marvelled and calling for
+the roll of the taxes of the village, saw that its assessment
+was but little and bethought him to increase it, on his return
+to his palace, saying in himself, 'Why is a village so lightly
+taxed, where they get this much juice out of one sugar-cane?'
+
+Then he left the village and pursued his chase. As he came back
+at the end of the day, he passed alone by the same door and
+called again for drink; whereupon the same damsel came out and
+knowing him, went in to fetch him drink. It was some time
+before she returned and the King wondered at this and said to
+her, 'Why hast thou tarried?' Quoth she, 'Because one sugar-
+cane yielded not enough for thy need. So I pressed three; but
+they yielded not so much as did one aforetime.' 'What is the
+cause of that?' asked the King; and she answered, 'The cause of
+it is that the King's mind is changed.' Quoth he, 'How knewst
+thou that?' 'We hear from the wise,' replied she, 'that, when
+the King's mind is changed against a folk, their prosperity
+ceaseth and their good waxeth less.' Anoushirwan laughed and
+put away from his mind that which he had purposed against the
+people of the village. Moreover, he took the damsel to wife
+then and there, being pleased with her much wit and acuteness
+and the excellence of her speech.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE WATER-CARRIER AND THE GOLDSMITH'S
+ WIFE.
+
+
+
+There was once, in the city of Bokhara, a water-carrier, who
+used to carry water to the house of a goldsmith and had done
+thus thirty years. Now the goldsmith had a wife of exceeding
+beauty and elegance and withal renowned for modesty, chastity
+and piety. One day, the water-carrier came, as of wont, and
+poured the water into the cisterns. Now the woman was standing
+in the midst of the court; so he went up to her and taking her
+hand, stroked it and pressed it, then went away and left her.
+When her husband came home from the bazaar, she said to him, 'I
+would have thee tell me what thou hast done in the bazaar,
+today, to anger God the Most High.' Quoth he, 'I have done
+nothing.' 'Nay,' rejoined she, 'but, by Allah, thou hast indeed
+done something to anger God; and except thou tell me the truth,
+I will not abide in thy house, and thou shalt not see me, nor
+will I see thee.' 'I will tell thee the truth,' answered he.
+'As I was sitting in my shop this day, a woman came up to me
+and bade me make her a bracelet. Then she went away and I
+wrought her a bracelet of gold and laid it aside. Presently,
+she returned and I brought her out the bracelet. She put out
+her hand and I clasped the bracelet on her wrist; and I
+wondered at the whiteness of her hand and the beauty of her
+wrist and recalled what the poet says:
+
+Bracelets, upon her wrists, of glittering virgin gold She hath,
+ like fire ablaze on running water cold.
+It is as if the wrists and bracelets thereabout Were water girt
+ with fire, right wondrous to behold.
+
+So I took her hand and pressed it and squeezed it.' 'God is
+Most Great!' exclaimed the woman. 'Why didst thou this ill
+thing? Know that the water-carrier, who has come to our house
+these thirty years, nor sawst thou ever any treason in him,
+took my hand to day and pressed and squeezed it.' Quoth her
+husband, 'O woman, let us crave pardon of God! Verily, I repent
+of what I did, and do thou ask forgiveness of God for me.' 'God
+pardon me and thee,' said she, 'and vouchsafe to make good the
+issue of our affair!'
+
+Next day, the water-carrier came in to the jeweller's wife and
+throwing himself at her feet, grovelled in the dust and
+besought pardon of her, saying, 'O my lady, acquit me of that
+which Satan deluded me to do; for it was he that seduced me and
+led me astray.' 'Go thy ways,' answered she; 'the fault was not
+in thee, but in my husband, for that he did what he did in his
+shop, and God hath retaliated upon him in this world.' And it
+is related that the goldsmith, when his wife told him how the
+water-carrier had used her, said, 'Tit for tat! If I had done
+more, the water-carrier had done more.' And this became a
+current byword among the folk.
+
+So it behoveth a wife to be both outward and inward with her
+husband, contenting herself with little from him, if he cannot
+give her much, and taking pattern by Aaisheh[FN#114] the
+Truthful and Fatimeh[FN#115] the Clean Maid, (may God the Most
+High accept of them), that she may be of the company of the
+righteous.[FN#116]
+
+
+
+
+
+ KHUSRAU AND SHIRIN WITH THE FISHERMAN.
+
+
+
+King Khusrau[FN#117] of Persia loved fish; and one day, as he
+sat in his saloon, he and Shirin[FN#118] his wife, there came a
+fisherman, with a great fish, and presented it to the King, who
+was pleased and ordered the man four thousand dirhems. When he
+was gone, Shirin said to the King, 'Thou hast done ill.'
+'Wherefore?' asked he; and she answered, 'Because if, after
+this, thou give one of thy courtiers a like sum, he will
+disdain it and say, "He hath but given me the like of what he
+gave the fisherman." And if thou give him less, he will say,
+"He makes light of me and gives me less than he gave the
+fisherman."' 'Thou art right,' rejoined Khusrau; 'but the thing
+is done and it ill becomes a king to go back on his gift.'
+Quoth Shirin, 'An thou wilt, I will contrive thee a means to
+get it back from him.' 'How so?' asked he; and she said, 'Call
+back the fisherman and ask him if the fish be male or female.
+If he say, "Male," say thou, "We want a female," and if he say,
+"Female," say, "We want a male."'
+
+So he sent for the fisherman, who was a man of wit and
+discernment, and said to him, 'Is this fish male or female?'
+The fisherman kissed the ground and answered, 'It is of the
+neuter gender, neither male nor female.' The King laughed and
+ordered him other four thousand dirhems. So the fisherman went
+to the treasurer and taking his eight thousand dirhems, put
+them in a bag he had with him. Then, throwing the bag over his
+shoulder, he was going away, when he dropped a dirhem; so he
+laid the bag off his back and stooped down to pick it up. Now
+the King and Shirin were looking on, and the latter said, 'O
+King, didst thou note the meanness and greediness of yon man,
+in that he must needs stoop down, to pick up the one dirhem,
+and could not bring himself to leave it for one of the King's
+servants?' When the King heard this, he was wroth with the
+fisherman and said, 'Thou art right, O Shirin!' So he called
+the man back and said to him, 'Thou low-minded fellow! Thou art
+no man! How couldst thou put the bag off thy shoulder and stoop
+to pick up the one dirhem and grudge to leave it where it
+fell?' The fisherman kissed the earth before him and answered,
+'May God prolong the King's life! Indeed, I did not pick up the
+dirhem, because of its value in my eyes; but because on one of
+its faces is the likeness of the King and on the other his
+name; and I feared lest any should unwittingly set his foot
+upon it, thus dishonouring the name and presentment of the
+King, and I be blamed for the offence.' The King wondered at
+his wit and shrewdness and ordered him yet other four thousand
+dirhems. Moreover, he let cry abroad in his kingdom, saying,
+'It behoveth none to order himself by women's counsel; for
+whoso followeth their advice, loseth, with his one dirhem,
+other two.'
+
+
+
+
+
+ YEHYA BEN KHALID THE BARMECIDE AND THE
+ POOR MAN.
+
+
+
+Yehya ben Khalid the Barmecide was returning home, one day,
+from the Khalif's palace, when he saw a man at the gate of his
+house, who rose at his approach and saluted him, saying, 'O
+Yehya, I am in need of that which is in thy hand, and I make
+God my intermediary with thee.' So Yehya caused set apart a
+place for him in his house and bade his treasurer carry him a
+thousand dirhems every day and that his food should be of the
+choicest of his own meat. The man abode thus a whole month, at
+the end of which time, having received in all thirty thousand
+dirhems, he departed by stealth, fearing lest Yehya should take
+the money from him, because of the greatness of the sum; and
+when they told Yehya of this, he said, 'By Allah, though he had
+tarried with me to the end of his days, yet had I not scanted
+him of my largesse nor cut off from him the bounties of my
+hospitality!' For, indeed, the excellences of the Barmecides
+were past count nor can their virtues be told; especially those
+of Yehya teen Khalid, for he abounded in noble qualities, even
+as saith the poet of him:
+
+I asked munificence, "Art free?" It answered, "No, perdie!
+ Yehya ben Khalid's slave am I; my lord and master he."
+"A boughten slave?" asked I; but, "Nay, so heaven forfend!"
+ quoth it. "From ancestor to ancestor he did inherit me."
+
+
+
+
+
+ MOHAMMED EL AMIN AND JAAFER BEN EL HADI.
+
+
+
+Jaafer ben Mousa el Hadi[FN#119] once had a slave-girl, a lute
+player, called El Bedr el Kebir, than whom there was not in her
+time a fairer of face nor a better-shaped nor a more elegant of
+manners nor a more accomplished in singing and smiting the
+strings; she was indeed perfect in beauty and charm. Mohammed
+el Amin,[FN#120] son of Zubeideh, heard of her and was instant
+with Jaafer to sell her to him; but he replied, 'Thou knowest
+it beseems not one of my rank to sell slave-girls nor traffic
+in concubines; but, were it not that she was reared in my
+house, I would send her to thee, as a gift, nor grudge her to
+thee.'
+
+Some days after this, El Amin went to Jaafer's house, to make
+merry; and the latter set before him that which it behoves to
+set before friends and bade El Bedr sing to him and gladden
+him. So she tuned the lute and sang right ravishingly, whilst El
+Amin fell to drinking and making merry and bade the cupbearers
+ply Jaafer with wine, till he became drunken, when he took the
+damsel and carried her to his own house, but laid not a finger
+on her. On the morrow, he sent to invite Jaafer; and when he
+came, he set wine before him and bade the girl sing to him, from
+behind the curtain. Jaafer knew her voice and was angered at
+this, but, of the nobleness of his nature and the greatness of
+his mind, he dissembled his vexation and let no change appear in
+his demeanour.
+
+When the carousel was at an end, El Amin commanded one of his
+servants to fill the boat, in which Jaafer had come, with
+dirhems and dinars and all manner jewels and jacinths and rich
+clothes and other treasures of price. So he laid therein a
+thousand myriads of money and a thousand fine pearls, each
+worth twenty thousand dirhems; nor did he give over loading the
+barge with all manner of precious things, till the boatmen
+cried out for quarter, saying, 'The boat cannot hold any more;'
+whereupon he bade them carry all this to Jaafer's palace. Such
+are the fashions of the magnanimous, may God have mercy on
+them!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE SONS OF YEHYA BEN KHALID AND SAID BEN
+ SALIM EL BAHILI.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Said ben Salim el Bahili[FN#121]), I was once, in the
+days of Haroun er Reshid, in very narrow case and greatly
+oppressed with debts, that had accumulated upon me and that I
+had no means of discharging. My doors were blocked up with
+creditors and I was without cease importuned for payment by
+claimants, who dunned me in crowds, till I was at my wits'
+end what to do. At last, being sore perplexed and troubled,
+I betook myself to Abdallah ben Malik el Khuzai[FN#122] and
+besought him to aid me with his judgment and of his good
+counsel direct me to the door of relief; and he said, "None can
+quit thee of this thy strait but the Barmecides." Quoth I, "Who
+can brook their pride and put up with their arrogance?" And he
+answered, "Thou must put up with it, for the sake of amending
+thy case." So I left him and went straight to El Fezl and
+Jaafer, sons of Yehya ben Khalid, to whom I related my case.
+"God give thee His aid," answered they, "and enable thee by
+His bounties to dispense with the aid of His creatures and
+vouchsafe thee abundant good and bestow on thee what shall
+suffice thee, without the need of any but Himself; for He can
+what He will and is gracious and provident with His servants."
+
+I went out from them and returned to Abdallah, disappointed and
+perplexed and heavy at heart, and told him what they had said.
+Quoth he, "Thou wouldst do well to abide with us this day, that
+we may see what God the Most High will decree." So I sat with
+him awhile, and lo, up came my servant, who said to me, "O my
+lord, there are at our door many laden mules, and with them a
+man, who says he is the agent of Fezl and Jaafer ben Yehya."
+Quoth Abdallah, "I trust that relief is come to thee: go and
+see what is to do." So I left him and running to my house,
+found at the door a man, who gave me a letter, wherein was
+written the following: "Know that, after thou hadst been with
+us and acquainted us with thy case, we betook ourselves to the
+Khalif and informed him that the case had reduced thee to the
+humiliation of begging; whereupon he ordered thee a million
+dirhems from the Treasury. We represented to him that thou
+wouldst spend this money in paying thy creditors and said,
+'Whence shall he provide for his subsistence?' So he ordered
+thee other three hundred thousand, and we have sent thee, of
+our own money, a million dirhems each, so that thou hast now
+three millions and three hundred thousand dirhems, wherewithal
+to order thine affair and amend thine estate."
+
+See, then, the munificence of these generous men; may God the
+Most High have mercy on them!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE WOMAN'S TRICK AGAINST HER HUSBAND.
+
+
+
+A man brought his wife a fish one Friday and bidding her cook
+it against the end of the congregational prayers, went out to
+his business. Meanwhile, there came in her friend,[FN#123] who
+bade her to a wedding at his house; so she agreed and laying
+the fish in a jar of water, went off with him and was absent a
+whole week, whilst her husband sought her from house to house
+and enquired after her; but none could give him any news of
+her.
+
+On the following Friday, she came home, [and he fell to chiding
+and reproaching her;] but she brought out to him the fish alive
+from the jar and assembled the folk against him. He told them
+his case; but they credited him not and said, 'It cannot be
+that the fish should have remained alive all this while.' So
+they caused adjudge him mad and imprisoned him and laughed at
+him, whereupon he wept sore and recited the following verses:
+
+A hag, that holds high rank, indeed, in lewdness! In her face
+ Are witnesses that testify to filth and wantonness.
+When she's unclean, she bawds; and when she's clean, she plays
+ the whore: So, all her time, she's either bawd or else
+ adulteress.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE DEVOUT WOMAN AND THE TWO WICKED
+ ELDERS.[FN#124]
+
+There was once, of old time, a virtuous woman among the children
+of Israel, who was pious and devout and used every day to go out
+to the place of prayer, first entering a garden, which adjoined
+thereto, and there making the ablution. Now there were in this
+garden two old men, its keepers, who fell in love with her
+and sought her favours; but she refused, whereupon said they,
+'Except thou yield thyself to us, we will bear witness against
+thee of fornication.' Quoth she, 'God will preserve me from your
+wickedness!' Then they opened the garden-gate and cried out, and
+the folk came to them from all sides, saying, 'What ails you?'
+Quoth they, 'We found this damsel in company with a youth, who
+was doing lewdness with her; but he escaped from our hands.'
+
+Now it was the use of the people of those days to expose an
+adulteress to public ignominy for three days and after stone
+her. So they pilloried her three days, whilst the two old men
+came up to her daily and laying their hands on her head, said,
+'Praised be God who hath sent down His vengeance on thee!'
+
+On the fourth day, they carried her away, to stone her; but a
+lad of twelve years old, by name Daniel, followed them to the
+place of execution and said to them, 'Hasten not to stone her,
+till I judge between them.' So they set him a chair and he sat
+down and caused bring the old men before him separately. (Now
+he was the first that separated witnesses.) Then said he to the
+first, 'What sawest thou?' So he repeated to him his story, and
+Daniel said, 'In what part of the garden did this befall?' 'On
+the eastern side,' replied the elder, 'under a pear-tree.' Then
+he called the other old man and asked him the same question;
+and he replied, 'On the western side of the garden, under an
+apple-tree.' Meanwhile the damsel stood by, with her hands and
+eyes uplift to heaven, imploring God for deliverance. Then God
+the Most High sent down His vengeful thunder upon the two old
+men and consumed them and made manifest the innocence of the
+damsel.
+
+This was the first of the miracles of the Prophet Daniel, on
+whom and on the Prophet be blessing and peace!
+
+
+
+
+
+ JAAFER THE BARMECIDE AND THE OLD
+ BEDOUIN.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid went out one day, with Abou Yousuf
+the minion and Jaafer the Barmecide and Abou Nuwas, into the
+desert, where they fell in with an old man, leant upon his ass.
+The Khalif bade Jaafer ask him whence he came; so he said to
+him, 'Whence comest thou?' 'From Bassora,' answered the
+Bedouin. 'And whither goest thou?' asked Jaafer. 'To Baghdad,'
+said the other. 'And what wilt thou do there?' asked Jaafer. 'I
+go to seek medicine for my eye,' replied the old man. Quoth the
+Khalif, 'O Jaafer, make us sport with him.' 'If I jest with
+him,' answered Jaafer, 'I shall hear what I shall not like.'
+But Er Reshid rejoined, 'I charge thee, on my authority, jest
+with him.'
+
+So Jaafer said to the Bedouin, 'If I prescribe thee a remedy
+that shall profit thee, what wilt thou give me in return?'
+Quoth the other, 'God the Most High will requite thee for me
+with better than I can give thee.' 'Harkye, then,' said Jaafer,
+'and I will give thee a prescription, which I have given to
+none but thee.' 'What is that?' asked the Bedouin; and Jaafer
+answered, 'Take three ounces of wind-wafts and the like of
+sunbeams and moonshine and lamp-light; mix them together and
+let them lie in the wind three months. Then bray them three
+months in a mortar without a bottom and laying them in a cleft
+platter, set it in the wind other three months; after which use
+three drachms every night in thy sleep, and (God willing) thou
+shalt be cured.'
+
+When the Bedouin heard this, he stretched himself out on the
+ass's back and letting fly a terrible great crack of wind, said
+to Jaafer, 'Take this, in payment of thy prescription. When I
+have followed it, if God grant me recovery, I will give thee a
+slave-girl, who shall serve thee in thy lifetime a service,
+wherewith God shall cut short thy term; and when thou diest and
+God hurries thy soul to the fire, she shall blacken thy face
+with her ordure, of her mourning for thee, and lament and
+buffet her face, saying, "O frosty-beard, what a ninny thou
+wast!"'[FN#125] The Khalif laughed till he fell backward, and
+ordered the Bedouin three thousand dirhems.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF OMAR BEN KHETTAB AND THE
+ YOUNG BEDOUIN.
+
+
+
+The sheriff[FN#126] Hussein ben Reyyan relates that the Khalif
+Omar ben Khettab was sitting one day, attended by his chief
+counsellors, judging the folk and doing justice between his
+subjects, when there came up to him two handsome young men,
+haling by the collar a third youth, perfectly handsome and
+well dressed, whom they set before him. Omar looked at him and
+bade them loose him; then, calling him near to himself, said
+to them, 'What is your case with him?' 'O Commander of the
+Faithful,' answered they, 'we are two brothers by one mother
+and known as followers of the truth. We had a father, a very
+old man of good counsel, held in honour of the tribes, pure of
+basenesses and renowned for virtues, who reared us tenderly,
+whilst we were little, and loaded us with favours, when we
+grew up; in fine, a man abounding in noble and illustrious
+qualities, worthy of the poet's words:
+
+"Is Abou es Sekr of Sheiban[FN#127]?" they questioned of me;
+ and "No," I answered, "my life upon it! But Sheiban's of
+ him, I trow.
+How many a father hath ris'n in repute by a noble son, As
+ Adnan,[FN#128] by God's Apostle, to fame and glory did
+ grow!"
+
+He went forth this day to his garden, to take his pleasure
+amongst its trees and pluck the ripe fruits, when this young
+man slew him and swerved from the road of righteousness;
+wherefore we demand of thee the retribution of his crime and
+call upon thee to pass judgment upon him, according to the
+commandment of God.'
+
+The Khalif cast a terrible look at the accused youth and said
+to him, 'Thou hearest the complaint of these young men; what
+hast thou to say in reply?' Now he was stout of heart and ready
+of speech, having doffed the wede of faint-heartedness and put
+off the apparel of affright; so he smiled and after paying the
+usual ceremonial compliment to the Khalif, in the most eloquent
+and elegant words, said, 'O Commander of the Faithful, I have
+given ear to their complaint, and they have said sooth in that
+which they avouch, so far as they have set out what befell; and
+the commandment of God is a decreed decree.[FN#129] But I will
+state my case before thee, and thine be it to decide thereon.
+
+Know then, O Commander of the Faithful, that I am a very Arab
+of the Arabs, the noblest of those that are beneath the skies.
+I grew up in the dwellings of the desert, till evil and hostile
+times fell upon my tribe, when I came to the utterward of this
+town, with my children and good and household. As I went along
+one of the paths between the gardens, with my she-camels, high
+in esteem with me and precious to me, and midst them a stallion
+of noble race and goodly shape, a plenteous getter, by whom the
+females bore abundantly and who walked among them, as he were a
+crowned king,--behold, one of the she-camels broke away and
+running to the garden of these young men's father, began to
+crop the branches that showed above the wall. I ran to her, to
+drive her away, when there appeared, at a breach of the wall,
+an old man, whose eyes sparkled with anger, holding a stone in
+his right hand and swaying to and fro, like a lion preparing
+for a spring. He cast the stone at my stallion, and it struck
+him in a vital part and killed him. When I saw the stallion
+drop dead beside me, live coals of anger were kindled in my
+heart; so I took up the stone and throwing it at the old man,
+it was the cause of his end: thus his own wrongful act returned
+against him and the man was slain of that wherewith he slew.
+When the stone struck him, he cried out with a terrible great
+cry, and I hastened from the spot; but these young men hurried
+after me and laying hands on me, carried me before thee.'
+
+Quoth Omar, (may God the Most High accept of him), 'Thou hast
+confessed thy crime and acquittal is impossible; for [the law
+of] retaliation is imperative and there is no time of escape.'
+[FN#130] 'I hear and obey the judgment of the Imam,' answered
+the Bedouin, 'and am content to submit me to the requirement
+of the law of Islam; but I have a young brother, whose old
+father, before his death, appointed to him great store of
+wealth and much gold and committed his affair to me, saying,
+"I give this into thy hand for thy brother; keep it for him
+with thy might." So I took the money and buried it; nor doth
+any know of it but I. Now, if thou adjudge me to die forthright,
+the money will be lost and thou wilt be the cause of its loss;
+wherefore the little one will sue thee for his due on the day
+when God shall judge His creatures. But, if thou wilt grant
+me three days' delay, I will appoint one to undertake the boy's
+affair, in my stead, and return to answer my debt; and I have
+one who will be my surety for this my word.'
+
+The Khalif bowed his head awhile, then raised it and looking
+round upon those present, said, 'Who will be surety to me for
+his return?' The Bedouin looked at the faces of those who were
+in company and pointing to Abou Dherr,[FN#131] said, 'This man
+will answer for me and be my surety.' 'O Abou Dherr,' said Omar,
+'dost thou hear what this youth says and wilt thou be surety
+to me for his return?' 'Yes, O Commander of the Faithful,'
+answered Abou Dherr, 'I will be surety for him three days.'
+So the Khalif accepted his guarantee and let the young man go.
+
+Now, at the appointed time, when the days of grace were nearly
+or quite at end and still the Bedouin came not, the Khalif sat
+in his council, with the Companions[FN#132] surrounding him,
+like the stars about the moon, Abou Dherr and the plaintiffs
+being also present; and the latter said, 'O Abou Dherr, where
+is the defendant and how shall he return, having once escaped?
+But we will not stir hence, till thou bring him to us, that we
+may take our wreak of him.' 'As the All-Wise King liveth,'
+replied Abou Dherr, 'if the days of grace expire and the young
+man return not, I will fulfil my warranty and surrender myself
+to the Imam.' 'By Allah,' rejoined Omar, 'if the young man
+tarry, I will assuredly execute on Abou Dherr that which is
+prescribed by the law of Islam!' Thereupon the eyes of the
+bystanders ran over with tears; those who looked on raised
+groans, and great was the clamour. Then the chiefs of the
+Companions were instant with the plaintiffs to accept the
+bloodwit and win the thanks of the folk, but they refused and
+would nothing but the talion. However, as the folk were swaying
+to and fro and clamorously bemoaning Abou Dherr, up came the
+young Bedouin, with face beaded with sweat and shining like the
+new moon, and standing before the Imam, saluted him right
+fairly and said to him, 'I have given the boy in charge to his
+mother's brothers and have made them acquainted with all that
+pertains to his affairs and let them into the secret of his
+good; after which I braved the heats of midday and am come to
+redeem the promise of a free-born man.'
+
+The folk marvelled at his good faith and loyalty and his
+intrepid offering himself to death; and one said to him, 'How
+noble a youth art thou and how loyal to thy promise and thy
+duty!' 'Are ye not certified,' rejoined he, 'that when death
+presenteth itself none can escape from it? And indeed I have
+kept faith, that it be not said, "Loyalty is gone from among
+men."' 'By Allah, O Commander of the Faithful,' said Abou
+Dherr, 'I became warrant for this young man, without knowing to
+what tribe he belonged, nor had I seen him before that day; but
+when he turned away from all else who were present and singled
+me out, saying, "This man will answer for me and be my surety,"
+I thought ill to refuse him, and humanity forbade to baulk his
+expectation, there being no harm in compliance with his desire,
+that it be not said, "Benevolence is gone from among men."'
+Then said the two young men, 'O Commander of the Faithful, we
+forgive this youth our father's blood,--seeing that [by his
+noble behaviour] he hath changed desolation into cheer,--that
+it be not said, "Humanity is gone from among men."'
+
+The Khalif rejoiced in the acquittance of the young Bedouin and
+his truth and good faith; moreover, he extolled the humanity of
+Abou Dherr, over all his companions, and approved the benevolent
+resolve of the two young men, giving them grateful praise and
+applying to their case the saying of the poet:
+
+He who doth good among the folk shall be repaid again; For
+ works of Good are never lost betwixten God and men.
+
+Then he offered to pay them, from the Treasury, the bloodwit
+for their father; but they refused, saying, 'We forgave him but
+of our desire unto God the Bountiful, the Exalted; and he who
+is thus minded followeth not his benefits with reproach neither
+mischief.'
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF EL MAMOUN AND THE PYRAMIDS OF
+ EGYPT.
+
+
+
+It is told that the Khalif El Mamoun, son of Haroun er Reshid,
+when he entered the [God-]guarded city of Cairo, was minded to
+pull down the Pyramids, that he might take what was therein;
+but, when he went about to do this, he could not avail thereto,
+for all his endeavour. He expended great sums of money in the
+attempt, but only succeeded in opening up a small gallery in
+one of them, wherein he found treasure, to the exact amount of
+the money he had spent in the works, neither more nor less; at
+which he marvelled and taking what he found there, desisted
+from his intent.
+
+Now the Pyramids are three in number, and they are one of the
+wonders of the world; nor is there on the face of the earth
+their like for height and fashion and skilful ordinance; for
+they are builded of immense rocks, and they who built them
+proceeded by piercing one block of stone and setting therein
+upright rods of iron; after which they pierced a second block
+of stone and lowered it upon the first. Then they poured melted
+lead upon the joints and set the blocks in geometrical order,
+till the building was complete. The height of each pyramid was
+a hundred cubits, of the measure of the time, and it was four-
+square, each side three hundred cubits long, at the bottom, and
+sloping upward thence to a point. The ancients say that, in the
+western Pyramid, are thirty chambers of vari-coloured granite,
+full of precious stones and treasures galore and rare images
+and utensils and costly arms, which latter are anointed with
+magical unguents, so that they may not rust till the day of
+Resurrection. Therein, also, are vessels of glass, that will
+bend and not break, containing various kinds of compound drugs
+and medicinal waters. In the second Pyramid are the records of
+the priests, written on tablets of granite,--to each priest his
+tablet, on which are set out the wonders of his craft and his
+achievements; and on the walls are figures like idols, working
+with their hands at all manner crafts and seated on thrones. To
+each pyramid there is a guardian, that keeps watch over it and
+guards it, to all eternity, against the ravages of time and the
+vicissitudes of events; and indeed the marvels of these
+pyramids astound all who have eyes and wit. Many are the poems
+that describe them, thou shalt profit no great matter thereby,
+and among the rest, quoth one of them:
+
+The high resolves of kings, if they would have them to abide In
+ memory, after them, are in the tongues of monuments.
+Dost thou not see the Pyramids? They, of a truth, endure And
+ change not for the shifts of time or chances of events.
+
+And again:
+
+Consider but the Pyramids and lend an ear to all They tell of
+ bygone times and that which did of yore befall.
+Could they but speak, assuredly they would to us relate What
+ time and fate have done with first and last and great and
+ small.
+
+And again:
+
+I prithee, tell me, friend of mine, stands there beneath the
+ sky A building with the Pyramids of Egypt that can vie
+In skilful ordinance? Behold, Time's self's afraid of them,
+ Though of all else upon the earth 'tis dreaded, low and
+ high.
+My sight no longer rests upon their wondrous ordinance, Yet are
+ they present evermore unto my spirit's eye.
+
+And again:
+
+Where's he the Pyramids who built? What was his tribe, His time
+ and what the place where he was stricken dead?
+The monuments survive their lords awhile; then death O'ertaketh
+ them and they fall prostrate in their stead.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE THIEF TURNED MERCHANT AND THE OTHER
+ THIEF.
+
+
+
+There was once a thief who repented to God the Most High and
+making good his repentance, opened himself a shop for the sale
+of stuffs, where he continued to trade awhile. One day, he
+locked his shop and went home; and in the night there came to
+the bazaar a cunning thief, disguised in the habit of the
+merchant, and pulling out keys from his sleeve, said to the
+watchman of the market, 'Light me this candle.' So the watchman
+took the candle and went to get a light, whilst the thief
+opened the shop and lit another candle he had with him. When
+the watchman came back, he found him seated in the shop,
+looking over the account-books and reckoning with his fingers;
+nor did he leave to do thus till point of day, when he said to
+the man, 'Fetch me a camel-driver and his camel, to carry some
+goods for me.' So the man fetched him a camel, and the thief
+took four bales of stuffs and gave them to the camel-driver,
+who loaded them on his beast. Then he gave the watchman two
+dirhems and went away after the camel-driver, the watchman the
+while believing him to be the owner of the shop.
+
+Next morning, the merchant came and the watchman greeted
+him with blessings, because of the two dirhems, much to the
+surprise of the former, who knew not what he meant. When he
+opened his shop, he saw the droppings of the wax and the
+account-book lying on the floor, and looking round, found
+four bales of stuffs missing. So he asked the watchman what
+had happened and he told him what had passed in the night,
+whereupon the merchant bade him fetch the camel-driver and said
+to the latter, 'Whither didst thou carry the stuffs?' 'To such
+a wharf,' answered the driver; 'and I stowed them on board such
+a vessel.' 'Come with me thither,' said the merchant. So the
+camel-driver carried him to the wharf and showed him the barque
+and her owner. Quoth the merchant to the latter, 'Whither didst
+thou carry the merchant and the stuff?' 'To such a place,'
+answered the master, 'where he fetched a camel-driver and
+setting the bales on the camel, went I know not whither.'
+'Fetch me the camel-driver,' said the merchant; so he fetched
+him and the merchant said to him, 'Whither didst thou carry the
+bales of stuffs from the ship?' 'To such a khan,' answered he.
+'Come thither with me and show it to me,' said the merchant.
+
+So the camel-driver went with him to a khan at a distance from
+the shore, where he had set down the stuffs, and showed him the
+mock merchant's magazine, which he opened and found therein his
+four bales untouched and unopened. The thief had laid his
+mantle over them; so the merchant took the bales and the cloak
+and delivered them to the camel-driver, who laid them on his
+camel; after which the merchant locked the magazine and went
+away with the camel-driver. On the way, he met the thief, who
+followed him, till he had shipped the bales, when he said to
+him, 'O my brother (God have thee in His keeping!), thou hast
+recovered thy goods, and nought of them is lost; so give me
+back my cloak.' The merchant laughed and giving him back his
+cloak, let him go unhindered.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ MESROUR THE EUNUCH AND IBN EL CARIBI
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid was very restless one night; so he
+said to his Vizier Jaafer, 'I am sleepless tonight and my heart
+is oppressed and I know not what to do.' Now his henchman
+Mesrour was standing before him, and he laughed. Quoth the
+Khalif, 'Dost thou laugh in derision of me or art thou mad?'
+'Neither, by Allah, O Commander of the Faithful,' answered
+Mesrour, 'by thy kinship to the Prince of Apostles, I did it
+not of my free-will; but I went out yesterday to walk and
+coming to the bank of the Tigris, saw there the folk collected
+about a man named Ibn el Caribi, who was making them laugh; and
+but now I recalled what he said, and laughter got the better of
+me; and I crave pardon of thee, O Commander of the Faithful!'
+'Bring him to me forthright,' said the Khalif. So Mesrour
+repaired in all haste to Ibn el Caribi and said to him, 'The
+Commander of the Faithful calls for thee.' 'I hear and obey,'
+answered the droll. 'But on condition,' added Mesrour, 'that,
+if he give thee aught, thou shalt have a fourth and the rest
+shall be mine.' 'Nay,' replied the other, 'thou shalt have half
+and I half.' 'Not so,' insisted Mesrour; 'I will have three-
+quarters.' 'Thou shalt have two-thirds, then,' rejoined Ibn el
+Caribi; 'and I the other third.' To this Mesrour agreed, after
+much haggling, and they returned to the palace together.
+
+When Ibn el Caribi came into the Khalif's presence, he saluted
+him, as became his rank, and stood before him; whereupon said
+Er Reshid to him, 'If thou do not make me laugh, I will give
+thee three blows with this bag.' Quoth Ibn el Caribi in
+himself, 'Three strokes with that bag were a small matter,
+seeing that beating with whips irketh me not;' for he thought
+the bag was empty. Then he clapped into a discourse, such as
+would make a stone laugh, and gave vent to all manner of
+drolleries; but the Khalif laughed not neither smiled, whereat
+Ibn el Caribi marvelled and was chagrined and affrighted. Then
+said the Khalif, 'Now hast thou earned the beating,' and gave
+him a blow with the bag, in which were four pebbles, each two
+pounds in weight. The blow fell on his neck and he gave a great
+cry, then calling to mind his compact with Mesrour, said,
+'Pardon, O Commander of the Faithful! Hear two words from me.'
+'Say on,' replied the Khalif. Quoth Ibn el Caribi, 'Mesrour
+made it a condition with me that, whatsoever might come to me
+of the bounties of the Commander of the Faithful, one-third
+thereof should be mine and the rest his; nor did he agree to
+leave me so much as one-third save after much haggling. Now
+thou hast bestowed on me nothing but beating; I have had my
+share and here stands he, ready to receive his; so give him the
+two other blows.'
+
+When the Khalif heard this, he laughed till he fell backward;
+then calling Mesrour, he gave him a blow, whereat he cried out
+and said, 'O Commander of the Faithful, one-third sufficeth me:
+give him the two-thirds.' The Khalif laughed at them and
+ordered them a thousand diners each, and they went away,
+rejoicing.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE DEVOUT PRINCE.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid had a son, who, from the time he
+attained the age of sixteen, renounced the world and walked in
+the way of ascetics and devotees. He was wont to go out to the
+tombs and say, 'Behold, ye that lie here once possessed the
+world, but that was no deliverer for you [from death], and now
+are ye come to your graves! Would God I knew what ye say and
+what is said to you!' And he wept, as one weeps that is
+troubled and fearful, and repeated the words of the poet:
+
+Whene'er the funerals pass, my heart with fear is torn, And the
+ wailing of the mourners maketh me to mourn.
+
+One day, as he sat among the tombs, according to his wont, his
+father passed by, in all his state, surrounded by his viziers
+and grandees and the officers of his household, who saw the
+Khalif's son, with a gown of woollen stuff on his body and a
+cowl of the same on his head, and said to one another, 'This
+youth dishonours the Commander of the Faithful among Kings:
+but, if he reproved him, he would leave his present way of
+life.' The Khalif heard what they said; so he bespoke his son
+of this, saying, 'O my son, thou puttest me to shame by thy
+present way of life.' The young man looked at him and made no
+reply: then he beckoned to a bird, that was perched on the
+battlements of the palace, and said to it, 'O bird, I conjure
+thee, by Him who created thee, alight upon my hand.' And
+straightway it flew down and perched on his hand. Quoth he,
+'Return to thy place;' and it did so. Then he said, 'Alight on
+the hand of the Commander of the Faithful;' but it refused, and
+he said to his father, 'It is thou that puttest me to shame,
+amongst the friends of God, by thy love of the world; and now I
+am resolved to depart from thee, never to return to thee, save
+in the world to come.' Then he went down to Bassora, where he
+fell to working with those that wrought in mud,[FN#133] taking,
+as his day's hire, but a dirhem and a danic.[FN#134] With the
+danic he fed himself and gave alms of the dirhem.
+
+(Quoth Abou Aamir of Bassora), There fell down a wall in my
+house: so I went out to the station of the artisans, to find
+one who should set it up for me, and my eyes fell on a handsome
+youth of a radiant countenance. So I accosted him and said to
+him, "O my friend, dost thou seek work?" "Yes," answered he;
+and I said, "Come with me and build a wall." "On two conditions,"
+replied he. Quoth I, "What are they, O my friend?" "First,"
+said he, "that my hire be a dirhem and a danic, and secondly,
+that, when the Muezzin calls to prayer, thou shalt let me
+go pray with the congregation." "It is well," answered I
+and carried him to my house, where he fell to work, such work
+as I never saw the like of. Presently, I named to him the
+morning meal; but he said, "No;" and I knew that he was
+fasting. When he heard the call to prayer, he said to me, "Thou
+knowest the condition?" "Yes," answered I. So he loosed his
+girdle and applying himself to the ablution, made it after a
+fashion than which I never saw a goodlier; then went to the
+mosque and prayed with the congregation and returned to his
+work. He did the like upon the call to afternoon-prayer, and
+when I saw him fall to work again thereafterward, I said to
+him, "O my friend, the hours of labour are over for to-day; a
+workman's day is but till the time of afternoon-prayer." "Glory
+be to God," answered he, "my service is till the night." And he
+ceased not to work till nightfall, when I gave him two dirhems.
+Quoth he, "What is this?" "By Allah," answered I, "this is
+[but] part of thy wage, because of thy diligence in my service."
+But he threw me back the two pieces, saying, "I will have no
+more than was agreed upon between us." I pressed him to take
+them, but could not prevail upon him; so I gave him the dirhem
+and the danic, and he went away.
+
+Next morning early, I went to the station, but found him not;
+so I enquired for him and was told that he came thither only on
+Saturdays. So, when Saturday came, I betook me to the market
+and finding him there, said to him, "In the name of God, do me
+the favour to come and work for me." ["Willingly,"] said he,
+"upon the conditions thou wottest of." "It is well," answered I
+and carrying him to my house, stood watching him, unseen of
+him, and saw him take a handful of mud and lay it on the wall,
+when, behold, the stones ranged themselves one upon another;
+and I said, "On this wise are the friends of God." He worked
+out his day and did even more than before; and when it was
+night, I gave him his hire, and he took it and went away.
+
+When the third Saturday came round, I went to the standing, but
+found him not; so I enquired for him and was told that he lay
+sick in the hut of such a woman. Now this was an old woman,
+renowned for piety, who had a hut of reeds in the burial-
+ground. So I went thither and found him lying on the naked
+earth, with a brick for a pillow and his face beaming with
+light. I saluted him and he returned my salute; and I sat
+down at his head, weeping over his tenderness of years and
+strangerhood and submission to the will of his Lord. Then said
+I to him, "Hast thou any need?" "Yes," answered he; and I said,
+"What is it?" He replied, "Come hither tomorrow in the forenoon
+and thou wilt find me dead. Wash me and dig my grave and tell
+none thereof: but shroud me in this my gown, after thou hast
+unsewn it and taken out what thou shalt find in the bosom,
+which keep with thee. Then, when thou hast prayed over me and
+laid me in the dust, go to Baghdad and watch for the Khalif
+Haroun er Reshid, till he come forth, when do thou bear him my
+salutation and give him what thou shalt find in the breast of
+my gown." Then he made the profession of the Faith and glorified
+his Lord in the most eloquent of words, reciting the following
+verses:
+
+Carry the trust of him on whom the wished-for death hath come
+ To Er Reshid, and thy reward with thy Creator stand!
+"An exile greets thee," say, "who longed full sorely for thy
+ sight; With long desire he yearned for thee, far in a
+ foreign strand.
+Nor hate nor weariness from thee estranged him, for, indeed, To
+ God Most High he was brought near by kissing thy right
+ hand.
+But, O my father, 'twas his heart, shunning the vain delights
+ Of this thy world, that drove him forth to seek a distant
+ land!"
+
+Then he betook himself to prayer, asking pardon of God and
+blessing the Lord of the Just[FN#135] and repeating verses of
+the Koran; after which he recited the following:
+
+Let not prosperity delude thee, father mine; For fortune wastes
+ and life itself must pass away.
+Whenas thou com'st to know of folk in evil plight, Think thou
+ must answer it upon the Judgment Day;
+And when thou bearest forth the dead unto the tombs, Think that
+ thou, too, must pass upon the self-same way!
+
+Then I left him and went home. On the morrow, I returned, at
+the appointed hour, and found him indeed dead, the mercy of God
+be on him! So I washed him and unsewing his gown, found in the
+bosom a ruby worth thousands of diners and said to myself, "By
+Allah, this youth was indeed abstracted from the things of this
+world!" After I had buried him, I made my way to Baghdad and
+going to the Khalif's palace, waited till he came forth, when I
+accosted him in one of the streets and gave him the ruby, which
+when he saw, he knew and fell down in a swoon. His attendants
+laid hands on me, but he revived and bade them unhand me and
+bring me courteously to the palace. They did his bidding, and
+when he returned, he sent for me and carrying me into his
+closet, said to me, "How doth the owner of this ruby?" Quoth I,
+"He is dead;" and told him what had passed; whereupon he fell
+a-weeping and said, "The son hath profited, but the father is
+disappointed." Then he called out, saying, "Ho, such an one!"
+And behold, a woman came out to him. When she saw me, she would
+have withdrawn; but he said to her, "Come; and heed him not."
+So she entered and saluted, and he threw her the ruby, which
+when she knew, she gave a great shriek and fell down in a
+swoon. As soon as she came to herself, she said, "O Commander
+of the Faithful, what hath God done with my son?" And he said
+to me, "Do thou tell her;" for he could not speak for weeping.
+So I repeated the story to her, and she began to weep and say
+in a failing voice, "How I have longed for thy sight, O
+consolation of my eyes! Would I might have given thee to drink,
+when thou hadst none to tend thee! Would I might have companied
+with thee, whenas thou foundest none to cheer thee!" And she
+poured forth tears and recited the following verses:
+
+I weep for one to whom death came, an exile and in pain: Alone
+ he died, without a friend to whom he might complain.
+Puissant and honoured and conjoined with those that loved him
+ dear, To live alone and seeing none, unfriended, he was
+ fain.
+That which the days conceal shall yet be manifest to us: Not
+ one of us by death, indeed, unsmitten may remain.
+O absent one, the Lord of all decreed thy strangerhood, And
+ thou left'st far behind the love that was betwixt us
+ twain!
+Though death, my son, forbid me hope to see thee in this life,
+ Tomorrow, on the Reckoning-Day, we two shall meet again.
+
+Quoth I, "O Commander of the Faithful, was he indeed thy son?"
+"Yes," answered he; "and indeed, before I succeeded to this
+office, he was wont to visit the learned and company with the
+devout; but, when I became Khalif, he grew estranged from me
+and withdrew himself apart. Then said I to his mother, 'This
+thy son is absorbed in God the Most High, and it may be that
+tribulations shall befall him and he be smitten with stress of
+evil chance; wherefore, do thou give him this ruby, that it may
+be to him a resource in the hour of need.' So she gave it him,
+conjuring him to take it, and he obeyed her. Then he left the
+things of our world to us and removed himself from us; nor did
+he cease to be absent from us, till he went to the presence of
+God (to whom belong might and majesty) with a holy and pure
+mind." Then said he, "Come, show me his grave." So we repaired
+to Bassora and I showed him his son's grave. When he saw it, he
+wept and lamented, till he fell down in a swoon; after which he
+came to himself and asked pardon of God, saying, "We are God's,
+and to Him we return!" and invoked blessings on the dead. Then he
+besought me of companionship; but I said to him, "O Commander of
+the Faithful, verily, in thy son's case is for me the gravest of
+admonitions!" And I recited the following verses:
+
+'Tis I am the stranger! None harbours the wight, Though he lie
+ in his native city by night.
+'Tis I am the exile! Nor children nor wife Nor comrades have I,
+ to take ruth on my plight.
+The mosques are my refuge; I haunt them indeed: My heart from
+ their shelter shall never take flight.
+To the Lord of all creatures, to God be the praise, Whilst yet
+ in the body abideth the spright!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE SCHOOLMASTER WHO FELL IN LOVE BY
+ REPORT.
+
+
+
+(Quoth one of the erudite), I passed once by a [school, in
+which a] schoolmaster, comely of aspect and well dressed, was
+teaching children; so I entered, and he rose and made me sit
+with him. Then I examined him in the Koran and in syntax and
+poetry and lexicography, and found him perfect in all that was
+required of him and said to him, "God strengthen thy purpose!
+Thou art indeed versed in all that is sought of thee." So I
+frequented him awhile, discovering daily some new excellence
+in him, and said to myself, "This is indeed a wonder in a
+schoolmaster; for the understanding are agreed upon the lack of
+wit of those that teach children." Then I separated myself from
+him and sought him out and visited him [only] every few days,
+till, one day, coming to see him as of wont, I found the school
+shut and made enquiry of the neighbours, who said, "Some one is
+dead in his house." So I said to myself, "It behoves me to pay
+him a visit of condolence," and going to his house, knocked at
+the door. A slave-girl came out to me and said, "What dost thou
+want?" "I want thy master," answered I. Quoth she, "He is
+sitting alone, mourning." "Tell him," rejoined I, "that his
+friend so and so seeks to condole with him." She went in and
+told him; and he said, "Admit him." So she brought me in to
+him, and I found him seated alone and his head bound [with the
+fillets of mourning]. "May God amply requite thee!" said I.
+"This is a road all must perforce travel, and it behoves thee
+to take patience. But who is dead unto thee?" "One who was
+dearest and best beloved of the folk to me," answered he. Quoth
+I, "Perhaps thy father?" He replied, "No;" and I said, "Thy
+mother?" "No," answered he. "Thy brother?" "No." "One of thy
+kindred?" "No." "Then," asked I, "what relation was the dead to
+thee?" "My mistress," answered he. Quoth I to myself, "This is
+the first sign of his lack of wit." Then I said to him, "There
+are others than she and fairer;" and he answered, "I never saw
+her, that I might judge whether or no there be others fairer
+than she." Quoth I to myself, "This is another sign" Then I
+said to him, "And how couldst thou fall in love with one thou
+hast never seen?" Quoth he, "I was sitting one day at the
+window, when there passed by a man, singing the following
+verse:
+
+Umm Amri,[FN#136] God requite thee thy generosity! Give back my
+ heart, prithee, wherever it may be!
+
+When I heard this, I said to myself, 'Except this Umm Amri were
+without equal in the world, the poets had not celebrated her in
+amorous verse.' So I fell in love with her; but, two days
+after, the same man passed, singing the following verse:
+
+The jackass with Umm Amri departed; but, alas, Umm Amri! She
+ returned not again, nor did the ass.
+
+Thereupon I knew that she was dead and mourned for her. This
+was three days ago, and I have been mourning ever since." So I
+left him and went away, having assured myself of the feebleness
+of his wit.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE FOOLISH SCHOOLMASTER
+
+
+
+A man of elegant culture once entered a school and sitting down
+by the master, entered into discourse with him and found him an
+accomplished theologian, poet, grammarian and lexicographer,
+intelligent, well bred and pleasant; whereat he wondered,
+saying in himself, 'It cannot be that a man, who teaches
+children in a school, should have a perfect wit.' When he was
+about to go away, the schoolmaster said to him, 'Thou art my
+guest to-night;' and he consented and accompanied him to his
+house, where he made much of him and set food before him. They
+ate and drank and sat talking, till a third part of the night
+was past, when the host spread his guest a bed and went up to
+his harem. The other lay down and addressed himself to sleep,
+when, behold, there arose a great clamour in the harem. He
+asked what was to do, and they said, 'A terrible thing hath
+befallen the sheikh, and he is at the last gasp.' 'Take me up
+to him,' said he. So they carried him to the schoolmaster, whom
+he found lying insensible, with his blood streaming down. He
+sprinkled water on his face and when he revived, he said to
+him, 'What has betided thee? When thou leftest me, thou west in
+all good cheer and sound of body.' 'O my brother,' answered the
+schoolmaster, 'after I left thee, I sat meditating on the works
+of God the Most High and said to myself, "In every thing God
+hath created for man there is an use; for He (to whom be glory)
+created the hands to seize, the feet to walk, the eyes to see,
+the ears to hear and the yard to do the deed of kind; and so on
+with all the members of the body, except these two cullions;
+there is no use in them." So I took a razor I had by me and cut
+them off; and there befell me what thou seest.' So the guest
+left him and went away, saving, 'He was in the right who said,
+"No schoolmaster who teaches children can have a perfect wit,
+though he know all sciences."
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE IGNORANT MAN WHO SET UP FOR A
+ SCHOOLMASTER.
+
+
+
+There was once, among the hangers-on of the collegiate mosque,
+a man who knew not how to read and write and got his bread by
+gulling the folk. One day, he bethought him to open a school
+and teach children; so he got him tablets and written scrolls
+and hung them up in a [conspicuous] place. Then he enlarged his
+turban and sat down at the door of the school. The people, who
+passed by and saw his turban and the tablets and scrolls,
+thought he must be a very learned doctor; so they brought him
+their children; and he would say to this, 'Write,' and to that,
+'Read;' and thus they taught one another.
+
+One day, as he sat, as of wont, at the door of the school, he
+saw a woman coming up, with a letter in her hand, and said to
+himself, 'This woman doubtless seeks me, that I may read her
+the letter she has in her hand. How shall I do with her seeing
+I cannot read writing?' And he would fain have gone down and
+fled from her; but, before he could do this, she overtook him
+and said to him, 'Whither away?' Quoth he, 'I purpose to pray
+the noontide-prayer and return.' 'Noon is yet distant,' said
+she; 'so read me this letter.' He took the letter and turning
+it upside down, fell to looking at it, now shaking his head and
+anon knitting his eyebrows and showing concern. Now the letter
+came from the woman's husband, who was absent; and when she saw
+the schoolmaster do thus, she said, 'Doubtless my husband is
+dead, and this learned man is ashamed to tell me so.' So she
+said to him, 'O my lord, if he be dead, tell me.' But he shook
+his head and held his peace. Then said she, 'Shall I tear my
+clothes?' 'Tear,' answered he. 'Shall I buffet my face?' asked
+she; and he said, 'Buffet.' So she took the letter from his
+hand and returning home, fell a-weeping, she and her children.
+
+One of her neighbours heard her weeping and asking what ailed
+her, was answered, 'She hath gotten a letter, telling her that
+her husband is dead.' Quoth the man, 'This is a lying saying;
+for I had a letter from him but yesterday, advising me that he
+is in good health and case and will be with her after ten
+days.' So he rose forthright and going in to her, said, 'Where
+is the letter thou hast received?' She brought it to him, and
+he took it and read it; and it ran as follows, after the usual
+salutations, 'I am well and in good health and case and will be
+with thee after ten days. Meanwhile, I send thee a quilt and an
+extinguisher.'[FN#137] So she took the letter and returning
+with it to the schoolmaster, said to him, 'What moved thee to
+deal thus with me?' And she repeated to him what her neighbour
+had told her of her husband's well-being and of his having sent
+her a quilt and an extinguisher. 'Thou art in the right,'
+answered he. 'But excuse me, good woman; for I was, at the
+time, troubled and absent-minded and seeing the extinguisher
+wrapped in the quilt, thought that he was dead and they had
+shrouded him.' The woman, not smoking the cheat, said, 'Thou
+art excused.' and taking the letter, went away.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KING AND THE VIRTUOUS WIFE
+
+
+
+A certain King once went forth in disguise, to look into the
+affairs of his subjects. Presently, he came to a great village
+and being athirst, stopped at the door of a house and asked for
+water. There came out to him a fair woman, with a pitcher of
+water, which she gave him, and he drank. When he looked at her,
+he was ravished with her and required her of love. Now she knew
+him; so she brought him into the house and making him sit down,
+brought out a book and said to him, 'Look in this book, whilst
+I order my affair and return to thee.' So he looked into the
+book, and behold, it treated of the Divine prohibition against
+adultery and of the punishments that God hath prepared for
+those that do it. When he read this, his flesh quaked and he
+repented to God the Most High: then he called the woman and
+giving her the book, went away. Now her husband was absent and
+when he returned, she told him what had passed, whereat he was
+confounded and said in himself, 'I fear lest the King's desire
+have fallen upon her.' And he dared not have to do with her
+after this.
+
+After awhile, the wife told her kinsfolk of her husband's
+conduct, and they complained of him to the King, saying, 'May
+God advance the King! This man hired of us a piece of land, for
+tillage, and tilled it awhile; then left it fallow and tilled
+it not, neither forsook it, that we might let it to one who
+would till it. Indeed, harm is come to the field, and we fear
+its corruption, for that land, if it be not tilled' spoileth.'
+Quoth the King to the man, 'What hinders thee from tilling thy
+land?' 'May God advance the King!' answered he. 'It came to my
+knowledge that a lion entered the field, wherefore I stood in
+awe of him and dared not approach it, seeing that I know I
+cannot cope with the lion, and I stand in fear of him.' The
+King understood the parable and rejoined, saying, 'O fellow,
+the lion trampled not thy land, and it is good for tillage; so
+do thou till it and God prosper thee in it, for the lion hath
+done it no hurt.' Then he bade give the man and his wife a
+handsome present and sent them away.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABDURREHMAN THE MOOR'S STORY OF THE ROC.
+
+
+
+There was once a man of the people of Morocco, called
+Abdurrehman the Moor, and he was known, to boot, as the
+Chinaman, for his long sojourn in Cathay. He had journeyed far
+and wide and traversed many seas and deserts and was wont to
+relate wondrous tales of his travels. He was once cast upon an
+island, where he abode a long while and returning thence to his
+native country, brought with him the quill of the wing-feather
+of a young roe, whilst yet unhatched and in the egg; and this
+quill was big enough to hold a skinful of water, for it is said
+that the length of the young roe's wing, when it comes forth of
+the egg, is a thousand fathoms. The folk marvelled at this
+quill, when they saw it, and Abdurrehman related to them the
+following adventure.
+
+He was on a voyage in the China seas, with a company of
+merchants, when they sighted a great island so they steered
+for it and casting anchor before it, saw that it was large and
+spacious. The ship's people went ashore to get wood and water,
+taking with them skins and ropes and axes, and presently espied
+a great white gleaming dome, a hundred cubits high. So they
+made towards it and drawing near, found that it was a roe's
+egg and fell on it with axes and stones and sticks, till they
+uncovered the young bird and found it as it were a firm-set
+mountain. They went about to pluck out one of its wing-feathers,
+but could not win to do so, save by helping one another, for
+all the feathers were not full grown; after which they took
+what they could carry of the young bird's flesh and cutting
+the quill away from the feather-part, returned to the ship.
+Then they spread the canvas and putting out to sea, sailed
+with a fair wind all that night, till the sun rose, when they
+saw the old roc come flying after them, as he were a vast
+cloud, with a rock in his talons, like a great mountain, bigger
+than the ship. As soon as he came over the vessel, he let fall
+the rock upon it; but the ship, having great way on her,
+forewent the rock, which fell into the sea with a terrible
+crash. So God decreed them safety and delivered them from
+destruction; and they cooked the young bird's flesh and ate it.
+Now there were amongst them old grey bearded men; and when they
+awoke on the morrow, they found that their beards had turned
+black, nor did any who had eaten of the young roc ever grow
+grey. Some held the cause of the return of youth to them and
+the ceasing of hoariness from them to be that they had heated
+the pot with arrow-wood, whilst others would have it that it
+came of eating the young roe's flesh; and this is indeed a
+wonder of wonders.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ADI BEN ZEID AND THE PRINCESS HIND.
+
+
+
+En Numan ben el Mundhir, King of the Arabs [of Irak], had a
+daughter named Hind, who was eleven years old and was the
+loveliest woman of her age and time. She went out one Easter,
+which is a feast-day of the Nazarenes,[FN#138] to the White
+Church, to take the sacrament. Now that day came to El Hireh a
+young man called Adi ben Zeid,[FN#139] with presents from
+Chosroës,[FN#140] to En Numan, and he also went into the White
+Church, to communicate. He was tall and well-favoured, with
+handsome eyes and smooth cheeks, and had with him a company of
+his people. Now there was with Hind a slave-girl named Mariyeh,
+who was enamoured of Adi, but had not been able to win to him.
+So, when she saw him in the church, she said to Hind, 'Look at
+yonder youth. By Allah, he is handsomer than all thou seest!'
+'And who is he?' asked Hind. 'Adi ben Zeid,' answered Mariyeh
+Quoth the princess, 'I fear lest he know me, if I draw near,
+to look on him closelier.' 'How should he know thee,' said
+Mariyeh, 'when he has never seen thee?' So she drew near him
+and found him jesting with his companions; and indeed he
+surpassed them all, not only in his beauty, but in the excellence
+of his speech and the eloquence of his tongue and the richness
+of his apparel. When the princess saw him, she was ravished with
+him, her reason was confounded and her colour changed; and
+Mariyeh, seeing her inclination to him, said to her, 'Speak to
+him.' So she spoke to him and went away.
+
+When he saw her and heard her speech, he was captivated by her
+and his wit was dazed; his colour changed and his heart
+fluttered, so that his companions misdoubted of him, and he
+whispered one of them to follow her and find out who she was.
+The man followed her and returning to his master, informed him
+that she was the princess Hind, daughter of En Numan. So Adi
+left the church, knowing not whither he went, for stress of
+love, and reciting the following verses:
+
+Companions mine, yet one more favour I entreat: Address ye to
+ the ways once more your travelling feet.
+Turn me towards the lands, the lands where Hinda dwells; Then
+ go and her I love with tidings of me greet.
+
+Then he went to his lodging and lay that night, restless nor
+tasting sleep. On the morrow, Mariyeh accosted him, and he
+received her kindly, though before he would not hearken to her,
+and said to her, 'What is thy will?' Quoth she, 'I have a suit
+to thee.' 'Name it,' answered he; 'for, by Allah, thou shalt
+not ask me aught, but I will give it thee!' So she told him
+that she was in love with him, and her suit to him was that he
+would grant her a lover's privacy; and he agreed to do her
+will, on condition that she would serve him with Hind and make
+shift to bring them together. Then he took her into a vintner's
+shop, in one of the by-streets of Hireh, and lay with her;
+after which she returned to Hind and said to her, 'Dost thou
+not long to see Adi?' 'How can this be?' replied the princess.
+'Indeed my longing for him makes me restless, and no repose is
+left me since yesterday, on his account.' Quoth Mariyeh, 'I
+will appoint him to be in such a place, where thou canst look
+on him from the palace.' 'Do what thou wilt,' replied Hind and
+agreed with her upon the place.
+
+So Adi came, and the princess looked out upon him; and when she
+saw him, she was like to fall down from the top of the palace
+and said to Mariyeh, 'Except thou bring him in to me this
+night, I shall die.' So saying, she fell down in a swoon, and
+her serving-women lifted her up and bore her into the palace;
+whilst Mariyeh hastened to En Numan and discovered the whole
+matter to him, saying, 'Verily, she is mad for love of Adi; and
+except thou marry her to him, she will be put to shame and die
+of love for him.' The King bowed his head awhile in thought and
+exclaimed again and again, 'Verily, we are God's and to Him we
+return!' Then said he, 'Out on thee! How shall the marriage be
+brought about, seeing it misliketh me to open the matter to
+him?' 'He is yet more ardently in love and yet more desireful
+of her than she of him,' answered Mariyeh; 'and I will so order
+the matter that he shall be unaware that his case is known to
+thee; but do not betray thyself, O King.'
+
+Them she went to Adi and said to him, 'Make a feast and bid the
+King thereto; and when wine hath gotten the better of him, ask
+of him the hand of his daughter, for he will not refuse thee.'
+Quoth Adi, 'I fear lest this enrage him against me and be the
+cause of enmity between us.'
+
+But she answered, 'I came not to thee, till I had settled the
+whole matter with him.' Then she returned to En Numan and said
+to him, 'Seek of Adi that he entertain thee in his house.'
+'There is no harm in that,' replied the King and after three
+days, besought Adi to give him and his lords the morning-meal
+in his house. The young man consented, and the King went to
+him; and when the wine had taken effect on En Numan, Adi rose
+and sought of him his daughter in marriage. He consented and
+married them and brought her to him after three days; and they
+abode at En Numan's court, in all delight and solace of life,
+three years, at the end of which time the King was wroth with
+Adi and slew him. Hind mourned for him with an exceeding grief
+and built her a convent without the city, whither she retired
+and devoted herself to religious exercises, weeping and
+bemoaning her husband, till she died. And her convent is extant
+to this day without El Hireh.
+
+
+
+
+
+ DIBIL EL KHUZAÏ WITH THE LADY AND MUSLIM
+ BEN EL WELID.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Dibil el Khuzaï[FN#141]), I was sitting one day at the
+gate of El Kerkh,[FN#142] when a lady came up to me, never saw
+I a handsomer or better shaped than she, walking with a swaying
+gait and ravishing, with her flexile grace, all who beheld her.
+When my eyes fell on her, I was captivated by her and my
+entrails trembled and meseemed my heart fled forth of my
+breast; so I accosted her with the following verse:
+
+Unsealed are the springs of tears for mine eyes, heigho! And
+ sealed are the springs of sleep to my lids, for woe.
+
+She turned her head and looking at me, made answer forthright
+with the following:
+
+And surely, an ailing eye to have, for him Whom her looks
+ invite, is a little thing, I trow.
+
+I was astounded at the readiness of her reply and the sweetness
+of her speech and rejoined with this verse:
+
+And doth then the heart of my fair indeed incline To favour him
+ whose tears as a river flow?
+
+She answered me, without hesitation, thus:
+
+If thou desire us of love, betwixt us love Is a loan to be
+ returned, I'd have thee know.
+
+Never entered my ears sweeter than her speech nor ever saw I
+brighter than her face: so I changed the rhyme and measure, to
+try her, in my wonder at her speech, and repeated the following
+verse:
+
+Will destiny e'er gladden us with union and delight And one
+ desireful one at last with other one unite?
+
+She smiled at this, (never saw I fairer than her mouth nor
+sweeter than her lips,) and answered me, without hesitation, as
+follows:
+
+I prithee, what hath destiny to do betwixt us twain? Thou'rt
+ destiny: rejoice us, then, with union and delight.
+
+At this, I sprang up and kissing her hands, said, "I had not
+thought that Fortune would vouchsafe me such an opportunity. Do
+thou follow me, not of command or against thy will, but of thy
+grace and favour to me." Then I went on and she after me.
+
+Now I had not, at that time, a lodging I deemed fit for the
+like of her; Muslim ben El Welid[FN#143] was my fast friend,
+and he had a handsome house. So I made for his abode and
+knocked at the door, whereupon he came out, and I saluted him,
+saying, "It is for a time like this that friends are treasured
+up." "With all my heart," answered he; "enter." So we entered,
+I and the lady, but found money scarce with him. However, he
+gave me a handkerchief, saying, "Carry it to the market and
+sell it and buy meat and what else thou needest." So I took the
+handkerchief and hastening to the market, sold it and bought
+meat and what else we required; but, when I returned, I found
+that Muslim had retired, with the lady, to an underground
+chamber.[FN#144] When he heard me, he came out and said to me,
+"God requite thee the kindness thou hast done me, O Abou
+Ali,[FN#145] and reckon it of thy good deeds on the Day of
+Resurrection!" So saying, he took from me the meat and wine and
+shut the door in my face His words enraged me and I knew not
+what to do; but he stood behind the door, shaking for mirth;
+and when he saw me thus, he said to me, "I conjure thee on my
+life, O Abou Ali, tell me who it was composed this verse?
+
+I lay in the arms of the fair one all night, Whilst my friend
+ slept, clean-limbed, but polluted of spright."
+
+At this, my rage redoubled, and I replied, "He who wrote this
+other verse:
+
+One, I wish him in's girdle a thousand of horns, Exceeding the
+idol Menaf[FN#146] in their height!"
+
+Then I began to revile him and reproach him with the foulness
+of his conduct and his lack of honour; and he was silent. But,
+when I had finished, he smiled and said, "Out on thee, O fool!
+Thou hast entered my house and sold my handkerchief and spent
+my money: so, with whom art thou wroth, O pimp?" Then he left
+me and went away to her, whilst I said, "By Allah, thou art
+right to call me a fool and a pimp!" Then I left his door and
+went away in sore concern, whereof I feel the trace in my heart
+to this day; and I never had my desire of her nor ever heard of
+her more.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ISAAC OF MOSUL AND THE MERCHANT.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Ishac ben Ibrahim el Mausili), One day, being weary of
+assiduous attendance upon the Khalif, I mounted my horse and
+went forth, at break of day, having a mind to ride out and take
+my pleasure in the open country, and I said to my servant, "If
+there come a messenger from the Khalif or another, say that I
+set out at daybreak, upon a pressing business, and that thou
+knowest not whither I am gone." So I rode forth alone and went
+round about the city, till the sun grew hot, when I halted in a
+street, known as El Herem, and stood my horse under the
+spacious jutting porch of one of the houses there, to shelter
+me from the glare of the sun.
+
+I had not stood long, before there came up a black slave,
+leading an ass with jewelled housings, on which sat a damsel,
+clad in the richest of clothes, richness can go no farther; and
+I saw that she was elegantly made, with languorous looks and
+graceful carriage. I asked one of the passers-by who she was,
+and he said, "She is a singer." And I fell in love with her at
+sight, so that I could scarce keep my seat on my horse's back.
+She entered the house at whose gate I stood; and as I cast
+about for a device to gain access to her, there came up two
+comely young men, who sought admission, and the master of the
+house gave them leave to enter. So they alighted and entered,
+and I with them, they supposing that the master of the house
+had invited me; and we sat awhile, till food was brought and we
+ate. Then they set wine before us, and the damsel came out,
+with a lute in her hand. She sang and we drank, till I rose to
+do an occasion. During my absence, the host questioned the two
+others of me, and they replied that they knew me not; whereupon
+quoth he, "This fellow is a spunger, but he is well-bred and
+pleasant; so entreat him fairly." Then I came back and sat down
+in my place, whilst the damsel sang the following verses to a
+pleasing air:
+
+Say thou unto the she-gazelle, who yet is no gazelle, And the
+ wild heifer, languorous-eyed, who yet no heifer is,
+"One, who in dalliance affects the male, no female is, And he
+ who is effeminate of step's no male, ywis."
+
+She sang it excellent well, and the company drank and her song
+pleased them. Then she sang various songs to rare tunes, and
+amongst the rest one of mine, to the following words:
+
+The pleasant girls have gone and left The homesteads empty and
+ bereft
+Of their sweet converse, after cheer, All void and ruined by
+ Time's theft.
+
+She sang this even better than the first; then she sang other
+rare songs, old and new, and amongst them, another of mine,
+with the following words:
+
+To the loved one, who turneth in anger away And vrithdraweth
+ himself far apart from thee, say,
+"The mischief thou wroughtest, thou wroughtest indeed, For all,
+ per-adventure, thou west but in play."
+
+I asked her to repeat the song, that I might correct it for
+her; whereupon one of the men turned to me and said, "Never saw
+I a more brazen-faced parasite than thou. Art thou not content
+with spunging, but thou must meddle, to boot? Verily, in thee
+is the saying made true, 'A parasite and a meddler.'" I hung
+down my head for shame and made him no answer, whilst his
+companion would have restrained him from me; but he would not
+be restrained. Presently, they rose to pray, but I hung behind
+a little and taking the lute, tuned it after a particular
+fashion and stood up to pray with the rest. When we had made an
+end of prayer, the same man fell again to flouting and reviling
+me and persisted in his churlishness, whilst I held my peace.
+Then the damsel took the lute and touching it, knew that it was
+other than as she had left it and said, "Who hath touched my
+lute?" Quoth they, "None of us hath touched it." "Nay, by
+Allah," rejoined she, "some one hath touched it, and he a past
+master in the craft; for he hath ordered the strings and tuned
+them after the fashion of one who is right skilled in the art."
+Quoth I, "It was I tuned it." "Then, God on thee," answered
+she, "take it and play on it!" So I took it and playing a rare
+and difficult measure, that came nigh to deaden the live and
+raise the dead, sang thereto the following verses:
+
+I had a heart, wherewith of yore I lived: 'Twas seared with
+ fire and all consumed indeed.
+Her love, alack I was not vouchsafed to me; Unto the slave
+ 'twas not of Heaven decreed.
+If what I taste be passion's very food, Then all who love upon
+ its like must feed.
+
+When I had finished, there was not one of the company but
+sprang from his place and sat down before me,[FN#147] saying
+"God on thee, O our lord, sing us another song." "With all my
+heart," said I and playing another measure in masterly fashion,
+sang thereto the following:
+
+O thou whose heart, for fortune's blows, is all consumed and
+ sped, Sorrows with whom from every side have taken up
+ their stead,
+Unlawful unto her, my heart who pierces with her shafts, Is
+ that my blood which, breast-bones 'twixt and
+ vitals,[FN#148] she hath shed.
+'Twas plain, upon the parting day, that her resolve, our loves
+ To sunder, unto false suspect must be attributed.
+She pours forth blood she had not shed, if passion had not
+ been. Will none my murderess ensue and wreak me on her
+ head?
+
+When I had made an end of this song, there was not one of them
+but rose to his feet and threw himself to the ground, for
+excess of delight. Then I cast the lute from my hand; but they
+said, "Allah on thee, let us hear another song, so God increase
+thee of His bounty!" "O folk," replied I, "I will sing you
+another song and another and another and will tell you who I
+am. Know that I am Ishac ben Ibrahim el Mausili, and by Allah,
+I bear myself haughtily to the Khalif, when he seeks me. Ye
+have today made me hear [abuse from] an unmannerly fellow such
+as I loathe; and by Allah, I will not speak a word nor sit with
+you, till ye put yonder quarrelsome churl out from among you!"
+Quoth the latter's companion to him, "This is what I feared and
+warned thee against." So they took him by the hand and put him
+out; and I took the lute and sang over again the songs of my
+fashion that the damsel had sung. Then I whispered the host
+that she had taken my heart and that I had no patience to
+endure from her. Quoth he, "Thou shalt have her and all that
+pertains to her of clothes and jewels, on one condition." "What
+is that?" asked I. "It is," answered he, "that thou abide with
+me a month." "It is well," rejoined I; "I will do this." So I
+abode with him a whole month, whilst none knew where I was and
+the Khalif sought me everywhere, but could come by no news of
+me; and at the end of this time, the merchant delivered to me
+the damsel, together with all that pertained to her of things
+of price and an eunuch to attend her.
+
+I brought her to my lodging, feeling as I were lord of the
+whole world, for stress of delight in her; then rode forthright
+to El Mamoun. When he saw me, he said, "Out on thee, O Isaac,
+where hast thou been all this while?" I acquainted him with the
+story and he said, "Bring me the man at once." So I told him
+where he dwelt, and he sent and fetched him and questioned him
+of the case; whereupon he repeated the story and the Khalif
+said to him, "Thou art a man of a generous mind, and it is just
+that thou be upheld in thy generosity." Then he ordered him a
+hundred thousand dirhems and said to me, "O Isaac, bring me the
+damsel." So I brought her to him, and she sang and delighted
+him. He was greatly gladdened by her and ordered her fifty
+thousand dirhems, saying to me, "I appoint her of service every
+Thursday, when she must come and sing to me from behind the
+curtain." So, by Allah, this ride of mine was a source of
+profit both to me and to others.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE THREE UNFORTUNATE LOVERS.
+
+
+
+(Quoth El Utbi[FN#149]), I was sitting one day with a company
+of men of culture, telling stories of the folk, when the talk
+turned upon anecdotes of lovers and each of us said his say
+thereon. Now there was in our company an old man, who remained
+silent, till we had all spoken and had no more to say, when he
+said, "Shall I tell you a thing, the like of which you never
+heard?" "Yes," answered we; and he said, "Know, then, that I
+had a daughter, who loved a youth, but we knew it not. The
+youth in question loved a singing-girl, who, in her turn,
+was enamoured of my daughter. One day, I was present at an
+assembly, where were also the young man and the girl; when the
+latter sang the following verses:
+
+Tears are the token by which, for love, Abjection in lovers
+ still is shown,
+And more by token in one who finds No friend, to whom he may
+ make his moan.
+
+'By Allah, thou hast said well, O my lady!' exclaimed the
+youth. 'Doss thou bid me die?' 'Yes,' answered the girl from
+behind the curtain, 'if thou be in love.' So he laid his head
+on a cushion and closed his eyes; and when the cup came round
+to him, we shook him and found that he was dead. Therewith we
+all flocked to him, and our joy was troubled and we grieved and
+broke up forthright. When I came home, my people taxed me with
+returning before the appointed time, and I told them what had
+befallen the youth, thinking to surprise them. My daughter
+heard my words and rising, went into another chamber, whither I
+followed her and found her lying, with her head on a cushion,
+as I had told of the young man. I shook her and behold, she
+was dead. So we laid her out and set forth next morning with
+her funeral, whilst the friends of the young man carried him
+out, likewise, to bury him. As we were on the way to the
+burial-place, we met a third funeral and enquiring whose it
+was, were told that it was that of the singing-girl, who,
+hearing of my daughter's death, had done even as she and was
+dead. So we buried them all three on one day, and this is the
+rarest story that ever was heard of lovers."
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVERS OF THE BENOU TAI.
+
+
+
+Quoth a man of the Benou Temim (cited by Casim ben Adi), I went
+out one day in search of a stray beast and coming to the waters
+of the Benou Tai, saw two companies of people, near one
+another, and those of each company were disputing among
+themselves. So I watched them and observed, in one of the
+companies, a young man, wasted with sickness, as he were a
+worn-out water-skin. As I looked on him, he repeated the
+following verses:
+
+What ails the fair that she returneth not to me? Is't
+ grudgingness in her or inhumanity?
+I sickened, and my folk to visit me came all. Why 'mongst the
+ visitors wast thou then not to see?
+Hadst thou been sick, I would have hastened to thy side; Nor
+ menaces nor threats had hindered me from thee.
+I miss thee midst the rest, and desolate am I: Thy loss, my
+ heart's abode, is grievous unto me.
+
+A damsel in the other company heard his words and hastened
+towards him. Her people followed her, but she repelled them
+with blows. Then the youth caught sight of her and ran towards
+her, whilst his people ran after him and laid hold of him.
+However, he struggled, till he freed himself from them, and she
+in like manner loosed herself; and they ran to each other and
+meeting between the two parties, embraced and fell down dead.
+
+Thereupon there came out an old man from one of the tents and
+stood over them, weeping sore and exclaiming, "Verily, we are
+God's and to Him we return!" Then, "May God the Most High have
+mercy on you both!" said he. "By Allah, though you were not
+united in your lives, I will at least unite you after death."
+And he bade lay them out. So they washed them and shrouded them
+in one shroud and buried them in one grave, after they had
+prayed over them; nor were there men nor women in the two
+parties but I saw weeping over them and buffeting their faces.
+Then I questioned the old man of them, and he said, "She was my
+daughter and he my brother's son; and love brought them to this
+pass." "May God amend thee!" exclaimed I. "But why didst thou
+not marry them to one another?" Quoth he, "I feared reproach
+and dishonour; and now I am fallen upon both."
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE MAD LOVER.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Aboulabbas el Muberred[FN#150]), I set out one day with
+a company to El Berid on an occasion, and coming to the
+monastery of Heraclius,[FN#151] we alighted in its shade.
+Presently a man came out to us and said, "There are madmen in
+the monastery, and amongst them one who speaketh wisdom; if ye
+saw him, ye would marvel at his speech." So we arose all and
+went into the monastery, where we saw a man seated on a leather
+mat in one of the cells, with bare head and eyes fixed upon the
+wall. We saluted him, and he returned our greeting, without
+looking at us; and one said to us, "Repeat some verses to him;
+for, when he hears verses, he speaks." So I repeated the
+following verses:
+
+O best of all the race whom Eve gave birth unto, Except for
+ thee the world were neither sweet nor bright:
+Thou'rt he, whose face if God unveil to any man, Eternity is
+ his; his head shall ne'er grow white.[FN#152]
+
+When he heard this, he turned towards us and repeated these
+lines:
+
+God indeed knows that I am sore afflicted: I suffer so, I
+ cannot tell the whole.
+I have two souls; one in this place is dwelling; Another
+ country holds my second soul.
+Meseems the absent one is like the present And wearies under
+ the same weight of dole.
+
+Quoth he, "Have I said well or ill?" "Thou hast said well and
+excellent well," replied we. Then he put out his hand and took
+a stone, that was by him; whereupon we fled from him, thinking
+he would throw it at us; but he fell to beating his breast
+therewith violently and said to us, "Fear not, but draw near
+and hear somewhat from me and receive it from me." So we came
+back, and he repeated the following verses:
+
+When they made their beasts of burden kneel as day drew nigh
+ and nigher, Then they mounted and the camels bore away my
+ heart's desire,--
+When my eyes perceived my loved one through the crannied
+ prison-wall, Then I cried, with streaming eyelids and a
+ heart for love a-fire,
+"Turn thou leader of the camels, let me bid my love farewell!"
+ For her absence and estrangement, life and hope in me
+ expire.
+Still I kept my troth and failed not from her love; ah, would I
+ knew What she did with that our troth-plight, if she kept
+ her faith entire!
+
+Then he looked at me and said, "Dost thou know what she did?"
+"Yes," answered I, "she is dead; may God the Most High have
+mercy on her!" At this his face changed and he sprang to his
+feet and cried out, "How knowest thou she is dead?" "Were she
+alive," answered I, "she had not left thee thus." "By Allah,
+thou art right," said he, "and I care not to live after her."
+Then his nerves quivered and he fell on his face; and we ran up
+to him and shook him and found him dead, the mercy of God be on
+him! At this we marvelled and mourned sore for him and laid him
+out and buried him. When I returned to Baghdad and went in to
+the Khalif El Mutawekkil, he saw the trace of tears on my face
+and said to me, "What is this?" So I told him what had passed,
+and it was grievous to him and he said, "What moved thee to
+deal thus with him? By Allah, if I thought thou didst this with
+intent, I would punish thee therefor!" And he mourned for him
+the rest of the day.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE APPLES OF PARADISE.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Abou Bekr Mohammed ibn el Ambari[FN#153]), I once left
+Ambar, on a journey to Ammouriyeh, in the land of the Greeks,
+[FN#154], and alighted midway at the monastery of El Anwar,
+[FN#155], in a village near Ammouriyeh, where there came out
+to me the prior of the monastery and superior of the monks,
+Abdulmesih[FN#156] by name, and brought me into the monastery.
+There I found forty monks, who entertained me that night
+with the most liberal hospitality, and I saw among them such
+abounding piety and diligence in devotion as I never beheld the
+like of in any others. On the morrow, I took leave of them and
+went on to Ammouriyeh, where I did my business and returned to
+Ambar [without again visiting the monastery].
+
+Next year it befell that I made the pilgrimage to Mecca, and as
+I was compassing the Holy House, behold, I saw Abdulmesih the
+monk also making the circuit of the Kaabeh, and with him five
+of his fellows, the monks. When I was certified that it was
+indeed he, I accosted him, saying, "Art thou not Abdulmesih er
+Rahib?"[FN#157] "Nay," answered he; "I am Abdallah er Raghib."
+[FN#158] Therewith I fell to kissing his hoary hairs and weeping;
+then, taking him by the hand, I led him aside into a corner of
+the sanctuary and said to him, "Tell me the manner of thy
+conversion to Islam." "It was a wonder of wonders," answered
+he; "and befell thus. Know that, not long after thy visit to
+us, a company of Muslim devotees came to the village, in which
+is our monastery, and sent a youth to buy them food. He saw,
+in the market, a Christian damsel selling bread, who was of
+the fairest of women, and became then and there so passionately
+enamoured of her, that his senses failed him and he fell on his
+face in a swoon. When he revived, he returned to his companions
+and told them what had happened, saying, 'Go ye about your
+business; I may not go with you.' They blamed him and exhorted
+him, but he paid no heed to them; so they left him and went on,
+whilst he entered the village and seated himself at the door
+of the woman's shop. She asked him what he wanted, and he told
+her that he was in love with her, whereupon she turned from
+him; but he abode in his place three days, without tasting
+food, with his eyes fixed on her face.
+
+When she saw that he departed not from her, she went to her
+people and acquainted them with her case, and they set the boys
+of the village on him, who pelted him with stones and bruised
+his ribs and broke his head; but, for all this, he would not
+budge. Then the people of the village took counsel together to
+kill him; but one of them came to me and told me of his
+condition, and I went out to him and found him lying prostrate
+on the ground. So I wiped the blood from his face and carried
+him to the convent, where I dressed his wounds, and he abode
+with me fourteen days. But, as soon as he could walk, he left
+the convent and returned to the door of the woman's shop, where
+he sat gazing on her as before. When she saw him, she came out
+to him and said, 'By Allah, thou movest me to pity! If thou
+wilt enter my faith, I will marry thee.' 'God forbid,' answered
+he, 'that I should put off the faith of the Unity and enter
+that of Plurality!'[FN#159] Quoth she, 'Come in with me to my
+house and take thy will of me and go thy ways in peace.' 'Not
+so,' answered he, 'I will not barter the pious service of
+twelve years for the lust of a moment.' 'Then depart from me
+forthright,' said she; and he rejoined, 'My heart will not
+suffer me to do that;' whereupon she turned her face from him.
+Presently the boys found him out and began to throw stones
+at him; and he fell on his face, saying, 'Verily, God is my
+keeper, who sent down the Book and who protecteth the righteous!'
+[FN#160] At this juncture, I sallied forth and driving away
+the boys, lifted his head from the ground and heard him say,
+'O my God, unite me with her in Paradise!' Then I took him in
+my arms, to carry him to the monastery; but he died, before
+I could reach it, and I dug him a grave without the village
+and buried him there.
+
+In the middle of that night, the people of the village heard
+the damsel give a great cry, and she in her bed; so they
+flocked to her and questioned her of her case. Quoth she, 'As I
+slept, the Muslim [who ye wot of] came in to me and taking me
+by the hand, carried me to the gate of Paradise; but the keeper
+denied me entrance, saying, "It is forbidden to unbelievers."
+So I embraced Islam at his hands and entering with him, beheld
+therein palaces and trees, such as I cannot describe to you.
+Moreover, he brought me to a pavilion of jewels and said to me,
+"This is my pavilion and thine, nor will I enter it except with
+thee; but, after five nights, thou shalt be with me therein, if
+it be the will of God the Most High." Then, putting his hand to
+a tree that grew at the door of the pavilion, he plucked
+therefrom two apples and gave them to me, saying, "Eat this and
+keep the other, that the monks may see it." So I ate one of
+them and never tasted I aught sweeter than it. Then he took my
+hand and carried me back to my house; and when I awoke, I found
+the taste of the apple in my mouth and the other in my hand.'
+So saying, she brought out the apple, and it shone in the
+darkness of the night, as it were a sparkling star. So they
+carried her to the monastery, where she repeated to us her
+vision and showed us the apple; never saw we its like among all
+the fruits of the world. Then I took a knife and cut the apple
+into as many pieces as we were folk in the company; and never
+knew we aught more delicious than its taste nor sweeter than
+its scent; but we said, 'Haply this was a devil that appeared
+to her, to seduce her from her faith.' Then her people took her
+and went away; but she abstained from eating and drinking till
+the fifth night, when she rose from her bed and going forth the
+village to the grave of the young Muslim, threw herself upon it
+and died.
+
+Her people knew not what was come of her; but, on the morrow,
+there came to the village two Muslim elders, clad in hair-
+cloth, and with them two women in like garb, and said, 'O
+people of the village, with you is a woman of the friends of
+God,[FN#161] who died a Muslim, and we will take charge of her,
+instead of you.' So the damsel's family sought her and found
+her dead on the young Muslim's grave; and they said, 'This our
+sister died in our faith, and we will take charge of her.' 'Not
+so,' rejoined the two old men; 'she died a Muslim and we claim
+her.' And the dispute waxed hot between them, till one of the
+Muslims said, 'Be this the test of her faith. Let the forty
+monks of the monastery come all and [essay to] lift her from
+the grave. If they succeed, then she died a Nazarene; if not,
+one of us shall come and lift her up, and if she yield to him,
+she died a Muslim.' The villagers agreed to this and fetched
+the forty monks, who heartened each other and came to her, to
+lift her, but could not. Then we tied a great rope about her
+middle and tugged at it with our might; but the rope broke in
+sunder, and she stirred nor; and the villagers came and joined
+their endeavour to ours, but could not move her from her place.
+At last, when all our devices failed, we said to one of the two
+old Muslims, 'Come thou and lift her.' So he went up to the
+grave and covering her with his mantle, said, 'In the name of
+God the Compassionate, the Merciful, and of the Faith of the
+Apostle of God, on whom be peace and salvation!' Then he lifted
+her and taking her in his bosom, betook himself with her to a
+cave hard by, where they laid her, and the two women came and
+washed her and shrouded her. Then the two elders bore her to
+the young Muslim's grave and prayed over her and buried her by
+his side and went their way.
+
+Now we were witness of all this; and when we were alone with
+one another, we said, 'Of a verity, the Truth is most worthy to
+be followed;[FN#162] and indeed it hath been publicly manifested
+to us, nor is it possible to have a clearer proof of the truth
+of Islam than that we have seen this day with our eyes.' So I
+and all the monks embraced Islam and on like wise did the people
+of the village; and we sent to the people of Mesopotamia for a
+doctor of the law, to instruct us in the ordinances of Islam and
+the canons of the Faith. They sent us a pious man, who taught us
+the rites of devotion and the tenets of the faith and the
+service of God; and we are now in great good case. To God be
+the praise and the thanks!"
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVES OF ABOU ISA AND CURRET EL AIN.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Amr ben Mesaadeh[FN#163]), Abou Isa, son or Er Reshid
+and brother to El Mamoun, was enamoured of a girl called Curret
+el Ain, belonging to Ali ben Hisham,[FN#164] and she also loved
+him; but he concealed his passion, complaining of it to none
+neither discovering his secret to any, of his pride and
+magnanimity; and he had used his utmost endeavour to buy her of
+her lord, but in vain. At last, when his patience failed him
+and his passion was sore on him and he was at his wits' end
+concerning her affair, he went in, one day of state, to El
+Mamoun, after the folk had retired, and said to him, "O
+Commander of the Faithful, if thou wilt this day make trial of
+thy governors,[FN#165] by visiting them unawares, thou wilt the
+men of worth from those that lack of it and note each one's
+[due] place, after the measure of his faculties." (But he
+purposed, in saying this, to win to sit with Curret el Ain in
+her lord's house.) El Mamoun approved his proposal and bade
+make ready a barge, called the Flyer, in which he embarked,
+with his brother and a party of his chief officers. The first
+house he visited was that of Hemid et Tawil of Tous, whom he
+found seated on a mat and before him singers and players, with
+lutes and hautboys and other instruments of music in their
+hands. El Mamoun sat with him awhile, and presently he set
+before him dishes of nothing but flesh-meat, with no birds
+among them. The Khalif would not taste thereof and Abou Isa
+said to him, "O Commander of the Faithful, we have taken the
+owner of this place unawares, and he knew not of thy coming;
+but now let us go to another place, that is prepared and fitted
+for thee."
+
+So the Khalif arose and betook himself, with his brother and
+his suite, to the abode of Ali ben Hisham, who, on hearing of
+their approach, came out and received them after the goodliest
+fashion, and kissed the earth before El Mamoun. Then he brought
+them into his palace and opened to them a saloon, than which
+never saw eyes a goodlier. Its floors and walls and columns
+were of vari-coloured marble, adorned with Greek paintings: it
+was spread with Indian matting, on which were carpets and
+divans of Bassora make, fitted to the length and breadth of the
+room. The Khalif sat awhile, examining the house and its roof
+and walls, then said, "Give us to eat." So they brought him
+forthwith nigh upon a hundred dishes of fowls, besides other
+birds and brewises and fricassees and marinades. When he had
+eaten, he said, "Give us to drink, O Ali;" and the latter set
+before him raisin-wine, boiled with fruits and spices, in
+vessels of gold and silver and crystal, served by boys like
+moons, clad in garments of Alexandrian cloth of gold and
+bearing on their breasts flagons of crystal, full of rose-water
+mingled with musk. El Mamoun marvelled exceedingly at all this
+and said, "Harkye, Aboulhusn!"[FN#166] Whereupon Ali sprang to
+the carpet [on which the Khalif was seated] and kissing it,
+said, "At thy service, O Commander of the Faithful!" and stood
+before him. Quoth El Mamoun, "Let us hear some pleasant songs."
+"I hear and obey, O Commander of the Faithful," replied Ali and
+said to one of his servants, "Fetch the singing-women."
+
+So he went out and returned in a moment, followed by ten
+eunuchs, bearing ten golden stools, which they set down; and
+these in their turn were followed by ten damsels, as they were
+shining full moons or flowerful gardens, clad in black brocade,
+with crowns of gold on their heads. They sat down on the stools
+and sang various songs. Then El Mamoun looked at one of them
+and captivated by her elegance and the beauty of her aspect,
+said to her, "What is thy name, O damsel?" "My name is Sejahi,
+O Commander of the Faithful," answered she; and he said, "Sing
+to us, O Sejahi!" So she took the lute and playing a lively
+measure, sang the following verses:
+
+Right stealthily, for fearfulness, I fare, the weakling's gait,
+ Who sees unto the watering-place two lion-whelps draw
+ near,
+With cloak, instead of sword, begirt and bosom love-distraught
+ And heart for eyes of enemies and spies fulfilled of fear,
+Till in to one at last I come, a loveling delicate, Like to a
+ desert antelope, that's lost its younglings dear.
+
+"Well done, O damsel!" said the Khalif. "Whose is this song?"
+"The words are by Amr ben Madi Kerib er Zubeidi,"[FN#167]
+answered she, "and the air is Mabid's."[FN#168] Then the Khalif
+and Ali and Abou Isa drank and the damsels went away and were
+succeeded by other ten, clad in flowered silk of Yemen,
+brocaded with gold, who sat down on the chairs and sang various
+songs. The Khalif looked at one of them, who was like a wild
+cow of the desert, and said to her, "What is thy name, O
+damsel?" "My name is Zebiyeh, O Commander of the Faithful,"
+answered she. "Sing to us, O Zebiyeh," said he; so she warbled
+some roulades and sang the following verses:
+
+Houris, noble ladies, that reck not of disquiet, Like antelopes
+ of Mecca, forbidden to be slain;
+Of their soft speech, they're taken for courtezans; but Islam
+ Still makes them from unseemliness and lewdness to
+ refrain.
+
+When she had finished, "Bravo!" cried the Khalif. "Whose is
+this song?" "The words are by Jerir,"[FN#169] answered she,
+"and the air by Suraij." Then the Khalif and his company drank,
+whilst the girls went away and there came yet another ten, as
+they were rubies, bareheaded and clad in red brocade, gold
+inwoven and broidered with pearls and jewels, who sat down on
+the stools and sang various airs. The Khalif looked at one of
+them, who was like the sun of the day, and said to her, "What
+is thy name?" "O Commander of the Faithful," answered she, "my
+name is Fatin." "Sing to us, O Fatin," quoth he. So she played
+a lively measure and sang the following verses:
+
+Vouchsafe me of thy grace; 'tis time to yield consent: Enough
+ have I endured of absence and lament.
+Thou'rt he whose face unites all charms, on whose account My
+ patience have I lost, for very languishment.
+I've spent my life for love of thee; ah, would to God I might
+ receive return for that which I have spent!
+
+"Bravo, O Fatin!" exclaimed the Khalif, when she had finished.
+"Whose song is that?" "The words are by Adi ben Zeid," answered
+she, "and the tune is an old one." Then they drank, whilst the
+damsels retired and were succeeded by other ten, as they were
+sparkling stars, clad in flowered silk, embroidered with gold,
+and girt with jewelled zones. They sat down and sang various
+airs; and the Khalif said to one of them, who was like a
+willow-wand, "What is thy name, O damsel!" "My name is Reshaa,
+O Commander of the Faithful," answered she. "Sing to us, O
+Reshaa," said he. So she played a lively measure and sang the
+following verses:
+
+There's a houri healing passion [with her kiss], Like a sapling
+ or a wild gazelle at gaze.
+Wine I quaff unto the vision of her cheeks[FN#170] And dispute
+ the goblet with her, till she sways.
+Then she lies and sleeps the night long in my arms, And I say,
+ "This is the wish of all my days."
+
+"Well done, O damsel!" said the Khalif. "More." So she rose and
+kissing the ground before him, sang the following verse:
+
+She came out to gaze on the bridal at leisure, In a tunic with
+ ambergris smeared, worth a treasure.
+
+The Khalif was much pleased with this verse, which when Reshaa
+saw, she repeated it several times. Then said El Mamoun, "Bring
+up the barge," being minded to embark and depart: but Ali said
+to him, "O Commander of the Faithful, I have a slave-girl, whom
+I bought for ten thousand dinars; she hath taken my whole
+heart, and I would fain show her to the Commander of the
+Faithful. If she please him and he will accept of her, she is
+his: and if not, let him hear something from her." "Bring her
+to me," said the Khalif; and there came forth a damsel, as she
+were a willow-wand, with heart-seducing eyes and eyebrows like
+a double bow. On her head she wore a crown of red gold, set
+with pearls and jewels, under which was a fillet, wrought in
+letters of chrysolite with the following words:
+
+Behold, a Jinniyeh this is; and Jinn hath she also, I trow, Who
+ teach her men's hearts to transfix, by means of a
+ stringless bow.
+
+She walked, with a gait like that of a fleeing gazelle, till
+she came to a chair, on which she seated herself. The Khalif
+marvelled at her beauty and grace; but when Abou Isa saw her,
+his colour changed and he was in ill case. "O Abou Isa," said
+the Khalif, "what ails thee, to change colour thus?" "O
+Commander of the Faithful," answered he, "it is because of pain
+that seizes me bytimes." "Hast thou known yonder damsel before
+to-day?" asked El Mamoun. "Yes, O Commander of the Faithful,"
+answered he. "Can the moon be hidden?" Then said El Mamoun to
+her, "What is thy name, O damsel?" "My name is Curret el Ain, O
+Commander of the Faithful," replied she; and he said, "Sing to
+us, O Curret el Ain." So she sang the following verses:
+
+The loved ones passed from thee in middle midnight's shade And
+ fared forth in the dawn, with the pilgrims' cavalcade.
+The tents of pride they pitched round their pavilions And
+ veiled themselves about with hangings of brocade.
+
+Quoth the Khalif, "Bravo, O Curret el Ain! Whose song is that?"
+"The words are by Dibil el Khuzai," answered she, "and the air
+by Zourzour es Seghir." Abou Isa looked at her and his tears
+choked him; so that the company marvelled at him. Then she
+turned to El Mamoun and said to him, "O Commander of the
+Faithful, wilt thou give me leave to change the words?" "Sing
+what thou wilt," answered the Khalif. So she played a lively
+measure and sang the following verses:
+
+If thou please me and he please thee in public, look thou hide
+ And keep in secret straiter watch o'er love, lest ill
+ betide.
+And disregard and put away the tales of slanderers; For seldom
+ seeks the sland'rer aught but lovers to divide.
+They say that when a lover's near, he wearies of his love And
+ that by absence passion's cured. 'Tis false; for I have
+ tried
+Both remedies, but am not cured of that which is with me,
+ Withal that nearness easier is than distance to abide.
+Yet nearness of abode, forsooth, may nowise profit thee, An If
+ the grace of him thou lov'st be unto thee denied.
+
+When she finished, Abou Isa said, "O Commander of the Faithful,
+we will be at peace, though we be dishonoured. Dost thou give
+me leave to reply to her?" "Yes," answered the Khalif. "Say
+what thou wilt to her." So he swallowed his tears and sang
+these verses:
+
+I held my peace nor said, "I am in love;" and eke The passion
+ that I felt even from my heart hid I:
+And natheless, if my eyes do manifest my love, It is because
+ they are the shining moon anigh.
+
+Then Curret el Ain took the lute and rejoined with the
+following:
+
+If what thou dost pretend were very truth, Thou woulst not with
+ mere wishing rest content,
+Nor couldst endure to live without a girl, In charms and beauty
+ wonder excellent.
+But there is nought in that thou dost avouch, Save only idle
+ talk and compliment.
+
+When Abou Isa heard this, he fell a-weeping and lamenting and
+discovered the trouble and anguish of his soul. Then he raised
+his eyes to her and sighing, repeated the following:
+
+Under my wede there is a wasted body And in my soul an all-
+ absorbing thought.
+I have a heart, whose suffering is eternal, and eyes with tears
+ like torrents ever fraught.
+When a wise man meets me, he rebukes me, Chiding the love that
+ thou in me hath wrought.
+Lord, I've no strength all this my dole to suffer; Prithee,
+ come Death or quick relief be brought!
+
+When he had ended, Ali ben Hisham sprang up and kissing his
+feet, said, "O my lord, God hath heard thy prayer and answered
+thy supplication, and consenteth to thy taking her with all her
+gear, so the Commander of the Faithful have no mind to her."
+"Had we a mind to her," answered the Khalif, "we would prefer
+Abou Isa before ourselves and help him to his desire." So
+saying, he rose and embarking, went away, whilst Abou Isa
+tarried for Curret al Ain, whom he took and carried to his own
+house, with a breast dilated for gladness. See then the
+generosity of Ali ben Hisham.
+
+
+
+
+
+ EL AMIN BEN ER RESHID AND HIS UNCLE
+ IBRAHIM BEN EL MEHDI.
+
+
+
+El Amin,[FN#171] son of Er Reshid, once entered the house of
+his uncle Ibrahim ben el Mehdi and saw there a slave-girl
+playing upon the lute. She was one of the fairest of women,
+and his heart inclined to her. Ibrahim, seeing how it was with
+him, sent the girl to him, with rich apparel and precious
+jewels. When he saw her, he thought that his uncle had lain
+with her; so he was loath to have to do with her, because of
+this, and sent her back to Ibrahim, accepting the present that
+came with her. Ibrahim learnt the reason of this from one of
+El Amin's servants; so he took a shift of flowered silk and let
+work upon his skirt, in letters of gold, the following lines:
+
+By Him to whom all fronts do bow, of that which is Beneath her
+ skirt, I swear, I'm ignorant outright;
+Nor have I had in aught to meddle with her mouth, Except it
+ were by way of hearing and of sight.
+
+Then he clad her in the shift and giving her a lute sent her
+once more to his nephew. When she came into the latter's
+presence, she kissed the earth before him and tuning the lute,
+sang thereto the following verses:
+
+By returning the gift, thou showest what's hid in thy breast,
+ And thine aversion to me is made manifest.
+As thou bear malice for aught that hath been,--forgive The
+ past, for the Khalifate's sake, and let it rest.
+
+When she had made an end of her song, El Amin looked at her and
+reading that which was wrought upon her skirt, could not
+control himself, but drew near unto her and kissed her and
+appointed her a separate lodging in his palace. Moreover, he
+thanked his uncle for this and bestowed on him the government
+of Er Reï.[FN#172]
+
+
+
+
+
+ EL FETH BEN KHACAN AND THE KHALIF EL
+ MUTAWEKKIL.
+
+
+
+The Khalid El Mutawekkil[FN#173] was once again taking
+medicine, and folk sent him all manner of presents and
+rarities. Amongst others, El Feth ben Khacan[FN#174] sent him
+a virgin slave, high-bosomed, of the fairest of women of her
+time, and with her a vase of crystal, containing red wine, and
+a goblet of red gold, whereon were graven in black the following
+verses:
+
+When th' Imam's made an end of taking medicine And health and
+ strength ensue to him thereon, in fine,
+There's no medicament befits him but to drink, From out this
+ cup, a draught of this decocted wine.
+And break the seal[FN#175] reserved to him, for this, indeed,
+ Right salutary is, hard after medicine.
+
+Now the physician Youhenna[FN#176] was with the Khalif, when
+the damsel entered; and when he read the above verses, he
+smiled and said, 'By Allah, O Commander of the Faithful, Feth
+is better versed than I in the art of medicine: so let not
+the Commander of the Faithful gainsay his prescription.'
+Accordingly, the Khalif followed El Feth's prescription and was
+made whole by the blessing of God.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE MAN'S DISPUTE WITH THE LEARNED
+ WOMAN OF THE RELATIVE EXCELLENCE OF THE
+ MALE AND THE FEMALE.
+
+
+
+(Quoth a certain man of learning) I never saw a woman sharper-
+witted, more intelligent, better furnished in learning, more
+excellent of faculties or more pleasant of ingredients than
+a female preacher of the people of Baghdad, by name Sitt el
+Meshayikh.[FN#177] It chanced that she came to the city of
+Hemah in the year [of the Hegira] 561[FN#178] and there
+delivered salutary exhortations to the folk from the pulpits.
+Now there used to visit her house a number of students of
+divinity and [other] persons of learning and culture, who
+would argue with her upon questions of theology and discuss
+controversial points with her. I went to her one day, with a
+friend of mine, a man of education; and when we had taken our
+seats, she set before us a dish of fruit and seated herself
+behind a curtain. Now she had a [young] brother, a handsome
+youth, who stood by us, to serve us.
+
+When we had eaten, we fell to disputing upon points of divinity,
+and I propounded to her a theological question, bearing upon a
+difference between the Imams.[FN#179] She proceeded to speak in
+answer, whilst I listened; but my friend fell the while to
+looking upon her brother's face and considering his charms,
+without paying any heed to what she said. Now she was watching
+him from behind the curtain; so, when she had made an end of
+her exposition, she turned to him and said, "Meseems thou art
+of those that give men the preference over women!" "Assuredly,"
+answered he. "And why so?" asked she. "Because," replied he,
+"God hath preferred the male over the female; and I love that
+which excels and mislike that which is excelled." She laughed
+and said, "Wilt thou deal fairly with me in argument, if I
+argue the matter with thee?" "I will," answered he. Then said
+she, "What is the evidence of the superiority of the male to
+the female?" "It is of two kinds," answered he, "that which
+is founded on authority and that which is founded on reason.
+The authoritative part derives from the Koran and the Sunneh
+[Traditions of the Prophet]. As for the former, quoth God the
+Most High, 'Men stand above women, in that God hath given
+these the preference over those;'[FN#180] and again, 'If
+there be not two men, then [call] one man and two women;'
+[FN#181] and again, when treating of the law of inheritance,
+'[If there be brothers and sisters,] let each male have the
+like of the portion of two females.'[FN#182] Thus God, blessed
+and exalted be He, hath in these places preferred the male over
+the female and teaches that a woman is as the half of a man,
+for that he is worthier than she. As for the Sunneh, is it not
+reported of the Prophet (whom God bless and preserve) that he
+appointed the blood-wit for a woman to be half that of a man?
+As for the evidence of reason, the male is the agent and the
+female the patient."
+
+"Thou hast said well, O my lord," rejoined she; "but, by Allah,
+thou hast proved my contention with thine own lips and hast
+advanced arguments that tell against thee, and not for thee.
+Thus: God (blessed and exalted be He) preferred the male above
+the female, solely because of the quality of masculinity; and
+in this, there is no difference between us. Now this quality
+[of masculinity] is common to the child, the boy, the youth,
+the adult and the graybeard; nor is there any distinction
+between them in this. Since, then, the superior excellence of
+man enures to him solely by virtue of the quality of masculinity,
+it behoves that thy heart incline to the graybeard and thy soul
+delight in him, equally with the boy, seeing that there is no
+distinction between them, in point of masculinity. But the
+difference between thee and me turns upon the qualities that
+are sought as constituting excellence of intercourse and
+delight of usance; and thou hast adduced no proof of the
+superiority of the male over the female in this."
+
+"O my lady," answered he, "knowest thou not that which is
+proper to the boy of symmetry of shape and rosy cheeks and
+pleasant smile and sweetness of speech? Boys are, in these
+respects, superior to women; and the proof of this is what is
+reported of the Prophet, that he said, 'Stay not thy gaze upon
+the beardless boys, for in them is the similitude[FN#183] of
+the black-eyed girls of Paradise.' Nor indeed is the superiority
+of the boy over the girl hidden to any, and how well saith Abou
+Nuwas:
+
+The least of his virtues it is that thou'rt free From
+ uncleanness with him nor with child can he be.
+
+And what another poet says:
+
+Quoth th' Iman Abou Nuwas, past-master sure was he In every
+ canon of debauch and jolly knavery,
+"O ye that love the downy cheeks of younglings, take your fill
+ Of a delight, in Paradise that will not founden be."
+
+So if one enlarge in praise of a girl and wish to enhance her
+value by the mention of her charms, he likens her to a boy,
+because of the illustrious qualities that belong to the latter,
+even as saith the poet:
+
+Boylike of buttocks, to and fro, in amorous dalliance, She
+ sways as sway the nodding canes that in the north wind
+ dance.
+
+If boys, then, were not superior to girls, why should the
+latter be likened to them? And know also, may God the Most High
+preserve thee, that a boy is easy to be led, adapting himself
+to the wish, pleasant of commerce and manners, inclining to
+assent rather than difference, especially when the down on his
+face creeps lightly and the hair darkens on his lips and the
+vermilion of early youth runs in his cheeks, so that he is like
+the full moon; and how goodly is the saying of Abou Temmam:
+[FN#184]
+
+"The whiskers on his cheek appear;" the slanderers said to me;
+ Quoth I, "That's none of his defect; so give me no more
+ prate."
+What time he came of age to bear buttocks that here and there
+ Pulled him and over beads of pearl his lips' hair darkened
+ late
+And eke the rose a solemn oath, full fast and binding, swore
+ Its ruddy marvels from his cheek should never separate,
+I with my eyelids spoke to him, without the need of speech, And
+ for reply thereto was what his eyebrows answered straight.
+His goodliness still goodlier is than that thou knewst of yore,
+ And the hair guardeth him from those his charms would
+ violate.
+Brighter and sweeter are his charms, now on his cheek the down
+ Shows and the hair upon his lips grows dark and delicate;
+And those who chide me for the love of him, when they take up
+ Their parable of him and me, say evermore, "His mate."
+
+And quoth El Heriri[FN#185] and saith well:
+
+My censors say, "What is this love and doting upon him? Seest
+ not the hair upon his cheeks that sprouts? Where is thy
+ wit?"
+Quoth I, "By Allah, an ye chide at me, I rede you note The
+ exposition of the truth that in his eyes is writ.
+But for the blackness of the down, that veils his chin and
+ cheeks, Upon the brightness of his face no mortal gaze
+ might sit.
+A man who sojourns in a land, wherein no herbage is, Whenas the
+ very Spring arrives, shall he depart from it?"
+
+And quoth another:
+
+"He is consoled," say the censors of me; but, by heaven, they
+ lie! For solace and comfort come hardly to those for
+ longing that sigh.
+When the rose of his cheek stood blooming alone, I was not
+ consoled; So how should I now find solace, that basil has
+ sprung thereby?
+
+And again:
+
+A slender one, whose glances and the down upon his cheeks Each
+ other, in the slaying of folk, abet and aid.
+A sabre of narcissus[FN#186] withal, he sheddeth blood, The
+ hangers[FN#187] of its scabbard of very myrtle made.
+
+And again:
+
+Not with his wine I'm drunken, but with his tresses bright,
+ That make all creatures drunken, yea, all beneath the sky.
+Each of his charms doth envy the others; ay, and each To be the
+ down so silky upon his cheek doth sigh.
+
+These are the excellences of the boy, that women do not
+possess, and these suffice and more to give boys the preference
+in grace and glory over women."
+
+"God give thee health!" cried she. "Verily, thou hast imposed
+the discussion upon thyself; and thou hast spoken and hast not
+stinted and hast adduced these arguments, in support of thy
+contention. But now is the truth made manifest;[FN#188] so
+swerve thou not from the path thereof; and if thou be not
+content with a summary of proof, I will set it out to thee in
+detail. God on thee, where is the boy beside the girl and who
+shall liken the kid to the wild cow? The girl is soft of
+speech, fair of shape, like a stalk of sweet basil, with teeth
+like chamomile-petals and hair like halters. Her cheeks are
+like blood-red anemones and her face like an apple; she hath
+lips like wine and breasts like double pomegranates and a shape
+flexile as a willow-wand. Her body is rounded and well-formed:
+she hath a nose like the point of a shining sword and a
+forehead brilliant with whiteness and joined eyebrows and black
+and melting eyes. If she speak, fresh pearls are scattered from
+her mouth and all hearts are ravished by the daintiness of her
+charms; when she smiles, thou wouldst think the moon shone out
+from between her lips and when she gazes, swords flash from her
+eyes. In her all beauties have their term, and she is the
+centre of attraction of traveller and stay-at-home. She hath
+two red lips softer than cream and sweeter of taste than honey,
+and a bosom, as it were a way between two hills, wherein are a
+pair of breasts like globes of ivory; likewise, a smooth belly,
+soft of flanks as palm-flowers[FN#189] and creased with folds
+and dimples that overlap one another, and luxuriant thighs,
+like columns of pearl, and buttocks, that beat together like
+seas of crystal or mountains of light, and two slender feet and
+hands like ingot of virgin gold. So, O wretched fellow, where
+are mortal men besides the Jinn? Knowest thou not that mighty
+kings and captains and noble princes still submit themselves
+humbly to women and depend on them for delight? Verily, they
+[women] say, 'We rule over [all] necks and captivate [all]
+hearts.' How many a rich man have they not made poor, how many
+a powerful one have they not humbled and how many a noble have
+they not reduced to servitude! Indeed, they seduce the learned
+and bring the pious to shame and make poor the rich and plunge
+the favoured of fortune into misery. Yet, for all this, the
+wise but redouble in love and honour of them, nor do they count
+this oppression or dishonour. How many a man for them hath
+transgressed against his Lord and called down on himself the
+wrath of his father and mother! And all this because of the
+preponderance of the love of them over hearts. Knowest thou
+not, O wretched fellow, that for them are palaces built and
+slave-girls bought, and over them curtains are let down, that
+for them do tears flow and for them armies levied and pleasure-
+houses raised up and riches gathered and heads smitten off? And
+indeed he spoke sooth who said, 'The world is a commentary
+[FN#190] upon women.'
+
+As for thy citation from the Holy Traditions, it is an argument
+against thee and not for thee; for the Prophet (whom God bless
+and preserve) compares boys to the houris of Paradise. Now,
+without doubt, the subject of comparison is more worthy than
+the object compared with it; so, except women be the worthier
+and the goodlier, wherefore should other than they be likened
+to them? As for thy saying that girls are likened to boys, it
+is not so, but the contrary: boys are likened to girls; for
+folk say, 'Yonder boy is like a girl.' As for that thou quotest
+from the poets, the verses in question were the product of an
+unnatural complexion in this respect; and as for the confirmed
+sodomists and debauchees, that sin against religion, whom God
+hath condemned in His Holy Book, wherein He denounceth their
+filthy practices, saying, 'Do ye betake you to males from the
+four corners of the world and forsake that which your Lord hath
+created for you of your wives? Nay, but ye are a froward
+folk.'[FN#191] These it is that liken girls to boys, of their
+exceeding profligacy and frowardness and inclination to follow
+the devil and their own lusts, so that they say, 'She is apt
+for two men;' and these are all wanderers from the path of
+right. Quoth their chief Abou Nuwas:
+
+A slender one, boyish of waist and of wit, For wencher as well
+ as for sodomite fit.
+
+As for what thou sayest of a boy's whiskers and moustaches and
+how they add to his beauty and grace, by Allah, thou wanderest
+from the right path and sayest that which is other than the
+truth; for whiskers change the charms of the comely into
+ugliness; even as saith the poet:
+
+The whiskers, that sprout on the cheek of the wight, His lovers
+ avenge, if he 've done them unright.
+I see not on 's face what is like unto smoke, Except that his
+ curls are as coals to the sight.
+If the most of his paper[FN#192] thus blackened be, where Is
+ there room, deemest thou, for the pen to indite?
+If any prefer him another above, 'Tis ignorance makes them thus
+ turn from the light.
+
+Glory be to God", continued she, "how is it hidden from thee
+that the perfection of delight is in women and that abiding
+pleasure is not to be found but with them? Seeing that God
+(blessed and exalted be He) hath promised His prophets and
+saints black-eyed damsels in Paradise and hath appointed them
+for a recompense of their pious works: and had God the Most
+High known that the supreme delight was in the possession of
+other than women, He had rewarded them therewith and promised
+it to them. And quoth he whom God bless and preserve, 'The
+things in which I most delight of [the things of] your world
+are three: women and perfume and the solace of my eyes in
+prayer.' Verily, God hath appointed boys to serve His prophets
+and saints in Paradise, because Paradise is the abode of
+delight and pleasance, which could not be complete without the
+service of boys; but, as to the use of them for aught but
+service, it is sin and corruption. How well saith the poet:
+
+Men's turning unto boys is very frowardness; Who noble[FN#193]
+women loves is noble[FN#194] none the less.
+What difference 'twixt the lewd and him whose bedfellow A houri
+is, for looks a very sorceress.
+He rises from her couch and she hath given him scent; He
+perfumes all the house therewith and each recess.
+No boy, indeed, is worth to be compared with her: Shall aloes
+evened be with what not filthiness?"
+
+Then said she, "O folk, ye have made me overpass the bounds of
+modesty and the province of free-born women and indulge in idle
+talk and freedoms of speech, that beseem not people of learning.
+But the breasts of the noble are the tombs of secrets, and
+conversations of this kind are in confidence. Moreover, actions
+are according to intents, and I ask pardon of God for myself
+and you and all Muslims, seeing that He is forgiving and
+merciful."
+
+With this she held her peace and thereafter would answer us of
+nought; so we went our way, rejoicing in that we had profited
+by her discourses and sorrowing to part from her.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOU SUWEID AND THE HANDSOME OLD
+ WOMAN.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Abou Suweid), I entered a garden one day, I and a
+company of my friends, to buy somewhat of fruit; and we saw, in
+a corner of the place, an old woman, who was bright of face,
+but her hair was white, and she was combing it with a comb of
+ivory. We stopped before her, but she paid no heed to us
+neither veiled her face So I said to her' "O old woman, wert
+thou to dye thy hair black, thou wouldst be handsomer than a
+girl. What hinders thee from this?" She raised her head and
+looking at me with great eyes, recited the following verses:
+
+That which the years had dyed, I dyed erewhen but, sooth to
+ tell, My dye endureth not, whilst that of Time's
+ perdurable
+Clad in the raiment of my youth and beauty, of old days,
+ Proudly I walked, and back and front, men had with me to
+ mell
+
+"By Allah," cried I, "bravo to thee for an old woman! How
+sincere art thou in thy yearning remembrance of sin and how
+false in thy presence of repentance from for bidden things!"
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE AMIR ALI BEN TAHIR AND THE GIRL MOUNIS.
+
+
+
+There was once shown to the Amir Ali ben Mohammed ben Abdallah
+ben Tahir[FN#195] a slave-girl, who was excellently handsome
+and well-bred and an accomplished poetess; and he asked her of
+her name. 'May God advance the Amir,' replied she, 'my name is
+Mounis.' Now he knew this before; so he bowed his head awhile,
+then raising his eyes to her, recited the following verse:
+
+What dost thou say of one, on whom sickness and pain have
+ wrought, For love and longing after thee, till he is grown
+ distraught?
+
+'God exalt the Amir!' answered she and recited this verse in
+reply:
+
+An if we saw a lover true, on whom the pangs of love Were sore,
+ we would to him vouchsafe the favours that he sought.
+
+Her reply pleased him; so he bought her for threescore and ten
+thousand dirhems and begat on her Obeidallah teen Mohammed,
+after police-magistrate [at Baghdad].
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE WOMAN WHO HAD A BOY AND THE OTHER
+ WHO HAD A MAN TO LOVER.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Abou el Ainaä[FN#196]), There were in our street two
+women, one of whom had to lover a man and the other a beardless
+boy, and they foregathered one night on the roof of a house,
+not knowing that I was within hearing. Quoth one to the other,
+"O my sister, how canst thou brook the harshness of thy lover's
+beard, as it falls on thy breast, when he kisses thee, and his
+moustaches rub thy cheek and lips?" "Silly wench that thou
+art," replied the other, "what adorns the tree but its leaves
+and the cucumber but its bloom? Didst ever see aught uglier
+than a scald-head, with his beard plucked out? Knowest thou not
+that the beard is to men as the side-locks to women; and what
+is the difference between the chin and the cheek? Knowest thou
+not that God (blessed and exalted be He) hath created an angel
+in heaven, who saith, 'Glory be to Him who adorneth men with
+beards and women with tresses?' So, were not the beard even as
+the tresses in comeliness, it had not been coupled with them, O
+silly woman! How shall I underlie a boy, who will be hasty with
+me in emission and forestall me in flaccescence, and leave a
+man, who, when he takes breath, clips close and when he enters,
+goes leisurely, and when he has done, repeats, and when he
+pushes, pushes hard, and as often as he withdraws, returns?"
+The other was edified by her speech and said, "I forswear my
+lover by the Lord of the Kaabeh!"
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE HAUNTED HOUSE IN BAGHDAD.
+
+
+
+There lived once, in the city of Cairo, a merchant by name
+Hassan the Jeweller of Baghdad, who had great store of wealth
+in money and jewels and lands and houses beyond count. God
+had blessed him with a son of perfect beauty and elegance,
+rosy-cheeked, fair of face and well-shaped, whom he named Ali
+of Cairo and taught the Koran and science and elocution and the
+other branches of polite letters, till he became proficient
+in all manner of knowledge and was under his father's hand
+in trade. After awhile, Hassan fell sick and his sickness
+increased upon him, till he made sure of death and calling his
+son to him, said, 'O my son, verily this world passeth away;
+but the next endureth for ever. Every soul must taste of death;
+and now, O my son, my last hour is at hand and I desire to lay
+on thee an injunction, which if thou observe, thou shalt abide
+in peace and prosperity, till thou meet God the Most High; but
+if thou follow it not, there shall befall thee weariness galore
+and thou wilt repent of having transgressed my admonitions.' 'O
+my father,' replied Ali, 'how shall I do other than hearken to
+thee and do after thine enjoinder, seeing that I am bounden by
+the law of God to obey thee and give ear to thy word?' 'O my
+son,' rejoined his father, 'I leave thee lands and houses
+and goods and wealth past count; wert thou each day to spend
+thereof five hundred dinars, thou wouldst miss nought of it.
+But, O my son, look that thou live in the fear of God and
+follow His Chosen One (whom may He bless and preserve) in
+what he is reported to have enjoined and forbidden in his
+traditions. Be thou assiduous in good works and the practice of
+beneficence and in consorting with men of worth and piety and
+learning; and look that thou have a care for the poor and needy
+and shun avarice and meanness and the converse of the wicked or
+those of doubtful character. Look kindly upon thy servants and
+family, and also upon thy wife, for she is of the daughters
+of the notables and is with child by thee; belike God will
+vouchsafe thee virtuous offspring by her.' And he went on to
+exhort him thus, weeping and saying, 'O my son, I beseech God
+the Bountiful, the Lord of the Empyrean, to deliver thee from
+all straits that may betide thee and grant thee His speedy
+relief!'
+
+His son wept sore and said, 'O my father, I am consumed by thy
+words, for they are as the words of one that saith farewell.'
+'Yes, O my son,' replied the merchant, 'I am ware of my
+condition: forget thou not my enjoinder.' Then he fell to
+repeating the professions of the Faith and reciting [verses of
+the Koran], until the appointed hour arrived, when he said,
+'Draw near unto me, O my son.' So Ali drew near and he kissed
+him; then he sighed and his soul departed his body and he went
+to the mercy of God the Most High. Therewith great grief fell
+upon Ali; the noise of lamentation arose in his house and his
+father's friends flocked to him. Then he betook himself to
+preparing him for burial and made him a splendid funeral. They
+bore him to the place of prayer and prayed over him, then to
+the cemetery, where they buried him and recited over him what
+was fitting of the Koran; after which they returned to the
+house and condoled with the dead man's son and went each his
+own way. Moreover, Ali prayed the Friday prayers for his father
+and let make recitations of the whole Koran for the [accustomed]
+space of forty days, during which time he abode in the house
+and went not forth, save to the place of prayer; and every
+Friday he visited his father's tomb.
+
+He ceased not from his prayers and devotions, till, at last,
+his fellows of the sons of the merchants came in to him one
+day and saluting him, said, 'How long wilt thou keep up this
+thy mourning and neglect thy business and the company of
+thy friends? Verily, this is a fashion that will bring thee
+weariness, and thy body will suffer greatly for it.' Now,
+when they came in to him, Iblis the accursed was with them,
+prompting them, and they went on to press him to accompany them
+to the bazaar, whilst Iblis incited him to consent to them,
+till he yielded and went forth the house with them, that the
+will of God (blessed and exalted be He) might be fulfilled.
+'Mount thy mule,' quoth they, 'and ride with us to such a
+garden, that we may divert us there and that thy grief and
+melancholy may depart from thee.' So he mounted and taking his
+slave, went with them to the garden in question, where they
+entered, and one of them went and making ready the morning-
+meal, brought it to them there. So they ate and made merry and
+sat, talking, till the end of the day, when they mounted and
+returned each to his own lodging, where they passed the night.
+On the morrow, they said to Ali, 'Come with us.' 'Whither?'
+asked he, and they answered, 'To such a garden; for it is
+finer than the first and more pleasant.' So he went with them
+to the garden, and one of them, going away, made ready the
+morning-meal and brought it to them, together with strong wine;
+and Ali said, 'What is this?' Quoth they, 'This is what dispels
+grief and unveils gladness.' And they went on to commend it to
+him, till they prevailed upon him and he drank with them. Then
+they sat, drinking and talking, till the end of the day, when
+each returned home.
+
+As for Ali, he was giddy with wine and went in, in this plight,
+to his wife, who said to him, 'What ails thee?' Quoth he, 'We
+were making merry to-day, when one of my companions brought us
+liquor; so my friends drank and I with them, and this giddiness
+came upon me.' 'O my lord,' said she, 'hast thou forgotten thy
+fathers injunction and done that from which he forbade thee, in
+consorting with lewd folk?' 'These are of the sons of the
+merchants,' answered he; 'they are no lewd folk, only lovers of
+mirth and good cheer.' And he continued to lead this life with
+his friends, day after day, going from place to place and
+feasting and drinking with them, till they said to him, 'Our
+turns are ended, and now it is thy turn.' 'Welcome and fair
+welcome!' answered he; so, on the morrow, he made ready all
+that the case called for of meat and drink, double what they
+had provided, and taking cooks and tent-pitchers and coffee-
+makers, repaired with the others to Er Rauzeh[FN#197] and
+the Nilometer, where they abode a whole month, eating and
+drinking and hearing music and making merry. At the end of the
+month, Ali found that he had spent a great sum of money; but
+Satan the Accursed deluded him and said to him, 'Though thou
+shouldst spend every day a like sum, yet would not thy wealth
+fail.' So he took no account of expense and continued this way
+of life three years, whilst his wife remonstrated with him and
+reminded him of his father's injunctions; but he hearkened not
+to her, till he had spent all his ready money, when he fell to
+selling his jewels and spending their price, till they were all
+gone. Then he sold his houses and lands and farms and gardens,
+one after another, till they were all gone and he had nothing
+left but the house in which he lived. So he tore out the marble
+and wood-work and sold it and spent of its price, till he had
+made an end of this also, when he bethought himself and finding
+that he had nothing left to spend, sold the house itself and
+spent the purchase-money.
+
+Presently, the man who had bought the house came to him and
+said, 'Look thyself out a lodging, for I have need of my
+house.' So he bethought himself and considering that he had
+nothing requiring a house, except his wife, who had borne him a
+son and daughter,--for he had not a servant left,--hired a room
+in one of the mean lodging houses and there took up his abode,
+after having lived in honour and luxury, with many servants and
+much wealth, and came to lack of one day's bread. Quoth his
+wife, 'I warned thee of this and exhorted thee to obey thy
+father's injunction, and thou wouldst not hearken to me; but
+there is no power and no virtue save in God the Most High, the
+Supreme! Whence shall the little ones eat? Arise, go round to
+thy friends, the sons of the merchants: it may be they will
+give thee somewhat on which we may live this day.' So he went
+the round of his friends, one by one; but they all hid their
+faces from him and gave him nothing but injurious and revolting
+words; and he returned to his wife and said to her, 'They have
+given me nothing.' Thereupon she went out to beg of her
+neighbours wherewithal to sustain themselves and came to a
+woman, whom she had known in former days. When she came in to
+her and she saw her plight, she rose and receiving her kindly,
+wept and said, 'What hath befallen thee?' So she told her of
+her husband's conduct, and the other said, 'Welcome and fair
+welcome! Whatever thou needest, seek it of me, without price.'
+'May God abundantly requite thee!' answered she. Then her
+friend gave her as much victual as would suffice herself and
+her family a whole month, and she took it and returned to her
+lodging. When her husband saw her, he wept and said, 'Whence
+hadst thou that?' 'I got it of such a woman,' answered she;
+'for, when I told her what had befallen us, she failed me not
+in aught, but said, "Seek of me all thou needest."' 'Since thou
+hast this,' rejoined her husband, 'I will betake myself to a
+place I have in my mind; peradventure God the Most High will
+bring us relief.'
+
+So saying, he took leave of her and kissing the children, went
+out, not knowing whither he should go, and walked on till he
+came to Boulac,[FN#198] where he saw a ship about to sail for
+Damietta. Here he met a man, between whom and his father there
+had been friendship; and he saluted him and said to him,
+'Whither away?' 'To Damietta,' replied Ali; 'I have friends
+there, whom I would fain enquire after and visit and return.'
+The man took him home and entreated him hospitably, then,
+furnishing him with victual [for the voyage] and giving him
+somewhat of money, embarked him on board the vessel bound for
+Damietta. When they reached that place, Ali landed, not knowing
+where to go, but, as he was walking along, a merchant saw him
+and had pity on him. So he carried him to his house, where he
+abode awhile, till he said in himself, 'How long shall this
+sojourning in other folks' houses last?' Then he left the
+merchant's house and went down to the quay, where he saw a ship
+ready to sail for Syria. His host provided him with victual and
+embarked him in the ship; and it set sail and arrived, in due
+course, at the coast of Syria, where he landed and journeyed
+till he entered Damascus. As he walked about the town, a
+benevolent man saw him and took him to his house, where he
+abode awhile, till, one day, going abroad, he saw a caravan
+about to start for Baghdad and bethought himself to journey
+thither with it. So he returned to his host and taking leave of
+him, set out with the caravan.
+
+Now God (blessed and exalted be He) inclined to him the heart
+of one of the merchants, so that he took him with him, and Ali
+ate and drank with him, till they came within one day's journey
+of Baghdad, where a company of highwaymen fell upon the caravan
+and took all they had. But few of the merchants escaped and
+these made each for a [separate] place of refuge. As for Ali,
+he made for Baghdad, where he arrived at sundown, as the
+gatekeepers were about to shut the gates, and said to them
+'Let me in with you.' So they admitted him and asked him
+whence he came and whither he was bound. 'I am a man from
+the city of Cairo,' replied he, 'and have with me mules laden
+with merchandise and slaves and servants. I forewent them, to
+look me out a place wherein to deposit my goods; but as I rode
+along on my mule, there fell upon me a company of highway robbers,
+who took my mule and gear; nor did I escape from them but at
+the last gasp.' The warders entreated him hospitably and bade
+him welcome, saying, 'Abide with us this night, and in the
+morning we will look thee out a place befitting thee.' Then he
+sought in his pocket and finding a dinar remaining of those he
+had gotten of the merchant at Boulac, gave it to one of the
+gatekeepers, saying, 'Take this and change it and bring us
+something to eat.' The man took it and went to the market,
+where he changed it and brought Ali bread and cooked meat. So
+he ate, he and the gatekeepers, and he lay the night with them.
+
+On the morrow, one of the warders carried him to a merchant of
+the town, to whom he told the same story, and he believed him,
+deeming that he was a merchant and had with him loads of
+merchandise. So he took him up into his shop and entreated him
+with honour. Moreover, he sent to his house for a splendid suit
+of his own apparel for him and carried him to the bath. So,
+[quoth Ali], I went with him to the bath, and when we came out,
+he brought me to his house, where he caused set the morning-meal
+before us, and we ate and made merry.
+
+Then said he to one of his slaves, "Harkye, Mesoud, take this
+thy lord and show him the two houses in such a place. Whichever
+pleases him of them, give him the key of it and come back." So
+I went with the slave, till we came to a place where stood
+three houses, side by side, new and shut up. He opened the
+first and the second, and I looked at them; after which he said
+to me, "Of which of them shall I give thee the key?" "To whom
+does yon large house belong?" asked I. "To us," answered he;
+and I said, "Open it, that I may view it." Quoth he, "Thou hast
+no call to it." "Wherefore?" asked I; and he, "Because it is
+haunted, and none lodges there but in the morning he is a dead
+man; nor do we use to open the door, to take out the corpse,
+but mount the roof of one of the other two houses and take it
+up thence. For this reason, my master has abandoned the house
+and says, 'I will never again give it to any one.'" Quoth I,
+"Open it, that I may view it;" and I said in myself, "This is
+what I seek. I will pass the night there and in the morning be
+a dead man and be at peace from this miserable plight of mine."
+So he opened it and I entered and found it a splendid house,
+without its like; and I said to the slave, "I will have none
+other than this house; give me the key." But he answered, "I
+will not give thee this key till I consult my master," and
+going to the latter, said to him, "The Egyptian merchant saith,
+'I will lodge in none but the great house.'"
+
+When the merchant heard this, he rose and coming to Ali, said
+to him, 'O my lord, thou hast no need of this house.' But he
+replied, 'I will lodge in none other than this; for I care
+nothing for this saying.'[FN#199] 'Then,' said the other,
+'write me an acknowledgment that, if aught happen to thee, I am
+not responsible.' 'So be it,' answered Ali; whereupon the
+merchant fetched an assessor from the Cadi's court and taking
+of him the prescribed acknowledgment, delivered him the key,
+which he took and entered the house. The merchant sent him
+bedding by a slave, who spread it for him on the bench behind
+the door and went away. Presently Ali went into the inner court
+and seeing there a well with a bucket, let down the latter and
+drew water, with which he made the ablution and prayed the
+obligatory prayers. Then he sat awhile, till the merchant's
+slave brought him the evening meal from his master's house,
+together with a lamp, a candle and candlestick, a basin and
+ewer and a gugglet; after which he left him and returned home.
+Ali lighted the candle and supped at his ease and prayed the
+evening prayer; after which he said to himself, 'Let us take
+the bed and go upstairs and sleep there, rather than here.' So
+he took the bed and carried it upstairs, where he found a
+splendid saloon, with gilded ceiling and walls and floor of
+variegated marble. He spread his bed there and sitting down,
+began to recite somewhat of the sublime Koran, when suddenly he
+heard one calling to him and saying, 'O Ali, O son of Hassan,
+shall I send thee down the gold?' And he answered, 'Send away.'
+
+Hardly had he spoken, when pieces of gold began to rain down on
+him, like [pebbles from] a mangonel, nor stinted till the
+saloon was full. Then said the voice, 'Set me free, that I may
+go my way; for I have made an end of my service and have
+delivered unto thee that which was committed to me for thee.'
+Quoth Ali, 'I adjure thee by the Most High God to tell me the
+history of this gold.' 'This is a treasure that was enchanted
+to thee of old time,' replied the voice; 'and to every one, who
+entered the house, we used to come and say to him, "O Ali, O
+son of Hassan, shall we send down the gold?" Whereat he would
+be affrighted and cry out, and we would come down to him and
+break his neck and go away. But, when thou camest and we
+accosted thee by thy name and that of thy father, saying,
+"Shall we send thee down the gold?" and thou madest answer,
+saying, "Send away," we knew thee for the owner of it and sent
+it down. Moreover, there is yet another treasure for thee in
+the land of Yemen, whither thou wouldst do well to journey and
+fetch it. And now I would have thee set me free, that I may go
+my way.' 'By Allah,' said Ali, 'I will not set thee free, till
+thou bring me hither the treasure from Yemen!' Quoth the voice,
+'If I bring it thee, wilt thou release me and the servant of
+the other treasure also?' 'Yes,' replied Ali; and the genie
+said, 'Swear to me.' So he swore to him, and he was about to go
+away, when Ali said to him, 'I have one other service to ask of
+thee.' 'What is that?' asked the genie. Quoth Ali, 'I have a
+wife and children at Cairo, in such a place; thou must fetch
+them to me, at their ease and without hurt.' 'I will bring them
+to thee in state,' answered the genie, 'in a litter, with a
+train of slaves and servants, together with the treasure from
+Yemen, if it be the will of God the Most High.' Then he took of
+him leave of absence for three days, at the end of which time
+all this should be with him, and departed.
+
+When it was morning, Ali went round about the saloon, seeking a
+place wherein to lay the gold, and saw in the wall of the dais
+a marble panel, with a knob in it. So he pressed the knob and
+the panel slid back and discovered a door, which he opened and
+entering, found a great closet, full of linen bags. So he took
+out the bags and fell to filling them with gold and replacing
+them in the closet, till he had transported thither the whole
+treasure, whereupon he shut the door and pressing the knob, the
+panel returned to its place. Then he went down and seated
+himself on the bench behind the door. Presently, there came a
+knock at the door; so he opened it and found the merchant's
+slave, who, seeing him, returned in haste to his master with
+the good tidings, saying, 'O my lord, the merchant, who is
+lodged in the haunted house, is alive and well and sits on the
+bench behind the door.' When the merchant heard this, he rose
+joyfully and went to the house, taking breakfast with him; and
+when he saw Ali, he embraced him and kissed him between the
+eyes, saying, 'How hath God dealt with thee?' 'Right well,'
+answered Ali. 'I slept upstairs in the marble saloon.' Quoth
+the merchant, 'Did aught come to thee or didst thou see aught?'
+'No,' replied Ali; 'I recited some little of the Koran and
+slept till morning, when I arose and after making the ablution
+and praying, came down and seated myself on the bench behind
+the door.' 'Praised be God for safety!' exclaimed the merchant,
+then left him and presently sent him slaves and servants, black
+and white and male and female, with furniture. They swept the
+house from top to bottom and furnished it magnificently, after
+which three black slaves and the like number of white and four
+slave-girls abode with him, to serve him, and the rest returned
+to their master's house. When the merchants heard of him, they
+sent him presents of all manner of things of price, even to
+meat and drink and clothes, and took him with them in the
+market, saying, 'When will thy baggage arrive?' And he answered,
+'After three days it will come.'
+
+Accordingly, when the three days had elapsed, the servant of
+the first treasure came to him and said, 'Go forth and meet thy
+harem, together with the treasure I have brought thee from
+Yemen, part of which is by way of costly merchandise; but the
+slaves, black and white, and the horses and camels and mules
+are all of the Jinn. (Now the genie, when he betook himself to
+Cairo, found Ali's wife and children in sore straits for
+nakedness and hunger; so he carried them forth of the town in a
+travelling-litter and clad them in sumptuous raiment of that
+which was in the treasure of Yemen.) When Ali heard this, he
+rose and repairing to the merchants, said to them, 'Come, go
+forth the city with me, to meet the caravan, with my merchandise,
+and honour me with the presence of your harems, to meet my
+harem.' 'We hear and obey,' answered they and sending for
+their harems, went forth all together and alighted in one
+of the gardens without the city. As they sat talking, behold, a
+cloud of dust arose out of the heart of the desert, and they
+came out to see what it was. Presently, it lifted and discovered
+mules and muleteers and tent-pitchers and linkmen, who came on,
+singing and dancing, till they reached the garden, when the
+chief of the muleteers came up to Ali and kissing his hand,
+said to him, 'O my lord, we have been long on the way, for
+we thought to enter some days ago; but we were in fear of
+the highway-robbers, so abode in our station four days, till
+God the Most High rid us of them.'
+
+Then the merchants mounted their mules and rode forward with
+the caravan, wondering at the [number of] mules laden with
+chests, whilst their harems followed them, with Ali's harem,
+marvelling at the richness of the apparel of his wife and
+children and saying to each other, 'Verily, the King of Baghdad
+hath no such raiment, no, nor any other of the kings or
+merchants or notables.' So they entered Baghdad in great state
+and rode on till they came to Ali's house, where they alighted
+and brought the mules and their burdens into the midst of the
+courtyard. Then they unloaded them and laid up the goods in the
+storehouses, whilst the merchants' wives went up with Ali's
+family to the saloon, which they found as it were a luxuriant
+garden, spread with magnificent furniture. They sat in mirth
+and good cheer till noon, when they brought them up the noon
+meal, of all manner meats and sweetmeats of the best; and
+they ate and drank costly sherbets and perfumed themselves
+thereafter with rose-water and scented woods. Then they took
+leave and departed, men and women. When the merchants returned
+home, they all sent presents to Ali, according to their
+conditions; and their wives likewise sent presents to his wife,
+so that there came to them great plenty of slaves, black and
+white and male and female, and store of all manner goods, such
+as grain and sugar and so forth, beyond count. As for the
+landlord of the house, he abode with Ali and quitted him not,
+but said to him, 'Let the slaves and servants take the mules
+and the other cattle into one of my other houses, to rest.'
+Quoth Ali, 'They set out again to-night for such a place.' Then
+he gave them leave to go forth the city, that they might set
+out on their journey at nightfall; whereupon they took leave of
+him forthright and departing the city, flew off through the air
+to their several abodes.
+
+Ali and the merchant sat together till a third of the night
+was past, when the latter returned to his own house and Ali
+went up to his wife and children and greeted them, saying,
+'What hath befallen you all this time?' So she told him what
+they had suffered of hunger and nakedness and toil, and he
+said, 'Praised be God for safety! How did ye come?' 'O my lord,'
+answered she, 'I was asleep, with my children, yesternight,
+when suddenly one raised us from the ground and carried us
+through the air, without doing us any hurt, nor did he give
+over flying with us, till he set us down in a place as it were
+a Bedouin camping-place, where we saw laden mules and a litter
+borne upon two great mules, and round them servants, boys and
+men. So I said to them, "Who are ye and what are these loads
+and where are we?" And they answered, "We are the servants of
+the merchant Ali ibn Hassan of Cairo, who has sent us to fetch
+you to him at Baghdad." Quoth I, "Is it far or near, hence to
+Baghdad?" "Near," answered they; "there lies but the darkness
+of the night between us and the city." Then they mounted us in
+the litter, and on the morrow, we found ourselves with thee,
+without having suffered any hurt. 'Who gave you these clothes?'
+asked he, and she said, 'The chief of the caravan opened one of
+the chests on the mules and taking out the clothes, clad me and
+the children each in a suit; after which he locked the chest
+and gave me the key, saying, "Take care of it, till thou give
+it to thy husband." And here it is, safe.' So saying, she gave
+him the key, and he said, 'Dost thou know the chest?' 'Yes,'
+answered she. So he took her down to the magazine and she
+pointed it out, whereupon he put the key in the lock and opened
+the chest, in which he found much raiment and the keys of all
+the other chests. So he took them out and fell to opening the
+other chests, one after another, and feasting his eyes upon the
+jewels and precious metals they contained, whose like was not
+found with any of the kings; after which he locked them again
+and took the keys, saying to his wife, 'This is of the bounty
+of God the Most High.'
+
+Then he returned with her to the saloon and bringing her to the
+secret panel, pressed the knob and opened the door of the
+closet into which he entered with her and showed her the gold
+he had laid up there. Quoth she, 'Whence hadst thou all this?'
+'It came to me by the grace of my Lord,' answered he and told
+her all that had befallen him, from first to last. 'O my lord,'
+said she, 'all this comes of the blessing of thy father's
+prayers, whenas he prayed for thee, before his death, saying,
+"I beseech God to cast thee into no strait, except He bring
+thee speedy deliverance [therefrom]!" So praised be God the
+Most High for that He hath brought thee relief and hath
+requited thee with more than thou didst lose! But God on thee,
+O my lord, return not to thy sometime fashion and companying
+with folk of lewd life; but look thou fear God the Most High,
+both in public and private!' And she went on to admonish him.
+Quoth he, 'I accept thine admonition and beg God the Most High
+to remove the wicked from us and stablish us in His obedience
+and in the observance of the law of His Prophet, on whom be
+peace and salvation!'
+
+Ali and his wife and children were now in all delight of life and
+gladness; and he opened him a shop in the merchants' bazaar and
+stocking it with jewels and precious metals, sat therein with
+his children and servants. He soon became the most considerable
+of the merchants of Baghdad, and his report reached the King of
+that city, who sent a messenger to command his attendance. So
+he took four trays of red gold and filling them with jewels and
+precious metals, such as no king possessed, went up to the
+palace and presenting himself before the prince, kissed the
+earth before him and wished him continuance of glory and
+prosperity, in the best words he could command. 'O merchant,'
+said the King, 'thou honourest our city with thy presence;'
+and Ali rejoined, saying, 'O King of the age, thy slave hath
+brought thee a present and hopes for acceptance thereof from
+thy favour.' So saying, he laid the four trays before the King,
+who uncovered them and seeing that they contained jewels,
+whose like he possessed not and whose worth equalled treasuries
+of money, said, 'O merchant, thy present is accepted, and so
+God please, we will requite thee with its like.' And Ali kissed
+his hands and went away. Then the King called his grandees
+and said to them, 'How many kings have sought my daughter in
+marriage?' 'Many,' answered they. 'Hath any of them given me
+the like of this gift?' asked he. 'Not one,' replied they;
+'for that none of them hath its like;' and he said, 'I have
+consulted God the Most High,[FN#200] as to marrying my daughter
+to this merchant. What say ye?' 'Be it as thou deemest,'
+answered they. Then he bade the eunuch carry the four trays
+into his harem and going in to his wife, laid them before
+her. She uncovered them and seeing therein that whose like
+she possessed not,--no, nor a fraction thereof,--said to him,
+'Of which of the kings hadst thou these? Peradventure of
+one of those that seek our daughter in marriage?' 'Not so,'
+answered he, 'I had them of an Egyptian merchant, who is lately
+come to our city. I heard tell of him and sent to command him
+to us, thinking to make his acquaintance, so haply we might
+find with him somewhat of jewels and buy them of him for our
+daughter's equipment. He obeyed the summons and brought us
+these four trays, as a present, and I saw him to be a handsome
+and elegant young man[FN#201] of dignified aspect and accomplished
+wit, well-nigh as he were of the sons of the kings. Wherefore my
+heart inclined to him and I rejoiced in him and thought to marry
+my daughter to him.' Then he told her what had passed between
+himself and his grandees on the subject and added, 'But what
+sayst thou?' 'O King of the age,' answered she, 'the affair
+is in God's hand, and thine, and what God willeth shall come
+to pass.' 'If it be His will,' rejoined the King, 'I will marry
+her to none other than this young man.'
+
+So, on the morrow, he went out to his Divan and sending for Ali
+and the rest of the merchants of Baghdad, bade them be seated.
+Then he summoned the Cadi of the Divan and said to him, 'O
+Cadi, draw up the contract of marriage between my daughter and
+the merchant Ali of Cairo.' But the latter said, 'Thy pardon, O
+our lord the Sultan! It befits not that a merchant, such as I,
+be the King's son-in-law.' Quoth the King, 'It is my will to
+bestow this favour upon thee, as well as the Vizierate.' And he
+invested him forthwith in the Vizier's habit. Then Ali sat down
+in the seat of the Vizierate and said, 'O King of the age, thou
+hast bestowed on me this; and indeed I am honoured by thy
+bounties; but hear one word from me.' 'Say on,' answered the
+King, 'and fear not.' Quoth Ali, 'Since it is thine august will
+to marry thy daughter, thou wouldst do better to marry her to
+my son.' 'Hast thou then a son?' asked the King; and Ali
+replied, 'Yes.' 'Send for him forthright,' said the King;
+whereupon, 'I hear and obey,' answered Ali and sent a servant
+to fetch his son, who came and kissing the ground before the
+King, stood in an attitude of respect. The King looked at him
+and seeing him to be yet comelier than his daughter and
+goodlier than she in symmetry and brightness and perfection,
+said to him, 'O my son, what is thy name?' 'O our lord the
+Sultan,' replied the young man, who was then fourteen years
+old, 'my name is Hassan.' Then the Sultan said to the Cadi,
+'Write the contract of marriage between my daughter Husn el
+Wujoud and Hassan, son of the merchant Ali of Cairo.' So he
+wrote the contract of marriage between them, and the affair was
+ended on the goodliest wise; after which all in the Divan went
+their ways and the merchants escorted the Vizier Ali to his
+house, where they gave him joy of his advancement and departed.
+Then he went in to his wife, who, seeing him clad in the
+Vizier's habit, exclaimed, 'What is this?' So he told her all
+that had passed, and she rejoiced therein with an exceeding
+joy.
+
+On the morrow, he went up to the Divan, where the King received
+him with especial favour and seating him beside himself, said
+to him, 'O Vizier, we purpose to celebrate the wedding festivities
+and bring thy son in to our daughter.' 'O our lord the Sultan,'
+replied Ali, 'that thou deemest good is good.' So the Sultan
+gave orders for the festivities, and they decorated the city
+and held high festival thirty days, in all cheer and gladness;
+at the end of which time, the Vizier Ali's son Hassan went
+in to the princess and enjoyed her beauty and grace. When
+the queen saw her daughter's husband, she conceived a warm
+affection for him, and in like manner she rejoiced greatly in
+his mother. Then the King bade build his son-in-law a palace
+beside his own; so they built him with all speed a splendid
+palace, in which he took up his abode; and his mother used to
+abide with her son some days and then return to her own house.
+After awhile, the queen said to her husband, 'O King of the
+age, Hassan's mother cannot take up her abode with her son and
+leave the Vizier; neither can she abide with her husband and
+leave her son.' 'Thou sayst sooth,' replied the King and bade
+build a third palace beside the two others, which being done in
+a few days, he caused remove thither the Vizier's goods, and
+the latter and his wife took up their abode there. Now the
+three palaces communicated with one another, so that, when the
+King had a mind to speak with the Vizier by night, he would go
+to him or send to fetch him; and so with Hassan and his father
+and mother.
+
+They dwelt thus in the greatest happiness and contentment awhile,
+till the King fell ill and his sickness increased on him. So he
+summoned the grandees of his realm and said to them, 'There is
+come upon me a sore sickness, peradventure a mortal one, and I
+have therefore summoned you to consult you respecting a certain
+matter, on which I would have you counsel me as you deem well.'
+'What is the matter of which thou wouldst take counsel with us,
+O King?' asked they; and he answered, 'I am old and sickly and
+I fear for the realm, after me, from the enemies; so I would
+have you all agree upon some one, that I may proclaim him king
+in my lifetime and so ye may be at ease.' Whereupon quoth they
+all, 'We all approve of thy son-in-law Hassan, son of the
+Vizier Ali; for we have seen the perfectness of his wit and
+understanding, and he knows the rank of all, great and small.
+
+'Are ye indeed agreed upon this?' asked the King, and they
+answered, 'Yes.' 'Peradventure,' quoth he, 'ye say this to my
+face, of respect for me; but, behind my back, ye will say
+otherwise.' But they all answered, saying, 'By Allah, our word,
+in public and in private, is one, varying not; and we accept
+him frankly and with all our hearts.' 'Since the case is thus,'
+said the King, 'bring the Cadi of the Holy Law and all the
+chamberlains and captains and officers of state before me
+to-morrow, and we will settle the affair on the goodliest
+wise.' 'We hear and obey,' answered they and withdrawing,
+notified all the doctors of the law and the chief Amirs.
+
+So, on the morrow, they came up to the Divan and saluted the
+King, who said to them, 'O Amirs of Baghdad, whom will ye have
+to be king over you after me, that I may invest him in my
+lifetime, in the presence of you all?' Quoth they all, 'We are
+agreed upon thy daughter's husband, Hassan, son of the Vizier
+Ali.' 'If it be so,' said the King, 'go all of you and bring
+him before me.' So they all arose and repairing to Hassan's
+palace, said to him, 'Come with us to the King.' 'Wherefore?'
+asked he, and they answered, 'For a thing that will advantage
+both us and thee.' So he went in with them to the King and
+kissed the ground before the latter, who bade him be seated and
+said to him, 'O Hassan, all the Amirs have approved of thee and
+agreed to make thee king over them after me; and it is my
+purpose to proclaim thee, whilst I yet live, and so make an end
+of the business.' But Hassan arose and kissing the earth once
+more before the King, said to him, 'O our lord the King, among
+the Amirs there be [many] who are older than I and greater of
+worth; hold me quit therefore of this thing.' Quoth all the
+Amirs, 'We consent not but that thou be king over us.' Then
+said Hassan, 'My father is older than I, and he and I are one
+thing; and it befits not to advance me over him.' But Ali
+said, 'I will consent to nothing but what is pleasing to my
+brethren; and they have all chosen and agreed upon thee.
+Wherefore gainsay thou not the King's commandment and that
+of thy brethren.' And Hassan hung his head in abashment before
+the King and his father. Then said the King to the Amirs, 'Do
+ye all accept of him?' 'We do,' answered they and recited
+thereupon seven Fatihehs.'[FN#202] So the King said to the
+Cadi, 'Draw up a legal act testifying of these Amirs that they
+are agreed to make my daughter's husband Hassan king over
+them.' So the Cadi wrote the act and made it executory,[FN#203]
+after they had all taken the oath of fealty to Hassan. Then the
+King invested him with the insignia of royalty and bade him
+take his seat on the throne; whereupon they all arose and
+kissed King Hassan's hands and did homage to him.
+
+The new king dispensed justice among the people that day, in
+right royal fashion, and invested the grandees of the realm in
+splendid robes of honour. When the Divan broke up, he went in
+to his father-and-law and kissed his hands; and the old King
+said to him, 'O my son, look thou govern the people in the fear
+of God.' 'O my father,' replied Hassan, 'through thy prayers
+for me, the grace of God will come to me.' Then he entered his
+own palace and was met by his wife and her mother and their
+attendants, who kissed his hands and gave him joy of his
+advancement, saying, 'This is a blessed day.' Then he went in
+to his father and mother, who rejoiced with an exceeding joy in
+that which God had vouchsafed him of his advancement to the
+kingship, and his father exhorted him to the fear of God and to
+affectionate solicitude in his dealings with his subjects. He
+passed the night in joy and gladness, and on the morrow, having
+prayed the appointed prayers, concluding with the customary
+recitation of part of the Koran, he repaired to the Divan,
+whither came all his officers and dignitaries. He passed the
+day in dispensing justice among his subjects, enjoining to
+beneficence and forbidding from iniquity and appointing and
+displacing, till nightfall, when the Divan broke up, after the
+goodliest fashion, and all present withdrew and went each his
+own way. Then he arose and went in to the palace, where he
+found his father-in-law's sickness grown heavy upon him and
+said to him, 'May no hurt befall thee!' At this the old King
+opened his eyes and said, 'O Hassan!' 'At thy service, O my
+lord,' replied the young man. Quoth the old King, 'My last hour
+is at hand: be careful of thy wife and her mother and look
+thou fear God and honour thy parents, being still in awe of
+the majesty of the Requiting King and remembering that He
+commandeth to justice and beneficence.' And Hassan replied,
+'I hear and obey.'
+
+The old King lingered three days after this and was then
+received into the mercy of God the Most High. They paid him
+the last offices and buried him and held over him readings and
+recitations of the Koran, to the end of the [customary] forty
+days. And King Hassan, son of the Vizier, reigned in his stead,
+and his subjects rejoiced in him and all his days were gladness.
+Moreover, his father ceased not to be his chief Vizier on his
+right hand, and he took to himself another Vizier, to be at his
+left hand. His reign was a prosperous one and he abode long
+King in Baghdad. God blessed him, by the old King's daughter,
+with three sons, who inherited the kingdom after him; and they
+abode in the enjoyment of all delight and solace of life, till
+there came to them the Destroyer of Delights and the Sunderer
+of Companies. And glory be to Him who is eternal and in whose
+hand are annulment and confirmation!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE PILGRIM AND THE OLD WOMAN WHO DWELT
+ IN THE DESERT.
+
+
+
+A man of the pilgrims once slept a long sleep and awaking,
+found no trace of the caravan. So he arose and walked on, but
+lost his way and presently came to a tent, at whose door he saw
+an old woman and a dog by her, asleep. He went up to the tent
+and saluting the old woman, sought of her food. 'Go to yonder
+valley,' said she, 'and catch thy sufficiency of serpents, that
+I may broil of them for thee and give thee to eat.' 'I dare not
+catch serpents,' answered the pilgrim; 'nor did I ever eat
+them.' Quoth the old woman, 'I will go with thee and catch
+them; fear not.' So she went with him, followed by the dog, to
+the valley, and catching a sufficient number of serpents,
+proceeded to broil them. He saw nothing for it but to eat, for
+fear of hunger and exhaustion; so he ate of the serpents.
+
+Then he was athirst and asked for water to drink. 'Go to the
+spring and drink,' answered she. So he went to the spring and
+found the water thereof bitter; yet needs must he drink of it,
+for all its bitterness, because of the violence of his thirst.
+Then he returned to the old woman and said to her, 'O old
+woman, I marvel at thy choosing to abide in this place and
+putting up with such meat and drink!' 'And how is it then in
+thy country?' asked she. 'In my country,' answered he, 'are
+wide and spacious houses and ripe and delicious fruits and
+sweet and abundant waters and goodly viands and fat meats and
+plentiful flocks and all things pleasant and all the goods of
+life, the like whereof are not, save in the Paradise that God
+the Most High hath promised to His pious servants.' 'All this,'
+replied she, 'have I heard: but tell me, have you a Sultan who
+ruleth over you and is tyrannical in his rule and under whose
+hand you are, who, if one of you commit a fault, taketh his
+goods and undoth him and who, when he will, turneth you out of
+your houses and uprooteth you, stock and branch?' 'Indeed, that
+may be,' answered the man. 'Then, by Allah,' rejoined she,
+'these your delicious viands and dainty life and pleasant
+estate, with tyranny and oppression, are but a corroding
+poison, in comparison wherewith, our food and fashion, with
+freedom and safety, are a healthful medicine. Hast thou not
+heard that the best of all boons, after the true Faith, are
+health and security?'
+
+Now these[FN#204] [quoth he who tells the tale] may be by the
+just rule of the Sultan, the Vicar of God in His earth, and the
+goodness of his policy. The Sultan of times past needed but
+little awfulness, for that, when the people saw him, they
+feared him; but the Sultan of these days hath need of the most
+accomplished policy and the utmost majesty, for that men are
+not as men of time past and this our age is one of folk
+depraved and greatly calamitous, noted for folly and hardness
+of heart and inclined to hatred and enmity. If, therefore, the
+Sultan that is set over them be (which God the Most High
+forfend) weak or lack of policy and majesty, without doubt,
+this will be the cause of the ruin of the land. Quoth the
+proverb, 'A hundred years of the Sultan's tyranny, rather than
+one of the tyranny of the people, one over another.' When the
+people oppress one another, God setteth over them a tyrannical
+Sultan and a despotic King. Thus it is told in history that
+there was, one day, presented to El Hejjaj ben Yousuf[FN#205] a
+docket, in which was written, 'Fear God and oppress not His
+servants with all manner of oppression.' When he read this, he
+mounted the pulpit, (for he was ready of speech,) and said, 'O
+folk' God the Most High hath set me over you, by reason of your
+[evil] deeds; and though I die, yet will ye not be delivered
+from oppression, with your evil deeds; for God the Most High
+hath created many like unto me. If it be not I, it will be a
+more fertile than I in mischief and a mightier in oppression
+and a more strenuous in violence, even as saith the poet:
+
+For no hand is there but the hand of God is over it And no
+ oppressor but shall be with worse than he oppress.
+
+Tyranny is feared: but justice is the best of all things. We
+beg God to better our case.'
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOULHUSN AND HIS SLAVE-GIRL TAWEDDUD.
+
+
+
+There was once in Baghdad a man of rank and rich in money and
+houses and lands, who was one of the chiefs of the merchants,
+and God had largely endowed him with worldly goods, but had
+not vouchsafed him what he longed for of offspring; and there
+passed over him a long space of time, without his being blessed
+with children, male or female. His years waxed great, his bones
+became wasted and his back bent, and weakness and trouble
+increased on him, and he feared the loss of his wealth and
+possessions, seeing he had no child, whom he might make his
+heir and by whom he should be remembered. So he betook himself
+with supplication to God the Most High, fasting by day and
+rising by night [to pray]. Moreover, he made vows to God the
+Living, the Eternal, and visited the pious and was instant in
+supplication to the Most Migh, till He gave ear to him and
+accepted his prayer and took pity on his striving and complaining;
+so that, before many days were past, he lay with one of his women
+and she became with child by him the same night. She accomplished
+the months of her pregnancy and casting her burden, bore a male
+child as he were a piece of the moon; whereupon the merchant,
+in his gratitude to God, (to whom belong might and majesty,)
+fulfilled his vows and gave alms and clothed the widow and the
+orphan.
+
+On the seventh night after the boy's birth, he named him
+Aboulhusn, and the wet-nurses suckled him and the dry-nurses
+dandled him and the slaves and servants carried him, till he
+grew up and throve and learnt the sublime Koran and the
+ordinances of Islam and the things of the True Faith. Moreover,
+he learned writing and poetry and mathematics and archery and
+became the pearl of his age and the goodliest of the folk of
+his time and his day, fair of face and fluent of tongue,
+bearing himself with a proud and graceful port and glorying in
+his symmetry and amorous grace. His cheeks were red and his
+forehead white and brilliant and the tender down of the
+whiskers darkened upon his face, even as saith one, describing
+him:
+
+The Spring of the down on his cheeks to the eye shows clear;
+ And how shall the rose endure, after Spring is here?
+Dost thou not see that the growth on his cheek, forsooth, A
+ violet is, that forth of its leaves doth peer?
+
+He abode awhile with his father, in the best of case, and the
+latter rejoiced and delighted in him, till he came to man's
+estate, when the merchant one day made him sit down before him
+and said to him, 'O my son, the appointed term draws near; my
+last hour is at hand and it remains but to meet God (to whom
+belong might and majesty). I leave thee what shall suffice
+thee, even to thy son's son, of money and farms and houses and
+gardens; wherefore, O my son, fear thou God the Most High in
+[dealing with] that which I leave thee and follow none but
+those who will help thee [in this].' Not long after, he
+sickened and died; so his son ordered his funeral, after the
+goodliest fashion, and burying him, returned to his house and
+sat mourning for him [many] days and nights, till certain of
+his friends came in to him and said to him, 'Whoso leaveth the
+like of thee after him is not dead; indeed, what is past is
+past and mourning beseemeth none but girls and cloistered
+women.' And they ceased not from him, till they wrought on him
+to enter the bath and break off his mourning. Then he forgot
+his father's injunctions, and his head was turned by his
+riches; he thought fortune would still abide with him, as it
+was, and that wealth would never come to an end. So he ate and
+drank and made merry and took his pleasure and gave gifts of
+money and raiment and was profuse with gold and gave himself up
+to eating fowls and breaking the seals of wine-flasks and
+listening to songs and to the laugh of the wine, as it gurgled
+from the flagon; nor did he give over this way of life, till
+his wealth was wasted and the case became straitened [upon him]
+and he bit his hands [for repentance] and gone was all he had.
+
+In good sooth, he had nothing left, after that which he had
+squandered, but a slave-girl that his father had bequeathed to
+him with the rest of his estate: her name was Taweddud and she
+had no equal in beauty and grace and brightness and symmetry
+and all perfection. She was past mistress in all manner of arts
+and accomplishments and endowed with [many] excellences,
+surpassing all the folk of her age and time. She was grown more
+notorious than a way-mark,[FN#206] for the versatility of her
+genius, and outdid the fair both in theory and practice and
+elegant and flexile grace, more by token that she was five feet
+high and in conjunction with fair fortune, with strait arched
+brows, as they were the crescent moon of Shaaban,[FN#207] and
+eyes like those of gazelles, nose like the point of the sabre
+and cheeks like blood-red anemones, mouth like Solomon's seal
+and teeth like necklaces of pearls, navel holding an ounce of
+benzoin ointment and waist more slender than his body whom love
+hath wasted and whom concealment [of his passion] hath made
+sick, and buttocks heavier than two hills of sand; brief, in
+all she answered to the saying of him who says:
+
+Her fair shape ravisheth, if face to face she did appear, And
+ if she turn, for severance from her she slayeth sheer.
+Sun-like, full-moon-like, sapling-like, unto her character
+ Estrangement nowise appertains nor cruelty austere.
+Under the bosom of her shift the garths of Eden are, and the
+ full-moon revolveth still upon her neck-rings' sphere.
+
+She seemed [at once] a rising full moon and a browsing gazelle,
+a girl of nine and five,[FN#208] putting to shame the moon and
+the sun, even as saith of her the eloquent and ingenious poet:
+
+The likeness of the full-moon, faring o'er The heavens, five
+ and five and after four;
+'Tis not my fault, if she have made of me Its likeness, when it
+ first in heaven doth soar.
+
+White of skin, odoriferous of breath, it seemed as if she were
+[at once] fashioned of fire and moulded of crystal; rose-red
+was the cheek of her and perfect her shape and figure; even as
+saith of her one, describing her:
+
+
+Scented with sandal and musk, right proudly doth she go, With
+ gold and silver and rose and saffron-colour aglow.
+A flower in a garden she is, a pearl in an ouch of gold Or an
+ image in chapel set for worship of high and low.
+Slender and shapely she is; vivacity bids her arise, But the
+ weight of her hips says, "Sit, or softly and slowly go."
+Whenas her favours I seek and sue for my heart's desire, "Be
+ gracious," her beauty says; but her coquetry answers,
+ "No."
+Glory to Him who made beauty her portion, and that Of her lover
+ to be the prate of the censurers, heigho!
+
+Indeed, she captivated all who saw her, with the excellence of
+her beauty and the sweetness of her smile, and transpierced
+them with the arrows she launched from her eyes; and withal she
+was eloquent of speech and excellently skilled in poetry.
+
+When Aboulhusn had squandered all his wealth and there remained
+to him nought but this slave-girl, when [I say] the wretchedness
+of his plight became manifest to him, he abode three days
+without tasting food or taking rest in sleep, and Taweddud
+said to him, 'O my lord, carry me to the Khalif Haroun er
+Reshid, fifth of the sons of Abbas, and seek of him ten thousand
+dinars to my price. If he deem me dear at this price, say to
+him, "O Commander of the Faithful, my slave is worth more
+than this: do but prove her, and her value will be magnified
+in thine eyes, for she hath not her equal, and it were unfit
+that any but thou should possess her." And beware, O my lord,
+of selling me for less than the sum I have named, for it is
+but little for the like of me.' (Now Aboulhusn knew not her
+worth nor that she had no equal in her day.) So he carried
+her to the Khalif, to whom he repeated what she had bidden
+him say, and the Khalif said to her, 'What is thy name?'
+'Taweddud,' answered she. 'O Taweddud,' asked he, 'in what
+branches of knowledge dost thou excel?' 'O my lord,' answered
+she, 'I am versed in syntax and poetry and jurisprudence and
+exegesis and lexicography and music and the knowledge of the
+Divine ordinances and in arithmetic and geodesy and the fables
+of the ancients. I know the sublime Koran [by heart] and have
+read it according to the seven and the ten and the fourteen
+[modes]. I know the number of its chapters and verses and
+sections and words and letters and its halves and fourths
+and eighths and tenths, the number of acts of adoration,
+that occur in it, and what there is in it of cancelling and
+cancelled;[FN#209] also what parts of it were revealed at
+Medina and what at Mecca and the manner of the different
+revelations. I know the Holy Traditions, their history and
+variants and the manner of their recitation and interpretation,
+together with those of them whose chain of descent is unbroken
+and those for which it is broken; and I have studied the exact
+sciences, geometry and philosophy and medicine and logic
+and rhetoric and composition; and I know many things and am
+passionately fond of poetry. I can play the lute and know its
+gamut and notation and so forth. If I sing and dance, I ravish,
+and if I adorn and perfume myself, I slay. In fine, I have
+reached a pitch of perfection such as can only be estimated by
+those who are stablished in knowledge.'[FN#210]
+
+When the Khalif heard her words, he wondered at them and at the
+eloquence of her speech, seeing the tenderness of her age, and
+turning to Aboulhusn, said to him, 'I will summon those who
+shall examine her in all she lays claim to; if she answer
+[correctly,] I will give thee the price thou askest for her and
+more; and if not, thou art fitter to [possess] her [than I].'
+'With all my heart, O Commander of the Faithful,' replied
+Aboulhusn. So the Khalif wrote to the Viceroy of Bassora, to
+send him Ibrahim ben Siyyar the poet, who was the first man of
+his day in argument and eloquence and poetry and logic, and
+bade him bring with him readers of the Koran and doctors of the
+law and physicians and astrologers and sages and geometricians
+and philosophers; and Ibrahim was more learned than all. In a
+little while they all arrived at the Khalif's palace, knowing
+not what was to do, and the latter sent for them to his
+sitting-chamber and bade them be seated. So they sat down and
+he bade fetch the damsel Taweddud, who came and unveiling,
+showed herself, as she were a sparkling star. The Khalif caused
+set her a stool of gold; and she saluted and speaking with an
+eloquent tongue, said, 'O Commander of the Faithful, bid the
+learned men present contend with me in argument.' So he said to
+them, 'I desire of you that ye dispute with this damsel on the
+things of her faith and make void her argument, in all she
+avoucheth;' and they answered, saying, 'We hear and obey God
+and thee, O Commander of the Faithful.'
+
+Thereupon Taweddud bowed her head and said, 'Which of you is
+the doctor of the law, the scholar, versed in the interpretation
+of the Koran and in the Traditions?' Quoth one of them, 'I am
+the man thou seekest.' 'Then,' said she, 'ask me of what thou
+wilt.' Quoth the doctor, 'Hast thou read the precious book of
+God and dost thou know its abrogating and abrogated parts and
+hast thou meditated its verses and expressions?' 'Yes,' answered
+she. 'Then,' said he, 'I will proceed to question thee of the
+obligatory ordinances and the immutable institutions: so tell
+me of these, O damsel, and who is thy Lord, who thy prophet,
+and who thy brethren. Also, what is thy [point of] fronting
+[in prayer], what thine exemplar, what thy path and what thy
+highway?' 'Allah is my Lord,' replied she, 'and Mohammed (whom
+God bless and preserve) my prophet and the true-believers are my
+brethren. The Koran is my exemplar and the Kaabeh my [point of]
+fronting; the practice of good is my path and the Sunneh[FN#211]
+my highway.' (Q.) 'With what do we know God the Most High?'
+(A.) 'With the understanding.' (Q.) 'And what is the understanding?'
+(A.) 'It is of two kinds, natural and acquired. The first is that
+which God (to whom belong might and majesty) bestoweth on whom He
+will of His servants; and the other is that which men acquire
+by dint of study and fair knowledge.' (Q.) 'Thou hast answered
+well. Where is the seat of the understanding?' (A.) 'God casteth
+it in the heart, whence its lustre ascendeth to the brain and
+there becometh fixed.' (Q.) 'How knowest thou the Prophet of God?'
+(A.) 'By the reading of God's Holy Book and by signs and proofs
+and portents and miracles.' (Q.) 'What are the obligatory
+ordinances and the immutable institutions?' (A.) 'The obligatory
+ordinances are five in number. (1) Testification that there is no
+god but God alone, that He hath no partner in divinity and that
+Mohammed is His servant and His apostle. (2) The scrupulous
+performance of the enjoined prayers. (3) The payment of the
+poor-rate. (4) Fasting Ramazan. (5) The performance of the
+Pilgrimage to God's Holy House [at Mecca] for all to whom it
+is possible. The immutable institutions are four in number; to
+wit, night and day and sun and moon, the which build up life and
+hope, neither knoweth any son of Adam if they will be destroyed
+on the Day of Judgment.' (Q.) 'What are the obligatory rites of
+the Faith?' (A.) 'Prayer, almsgiving, fasting, pilgrimage,
+fighting for the Faith and abstinence from what is forbidden.'
+(Q.) 'Why dost thou stand up to pray?' (A.) 'To express the
+devout intent of the slave submitting himself to [or acknowledging]
+the Divinity.' (Q.) 'What are the conditions precedent of standing
+up to pray?' (A.) 'Purification, covering the privy parts,
+the avoidance of soiled clothes, standing on a clean place,
+fronting [the Kaabeh,] a standing posture, the intent[FN#212]
+and the magnification of prohibition.'[FN#213] (Q.) 'With what
+shouldest thou go forth thy house to pray? (A.) 'With an intent
+of worship.'[FN#214] (Q.) 'With what intent shouldest thou
+enter the mosque?' (A.) 'With an intent of service.'[FN#215]
+(Q.) 'Why do we front the Kaabeh?' (A.) 'In obedience to three
+Divine and one Traditional ordinance.' (Q.) 'What is the
+commencement, the consecration and the dissolution [end] of
+prayer?' (A.) 'Purification, the magnification of prohibition
+and the salutation of the angels [concluding prayer].' (Q.)
+'What of him who neglecteth prayer?' (A.) 'It is reported,
+among the authentic (Traditions of the Prophet, that he said),
+"He, who neglecteth prayer wilfully and without excuse, hath no
+part in Islam."' (Q.) 'What is prayer?' (A.) 'Prayer is
+communion between the slave and his Lord, and in it are ten
+virtues, to wit, (1) it illumines the heart (2) makes the face
+shine (3) pleases the Merciful One (4) angers Satan (5)
+conjures calamity (6) wards off the mischief of enemies (7)
+multiplies mercy (8) forfends vengeance [or punishment] (9)
+brings the slave nigh unto [or in favour with] his Lord and
+(10) restrains from lewdness and iniquity. It is one of the
+written obligatory ordinances and the pillar of the Faith.'
+(Q.) 'What is the key of prayer?' (A.) 'Ablution.' (Q.) 'What
+is the key of ablution?' (A.) 'Nomination.'[FN#216] (Q.) 'That
+of naming God?' (A.) 'Faith.' (Q.) 'That of Faith?' (A.) 'Trust
+in God.' (Q.) 'That of trust in God?' (A.) 'Hope.' (Q.) 'That
+of Hope?' (A.) 'Obedience.' (Q.) 'That of obedience?' (A.) 'The
+confession of the unity and the acknowledgment of the divinity
+of God.' (Q.) 'What are the Divine ordinances of ablution?'
+(A.) 'They are six in number, according to the canon of the
+Imam Es Shafi Mohammed ben Idris (of whom God accept) to wit,
+(1) intent[FN#217] to wash the face (2) washing the face (3)
+washing the hands and elbows (4) wiping part of the head (5)
+washing the feet and heels and (6) observing the prescribed
+order of ablution, whose statutes are ten in number, to wit,
+(1) nomination (2) washing the hands before putting them into
+the vase (3) rinsing the mouth (4) drawing up water through the
+nostrils (5) wiping the whole head (6) washing the ears within
+and without with fresh water (7) separating a thick beard (8)
+separating the fingers and toes (9) washing the right foot
+before the left and (10) doing each of these thrice and all in
+unbroken succession. When the ablution is ended, the devotee
+should (quoth Es Shafi[FN#218]) say, "I testify that there is
+no god but God alone, who hath no partner, and that Mohammed is
+His servant and apostle. O my God, make me of those who repent
+and are made clean! Glory to Thee, O my God, and in Thy praise
+I testify that there is no god but Thou! I crave pardon of
+Thee and repent to Thee!" For it is reported, in the Holy
+Traditions, that the Prophet (whom God bless and keep) said of
+this prayer, "Whoso ensueth every ablution with this prayer,
+the eight gates of Paradise are open to him; he shall enter at
+which he pleases."' (Q.) 'When a man purposes to make the
+ablution, what betides him from the angels and the devils?'
+(A.) 'When a man prepares for ablution, the angels come and
+stand on his right and the devils on his left hand. If he name
+God, at the beginning of the ablution, the devils flee from him
+and the angels hover over him with a pavilion of light, having
+four ropes, to each an angel glorifying God and craving pardon
+for him, so long as he remains silent or calls upon the name of
+God. But if he omit to begin with naming God (to whom belong
+might and majesty) neither remain silent, the angels depart
+from him and the devils settle upon him and whisper evil
+thoughts unto him, till he falls into doubt and comes short in
+his ablution. For (quoth he on whom be blessing and salvation)
+"A perfect ablution driveth away the devils and assureth
+against the tyranny of the Sultan; and he who neglecteth the
+ablution, if calamity befall him, let him blame none but
+himself."' (Q.) 'What should a man do, when he awakes from
+sleep?' (A.) 'He should wash his hands thrice, before putting
+them into the vessel.' (Q.) 'What are the ordinances, Koranic
+and Traditional, of complete ablution?'[FN#219] (A.) 'The
+Koranic ordinances are intent and covering the whole body with
+water, so that it shall come at every part of the hair and
+skin. The Traditional, previous partial ablution [as before
+prayer,] rubbing the body, separating the hair and deferring in
+words[FN#220] the washing of the feet till the end of the
+ablution.' (Q.) 'What are the reasons [or occasions] for making
+the ablution with other than water, and what are the ordinances
+thereof, Koranic and Traditional?'[FN#221] (A.) 'The reasons
+are seven in number, to wit, lack of water, fear, need thereto,
+going astray on a journey, sickness, having the bones [broken
+and] in splints and wounds. As for its ordinances, the Koranic
+are four in number, to wit, intent, dust, applying it to the
+face and to the hands, and the Traditional two, to wit,
+nomination and preferring the right before the left hand.' (Q.)
+'What are the conditions, the essentials [or fundamentals] and
+the Traditional statutes of prayer?' (A.) 'The conditions are
+five in number, to wit, (1) purification of the members (2)
+covering the privy parts (3) observing the proper hours, either
+of certainty or to the best of one's belief, (4) fronting the
+Kaabeh and (5) standing on a clean place. The essentials are
+twelve in number, to wit, (1) intent (2) the magnification of
+prohibition (3) standing at the proper distance one from
+another (4) repeating the first chapter of the Koran and also
+(according to the Shafiyites) saying, "In the name of God the
+Merciful, the Compassionate!" a verse thereof (5) bowing the
+body and tranquillity [or gravity] therein (6) keeping the feet
+and legs still and in the same position, [whilst the rest of
+the body moves], and tranquillity therein (7) prostration and
+tranquillity therein (8) sitting between two prostrations and
+tranquillity therein (9) repeating the latter profession of
+the Faith and sitting up therefor (10) invoking benediction
+on the Prophet (whom God bless and preserve) (11) the first
+Salutation[FN#222] and (12) the intent of making an end of
+prayer, [expressed] in words. The Traditional statutes are
+the call to prayer, the repetition of the words of the latter,
+raising the hands to either side of the face, whilst pronouncing
+the magnification of prohibition, pronouncing the magnification
+before reciting the Fatiheh [First chapter of the Koran],
+seeking refuge with God,[FN#223] saying "Amen," repeating
+the (obligatory) chapter [of the Koran] after the Fatiheh,
+repeating the magnifications during change of posture, saying,
+"May God hear him who praiseth Him!" and "O our Lord, to Thee
+be the praise!" uttering aloud the prayers in their places
+and in like manner, under the breath, those so prescribed,
+the first testification and sitting up thereto, blessing the
+Prophet therein, blessing his family in the latter profession
+[or testification] and the second Salutation.' (Q.) 'On what
+is the poor-rate taxable?' (A.) 'On gold and silver and camels
+and oxen and sheep and wheat and barley and millet and beans
+and pulse and rice and raisins and dates.' (Q.) 'What is the
+poor-rate on gold ?' (A.) 'Below twenty dinars, nothing; but,
+on that amount and over, half a dinar for every score.'
+(Q.) 'On silver?' (A.) 'Under two hundred dirhems, nothing;
+then, five dirhems on every two hundred.' (Q.) 'On camels?'
+(A.) 'For every five, an ewe, or for every twenty-five a
+pregnant camel.' (Q.) 'On sheep?' (A.) 'On forty and over, an
+ewe for every forty head.' (Q.) 'What are the ordinances of
+the Fast [of Ramazan]?' (A.) 'The Koranic are intent,[FN#224]
+abstinence from eating, drinking and copulation and stoppage of
+vomiting. It is incumbent on all who submit to the Law, save
+women in their courses and forty days after child-birth; and it
+becomes obligatory on sight of the new moon or on news of its
+appearance, brought by a trustworthy person and commending
+itself as truth to the hearer's heart; and among its requisites
+is that it be commenced by night.[FN#225] The Traditional
+ordinances of fasting are, hastening to break the fast,[FN#226]
+deferring the fore-dawn meal[FN#227] and abstaining from
+speech, save for good works and for calling on the name of God
+and reciting the Koran.' (Q.) 'What things vitiate not the
+fast?' (A.) 'The use of unguents and eye-powders and the dust
+of the road and the swallowing of one's spittle and the
+emission of seed in dreams of dalliance or at the sight of a
+strange woman and cupping and letting blood; none of these
+things vitiates the fast.' (Q.) 'What are the prayers of the
+two great [annual] Festivals?' (A.) 'Two one-bow prayers, after
+the traditional ordinance, without call to prayer or the
+repetition thereof by the devotee, who shall say, "Prayer is a
+collector of all folk!"[FN#228] and pronounce the magnification
+seven times in the first prayer, besides the magnification of
+prohibition, and in the second, five times, besides that of
+rising up, (according to the canon of the Imam Es Shafi, on
+whom God have mercy) and make the profession of the Faith.'
+(Q.) 'What are the prayers prescribed on the occasion of an
+eclipse of the sun or moon?' (A.) 'Two one-bow prayers, without
+call to prayer or repetition thereof by the devotee, who shall
+make in each two standings up and two inclinations and two
+prostrations, then sit up and testify and salute.' (Q.) 'What
+is the ritual of prayer for rain?' (A.) 'Two one-bow prayers,
+without call to prayer or repetition; then shall the devotee
+make the profession and salute. Moreover [the Imam] shall
+deliver an exhortation and (in place of the magnification, as
+in the two exhortations of the two great Festivals) ask pardon
+of God and reverse his mantle and pray and supplicate.' (Q.)
+'What are the additional or occasional prayers?' (A.) 'The
+least is a one-bow prayer and the most eleven.' (Q.) 'What
+is the forenoon prayer?' (A.) 'At least, two one-bow prayers
+and at most, twelve.' (Q.) 'What is the service of seclusion?'
+[FN#229] (A.) 'It is a matter of Traditional ordinance.'
+(Q.) 'What are its conditions?' (A.) '(1) Expression of intent
+(2) not leaving the mosque save of necessity (3) not having
+to do with a woman (4) fasting and (5) abstaining from speech.'
+(Q.) 'Under what conditions is pilgrimage obligatory?' (A.)
+'So a man be of full age and understanding and a true-believer
+and it be possible to him; and it is obligatory [on all], once
+before death.' (Q.) 'What are the Koranic statutes of the
+pilgrimage?'' (A.) '(1) Assumption of the pilgrim's habit
+(2) station at Arafat (3) compassing [the Kaabeh] (4) running
+[between Sefa and Merweh[FN#230]] and (5) [previous] shaving
+or clipping the hair.' (Q.) 'What are the Koranic statutes of
+the lesser pilgrimage?' (A.) 'Reassuming the pilgrim's habit and
+compassing and running [as before].' (Q.) 'What are the Koranic
+ordinances of the assumption of the pilgrim's habit?' (A.)
+'Putting off sewn garments, forswearing perfume and ceasing to
+shave the head or cut the nails and avoiding the killing of
+game and copulation.' (Q.) 'What are the Traditional statutes
+of the pilgrimage?' (A.) '(1) The crying out, "Here I am, O our
+Lord!"[FN#231] (2) the circuitings [about the Kaabeh] of
+arrival [at] and departure [from Mecca] (3) the passing the
+night at Muzdelifeh and Mina[FN#232] and (4) the stone-throwing.'
+[FN#233] (Q.) 'What is the war in defence of the Faith and its
+essentials?' (A.) 'Its essentials are (1) the descent of the
+infidels upon us (2) the existence of the Imam[FN#234] (3) a
+state of [armed] preparation and (4) firmness in meeting the
+foe. Its ordinance is incital to battle, in that the Most High
+hath said, "O my Prophet, incite the faithful to battle!"'
+[FN#235] (Q.) 'What are the ordinances of buying and selling?'
+(A.) 'The Koranic are (1) offer and acceptance and (2) if the
+thing sold be a (white) slave, by whom one profiteth, to do
+one's endeavour to convert him to Islam and (3) to abstain
+from usury; the Traditional, resiliation and option before
+separating, after the saying of the Prophet, "The parties
+to a sale shall have the option [of cancelling or altering
+the terms of a bargain,] whilst they are yet unseparated."'
+(Q.) 'What is it forbidden to sell [or exchange] for what?'
+(A.) 'On this point I mind me of an authentic tradition,
+reported by Nafi[FN#236] of the Apostle of God, that he forbade
+the sale of dried dates for fresh and fresh figs for dry and
+jerked for fresh meat and cream for butter; in fine, of all
+eatables of one and the same kind, it is unlawful to sell some
+for other some.'[FN#237] When the professor heard her words
+and knew that she was keen of wit, ingenious and learned in
+jurisprudence and the Traditions and the interpretation of the
+Koran and what not else, he said in himself, 'Needs must I go
+about with her, that I may overcome her in the assembly of the
+Commander of the Faithful.' So he said to her, 'O damsel, what
+is the lexicographical meaning of the word wuzou?'[FN#238]
+And she answered, 'Cleanliness and freedom from impurities.'
+(Q.) 'And of prayer?' (A.) 'An invocation of good.' (Q.) 'And
+of ghusl?'[FN#239] (A.) 'Purification.' (Q.) 'And of fasting?'
+(A.) 'Abstention.' (Q.) 'And of zekat?'[FN#240] (A.) 'Increase.'
+(Q.) 'And of pilgrimage?' (A.) 'Visitation [or quest].' (Q.) 'And
+of jehad?'[FN#241] (A.) '[Endeavour in] repelling.' With this the
+doctor's arguments were exhausted, so he rose to his feet and
+said, 'Bear witness against me, O Commander of the Faithful,
+that this damsel is more learned than I am in the Law. Quoth
+she, 'I will ask thee somewhat, which do thou answer me
+speedily, an thou be indeed a learned man.' 'Say on,' quoth he;
+and she said, 'What are the arrows of the Faith?' 'They are ten
+in number,' answered he; 'to wit, (1) Testification,[FN#242]
+that is, religion (2) Prayer, that is, the Covenant (3) Alms,
+that is, purification (4) Fasting, that is, defensive armour
+(5) Pilgrimage, that is, the Law (6) Fighting for the Faith,
+that is, a general duty (7) Enjoining to beneficence and (8)
+Forbidding from iniquity, both of which are jealousy [for good]
+(9) The communion of the faithful, that is, sociableness, and
+(10) Seeking knowledge, that is, the praiseworthy way.' (Q.)
+'What are the roots[FN#243] of Islam?' (A.) 'They are four
+in number, to wit, sincerity of belief, truth of purpose,
+observance of the limit [prescribed by the Law] and keeping the
+Covenant.' Then said she, 'I have one more question to ask
+thee, which if thou answer, [it is well]; else, I will take thy
+clothes.' Quoth he, 'Speak, O damsel;' and she said, 'What are
+the branches[FN#244] of Islam?' But he was silent and made no
+reply; and she said, 'Put off thy clothes, and I will expound
+them to thee.' Quoth the Khalif, 'Expound them, and I will make
+him put off his clothes for thee.' 'They are two-and-twenty in
+number,' answered she, 'to wit, (1) holding fast to the Book of
+God the Most High (2) taking example by His Apostle (whom God
+bless and preserve) (3) abstaining from doing evil (4) eating
+what is lawful and (5) avoiding what is unlawful (6) restoring
+things wrongfully taken to their owners (7) repentance (8)
+knowledge of the Law (9) love of [Abraham] the Friend [of God]
+(10) and of the followers of the Revelation[FN#245] (11) belief
+in the Apostles (12) fear of apostacy (13) preparation for
+departure[FN#246] (14) strength of conviction (15) clemency in
+time of power (16) strength in time of weakness (17) patience
+under affliction (18) knowledge of God the Most High and (19)
+of what His Prophet hath made known to us (20) gainsaying Iblis
+the accursed (21) striving earnestly against the lusts of the
+soul and gainsaying them and (22) guiltlessness of believing in
+any other god but God.'
+
+When the Commander of the Faithful heard her words, he bade the
+doctor put off his clothes and hood; and he did so and went
+forth, beaten and confounded, from the Khalif's presence.
+Thereupon arose another man and said to her, 'O damsel, hear a
+few questions from me.' 'Say on,' quoth she; and he said, 'What
+are the conditions of valid [purchase by] payment in advance?'
+'That the amount [of the thing bought], the kind and the period
+[of delivery to the purchaser], be [fixed or] known,' replied
+she. (Q.) 'What are the Koranic canons of eating?' (A.) 'The
+confession [by the eater] that God the Most High provideth him
+and giveth him to eat and drink and thanksgiving to Him
+therefor.' (Q.) 'What is thanksgiving?' (A.) 'The use by the
+creature of that which God vouchsafeth to him in the manner and
+to the ends for which He hath created it.' (Q.) 'What are the
+Traditional canons of eating?' (A.) 'The [preliminary] naming
+[of God] and washing the hands, sitting on the left buttock,
+eating with three fingers and eating of that which is chewed.'
+[FN#247] (Q.) 'What are the civilities of eating?' (A.) 'Taking
+small mouthfuls and looking little at one's table-companion.'
+(Q.) 'What are the heart's stays [or articles of faith] and
+their correlatives?' (A.) 'They are three in number, to wit,
+(1) holding fast to the Faith, the correlative whereof is the
+shunning of infidelity, (2) holding fast to the Traditional Law
+and its correlative, the shunning of innovation [or heresy] and
+(3) holding fast to obedience and its correlative, the shunning
+of disobedience.' (Q.) 'What are the conditions of ablution?'
+(A.) '(1) Submission to the will of God[FN#248] (2) possession
+of discernment of good and evil [or having attained the age of
+discretion] (3) purity of the water and (4) absence of legal
+or material impediments.' (Q.) 'What is belief?' (A.) 'It is
+divided into nine parts, to wit, (1) belief in the One worshipped
+(2) belief in the condition of slavery [of the worshipper]
+(3) belief in one God, to the exclusion of all others (4) belief
+in the Two Handfuls[FN#249] (5) belief in Providence (6) belief
+in the Abrogating and (7) in the Abrogated (8) belief in God, His
+angels and apostles and (9) in fore-ordained Fate, general and
+particular, its good and ill, sweet and bitter.' (Q.) 'What
+three things do away other three?' (A.) 'It is told of Sufyan
+eth Thauri[FN#250] that he said, "Three things do away other
+three. Making light of the pious doth away the future life,
+making light of kings doth away [this] life and making light of
+expenditure doth away wealth."' (Q.) 'What are the keys of the
+heavens, and how many gates have they?' (A.) 'Quoth God the Most
+High, "And heaven shall be opened, and it shall be [all] doors,"
+[FN#251] and quoth he whom God bless and keep, "None knoweth the
+number of the gates of heaven, save He who created it, and there
+is no son of Adam but hath two gates allotted to him in the skies,
+one whereby his subsistence cometh down and another where-through
+his works [good and evil] ascend. The former is not closed,
+save when his term of life comes to an end, nor the latter,
+till his soul ascends [for judgment]."' (Q.) 'Tell me of a
+thing and a half thing and a no-thing.' (A.) 'The thing is the
+believer, the half thing the hypocrite and the no-thing the
+infidel.' (Q.) 'Tell me of various kinds of hearts.' (A.)
+'There is the whole [or perfect] heart, which is that of
+[Abraham] the Friend [of God], the sick heart, that of the
+infidel, the contrite heart, that of the pious, fearful ones,
+the heart consecrated to God, that of our Lord Mohammed (whom
+God bless and preserve) and the enlightened [or enlightening]
+heart, that of those who follow him. The hearts of the learned
+are of three kinds, to wit, those that are in love with this
+world, with the next and with their Lord; and it is said that
+hearts are three, the suspended, that of the infidel, the
+non-existent [or lost], that of the hypocrite, and the constant
+[or firm], that of the true-believer. Moreover, it is said that
+the latter is of three kinds, namely, the heart dilated with
+light and faith, that wounded with fear of estrangement and
+that which feareth to be forsaken of God.'
+
+Quoth the second doctor, 'Thou hast said well;' whereupon said
+she to the Khalif, 'O Commander of the Faithful, he has
+questioned me, till he is weary, and now I will ask him two
+questions. If he answer them, it is well, and if not, I will
+take his clothes and he shall depart in peace.' Quoth the
+doctor, 'Ask me what thou wilt,' and she said, 'What is
+religion?' 'Religion,' answered he, 'is confession[FN#252] with
+the tongue and belief with the heart and doing with the
+members. Quoth the Prophet, "The believer is not perfect in
+belief, except five qualities be accomplished in him, namely,
+trust in God, committal of his affair to Him, submission to His
+commandment, acquiescence in His decrees and that he do all for
+His sake; so is he of those who are acceptable to God and who
+give and withhold for His sake, and he is perfect in belief."'
+Then said she, 'What is the Koranic ordinance of ordinances
+and the ordinance which is the preliminary of all ordinances
+and that of which all others stand in need and that which
+comprehendeth all others, and what is the Traditional ordinance
+that entereth into the Koranic, and that whereby the latter is
+completed?' But he was silent and made no reply; whereupon the
+Khalif bade her expound and ordered him to doff his clothes and
+give them to her. 'O doctor,' said she, 'the Koranic ordinance
+of ordinances is the knowledge of God the Most High; that,
+which is the preliminary of all others, is the testifying that
+there is no god but God and that Mohammed is His apostle; that,
+of which all others have need, is ablution; that, which
+compriseth all others, is that of [total] ablution from
+[ceremonial] defilement; the Traditional ordinance, that enters
+into the Koranic, is the separation of the fingers and the
+thick beard; and that, wherewith all Koranic ordinances are
+completed, is circumcision.' Therewith was manifest the
+insufficiency of the doctor, who rose to his feet and said, 'I
+call God to witness, O Commander of the Faithful, that this
+damsel is more learned than I in the Law and what pertains
+thereto.' So saying, he put off his clothes and went away,
+defeated.
+
+Then turned she to the rest of the learned men present and
+said, 'O masters, which of you is the reader,[FN#253] versed in
+the seven readings and in syntax and lexicography?' Thereupon
+the professor arose and seating himself before her, said, 'Hast
+thou read the Book of God the Most High and made thyself
+throughly acquainted with its verses and its various parts,
+abrogating and abrogated, equivocal and unequivocal, Meccan and
+Medinan? Dost thou understand its interpretation and hast thou
+studied it, according to the various versions and readings?'
+'Yes,' answered she; and he said, 'What, then, is the number of
+its chapters, how many are Meccan and how many Medinan? How
+many verses and decades[FN#254] does it contain, how many
+words and how many letters and how many acts of prostration
+and how many prophets and birds are mentioned in it?' 'It
+contains a hundred and fourteen chapters,' replied she, 'whereof
+threescore and ten were revealed at Mecca and forty and four at
+Medina, six thousand three hundred and thirty-six verses, six
+hundred and twenty-one decades, seventy-nine thousand four
+hundred and thirty-nine words and three hundred and twenty-
+three thousand and six hundred and seventy letters; and to the
+reader thereof, for every letter, accrue ten benefits. The
+acts of prostration it contains are fourteen in number, and
+five-and-twenty prophets are named therein, to wit, Adam, Noah,
+Abraham, Ishmael, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Elisha, Jonah, Lot,
+Salih, Houd,[FN#255] Shuaib,[FN#256] David, Solomon, Dhoulkifl,
+[FN#257] Idris,[FN#258] Elias, Yehya,[FN#259] Zacharias, Job,
+Moses, Aaron, Jesus and Mohammed, the peace of God and His
+blessing be on them all! Moreover, nine birds [or flying
+things] are mentioned in the Koran, namely, the gnat, the bee,
+the fly, the ant, the hoopoe, the crow, the locust, the bustard
+and the bird of Jesus[FN#260] (on whom be peace), to wit, the
+bat.' (Q.) 'Which is the most excellent chapter of the Koran?'
+(A.) 'That of the Cow.'[FN#261] (Q.) 'Which is the most magnificent
+verse?' (A.) 'That of the Throne;[FN#262] it has fifty words, in
+each fifty blessings.' (Q.) 'What verse hath in it nine signs [or
+wonders]?' (A.) 'That in which quoth God the Most High, "Verily,
+in the creation of the heavens and the earth and the alternation
+of night and day and the ship that runneth in the sea with what
+profiteth mankind and in what God sendeth down from heaven of
+water and quickeneth therewith the earth, after its dearth, and
+spreadeth abroad therein all manner cattle, and the shifting of
+the winds and the clouds, pressed into service betwixt heaven
+and earth, are signs for folk who understand."'[FN#263] (Q.)
+'Which is the most just?' (A.) 'That in which God saith, "Verily,
+God commandeth to justice and beneficence and giving to those
+that are near unto us and forbiddeth from profligacy and iniquity
+and oppression."'[FN#264] (Q.) 'Which is the most yearnful?' (A.)
+'That in which quoth God, "Shall every man of them yearn to
+enter a garden of delight?"'[FN#265] (Q.) 'Which is the most
+hopeful?' (A.) 'That in which quoth God the Most High, "Say, 'O
+ye my servants, that have transgressed against your own souls,
+despair not of the mercy of God! Indeed, God forgiveth sins,
+all of them, for He is the Forgiving, the Compassionate.'"'
+[FN#266] (Q.) 'By what version dost thou read?' (A.) 'By that of
+the people of Paradise, to wit, the version of Nafi.'[FN#267]
+(Q.) 'In which verse doth God make prophets lie?' (A.) 'In that
+wherein He saith, "They [the brothers of Joseph] brought lying
+blood upon his shirt."'[FN#268] (Q.) 'In which doth He make
+infidels speak the truth?' (A.) 'In that wherein He saith, "The
+Jews say, 'The Nazarenes are [grounded] on nought,' and the
+Nazarenes say, 'The Jews are [grounded] on nought;' and [yet]
+they [both] read the Scripture."[FN#269] And [in this] both speak
+the truth.' (Q.) 'In which doth God speak in His own person [in
+the singular]?' (A.) 'In that in which He saith, "Neither have I
+created Jinn and men, but that they should worship."'[FN#270]
+(Q.) 'In which do the angels speak?' (A.) 'In that which saith,
+"We celebrate Thy praises and hallow Thee."'[FN#271] (Q.) 'What
+sayst thou of the formula, "I seek refuge with God from Satan
+the Stoned"?' (A.) 'It is obligatory, by commandment of God,
+on all who read the Koran, as appears by His saying, "When
+thou readest the Koran, seek refuge with God from Satan the
+Stoned."'[FN#272] (Q.) 'What are the words and variants of
+the formula?' (A.) 'Some say, "I take refuge with God the
+All-hearing and knowing, etc.," and others, "With God the
+Strong;" but the best is that of which the noble Koran and the
+Traditions speak. The Prophet was used, whenas he was about to
+open the Koran, to say, "I take refuge with God from Satan
+the Stoned." And quoth a Tradition, reported by Nafi on the
+authority of his [adopted] father, "The apostle of God used,
+when he rose in the night to pray, to say aloud, 'God is Most
+Great, with [all] greatness! Praise be to God abundantly! Glory
+to God morning and evening!' Then would he say, 'I seek refuge
+with God from Satan the Stoned and from the instigations of the
+Devils and their evil suggestions."' And it is told of Ibn
+Abbas[FN#273] (of whom God accept) that he said, "The first
+time Gabriel came down to the Prophet [with a portion of the
+Koran,] he taught him [the formula of] seeking refuge, saying,
+'O Mohammed, say, "I seek refuge with God the All-hearing and
+knowing;" then say, "In the name of God the Compassionate, the
+Merciful!" And read, in the name of thy Lord who created men
+from clotted blood.'"'[FN#274] (Q.) 'What sayst thou of the
+verse, "In the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful"?
+Is it one of the verses of the Koran?' (A.) 'Yes; it is a verse
+of "The ant"[FN#275] and occurs also [at the head of the first
+and] between every two [following] chapters; and there is much
+difference of opinion, respecting this, among the learned.'
+(Q.) 'Why is not the formula written at the head of the chapter
+of Immunity?'[FN#276] (A.) 'When this chapter was revealed for
+the dissolution of the alliance between the Prophet and the
+idolaters, the former sent Ali ibn Abi Talib (whose face God
+honour) therewith [from Medina to Mecca] at the season of the
+greater pilgrimage;[FN#277] and he read the chapter to them,
+but did not read "In the name, etc."'[FN#278] (Q.) 'What of the
+excellence of the formula and the blessing that attaches to
+it?' (A.) 'It is told of the Prophet that he said, "Never is
+'In the name, etc.' pronounced over aught, but there is a
+blessing in it;" and it is reported, on his authority, that the
+Lord of Glory swore by His glory that never should the formula
+be pronounced over a sick person, but he should be healed of
+his sickness. Moreover, it is said that, when God created the
+empyreal heaven, it was agitated with an exceeding agitation; but
+He wrote on it, "In the name, etc.," and its agitation subsided.
+When the formula was first revealed to the Prophet, he said, "I
+am safe from three things, earthquake and metamorphosis and
+drowning;" and indeed its virtues are great and its blessings
+too many to enumerate. It is told of the Prophet that he said,
+"There will be brought before God, on the judgment day, a man
+with whom He shall reckon and finding no good deed to his account,
+shall order him to the fire; but the man will say, 'O my God,
+Thou hast not dealt justly by me!' Then shall God (to whom belong
+might and majesty) say, 'How so?' and the man will answer, saying,
+'O Lord, for that Thou callest Thyself the Compassionate, the
+Merciful, yet wilt Thou punish me with the fire!' And God
+(extolled be His majesty) shall say, 'I did indeed name myself
+the Compassionate, the Merciful. Carry My servant to Paradise,
+of My mercy, for I am the most Merciful of those that have
+mercy.'"' (Q.) 'What was the origin of the use of the formula?'
+(A.) 'When God revealed the Koran, they wrote, "In Thy name, O
+my God!"; when He revealed the words, "Say, pray ye to God or
+pray ye to the Compassionate, what days ye pray, for to Him
+[belong] the most fair names,"[FN#279] they wrote, "In the name
+of God, the Compassionate;" and when He revealed the words,
+"Your God is one God, there is no god but He, the Compassionate,
+the Merciful,"[FN#280] they wrote, "In the name of God, the
+Compassionate, the Merciful!"' (Q.) 'Did God reveal the Koran
+all at once or at intervals?' (A.) 'Gabriel the Faithful
+[Spirit] (on whom be peace) descended with it from the Lord of
+the Worlds upon His Prophet Mohammed, Prince of the Apostles
+and seal[FN#281] of the Prophets, by detached verses, containing
+commandment and prohibition, promise and menace, anecdotes
+and similitudes, as the occasion called for it, in the course
+of twenty years.' (Q.) 'Which chapter was first revealed?'
+(A.) 'According to Ibn Abbas, that of the Clot of Blood,[FN#282]
+and according to Jabir ben Abdallah,[FN#283] that of the Covered
+[with a cloak].'[FN#284] (Q.) 'Which verse was the last revealed?'
+(A.) 'That of Usury,[FN#285] and it is said [also], the verse,
+"When there cometh God's succour and victory."'[FN#286] (Q.) 'Tell
+me the names of the Companions who collected the Koran, in the
+lifetime of the Apostle of God.' (A.) 'They were four in number,
+to wit, Ubaï ibn Kaab, Zeid ibn Thabit, Abou Ubeideh Aamir ben
+Jerrah and Othman ben Affan,[FN#287] may God accept of them all!'
+(Q.) 'Who are the readers, from whom the [accepted] reading of
+the Koran is taken?' (A.) 'They are four in number, namely,
+Abdallah ben Mesoud, Ubaï ben Kaab, Maadh ben Jebel[FN#288] and
+Salim ben Abdallah.'[FN#289] (Q.) 'What sayst thou of the words
+of the Most High, "That which is sacrificed to stones"?'[FN#290]
+(A.) 'The stones are idols, which are set up and worshipped, instead
+of God the Most High, and [from this] we seek refuge with Him.'
+(Q.) 'What sayst thou of the words of the Most High, "[Quoth
+Jesus] Thou knowest what is in my soul, and I know not what is
+in Thy soul"?'[FN#291] (A.) 'They mean "Thou [God] knowest the
+truth of me and what is in me and I [Jesus] know not what is in
+Thee;" and the proof of this are his words,[FN#292] "Thou [God]
+art He that knoweth the hidden things;" and it is said, also,
+"Thou [God] knowest my essence, but I [man] know not Thine
+essence."' (Q.) 'What sayst thou of the words of the Most High,
+"O ye that believe, deny not yourselves the good things that
+God hath made lawful to you!"?'[FN#293] (A.) 'My master (on
+whom God have mercy) told me that Ez Zuhak[FN#294] said, "There
+was a people of the true-believers who said, 'We will dock our
+yards and don sackcloth;' whereupon this verse was revealed."
+But El Cutadeh[FN#295] says that it was revealed on account of
+sundry Companions of the Apostle of God, Ali ibn Abi Talib and
+Othman ben Musaab and others, who said, "We will dock ourselves
+and don hair [cloth] and make us monks."' (Q.) 'What sayst thou
+of the words of the Most High, "And God took Abraham to
+friend"?'[FN#296] (A.) 'The friend [of God] is the needy, the
+poor, and (according to another saying) he is the lover, he who
+is absorbed in the love of God the Most High and in whose
+exclusive devotion there is no falling away.'
+
+When the professor saw her pass on in speech with the passing
+of the clouds[FN#297] and that she stayed not in answering, he
+rose to his feet and said, 'I take God to witness, O Commander
+of the Faithful, that this damsel is more learned than I in
+Koranic exegesis and what pertains thereto.' Then said she, 'I
+will ask thee one question, which if thou answer, it is well:
+but if thou answer not, I will strip off thy clothes.' 'Ask
+on,' quoth the Khalif; and she said, 'Which verse of the
+Koran has in it three-and-twenty Kafs,[FN#298] which sixteen
+Mims,[FN#299] which a hundred and forty Ains,[FN#300] and which
+section[FN#301] lacks the formula, "To whom [God] belong might
+and majesty"?' He could not answer, and she said to him, 'Put
+off thy clothes.' So he doffed them, and she said, 'O Commander
+of the Faithful, the verse of the sixteen Mims is in the
+chapter Houd and is the saying of the Most High, "It was
+said, 'O Noah, go down in peace from us, and blessing upon
+thee!'"[FN#302]; that of the three-and-twenty Kafs is the verse
+called of the Faith, in the chapter of the Cow; that of the
+hundred and forty Ains is in the chapter of El Aaraf,[FN#303]
+"And Moses chose seventy men of his tribe to [attend] our
+appointed time;[FN#304] to each man a pair of eyes."[FN#305]
+And the set portion which lacks the formula, "To whom [God]
+belong might and majesty," is that which comprises the chapters
+"The Hour draweth nigh and the Moon is cloven in twain," "The
+Compassionate" and "The Event."'[FN#306] And the professor
+departed in confusion.
+
+Then came forward the skilled physician and said to her, 'We
+have done with theology and come now to physiology. Tell me,
+therefore, how is man made, how many veins, bones and vertebræ
+are there in his body, which is the chief vein and why Adam was
+named Adam?' 'Adam was called Adam,' answered she, 'because of
+the udmeh, to wit, the tawny colour of his complexion and also
+(it is said) because he was created of the adim of the earth,
+that is to say, of the soil of its surface. His breast was made
+of the earth of the Kaabeh, his head of earth from the East and
+his legs of earth from the West. There were created for him
+seven doors [or openings] in his head, to wit, the eyes, the
+ears, the nostrils and the mouth, and two passages, the urethra
+and the anus. The eyes were made the seat of the sense of
+sight, the ears of that of hearing, the nostrils of that of
+smell, the mouth of that of taste and the tongue to speak forth
+what is in the innermost heart of man. Adam was originally
+created of four elements combined, water, earth, fire and air.
+The yellow bile is the humour of fire, being hot and dry, the
+black bile that of earth, being cold and dry, the phlegm that
+of water, being cold and moist, and the blood that of air,
+being hot and moist. There are in man three hundred and
+threescore veins, two hundred and forty bones and three souls
+[or natures], the animal, the rational and the essential or
+[natural], to each of which is allotted a separate function.
+Moreover, God made him a heart and spleen and lungs and six
+guts and a liver and two kidneys and marrow [or brain] and
+buttocks and bones and skin and five senses, hearing, seeing,
+smell, taste and touch. The heart He set on the left side of
+the breast and made the stomach the exemplar [or governor]
+thereof. He appointed the lungs for a ventilator to the heart
+and set the liver on the right side, opposite thereto. Moreover,
+He made, besides this, the midriff and the intestines and set
+up the bones of the breast and ribbed them with the ribs.'
+(Q.) 'How many ventricles are there in a man's head?' (A.) 'Three,
+which contain five faculties, styled the intrinsic senses, i.e.
+common sense, fancy, thought, apperception and memory.' (Q.)
+'Describe to me the scheme of the bones.' (A.) 'It consists of
+two hundred and forty bones, which are divided into three parts,
+the head, the trunk and the extremities. The head is divided
+into skull and face. The skull is constructed of eight bones,
+and to it are attached the teeth, two-and- thirty in number,
+and the hyoïd bone, one. The trunk is divided into spinal column,
+breast and basin. The spinal column is made up of four-and-twenty
+bones, called vertebræ, the breast of the breastbone and the ribs,
+which are four-and-twenty in number, twelve on each side, and
+the basin of the hips, the sacrum and the coccyx. The extremities
+are divided into arms and legs. The arms are again divided into
+shoulder, comprising shoulder-blades and collar-bone, the upper-
+arm, one bone, the fore-arm, composed of two bones, the radius and
+the ulna, and the hand, consisting of the wrist, the metacarpus
+and the fingers. The wrist is composed of eight bones, ranked in
+two rows, each comprising four bones; the metacarpus of five
+and the fingers, which are five in number, of three bones each,
+called the phalanges, except the thumb, which has but two.
+The lower extremities are divided into thigh, one bone, leg,
+composed of three bones, the tibia, the fibula and the kneepan,
+and the foot, divided like the hand, with the exception of the
+wrist,[FN#307] which is composed of seven bones, ranged in two
+rows, two in one and five in the other.' (Q.) 'Which is the
+root of the veins?' (A.) 'The aorta from which they ramify, and
+they are many, none knoweth the tale of them save He who
+created them; but, as I have before observed, it is said that
+they are three hundred and threescore in number. Moreover, God
+hath appointed the tongue to interpret [for the thought], the
+eyes to serve as lanterns, the nostrils to smell with, and the
+hands for prehensors. The liver is the seat of pity, the spleen
+of laughter and the kidneys of craft; the lungs are the
+ventilators, the stomach the storehouse and the heart the
+pillar [or mainstay] of the body. When the heart is sound, the
+whole body is sound, and when the heart is corrupt, the whole
+body is corrupt.' (Q.) 'What are the outward signs and symptoms
+of disease in the members of the body, both internal and
+external?' (A.) 'A physician, who is a man of understanding,
+looks into the state of the body and is guided by the feel of
+the hands, according as they are firm [or flabby], hot or cool,
+moist or dry. Internal disorders are also indicated by external
+symptoms, such as yellowness of the [whites of the] eyes, which
+denotes jaundice, and bending of the back, which denotes
+disease of the lungs.' (Q.) 'What are the internal symptoms of
+disease?' (A.) 'The science of the diagnosis of disease by
+internal symptoms is founded upon six canons, to wit, (1) the
+actions [of the patient] (2) what is evacuated from his body
+(3) the nature and (4) site of the pain he feels (5) swelling
+and (6) the effluvia given off by his body.' (Q.) 'How cometh
+hurt to the head?' (A.) 'By the introduction of food upon food,
+before the first be digested, and by satiety upon satiety; this
+it is that wasteth peoples. He who will live long, let him be
+early with the morning-meal and not late with the evening-meal;
+let him be sparing of commerce with women and chary of cupping
+and blood-letting and make of his belly three parts, one for
+food, one for drink and the third for air; for that a man's
+intestines are eighteen spans in length and it befits that he
+appoint six for food, six for drink, and six for air. If he
+walk, let him go gently; it will be wholesomer for him and
+better for his body and more in accordance with the saying of
+God the Most High, "Walk not boisterously [or proudly] upon the
+earth."'[FN#308] (Q.) 'What are the symptoms of yellow bile and
+what is to be feared there-from?' (A.) 'The symptoms are,
+sallow complexion and dryness and bitter taste in the mouth,
+failure of the appetite, and rapid pulse; and the patient has
+to fear high fever and delirium and prickly heat and jaundice
+and tumour and ulceration of the bowels and excessive thirst.'
+(Q.) 'What are the symptoms of black bile and what has the
+patient to fear from it, if it get the mastery of the body?'
+(A.) 'The symptoms are deceptive appetite and great mental
+disquiet and care and anxiety; and it behoves that it be
+evacuated, else it will generate melancholy and leprosy and
+cancer and disease of the spleen and ulceration of the bowels.'
+(Q.) 'Into how many branches is the art of medicine divided?'
+(A.) 'Into two: the art of diagnosing diseases and that of
+restoring the diseased body to health.' (Q.) 'When is the
+drinking of medicine more efficacious than otherwhen?' (A.)
+'When the sap runs in the wood and the grape thickens in
+the cluster and the auspicious planets[FN#309] are in the
+ascendant, then comes in the season of the efficacy of drinking
+medicine and the doing away of disease.' (Q.) 'What time is it,
+when, if a man drink from a new vessel, the drink is wholesomer
+and more digestible to him than at another time, and there
+ascends to him a pleasant and penetrating fragrance?' (A.)
+'When he waits awhile after eating, as quoth the poet:
+
+I rede thee drink not after food in haste, but tarry still;
+ Else with a halter wilt thou lead thy body into ill.
+Yea, wait a little after thou hast eaten, brother mine; Then
+ drink, and peradventure thus shalt thou attain unto thy
+ will.'
+
+
+(Q.) 'What food is it that giveth not rise to ailments?' (A.)
+'That which is not eaten but after hunger, and when it is
+eaten, the ribs are not filled with it, even as saith Galen the
+physician, "Whoso will take in food, let him go slowly and he
+shall not go wrong." To end with the saying of the Prophet,
+(whom God bless and preserve,) "The stomach is the home of
+disease, and abstinence is the beginning[FN#310] of cure,
+[FN#311] for the origin of every disease is indigestion,
+that is to say, corruption of the meat in the stomach."' (Q.)
+'What sayst thou of the bath?' (A.) 'Let not the full man enter
+it. Quoth the Prophet, "The bath is the delight of the house,
+for that it cleanseth the body and calleth to mind the fire [of
+hell]."' (Q.) 'What waters[FN#312] are best for bathing?' (A.)
+'Those whose waters are sweet and plains wide and whose air is
+pleasant and wholesome, its climate [or seasons] being fair,
+autumn and summer and winter and spring.' (Q.) 'What kind of
+food is the most excellent?' (A.) 'That which women make and
+which has not cost overmuch trouble and which is readily
+digested. The most excellent of food is brewis,[FN#313]
+according to the saying of the Prophet, "Brewis excels other
+food, even as Aaïsheh excels other women."' (Q.) 'What kind of
+seasoning[FN#314] is most excellent?' (A.) 'Flesh meat (quoth
+the Prophet) is the most excellent of seasonings; for that it
+is the delight of this world and the next.' (Q.) 'What kind of
+meat is the most excellent?' (A.) 'Mutton; but jerked meat is
+to be avoided, for there is no profit in it.' (Q.) 'What of
+fruits?' (A.) 'Eat them in their prime and leave them when
+their season is past.' (Q.) 'What sayst thou of drinking
+water?' (A.) 'Drink it not in large quantities nor by gulps,
+or it will give thee the headache and cause divers kinds of
+harm; neither drink it immediately after the bath nor after
+copulation or eating (except it be after the lapse of fifteen
+minutes for a young and forty for an old man) or waking from
+sleep.' (Q.) 'What of drinking wine?' (A.) 'Doth not the
+prohibition suffice thee in the Book of God the Most High,
+where He saith, "Verily, wine and casting lots and idols and
+divining arrows are an abomination of the fashion of the Devil:
+shun them, so surely shall ye thrive."[FN#315] And again, "If
+they ask thee of wine and casting lots, say, 'In them are great
+sin and advantages to mankind, but the sin of them is greater
+than the advantage.'"[FN#316] Quoth the poet:
+
+O wine-bibber, art not ashamed and afraid To drink of a thing
+ that thy Maker forbade?
+Come, put the cup from thee and mell with it not, For wine and
+ its drinker God still doth upbraid.
+
+And quoth another:
+
+I drank the sweet sin till my wit went astray: 'Tis ill
+ drinking of that which doth reason away.
+
+As for the useful qualities that are therein, it disperses
+gravel from the kidneys and strengthens the bowels, banishes
+care, moves to generosity and preserves health and digestion.
+It assains the body, expels disease from the joints, purifies
+the frame of corrupt humours, engenders cheerfulness and
+gladdens and keeps up the natural heat. It contracts the
+bladder, strengthens the liver and removes obstructions,
+reddens the face, clears away cobwebs from the brain and defers
+gray hairs. In short, had not God (to whom belong might and
+majesty) forbidden it, there were not on the face of the earth
+aught fit to stand in its place. As for drawing lots, it is a
+game of hazard.'[FN#317] (Q.) 'What wine is the best?' (A.)
+'That which is pressed from white grapes and ferments fourscore
+days or more: it resembleth not water and indeed there is
+nothing on the surface of the earth like unto it.' (Q.) 'What
+of cupping?' (A.) 'It is for him who is [over] full of blood
+and has no defect therein. Whoso will be cupped, let it be at
+the wane of the moon, on a day without cloud or wind or rain
+and the seventeenth of the month. If it fall on a Tuesday, it
+will be the more efficacious, and nothing is more salutary for
+the brain and eyes and for clearing the memory than cupping.'
+(Q.) 'What is the best time for cupping?' (A.) 'One should be
+cupped fasting, for this fortifies the wit and the memory. It
+is reported of the Prophet that, when any one complained to him
+of a pain in the head or legs, he would bid him be cupped and
+not eat salt [meat] fasting, for it engendered scurvy, neither
+eat sour milk immediately after [cupping].' (Q.) 'When is
+cupping to be avoided?' (A.) 'On Wednesdays and Saturdays, and
+let him who is cupped on these days blame none but himself.
+Moreover, one should not be cupped in very hot nor in very cold
+weather; and the best season for cupping is Spring.' (Q.) 'Tell
+me of copulation.'
+
+At this Taweddud hung her head, for shame and confusion before
+the Khalif; then said, 'By Allah, O Commander of the Faithful,
+it is not that I am at fault, but that I am ashamed, though,
+indeed, the answer is on the tip of my tongue.' 'Speak, O
+damsel,' said the Khalif; whereupon quoth she, 'Copulation hath
+in it many and exceeding virtues and praiseworthy qualities,
+amongst which are, that it lightens a body full of black bile
+and calms the heat of love and engenders affection and dilates
+the heart and dispels sadness; and the excess of it is more
+harmful in summer and autumn than in spring and winter.' (Q.)
+'What are its good effects?' (A.) 'It doth away trouble and
+disquiet, calms love and chagrin and is good for ulcers in a
+cold and dry humour; but excess of it weakens the sight and
+engenders pains in the legs and head and back: and beware,
+beware of having to do with old women, for they are deadly.
+Quoth the Imam Ali,[FN#318] (whose face God honour), "Four
+things kill and ruin the body: bathing on a full stomach,
+eating salt meat, copulation on a plethora [of blood] and lying
+with an ailing woman; for she will weaken thy strength and
+infect thy body with sickness; and an old woman is deadly
+poison." And quoth one of them, "Beware of taking an old woman
+to wife, though she be richer in goods than Caroun."'[FN#319]
+(Q.) 'What is the best copulation?' (A.) 'If the woman be
+young, well-shaped, fair of face, swelling-breasted and of
+honourable extraction, she will add to thee strength and health
+of body; and let her be even as saith the poet, describing her:
+
+Even by thy looks, I trow, she knows what thou desir'st, By
+ instinct, without sign or setting forth of sense;
+And when thou dost behold her all-surpassing grace, Her charms
+ enable thee with gardens to dispense.'
+
+(Q.) 'At what time is copulation good?' (A.) 'If by day, after
+the morning-meal, and if by night, after food digested.' (Q.)
+'What are the most excellent fruits?' (A.) 'The pomegranate and
+the citron.' (Q.) 'Which is the most excellent of vegetables?'
+(A.) 'The endive.' (Q.) 'Which of sweet-scented flowers?'
+(A.) 'The rose and the violet.' (Q.) 'How is sperma hominis
+secreted?' (A.) 'There is in man a vein that feeds all the
+other veins. Water [or blood] is collected from the three
+hundred and threescore veins and enters, in the form of red
+blood, the left testicle, where it is decocted, by the heat of
+man's temperament, into a thick, white liquid, whose odour is
+as that of the palm-spathe.' (Q.) 'What bird [or flying thing]
+is it that emits seed and menstruates?' (A.) 'The bat, that is,
+the rere-mouse.' (Q.) 'What is that which, when it is shut out
+[from the air], lives, and when it smells the air, dies?' (A.)
+'The fish.' (Q.) 'What serpent lays eggs?' (A.) 'The dragon.'
+
+With this the physician was silent, being weary with much
+questioning, and Taweddud said to the Khalif, 'O Commander of
+the Faithful, he hath questioned me till he is weary, and now I
+will ask him one question, which if he answer not, I will take
+his clothes as lawful prize.' 'Ask on,' quoth the Khalif. So
+she said to the physician, 'What is that which resembles the
+earth in [plane] roundness, whose resting-place and spine are
+hidden, little of value and estimation, narrow-chested, its
+throat shackled, though it be no thief nor runaway slave,
+thrust through and through, though not in fight, and wounded,
+though not in battle; time eats its vigour and water wastes it
+away; now it is beaten without a fault and now made to serve
+without stint; united after separation, submissive, but not to
+him who caresses it, pregnant[FN#320] without a child in its
+belly, drooping, yet not leaning on its side, becoming dirty
+yet purifying itself, cleaving to [its mate], yet changing,
+copulating without a yard, wrestling without arms, resting and
+taking its ease, bitten, yet not crying out, [now] more
+complaisant than a boon-companion and [anon] more troublesome
+than summer-heat, leaving its wife by night and clipping her
+by day and having its abode in the corners of the mansions of
+the noble?' The physician was silent and his colour changed and
+he bowed his head awhile in perplexity and made no reply;
+whereupon she said to him, 'O physician, speak or put off thy
+clothes.' At this, he rose and said, 'O Commander of the
+Faithful, bear witness against me that this damsel is more
+learned than I in medicine and what else and that I cannot cope
+with her.' And he put off his clothes and fled forth. Quoth the
+Khalif to Taweddud, 'Expound to us thy riddle,' and she
+replied, 'O Commander of the Faithful, it is the button and the
+button loop.'
+
+Then said she, 'Let him of you who is an astronomer come
+forward.' So the astronomer came forward and sat down before
+her. When she saw him, she laughed and said, 'Art thou the
+astronomer, the mathematician, the scribe?' 'Yes,' answered he.
+'Ask of what thou wilt,' quoth she; 'success rests with God.'
+So he said, 'Tell me of the sun and its rising and setting?'
+And she replied, 'The sun rises in the Eastern hemisphere and
+sets in the Western, and each hemisphere comprises ninescore
+degrees. Quoth God the Most High, "Verily, I swear by the Lord
+of the places of the sunrise and of the sunsetting."[FN#321]
+And again, "He it is who appointed the sun for a splendour and
+the moon for a light and ordained to her mansions, that ye
+might know the number of the years and the reckoning."[FN#322]
+The moon is Sultan of the night and the sun Sultan of the day,
+and they vie with one another in their courses and follow each
+other in uninterrupted succession. Quoth God the Most High, "It
+befits not that the sun overtake the moon nor that the night
+prevent the day, but each glides in [its own] sphere."'[FN#323]
+(Q.) 'When the day cometh, what becomes of the night, and what
+of the day, when the night cometh?' (A.) 'He maketh the night
+to enter into the day and the day into the night.'[FN#324] (Q.)
+'Enumerate to me the mansions of the moon.' (A.) 'They are
+eight-and-twenty in number, to wit, Sheretan, Butain, Thureya,
+Deberan, Hecaäh, Henaäh, Dhiraa, Nethreh, Terf, Jebheh, Zubreh,
+Serfeh, Awwaa, Simak and Ghefr, Zubaniya, Iklil, Kelb, Shauleh,
+Naaïm, Beldeh, Saad edh Dhabih, Saad el Bulaa, Saad el Akhbiyeh,
+Saad es Suwoud, Fergh the Former and Fergh the Latter and Rishaa.
+They are disposed in the order of the letters of the alphabet,
+according to their numerical power, and there are in them secret
+virtues which none knoweth save God (glorified and exalted be
+He) and those who are firmly stablished in science. They are
+divided among the twelve signs of the Zodiac, in the ratio of two
+mansions and a third of a mansion to each sign. Thus Sheretan,
+Butain and one-third of Thureya belong to Aries, the other two-
+thirds of Thureya, Deberan and two thirds of Hecaäh to Taurus,
+the other third of Hecaäh, Henaäh and Dhiraa to Gemini, Nethreh,
+Terf, and a third of Jebheh to Cancer, the other two-thirds of
+Jebheh, Zubreh and two-thirds of Serfeh to Leo, the other third
+of Serfeh, Awwaa and Simak to Virgo, Ghefr, Zubaniya and one-third
+of Iklil to Libra, the other two-thirds of Iklil, Kelb and two-
+thirds of Shauleh to Scorpio, the other third of Shauleh, Naaïm
+and Beldeh to Sagittarius, Saad edh Dhabih, Saad el Bulaa and
+one-third of Saad es Suwoud to Capricorn, the other two-thirds
+of Saad es Suwoud, Saad el Akbiyeh and two-thirds of Fergh the
+Former to Aquarius, the other third of Fergh the Former, Fergh
+the Latter and Rishaa to Pisces.' (Q.) 'Tell me of the planets
+and their natures, also of their sojourn in the signs of the
+Zodiac, their aspects, favourable and sinister, their houses,
+ascendants and descendants.' (A.) 'The sitting is narrow [for
+so comprehensive a matter], but they are seven in number, to
+wit, the sun, the moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and
+Saturn. The sun is hot and dry, sinister in conjunction,
+favourable in opposition, and abides thirty days in each sign.
+The moon is cold and moist, favourable of aspect, and abides
+two days in each sign and a third of another day. Mercury is of
+a mixed nature, favourable [in conjunction] with the favourable
+and sinister [in conjunction] with the sinister [asterisms],
+and abides in each sign seventeen and a half days. Venus is
+temperate, favourable and abides in each sign five-and-twenty
+days. Mars is sinister and abides in each sign ten months.
+Jupiter is favourable and abides in each sign a year. Saturn is
+cold and dry and sinister and abides in each sign thirty
+months. The house of the sun is Leo, its ascendant is Aries and
+its descendant Aquarius. The moon's house is Cancer, its
+ascendant Taurus, its descendant Scorpio and its sinister
+aspect Capricorn. Saturn's house is Capricorn and Aquarius, its
+ascendant Libra, its descendant Aries and its sinister aspects
+Cancer and Leo. Jupiter's house is Pisces and Sagittarius, its
+ascendant Cancer, its descendant Capricorn and its sinister
+aspects Gemini and Leo. Venus's house is Taurus, its ascendant
+Pisces, its descendant Libra and its sinister aspects Aries and
+Scorpio. Mercury's house is Gemini and Virgo, its ascendant
+Virgo, its descendant Pisces and its sinister aspect Taurus.
+Mars's house is Aries and Scorpio, its ascendant Capricorn, its
+descendant Cancer and its sinister aspect Libra.'
+
+When the astronomer saw her acuteness and skill and heard her
+fair answers, he bethought him for a device to confound her
+before the Commander of the Faithful and said to her, 'O
+damsel, will rain fall this month?' At this she bowed her head
+and pondered so long, that the Khalif thought her at a loss for
+an answer and the astronomer said to her, 'Why dost thou not
+speak?' Quoth she, 'I will not speak except the Commander of
+the Faithful give me leave.' The Khalif laughed and said, 'How
+so?' Said she, 'I would have thee give me a sword, that I may
+strike off his head, for he is an infidel.' At this the Khalif
+and those about him laughed, and she said, 'O astronomer, there
+are five things that none knoweth save God the Most High;' and
+she repeated the following verse: 'Verily, with God is the
+knowledge of the hour; He sendeth down the rain and knoweth
+what is in the wombs. None knoweth what the morrow shall bring
+forth for him nor in what land he shall die. Verily, God is the
+All-wise, the All-knowing.'[FN#325]
+
+Quoth the astronomer, 'Thou hast said well, and by Allah, I
+thought but to try thee.' 'Know,' rejoined she, 'that the
+almanack-makers have certain signs and tokens, referring to the
+planets, relative to the coming in of the year, and in which
+are tribulations for the folk.' (Q.) 'What are they?' (A.)
+'Each day hath a planet that rules it. So, if the first day of
+the year fall on a Sunday, that day is the sun's and this
+portends (though God alone is All-knowing) oppression of kings
+and sultans and governors and much miasma and lack of rain and
+that the folk will be in great disorder and the grain-crop will
+be good, except lentils, which will perish, and the vines will
+rot and flax will be dear and wheat cheap from the beginning of
+Toubeh[FN#326] to the end of Beremhat.[FN#327] Moreover, in
+this year there will be much fighting among kings, and there
+shall be great plenty of good in this year.' (Q.) 'What if the
+first day fall on Monday?' (A.) 'That day belongs to the moon
+and portends righteousness in administrators and deputies and
+that it will be a year of much rain and grain-crops will be
+good, but linseed will decay and wheat will be cheap in the
+month Keyehk;[FN#328] also that plagues will be rife and
+that half the sheep and goats will die, that grapes will be
+plentiful and honey scarce and cotton cheap.' (Q.) 'What if it
+fall on Tuesday?' (A.) 'That is Mars's day and portends death
+of great men and much destruction and outpouring of blood and
+dearness of grain, lack of rain and scarcity of fish, which
+will anon be in excess and anon fail [altogether]. In this
+year, lentils and honey will be cheap and linseed dear and only
+barley will thrive, to the exception of all other grain: great
+will be the fighting among kings and death will be in the blood
+and there will be much mortality among asses.' (Q.) 'What if it
+fall on Wednesday?' (A.) 'That is Mercury's day and portends
+great anarchy among the folk and much enmity and rotting of
+some of the green crops and moderate rains; also that there
+will be great mortality among cattle and infants and much
+fighting by sea, that wheat will be dear from Burmoudeh to
+Misra[FN#329] and other grains cheap: thunder and lightning
+will abound and honey will be dear, palm-trees will thrive and
+bear apace and flax and cotton will be plentiful, but radishes
+and onions will be dear.' (Q.) 'What if it fall on Thursday?'
+(A.) 'That is Jupiter's day and portends equity in viziers and
+righteousness in Cadis and fakirs and the ministers of religion
+and that good will be plentiful: rain and fruits and trees and
+grain and fish will abound and flax, cotton, honey and grapes
+be cheap.' (Q.) 'What if it fall on Friday?' (A.) 'That day
+belongs to Venus and portends oppression in the chiefs of the
+Jinn and talk of forgery and calumny; there will be much dew,
+the autumn crops will be good in the land and there will be
+cheapness in one town and not in another: lewdness will be
+rife by land and sea, linseed will be dear, also wheat, in
+Hatour,[FN#330] but cheap in Amshir:[FN#331] honey will be
+dear and grapes and melons will rot.' (Q.) 'What if it fall
+on Saturday?' (A.) 'That is Saturn's day and portends the
+preferment of slaves and Greeks and those in whom there is no
+good, neither in their neighbourhood; there will be great
+drought and scarcity; clouds will abound and death will be rife
+among mankind and woe to the people of Egypt and Syria from the
+oppression of the Sultan and failure of blessing upon the green
+crops and rotting of grain.'
+
+With this, the astronomer hung his head, [being at an end of
+his questions], and she said to him, 'O astronomer, I will ask
+thee one question, which if thou answer not, I will take thy
+clothes.' 'Ask on,' replied he. Quoth she, 'Where is Saturn's
+dwelling place?' And he answered, 'In the seventh heaven.' (Q.)
+'And that of Jupiter?' (A.) 'In the sixth heaven.' (Q.) 'And
+that of Mars?' (A.) 'In the fifth heaven.' (Q.) 'And that of
+the sun?' (A.) 'In the fourth heaven.' (Q.) 'And that of
+Venus?' (A.) 'In the third heaven.' (Q.) 'And that of Mercury?'
+(A.) 'In the second heaven.' (Q.) 'And that of the moon?' (A.)
+'In the first heaven.' Quoth she, 'Well answered; but I have
+one more question to ask thee. Into how many parts are the
+stars divided?' But he was silent and answered nothing; and she
+said to him, 'Put off thy clothes.' So he put them off and she
+took them; after which the Khalif said to her, 'Tell us the
+answer to thy question.' 'O Commander of the Faithful,'
+answered she, 'the stars are divided into three parts, one
+whereof is hung in the sky of the earth,[FN#332] as it were
+lamps, to give light to the earth, another suspended in the
+air, to give light to the seas and that which is therein, and
+the third is used to transfix the demons withal, when they draw
+near by stealth to [listen to the talk of the angels in]
+heaven. Quoth God the Most High, "Verily, we have decked the
+sky of the earth with lamps and have appointed them for
+projectiles against the demons."'[FN#333] Quoth the astronomer,
+'I have one more question to ask, which if she answer, I will
+avow myself beaten.' 'Say on,' answered she. Then said he,
+'What four incompatible things are based upon other four
+incompatibles?' 'The four elements,' replied she; 'for of heat
+God created fire, which is by nature hot and dry; of dryness,
+earth, which is cold and dry; of cold, water, which is cold and
+moist; of moisture, air, which is hot and moist. Moreover, He
+created twelve signs of the Zodiac, Aries, Taurus, Gemini,
+Cancer, Leo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn,
+Aquarius and Pisces and appointed them of four [several]
+humours, three, Aries, Leo and Sagittarius, fiery, Taurus, Virgo
+and Capricorn, earthy, Gemini, Libra and Aquarius, airy, and
+Cancer, Scorpio and Pisces, watery.' With this, the astronomer
+rose, and saying, 'Bear witness against me that she is more
+learned than I,' went away beaten.
+
+Then said the Khalif, 'Where is the philosopher?' whereupon one
+came forward and said to Taweddud, 'What is Time?' 'Time,'
+answered she, 'is a name applied to the [lapse of the] hours of
+the day and night, which are but the measures of the courses of
+the sun and moon in their several orbits, even as God the Most
+High telleth us, when he saith, "And a sign to them [is] the
+night, from which we strip off the day, and behold, they are in
+darkness, and the sun runneth to a fixed abode, [appointed] to
+it; this is the ordinance of the Sublime, the All-knowing."'
+[FN#334] (Q.) 'How comes unbelief to the son of Adam?' (A.) 'It
+is reported of the Prophet that he said, "Unbelief runs in a man,
+as the blood runs in the veins, when he reviles the world and Time
+and night and the hour." And again, "Let none of you revile Time,
+for Time is God; neither the world, for it saith, 'May God not
+help him that reviles me!' neither the hour, for 'Verily, the hour
+cometh, without doubt;'[FN#335] neither the earth, for it is a
+portent, according to the saying of the Most High, 'From it we
+created you, to it we will return you and from it we will bring
+you forth yet again.'"'[FN#336] (Q.) 'What are the five that ate
+and drank, yet came not out of loins nor belly?' (A.) 'Adam and
+Simeon and Salih's she-camel[FN#337] and Ishmael's ram and the
+bird that Abou Bekr the Truth-teller saw in the cave.'[FN#338]
+(Q.) 'Tell me of five that are in Paradise and are neither
+mortals, Jinn nor angels?' (A.) 'Jacob's wolf and the Seven
+Sleepers' dog and Esdras's ass and Salih's camel and the
+Prophet's mule.' (Q.) 'What man prayed a prayer neither on
+earth nor in heaven?' (A.) 'Solomon [son of David], when he
+prayed on his carpet, borne by the wind.' (Q.) 'A man once
+looked at a handmaid in the morning, and she was unlawful to
+him; but, at noonday, she became lawful to him. By mid-afternoon,
+she was again unlawful, but at sundown, she was lawful to him.
+At evensong, she was a third time unlawful, but by daybreak, she
+became once more lawful to him.' (A.) 'This was a man who looked
+at another's handmaid in the morning, and she was then unlawful
+to him, but at midday he bought her, and she became lawful to him.
+At mid-afternoon he enfranchised her, and she became unlawful to
+him, but at sundown he married her and she was again lawful to
+him. At evensong, he divorced her and she was then a third time
+unlawful to him, but, next morning, at daybreak, he took her back,
+and she became once more lawful to him.' (Q.) 'Tell me what tomb
+fared on with him that lay buried therein?' (A.) 'The whale,
+when it had swallowed Jonah.' (Q.) 'What spot of ground is it,
+upon which the sun shone once, but will never again shine till
+the Day of Judgment?' (A.) 'The bottom of the Red Sea, when Moses
+smote it with his staff, and the sea clove asunder in twelve
+places, according to the number of the tribes; then the sun
+shone on the bottom and will do so never again till the Day of
+Judgment.' (Q.) 'What was the first skirt that trailed upon the
+surface of the earth?' (A.) 'That of Hagar, out of shame before
+Sarah, and it became a custom among the Arabs.' (Q.) 'What is
+that which breathes without life?' (A.) 'Quoth God the Most
+High, "By the morning, when it breathes!"'[FN#339] (Q.) 'A
+number of pigeons came to a high tree and lighted, some on the
+tree and others under it. Said those on the tree to those on
+the ground, "If one of you come up to us, ye will be a third
+part of us [all] in number; and if one of us descend to you, we
+shall be like unto you in number." How many pigeons were there
+in all?' (A.) 'Twelve: seven alighted on the tree and five
+beneath.'
+
+With this the philosopher put off his clothes and fled forth:
+whereupon she turned to those present and said, 'Which of you
+is the rhetorician that can discourse of all kinds of
+knowledge?' There came forward Ibrahim ben Siyyar and said to
+her, 'Think me not like the rest.' Quoth she, 'It is the more
+sure to me that thou wilt be beaten, for that thou art a
+boaster, and God will help me against thee, that I may strip
+thee of thy clothes. So, if thou sentest one to fetch thee
+wherewithal to clothe thyself, it would be well for thee.' 'By
+Allah,' cried he, 'I will assuredly conquer thee and make thee
+a byword among the folk, generation after generation!' 'Do
+penance [in advance] for thy [void] oath,' rejoined she. Then
+said he, 'What five things did God create, before He made man?'
+And she replied, 'Water and earth and light and darkness and
+the fruits [of the earth].' (Q.) 'What did God create with the
+hand of omnipotence?' (A.) 'The empyreal heaven and the tree
+Touba[FN#340] and Adam and the garden of Eden; these God
+created with the hand of His omnipotence; but to all other
+created things He said, "Be,"--and they were.' (Q.) 'Who is thy
+father in Islam?' (A.) 'Mohammed, whom God bless and preserve!'
+(Q.) 'Who was the father [in Islam] of Mohammed?' (A.) 'Abraham
+the Friend of God.' (Q.) 'What is the Faith of Islam?' (A.)
+'The professing that there is no god but God and that Mohammed
+is the apostle of God.' (Q.) 'What is thy first and thy last?'
+(A.) 'My first is troubled water[FN#341] and my last filthy
+carrion. The first of me is dust and the last dust. Quoth the
+poet:
+
+Created wast thou of the dust and didst a man become, Ready in
+ question and reply and fluent in debate.
+Then to the dust return'dst anon and didst become of it, For
+ that, in very deed, of dust at first thou wast create.'
+
+(Q.) 'What thing was it, whose first [state] was wood and its
+last life?' (A.) 'Moses' rod, when he cast it on the ground and
+it became, by permission of God, a writhing serpent.'[FN#342]
+(Q.) 'What is the meaning of the verse in the Koran, "And I
+have other need [or occasion] for it"?'[FN#343] (A.) 'He
+[Moses] was wont to plant his staff in the ground, and it would
+flower and fruit and shade him from the heat and the cold.
+Moreover, it would carry him, when he was weary, and guard his
+sheep from the wild beasts, whilst he slept.' (Q.) 'What woman
+was born of a man alone and what man of a woman alone?' (A.) 'Eve
+of Adam and Jesus of Mary.' (Q.) 'What fire eats and drinks, what
+fire eats but drinks not, what fire drinks but eats not and what
+other neither eats nor drinks?' (A.) 'Hellfire eats and drinks,
+the fire of the world eats but drinks not, the fire of the sun
+drinks but eats not, and that of the moon neither eats nor drinks.'
+(Q.) 'Which is the open [door] and which the shut [door]?' (A.)
+'The Traditional Ordinances are the open, the Koranic the shut
+[door].' (Q.) 'Of what does the poet speak, when he says:
+
+A dweller in the sepulchre, at 's head his victual lies; Whenas
+ he tastes thereof, he speaks and questions and replies.
+He rises up and walks and talks, yet silent is the while, And
+ turns anon unto the tomb wherefrom he did arise.
+No living one is he, that hath a title to respect, Nor dead,
+ that folk should say of him, "God's mercy him comprise!"?'
+
+(A.) 'The pen.' (Q.) 'What does the poet refer to in these
+verses:
+
+Two breasts in one it hath; its blood is eath and quick of
+ flow, Wide-mouthed, though all the rest be black, its ears
+ are white as snow.
+It hath an idol like a cock, that doth its belly peck, And half
+ a dirhem is its worth, if thou its price wouldst know?'
+
+(A.) 'The inkhorn.' (Q.) 'And in these:
+
+Say to men of wit and learning and to doctors everywhere,
+ Skilled to find the hidden meanings riddles and enigmas
+ bear,
+Come expound to me what is it that ye see a bird produce,
+ 'Mongst the Arabs and barbarians and wherever else ye
+ fare;
+Neither flesh nor blood, I warrant, hath the thing whereof I
+ speak; Neither down nor feathers, birdwise, for a garment
+ doth it wear.
+Boiled it is and likewise roasted, eaten hot and eaten cold;
+ Yea, to boot, and when 'tis buried in the glowing embers'
+ flare,
+Colours twain in it are noted, one as silver clear and white,
+ And the other lucent yellow, gold therewith may not
+ compare.
+Living can it not be reckoned, neither may we count it dead:
+ Tell me, then, what is this wonder, rarity of all things
+ rare?'
+
+(A.) 'Thou makest long the questioning of an egg worth a doit.'
+(Q.) 'How many words [or times] did God speak to Moses?' (A.)
+'It is related of the Prophet that he said, "God spoke to Moses
+fifteen hundred and fifteen words [or times]."' (Q.) 'Tell me
+of fourteen things that speak to the Lord of the Worlds?' (A.)
+'The seven heavens and the seven earths, when they say, "We
+come, obedient."'[FN#344] (Q.) 'How was Adam created?' (A.)
+'God created Adam of clay: the clay He made of foam and the
+foam of the sea, the sea of darkness, darkness of light, light
+of a fish, the fish of a rock, the rock of a ruby, the ruby of
+water, and the water He created by the exertion of His omnipotent
+will, according to His saying (exalted be His name!), "His
+commandment is only when He willeth aught, that He say, 'Be,'
+--and it is."'[FN#345] (Q.) 'What is meant by the poet in the
+following verses:
+
+A things sans mouth or maw that eats in wondrous wise; On trees
+ and beasts it feeds and all beneath the skies.
+Give it to eat, it thrives and flourishes amain; But give it
+ not to drink of water, or it dies?'
+
+(A.) 'Fire.' (Q.) 'And in these:
+
+Two lovers, that are still estopped from all delight:
+ Embracing, each with each, they pass the livelong night.
+They guarantee the folk from all calamity, And with the risen
+ sun they're torn apart forthright?'
+
+(A.) 'The leaves of a gate.' (Q.) 'Tell me of the gates of
+Hell?' (A.) 'They are seven in number and their names are
+comprised in the following verses:
+
+Jehennem first, then Leza comes and eke Hetim as well; Then
+ must thou count Saïr, and fifth comes Seker, sooth to
+ tell:
+Sixth comes Jehim and last of all, Hawiyeh; thus thou hast, In
+ compass brief of doggrel rhyme, the seven rooms of Hell.'
+
+(Q.) 'To what does the poet refer in these verses:
+
+A pair of ringlets long she hath, that trail for aye Behind
+ her, as she comes and goes upon her way,
+And eye that never knows the taste of sleep nor sheds A tear,
+ for none it hath for shedding, sooth to say;
+Nor wears it aught of clothes, from year to ended year; Yet in
+ all manner wede it doth the folk array?'
+
+(A.) 'A needle.' (Q.) 'What is the length and breadth of the
+bridge Es Sirat?' (A.) 'Its length is three thousand years'
+journey, a thousand in descent, a thousand level and a thousand
+in ascent: it is sharper than a sword and finer than a hair.'
+(Q.) 'How many intercessions [with God] hath the Prophet [for
+each soul]?' (A.) 'Three.' (Q.) 'Was Abou Bekr the first that
+embraced Islam?' (A.) 'Yes.' (Q.) 'Yet Ali[FN#346] became a
+Muslim before him?' (A.) 'All came to the Prophet, when he was
+a boy of seven years old, for God vouchsafed him the knowledge
+of the truth in his tender youth, so that he never prostrated
+himself to idols.' (Q.) 'Which is the more excellent, Ali or
+Abbas?'[FN#347]
+
+Now she knew that, in propounding this question, Ibrahim was
+laying a trap for her; for, if she said, 'Ali is the more
+excellent,' she would fall in disgrace with the Khalif; so she
+bowed her head awhile, now reddening, now paling, then said,
+'Thou askest me of two excellent men, each having [his own
+especial] excellence. Let us return to what we were about.'
+When the Khalif heard her reply, he rose to his feet and said,
+'By the Lord of the Kaabeh, thou hast said well, O Taweddud!'
+Then said Ibrahim, 'What means the poet, when he says:
+
+Slender of skirts and slim of shape and sweet of taste it is,
+ Most like unto the spear, except it lacks of the spontoon.
+In all the countries of the world the folk make use of it, And
+ eaten 'tis in Ramazan, after mid-afternoon?'
+
+She answered, 'The sugar-cane;' and he said, 'Tell me of many
+things.' 'What are they?' asked she; and he said, 'What is
+sweeter than honey, what is sharper than the sword, what is
+swifter than poison, what is the delight of a moment and what
+the contentment of three days, what is the pleasantest of days,
+what is the joy of a week, what is the debt that the worst
+payer denieth not, what is the prison of the tomb, what is the
+joy of the heart, what is the snare of the soul, what is death
+in life, what is the malady that may not be healed, what is the
+reproach that may not be done away, what is the beast that
+harbours not in cultivated fields, but lodges in waste places
+and hates mankind and hath in it somewhat of the make of seven
+strong beasts?' Quoth she, 'Hear what I shall say in answer;
+then put off thy clothes, that I may expound to thee.' Then the
+Khalif said, 'Expound, and he shall put off his clothes.' So
+she said, 'That, which is sweeter than honey, is the love of
+pious children to their parents; that, which is sharper than
+the sword, is the tongue; that, which is swifter than poison,
+is the evil eye; the delight of a moment is coition and the
+contentment of three days is the depilatory for women; the
+pleasantest of days is that of profit on merchandise; the joy
+of a week is the bride; the debt, which the worst payer denieth
+not, is death; the prison of the tomb is an ill son; the joy of
+the heart is a woman obedient to her husband, (and it is said
+also that, when fleshmeat descends upon the heart, it rejoiceth
+therein); the snare [or vexation] of the soul is a disobedient
+slave; death in life is poverty; the malady, that may not be
+healed, is an ill nature and the reproach, that may not be done
+away, is an ill daughter; lastly, the beast that harbours not
+in cultivated fields, but lodges in waste places and hates
+mankind and hath in it somewhat of the make of seven strong
+beasts, is the locust, whose head is as the head of the horse,
+its neck as the neck of the bull, its wings as the wings of the
+vulture, its feet as the feet of the camel, its tail as the
+tail of the serpent, its body as the body of the scorpion and
+its horns as the horns of the gazelle.'
+
+The Khalif was astounded at her quickness and understanding and
+said to Ibrahim, 'Put off thy clothes.' So he rose and said, 'I
+call all who are present in this assembly to witness that she
+is more learned than I and all the learned men.' And he put off
+his clothes and gave them to her, saying, 'Take them and may
+God not bless them to thee!' The Khalif ordered him fresh
+clothes and said to Taweddud, 'There is one thing left of
+that for which thou didst engage, namely, chess.' And he
+sent for professors of chess and draughts and backgammon. The
+chess-player sat down before her, and they set the pieces, and
+he moved and she moved; but, every move he made she speedily
+countered, till she beat him and he found himself check-mated.
+Quoth he, 'I did but lead thee on, that thou mightest think
+thyself skilful; but set up again, and I will show thee.' So
+they placed the pieces a second time, and he said to himself,
+'Open thine eyes, or she will beat thee.' And he fell to moving
+no piece, save after calculation, and ceased not to play, till
+she said, 'Check-mate.' When he saw this, he was confounded at
+her quickness and skill; but she laughed and said, 'O master,
+I will make a wager with thee on this third game. I will give
+thee the queen and the right-hand rook and the left-hand knight;
+if thou beat me, take my clothes, and if I beat thee, I will
+take thine.' 'I agree to this,' replied he, and they replaced
+the pieces, she giving him the queen, rook and knight. Then
+said she, 'Move, O master.' So he moved, saying in himself,
+'I cannot but win, with such an advantage,' and made a combination;
+but she moved on, little by little, till she made one of her pawns
+a queen and pushing up to him pawns and other pieces, to take off
+his attention, set one in his way and tempted him with it.[FN#348]
+Accordingly, he took it and she said to him, 'The measure is meted
+out and the equilibrium established. Eat, O man, till thou pass
+repletion; nought shall be thy ruin but greediness. Knowest thou
+not that I did but tempt thee, that I might beguile thee? See:
+this is check-mate: put off thy clothes.' 'Leave me my trousers,'
+quoth he, 'so God requite thee;' and he swore by Allah that he
+would contend with none, so long as Taweddud abode at the Court
+of Baghdad. Then he took off his clothes and gave them to her
+and went away.
+
+Then came the backgammon-player, and she said to him, 'If I
+beat thee, what wilt thou give me?' Quoth he, 'I will give thee
+ten suits of brocade of Constantinople, figured with gold, and
+ten suits of velvet and a thousand dinars, and if I beat thee,
+I ask nothing but that thou write me an acknowledgment thereof.'
+'To it, then,' replied she, 'and do thy best.' So they played,
+and he lost and went away, jabbering in the Frank jargon and
+saying, 'By the bounty of the Commander of the Faithful, there
+is not her like in all the world!' Then the Khalif summoned
+players on instruments of music and said to her, 'Dost thou
+know aught of music?' 'Yes,' answered she. So he bade bring
+a peeled and polished lute, whose owner [or maker] was ground
+down by exile [or estrangement from the beloved] and of which
+quoth one, describing it:
+
+God watered a land and straight a tree sprang up on its root:
+ It cast forth branches and throve and flourished with many
+ a shoot.
+The birds, when the wood was green, sang o'er it, and when it
+ was dry, Fair women sang to it in turn, for lo, 'twas a
+ minstrel's lute!
+
+So they brought a bag of red satin, with tassels of
+saffron-coloured silk: and she opened the bag, and took out a
+lute, on which were graven the following verses:
+
+Full many a tender branch a lute for singing-girl has grown,
+ Wherewith at banquets to her mates she makes melodious
+ moan.
+She sings; it follows on her song, as 'twere to teach her how
+ Heart's troubles in clear perfect speech of music to make
+ known.
+
+She laid her lute in her lap and letting her breasts hang over
+it, bent to it as bends a mother, suckling her child; then
+preluded in twelve different modes, till the whole assembly was
+agitated with delight, and sang the following verses:
+
+Leave your estrangement, I pray, and bid your cruelty hold,
+ For, by your life, my heart will never for you be
+ consoled.
+Have pity on one who weeps, afflicted and ever sad, A slave of
+ passion, who burns for thee with longings untold.
+
+The Khalif was ravished and exclaimed, 'May God bless thee and
+receive him who taught thee[FN#349] into His mercy!' Whereupon
+she rose and kissed the earth before him. Then he sent for
+money and paid her master Aboulhusn a hundred thousand dinars
+to her price; after which he said to her, 'O Taweddud, ask a
+boon of me.' 'O Commander of the Faithful,' replied she, 'I ask
+of thee that thou restore me to my lord who sold me to thee.'
+'It is well,' answered the Khalif and restored her to her
+master and gave her five thousand dinars for herself. Moreover,
+he appointed Aboulhusn one of his boon-companions and assigned
+him a monthly stipend of a thousand dinars so long as he should
+live, and he abode with the damsel Taweddud in all delight of
+life.
+
+Marvel then, O King, at the eloquence of this damsel and the
+greatness of her learning and understanding and her perfect
+excellence in all branches of knowledge, and consider the
+generosity of the Khalif Haroun er Reshid, in that he gave her
+master this money and said to her, 'Ask a boon of me;' and she
+besought him to restore her to her lord. So he restored her to
+him and gave her five thousand dinars for herself and made him
+one of his boon-companions. Where is such generosity to be
+found after the Abbaside Khalifs, may God the Most High have
+mercy upon them all!
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Vol. IV
+
+
+
+
+ Arabian Nights, Volume 4
+ Footnotes
+
+
+[FN#1] A very famous legist and wit of the eighth century and a
+prime favourite with Er Reshid. He was one of the chief pupils
+of the Imam Abou Henifeh (see note, Vol. II. p. 131 {see Vol. 2
+FN#91}) and was Cadi of Baghdad under the third, fourth and
+fifth Khalifs of the Abbaside dynasty.
+
+[FN#2] Shown in choosing so learned a Cadi.
+
+[FN#3] Governor of the two Iraks (i.e. Bassora and Cufa) in the
+reign of Hisham, tenth Khalif of the Ommiade dynasty (A.D.
+723-741). He was celebrated for his beneficence and liberality.
+
+[FN#4] Koran iii. 178, etc.
+
+[FN#5] "The hand of a thief shall not be cut off for stealing
+less than a quarter of a dinar."--Mischat ul Masabih.
+
+[FN#6] El Asmai the poet, author or compiler of the well-known
+romance of Antar.
+
+[FN#7] Zanzibar (ant. Zengibar).
+
+[FN#8] The word Sherif (lit. noble) signifies strictly a
+descendant of the martyr Hussein, son of the Khalif Ali; but it
+is here used in the sense of "chief" [of the bazaar].
+
+[FN#9] Quære Mensour en Nemri, a well-known poet of the time
+and (originally) a protege of Yehya's son, El Fezl.
+
+[FN#10] Intendant of the palace to Haroun er Reshid and captain
+of his guards.
+
+[FN#11] i.e. the Khalif
+
+[FN#12] i.e. As if he were an old Bedouin, with forehead
+disfigured by the friction of the rope of camel's hair, which
+is part of the Bedouin headdress.
+
+[FN#13] Mohammed said, "Change the whiteness of your hair, but
+not with anything black." Henna is the approved hairdye for a
+true-believer; it changes the hair to a reddish-brown.
+
+[FN#14] i.e. thou that art as dear to me as my sight and
+hearing.
+
+[FN#15] A fountain of Paradise.
+
+[FN#16] Syn. languishing (munkesir).
+
+[FN#17] A river of Paradise.
+
+[FN#18] i.e. Orthodox.
+
+[FN#19] These words are a quotation from a well-known piece of
+verse.
+
+[FN#20] Of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#21] Usually made of palm-fibres.
+
+[FN#22] The distinctive headdress of the Muslims.
+
+[FN#23] The bridge that spans Hell, finer than a hair and
+sharper than a sword, and over which all must pass on the Day
+of Judgment.
+
+[FN#24] Or leader of the people at prayer, who stands opposite
+the niche sunk into or painted on the wall of the mosque, to
+indicate the direction of Mecca.
+
+[FN#25] All this is an audacious parody of the Muslim ritual of
+prayer.
+
+[FN#26] Lit. "exclamations of 'Glory be to God!'" which are of
+frequent recurrence in the Mohammedan formulas of prayer. See
+last note.
+
+[FN#27] i.e. governor.
+
+[FN#28] The word ucwaneh, here used in the dual number, usually
+designates the teeth, in its common meaning of "camomile-
+flower": but the lips are here expressly mentioned, and this
+fact, together with that of the substitution, in the Breslau
+edition, of the word akikan (two cornelians or rubies) for
+ucwanetan (two camomiles), as in the Calcutta and Boulac
+editions, shows that the word is intended to be taken in its
+rarer meaning of "corn-marigold."
+
+[FN#29] Syn. Fortune (ez zeman).
+
+[FN#30] One of the tribes of the Arabs and that to which the
+renowned Maan ben Zaideh (see Vol. III. p. 317, {Vol. 3,
+FN#121}) belonged.
+
+[FN#31] The Muslims accuse the Jews of having corrupted the
+Pentateuch and others of their sacred books, even as the
+Christians the Gospels (see Vol. II. page 149, note {Vol. 2,
+FN#97}), by expunging or altering the passages foretelling the
+coming of Mohammed.
+
+[FN#32] See Vol. I. p. 135, note 2. {Vol. 1, FN#45}
+
+[FN#33] i.e. as a martyr.
+
+[FN#34] The force of this comparison will best appear from the
+actual figuration of the Arabic double-letter Lam-Alif (Anglice
+L.A.) which is made up of the two letters *<arabic character>,
+(initial form of Lam) and *<arabic character> (final of Alif,)
+and is written thus, *<arabic character>.
+
+[FN#35] i.e. O thou, whose glance is as the light of the
+glowing embers.
+
+[FN#36] Thus figured in Arabic *<arabic character>.
+
+[FN#37] Thus *<arabic character>.
+
+[FN#38] Thus *<arabic character>.
+
+[FN#39] Koran xxvil. 12.
+
+[FN#40] Koran iii. 103.
+
+[FN#41] Koran xcii. 1,2.
+
+[FN#42] Sauda, feminine of aswed (black), syn. black bile
+(melancholia).
+
+[FN#43] The distinctive colour of which is white.
+
+[FN#44] Koran li. 26.
+
+[FN#45] Mohammed.
+
+[FN#46] Koran ii. 64, referring to an expiatory heifer which
+the Jews were commanded, through Moses, to sacrifice.
+
+[FN#47] See note, Vol III. p. 104 {Vol. 3, FN#19}
+
+[FN#48] Sulafeh.
+
+[FN#49] Sewalif, plural of salifeh (equivalent of sulafeh). A
+play upon the double meaning of the word is, of course,
+intended.
+
+[FN#50] Syn. yellowness (isfirar).
+
+[FN#51] A title of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#52] His wife Zubeideh.
+
+[FN#53] i.e. his beautiful slave-girls.
+
+[FN#54] i.e. his beautiful slave-girls.
+
+[FN#55] Title of Saladin (Selaheddin) and several other
+Eyoubite Sultans of Egypt and Syria. It is equivalent to our
+"Defender of the Faith."
+
+[FN#56] Koran xli. 46.
+
+[FN#57] A town of Upper Egypt.
+
+[FN#58] Meaning the merchant, whose name, Abou Jaafer or the
+like, he had learnt from the tailor.
+
+[FN#59] Muslim Jews.
+
+[FN#60] A well-known jurist at Baghdad in the reign of the
+Khalif Mamoun.
+
+[FN#61] Medina.
+
+[FN#62] One of the gates of the great mosque there, wherein is
+the tomb of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#63] Tenth Khalif of the Abbaside dynasty, A.D. 849-861.
+
+[FN#64] Muwelledat, women born in Muslim countries of
+slave-parents; syn. mulatto-women.
+
+[FN#65] Lieutenant of the Prefect of Baghdad.
+
+[FN#66] Muwelledat, women born in Muslim countries of
+slave-parents; syn. mulatto-women.
+
+[FN#67] El Hakim bi Amrillah, sixth Fatimite Khalif of Egypt
+(A.D. 995-1021), cruel and fantastic tyrant, who claimed to be
+an incarnation of the Deity. He was the founder of the religion
+of the Druses, who look to him to reappear and be their Messiah
+
+[FN#68] Bastard or Spanish pellitory.
+
+[FN#69] Or dyed.
+
+[FN#70] Or interlocking.
+
+[FN#71] Or torn.
+
+[FN#72] Sufreh, a round piece of leather used (mostly by
+travellers) as a table-cloth and having a running string
+inserted round its edge, by means of which it can be converted
+into a bag or budget for holding provisions, as in this
+instance.
+
+[FN#73] Lower India.
+
+[FN#74] i.e. as master of the house in which I have sought
+shelter.
+
+[FN#75] Uns el Wujoud.
+
+[FN#76] A pun upon his name, Uns wa joud, pleasance and bounty.
+
+[FN#77] See supra, p. 95, note 3. {Vol. 4, FN#38}
+
+[FN#78] The fourteenth letter of the Arabic alphabet, in its
+medial form (<arabic>) closely resembling an eye underlined
+with kohl.
+
+[FN#79] See Note, Vol. III. p. 274. {Vol. 3, FN#102}
+
+[FN#80] i.e. in dreams..
+
+[FN#81] One of the months in which war was forbidden to the
+pagan Arabs and a sort of Trève de Dieu prevailed.
+
+[FN#82] The Arabic word fakir means literally, "a poor man;"
+but it would appear, from what follows, that Uns el Wujoud had
+disguised himself as a religious mendicant and was taken for
+such by the people of the castle.
+
+[FN#83] i.e. one absorbed in the contemplation of supra-
+terrestrial things.
+
+[FN#84] Uns el Wujoud.
+
+[FN#85] To salute them and wish them joy, according to Oriental
+custom.
+
+[FN#86] Mosul is called the land of purity, in a religious
+sense, it having never been polluted with idolatrous worship.
+
+[FN#87] The people of Aleppo seem to have been noted for
+debauchery.
+
+[FN#88] i.e. Do not express admiration openly, lest it attract
+the evil eye, but vent your wonder by saying, "God bless and
+preserve the Prophet!" according to general Muslim wont.
+
+[FN#89] A gorge near Mecca, the scene of one of Mohammed's
+battles.
+
+[FN#90] i.e. as made out of a crooked rib, according to the
+tradition.
+
+[FN#91] i.e. the land of the virgin.
+
+[FN#92] The word Jamiaïn means "two congregational mosques,"
+which would only be found in a large town like Baghdad. It is
+possible, therefore, that the expression, "land of Jamiaïn,"
+may mean Baghdad or some other great city, noted for its
+debauched manners.
+
+[FN#93] Oriental substitute for slate.
+
+
+[FN#94] A pre-Mohammedan poet.
+
+[FN#95] King of Hireh in Chaldæa, a fantastic and bloodthirsty
+tyrant, whom he had lampooned.
+
+[FN#96] Aboulabbas er Recashi, a well-known poet of the time.
+
+[FN#97] Koran xxvi. 224, 5, 6.
+
+[FN#98] Half-brother of Abdallah ben ez Zubeir, the celebrated
+pretender to the Khalifate, see Vol. III. p. 194, note 3. {Vol.
+3, FN#62}
+
+[FN#99] Grand-daughter of the Khalif Aboubekr and the most
+beautiful woman of her day.
+
+[FN#100] A famous Medinan Traditionist of the eighth century.
+
+[FN#101] Er Zubeir ibn el Awwam, cousin-german to Mohammed and
+one of his Companions.
+
+[FN#102] Abou Mohammed el Aamesh, a Cufan Traditionist of the
+eighth century.
+
+[FN#103] A Traditionist of the seventh century.
+
+[FN#104] One of the Companions.
+
+[FN#105] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#106] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#107] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#108] Companions of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#109] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#110] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#111] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#112] Companions of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#113] A.D. 530-579. The founder of the great Persian dynasty
+of the Kisras (Chosroës). Mohammed was born in the reign of
+this monarch, whose name is a synonym with Eastern writers for
+all that is just and noble in a King.
+
+[FN#114] Wife of Mohammed.
+
+[FN#115] Daughter of Mohammed.
+
+[FN#116] Lit. "of the ancestors," i.e. those pious and blessed
+persons who have gone before. The word es selef (the ancestors)
+is specially applied to Mohammed, his wife Aaisheh, the first
+three Khalifs and certain other early Muslims.
+
+[FN#117] Khusrau Perviz, grandson of Kisra Anoushirwan (see
+supra, p. 228). {Vol. 4, FN#113}
+
+[FN#118] The famous beauty, daughter of Maurice, Emperor of the
+East, and heroine of Nizami's well-known poem.
+
+[FN#119] First cousin of Haroun er Reshid.
+
+[FN#120] Son and successor of Er Reshid.
+
+[FN#121] A well-known grammarian and traditionist of the time,
+afterwards governor of part of Khorassan, under the Khalif El
+Mamoun.
+
+[FN#122] Intendant of the palace under Er Reshid.
+
+[FN#123] i.e. lover.
+
+[FN#124] Muslim version of Susannah and the Elders.
+
+[FN#125] Lit. O frosty-beard (fool), how frosty was thy beard!
+
+[FN#126] Descendant of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#127] Name of a tribe.
+
+[FN#128] A descendant of Ishmael, from whom the Arab
+genealogists trace Mohammed's lineage.
+
+[FN#129] Koran xxxiii. 38.
+
+[FN#130] Koran xxxviii. 2.
+
+[FN#131] One of the Companions of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#132] Of the Prophet i.e. those who had personally known
+Mohammed.
+
+[FN#133] i.e. the builders, who, in the East, use mud or clay
+for mortar.
+
+[FN#134] About a penny.
+
+[FN#135] Mohammed.
+
+
+[FN#136] A woman's name.
+
+[FN#137] For putting out the fire in a brasier or
+cooking-stove.
+
+[FN#138] The last Kings of Hireh were Christians.
+
+[FN#139] A prae-Islamitic poet.
+
+[FN#140] King of Persia and En Numan's suzerain.
+
+[FN#141] A celebrated poet of the eighth and ninth centuries at
+the court d the Abbaside Khalifs.
+
+[FN#142] A quarter of Baghdad.
+
+[FN#143] Another well-known poet of the time, Dibil's teacher
+and friend.
+
+[FN#144] Underground rooms are much used in Baghdad and Central
+Asia, for coolness' sake, in the season of the great heats.
+
+[FN#145] Dibil's surname.
+
+[FN#146] An idol of the pagan Arabs, before the coming of
+Mohammed.
+
+[FN#147] In the attitude or a pupil before his master.
+
+[FN#148] i.e. heart's blood.
+
+[FN#149] A well-known poet, who flourished at Baghdad in the
+ninth century
+
+[FN#150] Aboulabbas Mohammed ben Yezid eth Thumali, surnamed El
+Muberred, a famous Baghdad grammarian of the ninth century.
+
+[FN#151] A monastery in the town of Hemah in Syria, so called
+from the Emperor Heraclius, who retired thither, to end his.
+days.
+
+[FN#152] These verses are addressed to the Prophet Mohammed.
+
+[FN#153] The most learned grammarian of his day. He flourished
+at Baghdad in the first half of the tenth century.
+
+[FN#154] Anatolia.
+
+[FN#155] The Lights.
+
+[FN#156] Servant of the Messiah.
+
+[FN#157] The monk.
+
+[FN#158] The desireful servant of God. Abdallah is the name
+commonly given to a Christian convert to Islam. This question
+and answer are a good example of the jingle of rhymes so much
+affected by the Arabs.
+
+[FN#159] i.e. of gods (shirk).
+
+[FN#160] Koran vii. 195.
+
+[FN#161] i.e. saints.
+
+[FN#162] Koran x. 36.
+
+[FN#163] A well-known man of letters and one of El Mamoun's
+viziers.
+
+[FN#164] Prefect of Baghdad under El Mamoun.
+
+[FN#165] i.e. the persons in authority under them.
+
+[FN#166] Surname of Ali ben Hisham.
+
+[FN#167] A renowned chieftain and poet of the time of Mohammed.
+
+[FN#168] A famous singer and composer of the first century of
+the Hegira.
+
+[FN#169] One of the greatest of Arab poets; he flourished in
+the first century of the Hegira.
+
+[FN#170] i.e. as to the sound of music.
+
+[FN#171] Sixth of the Abbaside Khalifs, A.D. 809-813.
+
+[FN#172] See note, Vol. III. p. 324. {See Vol. 3, FN#130}.
+
+[FN#173] Tenth Abbaside Khalif, A.D. 849-861.
+
+[FN#174] Vizier and favourite of El Mutawekkil, killed A.D. 861
+whilst endeavouring to defend the Khalif against the parricide
+El Muntestr.
+
+[FN#175] Virginitatem tollere.
+
+[FN#176] Johannes, a Greek physician in high favour with El
+Mutawekkil and others of the Abbaside Khalifs.
+
+[FN#177] i.e. Princess of the Doctors or men of learning.
+
+[FN#178] A.D. 1166.
+
+[FN#179] Or heads of the various sects or schools of religion.
+
+[FN#180] Koran iv. 38.
+
+[FN#171] As witness to a debt, Koran ii. 282.
+
+[FN#182] Koran iv. 175.
+
+[FN#183] Or "eye-glance."
+
+[FN#184] Abou Temmam et Tai (of the tribe of Tai), a famous
+poet of the first half of the ninth century and postmaster at
+Mosul under the Khalif Wathic Billah (commonly known as
+Vathek), A.D. 842-849. He was the compiler of the famous
+anthology of ancient Arabian poetry, known as the Hemaseh
+(Hamasa).
+
+[FN#185] Aboulcasim el Heriri, the famous poet and grammarian,
+author of the Mecamat, the most celebrated single work in
+Arabic literature. He holds much the same rank in Arabic
+letters as Pope and Boileau in the literature of England
+and France and may, with much better reason, be styled "le
+legislateur du Parnasse (Arabe)." He was a native of Bassora
+and died early in the twelfth century.
+
+[FN#186] i.e. the languishing glance of his eye.
+
+[FN#187] i.e. his whiskers.
+
+[FN#188] Koran xii. 51.
+
+[FN#189] Or quare palm-spathes.
+
+[FN#190] Or quare "an exposition of women."
+
+[FN#191] Koran xxvi. 165, 166.
+
+[FN#192] i.e. the whiteness of his face.
+
+[FN#193] Or "freeborn," the Arabic word used here having this
+double meaning. The Arabs hold that the child of freeborn
+parents (Lat. ingenuus) must of necessity be noble and those
+born of slave parents or a slave mother the contrary.
+
+[FN#194] Or "freeborn," the Arabic word used here having this
+double meaning. The Arabs hold that the child of freeborn
+parents (Lat. ingenuus) must of necessity be noble and those
+born of slave parents or a slave mother the contrary.
+
+[FN#195] A famous statesman, soldier, poet and musician,
+governor of Khorassan, Egypt and other provinces under the
+Khalif El Mamoun.
+
+[FN#196] Abou Abdallah ibn el Casim el Hashimi, surnamed Abou
+el Ainaa, a blind traditionist and man of letters of Bassora,
+in the ninth century, and one of the most celebrated wits of
+his day.
+
+[FN#197] An island near Cairo, on which is situate the
+Nilometer. It is a favourite pleasure-resort of the Cairenes.
+
+[FN#198] The port of Cairo.
+
+[FN#199] i.e. the report of its being haunted.
+
+[FN#200] i.e. by the Sortes Coranicæ or other similar process.
+
+[FN#201] The word shabb (young man) is applied by the Arabs to
+men of all ages from early adolescence to forty or even
+(according to some authorities) fifty.
+
+[FN#202] i.e. recited the first chapter of the Koran seven
+times.
+
+[FN#203] i.e. affixed the tughraa, the royal seal or rather
+countermark.
+
+[FN#204] i.e. health and security.
+
+[FN#205] See Vol. III. p. 225, note 1. {Vol. 3 FN#78}
+
+[FN#206] A pile of stones or other land-mark, set up to show
+the way to travellers in the desert.
+
+[FN#207] The eyebrows of a beautiful woman are usually compared
+to the new moon of Ramazan (see note, Vol. I. p. 71 {see Vol. 1
+FN#26}). The meaning here is the same, the allusion being
+apparently to the eagerness with which the pagan Arabs may be
+supposed to have watched for the appearance of the new moon of
+Shaaban, as giving the signal for the renewal of predatory
+excursions, after the enforced close-time or Trêve de Dieu of
+the holy month Rejeb.
+
+[FN#208] Quære fourteen [years old].
+
+[FN#209] i.e. the abrogated passages and those by which they
+are abrogated.
+
+[FN#210] Koran iv. 160.
+
+[FN#211] Traditions of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#212] i.e. saying, "I purpose to pray such and such
+prayers."
+
+[FN#213] i.e. saying, "God is most Great!" So called, because
+its pronunciation after that of the niyeh or intent, prohibits
+the speaking of any words previous to prayer.
+
+[FN#214] i.e. saying, "I purpose, etc."
+
+[FN#215] i.e. saying, "I purpose, etc."
+
+[FN#216] i.e. saying, "In the name of God, etc."
+
+[FN#217] i.e. saying, "I purpose, etc."
+
+[FN#218] It may be noted that these answers of Taweddud form an
+excellent compendium of devotional practice, according to the
+tenets of the Shafy school.
+
+[FN#219] Obligatory as a preparation for the Friday prayer and
+on other occasions when legal purification is necessary.
+
+[FN#220] i.e. saying, "I purpose to defer, etc."
+
+[FN#221] i.e. with sand, earth or dust.
+
+[FN#222] i.e. saying, "Peace be on us and [all] the righteous
+worshippers of God!"
+
+[FN#223] i.e. saying, "I seek refuge with God from Satan the
+accursed."
+
+[FN#224] i.e. saying, "I purpose, etc."
+
+[FN#225] Lit. that the intent shall be by night.
+
+[FN#226] At sundown.
+
+[FN#227] Eaten a little before the break of day, the fast
+commencing as soon as there is light enough to distinguish a
+black thread from a white and lasting till sunset.
+
+[FN#228] A saying of Mohammed.
+
+[FN#229] i.e. retirement to a mosque for pious exercises,
+equivalent to the Roman Catholic retraite.
+
+[FN#230] Two hills near Mecca.
+
+[FN#231] On first catching sight of Mecca.
+
+[FN#232] Places near Mecca.
+
+[FN#233] At a pillar supposed to represent the Devil.
+
+[FN#234] Or chief of the faith.
+
+[FN#235] Koran vii. 66.
+
+[FN#236] One of the followers of Mohammed, i.e. those who had
+known some of the Companions [of the Prophet] though they had
+never seen himself. The freedman [and adopted son] of Abdallah,
+son of Omar ben El Khettab, the most authoritative of all the
+Companions and reporters of the sayings and doings of the
+Prophet.
+
+[FN#237] i.e. at a profit. The exchange must be equal and
+profitless.
+
+[FN#238] Ablution.
+
+[FN#239] Complete ablution.
+
+[FN#240] Poor-rate.
+
+[FN#241] Warring for the Faith.
+
+[FN#242] i.e. saying, "I testify that there is no God, etc."
+
+[FN#243] i.e. fundamentals.
+
+[FN#244] i.e. derivatives.
+
+[FN#245] i.e. the true believers.
+
+[FN#246] i.e. death.
+
+[FN#247] i.e. that which does not require to be cut with a
+knife. "Cut not meat with a knife, because it is of the manners
+and customs of the barbarians; but eat it with your teeth."--
+Mishcat ul Masabih.
+
+[FN#248] Or "being a Muslim."
+
+[FN#249] Apparently referring to the verse, "The earth all
+[shall be] His handful [on the] Day of Resurrection and the
+heavens rolled up in His right [hand]."--Koran xxxix. 67.
+
+[FN#250] See Vol. II. p. 126, note. {Vol. 2, FN#76}
+
+[FN#251] Koran lxxviii. 19.
+
+[FN#252] Of the unity of God.
+
+[FN#253] i.e. professor of Koranic exegesis.
+
+[FN#254] i.e. portions so called.
+
+[FN#255] Heber.
+
+[FN#256] Jethro.
+
+[FN#257] Joshua.
+
+[FN#258] Enoch.
+
+[FN#259] John the Baptist.
+
+[FN#260] i.e. the bird of clay fabled by the Koran (following
+the Apocryphal Gospel of the childhood of Christ) to have been
+animated by him.
+
+[FN#261] Koran ii.
+
+[FN#262] Koran ii. 256, "God, there is no god but He, the
+Living, the Eternal. Slumber taketh him not, neither sleep, and
+His is what is in the heavens and what is in the earth. Who is
+he that intercedeth with Him but by His leave? He knoweth what
+is before them and what is behind them, nor do they comprehend
+aught of the knowledge of Him but of what He willeth. His
+throne embraceth the heavens and the earth and the guarding of
+them oppresseth Him not, for He is the Most High, the Supreme."
+
+[FN#263] Koran ii. 159.
+
+[FN#264] Koran xvi. 92.
+
+[FN#265] Paradise, Koran lxx. 38.
+
+[FN#266] Koran xxxix. 54.
+
+[FN#267] See note, p. 338 supra. {Vol. 4, FN#236}
+
+[FN#268] Koran xii. 18.
+
+[FN#269] Koran ii. 107.
+
+[FN#270] Koran li. 57.
+
+[FN#271] Koran ii. 28.
+
+[FN#272] Koran xvi. 100. The Muslims fable the devil to have
+tempted Abraham to disobey God's commandment to sacrifice
+Ishmael (Isaac) and to have been driven off by the Patriarch
+with stones. Hence he is called "The Stoned."
+
+[FN#273] Abdallah ibn Abbas, first cousin of Mohammed and the
+most learned theologian among the Companions.
+
+[FN#274] Koran xcvi. 1 and 2.
+
+[FN#275] Koran xxvii. 30.
+
+[FN#276] Koran ix.
+
+[FN#277] i.e. the day of the sacrifice at Mina, which completes
+the ceremonies of the pilgrimage.
+
+[FN#278] The better opinion seems to be that this omission
+(unique in the Koran) arose from the ninth chapter having
+originally formed part of the eighth, from which it was
+separated after Mohammed's death.
+
+[FN#279] Koran xvii. 110.
+
+[FN#280] Koran ii. 158.
+
+[FN#281] i.e. him who seals or closes the list of the prophets.
+
+[FN#282] C. xcvi.
+
+[FN#283] A native of Medina and one of the first of Mohammed's
+disciples.
+
+[FN#284] Koran lxxiv.
+
+[FN#285] There are several verses on this subject.
+
+[FN#286] Koran cx. 1.
+
+[FN#287] The third Khalif.
+
+[FN#288] Companions of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#289] One of the Followers.
+
+[FN#290] Koran v. 4.
+
+[FN#291] Koran v. 116.
+
+[FN#292] In the same verse.
+
+[FN#293] Koran v. 89.
+
+[FN#294] Ez Zuhak ben Sufyan, one of the Companions.
+
+[FN#295] One of the Followers.
+
+[FN#296] Koran iv. 124.
+
+[FN#297] i.e. without hesitation or interruption.
+
+[FN#298] Kaf, the 21st letter of the Arabic alphabet.
+
+[FN#299] Mim, the 24th letter of the Arabic alphabet.
+
+[FN#300] Ain, the 18th letter of the Arabic alphabet.
+
+[FN#301] The Koran is divided into sixty set portions,
+answering or equivalent to our Lessons, for convenience of use
+in public worship.
+
+[FN#302] Koran xi. 50.
+
+[FN#303] Name of the partition-wall between heaven and hell.
+
+[FN#304] Koran vii. 154.
+
+[FN#305] A play on the word ain, which means "eye."
+
+[FN#306] Chapters liv. lv. and lvi.
+
+[FN#307] i e. ankle.
+
+[FN#308] Koran xvii. 39.
+
+[FN#309] Two stars in Aquarius and Capricorn.
+
+[FN#310] Or chief part, lit. head.
+
+[FN#311] Or remedial treatment.
+
+[FN#312] Quare hot springs.
+
+[FN#313] A dish of crumpled bread and broth.
+
+[FN#314] Or savoury supplement to bread, rice and so forth.
+
+[FN#315] Koran v. 92.
+
+[FN#316] Koran ii. 216.
+
+[FN#317] Played with headless arrows.
+
+[FN#318] The fourth Khalif.
+
+[FN#319] The Korah of Numbers xvi. fabled by the Muslims
+(following a Talmudic tradition) to have been a man of immense
+wealth. "Now Caroun was of the tribe of Moses [and Aaron], but
+he transgressed against them and we gave him treasures, the
+keys whereof would bear down a company of men of strength."--
+Koran xxviii. 76.
+
+[FN#320] Syn. bearing a load (hamil).
+
+[FN#321] Koran lxx. 40.
+
+[FN#322] Koran x. 5.
+
+[FN#323] Koran xxxvi. 40.
+
+[FN#324] Koran xxii. 60.
+
+[FN#325] Koran xxxi. 34.
+
+[FN#326] Fifth and seventh months of the Coptic year, answering
+(roughly) to our January and March.
+
+[FN#327] Fifth and seventh months of the Coptic year, answering
+(roughly) to our January and March.
+
+[FN#328] Fourth month of the Coptic year.
+
+[FN#329] Eighth and twelfth months of the Coptic year (April
+and August).
+
+[FN#330] Third month (November) of the Coptic year.
+
+[FN#331] Sixth month (February) of the Coptic year.
+
+[FN#332] The lowest of the seven stages into which Mohammedan
+tradition divides the heavens.
+
+[FN#333] Koran lxxvii. 5.
+
+[FN#334] Koran xxxvi. 36, 37, 38.
+
+[FN#335] Koran xxii. 7.
+
+[FN#336] Koran xx. 57.
+
+[FN#337] A she-camel, big with young, miraculously produced,
+according to Muslim legend, from a rock by the Prophet Salih,
+for the purpose of converting the Themoudites.
+
+[FN#338] Where he was hiding with Mohammed from the pursuit of
+the Benou Curaish.
+
+[FN#339] Koran lxxxi. 18.
+
+[FN#340] In Paradise.
+
+[FN#341] Sperma hominis.
+
+[FN#342] The Muslims attribute this miracle to Moses, instead
+of Aaron. See Koran vii. 110 et seq.
+
+[FN#343] [Quoth God] "What is that in thy right hand, O Moses?"
+Quoth he, "It is my staff, on which I lean and wherewith I beat
+down leaves for my flock, and I have other uses for it."--Koran
+xx. 18, 19.
+
+[FN#344] Then He turned to the heaven (now it was smoke) and
+said to it and to the earth, "Come ye twain, obedient or
+loathing." And they said both, "We come, obedient."--Koran xli.
+10.
+
+[FN#345] Koran xxxvi. 82.
+
+[FN#346] Ali ibn Abi Taleb, first cousin of Mohammed and fourth
+Khalif.
+
+[FN#347] Uncle of Mohammed and ancestor of the Abbaside
+Khalifs.
+
+[FN#348] Lit. gave him to eat of it.
+
+[FN#349] Assuming him to be dead.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Book Of The Thousand Nights And
+One Night, Volume IV, by Anonymous
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 1001 NIGHTS, VOL IV ***
+
+***** This file should be named 8658-8.txt or 8658-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/8/6/5/8658/
+
+Produced by JC Byers, Graeme Houston, Renate Preuss, Coralee
+Sheehan, Marryann Short, and Anne Soulard
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
+be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
+law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
+so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
+States without permission and without paying copyright
+royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
+of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
+and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
+specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
+eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
+for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
+performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
+away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
+not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
+trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
+
+START: FULL LICENSE
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
+Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
+www.gutenberg.org/license.
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
+destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
+possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
+Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
+by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
+person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
+1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
+agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
+Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
+of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
+works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
+States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
+United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
+claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
+displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
+all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
+that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
+free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
+works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
+Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
+comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
+same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
+you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
+in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
+check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
+agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
+distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
+other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
+representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
+country outside the United States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
+immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
+prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
+on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
+performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
+
+ This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+ most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
+ restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
+ under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
+ eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
+ United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
+ are located before using this ebook.
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
+derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
+contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
+copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
+the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
+redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
+either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
+obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
+trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
+additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
+will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
+posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
+beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
+any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
+to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
+other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
+version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
+(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
+to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
+of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
+Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
+full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+provided that
+
+* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
+ to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
+ agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
+ within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
+ legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
+ payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
+ Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
+ Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
+ Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
+ copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
+ all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
+ works.
+
+* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
+ any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
+ receipt of the work.
+
+* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
+are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
+from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
+Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
+Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
+contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
+or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
+other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
+cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
+with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
+with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
+lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
+or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
+opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
+the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
+without further opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
+OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
+damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
+violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
+agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
+limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
+unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
+remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
+accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
+production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
+including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
+the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
+or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
+additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
+Defect you cause.
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
+computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
+exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
+from people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
+generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
+Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
+www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
+U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
+mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
+volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
+locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
+Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
+date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
+official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
+
+For additional contact information:
+
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
+DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
+state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
+donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
+freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
+distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
+volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
+the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
+necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
+edition.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
+facility: www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
diff --git a/8658-8.zip b/8658-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..73e009b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/8658-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6a97a02
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #8658 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/8658)
diff --git a/old/41001107a.txt b/old/41001107a.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d243114
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/41001107a.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,14683 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Book Of The Thousand Nights And One Night, Volume IV
+by Anonymous
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
+
+This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project
+Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the
+header without written permission.
+
+Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the
+eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is
+important information about your specific rights and restrictions in
+how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a
+donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: The Book Of The Thousand Nights And One Night, Volume IV
+
+Author: Anonymous
+
+Translator: John Payne
+
+Release Date: August, 2005 [EBook #8658]
+[This file was first posted on July 30, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, THE BOOK OF THE THOUSAND NIGHTS AND ONE NIGHT, VOLUME IV ***
+
+
+
+
+Text scanned by JC Byers (www.wollamshram.ca/1001) and proofread by
+JC Byers, Graeme Houston, Renate Preuss, Coralee Sheehan, Marryann
+Short, and Anne Soulard
+
+
+Editorial Note: Project Gutenberg also has the translation of this work by
+ Richard F. Burton in 16 volumes.
+
+
+
+
+ THE BOOK OF THE THOUSAND NIGHTS AND ONE NIGHT:
+
+ Now First Completely Done Into English
+ Prose and Verse, From The Original Arabic,
+
+ By John Payne
+(Author of "The Masque of Shadows," "Intaglios: Sonnets," "Songs
+ of Life and Death,"
+ "Lautrec," "The Poems of Master Francis Villon of Paris," "New
+ Poems," Etc, Etc.).
+
+ In Nine Volumes:
+
+
+
+ VOLUME THE FOURTH.
+
+
+
+ 1901
+
+ Delhi Edition
+
+
+ Contents of The Fourth Volume.
+
+
+
+1. The Imam Abou Yousuf With Haroun er Reshid and his Vizier
+ Jaafer
+2. The Lover Who Feigned Himself a Thief to save His Mistress's
+ Honour
+3. Jaafer the Barmecide and the Bean-seller
+4. Abou Mohammed the Lazy
+5. Yehya Ben Khalid and Mensour
+6. Yehya Ben Khalid and the Man Who Forged a Letter in His Name
+7. The Khalif el Mamoun and the Strange Doctor
+8. Ali Shar and Zumurrud
+9. The Loves of Jubeir Ben Umeir and the Lady Budour
+10. The Man of Yemen and His Six Slave Girls
+11. Haroun er Reshid with the Damsel and Abou Nuwas
+12. The Man Who Stole The Dog's Dish of Gold
+13. The Sharper of Alexandria and the Master of Police
+14. El Melik en Nasir and the Three Masters of Police
+ a. Story of the Chief of the New Cairo Police
+ b. Story of the Chief of the Boulac Police
+ c. Story of the chief of the Old Cairo Police
+15. The Thief and the Money-Changer
+16. The Chief of the Cous Police and the Sharper
+17. Ibrahim Ben el Mehdi and the Merchant's Sister
+18. The Woman Whose Hands Were Cut Off For Almsgiving
+19. The Devout Israelite
+20. Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi and the Man From Khorassan
+21. The Poor Man and his Generous Friend
+22. The Ruined Man Who Became Rich Again Through a Dream
+23. El Mutawekkil and his Favourite Mehboubeh
+24. Werdan the Butcher's Adventure with the Lady and the Bear
+25. The King's Daughter and the Ape
+26. The Enchanted Horse
+27. Uns El Eoujoud and the Vizier's Daughter Rose-in-Bud
+28. Abou Nuwas with the Three Boys and the Khalif Haroun er
+ Reshid
+29. Abdallah Ben Maamer with the Man of Bassora and His Slave
+ Girl
+30. The Lovers of the Benou Udhreh
+31. The Vizier of Yemen and His Young Brother
+32. Loves of the Boy and Girl at School
+33. El Mutelemmis and His Wife Umeimeh
+34. Haroun er Reshid and Zubeideh in the Bath
+35. Haroun er Reshid and the Three Poets
+36. Musab Ben ez Zubeir and Aaisheh His Wife
+37. Aboulasweh and His Squinting Slave Girl
+38. Haroun er Reshid ad the Two Girls
+39. Hroun er Reshid and the Three Girls
+40. The Miller and his Wife
+41. The Simpleton and the Sharper
+42. The Imam Abou Yousuf with Haroun er Reshid and Zubeideh
+43. The Khalif el Hakim and the Merchant
+44. King Kisra Anoushirwan and the Village Damsel
+45. The Water-Carrier and the Goldsmith's Wife
+46. Khusrau and Shirin and the Fisherman
+47. Yehya Ben Khalid and the Poor Man
+48. Mohammed El Amin and Jaafer Ben el Hadi
+49. Said Ben Salim and the Barmecides
+50. The Woman's Trick Against Her Husband
+51. The Devout Woman and the Two Wicked Elders
+52. Jaafer the Barmecide and the Old Bedouin
+53. Omar Ben Khettab and the Young Bedouin
+54. El Mamoun and the Pyramids of Egypt
+55. The Thief Turned Merchant and the Other Thief
+56. Mesrour and Ibn El Caribi
+57. The Devout Prince
+58. The Schoolmaster Who Fell in Love by Report
+59. The Foolish Schoolmaster
+60. The Ignorant Man Who Set up For a Schoolmaster
+61. The King and the Virtuous Wife
+62. Abdurrehman the Moor's Story of the Roc
+63. Adi Ben Zeid and the Princess Hind
+64. Dibil el Khuzai With the Lady and Muslim Ben el Welid
+65. Isaac of Mosul and the Merchant
+66. The Three Unfortunate Lovers
+67. The Lovers of the Benou Tai
+68. The Mad Lover
+69. The Apples of Paradise
+70. The Loves of Abou Isa and Current El Ain
+71. El Amin and His Uncle Ibrahim Ben el Mehdi
+72. El Feth Ben Khacan and El Mutawekkil
+73. The Man's Dispute with the Learned Woman of the Relative
+ Excellence of the Male and the Female
+74. Abou Suweid and the Handsome Old Woman
+75. Ali Ben Tahir and the Birl Mounis
+76. The Woman Who Has a Boy and the Other Who Had a Man to Lover
+77. The Haunted House in Baghdad
+78. The Pilgrim and the Old Woman Who Dwelt in the Desert
+79. Aboulhusn and His Slave Girl Taweddud
+
+
+
+
+ THE BOOK OF THE THOUSAND NIGHTS
+ AND ONE NIGHT
+
+
+
+
+ HOW THE IMAM ABOU YOUSUF EXTRICATED THE
+ KHALIF HAROUN ER RESHID AND HIS VIZIER
+ JAAFER FROM A DILEMMA.
+
+
+
+It is said that Jaafer the Barmecide was one night carousing with
+Er Reshid, when the latter said to him, 'O Jaafer, I hear that
+thou hast bought such and such a slave-girl. Now I have long
+sought her and my heart is taken up with love of her, for she is
+passing fair; so do thou sell her to me.' 'O Commander of the
+Faithful,' replied Jaafer, 'I will not sell her.' 'Then give her
+to me,' rejoined the Khalif. 'Nor will I give her,' answered
+Jaafer. 'Be Zubeideh triply divorced,' exclaimed Haroun, 'if
+thou shalt not either sell or give her to me!' Quoth Jaafer, 'Be
+my wife triply divorced, if I either sell or give her to thee!'
+After awhile they recovered from their intoxication and were ware
+that they had fallen into a grave dilemma, but knew not how to
+extricate themselves. Then said Er Reshid, 'None can help us in
+this strait but Abou Yousuf.'[FN#1] So they sent for him, and
+this was in the middle of the night. When the messenger reached
+the Imam, he arose in alarm, saying in himself, 'I should not be
+sent for at this hour, save by reason of some crisis in Islam.'
+So he went out in haste and mounted his mule, saying to his
+servant, 'Take the mule's nose-bag with thee; it may be she has
+not finished her feed; and when we come to the Khalif's palace,
+put the bag on her, that she may eat what is left of her fodder,
+whilst I am with the Khalif.' 'I hear and obey,' replied the man.
+
+So the Imam rode to the palace and was admitted to the presence
+of Er Reshid, who made him sit down on the couch beside himself,
+whereas he was used to seat none but him, and said to him, 'We
+have sent for thee at this hour to advise us upon a grave matter,
+with which we know not how to deal' And he expounded to him the
+case. 'O Commander of the Faithful,' replied Abou Yousuf, 'this
+is the easiest of things.' Then he turned to Jaafer and said to
+him, 'O Jaafer, sell half of her to the Commander of the Faithful
+and give him the other half; so shall ye both be quit of your
+oaths.' The Khalif was delighted with this and they did as he
+prescribed. Then said Er Reshid, 'Bring me the girl at once, for
+I long for her exceedingly.' So they brought her and the Khalif
+said to Abou Yousuf, 'I have a mind to lie with her forthright;
+for I cannot endure to abstain from her during the prescribed
+period of purification; how is this to be done?' 'Bring me one of
+thine unenfranchised male slaves,' answered the Imam, 'and give
+me leave to marry her to him; then let him divorce her before
+consummation. So shall it be lawful for thee to lie with her
+before purification.' This expedient pleased the Khalif yet more
+than the first and he sent for the slave. When he came, Er Reshid
+said to the Imam, 'I authorize thee to marry her to him.' So the
+Imam proposed the marriage to the slave, who accepted it, and
+performed the due ceremony; after which he said to the slave,
+'Divorce her, and thou shalt have a hundred diners.' But he
+refused to do this and the Imam went on to increase his offer,
+till he bid him a thousand diners. Then said the slave to him,
+'Doth it rest with me to divorce her, or with thee or the
+Commander of the Faithful?' 'With thee,' answered the Imam.
+'Then, by Allah,' quoth the slave, 'I will never do it!'
+
+At this the Khalif was exceeding wroth and said to the Imam,
+'What is to be done, O Abou Yousuf?' 'Be not concerned, O
+Commander of the Faithful,' replied the Imam; 'the thing is easy.
+Make this slave the damsel's property.' Quoth Er Reshid, 'I give
+him to her;' and the Imam said to the girl, 'Say, "I accept."' So
+she said, 'I accept:' whereupon quoth Abou Yousuf, 'I pronounce
+divorce between them, for that he hath become her property, and
+so the marriage is annulled.' With this, Er Reshid sprang to his
+feet and exclaimed, 'It is the like of thee that shall be Cadi in
+my time.' Then he called for sundry trays of gold and emptied
+them before Abou Yousuf, to whom he said, 'Hast thou wherein to
+put this ?' The Imam bethought him of the mule's nose-bag; so he
+sent for it and filling it with gold, took it and went home; and
+on the morrow, he said to his friends, 'There is no easier or
+shorter road to the goods of this world and the next, than that
+of learning; for, see, I have received all this money for
+answering two or three questions.' Consider, then, O polite
+[reader], the pleasantness of this anecdote, for it comprises
+divers goodly features, amongst which are the complaisance of
+Jaafer to Er Reshid and the wisdom[FN#2] of the Khalif and the
+exceeding wisdom of Abou Yousuf, may God the Most High have mercy
+on all their souls!
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVER WHO FEIGNED HIMSELF A THIEF TO
+ SAVE HIS MISTRESS'S HONOUR.
+
+
+
+There came one day to Khalid ibn Abdallah el Kesri,[FN#3]
+governor of Bassora, a company of men dragging a youth of
+exceeding beauty and lofty bearing, whose aspect expressed good
+breeding and dignity and abundant wit They brought him before the
+governor, who asked what was to do with him, and they replied,
+'This fellow is a thief, whom we caught last night in our
+dwelling.' Khalid looked at him and was struck with wonder at his
+well-favouredness and elegance; so he said to the others, 'Loose
+him,' and going up to the young man, asked what he had to say for
+himself. 'The folk have spoken truly,' answered he; 'and the case
+is as they have said.' 'And what moved thee to this,' asked
+Khalid, 'and thou so noble and comely of aspect?' 'The lust
+after worldly good,' replied the other, 'and the ordinance of
+God, glorified and exalted be He!' 'May thy mother be bereaved of
+thee!' rejoined Khalid. 'Hadst thou not, in thy fair face and
+sound sense and good breeding, what should restrain thee from
+thieving?' 'O Amir,' answered the young man, 'leave this talk
+and proceed to what God the Most High hath ordained; this is
+what my hands have earned, and God is no oppressor of His
+creatures.'[FN#4] Khalid was silent awhile, considering the
+matter; then he said to the young man, 'Verily, thy confession
+before witnesses perplexes me, for I cannot believe thee to be a
+thief. Surely thou hast some story that is other than one of
+theft. Tell it me'. 'O Amir,' replied the youth, 'deem thou
+nought save what I have confessed; for I have no story other than
+that I entered these folk's house and stole what I could lay
+hands on, and they caught me and took the stuff from me and
+carried me before thee.' Then Khalid bade clap him in prison and
+commanded a crier to make proclamation throughout Bassora,
+saying, 'Ho, whoso is minded to look upon the punishment of such
+an one, the thief, and the cutting off of his hand, let him be
+present tomorrow morning at such a place!'
+
+When the youth found himself in prison, with irons on his feet,
+he sighed heavily and repeated the following verses, whilst the
+tears streamed from his eyes:
+
+Khalid doth threaten me with cutting off my hand, Except I do
+ reveal to him my mistress' case.
+But, "God forbid," quoth I, "that I should e'er reveal That which
+ of love for her my bosom doth embrace!"
+The cutting-off my hand, for that I have confessed Unto, less
+ grievous were to me than her disgrace.
+
+The warders heard him and went and told Khalid, who sent for the
+youth after nightfall and conversed with him. He found him
+well-bred and intelligent and of a pleasant and vivacious wit; so
+he ordered him food and he ate. Then said Khalid, 'I know thou
+hast a story to tell that is no thief's; so, when the Cadi comes
+to-morrow morning and questions thee before the folk, do thou
+deny the charge of theft and avouch what may avert the cutting-off
+of thy hand; for the Prophet (whom God bless and preserve) saith,
+"In cases of doubt, eschew [or defer] punishment."' Then he sent
+him back to the prison, where he passed the night.
+
+On the morrow, the folk assembled to see his hand cut off, nor
+was there man or woman in Bassora but came forth to look upon his
+punishment. Then Khalid mounted in company of the notables of the
+city and others and summoning the Cadi, sent for the young man,
+who came, hobbling in his shackles. There none saw him but wept
+for him, and the women lifted up their voices in lamentation. The
+Cadi bade silence the women and said to the prisoner, 'These
+folk avouch that thou didst enter their dwelling and steal their
+goods: belike thou stolest less than a quarter dinar?'[FN#5]
+'Nay,' replied he, 'I stole more than that.' 'Peradventure,'
+rejoined the Cadi, 'thou art partner with them in some of the
+goods?' 'Not so,' replied the young man; 'it was all theirs. I
+had no right in it.' At this Khalid was wroth and rose and smote
+him on the face with his whip, applying this verse to his own
+case:
+
+Man wisheth and seeketh his wish to fulfil, But Allah denieth
+ save that which He will.
+
+Then he called for the executioner, who came and taking the
+prisoner's hand, set the knife to it and was about to cut it off,
+when, behold, a damsel, clad in tattered clothes, pressed through
+the crowd of women and cried out and threw herself on the young
+man. Then she unveiled and showed a face like the moon; whereupon
+the people raised a mighty clamour and there was like to have
+been a riot amongst them. But she cried out her loudest, saying,
+'I conjure thee, by Allah, O Amir, hasten not to cut off this
+man's hand, till thou have read what is in this scroll!' So
+saying, she gave him a scroll, and he took it and read therein
+the following verses:
+
+O Khalid, this man is love-maddened, a cave of desire, Transfixed
+ by the glances that sped from the bows of my eye.
+The shafts of my looks 'twas that pierced him and slew him;
+ indeed, He a bondsman of love, sick for passion and like for
+ to die.
+Yea, rather a crime, that he wrought not, he choose to confess
+ Than suffer on her whom he cherished dishonour to lie.
+Have ruth on a sorrowful lover; indeed he's no thief, But the
+ noblest and truest of mortals for passion that sigh.
+
+When he had read this, he called the girl apart and questioned
+her; and she told him that the young man was her lover and she
+his mistress. He came to the dwelling of her people, thinking to
+visit her, and threw a stone into the house, to warn her of his
+coming. Her father and brothers heard the noise of the stone and
+sallied out on him; but he, hearing them coming, caught up all
+the household stuff and made as if he would have stolen it, to
+cover his mistress's honour. 'So they seized him,' continued she,
+'saying, "A thief!" and brought him before thee, whereupon he
+confessed to the robbery and persisted in his confession, that he
+might spare me dishonour; and this he did, making himself a
+thief, of the exceeding nobility and generosity of his nature.'
+
+'He is indeed worthy to have his desire,' replied Khalid and
+calling the young man to him, kissed him between the eyes. Then
+he sent for the girl's father and bespoke him, saying, 'O elder,
+we thought to punish this young man by cutting off his hand; but
+God (to whom belong might and majesty) hath preserved us from
+this! and I now adjudge him the sum of ten thousand dirhems, for
+that he would have sacrificed his hand for the preservation of
+thine honour and that of thy daughter and the sparing you both
+reproach. Moreover, I adjudge other ten thousand dirhems to thy
+daughter, for that she made known to me the truth of the case;
+and I ask thy leave to marry him to her.' 'O Amir,' rejoined the
+old man, 'thou hast my consent.' So Khalid praised God and
+thanked Him and offered up a goodly exhortation and prayer; after
+which he said to the young man, 'I give thee this damsel to wife,
+with her own and her father's consent; and her dowry shall be
+this money, to wit, ten thousand dirhems. 'I accept this marriage
+at thy hands,' replied the youth and Khalid let carry the money
+on trays in procession to the young man's house, whilst the
+people dispersed, full of gladness. And surely [quoth he who
+tells the tale[FN#6]] never saw I a rarer day than this, for that
+its beginning was weeping and affliction and its end joy and
+gladness.
+
+
+
+
+ JAAFER THE BARMECIDE AND THE BEANSELLER.
+
+
+
+When Haroun er Reshid put Jaafer the Barmecide to death, he
+commanded that all who wept or made moan for him should be
+crucified; so the folk abstained from this. Now there was a
+Bedouin from a distant desert, who used every year to make and
+bring to Jaafer an ode in his honour, for which he rewarded him
+with a thousand diners; and the Bedouin took them and returning
+to his own country, lived upon them, he and his family, for the
+rest of the year. Accordingly, he came with his ode at the wonted
+time and finding Jaafer done to death, betook himself to the
+place where his body was hanging, and there made his camel kneel
+down and wept sore and mourned grievously. Then he recited his
+ode and fell asleep. In his sleep Jaafer the Barmecide appeared
+to him and said, 'Thou hast wearied thyself to come to us and
+findest us as thou seest; but go to Bassora and ask for such a
+man there of the merchants of the town and say to him, "Jaafer
+the Barmecide salutes thee and bids thee give me a thousand
+diners, by the token of the bean."'
+
+When the Bedouin awoke, he repaired to Bassora, where he sought
+out the merchant and repeated to him what Jaafer had said in the
+dream; whereupon he wept sore, till he was like to depart the
+world. Then he welcomed the Bedouin and entertained him three
+days as an honoured guest; and when he was minded to depart, he
+gave him a thousand and five hundred diners, saying, 'The
+thousand are what is commanded to thee, and the five hundred are
+a gift from me to thee; and every year thou shalt have of me a
+thousand diners.' When the Bedouin was about to take leave, he
+said to the merchant, 'I conjure thee, by Allah, tell me the
+story of the bean, that I may know the origin of all this.' 'In
+the early part of my life,' replied the merchant, 'I was
+miserably poor and hawked hot boiled beans about the streets of
+Baghdad for a living.
+
+I went out one cold, rainy day, without clothes enough on my body
+to protect me from the weather, now shivering for excess of cold
+and now stumbling into the pools of rain-water, and altogether in
+so piteous a plight as would make one shudder to look upon. Now
+it chanced that Jaafer was seated that day, with his officers and
+favourites, in an upper chamber overlooking the street, and his
+eye fell on me; so he took pity on my case and sending one of his
+servants to fetch me to him, said to me, "Sell thy beans to my
+people." So I began to mete out the beans with a measure I had
+with me, and each who took a measure of beans filled the vessel
+with gold pieces, till the basket was empty. Then I gathered
+together the money I had gotten, and Jaafer said to me, "Hast
+thou any beans left?" "I know not," answered I and sought in the
+basket, but found only one bean. This Jaafer took and splitting
+it in twain, kept one half himself and gave the other to one of
+his favourites, saying, "For how much wilt thou buy this
+half-bean?" "For the tale of all this money twice-told," replied
+she; whereat I was confounded and said in myself, "This is
+impossible." But, as I stood wondering, she gave an order to one
+of her handmaids and the girl brought me the amount twice-told.
+Then said Jaafer, "And I will buy my half for twice the sum of
+the whole. Take the price of thy bean." And he gave an order to
+one of his servants, who gathered together the whole of the money
+and laid it in my basket; and I took it and departed. Then I
+betook myself to Bassora, where I traded with the money and God
+prospered me, to Him be the praise and the thanks! So, if I give
+thee a thousand diners a year of the bounty of Jaafer, it will in
+no wise irk me.' Consider then the munificence of Jaafer's nature
+and how he was praised both alive and dead, the mercy of God the
+Most High be upon him!
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOU MOHAMMED THE LAZY.
+
+
+
+It is told that Haroun er Reshid was sitting one day on the
+throne of the Khalifate, when there came in to him a youth of his
+eunuchs, bearing a crown of red gold, set with pearls and rubies
+and all manner other jewels, such as money might not buy, and
+kissing the ground before him, said, 'O Commander of the
+Faithful, the lady Zubeideh kisses the earth before thee and
+saith to thee, thou knowest she hath let make this crown, which
+lacks a great jewel for its top; and she hath made search among
+her treasures, but cannot find a jewel to her mind.' Quoth the
+Khalif to his chamberlains and officers, 'Make search for a
+great jewel, such as Zubeideh desires.' So they sought, but found
+nothing befitting her and told the Khalif, who was vexed thereat
+and exclaimed, 'Am I Khalif and king of the kings of the earth
+and lack of a jewel? Out on ye! Enquire of the merchants.' So
+they enquired of the merchants, who replied, 'Our lord the Khalif
+will not find a jewel such as he requires save with a man of
+Bassora, by name Abou Mohammed the Lazy.' They acquainted the
+Khalif with this and he bade his Vizier Jaafer send a letter to
+the Amir Mohammed ez Zubeidi, governor of Bassora, commanding him
+to equip Abou Mohammed the Lazy and bring him to Baghdad.
+
+Jaafer accordingly wrote a letter to that effect and despatched
+it by Mesrour, who set out forthright for Bassora and went in to
+the governor, who rejoiced in him and entreated him with the
+utmost honour. Then Mesrour read him the Khalif's mandate, to
+which he replied, 'I hear and obey,' and forthwith despatched
+him, with a company of his followers, to Abou Mohammed's house.
+When they reached it, they knocked at the door, whereupon a
+servant came out and Mesrour said to him, 'Tell thy master that
+the Commander of the Faithful calls for him.' The servant went in
+and told his master, who came out and found Mesrour, the Khalif's
+chamberlain, and a company of the governor's men at the door. So
+he kissed the earth before Mesrour and said, 'I hear and obey the
+summons of the Commander of the Faithful; but enter ye my house.'
+'We cannot do that,' replied Mesrour, 'save in haste; for the
+Commander of the Faithful awaits thy coming.' But he said, 'Have
+patience with me a little, till I set my affairs in order.' So,
+after much pressure and persuasion, they entered and found the
+corridor hung with curtains of blue brocade, figured with gold,
+and Abou Mohammed bade one of his servants carry Mesrour to the
+bath. Now this bath was in the house and Mesrour found its walls
+and floor of rare and precious marbles, wrought with gold and
+silver, and its waters mingled with rose-water. The servants
+served Mesrour and his company on the most perfect wise and clad
+them, on their going forth of the bath, in robes of honour of
+brocade, interwoven with gold.
+
+Then they went in to Abou Mohammed and found him seated in his
+upper chamber upon a couch inlaid with jewels. Over his head hung
+curtains of gold brocade, wrought with pearls and jewels, and the
+place was spread with cushions, embroidered in red gold. When he
+saw Mesrour, he rose to receive him and bidding him welcome,
+seated him by his side. Then he called for food: so they brought
+the table of food, which when Mesrour saw, he exclaimed, 'By
+Allah, never saw I the like of this in the palace of the
+Commander of the Faithful!' For indeed it comprised all manner of
+meats, served in dishes of gilded porcelain. So they ate and
+drank and made merry till the end of the day, when Abou Mohammed
+gave Mesrour and each of his company five thousand diners; and on
+the morrow he clad them in dresses of honour of green and
+gold and entreated them with the utmost honour. Then said
+Mesrour to him, 'We can abide no longer, for fear of the Khalif's
+displeasure.' 'O my lord,' answered Abou Mohammed, 'have patience
+with us till to-morrow, that we may equip ourselves, and we will
+then depart with you.' So they tarried that day and night with
+him; and next morning, Abou Mohammed's servants saddled him a
+mule with housings and trappings of gold, set with all manner
+pearls and jewels; whereupon quoth Mesrour in himself, 'I wonder
+if, when he presents himself in this equipage before the
+Commander of the Faithful, he will ask him how he came by all
+this wealth.'
+
+Then they took leave of Ez Zubeidi and setting out from Bassora,
+fared on, without stopping, till they reached Baghdad and
+presented themselves before the Khalif who bade Abou Mohammed be
+seated. So he sat down and addressing the Khalif in courtly wise,
+said to him, 'O Commander of the Faithful, I have brought with me
+a present by way of homage: have I thy leave to produce it?'
+'There is no harm in that,' replied the Khalif; whereupon Abou
+Mohammed caused bring in a chest, from which he took a number of
+rarities and amongst the rest, trees of gold, with leaves of
+emerald and fruits of rubies and topazes and pearls. Then he
+fetched another chest and brought out of it a pavilion of
+brocade, adorned with pearls and rubies and emeralds and
+chrysolites and other precious stones; its poles were of the
+finest Indian aloes-wood, and its skirts were set with emeralds.
+Thereon were depicted all manner beasts and birds and other
+created things, spangled with rubies and emeralds and chrysolites
+and balass rubies and other precious stones.
+
+When Er Reshid saw these things, he rejoiced exceedingly, and
+Abou Mohammed said to him, 'O Commander of the Faithful, deem not
+that I have brought these to thee, fearing aught or coveting
+aught; but I knew myself to be but a man of the people and that
+these things befitted none save the Commander of the Faithful.
+And now, with thy leave, I will show thee, for thy diversion,
+something of what I can do.' 'Do what thou wilt,' answered Er
+Reshid, 'that we may see.' 'I hear and obey,' said Abou Mohammed
+and moving his lips, beckoned to the battlements of the palace,
+whereupon they inclined to him; then he made another sign to
+them, and they returned to their place. Then he made a sign with
+his eye, and there appeared before him cabinets with closed
+doors, to which he spoke, and lo, the voices of birds answered
+him [from within]. The Khalif marvelled exceedingly at this and
+said to him, 'How camest thou by all this, seeing that thou art
+only known as Abou Mohammed the Lazy, and they tell me that thy
+father was a barber-surgeon, serving in a public bath, and left
+thee nothing?' 'O Commander of the Faithful,' answered he,
+'listen to my story, for it is an extraordinary one and its
+particulars are wonderful; were it graven with needles upon the
+corners of the eye, it would serve as a lesson to him who can
+profit by admonition.' 'Let us hear it,' said the Khalif.
+
+'Know then, O Commander of the Faithful,' replied Abou Mohammed,
+'(may God prolong to thee glory and dominion,) that the report of
+the folk, that I am known as the Lazy and that my father left me
+nothing, is true; for he was, as thou hast said, but a barber-
+surgeon in a bath. In my youth I was the laziest wight on the
+face of the earth; indeed, so great was my sluggishness that,
+if I lay asleep in the sultry season and the sun came round upon
+me, I was too lazy to rise and remove from the sun to the shade;
+and thus I abode till I reached my fifteenth year, when my father
+was admitted to the mercy of God the Most High and left me
+nothing. However, my mother used to go out to service and feed me
+and give me to drink, whilst I lay on my side.
+
+
+One day, she came in to me, with five silver dirhems, and said to
+me, "O my son, I hear that the Sheikh Aboul Muzeffer is about to
+go a voyage to China." (Now this Sheikh was a good and charitable
+man and loved the poor.) "So come, let us carry him these five
+dirhems and beg him to buy thee therewith somewhat from the land
+of China, so haply thou mayst make a profit of it, by the bounty
+of God the Most High!" I was too lazy to move; but she swore by
+Allah that, except I rose and went with her, she would neither
+bring me meat nor drink nor come in to me, but would leave me to
+die of hunger and thirst. When I heard this, O Commander of the
+Faithful, I knew she would do as she said; so I said to her,
+"Help me to sit up." She did so, and I wept the while and said to
+her, "Bring me my shoes." Accordingly, she brought them and I
+said, "Put them on my feet." She put them on my feet and I said,
+"Lift me up." So she lifted me up and I said, "Support me, that I
+may walk." So she supported me and I went along thus, still
+stumbling in my skirts, till we came to the river-bank, where we
+saluted the Sheikh and I said to him, "O uncle, art thou Aboul
+Muzeffer?" "At thy service," answered he, and I said, "Take these
+dirhems and buy me somewhat from the land of China: haply, God
+may vouchsafe me a profit of it." Quoth the Sheikh to his
+companions, "Do ye know this youth?" "Yes," replied they; "he is
+known as Abou Mohammed the Lazy, and we never saw him stir from
+his house till now." Then said he to me, "O my son, give me the
+dirhems and the blessing of God the Most High go with them!" So
+he took the money, saying, "In the name of God!" and I returned
+home with my mother.
+
+Meanwhile the Sheikh set sail, with a company of merchants, and
+stayed not till they reached the land of China, where they bought
+and sold, and having done their intent, set out on their homeward
+voyage. When they had been three days at sea, the Sheikh said to
+his company, "Stay the ship!" And they asked him what was to do
+with him. "Know," replied he, "that I have forgotten the
+commission with which Abou Mohammed the Lazy charged me; so let
+us turn back, that we may buy him somewhat whereby he may
+profit." "We conjure thee, by God the Most High," exclaimed they,
+"turn not back with us; for we have traversed an exceeding great
+distance and endured sore hardship and many perils." Quoth he,
+"There is no help for it;" and they said "Take from us double the
+profit of the five dirhems and turn not back with us." So he
+agreed to this and they collected for him a great sum of money.
+
+Then they sailed on, till they came to an island, wherein was
+much people; so they moored thereto and the merchants went
+ashore, to buy thence precious metals and pearls and jewels and
+so forth. Presently, Aboul Muzeffer saw a man seated, with many
+apes before him, and amongst them one whose hair had been plucked
+off. As often as the man's attention was diverted from them, the
+other apes fell upon the plucked one and beat him and threw him
+on their master; whereupon the latter rose and beat them and
+bound them and punished them for this; and all the apes were
+wroth with the plucked ape therefor and beat him the more. When
+Aboul Muzeffer saw this, he took compassion upon the plucked ape
+and said to his master, "Wilt thou sell me yonder ape?" "Buy,"
+replied the man, and Aboul Muzeffer rejoined, "I have with me
+five dirhems, belonging to an orphan lad. Wilt thou sell me the
+ape for that sum?" "He is thine," answered the ape-merchant. "May
+God give thee a blessing of him!" So the Sheikh paid the money
+and his slaves took the ape and tied him up in the ship.
+
+Then they loosed sail and made for another island, where they
+cast anchor; and there came down divers, who dived for pearls and
+corals and other jewels. So the merchants hired them for money
+and they dived. When the ape saw this, he did himself loose from
+his bonds and leaping off the ship's side, dived with them;
+whereupon quoth Aboul Muzeffer, "There is no power and no virtue
+but in God the Most High, the Supreme! The ape is lost to us, by
+the [ill] fortune of the poor fellow for whom we bought him." And
+they despaired of him; but, after awhile, the company of divers
+rose to the surface, and with them the ape, with his hands full
+of jewels of price, which he threw down before Aboul Muzeffer,
+who marvelled at this and said, "There hangs some great mystery
+by this ape!"
+
+Then they cast off and sailed till they came to a third island,
+called the Island of the Zunonj,[FN#7] who are a people of the
+blacks, that eat human flesh. When the blacks saw them, they
+boarded them in canoes and taking all in the ship, pinioned them
+and carried them to their king who bade slaughter certain of the
+merchants. So they slaughtered them and ate their flesh; and the
+rest passed the night in prison and sore concern. But, when it
+was [mid]night, the ape arose and going up to Aboul Muzeffer, did
+off his bonds. When the others saw him free, they said, "God
+grant that our deliverance may be at thy hands, O Aboul
+Muzeffer!" But he replied, "Know that he who at delivered me, by
+God's leave, was none other than this ape; and I buy my release
+of him at a thousand dinars." "And we likewise," rejoined the
+merchants, "will pay him a thousand diners each, if he release
+us." With this, the ape went up to them and loosed their bonds,
+one by one, till he had freed them all, when they made for the
+ship and boarding her, found all safe and nothing missing. So
+they cast off and set sail; and presently Aboul Muzeffer said to
+them, "O merchants, fulfil your promise to the ape." "We hear and
+obey," answered they and paid him a thousand diners each, whilst
+Aboul Muzeffer brought out to him the like sum of his own monies,
+so that there was a great sum of money collected for the ape.
+
+Then they fared on till they reached the city of Bassora, where
+their friends came out to meet them; and when they had landed,
+the Sheikh said, "Where is Abou Mohammed the Lazy?" The news
+reached my mother, who came to me, as I lay asleep, and said to
+me, "O my son, the Sheikh Aboul Muzeffer has come back and is now
+in the city; so go thou to him and salute him and enquire what he
+hath brought thee; it may be God hath blessed thee with
+somewhat." "Lift me from the ground," quoth I, "and prop me up,
+whilst I walk to the river-bank." So she lifted me up and I went
+out and walked on, stumbling in my skirts, till I met the Sheikh,
+who exclaimed, at sight of me, "Welcome to him whose money has
+been the means of my delivery and that of these merchants, by
+the will of God the Most High! Take this ape that I bought for
+thee and carry him home and wait till I come to thee." So I
+took the ape, saying in myself, "By Allah, this is indeed rare
+merchandise!" and drove it home, where I said to my mother,
+"Whenever I lie down to sleep, thou biddest me rise and trade;
+see now this merchandise with thine own eyes."
+
+Then I sat down, and presently up came Aboul Muzeffer's slaves
+and said to me, "Art thou Abou Mohammed the Lazy?" "Yes,"
+answered I; and behold, Aboul Muzeffer appeared behind them. So I
+went up to him and kissed his hands; and he said to me, "Come
+with me to my house." "I hear and obey," answered I and followed
+him to his house, where he bade his servants bring me the money
+[and what not else the ape had earned me]. So they brought it and
+he said to me, "O my son, God hath blessed thee with this wealth,
+by way of profit on thy five dirhems." Then the slaves laid the
+treasure in chests, which they set on their heads, and Aboul
+Muzeffer gave me the keys of the chests, saying, "Go before the
+slaves to thy house; for all this wealth is thine." So I returned
+to my mother, who rejoiced in this and said to me, "O my son, God
+hath blessed thee with this much wealth; so put off thy laziness
+and go down to the bazaar and sell and buy." So I shook off my
+sloth, and opened a shop in the bazaar, where the ape used to sit
+on the same divan with me, eating with me when I ate and drinking
+when I drank. But, every day, he was absent from daybreak till
+noon-day, when he came back, bringing with him a purse of a
+thousand diners, which he laid by my side, and sat down. Thus did
+he a great while, till I amassed much wealth, wherewith I bought
+houses and lands and planted gardens and got me slaves, black and
+white and male and female.
+
+One day, as I sat in my shop, with the ape at my side, he began
+to turn right and left, and I said in myself, "What ails the
+beast?" Then God made the ape speak with a glib tongue, and he
+said to me, "O Abou Mohammed!" When I heard him speak, I was sore
+afraid; but he said to me, "Fear not; I will tell thee my case.
+Know that I am a Marid of the Jinn and came to thee, because of
+thy poor estate; but to-day thou knowest not the tale of thy
+wealth; and now I have a need of thee, wherein it thou do my
+will, it shall be well for thee." "What is it?" asked I, and he
+said, "I have a mind to marry thee to a girl like the full moon."
+"How so?" quoth I. "To. morrow," replied he, "don thou thy
+richest clothes and mount thy mule, with the saddle of gold, and
+ride to the forage-market. There enquire for the shop of the
+Sherif[FN#8] and sit down beside him and say to him, 'I come to
+thee a suitor for thy daughter's hand.' If he say to thee, 'Thou
+hast neither money nor condition nor family,' pull out a thousand
+diners and give them to him; and if he ask more, give him more
+and tempt him with money." "I hear and obey," answered I;
+"to-morrow, if it please God, I will do thy bidding."
+
+So on the morrow I donned my richest clothes and mounting my mule
+with trappings of gold, rode, attended by half a score slaves,
+black and white, to the forage-market, where I found the Sherif
+sitting in his shop. I alighted and saluting him, seated myself
+beside him. Quoth he, "Haply, thou hast some business with us,
+which we may have the pleasure of transacting?" "Yes," answered
+I; "I have business with thee." "And what is it?" asked he. Quoth
+I, "I come to thee as a suitor for thy daughter's hand." And he
+said, "Thou hast neither money nor condition nor family;"
+whereupon I pulled out a thousand diners of red gold and said to
+him, "This is my rank and family; and he whom God bless and keep
+hath said, 'The best of ranks is wealth.' And how well saith the
+poet:
+
+Whoso hath money, though it be but dirhems twain, his lips Have
+ learnt all manner speech and he can speak and fear no
+ slight.
+His brethren and his mates draw near and hearken to his word And
+ 'mongst the folk thou seest him walk, a glad and prideful
+ wight.
+But for the money, in the which he glorieth on this wise,
+ Thou'dst find him, midst his fellow-men, in passing sorry
+ plight.
+Yea, whensoe'er the rich man speaks, though in his speech he err,
+ 'Thou hast not spoken a vain thing,' they say; 'indeed,
+ thou'rt right.'
+But, for the poor man, an he speak, albeit he say sooth, They
+ say, 'Thou liest,' and make void his speech and hold it
+ light
+For money, verily, in all the lands beneath the sun, With
+ goodliness and dignity cloth its possessors dight.
+A very tongue it is for him who would be eloquent And eke a
+ weapon to his hand who hath a mind to fight."
+
+When he heard this, he bowed his head awhile, then, raising it,
+said, "If it must be so, I will have of thee other three thousand
+diners." "I hear and obey," answered I and sent one of my
+servants to my house for the money. When he came back with it, I
+handed it to the Sherif, who rose and bidding his servants shut
+his shop, invited his brother-merchants to the wedding; after
+which he carried me to his house and drew up the contract of
+marriage between his daughter and myself, saying to me, "After
+ten days, I will bring thee in to her." So I went home rejoicing
+and shutting myself up with the ape, told him what had passed;
+and he said, "Thou hast done well."
+
+When the time appointed by the Sherif drew near, the ape said to
+me, "There is a thing I would fain have thee do for me; and
+after, thou shalt have of me what thou wilt." "What is that?"
+asked I. Quoth he, "At the upper end of the bridechamber stands a
+cabinet, on whose door is a padlock of brass and the keys under
+it. Take the keys and open the cabinet, in which thou wilt find a
+coffer of iron, with four talismanic flags at its angles. In its
+midst is a brass basin full of money, wherein is tied a white
+cock with a cleft comb; and on one side of the coffer are eleven
+serpents and on the other a knife. Take the knife and kill the
+cock; cut away the flags and overturn the chest; then go back to
+the bride and do away her maidenhead. This is what I have to ask
+of thee." "I hear and obey," answered I and betook myself to the
+Sherif's house.
+
+As soon as I entered the bridechamber, I looked for the cabinet
+and found it even as the ape had described it. Then I went in to
+the bride and marvelled at her beauty and grace and symmetry, for
+indeed they were such as no tongue can set forth. So I rejoiced
+in her with an exceeding joy; and in the middle of the night,
+when she slept, I rose and taking the keys, opened the cabinet.
+Then I took the knife and killed the cock and threw down the
+flags and overturned the coffer, whereupon the girl awoke and
+seeing the closet open and the cock slain, exclaimed, "There is
+no power and no virtue but in God the Most High, the Supreme! The
+Marid hath gotten me!" Hardly had she made an end of speaking,
+when the Marid came down upon the house and seizing the bride,
+flew away with her; whereupon there arose a great clamour and in
+came the Sherif, buffeting his face. "O Abou Mohammed," said he,
+"what is this thou hast done? Is it thus thou requitest us? I
+made the talisman in the cabinet in my fear for my daughter from
+this accursed one; for these six years hath he sought to steal
+away the girl, but could not. But now there is no more abiding
+for thee with us; so go thy ways."
+
+So I went out and returned to my own house, where I made search
+for the ape, but could find no trace of him; whereby I knew that
+he was the Marid, who had taken my wife and had tricked me into
+destroying the talisman that hindered him from taking her, and
+repented, rending my clothes and buffeting my face; and there was
+no land but was straitened upon me. So I made for the desert,
+knowing not whither I should go, and wandered on, absorbed in
+melancholy thought, till night overtook me. Presently, I saw two
+serpents fighting, a white one and a tawny. So I took up a stone
+and throwing it at the tawny serpent, which was the aggressor,
+killed it; whereupon the white serpent made off, but returned
+after awhile accompanied by ten others of the same colour, which
+went up to the dead serpent and tore it in pieces, till but the
+head was left. Then they went their ways and I fell prostrate for
+weariness on the ground where I stood; but, as I lay, pondering
+my case, I heard a voice repeat the following verses, though I
+saw no one:
+
+Let destiny with slackened rein its course appointed fare And lie
+ thou down by night to sleep with heart devoid of care.
+For, twixt the closing of the eyes and th' opening thereof, God
+ hath it in His power to change a case from foul to fair.
+
+When I heard this, great concern got hold of me and I was beyond
+measure troubled; and I heard a voice from behind me repeat these
+verses also:
+
+Muslim, whose guide's the Koran and his due, Rejoice, for succour
+ cometh thee unto.
+Let not the wiles of Satan make thee rue, For we're a folk whose
+ creed's the One, the True.
+
+Then said I, "I conjure thee by Him whom thou worshippest, let me
+know who thou art!" Thereupon the unseen speaker appeared to me,
+in the likeness of a man, and said, "Fear not; for the report of
+thy good deed hath reached us, and we are a people of the
+true-believing Jinn. So, if thou lack aught, let us know it, that
+we may have the pleasure of fulfilling thy need." "Indeed,"
+answered I, "I am in sore need, for there hath befallen me a
+grievous calamity, whose like never yet befell man." Quoth he,
+"Surely, thou art Abou Mohammed the Lazy?" And I answered, "Yes."
+"O Abou Mohammed," rejoined the genie, "I am the brother of the
+white serpent, whose enemy thou slewest. We are four brothers, by
+one father and mother, and we are all indebted to thee for thy
+kindness. Know that he who played this trick on thee, in the
+likeness of an ape, is a Marid of the Marids of the Jinn; and had
+he not used this artifice, he had never been able to take the
+girl; for he hath loved her and had a mind to take her this long
+while, but could not win at her, being hindered of the talisman;
+and had it remained as it was, he could never have done so.
+However, fret not thyself for that; we will bring thee to her and
+kill the Marid; for thy kindness is not lost upon us."
+
+Then he cried out with a terrible voice, and behold, there
+appeared a company of Jinn, of whom he enquired concerning the
+ape; and one of them said, "I know his abiding-place; it is in
+the City of Brass, upon which the sun riseth not." Then said the
+first genie to me, "O Abou Mohammed, take one of these our
+slaves, and he will carry thee on his back and teach thee how
+thou shalt get back the girl: but know that he is a Marid and
+beware lest thou utter the name of God, whilst he is carrying
+thee; or he will flee from thee, and thou wilt fall and be
+destroyed." "I hear and obey," answered I and chose out one of
+the slaves, who bent down and said to me, "Mount." So I mounted
+on his back, and he flew up with me into the air, till I lost
+sight of the earth and saw the stars as they were fixed mountains
+and heard the angels glorifying God in heaven, what while the
+Marid held me in converse, diverting me and hindering me from
+pronouncing the name of God. But, as we flew, behold, one clad in
+green raiment, with streaming tresses and radiant face, holding
+in his hand a javelin whence issued sparks of fire, accosted me,
+saying, "O Abou Mohammed, say, 'There is no god but God and
+Mohammed is His apostle;' or I will smite thee with this
+javelin."
+
+Now I was already sick at heart of my [forced] abstention from
+calling on the name of God; so I said, "There is no god but God
+and Mohammed is His apostle." Whereupon the shining one smote the
+Marid with his javelin and he melted away and became ashes;
+whilst I was precipitated from his back and fell headlong toward
+the earth, till I dropped into the midst of a surging sea,
+swollen with clashing billows. Hard by where I fell was a ship
+and five sailors therein, who, seeing me, made for me and took me
+up into the boat. They began to speak to me in some tongue I knew
+not; but I signed to them that I understood not their speech. So
+they fared on till ended day, when they cast out a net and caught
+a great fish and roasting it, gave me to eat; after which they
+sailed on, till they reached their city and carried me in to
+their king, who understand Arabic. So I kissed the ground before
+him, and he bestowed on me a dress of honour and made me one of
+his officers. I asked him the name of the city, and he replied,
+"It is called Henad and is in the land of China." Then he
+committed me to his Vizier, bidding him show me the city, which
+was formerly peopled by infidels, till God the Most High turned
+them into stones; and there I abode a month's space, diverting
+myself with viewing the place, nor saw I ever greater plenty of
+trees and fruits than there.
+
+One day, as I sat on the bank of a river, there accosted me a
+horseman, who said to me, "Art thou not Abou Mohammed the Lazy?"
+"Yes," answered I; whereupon, "Fear not," said he; "for the
+report of thy good deed hath reached us." Quoth I, "Who art
+thou?" And he answered, "I am a brother of the white serpent, and
+thou art hard by the place where is the damsel whom thou
+seekest." So saying, he took off his [outer] clothes and clad me
+therein, saying, "Fear not; for he, that perished under thee, was
+one of our slaves." Then he took me up behind him and rode on
+with me, till we came to a desert place, when he said to me,
+"Alight now and walk on between yonder mountains till thou seest
+the City of Brass; then halt afar off and enter it not, till I
+return to thee and teach thee how thou shalt do." "I hear and
+obey," replied I and alighting, walked on till I came to the
+city, the walls whereof I found of brass. I went round about it,
+looking for a gate, but found none; and presently, the serpent's
+brother rejoined me and gave me a charmed sword that should
+hinder any from seeing me, then went his way.
+
+He had been gone but a little while, when I heard a noise of
+cries and found myself in the midst of a multitude of folk whose
+eyes were in their breasts. Quoth they, "Who art thou and what
+brings thee hither?" So I told them my story, and they said, "The
+girl thou seekest is in the city with the Marid; but we know not
+what he hath done with her. As for us, we are brethren of the
+white serpent. But go to yonder spring and note where the water
+enters, and enter thou with it; for it will bring thee into the
+city." I did as they bade me and followed the water-course, till
+it brought me to a grotto under the earth, from which I ascended
+and found myself in the midst of the city. Here I saw the damsel
+seated upon a throne of gold, under a canopy of brocade, midmost
+a garden full of trees of gold, whose fruits were jewels of
+price, such as rubies and chrysolites and pearls and coral.
+
+When she saw me, she knew me and accosted me with the
+[obligatory] salutation, saying, "O my lord, who brought thee
+hither?" So I told her all that had passed and she said, "Know
+that the accursed Marid, of the greatness of his love for me,
+hath told me what doth him hurt and what profit and that there is
+here a talisman by means whereof he could, an he would, destroy
+this city and all that are therein. It is in the likeness of an
+eagle, with I know not what written on it, and whoso possesses
+it, the Afrits will do his commandment in everything. It stands
+upon a column in such a place; so go thou thither and take it.
+Then set it before thee and taking a chafing-dish, throw into it
+a little musk, whereupon there will arise a smoke, that will draw
+all the Afrits to thee, and they will all present themselves
+before thee, nor shall one be absent; and whatsoever thou biddest
+them, that will they do. Arise therefore and do this thing, with
+the blessing of God the Most High."
+
+"I hear and obey," answered I and going to the column, did what
+she bade me, whereupon the Afrits presented themselves, saying,
+"Here are we, O our lord! Whatsoever thou biddest us, that will
+we do." Quoth I, "Bind the Marid that brought the damsel hither."
+"We hear and obey," answered they and disappearing, returned
+after awhile and informed me that they had done my bidding. Then
+I dismissed them and returning to my wife, told her what had
+happened and said to her, "Wilt thou go with me?" "Yes," answered
+she. So I carried her forth of the city, by the underground
+channel, and we fared on, till we fell in with the folk who had
+shown me the way into the city. I besought them to teach me how I
+should return to my native land; so they brought us to the
+seashore and set us aboard a ship, which sailed on with us with a
+fair wind, till we reached the city of Bassora. Here we landed,
+and I carried my wife to her father's house; and when her people
+saw her, they rejoiced with an exceeding joy. Then I fumigated
+the eagle with musk and the Afrits flocked to me from all sides,
+saying, "At thy service; what wilt thou have us do?" I bade them
+transport all that was in the City of Brass of gold and silver
+and jewels and precious things to my house in Bassora, which they
+did; and I then ordered them to fetch the ape. So they brought
+him before me, abject and humiliated, and I said to him, "O
+accursed one, why hast thou dealt thus perfidiously with me?"
+Then I commanded the Afrits to shut him in a brazen vessel: so
+they put him in a strait vessel of brass and sealed it with lead.
+But I abode with my wife in joy and delight; and now, O Commander
+of the Faithful, I have under my hand such stores of precious
+things and rare jewels and other treasure as neither reckoning
+may comprise nor measure suffice unto. All this is of the bounty
+of God the Most High, and if thou desire aught of money or what
+not, I will bid the Jinn bring it to thee forthright.'
+
+The Khalif wondered greatly at his story and bestowed on him
+royal gifts, in exchange for his presents, and entreated him with
+the favour he deserved.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE GENEROUS DEALING OF YEHYA BEN KHALID
+ THE BARMECIDE WITH MENSOUR.
+
+
+
+It is told that Haroun er Reshid, in the days before he became
+jealous of the Barmecides, sent once for one of his guards, Salih
+by name, and said to him, 'O Salih, go to Mensour[FN#9] and say
+to him, "Thou owest us a thousand thousand dirhems and we require
+of thee immediate payment of the amount." And I charge thee, O
+Salih, an he pay it not before sundown, sever his head from his
+body and bring it to me.' 'I hear and obey,' answered Salih and
+going to Mensour, acquainted him with what the Khalif had said,
+whereupon quoth he, 'By Allah, I am a lost man; for all my estate
+and all my hand owns, if sold for their utmost value, would not
+fetch more than a hundred thousand dirhems. Whence then, O Salih,
+shall I get the other nine hundred thousand?' 'Contrive how thou
+mayst speedily acquit thyself,' answered Salih; 'else art thou a
+dead man; for I cannot grant thee a moment's delay after the time
+appointed me by the Khalif, nor can I fail of aught that he hath
+enjoined on me. Hasten, therefore, to devise some means of saving
+thyself ere the time expire.' 'O Salih,' quoth Mensour, 'I beg
+thee of thy favour to bring me to my house, that I may take
+leave of my children and family and give my kinsfolk my last
+injunctions.'
+
+So he carried him to his house, where he fell to bidding his
+family farewell, and the house was filled with a clamour of
+weeping and lamentation and calling on God for help. Then Salih
+said to him, 'I have bethought me that God may peradventure
+vouchsafe thee relief at the hands of the Barmecides. Come, let
+us go to the house of Yehya ben Khalid.' So they went to Yehya's
+house, and Mensour told him his case, whereat he was sore
+concerned and bowed his head awhile; then raising it, he called
+his treasurer and said to him, 'How much money have we in our
+treasury?' 'Five thousand dirhems,' answered the treasurer, and
+Yehya bade him bring them and sent a message to his son Fezl,
+saying, 'I am offered for sale estates of great price, that may
+never be laid waste; so send me somewhat of money.' Fezl sent him
+a thousand thousand dirhems, and he despatched a like message to
+his son Jaafer, who also sent him a thousand thousand dirhems;
+nor did he leave sending to his kinsmen of the Barmecides, till
+he had collected from them a great sum of mosey for Mensour. But
+the latter and Salih knew not of this; and Mensour said to Yehya,
+'O my lord, I have laid hold upon thy skirt for I know not
+whither to look for the money but to thee; so discharge thou the
+rest of my debt for me, in accordance with thy wonted generosity,
+and make me thy freed slave.' Thereupon Yehya bowed his head and
+wept; then he said to a page, 'Harkye, boy, the Commander of the
+Faithful gave our slave-girl Denanir a jewel of great price: go
+thou to her and bid her send it us.' The page went out and
+presently returned with the jewel, whereupon quoth Yehya, 'O
+Mensour, I bought this jewel of the merchants for the Commander
+of the Faithful, for two hundred thousand diners, and he gave it
+to our slave-girl Denanir the lutanist. When he sees it with
+thee, he will know it and spare thy life and do thee honour for
+our sake; and now thy money is complete.'
+
+So Salih took the money and the jewel and carried them to the
+Khalif, together with Mensour; but on the way? he heard the
+latter repeat this verse, applying it to his own case:
+
+It was not love, indeed, my feet to them that led; Nay, but
+ because the stroke of th' arrows I did dread.
+
+When Salih heard this, he marvelled at the baseness and
+ingratitude of Mensour's nature, and turning upon him, said,
+'There is none on the face of the earth better than the
+Barmecides, nor any baser nor more depraved than thou; for they
+bought thee off from death and saved thee from destruction,
+giving thee what should deliver thee; yet thou thankest them not
+nor praisest them, neither acquittest thee after the manner of
+the noble; nay, thou requitest their benevolence with this
+speech.' Then he went to Er Reshid and acquainted him with all
+that had passed; and he marvelled at the generosity and
+benevolence of Yehya ben Khalid and the baseness and ingratitude
+of Mensour and bade restore the jewel to Yehya, saying, 'That
+which we have given, it befits not that we take again.'
+
+So Salih returned to Yehya, and acquainted him with Mensour's ill
+conduct; whereupon, 'O Salih,' replied he, 'when a man is in
+distress, sick at heart and distracted with melancholy thought.
+he is not to be blamed for aught that falls from him; for it
+comes not from the heart.' And he fell to seeking excuse for
+Mensour. But Salih wept [in telling the tale] and exclaimed,
+'Never shall the revolving sphere bring forth into being the like
+of thee, O Yehya! Alas, that one of such noble nature and
+generosity should be buried beneath the earth! 'And he repeated
+the following verses:
+
+Hasten to do the kindnesses thou hast a mind unto; For bounty is
+ not possible at every tide and hour.
+How many a man denies his soul to do the generous deed, To which
+ it's fain, till lack of means deprive him of the power!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE GENEROUS DEALING OF YEHYA BEN KHALID
+ WITH A MAN WHO FORGED A LETTER IN HIS
+ NAME.
+
+
+
+There was between Yehya ben Khalid and Abdallah ben Malik el
+Khuzai[FN#10] a secret enmity, the reason whereof was that Haroun
+er Reshid loved the latter with an exceeding love, so that Yehya
+and his sons were wont to say that he had bewitched the Khalif;
+and thus they abode a long while, with rancour in their hearts,
+till it fell out that the Khalif invested Abdallah with the
+government of Armenia and sent him thither. Soon after he had
+established himself in his seat of government, there came to him
+one of the people of Irak, a man of excellent parts and good
+breeding, who had lost his wealth and wasted his substance, and
+his estate was come to nought; so he forged a letter to Abdallah
+in Yehya's name and set out therewith for Armenia. When he came
+to the governor's gate, he gave the letter to one of the
+chamberlains, who carried it to his master. Abdallah read it and
+considering it attentively, knew it to be forged; so he sent for
+the man, who presented himself before him and called down
+blessings upon him and praised him and those of his court. Quoth
+Abdallah to him, 'What moved thee to weary thyself thus and bring
+me a forged letter? But be of good heart; for we will not
+disappoint thy travail.' 'God prolong the life of our lord the
+Vizier!' replied the other. 'If my coming irk thee, cast not
+about for a pretext to repel me, for God's earth is wide and the
+Divine Provider liveth. Indeed, the letter I bring thee from
+Yehya ben Khalid is true and no forgery.' Quoth Abdallah, 'I will
+write a letter to my agent at Baghdad and bid him enquire
+concerning the letter. If it be true, as thou sayest, I will
+bestow on thee the government of one of my cities; or, if thou
+prefer a present, I will give thee two hundred thousand dirhems,
+besides horses and camels of price and a robe of honour. But, if
+the letter prove a forgery, I will have thee beaten with two
+hundred blows of a stick and thy beard shaven.'
+
+Accordingly, he bade confine him in a privy chamber and furnish
+him therein with all he needed, till his case should be made
+manifest. Then he despatched a letter to his agent at Baghdad, to
+the following purport: 'There is come to me a man with a letter
+purporting to be from Yehya ben Khalid. Now I have my doubts of
+this letter: so delay thou not, but go thyself and learn the
+truth of the case and let me have an answer in all speed.' When
+the letter reached the agent, he mounted at once and betook
+himself to the house of Yehya ben Khalid, whom he found sitting
+with his officers and boon-companions. So he gave him the letter
+and he read it and said to the agent, 'Come back to me to-morrow,
+against I write thee an answer.'
+
+When the agent had gone away, Yehya turned to his companions and
+said, 'What doth he deserve who forgeth a letter in my name and
+carrieth it to my enemy?' They all answered, saying this and
+that, each proposing some kind of punishment; but Yehya said, 'Ye
+err in that ye say and this your counsel is of the meanness and
+baseness of your spirits. Ye all know the close favour of
+Abdallah with the Khalif and what is between him and us of
+despite and enmity; and now God the Most High hath made this man
+an intermediary, to effect a reconciliation between us, and hath
+appointed him to quench the fire of hate in our hearts, which
+hath been growing this score years; and by his means our
+differences shall be accorded. Wherefore it behoves me to requite
+him by confirming his expectation and amending his estate; so I
+will write him a letter to Abdallah, to the intent that he may
+use him with increase of honour and liberality.'
+
+When his companions heard what he said, they called down
+blessings on him and marvelled at his generosity and the
+greatness of his magnanimity. Then he called for paper and ink
+and wrote Abdallah a letter in his own hand, to the following
+effect: 'In the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful! Thy
+letter hath reached me (may God give thee long life!) and I have
+read it and rejoice in thy health and well-being. It was thy
+thought that yonder worthy man had forged a letter in my name and
+that he was not the bearer of any message from me; but the case
+is not so, for the letter I myself wrote, and it was no forgery;
+and I hope, of thy courtesy and benevolence and the nobility of
+thy nature, that thou wilt fulfil this generous and excellent man
+of his hope and wish and use him with the honour he deserves and
+bring him to his desire and make him the special object of thy
+favour and munificence. Whatever thou dost with him, it is to me
+that thou dost it, and I am beholden to thee accordingly.' Then
+he superscribed the letter and sealing it, delivered it to the
+agent, who despatched it to Abdallah.
+
+When the latter read it, he was charmed with its contents and
+sending for the man, said to him, 'Now will I give thee which
+thou wilt of the two things I promised thee.' 'The gift were more
+acceptable to me than aught else,' replied the man; whereupon
+Abdallah ordered him two hundred thousand dirhems and ten Arab
+horses, five with housings of silk and other five with richly
+ornamented saddles of state, besides twenty chests of clothes and
+ten mounted white slaves and a proportionate quantity of jewels
+of price. Moreover, he bestowed on him a dress of honour and sent
+him to Baghdad in great state. When he came thither, he repaired
+to Yehya's house, before he went to his own folk, and sought an
+audience of him. So the chamberlain went in to Yehya and said to
+him, 'O my lord, there is one at our door who craves speech of
+thee; and he is a man of apparent wealth and consideration,
+comely of aspect and attended by many servants.' Yehya bade admit
+him; so he entered and kissed the ground before him. 'Who art
+thou?' asked Yehya; and he answered, 'O my lord, I am one who was
+dead from the tyranny of fortune; but thou didst raise me again
+from the grave of calamities and preferredst me to the paradise
+of [my] desires. I am he who forged a letter in thy name and
+carried it to Abdallah ben Malek el Khuzai.' 'How hath he dealt
+with thee,' asked Yehya, 'and what did he give thee?' Quoth the
+man, 'He hath made me rich and overwhelmed me with presents and
+favours, thanks to thee and thy great generosity and magnanimity
+and to thine exceeding goodness and abounding munificence and
+thine all-embracing liberality. And now, behold, I have brought
+all that he gave me, and it is at thy door; for it is thine to
+command, and the decision is in thy hand.' 'Thou hast done me
+better service than I thee,' rejoined Yehya; 'and I owe thee
+thanks without stint and abundant largesse, for that thou hast
+changed the enmity that was between me and yonder man of worship
+into love and friendship. Wherefore I will give thee the like of
+what Abdallah gave thee.' Then he ordered him money and horses
+and apparel, such as Abdallah had given him; and thus that man's
+fortune was restored to him by the munificence of these two
+generous men.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF EL MAMOUN AND THE STRANGE
+ DOCTOR
+
+
+
+It is said that there was none, among the Khalifs of the house of
+Abbas, more accomplished in all branches of knowledge than El
+Mamoun. On two days in each week, he was wont to preside at
+conferences of the learned, when the doctors and theologians met
+and sitting, each in his several rank and room, disputed in his
+presence. One day, as he sat thus, there came into the assembly a
+stranger, clad in worn white clothes, and sat down in an obscure
+place, behind the doctors of the law. Then the assembled scholars
+began to speak and expound difficult questions, it being the
+custom that the various propositions should be submitted to each
+in turn and that whoso bethought him of some subtle addition or
+rare trait, should make mention of it. So the question went round
+till it came to the stranger, who spoke in his turn and made a
+goodlier answer than that of any of the doctors; and the Khalif
+approved his speech and bade advance him to a higher room. When
+the second question came round to him, he made a still more
+admirable answer, and the Khalif ordered him to be preferred to a
+yet higher place. When the third question reached him, he made
+answer more justly and appropriately than on the two previous
+occasions, and El Mamoun bade him come up and sit near himself.
+When the conference broke up, water was brought and they washed
+their hands; after which food was set on and they ate. Then the
+doctors arose and withdrew; but El Mamoun forbade the stranger to
+depart with them and calling him to himself, entreated him with
+especial favour and promised him honour and benefits.
+
+Presently, they made ready the banquet of wine; the fair-faced
+boon-companions came and the cup went round amongst them till it
+came to the stranger, who rose to his feet and said, 'If the
+Commander of the Faithful permit me, I will say one word.' 'Say
+what thou wilt,' answered the Khalif. Quoth the stranger,
+'Verily, the Exalted Intelligence[FN#11] (whose eminence God
+increase!) knoweth that his slave was this day, in the august
+assembly, one of the unknown folk and of the meanest of the
+company, and the Commander of the Faithful distinguished him and
+brought him near to himself, little as was the wit he showed,
+preferring him above the rest and advancing him to a rank whereto
+his thought aspired not: and now he is minded to deprive him of
+that small portion of wit that raised him from obscurity and
+augmented him, after his littleness. God forfend that the
+Commander of the Faithful should envy his slave what little he
+hath of understanding and worth and renown! But, if his slave
+should drink wine, his reason would depart from him and ignorance
+draw near to him and steal away his good breeding; so would he
+revert to that low degree, whence he sprang, and become
+contemptible and ridiculous in the eyes of the folk. I hope,
+therefore, that the August Intelligence, of his power and bounty
+and royal generosity and magnanimity, will not despoil his slave
+of this jewel.'
+
+When the Khalif heard his speech, he praised him and thanked him
+and making him sit down again in his place, showed him high
+honour and ordered him a present of a hundred thousand diners.
+Moreover he mounted him upon a horse and gave him rich apparel;
+and in every assembly he exalted him and showed him favour over
+all the other doctors, till he became the highest of them all in
+rank.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ALI SHAR AND ZUMURRUD.
+
+
+
+There lived once, of old days, in the land of Khorassan, a
+merchant called Mejdeddin, who had great wealth and many slaves
+and servants, black and white; but he was childless until he
+reached the age of threescore, when God the Most High vouchsafed
+him a son, whom he named Ali Shar. The boy grew up like the moon
+on the night of its full, and when he came to man's estate and
+was endowed with all kinds of perfection, his father fell sick of
+a mortal malady and calling his son to him, said to him, 'O my
+son, the hour of my death is at hand, and I desire to give thee
+my last injunctions.' 'And what are they, O my father?' asked
+Ali. 'O my son,' answered Mejdeddin, 'I charge thee, be not [too]
+familiar with any and eschew what leads to evil and mischief.
+Beware lest thou company with the wicked; for he is like the
+blacksmith; if his fire burn thee not, his smoke irks thee: and
+how excellent is the saying of the poet:
+
+There is no man in all the world whose love thou shouldst desire,
+ No friend who, if fate play thee false, will true and
+ constant be.
+Wherefore I'd have thee live apart and lean for help on none. In
+ this I give thee good advice; so let it profit thee.
+
+And what another saith:
+
+Men are a latent malady; Count not on them, I counsel thee.
+An if thou look into their case, They're full of guile and
+ perfidy.
+
+And yet a third:
+
+The company of men will profit thee in nought, Except to pass
+ away the time in idle prate;
+So spare thou to converse with them, except it be For gain of
+ lore and wit or mending of estate.
+
+And a fourth
+
+If a quickwitted man have made proof of mankind, I have eaten of
+ them, where but tasted hath he,
+And have seen their affection but practice and nought But
+ hypocrisy found their religion to be.'
+
+'O my father,' said Ali, 'I hear and obey: what more shall I do?'
+'Do good when thou art able thereto,' answered his father; 'be
+ever courteous and succourable to men and profit by all occasions
+of doing a kindness; for a design is not always easy of
+accomplishment; and how well saith the poet:
+
+'Tis not at every time and season that to do Kind offices,
+ indeed, is easy unto you;
+So, when the occasion serves, make haste to profit by't, Lest by
+ and by the power should fail thee thereunto.'
+
+'I hear and obey,' answered Ali; 'what more?' 'Be mindful of
+God,' continued Mejdeddin, 'and He will be mindful of thee.
+Husband thy wealth and squander it not; for, if thou do, thou
+wilt come to have need of the least of mankind. Know that the
+measure of a man's worth is according to what his right hand
+possesses: and how well saith the poet:
+
+If wealth should fail, there is no friend will bear me company,
+ But whilst my substance yet abounds, all men are friends to
+ me.
+How many a foe for money's sake hath companied with me! How many
+ a friend for loss thereof hath turned mine enemy!'
+
+'What more?' asked Ali. 'O my son,' said Mejdeddin, 'take counsel
+of those who are older than thou and hasten not to do thy heart's
+desire. Have compassion on those that are below thee, so shall
+those that are above thee have compassion on thee; and oppress
+none, lest God set over thee one who shall oppress thee. How well
+saith the poet:
+
+Add others' wit to thine and counsel still ensue; For that the
+ course of right is not concealed from two.
+One mirror shows a man his face, but, if thereto Another one he
+ add, his nape thus can he view.
+
+And as saith another:
+
+Be slow to move and hasten not to match thy heart's desire: Be
+ merciful to all, as thou on mercy reckonest;
+For no hand is there but the hand of God is over it, And no
+ oppressor but shall be with worse than he opprest.
+
+And yet another:
+
+Do no oppression, whilst the power thereto is in thine hand; For
+ still in peril of revenge the sad oppressor goes.
+Thine eyes will sleep anon, what while the opprest, on wake, call
+ down Curses upon thee, and God's eye shuts never in repose.
+
+Beware of drinking wine, for it is the root of all evil: it does
+away the reason and brings him who uses it into contempt; and how
+well saith the poet:
+
+By Allah, wine shall never invade me, whilst my soul Endureth in
+ my body and my thoughts my words control!
+Not a day long will I turn me to the zephyr-freshened bowl, And
+ for friend I'll choose him only who of wine-bibbing is
+ whole.
+
+This, then,' added Mejdeddin, 'is my charge to thee; keep it
+before thine eyes, and may God stand to thee in my stead.' Then
+he swooned away and kept silence awhile. When he came to himself,
+he besought pardon of God and making the profession of the Faith,
+was admitted to the mercy of the Most High. His son wept and
+lamented for him and made due preparation for his burial. Great
+and small attended him to the grave and the readers recited the
+Koran about his bier; nor did Ali Shar omit aught of what was due
+to the dead. Then they prayed over him and committed him to the
+earth, graving these words upon his tomb:
+
+Created of the dust thou wast and cam'st to life And eloquence
+ didst learn and spokest many a word;
+Then to the dust again returnedst and wast dead, As 'twere from
+ out the dust, indeed, thou'dst never stirred.
+
+His son Ali Shar grieved for him and mourned him after the wont
+of men of condition; nor did he cease therefrom till his mother
+died also, not long afterward, when he did with her as he had
+done with his father. Then he sat in the shop, selling and buying
+and consorting with none of God's creatures, in accordance with
+his father's injunction.
+
+On this wise he abode for a year, at the end of which time there
+came in to him certain whoreson fellows by craft and companied
+with him, till he turned with them to lewdness and swerved from
+the right way, drinking wine in goblets and frequenting the fair
+night and day; for he said in himself, 'My father amassed this
+wealth for me, and if I spend it not, to whom shall I leave it?
+By Allah, I will not do save as saith the poet:
+
+If all the days of thy life thou get And heap up treasure, to
+ swell thy hoard,
+When wilt thou use it and so enjoy That thou hast gathered and
+ gained and stored?'
+
+Then he ceased not to squander his wealth all tides of the day
+and watches of the night, till he had made away with it all and
+abode in evil case and troubled at heart. So he sold his shop and
+lands and so forth, and after this he sold the clothes off his
+body, leaving himself but one suit. Then drunkenness left him and
+thought came to him, and he fell into melancholy.
+
+One day, when he had sat from day-break to mid-afternoon without
+breaking his fast, he said in himself, 'I will go round to those
+on whom I spent my wealth: it may be one of them will feed me
+this day.' So he went the round of them all; but, as often as he
+knocked at any one's door, the man denied himself and hid from
+him, till he was consumed with hunger. Then he betook himself to
+the bazaar, where he found a crowd of people, assembled in a ring
+round somewhat, and said in himself, 'I wonder what ails the folk
+to crowd together thus? By Allah, I will not remove hence, till I
+see what is within yonder ring!' So he made his way into the ring
+and found that the crowd was caused by a damsel exposed for sale.
+She was five feet high, slender of shape, rosy-cheeked and high-
+bosomed and surpassed all the people of her time in beauty and
+grace and elegance and perfection; even as saith one, describing
+her:
+
+As she wished, she was created, after such a wise that lo! She in
+ beauty's mould was fashioned, perfect, neither less no mo'.
+Loveliness itself enamoured of her lovely aspect is; Coyness
+ decks her and upon her, pride and pudour sweetly show.
+In her face the full moon glitters and the branch is as her
+ shape; Musk her breath is, nor midst mortals is her equal,
+ high or low.
+'Tis as if she had been moulded out of water of pure pearls; In
+ each member of her beauty is a very moon, I trow.
+
+And her name was Zumurrud.
+
+When Ali Shar saw her, he marvelled at her beauty and grace and
+said, 'By Allah, I will not stir hence till I see what price this
+girl fetches and know who buys her!' So he stood with the rest of
+the merchants, and they thought he had a mind to buy her, knowing
+the wealth he had inherited from his parents. Then the broker
+stood at the damsel's head and said, 'Ho, merchants! Ho, men of
+wealth! Who will open the biddings for this damsel, the mistress
+of moons, the splendid pearl, Zumurrud the Curtain-maker, the aim
+of the seeker and the delight of the desirous? Open the biddings,
+and on the opener be nor blame nor reproach.'
+
+So one merchant said, 'I bid five hundred dinars for her.' 'And
+ten,' said another. 'Six hundred,' cried an old man named
+Reshideddin, blue-eyed and foul of face. 'And ten,' quoth
+another. 'I bid a thousand,' rejoined Reshideddin; whereupon the
+other merchants were silent and the broker took counsel with the
+girl's owner, who said, 'I have sworn not to sell her save to
+whom she shall choose; consult her.' So the broker went up to
+Zumurrud and said to her, 'O mistress of moons, yonder merchant
+hath a mind to buy thee.' She looked as Reshideddin and finding
+him as we have said, replied, 'I will not be sold to a grey-
+beard, whom decrepitude hath brought to evil plight.' 'Bravo,'
+quoth I, 'for one who saith:
+
+I asked her for a kiss one day, but she my hoary head Saw, though
+ of wealth and worldly good I had great plentihead;
+So, with a proud and flouting air, her back she turned on me And,
+ "No, by Him who fashioned men from nothingness!" she said.
+"Now, by God's truth, I never had a mind to hoary hairs, And
+ shall my mouth be stuffed, forsooth, with cotton, ere I'm
+ dead?"
+
+'By Allah,' quoth the broker, 'thou art excusable, and thy value
+is ten thousand dinars!' So he told her owner that she would not
+accept of Reshideddin, and he said, 'Ask her of another.'
+Thereupon another man came forward and said, 'I will take her at
+the same price.' She looked at him and seeing that his beard was
+dyed, said, 'What is this lewd and shameful fashion and
+blackening of the face of hoariness?' And she made a great show
+of amazement and repeated the following verses:
+
+A sight, and what a sight, did such a one present To me! A neck,
+ to beat with shoes, by Allah, meant!
+And eke a beard for lie a coursing-ground that was And brows for
+ binding on of ropes all crook'd and bent.[FN#12]
+Thou that my cheeks and shape have ravished, with a lie Thou dost
+ disguise thyself and reck'st not, impudent;
+Dyeing thy hoary hairs disgracefully with black[FN#13] And hiding
+ what appears, with fraudulent intent;
+As of the puppet-men thou wert, with one beard go'st And with
+ another com'st again, incontinent.
+
+And how well saith another:
+
+Quoth she to me, "I see thou dy'st thy hoariness;" and I, "I do
+ but hide it from thy sight, O thou my ear and eye!"[FN#14]
+She laughed out mockingly and said, "A wonder 'tis indeed! Thou
+ so aboundest in deceit that even thy hair's a lie."
+
+'By Allah,' quoth the broker, 'thou hast spoken truly!' The
+merchant asked what she said: so the broker repeated the verses
+to him, and he knew that she was in the right and desisted from
+buying her. Then another came forward and would have bought her
+at the same price; but she looked at him and seeing that he had
+but one eye, said, 'This man is one-eyed; and it is of such as he
+that the poet saith:
+
+Consort not with him that is one-eyed a day, And be on thy guard
+ 'gainst his mischief and lies:
+For God, if in him aught of good had been found, Had not curst
+ him with blindness in one of his eyes.'
+
+Then the broker brought her another bidder and said to her, 'Wilt
+thou be sold to this man?' She looked at him and seeing that he
+was short of stature and had a beard that reached to his navel,
+said, 'This is he of whom the poet speaks, when he says:
+
+I have a friend, who has a beard, that God Caused flourish
+ without profit, till, behold.
+'Tis, as it were, to look upon, a night Of middle winter, long
+ and dark and cold.'
+
+'O my lady,' said the broker, 'look who pleases thee of these
+that are present, and point him out, that I may sell thee to
+him.' So she looked round the ring of merchants, examining them
+one by one, till her eyes rested on Ali Shar. His sight cost her
+a thousand sighs and her heart was taken with him: for that he
+was passing fair of favour and more pleasant than the northern
+zephyr; and she said, 'O broker, I will be sold to none but my
+lord there, he of the handsome face and slender shape, whom the
+poet describes in the following verses:
+
+They showed thy lovely face and railed At her whom ravishment
+ assailed.
+Had they desired to keep me chaste, Thy face so fair they should
+ have veiled.
+
+None shall possess me but he,' added she; 'for his cheek is
+smooth and the water of his mouth sweet as Selsebil;[FN#15] his
+sight is a cure for the sick and his charms confound poet and
+proser, even as saith one of him:
+
+The water of his mouth is wine, and very musk The fragrance of
+ his breath; his teeth are camphor white.
+Rizwan hath put him our from paradise, for fear The black-eyed
+ girls of heaven be tempted with the wight.
+Men blame him for his pride; but the full moon's excuse, How
+ proud so'er it be, finds favour in our sight.
+
+Him of the curling locks and rose-red cheeks and enchanting
+glances, of whom saith the poet:
+
+A slender loveling promised me his favours fair and free; So my
+ heart's restless and my eye looks still his sight to see.
+His eyelids warranted me the keeping of his troth; But how shall
+ they, that bankrupt[FN#16] are, fulfil their warranty?
+
+And as saith another:
+
+"The script of whiskers on his cheek," quoth they, "is plain to
+ see: How canst thou then enamoured be of him, and whiskered
+ he?"
+Quoth I, "Have done with blame and leave your censuring, I pray.
+ As if it be a very script, it is a forgery.
+Lo, in the gathering of his cheeks the meads of Eden be, And more
+ by token that his lips are Kauther,[FN#17], verily."
+
+When the broker heard the verses she repeated on the charms of
+Ali Shar, he marvelled at her eloquence, no less than at the
+brightness of her beauty; but her owner said to him, 'Marvel not
+at her beauty, that shames the sun of day, nor that her mind is
+stored with the choicest verses of the poets; for, besides this,
+she can repeat the glorious Koran, according to the seven
+readings, and the august Traditions, after the authentic text;
+and she writes the seven hands and is versed in more branches of
+knowledge than the most learned doctor. Moreover, her hands are
+better than gold and silver; for she makes curtains of silk and
+sells them for fifty dinars each; and it takes her eight days to
+make a curtain.' 'Happy the man,' exclaimed the broker, 'who hath
+her in his house and maketh her of his privy treasures!' And her
+owner said, 'Sell her to whom she will.' So the broker went up to
+Ali Shar and kissing his hands, said to him, 'O my lord, buy thou
+this damsel, for she hath made choice of thee.' Then he set forth
+to him all her charms and accomplishments, and added: 'I give
+thee joy, if thou buy her, for she is a gift from Him who is no
+niggard of His giving.'
+
+Ali bowed his head awhile, laughing to himself and saying
+inwardly, 'Up to now I have not broken my fast; yet I am ashamed
+to own before the merchants that I have no money wherewith to buy
+her.' The damsel, seeing him hang down his head, said to the
+broker, 'Take my hand and lead me to him, that I may show myself
+to him and tempt him to buy me; for I will not be sold to any but
+him.' So the broker took her hand and stationed her before Ali
+Shar, saying, 'What is thy pleasure, O my lord?' But he made him
+no answer, and the girl said to him, 'O my lord and darling of my
+heart, what ails thee that thou wilt not bid for me? Buy me for
+what thou wilt, and I will bring thee good fortune.' Ali raised
+his eyes to her and said, 'Must I buy thee perforce? Thou art
+dear at one thousand dinars.' 'Then buy me for nine hundred,'
+answered she. 'Nay,' rejoined he; and she said, 'Then for eight
+hundred;' and ceased not to abate the price, till she came to a
+hundred dinars. Quoth he, 'I have not quite a hundred dinars.'
+'How much dost thou lack of a hundred?' asked she, laughing. 'By
+Allah,' replied he, 'I have neither a hundred dinars, nor any
+other sum; for I own neither white money nor red, neither dinar
+nor dirhem. So look out for another customer.' When she knew that
+he had nothing, she said to him, 'Take me by the hand and carry
+me aside into a passage, as if thou wouldst examine me privily.'
+He did so and she took from her bosom a purse containing a
+thousand dinars, which she gave him saying, 'Pay down nine
+hundred to my price and keep the rest to provide us withal.'
+
+He did as she bade him and buying her for nine hundred dinars,
+paid down the price from the purse and carried her to his house,
+which when she entered, she found nothing but bare floors,
+without carpets or vessels. So she gave him other thousand
+dinars, saying, 'Go to the bazaar and buy three hundred dinars'
+worth of furniture and vessels for the house and three dinars'
+worth of meat and drink, also a piece of silk, the size of a
+curtain, and gold and silver thread and [sewing] silk of seven
+colours.' He did her bidding, and she furnished the house and
+they sat down to eat and drink; after which they went to bed and
+took their pleasure, one of the other. And they lay the night
+embraced and were even as saith the poet:
+
+Cleave fast to her thou lov'st and let the envious rail amain;
+ For calumny and envy ne'er to favour love were fain.
+Lo, whilst I slept, in dreams I saw thee lying by my side And
+ from thy lips the sweetest, sure, of limpid springs did
+ drain.
+Yea, true and certain all I saw is, as I will avouch, And 'spite
+ the envier, thereto I surely will attain.
+There is no goodlier sight, indeed, for eyes to look upon, Than
+ when one couch in its embrace enfoldeth lovers twain,
+Each to the other's bosom clasped, clad in their twinned delight,
+ Whilst hand with hand and arm with arm about their necks
+ enchain.
+Lo, when two hearts are straitly knit in passion and desire, But
+ on cold iron smite the folk who chide at them in vain.
+Thou, that for loving censurest the votaries of love, Canst thou
+ assain a heart diseased or heal a cankered brain?
+If in thy time thou find but one to love thee and be true, I rede
+ thee cast the world away and with that one remain.
+
+They lay together till the morning and love for the other was
+stablished in the heart of each of them. On the morrow, Zumurrud
+took the curtain and embroidered it with coloured silks and gold
+and silver thread, depicting thereon all manner birds and beasts;
+nor is there in the world a beast but she wrought on the curtain
+the semblant thereof. Moreover, she made thereto a band, with
+figures of birds, and wrought at it eight days, till she had made
+an end of it, when she trimmed it and ironed it and gave it to
+Ali, saying, 'Carry it to the bazaar and sell it to one of the
+merchants for fifty dinars; but beware lest thou sell it to a
+passer-by, for this would bring about a separation between us,
+because we have enemies who are not unmindful of us.' 'I hear and
+obey,' answered he and repairing to the bazaar, sold the curtain
+to a merchant, as she bade him; after which he bought stuff for
+another curtain and silk and gold and silver thread as before and
+what they needed of food, and brought all this to her, together
+with the rest of the money.
+
+They abode thus a whole year, and every eight days she made a
+curtain, which he sold for fifty dinars. At the end of the year,
+he went to the bazaar, as usual, with a curtain, which he gave to
+the broker; and there came up to him a Christian, who bid him
+threescore dinars for the curtain; but he refused, and the
+Christian went on to bid higher and higher, till he came to a
+hundred dinars and bribed the broker with ten gold pieces. So the
+latter returned to Ali and told him of this and urged him to
+accept the offer, saying, 'O my lord, be not afraid of this
+Christian, for he can do thee no hurt.' The merchants also were
+instant with him to accept the offer; so he sold the curtain to
+the Christian, though his heart misgave him, and taking the
+price, set off to return home.
+
+Presently, he found the Christian walking behind him; so he said
+to him, 'O Nazarene, why dost thou follow me?' 'O my lord,'
+answered the other, 'I have a need at the end of the street, may
+God never bring thee to need!' Ali went on, but, as he came to
+the door of his house, the Christian overtook him; so he said to
+him, 'O accursed one, what ails thee to follow me wherever I go?'
+'O my lord,' replied the other, 'give me a draught of water, for
+I am athirst; and with God the Most High be thy reward!' Quoth
+Ali in himself, 'Verily, this man is a tributary [of the
+Khalifate] and seeks a draught of water of me; by Allah, I will
+not disappoint him!' So he entered the house and took a mug of
+water; but Zumurrud saw him and said to him, 'O my love, hast
+thou sold the curtain?' 'Yes,' answered he. 'To a merchant or a
+passer-by?' asked she. 'For my heart forethinketh me of
+separation.' 'To a merchant, of course,' replied he. But she
+rejoined, 'Tell me the truth of the case, that I may order my
+affair; and what wantest thou with the mug of water?' 'To give
+the broker a drink,' answered he; whereupon she exclaimed, 'There
+is no power and no virtue but in God the Most High, the Supreme!'
+And repeated the following verses:
+
+O thou that seekest parting, stay thy feet: Let clips and kisses
+ not delude thy spright.
+Softly, for fortune's nature is deceit And parting is the end of
+ love-delight.
+
+Then he took the mug and going out, found the Christian within
+the vestibule and said to him, 'O dog, how darest thou enter my
+house without my leave?' 'O my lord,' answered he, 'there is no
+difference between the door and the vestibule and I will not
+budge hence, save to go out; and I am beholden to thee for thy
+kindness.' Then he took the mug and emptying it, returned it to
+Ali, who took it and waited for him to go; but he did not move.
+So Ali said to him, 'Why dost thou not rise and go thy way?' 'O
+my lord,' answered the Christian, 'be not of those that do a
+kindness and after make a reproach of it, nor one of whom saith
+the poet:
+
+Gone, gone are they who, if thou stoodst before their door of
+ old, Had, at thy seeking, handselled thee with benefits
+ untold!
+And if thou stoodest at their door who follow after them, These
+ latter would begrudge to thee a draught of water cold.
+
+O my lord,' continued he, 'I have drunk, and now I would have
+thee give me to eat of whatever is in the house, though it be but
+a crust of bread or a biscuit and an onion.' 'Begone, without
+more talk,' replied Ali; 'There is nothing in the house.' 'O my
+lord,' insisted the Christian, 'if there be nothing in the house,
+take these hundred dinars and fetch us somewhat from the market,
+if but a cake of bread, that bread and salt may pass between us.'
+With this, quoth Ali to himself, 'This Christian is surely mad; I
+will take the hundred dinars and bring somewhat worth a couple of
+dirhems and laugh at him.' 'O my lord,' added the Christian, 'I
+want but somewhat to stay my hunger, were it but a cake of dry
+bread and an onion; for the best food is that which does away
+hunger, not rich meats; and how well saith the poet:
+
+A cake of dry stale bread will hunger out to flight: Why then are
+ grief and care so heavy on my spright?
+Death is, indeed, most just, since, with an equal hand, Khalif
+ and beggar-wretch, impartial, it doth smite.'
+
+Then said Ali, 'Wait here, whilst I lock the saloon and fetch
+thee somewhat from the market.' 'I hear and obey,' said the
+Christian. So Ali shut up the saloon and locking the door with a
+padlock, put the key in his pocket: after which he repaired to
+the market and bought fried cheese and virgin honey and bananas
+and bread, with which he returned to the Christian. When the
+latter saw this, he said, 'O my lord, this is [too] much; thou
+hast brought enough for half a score men and I am alone; but
+belike thou wilt eat with me.' 'Eat by thyself,' replied Ali; 'I
+am full.' 'O my lord,' rejoined the Christian, 'the wise say, "He
+who eats not with his guest is a base-born churl."'
+
+When Ali heard this, he sat down and ate a little with him, after
+which he would have held his hand: but [whilst he was not
+looking] the Christian took a banana and peeled it, then,
+splitting it in twain, put into one half concentrated henbane,
+mixed with opium, a drachm whereof would overthrow an elephant.
+This half he dipped in the honey and gave to Ali Shar, saying, 'O
+my lord, I swear by thy religion that thou shalt take this.' Ali
+was ashamed to make him forsworn; so he took the half banana and
+swallowed it; but hardly had it reached his stomach, when his
+head fell down in front of his feet and he was as though he had
+been a year asleep.
+
+When the Nazarene saw this, he rose, as he had been a bald wolf
+or a baited cat, and taking the saloon key, made off at a run,
+leaving Ali Shar prostrate. Now this Christian was the brother of
+the decrepit old man who thought to buy Zumurrud for a thousand
+dinars, but she would have none of him and flouted him in verse.
+He was an infidel at heart, though a Muslim in outward show, and
+called himself Reshideddin;[FN#18] and when Zumurrud mocked him
+and would not accept of him to her lord, he complained to his
+brother, the aforesaid Christian, Bersoum by name, who said to
+him, 'Fret not thyself about this affair; for I will make shift
+to get her for thee, without paying a penny.'
+
+Now he was a skilful sorcerer crafty and wicked; so he watched
+his time and played Ali Shar the trick aforesaid; then, taking
+the key, he went to his brother and told him what had passed,
+whereupon Reshideddin mounted his mule and repaired with his
+servants to Ali Shar's house, taking with him a purse of a
+thousand dinars, wherewith to bribe the master of police, should
+he meet him. He unlocked the saloon door, and the men who were
+with him rushed in upon Zumurrud and seized her, threatening her
+with death if she spoke; but they left the house as it was and
+took nothing therefrom. Moreover, they laid the key by Ali's side
+and leaving him lying in the vestibule, shut the door on him and
+went away. The Christian carried the girl to his own house and
+setting her amongst his women and concubines, said to her, 'O
+strumpet, I am the old man, whom thou did reject and lampoon; but
+now I have thee, without paying a penny.' 'God requite thee, O
+wicked old man,' replied she, with her eyes full of tears, 'for
+sundering my lord and me!' 'Wanton doxy that thou art,' rejoined
+he,' thou shalt see how I will punish thee! By the virtue of the
+Messiah and the Virgin, except thou obey me and embrace my faith,
+I will torture thee with all manner of torture!' 'By Allah,'
+answered she, 'though thou cut me in pieces, I will not forswear
+the faith of Islam! It may be God the Most High will bring me
+speedy relief, for He is all-powerful, and the wise say, "Better
+hurt in body than in religion."'
+
+Thereupon the old man called out to his eunuchs and women,
+saying, 'Throw her down!' So they threw her down and he beat her
+grievously, whilst she cried in vain for help, but presently
+stinted and fell to saying, 'God is my sufficiency, and He is
+indeed sufficient!' till her breath failed her and she swooned
+away. When he had taken his fill of beating her, he said to the
+eunuchs, 'Drag her forth by the feet and cast her down in the
+kitchen, and give her nothing to eat.' They did his bidding, and
+on the morrow the accursed old man sent for her and beat her
+again, after which he bade return her to her place. When the pain
+of the blows had subsided, she said, 'There is no god but God and
+Mohammed is His Apostle! God is my sufficiency and excellent is
+He in whom I put my trust!' And she called upon our lord Mohammed
+(whom God bless and preserve) for succour.
+
+Meanwhile, Ali Shar slept on till next day, when the fumes of the
+henbane quitted his brain and he awoke and cried out, 'O
+Zumurrud!' But none answered him. So he entered the saloon and
+found 'the air empty and the place of visitation distant;'[FN#19]
+whereby he knew that it was the Nazarene, who had played him this
+trick. And he wept and groaned and lamented and repeated the
+following verses:
+
+O Fate, thou sparest not nor dost desist from me: Lo, for my soul
+ is racked with dolour and despite!
+Have pity, O my lords, upon a slave laid low, Upon the rich made
+ poor by love and its unright.
+What boots the archer's skill, if, when the foe draw near, His
+ bowstring snap and leave him helpless in the fight?
+And when afflictions press and multiply on man, Ah, whither then
+ shall he from destiny take flight?
+How straitly did I guard 'gainst severance of our loves! But,
+ when as Fate descends, it blinds the keenest sight.
+
+Then he sobbed and repeated these verses also:
+
+Her traces on the encampment's sands a robe of grace bestow: The
+ mourner yearneth to the place where she dwelt whiles ago.
+Towards her native land she turns; a camp in her doth raise
+ Longing, whose very ruins now are scattered to and fro.
+She stops and questions of the place; but with the case's tongue
+ It answers her, "There is no way to union, I trow.
+'Tis as the lost a Levin were, that glittered on the camp Awhile,
+ then vanished and to thee appeareth nevermo'."
+
+And he repented, whenas repentance availed him not, and wept and
+tore his clothes. Then he took two stones and went round the
+city, beating his breast with the stones and crying out, 'O
+Zumurrud!' whilst the children flocked round him, calling out, 'A
+madman! A madman!' and all who knew him wept for him, saying,
+'Yonder is such an one: what hath befallen him?' This he did all
+that day, and when night darkened on him, he lay down in one of
+the by-streets and slept till morning. On the morrow, he went
+round about the city with the stones till eventide, when he
+returned to his house, to pass the night. One of his neighbours,
+a worthy old woman, saw him and said to him, 'God keep thee, O my
+son! How long hast thou been mad?' And he answered her with the
+following verse:
+
+Quoth they, "Thou'rt surely mad for her thou lov'st;" and I
+ replied, "Indeed the sweets of life belong unto the raving
+ race.
+My madness leave and bring me her for whom ye say I'm mad; And if
+ she heal my madness, spare to blame me for my case."
+
+Therewith she knew him for a lover who had lost his mistress and
+said, 'There is no power and no virtue but in God the Most High,
+the Supreme! O my son, I would have thee acquaint me with the
+particulars of thine affliction. Peradventure God may enable me
+to help thee against it, if it so please Him.' So he told her all
+that had happened and she said, 'O my son, indeed thou hast
+excuse.' And her eyes ran over with tears and she repeated the
+following verses:
+
+Torment, indeed, in this our world, true lovers do aby; Hell
+ shall not torture them, by God, whenas they come to die!
+Of love they died and to the past their passions chastely hid; So
+ are they martyrs, as, indeed, traditions[FN#20] testify.
+
+Then she said, 'O my son, go now and buy me a basket, such as the
+jewel-hawkers carry, and stock it with rings and bracelets and
+ear-rings and other women's gear, and spare not money. Bring all
+this to me and I will set it on my head and go round about, in
+the guise of a huckstress, and make search for her in all the
+houses, till I light on news of her, if it be the will of God the
+Most High.' Ali rejoiced in her words and kissed her hands, then,
+going out, speedily returned with all she required; whereupon she
+rose and donning a patched gown and a yellow veil, took a staff
+in her hand and set out, with the basket on her head.
+
+She ceased not to go from quarter to quarter and street to street
+and house to house, till God the Most High led her to the house
+of the accursed Reshideddin the Nazarene. She heard groans within
+and knocked at the door, whereupon a slave-girl came down and
+opening the door to her, saluted her. Quoth the old woman, 'I
+have these trifles for sale: is there any one with you who will
+buy aught of them?' 'Yes,' answered the girl and carrying her
+indoors, made her sit down; whereupon all the women came round
+her and each bought something of her. She spoke to them fair and
+was easy with them as to price, so that they rejoiced in her,
+because of her pleasant speech and easiness. Meanwhile, she
+looked about to see who it was she had heard groaning, till her
+eyes fell on Zumurrud, when she knew her and saw that she was
+laid prostrate. So she wept and said to the girls, 'O my
+children, how comes yonder damsel in this plight?' And they told
+her what had passed, adding, 'Indeed, the thing is not of our
+choice; but our master commanded us to do this, and he is now
+absent on a journey.' 'O my children,' said the old woman, 'I
+have a request to make of you, and it is that you loose this
+unhappy woman of her bonds, till you know of your lord's return,
+when do ye bind her again as she was; and you shall earn a reward
+from the Lord of all creatures.' 'We hear and obey,' answered
+they and loosing Zumurrud, gave her to eat and drink.
+
+Then said the old woman, 'Would my leg had been broken, ere I
+entered your house!' And she went up to Zumurrud and said to her,
+'O my daughter, take heart; God will surely bring thee relief.'
+Then she told her [privily] that she came from her lord Ali Shar
+and appointed her to be on the watch that night, saying, 'Thy
+lord will come to the bench under the gallery and whistle to
+thee; and when thou hearest him, do thou whistle back to him and
+let thyself down to him by a rope from the window, and he will
+take thee and go away.' Zumurrud thanked the old woman, and the
+latter returned to Ali Shar and told him what she had done,
+saying, 'Go to-night, at midnight, to such a quarter,--for the
+accursed fellow's house is there and its fashion is thus and
+thus. Stand under the window of the upper chamber and whistle;
+whereupon she will let herself down to thee; then do thou take
+her and carry her whither thou wilt.' He thanked her for her good
+offices and repeated the following verses, with the tears running
+down his cheeks:
+
+Let censors cease to rail and chide and leave their idle prate:
+ My body's wasted and my heart weary and desolate;
+And from desertion and distress my tears, by many a chain Of true
+ traditions handed down, do trace their lineage straight.
+Thou that art whole of heart and free from that which I endure Of
+ grief and care, cut short thy strife nor question of my
+ state.
+A sweet-lipped maiden, soft of sides and moulded well of shape,
+ With her soft speech my heart hath ta'en, ay, and her
+ graceful gait.
+My heart, since thou art gone, no rest knows nor my eyes do
+ sleep, Nor can the hunger of my hopes itself with patience
+ sate.
+Yea, thou hast left me sorrowful, the hostage of desire, 'Twixt
+ enviers and haters dazed and all disconsolate.
+As for forgetting, 'tis a thing I know not nor will know; For
+ none but thou into my thought shalt enter, soon or late.
+
+Then he sighed and shed tears and repeated these also:
+
+May God be good to him who brought me news that ye were come! For
+ never more delightful news unto my ears was borne.
+If he would take a worn-out wede for boon, I'd proffer him A
+ heart that at the parting hour was all in pieces torn.
+
+He waited until the appointed time, then went to the street,
+where was the Christian's house, and recognizing it from the old
+woman's description, sat down on the bench under the gallery.
+Presently, drowsiness overcame him, for it was long since he had
+slept, for the violence of his passion, and he became as one
+drunken with sleep. Glory be to Him who sleepeth not!
+
+Meanwhile, chance led thither a certain thief, who had come out
+that night to steal somewhat and prowled about the skirts of the
+city, till he happened on Reshideddin's house. He went round
+about it, but found no way of climbing up into it and presently
+came to the bench, where he found Ali Shar asleep and took his
+turban. At that moment, Zumurrud looked out and seeing the thief
+standing in the darkness, took him for her lord; so she whistled
+to him and he whistled back to her; whereupon she let herself
+down to him, with a pair of saddle-bags full of gold. When the
+robber saw this, he said to himself, 'This is a strange thing,
+and there must needs be some extraordinary cause to it.' Then,
+snatching up the saddle-bags, he took Zumurrud on his shoulders
+and made off with both like the blinding lightning.
+
+Quoth she, 'The old woman told me that thou wast weak with
+illness on my account; and behold, thou art stronger than a
+horse.' He made her no reply; so she put her hand to his face and
+felt a beard like a bath-broom,[FN#21] as he were a hog that had
+swallowed feathers and they had come out at his gullet; whereat
+she took fright and said to him, 'What art thou?' 'O strumpet,'
+answered he, 'I am the sharper Jewan the Kurd, of the band of
+Ahmed ed Denef; we are forty sharpers, who will all tilt at thy
+tail this night, from dusk to dawn.' When she heard his words,
+she wept and buffeted her face, knowing that Fate had gotten the
+better of her and that there was nothing for it but to put her
+trust in God the Most High. So she took patience and submitted
+herself to the ordinance of God, saying, 'There is no god but
+God! As often as we escape from one trouble, we fall into a
+worse.'
+
+Now the manner of Jewan's coming thither was thus: he had said to
+Ahmed ed Denef, 'O captain, I have been here before and know a
+cavern without the town, that will hold forty souls; so I will go
+before you thither and set my mother therein. Then will I enter
+the city and steal somewhat on your account and keep it till you
+come; so shall you be my guests this day.' 'Do what thou wilt,'
+replied Ahmed. So Jewan forewent them to the cavern and left his
+mother there; but, as he came out, he found a trooper lying
+asleep, with his horse tethered beside him; so he slew him and
+taking his clothes and arms, hid them with his mother in the
+cave, where also he tied up the horse. Then he betook himself to
+the city and prowled about, till he happened on the Christian's
+house and did with Ali Shar and Zumurrud as we have said. He
+ceased not to run, with Zumurrud on his back, till he came to the
+cavern, where he gave her in charge of his mother, saying, 'Keep
+watch over her till I come back to thee at point of day,' and
+went away.
+
+Meanwhile Zumurrud said to herself, 'Now is the time to cast
+about for a means of escape. If I wait till these forty men come,
+they will take their turns at me, till they make me like a water-
+logged ship.' Then she turned to the old woman and said to her,
+'O my aunt, wilt thou not come without the cave, that I may louse
+thee in the sun?' 'Ay, by Allah, O my daughter!' replied the old
+woman. 'This long time have I been out of reach of the bath; for
+these hogs cease not to hale me from place to place.' So they
+went without the cavern, and Zumurrud combed out the old woman's
+hair and killed the vermin in her head, till this soothed her and
+she fell asleep; whereupon Zumurrud arose and donning the clothes
+of the murdered trooper, girt herself with his sword and covered
+her head with his turban, so that she became as she were a man.
+Then she took the saddle-bags full of gold and mounted the horse,
+saying in herself, 'O kind Protector, I adjure thee by the glory
+of Mohammed, (whom God bless and preserve,) protect me! If I
+enter the city, belike one of the trooper's folk will see me, and
+no good will befall me.' So she turned her back on the city and
+rode forth into the desert.
+
+She fared on ten days, eating of the fruits of the earth and
+drinking of its waters, she and her horse; and on the eleventh
+day, she came in sight of a pleasant and safe city, stablished in
+good; the season of winter had departed from it with its cold and
+the spring-tide came to it with its roses and orange-blossoms;
+its flowers blew bright, its streams welled forth and its birds
+warbled. As she drew near, she saw the troops and Amirs and
+notables of the place drawn up before the gate, at which she
+marvelled and said to herself, 'The people of the city are all
+collected at the gate: there must needs be a reason for this.'
+Then she made towards them; but, as she drew near, the troops
+hastened forward to meet her and dismounting, kissed the ground
+before her and said, 'God aid thee, O our lord the Sultan!'
+
+Then the grandees ranked themselves before her, whilst the troops
+ranged the people in order, saying, 'God aid thee and make thy
+coming a blessing to the Muslims, O Sultan of all men! God
+stablish thee, O king of the age and pearl of the day and the
+time!' 'What ails you, O people of the city?' asked Zumurrud; and
+the chamberlain answered, 'Verily, He who is no niggard in giving
+hath been bountiful to thee and hath made thee Sultan of this
+city and ruler over the necks of all that are therein; for know
+that it is the custom of the citizens, when their king dies,
+leaving no son, that the troops should sally forth of the pace
+and abide there three days; and whoever cometh from the quarter
+whence thou hast come, they make him king over them. So praised
+be God who hath sent us a well-favoured man of the sons of the
+Turks; for had a lesser than thou presented himself, he had been
+Sultan.'
+
+Now Zumurrud was well-advised in all she did; so she said, 'Think
+not that I am of the common folk of the Turks; nay, I am a man of
+condition; but I was wroth with my family, so I went forth and
+left them. See these saddle-bags full of gold I brought with me,
+that I might give alms thereof to the poor and needy by the way.'
+So they called down blessings upon her and rejoiced in her with
+an exceeding joy and she also rejoiced in them and said in
+herself, 'Now that I have attained to this estate, it may be God
+will reunite me with my lord in this place, for He can do what He
+will.' Then the troops escorted her to the city and dismounting,
+walked before her to the palace. Here she alighted and the Amirs
+and grandees, taking her under the armpits, carried her into the
+palace and seated her on the throne; after which they all kissed
+the ground before her. Then she bade open the treasuries and gave
+largesse to the troops, who offered up prayers for the continuance
+of her reign, and all the townsfolk and the people of the kingdom
+accepted her rule.
+
+She abode thus awhile, ordering and forbidding, and remitted
+taxes and released prisoners and redressed grievances, so that
+all the people came to hold her in exceeding reverence and to
+love her, by reason of her generosity and continence; but, as
+often as she bethought her of her lord, she wept and besought God
+to reunite them; and one night, as she was thinking of him and
+calling to mind the days she had passed with him, her eyes ran
+over with tears and she repeated the following verses:
+
+My longing, 'spite of time, for thee is ever new; My weeping
+ wounds my lids and tears on tears ensue.
+Whenas I weep, I weep for anguish of desire; For grievous
+ severance is a lover's heart unto.
+
+Then she wiped away her tears and rising, betook herself to the
+harem, where she appointed to the slave-girls and concubines
+separate lodgings and assigned them pensions and allowances,
+giving out that she was minded to live apart and devote herself
+to works of piety. So she betook herself to fasting and praying,
+till the Amirs said, 'Verily, this Sultan is exceeding devout.'
+Nor would she suffer any attendants about her, save two little
+eunuchs, to serve her.
+
+She held the throne thus a whole year, during which time she
+heard no news of Ali Shar, and this was exceeding grievous to
+her; so, when her distress became excessive, she summoned her
+Viziers and chamberlains and bid them fetch architects and
+builders and make her a tilting ground, a parasang long and the
+like broad, in front of the palace. They hastened to do her
+bidding, and when the place was competed to her liking, she went
+down into it and they pitched her there a great pavilion, wherein
+the chairs of the Amirs were set in their order. Then she bade
+spread in the tilting-ground tables with all manner rich meats
+and ordered the grandees to eat. So they ate and she said to
+them, 'It is my will that, on the first day of each month, ye do
+on this wise and proclaim in the city that none shall open his
+shop, but that all the people shall come and eat of the king's
+banquet, and that whoso disobeyeth shall be hanged over his own
+door.'
+
+They did as she bade them, and when came the first day of the
+next month, Zumurrud went down into the tilting-ground and the
+crier proclaimed aloud, saying, 'Ho, all ye people, great and
+small, whoso openeth shop or house or magazine shall straightway
+be hanged over his own door; for it behoves you all to come and
+eat of the king's banquet.' Then they laid the tables and the
+people came in troops; so she bade them sit down at the tables
+and eat their fill of all the dishes. So they sat down and she
+sat on her chair of estate, watching them, whilst each thought
+she was looking at none but him. Then they fell to eating and the
+Amirs said to them, 'Eat and be not ashamed; for this is pleasing
+to the King.' So they ate their fill and went away, blessing the
+King and saying, one to the other, 'Never saw we a Sultan that
+loved the poor as doth this Sultan.' And they wished her length
+of life, whilst Zumurrud returned to the palace, rejoicing in her
+device and saying in herself, 'If it please God the Most High, I
+shall surely by this means happen on news of my lord Ali Shar.'
+
+When the first day of the second month came round, she made the
+banquet as before and the folk came and sat down at the tables,
+company by company and one by one. As she sat on her throne, at
+the head of the tables, watching the people eat, her eye fell on
+Bersoum, the Nazarene who had bought the curtain of Ali Shar; and
+she knew him and said in herself, 'This is the first of my solace
+and of the accomplishment of my desire.' Bersoum came up to the
+table and sitting down with the rest to eat, espied a dish of
+sweet rice, sprinkled with sugar; but it was far from him. So he
+pushed up to it and putting out his hand to it, took it and set
+it before himself. His next neighbour said to him, 'Why dost thou
+not eat of what is before thee? Art thou not ashamed to reach
+over for a dish that is distant from thee?' Quoth Bersoum, 'I
+will eat of none but this dish.' 'Eat then,' rejoined the other,
+'and small good may it do thee!' But another man, a hashish-
+eater, said, 'Let him eat of it, that I may eat with him.' 'O
+unluckiest of hashish-eaters,' replied the first speaker, 'this
+is no meat for thee; it is eating for Amirs. Let it be, that it
+may return to those for whom it is meant and they eat it.'
+
+But Bersoum heeded him not and putting his hand to the rice, took
+a mouthful and put it in his mouth. He was about to take a second
+mouthful, when Zumurrud, who was watching him, cried out to
+certain of her guards, saying, 'Bring me yonder man with the dish
+of sweet rice before him and let him not eat the mouthful he hath
+ready, but throw it from his hand.' So four of the guards went up
+to Bersoum and throwing the mouthful of rice from his hand, haled
+him forthright before Zumurrud, whilst all the people left eating
+and said to one another, 'By Allah, he did wrong in not eating of
+the food meant for the like of him.' 'For me,' quoth one, 'I was
+content with this frumenty that is before me.' And the hashish-
+eater said, 'Praised be God who hindered me from eating of the
+dish of sweet rice, for I looked for it to stand before him and
+was only waiting for him to have stayed his hunger of it, to eat
+with him, when there befell him what we see.' And they said, one
+to another, 'Wait till we see what befalls him.'
+
+Then said Zumurrud to Bersoum, 'Out on thee, O blue eyes! What is
+thy name and why comest thou hither?' But the accursed fellow
+miscalled himself, having a white turban,[FN#22] and answered, 'O
+King, my name is Ali; I am a weaver and came hither to trade.'
+'Bring me a table of sand and a pen of brass,' quoth Zumurrud,
+and they brought her what she sought. She levelled the sand and
+taking the pen, drew a geomantic figure, in the likeness of an
+ape; then, raising her head, she considered Bersoum straitly and
+said to him, 'O dog, how darest thou lie to kings? Art thou not a
+Nazarene, Bersoum by name, and comest thou not hither in quest of
+somewhat? Speak the truth, or, by the splendour of the Deity, I
+will strike off thy head?' At this, Bersoum was confounded and
+the Amirs and bystanders said, 'Verily, the King understands
+geomancy: blessed be He who hath gifted him!' Then Zumurrud cried
+out upon Bersoum and said, 'Tell me the truth, or I will make an
+end of thee!' 'Pardon, O King of the age,' replied Bersoum; 'the
+table hath told thee aright; thy slave is indeed a Nazarene.'
+Whereupon all present wondered at the King's skill in geomancy,
+saying, 'Verily, the King is a diviner, whose like there is not
+in the world.'
+
+Then Zumurrud bade flay the Christian and stuff his skin with
+straw and hang it over the gate of the tilting-ground. Moreover,
+she commanded to dig a pit without the city and burn his flesh
+and bones therein and throw over his ashes offal and rubbish. 'We
+hear and obey,' answered they and did with him as she bade. When
+the people saw what had befallen the Christian, they said, 'He
+hath his deserts; but what an unlucky mouthful was that for him!'
+And another said, 'Be my wife triply divorced if ever I eat of
+sweet rice as long as I live!' 'Praised be God,' quoth the
+hashish-eater, 'who saved me from this fellow's fate by hindering
+me from eating of the rice!' Then they all went out, minded
+thenceforth to leave sitting in the Christian's place, over
+against the dish of sweet rice.
+
+When the first day of the third month came, they laid the tables
+as of wont, and Queen Zumurrud came down and sat on her throne,
+with her guards in attendance on her, fearing her danger. Then
+the townsfolk entered, as usual, and went round about the tables,
+looking for the place of the dish of sweet rice, and quoth one to
+another, 'Hark ye, Hajji Khelef!' 'At thy service, O Hajji
+Khalid,' answered the other. 'Avoid the dish of sweet rice,' said
+Khalid, 'and look thou eat not thereof; for if thou do, thou wilt
+be hanged.' Then they sat down to meat; and as they were eating,
+Zumurrud chanced to look at the gate of the tilting-ground and
+saw a man come running in. So she considered him and knew him for
+Jewan the Kurd.
+
+Now the manner of his coming was on this wise. When he left his
+mother, he went to his comrades and said to them, 'I had fine
+purchase yesterday; for I slew a trooper and took his horse.
+Moreover there fell to me last night a pair of saddle-bags, full
+of gold, and a girl worth more than the money; and I have left
+them all with my mother in the cave.' At this they rejoiced and
+repaired to the cavern at nightfall, whilst they forewent them,
+that he might fetch them the booty. But he found the place empty
+and questioned his mother, who told him what had befallen;
+whereupon he bit his hands for despite and exclaimed, 'By Allah,
+I will make search for yonder harlot and take her, wherever she
+is, though it be in the shell of a pistachio-nut, and quench my
+malice on her!' So he went forth in quest of her and journeyed
+from place to place, till he came to Queen Zumurrud's city. He
+found the town deserted and enquiring of some women whom he saw
+looking from the windows, learnt that it was the Sultan's custom
+to make a banquet for all the people on the first of each month
+and was directed to the tilting-ground, where the feast was
+spread.
+
+So he came running in and finding no place empty, save that
+before the dish of sweet rice, took his seat there and put out
+his hand to the dish; whereupon the folk cried out to him,
+saying, 'O brother, what wilt thou do?' Quoth he, 'I mean to eat
+my fill of this dish.' 'If thou eat of it,' rejoined one of the
+people, 'thou wilt assuredly be hanged.' But Jewan said, 'Hold
+thy peace and talk not thus.' Then he stretched out his hand to
+the dish aforesaid and drew it to him.
+
+Now the hashish-eater, of whom we have before spoken, was sitting
+by him; but when he saw him do this, the fumes of the hashish
+left his head and he fled from his place and sat down afar off,
+saying, 'I will have nothing to do with yonder dish.' Then Jewan
+put out his hand, as it were a crow's foot, and dipping it in the
+dish, scooped up therewith half the dishful and drew it out, as
+it were a camel's hoof, and the bottom of the dish appeared. He
+rolled the rice in his hand, till it was like a great orange, and
+threw it ravenously into his mouth; and it rolled down his
+gullet, with a noise like thunder. 'Praised by God,' quoth his
+neighbour, 'who hath not made me meat before thee; for thou hast
+emptied the dish at one mouthful.' 'Let him eat,' said the
+hashish-eater; 'methinks he hath a gallows-face.' Then, turning
+to Jewan, 'Eat,' added he, 'and small good may it do thee!'
+
+Jewan put out his hand again and taking another mouthful, was
+rolling it in his hands like the first, when Zumurrud cried out
+to the guards, saying, 'Bring me yonder man in haste and let him
+not eat the mouthful in his hand.' So they ran and seizing him,
+as he bent over the dish, brought him to her, whilst the people
+exulted over him and said, one to the other, 'He hath his
+deserts, for we warned him, but he would not take warning.
+Verily, this place is fated to be the death of whoso sits
+therein, and yonder rice is fatal to all who eat of it.'
+
+Then said Zumurrud to Jewan, 'What is thy name and condition and
+why comest thou hither?' 'O our lord the Sultan,' answered he,
+'my name is Othman; I am a gardener and am come hither in quest
+of somewhat I have lost.' 'Bring me a table of sand,' said
+Zumurrud. So they brought it, and she took the pen and drawing a
+geomantic figure, considered it awhile, then raising her head,
+exclaimed, 'Out on thee, thou sorry knave! How darest thou lie to
+kings? This sand tells me that thy name is Jewan the Kurd and
+that thou art by trade a robber, taking men's goods in the way of
+unright and slaying those whom God hath forbidden to slay, save
+for just cause.' And she cried out upon him, saying, 'O hog, tell
+me the truth of thy case or I will cut off thy head!'
+
+When he heard this, he turned pale and his teeth chattered; then,
+deeming that he might save himself by telling the truth, he
+replied, 'O King, thou sayest sooth; but I repent at thy hands
+henceforth and turn to God the Most High!' Quoth she, 'I may not
+leave a pest in the way of the true-believers.' And she said to
+her guards, 'Take him and flay him and do with him as ye did by
+his like last month.' And they did her commandment. When the
+hashish-eater saw this, he turned his back upon the dish of rice,
+saying, 'It is unlawful to present my face to thee.' Then, when
+they had made an end of eating, they dispersed and Zumurrud
+returned to her palace and dismissed her attendants.
+
+When the fourth month came round, they made the banquet, as of
+wont, and the folk sat awaiting leave to begin. Presently
+Zumurrud entered and sitting down on her throne, looked at the
+tables and saw that room for four people was left void before the
+dish of rice, at which she wondered. As she sat, looking around,
+she saw a man come running in at the gate, who stayed not till he
+reached the tables and finding no room, save before the dish of
+rice, took his seat there. She looked at him and knowing him for
+the accursed Christian, who called himself Reshideddin, said in
+herself, 'How blessed is this device of the food, into whose
+toils this infidel hath fallen!'
+
+Now the manner of his coming was extraordinary, and it was on
+this wise. When he returned from his journey, the people of the
+house told him that Zumurrud was missing and with her a pair of
+saddle-bags full of gold; whereupon he rent his clothes and
+buffeted his face and plucked out his beard. Then he despatched
+his brother Bersoum in quest of her, and when he was weary of
+awaiting news of him, he went forth himself, to seek for him and
+for Zumurrud, and fate led him to the latter's city. He entered
+it on the first day of the month and finding the streets deserted
+and the shops shut, enquired of the women at the windows, who
+told him that the King made a banquet on the first of each month
+for the people, all of whom were bound to attend it, nor might
+any abide in his house or shop that day; and they directed him to
+the tilting-ground.
+
+So he betook himself thither and sitting down before the rice,
+put out his hand to eat thereof, whereupon Zumurrud cried out to
+her guards, saying, 'Bring me him who sits before the dish of
+rice.' So they laid hands on him and brought him before Queen
+Zumurrud, who said to him, 'Out on thee! What is thy name and
+occupation, and what brings thee hither?' 'O King of the age,'
+answered he, 'my name is Rustem and I have no occupation, for
+I am a poor dervish.' Then said she to her attendants, 'Bring
+me a table of sand and pen of brass.' So they brought her what
+she sought, as usual; and she took the pen and drawing a
+geomantic figure, considered it awhile, then raising her head to
+Reshideddin, said, 'O dog, how darest thou lie to kings? Thy name
+is Reshideddin the Nazarene; thou art outwardly a Muslim, but a
+Christian at heart, and thine occupation is to lay snares for the
+slave-girls of the Muslims and take them. Speak the truth, or
+I will smite off thy head.' He hesitated and stammered, then
+replied, 'Thou sayest sooth, O King of the age!' Whereupon she
+commanded to throw him down and give him a hundred blows on each
+sole and a thousand on his body; after which she bade flay him
+and stuff his skin with hards of flax and dig a pit without the
+city, wherein they should burn his body and cast dirt and rubbish
+on his ashes. They did as she bade them and she gave the people
+leave to eat.
+
+So they ate their fill and went their ways, whilst Zumurrud
+returned to her palace, thanking God for that He had solaced her
+heart of those who had wronged her. Then she praised the Creator
+of heaven and earth and repeated the following verses:
+
+Lo, these erst had power and used it with oppression and unright!
+ In a little, their dominion was as it ne'er had been.
+Had they used their power with justice, they had been repaid the
+ like; But they wrought unright and Fortune guerdoned them
+ with dole and teen.
+So they perished and the moral of the case bespeaks them thus,
+ "This is what your crimes have earnt you: Fate is not to
+ blame, I ween."
+
+Then she called to mind her lord Ali Shar and wept, but presently
+recovered herself and said, 'Surely God, who hath given mine
+enemies into my hand, will vouchsafe me speedy reunion with my
+beloved; for He can do what He will and is generous to His
+servants and mindful of their case!' Then she praised God (to
+whom belong might and majesty) and besought forgiveness of Him,
+submitting herself to the course of destiny, assured that to each
+beginning there is an end, and repeating the saying of the poet:
+
+Be at thine ease, for all things' destiny Is in His hands who
+ fashioned earth and sea.
+Nothing of Him forbidden shall befall Nor aught of Him appointed
+ fail to thee.
+
+And what another saith:
+
+Let the days pass, as they list, and fare, And enter thou not the
+ house of despair.
+Full oft, when the quest of a thing is hard, The next hour brings
+ us the end of our care.
+
+And a third:
+
+Be mild what time thou'rt ta'en with anger and despite And
+ patient, if there fall misfortune on thy head.
+Indeed, the nights are quick and great with child by Time And of
+ all wondrous things are hourly brought to bed.
+
+And a fourth:
+
+Take patience, for therein is good; an thou be learn'd in it,
+ Thou shalt be calm of soul nor drink of anguish any whit.
+And know that if, with a good grace, thou do not thee submit, Yet
+ must thou suffer, will or nill, that which the Pen hath
+ writ.
+
+She abode thus another whole month's space, judging the folk and
+commanding and forbidding by day, and by night weeping and
+bewailing her separation from her lord Ali Shar. On the first day
+of the fifth month, she bade spread the banquet as usual and sat
+down at the head of the tables, whilst the people awaited the
+signal to fall to, leaving the space before the dish of rice
+vacant. She sat with eyes fixed upon the gate of the tilting-
+ground, noting all who entered and saying, 'O Thou that
+restoredst Joseph
+to Jacob and didst away the affliction of Job, vouchsafe of Thy
+power and greatness to restore me my lord Ali Shar; for Thou
+canst all things! O Lord of all creatures, O Guide of the erring,
+O Hearer of those that cry, O Answerer of prayer, answer Thou my
+prayer, O Lord of all creatures!'
+
+Hardly had she made an end of her prayer, when she saw entering
+the gate a young man, in shape like the willow wand, the
+comeliest and most accomplished of youths, save that his face was
+sallow and his form wasted. He came up to the tables and finding
+no seat vacant save before the dish of rice, sat down there;
+whereupon Zumurrud's heart fluttered and observing him narrowly,
+she knew him for her lord Ali Shar and was like to have cried out
+for joy, but restrained herself, fearing disgrace before the
+folk. Her bowels were troubled and her heart throbbed; but she
+concealed that which she suffered.
+
+Now the manner of his coming thither was on this wise. When
+he awoke and found himself lying on the bench outside the
+Christian's house, with his head bare, he knew that some one had
+come upon him and robbed him of his turban, whilst he slept. So
+he spoke the word, which whoso saith shall never be confounded,
+that is to say, 'Verily, we are God's and to Him we return!' and
+going back to the old woman's house, knocked at the door. She
+came out and he wept before her, till he swooned away. When he
+came to himself, he told her all that had passed, and she blamed
+him and chid him for his heedlessness, saying, 'Thou hast but
+thyself to thank for thine affliction and calamity.' And she
+gave not over reproaching him, till the blood streamed from his
+nostrils and he again fainted away. When he revived, he saw her
+weeping over him; so he bewailed himself and repeated the
+following verses:
+
+How bitter is parting to friends, and how sweet Reunion to
+ lovers, for sev'rance that sigh!
+May God all unite them and watch over me, For I'm of their number
+ and like for to die.
+
+The old woman mourned over him and said to him, 'Sit here, whilst
+I go in quest of news and return to thee in haste.' 'I hear and
+obey,' answered he. So she left him and was absent till midday,
+when she returned and said to him, 'O Ali, I fear me thou must
+die in thy grief; thou wilt never see thy beloved again save on
+Es Sirat;[FN#23] for the people of the Christian's house, when
+they arose in the morning, found the window giving on the garden
+broken in and Zumurrud missing, and with her a pair of saddle-
+bags, full of the Christian's money. When I came thither, I found
+the Master of Police and his officers standing at the door, and
+there is no power and no virtue save in God the Most High, the
+Supreme!'
+
+When he heard this, the light in his eyes was changed to darkness
+and he despaired of life and made sure of death; nor did he leave
+weeping, till he lost his senses. When he recovered, love and
+longing were sore upon him; there befell him a grievous sickness
+and he kept his house a whole year; during which time the old
+woman ceased not to bring him doctors and ply him with diet-
+drinks and make him broths, till his life returned to him. Then
+he recalled what had passed and repeated the following verses:
+
+Union is parted; in its stead, of grief I am possessed: My tears
+ flow still, my heart's on fire for yearning and unrest.
+Longing redoubles on a wight who hath no peace, so sore Of love
+ and wakefulness and pain he's wasted and oppressed.
+Lord, I beseech Thee, if there be relief for me in aught,
+ Vouchsafe it, whilst a spark of life abideth in my breast.
+
+When the second year began, the old woman said to him, 'O my son,
+all this thy sadness and sorrowing will not bring thee back thy
+mistress. Rise, therefore, take heart and seek for her in the
+lands: haply thou shalt light on some news of her.' And she
+ceased not to exhort and encourage him, till he took heart and
+she carried him to the bath. Then she made him drink wine and eat
+fowls, and thus she did with him for a whole month, till he
+regained strength and setting out, journeyed without ceasing till
+he arrived at Zumurrud's city, when he went to the tilting-ground
+and sitting down before the dish of sweet rice, put out his hand
+to eat of it.
+
+When the folk saw this, they were concerned for him and said to
+him, 'O young man, eat not of that dish, for whoso eats thereof,
+misfortune befalls him.' 'Leave me to eat of it,' answered he,
+'and let them do with me as they list, so haply I may be at rest
+from this weary life.' Then he ate a first mouthful, and Zumurrud
+was minded to have him brought to her; but bethought her that
+belike he was anhungred and said in herself, 'It were well to let
+him eat his fill.' So he went on eating, whilst the people looked
+on in astonishment, waiting to see what would befall him; and
+when he had done, Zumurrud said to certain of her eunuchs, 'Go to
+yonder youth that eateth of the rice and bring him to me on
+courteous wise, saying, 'The King would have speech of thee on
+some slight matter.' 'We hear and obey,' answered they and going
+up to Ali Shar, said to him, 'O my lord, the King desires the
+favour of a word with thee, and let thy heart be easy.' 'I hear
+and obey,' replied he and followed the eunuchs, who carried him
+before Zumurrud, whilst the people said to one another, 'There is
+no power and no virtue save in God the Most High, the Supreme! I
+wonder what the King will do with him!' And others said, 'He will
+do him nought but good; for, were he minded to harm him, he had
+not suffered him to eat his fill.'
+
+When he came before Zumurrud, he saluted and kissed the earth
+before her, whilst she returned his greeting and received him
+with honour. Then said she to him, 'What is thy name and
+condition and what brought thee hither?' 'O King,' answered he,
+'my name is Ali Shar; I am of the sons of the merchants of
+Khorassan and the object of my coming hither is to seek for a
+slave-girl whom I have lost; for she was dearer to me than my
+sight and my hearing, and indeed my soul cleaves to her, since I
+lost her.' And he wept, till he swooned away. She caused sprinkle
+rose-water on his face, till he came to himself, when she said,
+'Bring me the table of sand and the pen.' So they brought them
+and she took the pen and drew a geomantic figure, which she
+considered awhile; then, 'Thou hast spoken sooth,' quoth she.
+'God will grant thee speedy reunion with her; so be not
+troubled.' Then she bade her chamberlain carry him to the bath
+and after clothe him in a handsome suit of royal apparel, and
+mount him an one of the best of the King's horses and bring him
+to the palace at end of day. So the chamberlain took him away,
+whilst the folk said to one another, 'What makes the King deal
+thus courteously with yonder youth?' And one said, 'Did I not
+tell you that he would do him no hurt? For he is fair of aspect;
+and this I knew, when the King suffered him to eat his fill.' And
+each said his say; after which they all dispersed and went their
+ways.
+
+As for Zumurrud, she thought the night would never come, that she
+might be alone with the beloved of her heart. As soon as it was
+dusk, she withdrew to her sleeping-chamber and made as she were
+overcome with sleep; and it was her wont to suffer none to pass
+the night with her, save the two little eunuchs that waited upon
+her. After a little, she sent for Ali Shar and sat down upon the
+bed, with candles burning at her head and feet and the place
+lighted with hanging lamps of gold that shone like the sun. When
+the people heard of her sending for Ali Shar, they marvelled and
+said, 'Algates, the King is enamoured of this young man, and to-
+morrow he will make him commander of the troops.' And each
+thought his thought and said his say. When they brought him in to
+her, he kissed the earth before her and called down blessings on
+her, and she said in herself, 'Needs must I jest with him awhile,
+ere I make myself known to him.' Then said she to him, 'O Ali,
+hast thou been to the bath?' 'Yes, O my lord,' answered he.
+'Come, eat of this fowl and meat and drink of this wine and
+sherbet of sugar,' said she; 'for thou art weary; and after come
+hither.' 'I hear and obey,' replied he and did as she bade him.
+
+When he had made an end of eating and drinking, she said to him,
+'Come up with me on the couch and rub my feet.' So he fell to
+rubbing her feet and legs and found them softer than silk. Then
+said she, 'Go higher with the rubbing;' and he, 'Pardon me, O my
+lord, I will go no higher than the knee.' Whereupon, 'Wilt thou
+gainsay me?' quoth she. 'It shall be an ill-omened night for
+thee! Nay, but it behoves thee to do my bidding and I will make
+thee my minion and appoint thee one of my Amirs.' 'And in what
+must I do thy bidding, O King of the age?' asked Ali. 'Put off
+thy trousers,' answered she, 'and lie down on thy face.' Quoth
+he, 'That is a thing I never in my life did; and if thou force me
+thereto, I will accuse thee thereof before God on the Day of
+Resurrection. Take all thou hast given me and let me go to my own
+city.' And he wept and lamented. But she said, 'Put off thy
+trousers and lie down on thy face, or I will strike off thy
+head.' So he did as she bade him and she mounted upon his back.
+And he felt what was softer than silk and fresher than cream and
+said in himself, 'Of a truth, this King is better than all the
+women!'
+
+She abode a while on his back, then turned over on to the ground,
+and he said [in himself], 'Praised be God! It seems his yard is
+not in point.' Then said she, 'O Ali, it is of the wont of my
+yard that it standeth not on end, except it be rubbed with the
+hand; so, some, rub it with thy hand, till it be in point, else
+will I kill thee.' So saying, she lay down on her back and taking
+his hand, set it to her kaze, and he found it a kaze softer than
+silk, white, plump and great, resembling for heat the hot room of
+the bath or the heart of a lover, whom passion hath wasted. Quoth
+Ali in himself, 'Verily, this King hath a kaze. This is a wonder
+of wonders!' And desire got hold on him and his yard stood on end
+to the utmost; which when Zumurrud saw, she burst out laughing
+and said to him, 'O my lord, all this betideth and yet thou
+knowest me not!' 'And who art thou, O King?' asked he; and she
+said, 'I am thy slave-girl Zumurrud.'
+
+When he knew this and was certified that she was indeed his very
+slave-girl Zumurrud, he threw himself upon her, as the lion upon
+the sheep, and kissed her and embraced her. Then he thrust his
+yard into her poke and stinted not to play the porter at her door
+and the Imam[FN#24] at her prayer-niche, whilst she with him
+ceased not from inclination and prostration and rising up and
+sitting down,[FN#25] accompanying her canticles of praise[FN#26]
+with motitations and other amorous gestures, till the [two
+little] eunuchs [aforesaid] heard [the noise]. So they came and
+peeping out from behind the curtains, saw the King lying [on his
+back] and Ali Shar upon him, thrusting and thronging amain,
+whilst she puffed and blew and wriggled. Quoth they, 'This is no
+man's wriggle; belike this King is a woman.' But they concealed
+their affair and discovered it to none.
+
+On the morrow, Zumurrud summoned all the troops and the grandees
+of the realm and said to them, 'I am minded to journey to this
+man's country; so choose a deputy, who shall rule over you, till
+I return to you.' And they answered, 'We hear and obey.' Then she
+applied herself to making ready for the journey and furnished
+herself with victual and treasure and camels and mules and so
+forth; after which she set out with Ali Shar, and they fared on,
+till they arrived at his native place, where he entered his house
+and gave alms and largesse. God vouchsafed him children by her,
+and they both lived the happiest of lives, till there came to
+them the Destroyer of Delights and Sunderer of Companies. Glory
+be to God, the Eternal without cease, and praised be He in every
+case!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVES OF JUBEIR BEN UMEIR AND THE LADY
+ BUDOUR
+
+
+
+It is related the Khalif Haroun er Reshid was restless one night
+and could not sleep; so that he ceased not to toss from side to
+side for very restlessness, till, growing weary of this, he
+called Mesrour and said to him, 'O Mesrour, look what may solace
+me of this my restlessness.' 'O Commander of the Faithful,'
+answered Mesrour, 'wilt thou walk in the garden of the palace and
+divert thyself with the sight of its flowers and gaze upon the
+stars and note the beauty of their ordinance and the moon among
+them, shining on the water?' 'O Mesrour,' replied the Khalif, 'my
+heart inclines not to aught of this.' 'O my lord,' continued
+Mesrour, 'there are in thy palace three hundred concubines, each
+of whom hath her separate lodging. Do thou bid retire each into
+her own apartment and then go thou about and divert thyself with
+gazing on them, without their knowledge.' 'O Mesrour,' answered
+Haroun, 'the palace is mine and the girls are my property:
+moreover, my soul inclineth not to aught of this.' 'O my lord,'
+said Mesrour, 'summon the doctors and sages and poets and bid
+them contend before thee in argument and recite verses and tell
+thee tales and anecdotes.' 'My soul inclines not to aught of
+this,' answered the Khalif; and Mesrour said, 'O my lord, bid the
+minions and wits and boon-companions attend thee and divert thee
+with witty sallies.' 'O Mesrour,' replied the Khalif, 'indeed my
+soul inclineth not to aught of this.' 'Then, O my lord,' rejoined
+Mesrour, 'strike off my head; maybe, that will dispel thine
+unease and do away the restlessness that is upon thee.'
+
+At this the Khalif laughed and said, 'See which of the boon-
+companions is at the door.' So Mesrour went out and returning,
+said, 'O my lord, he who sits without is Ali ben Mensour of
+Damascus, the Wag.' 'Bring him to me,' quoth Haroun; and Mesrour
+went out and returned with Ibn Mensour, who said, on entering,
+'Peace be on thee, O Commander of the Faithful!' The Khalif
+returned his salutation and said to him, 'O Ibn Mensour, tell us
+one of thy stories.' 'O Commander of the Faithful,' said the
+other, 'shall I tell thee what I have seen with my eyes or what I
+have only heard tell?' 'If thou have seen aught worth telling,'
+replied the Khalif, 'let us hear it; for report is not like eye-
+witness.' 'O Commander of the Faithful,' said Ibn Mensour, 'lend
+me thine ear and thy heart.' 'O Ibn Mensour,' answered the
+Khalif, 'behold, I am listening to thee with mine ears and
+looking at thee with mine eyes and attending to thee with my
+heart.'
+
+'Know then, O Commander of the Faithful,' began Ibn Mensour,
+'that I receive a yearly allowance from Mohammed ben Suleiman el
+Hashimi, Sultan[FN#27] of Bassora; so I went to him, once upon a
+time, as usual, and found him about to ride out a-hunting. I
+saluted him, and he returned my salute and would have me mount and
+go a-hunting with him; but I said, "O my lord, I cannot ride; so
+do thou stablish me in the guest-house and give thy chamberlains
+and officers charge over me." And he did so and departed for the
+chase. His officers entreated me with the utmost honour and
+hospitality; but I said in myself, "By Allah, it is a strange
+thing that I should have used so long to come from Baghdad to
+Bassora, yet know no more of the town than from the palace to
+the garden and back again! When shall I find an occasion like
+this to view the different parts of Bassora? I will rise at once
+and walk forth alone and divert myself and digest what I have
+eaten."
+
+So I donned my richest clothes and went out a-walking in Bassora.
+Now it is known to thee, O Commander of the Faithful, that it
+hath seventy streets, each seventy parasangs long of Irak
+measure; and I lost myself in its by-streets and thirst overcame
+me. Presently, as I went along, I came to a great door, on which
+were two rings of brass, with curtains of red brocade drawn
+before it. Over the door was a trellis, covered with a creeping
+vine, that hung down and shaded the doorway; and on either side
+the porch was a stone bench. I stood still, to gaze upon the
+place, and presently heard a sorrowful voice, proceeding from a
+mourning heart, warbling melodiously and chanting the following
+verses:
+
+My body is become th' abode of sickness and dismay, By reason of
+ a fawn, whose land and stead are far away.
+O zephyr of the waste, that roused my pain in me, I pray, By God
+ your Lord, to him, with whom my heart dwells, take your way
+ And prithee chide him, so reproach may soften him,
+ maybe.
+And if to you he do incline and hearken, then make fair Your
+ speech and tidings unto him of lovers, 'twixt you, bear.
+Yea, and vouchsafe to favour me with service debonair And unto
+ him I love make known my case and my despair,
+ Saying, "What ails thy bounden slave that, for
+ estrangement, she
+Should die without offence of her committed or despite Or
+ disobedience or breach of plighted faith or slight
+Or fraud or turning of her heart to other or unright?" And if he
+ smile, with dulcet speech bespeak ye thus the wight:
+ "An thou thy company wouldst grant to her, 'twere well
+ of thee;
+For she for love of thee's distraught, as needs must be the case;
+ Her eyes are ever void of sleep; she weeps and wails apace."
+If he show favour and incline to grant the wished-for grace, 'Tis
+ well and good; but, if ye still read anger in his face,
+ Dissemble then with him and say, "We know her not, not
+ we."
+
+Quoth I to myself, "Verily, if the owner of this voice be fair,
+she unites beauty of person and eloquence and sweetness of
+voice." Then I drew near the door, and raising the curtain little
+by little, beheld a damsel, white as the moon, when it rises on
+its fourteenth night, with joined eyebrows and languorous
+eyelids, breasts like twin pomegranates and dainty lips like twin
+corn-marigolds,[FN#28] mouth as it were Solomon's seal and teeth
+that sported with the reason of rhymester and proser, even as
+saith the poet:
+
+O mouth of the beloved, who set thy pearls arow And eke with
+ wine fulfilled thee and camomiles like show,
+And lent the morning-glory unto thy smile, and who Hath with a
+ padlock sealed thee of rubies sweet of show?
+Whoso but looks upon thee is mad for joy and pride. How should
+ it fare with him, who kisseth thee, heigho!
+
+And as saith another:
+
+O pearls of the teeth of my love, Have ruth on cornelian and
+ spare To vie with it! Shall it not find You peerless and
+ passing compare?
+
+In fine, she comprised all manner of loveliness and was a
+ravishment to men and women, nor could the beholder satisfy
+himself with the sight of her beauty; for she was as the poet
+hath said of her:
+
+If, face to face, she do appear, unveiled, she slays; and if
+ She turn her back, she makes all men her lovers far and
+ near.
+Like the full moon and eke the sun she is, but cruelty And
+ inhumanity belong not to her nature dear.
+The garden-gates of Paradise are opened with her shift And the
+ full moon revolveth still upon her neck-rings' sphere.
+
+As I looked at her through the opening of the curtains, she
+turned and seeing me standing at the door, said to her maid,
+"See who stands at the door." So the maid came up to me and
+said, "O old man, hast thou no shame, or do gray hairs and
+impudence go together?" "O my mistress," answered I, "I confess
+to the gray hairs, but as for unmannerliness, I think not to be
+guilty of it." "And what can be more unmannerly," rejoined her
+mistress, "than to intrude thyself upon a house other than thy
+house and gaze on a harem other than thy harem?" "O my lady,"
+said I, "I have an excuse." "And what is thine excuse?" asked
+she. Quoth I, "I am a stranger and well-nigh dead of thirst."
+"We accept thine excuse," answered she and calling one of her
+maids, said to her, "O Lutf, give him to drink in the golden
+tankard."
+
+So she brought me a tankard of red gold, set with pearls and
+jewels, full of water mingled with odoriferous musk and covered
+with a napkin of green silk; and I addressed myself to drink
+and was long about it, casting stolen glances at her the while,
+till I could prolong it no longer. Then I returned the tankard
+to the maid, but did not offer to go; and she said to me, "O old
+man, go thy way." "O my lady," replied I, "I am troubled in mind."
+"For what?" asked she; and I answered, "For the uncertainty of
+fortune and the vicissitudes of events." "Well mayst thou be
+troubled thereanent," replied she, "for Time[FN#29] is the
+mother of wonders. But what hast thou seen of them that thou
+shouldst muse upon?" Quoth I, "I was thinking of the former
+owner of this house, for he was my good friend in his lifetime."
+"What was his name?" asked she. "Mohammed ben Ali the Jeweller,"
+answered I; "and he was a man of great wealth. Did he leave
+any children?" "Yes," said she; "he left a daughter, Budour
+by name, who inherited all his wealth." Quoth I, "Meseems
+thou art his daughter?" "Yes," answered she, laughing; then
+added, "O old man, thou hast talked long enough; go thy ways."
+"Needs must I go," replied I; "but I see thou art out of health.
+Tell me thy case; it may be God will give thee solace at
+my hands." "O old man," rejoined she, "if thou be a man of
+discretion, I will discover to thee my secret; but first
+tell me who thou art, that I may know whether thou art worthy
+of confidence or not; for the poet saith:
+
+None keepeth secrets but the man who's trusty and discreet: A
+ secret's ever safely placed with honest fold and leal;
+For me, my secrets I preserve within a locked-up house, Whose
+ key is lost and on whose door is set the Cadi's seal."
+
+"O my lady," answered I, "an thou wouldst know who I am, I am
+Ali ben Mensour of Damascus, the Wag, boon-companion to the
+Khalif Haroun er Reshid." When she heard my name she came down
+from her seat and saluting me, said, "Welcome, O Ibn Mensour!
+Now will I tell thee my case and entrust thee with my secret.
+Know that I am a lover separated from her beloved." "O my
+lady," rejoined I, "thou art fair and shouldst love none but
+the fair. Whom then dost thou love?" Quoth she, "I love Jubeir
+ben Umeir es Sheibani, Prince of the Benou Sheiban;"[FN#30] and
+she described to me a young man than whom there was none
+handsomer in Bassora. "O my lady," asked I, "have letters or
+interviews passed between you?" "Yes," answered she; "but his
+love for me was of the tongue, not of the heart; for he kept
+not his covenant nor was faithful to his troth." "And what was
+the cause of your separation?" asked I.
+
+"I was sitting one day," replied she, "whilst my maid here
+combed my hair. When she had made an end of combing it, she
+plaited my tresses, and my beauty and grace pleased her; so she
+bent down to me and kissed my cheek. At that moment, he came
+in, unawares, and seeing her kiss my cheek, turned away in
+anger, vowing eternal separation and repeating the following
+verses:
+
+If any share with me in her I love, incontinent, I'll cast her
+ off from me and be to live alone content.
+A mistress, sure, is nothing worth, if, in the way of love, She
+ wish for aught but that to which the lover doth consent.
+
+And from that time to this, O Ibn Mensour," continued she, "he
+hath neither written to me nor answered my letters." "And what
+thinkest thou to do?" asked I. Quoth she, "I have a mind to send
+him a letter by thee. If thou bring me back an answer, thou shalt
+have of me five hundred dinars; and if not, then a hundred for
+thy pains." "Do what seemeth good to thee," answered I. So she
+called for inkhorn and paper and wrote the following verses:
+
+Whence this estrangement and despite, beloved of my soul?
+ Whither have kindliness and love between us taken flight?
+What makes thee with aversion turn from me? Indeed, thy face Is
+ not the face I used to know, when we our troth did plight.
+Belike, the slanderers have made a false report of me, And thou
+ inclin'dst to them, and they redoubled in despite.
+If thou believedst their report, far, far it should have been
+ From thee, that art too whole of wit at such a bait to
+ bite!
+Yea, I conjure thee by thy life, tell me what thou hast heard:
+ For lo! thou knowest what was said and wilt not do
+ unright.
+If aught I've said that angered thee, a speech of change
+ admits; Ay, and interpreting, I trow, may change its
+ meaning quite,
+Were it a word sent down from God; for even the Pentateuch Hath
+ falsified and garbled been of this and th' other
+ wight.[FN#31]
+Whilst, as for lies, how many were of folk before us told!
+ Joseph to Jacob was traduced and blackened in his sight.
+Yea, for the slanderer and myself and thee, an awful day Of
+ standing up shall come, when God to judgment all shall
+ cite.
+
+Then she sealed the letter and gave it to me. I took it and
+carried it to the house of Jubeir ben Umeir, whom I found
+absent hunting. So I sat down, to wait for him, and presently
+he returned; and when I saw him come riding up, my wit was
+confounded by his beauty ands grace. As soon as he saw me
+sitting at the door, he dismounted and coming up to me, saluted
+and embraced me; and meseemed I embraced the world and all that
+therein is. Then he carried me into his house and seating me on
+his own couch, called for food. So they brought a table of
+khelenj[FN#32] wood of Khorassan, with feet of gold, whereon
+were all manner of meats, fried and roasted and the like. So I
+seated myself at the table and examining it, found the following
+verses engraved upon it:
+
+Weep for the cranes that erst within the porringers did lie And
+ for the stews and partridges evanished heave a sigh!
+Mourn for the younglings of the grouse; lament unceasingly, As,
+ for the omelettes and the fowls browned in the pan, do I.
+How my heart yearneth for the fish that, in its different
+ kinds, Upon a paste of wheaten flour, lay hidden in the
+ pie!
+Praised be God for the roast meat, as in the dish it lay, With
+ pot-herbs, soaked in vinegar, in porringers hard by,
+And eke the rice with buffaloes' milk dressed and made savoury,
+ Wherein the hands were plunged and arms were buried
+ bracelet high!
+O soul, I rede thee patient be, for God is bountiful: What
+ though thy fortunes straitened be, His succour's ever
+ nigh.
+
+Then said Jubeir, "Put thy hand to our food and ease our heart
+by eating of our victual." "By Allah," answered I, "I will not
+eat a mouthful, till thou grant me my desire." "What is thy
+desire?" asked he. So I brought out the letter and gave it to
+him; but, when he had read it, he tore it into pieces and
+throwing it on the floor, said to me, "O Ibn Mensour, I will
+grant thee whatever thou askest, save this that concerns the
+writer of this letter, for I have no answer to make to her." At
+this, I rose in anger; but he caught hold of my skirts, saying,
+"O Ibn Mensour, I will tell thee what she said to thee, for all
+I was not present with you." "And what did she say to me?"
+asked I. "Did she not say to thee," rejoined he, "'If thou bring
+me back an answer, thou shalt have of me five hundred dinars;
+and if not, a hundred for thy pains?'" "Yes," answered I; and
+he said, "Abide with me this day and eat and drink and make
+merry, and thou shalt have five hundred dinars."
+
+So I sat with him and ate and drank and made merry and
+entertained him with converse; after which I said to him, "O my
+master, is there no music in thy house?" "Indeed," answered he,
+"we have drunk this long while without music." Then he called
+out, saying, "Ho, Shejeret ed Durr!" Whereupon a slave-girl
+answered him from her chamber and came in to us, with a lute of
+Indian make, wrapped in a silken bag. She sat down and laying
+the lute in her lap, preluded in one-and-twenty modes, then,
+returning to the first, sang the following verses to a lively
+measure:
+
+Who hath not tasted the sweet and the bitter of passion, I
+ trow, The presence of her whom he loves from her absence
+ he hardly shall know.
+So he, from the pathway of love who hath wandered and fallen
+ astray, The smooth knoweth not from the rough of the
+ roadway, wherein he doth go.
+I ceased not the votaries of love and of passion to cross and
+ gainsay, Till I too must taste of its sweet and its
+ bitter, its gladness and woe.
+Then I drank a full draught of the cup of its bitters, and
+ humbled was I, and thus to the bondman of Love and its
+ freedman therein was brought low.
+How many a night have I passed with the loved one, carousing
+ with him, Whilst I drank from his lips what was sweeter
+ than nectar and colder than snow!
+How short was the life of the nights of our pleasance! It
+ seemed to us still, No sooner was night fallen down than
+ the daybreak to eastward did glow.
+But Fortune had vowed she would sever our union and sunder our
+ loves; And now, in good sooth, she her vow hath
+ accomplished. Fate ordered it so;
+Fate ordered it thus, and against its ordaining, appeal there
+ is none; For who shall gainsay a supreme one's
+ commandments or causes him forego?
+
+Hardly had she made an end of these verses, when Jubeir gave a
+great cry and fell down in a swoon; whereupon, "May God not
+punish thee, O old man!" exclaimed the damsel. "This long time
+have we drunk without music, for fear the like of this should
+befall our master. But go now to yon chamber and sleep there."
+So I went to the chamber in question and slept till the
+morning, when a page brought me a purse of five hundred dinars
+and said to me, "This is what my master promised thee; but
+return thou not to her who sent thee and let it be as if
+neither thou nor we had heard of this affair." "I hear and
+obey," answered I and taking the purse, went my way.
+
+However, I said in myself, "The lady will have expected me
+since yesterday; and by Allah, I must needs return to her and
+tell her what passed between me and him; or she will curse me
+and all who come from my country." So I went to her and found
+her standing behind the door; and when she saw me, she said, "O
+Ibn Mensour, thou hast gotten me nought." "Who told thee of
+this?" asked I; and she answered, "O Ibn Mensour, yet another
+thing hath been revealed to me; and it is that, when thou
+gavest hum the letter, he tore it in pieces and throwing it on
+the floor, said to thee, 'O Ibn Mensour, ask me anything but
+what relates to the writer of this letter; for I have no reply
+to make to her.' Then didst thou rise from beside him in anger;
+but he laid hold of thy skirts, saying, 'Abide with me to-day,
+for thou art my guest, and eat and drink and make merry; and
+thou shalt have five hundred dinars.' So thou didst sit with
+him, eating and drinking and making merry, and entertainedst
+him with converse; and a slave-girl sand such an air and such
+verses, whereupon he fell down in a swoon." Quoth I, "Wast thou
+then with us?" "O Ibn Mensour," replied she, "hast thou not
+heard the saying of the poet:
+
+The heart of the lover hath eyes, well I wot, That see what the
+ eyes of beholders see not.
+
+But," added she, "day and night alternate not upon aught, but they
+change it." Then she raised her eyes to heaven and said, "O my
+God and my Master and my Lord, like as Thou hast afflicted me
+with love of Jubeir ben Umeir, even so do Thou afflict him with
+love of me and transfer the passion from my heart to his!" Then
+she gave me a hundred dinars for my pains and I took it and
+returned to the palace, when I found the Sultan come back from
+hunting; so I took my pension of him and made my way back to
+Baghdad.
+
+Next year, I repaired to Bassora, as usual, to seek my pension,
+and the Sultan paid it to me; but as I was about to return to
+Baghdad, I bethought me of the lady Budour and said to myself,
+"By Allah, I must needs go and see what hath befallen between
+her and her lover!" So I went to her house and finding the
+porch swept and sprinkled and slaves and servants and pages
+standing before the door, said to myself, "Most like grief hath
+broken the lady's heart and she is dead, and some Amir or other
+hath taken up his abode in her house." So I went on to Jubeir's
+house, where I found the benches of the porch broken down and
+no pages at the door, as of wont, and said to myself, "Belike
+he too is dead." Then I took up my station before the door of
+his house and with my eyes running over with tears, bemoaned it
+in the following verses:
+
+Lords, that are gone, but whom my heart doth evermore ensue,
+ Return; so shall my festal says return to me with you.
+I stand before your sometime stead, bewailing your abodes, With
+ quivering lids, from which the tears rain down, like
+ summer dew.
+Weeping, I question of the house and ruins, "Where is he Who
+ was the source of benefits and bounties ever new?"
+[They answer] "Go thy ways, for those thou lov'st from the
+ abode Departed are and neath the dust are buried; so
+ adieu!"
+May God not stint us of the sight [in dreams] of all their
+ charms Nor be their noble memories aye absent from men's
+ view!
+
+As I was thus bewailing the folk of the house, there came a
+black slave thereout and said to me, "Hold thy peace, O old
+man! May thy mother be bereft of thee! What ails thee to bemoan
+the house thus?" Quoth I, "I knew it of yore, when it belonged
+to a good friend of mine." "What was his name?" asked the
+slave. And I answered, "Jubeir ben Umeir the Sheibani." "And
+what hath befallen him?" rejoined he. "Praised be God, he is
+yet in the enjoyment of wealth and rank and prosperity, except
+that God hath stricken him with love of a damsel called the
+lady Budour; and he is overcome with love of her, that, for the
+violence of his passion and torment, he is like a great rock
+overthrown. If he hunger, he saith not, 'Feed me;' nor, if he
+thirst, doth he say, 'Give me to drink.'" Quoth I, "Ask leave
+me to go in to him." "O my lord," said the slave, "Wilt thou go
+in to him who understands or to him who understands not?" "I
+must needs see him, whatever be his case," answered I.
+
+Se he went in and presently returned with permission for me to
+enter, whereupon I went in to Jubeir and found him like a rock
+overthrown, understanding neither sign nor speech. I spoke to
+him, but he answered me not; and one of his servants said to
+me, "O my lord, if thou know aught of verse, repeat it, and
+raise thy voice; and he will be aroused by this and speak with
+thee." So I recited the following verses:
+
+Budour's love hast thou forgotten or art deaf still to her
+ sighs? Wak'st anights, or do thine eyelids close upon thy
+ sleeping eyes?
+If thy tears flow fast and freely, night and day long, torrent-
+ wise, Know thou, then, that thou shalt sojourn evermore in
+ Paradise.[FN#33]
+
+When he heard this, he opened his eyes and said, "Welcome, O
+Ibn Mensour! Verily, the jest is become earnest." "O my lord,"
+said I, "is there aught thou wouldst have me do for thee?"
+"Yes," answered he; "I would fain write her a letter and send
+it to her by thee. If thou bring me back an answer, thou shalt
+have of me a thousand dinars; and if not, two hundred for thy
+pains." "Do what seemeth good to thee," said I. So he called to
+one of his slave-girls for inkhorn and paper and wrote the
+following verses:
+
+By Allah, O my lady, have ruth on me, I pray! For all my wit by
+ passion is ravished quite away.
+Yea, love for thee and longing have mastered me and clad With
+ sickness and bequeathed me abjection and dismay.
+Aforetime, O my lady, by love I set small store And deemed it
+ light and easy to bear, until to-day;
+But now that Love hath shown me the billows of its sea, Those I
+ excuse, repenting, who languish neath its sway.
+Vouchsafe thy grace to grant me; or, if thou wilt me slay, At
+ least, then, for thy victim forget thou not to pray.
+
+Then he sealed the letter and gave it to me. I took it and
+repairing to Budour's house, raised the curtain of the door,
+little by little, as of wont, and looking in, saw ten damsels,
+high-bosomed maids, like moons, and the lady Budour sitting in
+their midst, as she were the full moon among stars or the sun,
+when it is clear of clouds; nor was there on her any trace of
+pain or care. As I looked and marvelled at her case, she turned
+and seeing me standing at the gate, said to me, "Welcome and
+fair welcome to thee, O Ibn Mensour! Come in." So I entered and
+saluting her, gave her the letter. She read it and laughing,
+said to me, "O Ibn Mensour, the poet lied not when he said:
+
+The love of thee I will endure with patient constancy, Till
+ such time as a messenger shall come to me from thee.
+
+O Ibn Mensour," added she, "I will write thee an answer that
+he may give thee what he promised thee." "May God requite thee
+with good!" answered I. So she called for inkhorn and paper and
+wrote the following verses:
+
+How comes it my vows I fulfilled and thou, thou wast false to
+ thy plight? Thou sawst me do justice and truth, and yet
+ thou thyself didst unright.
+'Twas thou that begannest on me with rupture and rigour, I
+ trow; 'Twas thou that play'dst foul, and with thee began
+ the untruth and the slight.
+Yea, still I was true to my troth and cherished but thee among
+ men And ceased not thine honour to guard and keep it
+ unsullied and bright,
+Till tidings of fashions full foul I heard, as reported of
+ thee, And saw with mine eyes what thou didst, to harm me
+ and work me despite.
+Shall I then abase my estate, that thine may exalted become? By
+ God, hadst thou generous been, the like should thy conduct
+ requite!
+So now unto solace I'll turn my heart, with forgetting, from
+ thee And washing my hands of thy thought, blot despair for
+ thee out of my spright.
+
+"By Allah, O my lady," said I, "there needs but the reading of
+this letter, to kill him!" So I tore it in pieces and said to
+her, "Write him other than this." "I hear and obey," answered
+she and wrote the following:
+
+Indeed, I am consoled and sleep is pleasant to mine eyes; For I
+ have heard what came of prate of slanderers and spies.
+My heart my summons hath obeyed, thee to forget; and eke My
+ lids to stint from wake for thee have seen it good and
+ wise.
+He lies who says that severance is bitterness; for me I find
+ its taste none otherwise than sweet; indeed he lies.
+I've grown to turn away from those who bring me news of thee
+ And look upon it as a thing at which my gorge doth rise.
+Behold, I have forgotten thee with every part of me. Let then
+ the spy and who will else this know and recognise.
+
+"By Allah, O my lady," said I, "when he reads these verses, his
+soul will depart his body!" "O Ibn Mensour," quoth she, "is
+passion indeed come to such a pass with him as thou sayst?"
+"Had I said more than this," replied I, "it were but the truth:
+but clemency is of the nature of the noble." When she heard
+this, her eyes filled with tears and she wrote him a letter, O
+Commander of the Faithful, there is none in thy court could
+avail to write the like of it; and therein were these verses:
+
+How long shall this despite continue and this pride? My enviers'
+ spite on me thou sure hast satisfied.
+Mayhap, I did amiss and knew it not; so tell Me what thou heardst
+ of me, that did our loves divide.
+Even as I welcome sleep unto mine eyes and lids, So would I
+ welcome thee, beloved, to my side.
+I've quaffed the cup of love for thee, unmixed and pure; So, if
+ thou see me drunk, reproach me not nor chide.
+
+Then she sealed it and gave it to me; and I said, "O my lady,
+this thy letter will heal the sick and ease the thirsting soul."
+Then I took it and was going away, when she called me back and
+said to me, "Tell me that I will be his guest this night." At
+this I rejoiced greatly and carried the letter to Jubeir, whom I
+found with his eyes fixed on the door, expecting the reply. I
+gave him the letter and he opened and read it, then gave a great
+cry and fell down in a swoon. When he came to himself, he said to
+me, "O Ibn Mensour, did she indeed write this letter with her
+hand and touch it with her fingers?" "O my lord," answered I, "do
+folk write with their feet?" And by Allah, O Commander of the
+Faithful, I had not done speaking, when we heard the chink of her
+anklets in the vestibule and she entered.
+
+When he saw her, he sprang to his feet, as thou there ailed him
+nought, and embraced her as the letter Lam embraces Alif,[FN#34]
+and the malady, that would not depart, ceased from him. Then he
+sat down, but she abode standing and I said to her, "O my lady,
+why dost thou not sit?" Quoth she, "I will not sit, O Ibn
+Mensour, save on a condition that is between us." "And what is
+that?" asked I. "None may know lovers' secrets," answered she and
+putting her mouth to Jubeir's ear, whispered to him; whereupon,
+"I hear and obey," replied he and rising, said somewhat privily
+to one of his slaves, who went out and returned, in a little,
+with a Cadi and two witnesses. Then Jubeir rose and taking a bag
+containing a hundred thousand dinars, said, "O Cadi, marry me to
+this young lady and write this sum to her dowry." Quoth the Cadi
+to her, "Say, 'I consent to this.'" "I consent to this," said
+she, whereupon he drew up the contract of marriage, and she
+opened the bag and taking out a handful of gold, gave it to the
+Cadi and the witnesses and handed the rest to Jubeir.
+
+Then the Cadi and the witnesses withdrew, and I sat with them, in
+mirth and delight, till the most part of the night was past, when
+I said in myself, "These are lovers and have been this long while
+separated. I will go now and sleep in some place afar from them
+and leave them to be private, one with the other." So I rose, but
+she laid hold of my skirts, saying, "What thinkest thou to do?"
+"So and so," answered I. But she rejoined, "Sit still, when we
+would be rid of thee, we will send thee away." So I sat with them
+till near daybreak, when she said to me, "O Ibn Mensour, go to
+yonder chamber; for we have furnished it for thee, and it is thy
+sleeping-place." So I went thither and slept till morning, when a
+page brought me basin and ewer, and I made the ablution and
+prayed the morning-prayer. Then I sat down and presently, Jubeir
+and his mistress came out of the bath in the house, wringing
+their locks.
+
+I wished them good morning and gave them joy of their safety and
+reunion, saying to Jubeir, "That which began with constraint hath
+ended in contentment." "Thou sayst well," replied he; "and indeed
+thou deservest largesse." And he called his treasurer and bade
+him fetch three thousand dinars. So he brought a purse containing
+that sum, and Jubeir gave it to me, saying, "Favour us by
+accepting this." "I will not take it," answered I, "till thou
+tell me the manner of the transfer of love from her to thee,
+after so great an aversion." "I hear and obey," said he. "Know
+that we have a festival, called the festival of the New Year,
+when all the people use to take boat and go a-pleasuring on the
+river. So I went out, with my comrades, and saw a boat, wherein
+were half a score damsels like moons, and amongst them, the lady
+Budour, with her lute in her hand. She preluded in eleven modes,
+then returning to the first, sang the following verses:
+
+Fire is not so fierce and so hot as the fires in my heart that
+ glow, And granite itself is less hard than the heart of my
+ lord, I trow.
+Indeed, when I think on his make and his fashion, I marvel to see
+ A heart that is harder than rock in a body that's softer
+ than snow.
+
+Quoth I to her, 'Repeat the verses and the air.' But she would
+not; so I bade the boatmen pelt her with oranges, and they pelted
+her till we feared her boat would sink. Then she went her way,
+and this is how the love was transferred from her breast to
+mine." So I gave them joy of their reunion and taking the purse,
+with its contents, returned to Baghdad.
+
+When the Khalif heard Ibn Mensour's story, his heart was
+lightened and the restlessness and oppression from which he
+suffered forsook him.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE MAN OF YEMEN AND HIS SIX SLAVE-GIRLS
+
+
+
+The Khalif El-Mamoun was sitting one day in his palace,
+surrounded by his grandees and officers of state, and there were
+present also before him all his poets and minions, amongst the
+rest one named Mohammed of Bassora. Presently, the Khalif turned
+to the latter and said to him, 'O Mohammed, I wish thee to tell
+me something that I have never before heard.' 'O Commander of the
+Faithful,' answered Mohammed, 'shall I tell thee a thing that I
+have heard with my ears of a thing that I have seen with my
+eyes?' 'Tell me whichever is the rarer,' said El Mamoun.
+
+'Know then, O Commander of the Faithful,' began Mohammed, 'that
+there lived once a wealthy man, who was a native of Yemen; but he
+left his native land and came to this city of Baghdad, whose
+sojourn so pleased him that he transported hither his family and
+possessions. Now he had six slave-girls, the first fair, the
+second dark, the third fat, the fourth thin, the fifth yellow and
+the sixth black, all fair of face and perfectly accomplished and
+skilled in the arts of singing and playing upon instruments of
+music. One day he sent for them all and called for meat and
+drink; and they ate and drank and made merry. Then he filled the
+cup and taking it in his hand, said to the blonde, "O new-moon-
+face, let us hear somewhat pleasing." So she took the lute and
+tuning it, made music thereon with such melodious trills and
+modulations that the place danced to the rhythm; after which she
+played a lively measure and sang the following verses:
+
+I have a friend, whose form is mirrored in mine eye, And deep
+ within my breast, his name doth buried lie.
+Whenas I call him back to mind, I am all heart, And when on him I
+ gaze, all eyes indeed am I.
+"Forswear the love of him," my censor says; and I, "That which is
+ not to be, how shall it be?" reply.
+"Go forth from me," quoth I, "and leave me, censor mine: Feign
+ not that eath and light, that's grievous to aby."
+
+At this their master was moved to mirth and drinking off his cup,
+gave the damsels to drink, after which he said to the brunette,
+"O light of the brasier[FN#35] and delight of souls, let us hear
+thy lovely voice, wherewith all that hearken are ravished." So
+she took the lute and trilled upon it, till the place was moved
+to mirth; then, taking all hearts with her graceful bendings, she
+sang the following verses:
+
+As thy face liveth, none but thee I'll love nor cherish e'er,
+ Till death, nor ever to thy love will I be false, I swear.
+O full moon, shrouded, as it were a veil, with loveliness, All
+ lovely ones on earth that be beneath thy banners fare.
+Thou, that in pleasantness and grace excellest all the fair, May
+ God, the Lord of heaven and earth, be with thee everywhere!
+
+The man was pleased and drank off his cup; after which he filled
+again and taking the goblet in his hand, beckoned to the plump
+girl and bade her sing and play. So she took the lute and
+striking a grief-dispelling measure, sang as follows:
+
+If but thy consent be assured, O thou who art all my desire, Be
+ all the folk angered 'gainst me; I set not a whit by their
+ ire.
+And if thou but show me thy face, thy brilliant and beautiful
+ face, I reck not if all the kings of the earth from my
+ vision retire.
+Thy favour, O thou unto whom all beauty must needs be referred,
+ Of the goods and the sweets of the world is all that I seek
+ and require.
+
+The man was charmed and emptying his cup, gave the girls to
+drink. Then he beckoned to the slender girl and said to her, "O
+houri of Paradise, feed thou our ears with sweet sounds." So she
+took the lute and tuning it, preluded and sang the following
+verses:
+
+Is it not martyrdom that I for thine estrangement dree, Seeing,
+ indeed, I cannot live, if thou depart from me?
+Is there no judge, in Love its law, to judge betwixt us twain, to
+ do me justice on thy head and take my wreak of thee?
+
+Their lord rejoiced and emptying the cup, gave the girls to
+drink. Then he signed to the yellow girl and said to her, "O sun
+of the day, let us hear some pleasant verses." So she took the
+lute and preluding after the goodliest fashion, sang as follows:
+
+I have a lover, whenas I draw him nigh, He bares upon me a sword
+ from either eye.
+May God avenge me some whit of him! For lo, He doth oppress me,
+ whose heart in 's hand doth lie.
+Oft though, "Renounce him, my heart," I say, yet it Will to none
+ other than him itself apply.
+He's all I ask for, of all created things; Yet jealous Fortune
+ doth him to me deny.
+
+The man rejoiced and drank and gave the girls to drink; then he
+filled the cup and taking it in his hand, signed to the black
+girl, saying, "O apple of the eye, let us have a taste of thy
+fashion, though it be but two words." So she took the lute and
+preluded in various modes, then returned to the first and sang
+the following verses to a lively air:
+
+O eyes, be large with tears and pour them forth amain, For, lo,
+ for very love my senses fail and wane.
+All manner of desire I suffer for his sake I cherish, and my foes
+ make merry at my pain.
+My enviers me forbid the roses of a cheek; And yet I have a heart
+ that is to roses fain.
+Ay, once the cups went round with joyance and delight And to the
+ smitten lutes, the goblets did we drain,
+What time my love kept troth and I was mad for him And in faith's
+ heaven, the star of happiness did reign.
+But lo, he turned away from me, sans fault of mine! Is there a
+ bitterer thing than distance and disdain?
+Upon his cheeks there bloom a pair of roses red, Blown ready to
+ be plucked; ah God, those roses twain!
+Were't lawful to prostrate oneself to any else Than God, I'd sure
+ prostrate myself upon the swain.
+
+Then rose the six girls and kissing the ground before their lord,
+said to him, "Judge thou between us, O our lord!" He looked at
+their beauty and grace and the difference of their colours and
+praised God the Most High and glorified Him: then said he, "There
+is none of you but has read the Koran and learnt to sing and is
+versed in the chronicles of the ancients and the doings of past
+peoples; so it is my desire that each of you rise and pointing to
+her opposite, praise herself and dispraise her rival; that is to
+say, let the blonde point to the black, the plump to the slender
+and the yellow to the brunette; and after, the latter shall, each
+in turn, do the like with the former; and be this illustrated
+with citations from the Holy Koran and somewhat of anecdotes and
+verse, so as to show forth your culture and elegance of
+discourse." Quoth they, "We hear and obey."
+
+So the blonde rose first and pointing at the black, said to her,
+"Out on thee, blackamoor! It is told that whiteness saith, 'I am
+the shining light, I am the rising full moon.' My colour is
+patent and my forehead is resplendent, and of my beauty quoth the
+poet:
+
+A blonde with smooth and polished cheeks, right delicate and
+ fair, As if a pearl in beauty hid, as in a shell, she were.
+Her shape a splendid Alif[FN#36] is, her smile a medial
+ Mim[FN#37] And over it her eyebrows make inverted
+ Nouns,[FN#38] a pair.
+Yes, and the glances of her eyes are arrows, and her brows A bow
+ that therewithal is horned with death and with despair.
+If to her cheeks and shape thou pass, her cheeks are roses red,
+ Sweet basil, ay, and eglantine and myrtles rich and rare.
+'Tis of the saplings' wont, to be implanted in the meads But, in
+ the saplings of thy shape, how many meads are there!
+
+My colour is like the wholesome day and the newly-gathered
+orange-blossom and the sparkling star; and indeed quoth God the
+Most High, in His precious book, to His prophet Moses (on whom be
+peace), 'Put thy hand into thy bosom and it shall come forth
+white without hurt.'[FN#39] And again He saith, 'As for those
+whose faces are made white, they are in the mercy of God and
+dwell for ever therein.'[FN#40] My colour is a miracle and my
+grace an extreme and my beauty a term. It is in the like of me
+that clothes show fair and to the like of me that hearts incline.
+Moreover, in whiteness are many excellences; for instance, the
+snow falls white from heaven, and it is traditional that white is
+the most beautiful of colours. The Muslims also glory in white
+turbans; but I should be tedious, were I to repeat all that may
+be said in praise of white; little and enough is better than too
+much. So now I will begin with thy dispraise, O black, O colour
+of ink and blacksmith's dust, thou whose face is like the crow
+that brings about lovers' parting! Verily, the poet saith in
+praise of white and dispraise of black:
+
+Seest not that for their milky hue white pearls in price excel
+ And charcoal for a groat a load the folk do buy and sell?
+And eke white faces, 'tis well known, do enter Paradise, Whilst
+ faces black appointed are to fill the halls of Hell.
+
+And indeed it is told in certain histories, related on the
+authority of devout men, that Noah (on whom be peace) was
+sleeping one day, with his sons Ham and Shem seated at his head,
+when a wind sprang up and lifting his clothes, uncovered his
+nakedness; whereat Ham laughed and did not cover him; but Shem
+rose and covered him. Presently, Noah awoke and learning what had
+passed, blessed Shem and cursed Ham. So Shem's face was whitened
+and from him sprang the prophets and the orthodox Khalifs and
+Kings; whilst Ham's face was blackened and he fled forth to the
+land of Ethiopia, and of his lineage came the blacks. All people
+are of a mind in affirming the lack of understanding of the
+blacks, even as saith the adage, 'How shall one find a black
+having understanding?'"
+
+Quoth her master, "It sufficeth; sit down, thou hast been
+prodigal." And he signed to the negress, who rose, and pointing
+at the blonde, said, "Doth thou not know that, in the Koran sent
+down to His prophet and apostle, is transmitted the saying of God
+the Most High, 'By the night, when it veileth [the world with
+darkness], and by the day, when it appeareth in all its
+glory!'[FN#41] If the night were not more illustrious than the
+day, why should God swear by it and give it precedence of the
+day? And indeed those of sense and understanding accept this.
+Knowst now that black [hair] is the ornament of youth and that,
+when whiteness descends upon the head, delights pass away and the
+hour of death draws nigh? Were not black the most illustrious of
+things, God had not set it in the kernel of the heart and the
+apple of the eye; and how excellent is the saying of the poet:
+
+An if I cherish the dusky maids, this is the reason why; They
+ have the hue of the core of the heart and the apple of the
+ eye
+And youth; nor in error I eschew the whiteness of the blondes;
+ For 'tis the colour of hoary hair and shrouds in them shun
+ I.
+
+And that of another:
+
+The brown, not the white, are first in my love And worthiest
+ eke to be loved of me,
+For the colour of damask lips have they, Whilst the white have
+ the hue of leprosy.
+
+And of a third:
+
+Black women, white of deeds, are like indeed to eyne That, though
+ jet-black they be, with peerless splendours shine.
+If I go mad for her, be not amazed; for black The source of
+ madness is, when in the feminine.[FN#42]
+'Tis as my colour were the middle dark of night; For all no moon
+ it be, yet brings it light, in fine.
+
+Moreover, is the companying together of lovers good but in the
+night? Let this quality and excellence suffice thee. What
+protects lovers from spies and censors like the blackness of the
+shadows? And nought gives them cause to fear discovery like the
+whiteness of the dawn. So, how many claims to honour are there
+not in blackness and how excellent is the saying of the poet:
+
+I visit them, and the mirk of night doth help me to my will And
+ seconds me, but the white of dawn is hostile to me still.
+
+And that of another:
+
+How many a night in joy I've passed with the beloved one, What
+ while the darkness curtained us about with tresses dun!
+Whenas the light of morn appeared, it struck me with affright,
+ And I to him, 'The Magians lie, who worship fire and sun.'
+
+And saith a third:
+
+He came forth to visit me, shrouding himself in the cloak of the
+ night, And hastened his steps, as he wended, for caution and
+ fear and affright.
+Then rose I and laid in his pathway my cheek, as a carpet it
+ were, For abjection, and trailed o'er my traces my skirts,
+ to efface them from sight.
+But lo, the new moon rose and shone, like a nail-paring cleft
+ from the nail, And all but discovered our loves with the
+ gleam of her meddlesome light.
+And then there betided between us what I'll not discover, i'
+ faith: So question no more of the matter and deem not of ill
+ or unright.
+
+And a fourth:
+
+Foregather with thy lover, whilst night your loves may screen;
+ For that the sun's a telltale, the moon a go-between.
+
+And a fifth:
+
+I love not white women, with fat blown out and overlaid; The girl
+ of all girls for me is the slender dusky maid.
+Let others the elephant mount, if it like them; as for me, I'll
+ ride but the fine-trained colt on the day of the cavalcade.
+
+And a sixth:
+
+My loved one came to me by night And we did clip and interlace
+And lay together through the dark; But, lo, the morning broke
+ apace.
+To God, my Lord, I pray that He Will reunite us of His grace
+And make night last to me, what while I hold my love in my
+ embrace.
+
+Were I to set forth all the praise of blackness, I should be
+tedious; but little and enough is better than great plenty and
+too much. As for thee, O blonde, thy colour is that of leprosy
+and thine embrace is suffocation; and it is of report that frost
+and intense cold[FN#43] are in Hell for the torment of the
+wicked. Again, of black things is ink, wherewith is written the
+word of God; and were is not for black ambergris and black musk,
+there would be no perfumes to carry to kings. How many glories
+are there not in blackness and how well saith the poet:
+
+Dost thou not see that musk, indeed, is worth its weight in gold,
+ Whilst for a dirhem and no more a load of lime is sold?
+Black eyes cast arrows at men's hearts; but whiteness of the
+ eyes, In man, is judged of all to be unsightly to behold."
+
+"It sufficeth," said her master. "Sit down." So she sat down and
+he signed to the fat girl, who rose and pointing at the slim
+girl, uncovered her arms and legs and bared her stomach, showing
+its creases and the roundness of her navel. Then she donned a
+shift of fine stuff, that showed her whole body, and said,
+"Praised be God who created me, for that He beautified my face
+and made me fat and fair and likened me to branches laden with
+fruit and bestowed upon me abounding beauty and brightness; and
+praised be He no less, for that He hath given me the precedence
+and honoured me, when He speaks of me in His holy book! Quoth the
+Most High, 'And he brought a fat calf.'[FN#44] And indeed He hath
+made me like unto an orchard, full of peaches and pomegranates.
+Verily, the townsfolk long for fat birds and eat of them and love
+not lean birds; so do the sons of Adam desire fat meat and eat of
+it. How many precious attributes are there not in fatness, and
+how well saith the poet:
+
+Take leave of thy love, for the caravan, indeed, is on the
+ start. O man, canst thou bear to say farewell and thus
+ from her to part?
+'Tis as her going were, I trow, but to her neighbour's house,
+ The faultless gait of a fat fair maid, that never tires
+ the heart.
+
+Sawst thou ever one stop at a butcher's stall, but sought fat
+meat of him? The wise say, 'Pleasure is in three things, eating
+flesh and riding on flesh and the thrusting of flesh into
+flesh.' As for thee, O thin one, thy legs are like sparrow's
+legs or pokers, and thou art like a cruciform plank or a piece
+of poor meat; there is nought in thee to gladden the heart;
+even as saith of thee the poet:
+
+Now God forfend that aught enforce me take for bedfellow A
+ woman like a foot-rasp, wrapt in palm-fibres and tow!
+In every limb she has a horn, that butts me in my sleep, So
+ that at day-break, bruised and sore, I rise from her and
+ go."
+
+"It is enough," quoth her master. "Sit down." So she sat down
+and he signed to the slender girl, who rose, as she were a
+willow-wand or a bamboo-shoot or a plant of sweet basil, and
+said, "Praised be God who created me and beautified me and made
+my embraces the end of all desire and likened me to the branch,
+to which all hearts incline. If I rise, I rise lightly; if
+I sit, I sit with grace; I am nimble-witted at a jest and
+sweeter-souled than cheerfulness [itself]. Never heard I one
+describe his mistress, saying, 'My beloved is the bigness of an
+elephant or like a long wide mountain;' but rather, 'My lady
+hath a slender waist and a slim shape.'
+
+A little food contents me and a little water stays my thirst;
+my sport is nimble and my habit elegant; for I am sprightlier
+than the sparrow and lighter-footed than the starling. My
+favours are the desire of the longing and the delight of the
+seeker; for I am goodly of shape, sweet of smile and graceful
+as the willow-wand or the bamboo-cane of the basil-plant; nor
+is there any can compare with me in grace, even as saith one of
+me:
+
+Thy shape unto the sapling liken I And set my hope to win thee or
+ to die.
+Distraught, I follow thee, and sore afraid, Lest any look on thee
+ with evil eye.
+
+It is for the like of me that lovers run mad and that the longing
+are distracted. If my lover be minded to draw me to him, I am
+drawn to him, and if he would have me incline to him, I incline
+to him and not against him. But as for thee, O fat of body, thine
+eating is as that of an elephant, and neither much not little
+contents thee. When thou liest with a man, he hath no ease of
+thee, nor can he find a way to take his pleasure of thee; for the
+bigness of thy belly holds him off from clipping thee and the
+grossness of thy thighs hinders him from coming at thy kaze. What
+comeliness is there in thy grossness and what pleasantness or
+courtesy in thy coarse nature? Fat meat is fit for nought but
+slaughter, nor is there aught therein that calls for praise. If
+one joke with thee, thou art angry; if one sport with thee, thou
+art sulky; if thou sleep, thou snorest; if thou walk, thou
+pantest; if thou eat, thou art never satisfied. Thou art heavier
+than mountains and fouler than corruption and sin. Thou hast in
+thee nor movement nor blessing nor thinkest of aught but to eat
+and sleep. If thou make water, thou scatterest; if thou void,
+thou gruntest like a bursten wine-skin or a surly elephant. If
+thou go to the draught-house, thou needest one to wash out thy
+privy parts and pluck out the hairs; and this is the extreme of
+laziness and the sign of stupidity. In fine, there is no good
+thing in thee, and indeed the poet saith of thee:
+
+Heavy and swollen with fat, like a blown-out water-skin, With
+ thighs like the pillars of stone that buttress a mountain's
+ head,
+Lo, if she walk in the West, so cumbrous her corpulence is The
+ Eastern hemisphere hears the sound of her heavy tread."
+
+Quoth her master, "It is enough: sit down." So she sat down and
+he signed to the yellow girl, who rose to her feet and praised
+God and magnified His name, calling down peace and blessing on
+the best of His creatures;[FN#45] after which she pointed at the
+brunette and said to her, "I am praised in the Koran, and the
+Compassionate One hath described my colour and its excellence
+over all others in His manifest Book, where He saith, 'A yellow
+[heifer], pure yellow, whose colour rejoices the beholders.'
+[FN#46] Wherefore my colour is a portent and my grace an extreme
+and my beauty a term; for that my colour is the colour of a dinar
+and of the planets and moons and of apples. My fashion is the
+fashion of the fair, and the colour of saffron outvies all
+other colours; so my fashion is rare and my colour wonderful. I
+am soft of body, and of great price, comprising all attributes of
+beauty. My colour, in that which exists, is precious as virgin
+gold, and how many glorious qualities are there not in me! Of the
+like of me quoth the poet:
+
+Yellow she is, as is the sun that shineth in the sky, And like to
+ golden dinars, eke, to see, her beauties are.
+Nor with her brightness, anywise, can saffron hold compare, And
+ even the very moon herself her charms outvie by far.
+
+And now I will begin in thy dispraise, O brown of favour! Thy
+colour is that of the buffalo, and all souls shudder at thy
+sight. If thy colour be in aught, it is blamed; if it be in food,
+it is poisoned; for thy colour is that of flies and is a mark of
+ugliness in dogs. It is, among colours, one which strikes with
+amazement and is of the signs of mourning. Never heard I of brown
+gold or brown pearls or brown jewels. If thou enter the wardrobe,
+thy colour changes, and when thou comest out, thou addest a new
+ugliness to thine ugliness. Thou art neither black, that thou
+mayst be known, nor white, that thou mayst be described; and
+there is no good quality in thee, even as saith of thee the poet:
+
+As a complexion unto her, the hue of soot doth serve; Her mirky
+ colour is as dust on couriers' feet upcast.
+No sooner fall mine eyes on her, thou but a moment's space, Than
+ troubles and misgivings straight beset me thick and fast."
+
+"Enough," said her master. "Sit down." So she sat down and he
+signed to the brunette. Now she was endowed with grace and beauty
+and symmetry and perfection, delicate of body, with coal-back
+hair, slender shape, rosy, oval cheeks, liquid black eyes, fair
+face, eloquent tongue, slim waist and heavy buttocks. So she rose
+and said, "Praised be God who hath created me neither blameably
+fat nor lankily slender, neither white like leprosy nor yellow
+like colic nor black like coal, but hath made my colour to be
+beloved of men of wit; for all the poets praise brunettes in
+every tongue and exalt their colour over all others. Brown of
+hue, praiseworthy of qualities; and God bless him who saith:
+
+In the brunettes a meaning is, couldst read its writ aright,
+ Thine eyes would never again look on others, red or white.
+Free-flowing speech and amorous looks would teach Harout[FN#47]
+ himself The arts of sorcery and spells of magic and of
+ might.
+
+And saith another:
+
+Give me brunettes; the Syrian spears, so limber and so
+ straight, Tell of the slender dusky maids, so lithe and
+ proud of gait.
+Languid of eyelids, with a down like silk upon her cheek,
+ Within her wasting lover's heart she queens it still in
+ state.
+
+And yet another:
+
+Yea, by my life, such virtues in goodly brownness lie, One spot
+ thereof makes whiteness the shining moons outvie;
+But if the like of whiteness is borrowed, then, for sure, Its
+ beauty were transmuted unto reproach thereby.
+Not with her wine[FN#48] I'm drunken, but with her
+ tresses[FN#49] bright That make all creatures drunken that
+ dwell beneath the sky.
+Each of her charms doth envy the others; yea, and each To be
+ the down so silky upon her cheek doth sigh.
+
+And again:
+
+Why should I not incline me unto the silken down On the cheeks
+ of a dusky maiden, like the cane straight and brown,
+Seeing the spot of beauty in waterlilies' cups Is of the poets
+ fabled to be all beauty's crown?
+Yea, and I see all lovers the swarthy-coloured mole, Under the
+ ebon pupil, do honour and renown.
+Why, then, do censors blame me for loving one who's all A mole?
+ May Allah rid me of every railing clown!
+
+My form is beautiful and my shape slender; kings desire my colour
+and all love it, rich and poor. I am pleasant, nimble, handsome,
+elegant, soft of body and great of price. I am perfect in beauty
+and breeding and eloquence; my aspect is comely and my tongue
+fluent, my habit light and my sport graceful. As for thee,
+[O yellow girl,] thou art like unto a mallow of Bab el Louc,
+yellow and made all of sulphur. Perdition to thee, O pennyworth
+of sorrel, O rust of copper, O owl's face and food of the damned!
+Thy bedfellow, for oppression of spirit, is buried in the tombs,
+and there is no good thing in thee, even as saith the poet of the
+like of thee:
+
+Paleness[FN#50] is sore on her, for all no illness doth her
+ fret; My breast is straitened by its sight; ay, and my
+ head aches yet.
+If thou repent thee not, my soul, to punish thee, I vow, I'll
+ humble thee with a kiss of her face, my teeth on edge
+ shall set."
+
+"Enough," said her master; "sit down." Then he made peace
+between them and clad them all in sumptuous dresses of honour
+and handselled them with precious jewels of land and sea. And
+never, O Commander of the Faithful, in any place or time have I
+seen fairer than these six fair damsels.'
+
+When the Khalif El Mamoun heard this story from Mohammed of Bassora,
+he said to him, 'O Mohammed, knowest thou the abiding-place of
+these damsels and their master, and canst thou make shift to buy
+them of him for us?' 'O Commander of the Faithful,' answered he,
+'I have heard that their master is wrapped up in them and cannot
+endure to be parted from them.' 'Take threescore thousand dinars,
+--that is, ten thousand for each girl,--' rejoined the Khalif,
+'and go to his house and buy them of him.' So Mohammed took the
+money and betaking himself to the man of Yemen, acquainted him
+with the Khalif's wish. He consented to sell them at that price,
+to pleasure him, and despatched them to El Mamoun, who assigned
+them an elegant lodging and used to sit with them therein,
+marvelling at their beauty and grace, no less than at their varied
+colours and the excellence of their speech.
+
+After awhile, when their former owner could no longer endure separation
+from them, he sent a letter to the Khalif, complaining of his ardent
+love for them and containing, amongst the rest, the following verses:
+
+Six damsels fair and bright have captivated me; My blessing and
+ my peace the six fair maidens greet!
+My life, indeed, are they, my hearing and my sight, Yea, and my
+ very drink, my pleasance and my meat.
+No other love can bring me solace for their charms, And
+ slumber, after them, no more to me is sweet.
+Alas, my long regret, my weeping for their loss! Would I have
+ ne'er been born, to know this sore defeat!
+For eyes, bedecked and fair with brows like bended bows, Have
+ smitten me to death with arrows keen and fleet.
+
+When the letter came to El Mamoun's hands, he clad the six
+damsels in rich apparel and giving them threescore thousand
+dinars, sent them back to their master, who rejoiced in them
+with an exceeding joy,--more by token of the money they brought
+him,--and abode with them in all delight and pleasance of life,
+till there came to them the Destroyer of Delights and the
+Sunderer of Companies.
+
+
+
+
+
+ HAROUN ER RASHID AND THE DAMSEL AND
+ ABOU NUWAS.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid, being one night exceeding restless
+and oppressed with melancholy thought, went out and walked
+about his palace, till he came to a chamber, over whose doorway
+hung a curtain. He raised the curtain and saw, at the upper end
+of the room, a bed, on which lay something black, as it were a
+man asleep, with a candle on his right hand and another on his
+left and by his side a flagon of old wine, over against which
+stood the cup. The Khalif wondered at this, saying, 'How came
+yonder black by this wine-service?' Then, drawing near the bed,
+he found that it was a girl asleep there, veiled with her hair,
+and uncovering her face, saw that it was like the moon on the
+night of her full. So he filled a cup of wine and drank it to
+the roses of her cheeks; then bent over her and kissed a mole
+on her face, whereupon she awoke and cried out, saying, 'O
+Trusty One of God,[FN#51], what is to do?' 'A guest who knocks
+at thy dwelling by night,' replied the Khalif, '[hoping] that
+thou wilt give him hospitality till the dawn.' 'It is well,'
+answered she; 'I will grace the guest with my hearing and my
+sight.'
+
+So she brought the wine and they drank it together; after which
+she took the lute and tuning it, preluded in one-and-twenty
+modes, then returning to the first, struck a lively measure and
+sang the following verses:
+
+The tongue of passion in my heart bespeaks thee for my soul,
+ Telling I love thee with a love that nothing can control.
+I have an eye, that testifies unto my sore disease, And eke a
+ heart with parting wrung, a-throb for love and dole.
+Indeed, I cannot hide the love that frets my life away; Longing
+ increases still on me, my tears for ever roll.
+Ah me, before the love of thee, I knew not what love was; But
+ God's decree must have its course on every living soul.
+
+Then said she, 'O Commander of the Faithful, I am a wronged
+woman.' 'How so?' quoth he, 'and who hath wronged thee?' She
+answered, 'Thy son bought me awhile ago, for ten thousand
+dirhems, meaning to give me to thee; but the daughter of thine
+uncle[FN#52] sent him the price aforesaid and bade him shut me
+up from thee in this chamber.' Whereupon, 'Ask a boon of me,'
+said the Khalif; and she, 'I ask thee to lie to-morrow night
+with me.' 'If it be the will of God,' replied the Khalif, and
+leaving her, went away.
+
+Next morning, he repaired to his sitting-room and called for
+Abou Nuwas, but found him not and sent his chamberlain to seek
+for him. The chamberlain found him in pawn, in a tavern, for a
+score of a thousand dirhems, that he had spent on a certain
+boy, and questioned him. So he told him what had befallen him
+with the boy and how he had spent a thousand dirhems upon him;
+whereupon quoth the chamberlain, 'Show him to me; and if he be
+worth this, thou art excused.' 'Wait awhile,' replied the poet,
+'and thou shalt see him presently.' As they were talking, up
+came the boy, clad in a white tunic, under which was another of
+red and yet another of black. When Abou Nuwas saw him, he
+sighed and repeated the following verses:
+
+To me he appeared in a garment of white, His eyes and his
+ eyelids with languor bedight.
+Quoth I, "Dost thou pass and salutest me not? Though God knows
+ thy greeting were sweet to my spright.
+Be He blessed who mantled with roses thy cheeks, Who creates,
+ without let, what He will, of His might!"
+"Leave prating," he answered; "for surely my Lord Is wondrous
+ of working, sans flaw or dissight.
+Yea, truly, my garment is even as my face And my fortune, each
+ white upon white upon white."
+
+When the boy heard this, he put off the white tunic and
+appeared in the red one; whereupon Abou Nuwas redoubled in
+expressions of admiration and repeated the following verses:
+
+Appeared in a garment, the colour of flame, A foeman of mine,
+ "The beloved," by name.
+"Thou'rt a full moon," I said in my wonder, "And com'st In a
+ garment that putteth the roses to shame.
+Hath the red of thy cheek clad that vest upon thee Or in
+ heart's blood of lovers hast tinctured the same?"
+Quoth he, "'Twas the sun lately gave me the wede; From the
+ rubicund hue of his setting it came.
+So my garment and wine and the colour so clear Of my cheek are
+ as flame upon flame upon flame."
+
+Then the boy doffed the red tunic and abode in the black;
+whereupon Abou Nuwas redoubled in attention to him and repeated
+the following verses:
+
+He came in a tunic all sable of hue And shone out, thus veiled
+ in the dark, to men's view.
+"Thou passest," quoth I, "without greeting, and thus Givest
+ cause to exult to the rancorous crew.
+Thy garment resembles thy locks and my lot, Yea, blackness and
+ blackness and blackness thereto."
+
+Then the chamberlain returned to Haroun er Reshid and
+acquainted him with the poet's predicament, whereupon he bade
+him take a thousand dirhems and go and take him out of pawn. So
+he returned to Abou Nuwas and paying his score, carried him to
+the Khalif, who said, 'Make me some verses containing the
+words, "O Trusty One of God, what is to do?"' 'I hear and obey,
+O Commander of the Faithful,' answered he and improvised the
+following verses:
+
+My night was long for sleeplessness and care. Weary I was and
+ many my thoughts were.
+I rose and walked awhile in my own place, Then midst the
+ harem's cloistered courts did fare,
+Until I chanced on somewhat black and found It was a damsel
+ shrouded in her hair.
+God bless her for a shining moon! Her shape A willow-wand, and
+ pudour veiled the fair.
+I quaffed a cup to her; then, drawing near, I kissed the mole
+ upon her cheek so rare.
+She woke and swayed about in her amaze, Even as the branch
+ sways in the rain-fraught air;
+Then rose and said, "O Trusty One of God, What is to do, and
+ thou, what dost thou there?"
+"A guest", quoth I, "that sues to thee, by night, For shelter
+ till the hour of morning-prayer."
+"Gladly," she said; "with hearing and with sight To grace the
+ guest, my lord, I will not spare."
+
+'Confound thee!' cried the Khalif. 'It is as if thou hadst been
+present with us.' Then he took him by the hand and carried him
+to the damsel, who was clad in a dress and veil of blue. When
+Abou Nuwas saw her, he was profuse in expressions of admiration
+and recited the following verses:
+
+Say to the lovely maid, i' the veil of azure dight, "By Allah,
+ O my life, have pity on my plight!
+For when the fair entreats her lover cruelly, Sighs of all
+ longing rend his bosom day and night.
+So, by thy charms and by the whiteness of thy cheek, Have ruth
+ upon a heart for love consumed outright.
+Incline to him and be his stay 'gainst stress of love, Nor let
+ what fools may say find favour in thy sight."
+
+Then the damsel set wine before the Khalif and taking the lute,
+played a lively measure and sang the following verses:
+
+Wilt thou be just in thy love to others and deal with me
+ Unjustly and put me away, while others have joy in thee?
+Were there for lovers a judge, to whom I might complain Of
+ thee, he would do me justice and judge with equity.
+If thou forbid me to pass thy door, yet from afar To greet thee
+ and to bless, at least, I shall be free.
+
+The Khalif bade her ply Abou Nuwas with wine, till he lost his
+wits; when he gave him a full cup, and he drank a draught of it
+and held the cup in his hand. Er Reshid bade the girl take the
+cup from him and conceal it; so she took it and hid it between
+her thighs. Then he drew his sword and standing at the poet's
+head, pricked him with the point; whereupon he awoke and saw
+the Khalif standing over him, with a drawn sword. At this sight
+the fumes of the wine fled from his head and the Khalif said to
+him, 'Make me some verses and tell me therein what is come of
+thy cup; or I will cut off thy head.' So he improvised the
+following verses:
+
+My tale, indeed is hard to tell: The thief was none but yon
+ gazelle.
+She stole my cup of wine, whereof My lips had drunken but one
+ spell,
+And hid it in a place, for which My heart's desire's
+ unspeakable.
+I name it not, for awe of him, In whom the right thereof doth
+ dwell.
+
+'Confound thee!' quoth the Khalif. 'How knewst thou that? But
+we accept what thou sayst.' Then he ordered him a dress of
+honour and a thousand dinars, and he went away, rejoicing.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE MAN WHO STOLE THE DISH OF GOLD IN
+ WHICH THE DOG ATE.
+
+
+
+There was once a man, who was overborne with debt, and his case
+was straitened upon him, so that he left his people and family
+and went forth in distraction. He wandered on at random till he
+came to a high-walled and splendidly built city and entered it
+in a state of wretchedness and despair, gnawed with hunger and
+worn with the toil of his journey. As he passed through one of
+the streets, he saw a company of notables going along; so he
+followed them, till they entered a house like to a royal
+palace. He entered with them, and they stayed not till they
+came in presence of a man of the most dignified and majestic
+aspect, seated at the upper end of a saloon and surrounded by
+pages and servants, as he were of the sons of the Viziers. When
+he saw the visitors, he rose and received them with honour; but
+the poor man was confounded at the goodliness of the place and
+the crowd of servants and attendants and drawing back, in fear
+and perplexity, sat down apart in a place afar off, where none
+should see him.
+
+After awhile, in came a man with four hunting-dogs, clad in
+various kinds of silk and brocade and having on their necks
+collars of gold with chains of silver, and tied up each dog in a
+place set apart for him; after which he went out and presently
+returned with four dishes of gold, full of rich meats, one of
+which he set before each dog. Then he went away and left them,
+whilst the poor man began to eye the food, for stress of hunger,
+and would fain have gone up to one of the dogs and eaten with
+him; but fear of them withheld him. Presently, one of the
+dogs looked at him and God the Most High inspired him with a
+knowledge of his case; so he drew back from the platter and
+beckoned to the man, who came and ate, till he was satisfied.
+Then he would have withdrawn, but the dog pushed the dish
+towards him with his paw, signing to him to take it and what
+was left in it for himself. So the man took the dish and
+leaving the house, went his way, and none followed him. Then
+he journeyed to another city, where he sold the dish and buying
+goods with the price, returned to his own town. There he sold
+his stock and paid his debts; and he prospered and became rich
+and at his ease.
+
+After some years had passed, he said to himself, 'Needs must I
+repair to the city of the owner of the dish, which the dog
+bestowed on me, and carry him its price, together with a fit
+and handsome present.' So he took the price of the dish and a
+suitable present and setting out, journeyed night and day, till
+he came to the city and entering, went straight to the place
+where the man's house had been; but lo, he found there nothing
+but mouldering ruins and dwelling-places laid waste, over which
+the raven croaked; for the place was desert and the environs
+changed out of knowledge. At this, his heart and soul were
+troubled and he repeated the words of him who saith:
+
+The privy chambers are void of all their hidden store, As
+ hearts of the fear of God and the virtues all of yore.
+Changed is the vale and strange to me are its gazelles, And
+ those I knew of old its sandhills are no more.
+
+And those of another:
+
+The phantom of Saada came to me by night, near the break of
+ day, And roused me, whenas my comrades all in the desert
+ sleeping lay.
+But, when I awoke to the dream of the night, that came to visit
+ me, I found the air void and the wonted place of our
+ rendezvous far away.
+
+When he saw what the hand of time had manifestly done with the
+place, leaving but traces of the things that had been aforetime,
+the testimony of his eyes made it needless for him to enquire
+of the case; so he turned away and seeing a wretched man, in
+a plight that made the skin quake and would have moved the
+very rock to pity, said to him, 'Harkye, sirrah! What have
+time and fortune done with the master of this place? Where are
+his shining full moons[FN#53] and splendid stars;[FN#54] and
+what is the cause of the ruin that is come upon his abode, so
+that but the walls thereof remain?' Quoth the other, 'He is the
+miserable wretch thou seest bewailing that which hath befallen
+him. Knowest thou not the words of the Prophet (whom God bless
+and preserve), wherein is a lesson to him who will profit by it
+and an admonition to whoso will be guided thereby in the right
+way? "Verily it is the way of God the Most High to raise up
+nothing of this world, except He cast it down again." If thou
+enquire of the cause of this thing, indeed, it is no wonder,
+considering the vicissitudes of fortune. I was the master of
+this place and its builder and founder and owner and lord of
+its shining full moons and radiant damsels and of all its
+splendid circumstance an magnificent garniture; but Fortune
+turned and did away from me wealth and servants, overwhelming
+me unawares with disasters unforeseen and bringing me to this
+sorry plight. But there must needs be some reason for this thy
+question: tell it me and leave wondering.'
+
+So the other told him the whole story, sore concerned at what
+he heard and saw, and added, 'I have brought thee a present
+such as souls desire, and the price of thy dish of gold, that I
+took; for it was the cause of my becoming rich, after poverty,
+and of the reinstating of my dwelling-place, after desolation,
+and of the doing away of my trouble and straitness from me.'
+But the poor man shook his head, groaning and weeping and
+lamenting, and answered, 'O man, methinks thou art mad; for
+this is not the fashion of a man of understanding. How should a
+dog of mine make gift to thee of a dish of gold and I receive
+back its price? This were indeed a strange thing! By Allah,
+were I in the straitest misery and unease, I would not accept
+of thee aught, no, not the worth of a nail-paring! So return
+whence thou camest, in health and safety.'
+
+The merchant kissed his feet and taking leave of him, returned
+whence he came, praising him and reciting the following verse:
+
+The men and eke the dogs are gone and vanished all. Peace be
+ upon the men and dogs, whate'er befall!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE SHARPER OF ALEXANDRIA AND THE
+ MASTER OF POLICE.
+
+
+
+There was once, in the coast-fortress of Alexandria, a Master
+of Police, Husameddin by name, who was one night sitting in his
+seat of office, when there came in to him a trooper, who said
+to him, 'Know, O my lord, that I entered the city this night
+and alighted at such a khan and slept there, till a third part
+of the night was past, when I awoke and found my saddle-bags
+cut open and a purse of a thousand dinars stolen from them.' No
+sooner had he done speaking than the magistrate called his
+officers and bade them lay hands on all in the khan and clap
+them in prison till the morning; and on the morrow, he caused
+bring the instruments of torment and sending for the prisoners,
+was about to torture them, [to make them confess], in the
+presence of the owner of the stolen money, when, behold, a man
+pressed through the crowd and coming up to the chief of the
+police, said, 'O Amir, let these folk go, for they are wrongly
+accused. It was I who robbed the trooper, and here is the purse
+I stole from his saddle-bags.' So saying, he pulled out the
+purse from his sleeve and laid it before Husameddin, who said
+to the soldier, 'Take thy money; thou hast no ground of
+complaint now against the people of the khan.' Thereupon the
+latter and all who were present fell to blessing the thief and
+praising him; but he said, 'O Amir, the skill is not in that I
+came to thee and brought thee the purse, but in taking it a
+second time from the trooper.' 'And how didst thou take it, O
+sharper?' asked Husameddin.
+
+'O Amir,' replied the thief, 'I was standing in the
+money-changers' bazaar at Cairo, when I saw yonder man receive
+the gold and put it in his purse; so I followed him from street
+to street, but found no occasion of stealing it from him. Then
+he left Cairo and I followed him from place to place, casting
+about by the way to rob him, but without avail, till he entered
+this city and I followed him to the khan. I took up my lodging
+beside him and watched him till he fell asleep and I heard him
+snoring, when I went softly up to him and cutting open his
+saddlebags with this knife, took the purse thus--'
+
+So saying, he put out his hand and took the purse from before
+the chief of the police, whilst the latter and the trooper and
+the folk drew back, watching him and thinking he would show them
+how he took the purse from the saddle-bags; but, of a sudden,
+he broke into a run and threw himself into a reservoir hard by.
+The chief of the police called to his officers to pursue him,
+but before they could put off their clothes and descend the
+steps, he had made off; and they sought for him, but found him
+not; for the streets of Alexandria all communicate one with
+another. So they came back, empty-handed, and the chief of the
+police said to the trooper, 'Thou hast no recourse against the
+folk; for thou foundest him who robbed thee and receivedst back
+thy money, but didst not keep it.' So the trooper went away,
+having lost his money, whilst the folk were delivered from his
+hands and those of the chief of the police; and all this was of
+the favour of God the Most High.
+
+
+
+
+
+ EL MELIK EN NASIR AND THE THREE MASTERS
+ OF POLICE.
+
+
+
+El Melik en Nasir[FN#55] once sent for the chiefs of the police
+of New Cairo, Boulac and Old Cairo and said to them, 'I wish
+each of you to tell me the most remarkable thing that hath
+befallen him during his term of office.' 'We hear and obey,'
+answered they. Then said the chief of the police of New Cairo,
+'O our lord the Sultan, the most remarkable thing that befell
+me, during my term of office, was on this wise:
+
+
+
+
+
+Story of the Chief of the Police of New Cairo.
+
+
+
+There were once, in this city, two men apt to bear witness in
+matters of blood and wounds; but they were both given to wine
+and women and debauchery; nor, do what I would, could I succeed
+in bringing them to account. So I charged the vintners and
+confectioners and fruiterers and chandlers and bagnio-keepers
+to acquaint me of these two, when ever they should anywhere be
+engaged in drinking or debauchery, whether together or apart,
+and that, if they or either of them bought of them aught for
+the purpose of carousal, they should not conceal it from me.
+And they replied, "We hear and obey."
+
+One night, a man came to me and said, "O my lord, know that the
+two witnesses are in such a house in such a street, engaged
+in sore wickedness." So I disguised myself and went out,
+accompanied by none but my page, to the street in question.
+When I came to the house, I knocked at the door, whereupon a
+slave-girl came out and opened to me, saying, "Who art thou?" I
+made her no answer, but entered and saw the two witnesses and
+the master of the house sitting, and lewd women with them, and
+great plenty of wine before them. When they saw me, they rose to
+receive me, without showing the least alarm, and made much of me,
+seating me in the place of honour and saying to me, "Welcome for
+an illustrious guest and a pleasant cup-companion!"
+
+Presently, the master of the house went out and returning after
+awhile with three hundred dinars, said to me, without the least
+fear, "O my lord, it is, we know, in thy power both to disgrace
+and punish us; but this will bring thee nothing but weariness.
+So thou wouldst do better to take this money and protect us;
+for God the Most High is named the Protector and loveth those
+of His servants who protect each other; and thou shalt have thy
+reward in the world to come." The money tempted me and I said
+in myself, "I will take the money and protect them this once;
+but, if ever again I have them in my power, I will take my
+wreak of them."
+
+So I took the money and went away; but, next day, one of the
+Cadi's serjeants came to me and cited me before the court. I
+accompanied him thither, knowing not the meaning of the
+summons; and when I came into the Cadi's presence, I saw the
+two witnesses and the master of the house sitting by him. The
+latter rose and sued me for three hundred dinars, nor was it in
+my power to deny the debt; for he produced a written obligation
+and the two others testified against me that I owed the amount.
+
+Their evidence satisfied the Cadi and he ordered me to pay the
+money; nor did I leave the Court till they had of me the three
+hundred dinars. So I went away, in the utmost wrath and
+confusion, vowing vengeance against them and repenting that I
+had not punished them.'
+
+Then rose the chief of the Boulac police and said, 'As for me,
+O our lord the Sultan, the most remarkable thing that befell
+me, during my term of office, was as follows:
+
+
+
+
+
+Story of the Chief of the Boulac Police.
+
+
+
+I was once in debt to the amount of three hundred thousand
+dinars, and being distressed thereby, I sold what was behind me
+and what was before me and all I could lay my hands on, but
+could raise no more than a hundred thousand dinars and abode in
+great perplexity. One night, as I sat at home, in this state of
+mind, there came a knocking at the gate; so I said to one of my
+servants, "See who is at the door." He went out and returned,
+pale and trembling in every nerve; so I said to him, "What ails
+thee?" "There is a man at the door, seeking thee," answered he.
+"He is half naked, clad in skins, with a sword and a knife in
+his girdle, and with him are a company of the same fashion." So
+I took my sword and going out to see who these were, found them
+as the boy had reported and said to them, "What is your
+business?" "We are thieves," answered they, "and have made
+great purchase to-night and appointed it to thy use, that thou
+mayst pay therewith the debts that oppress thee and free
+thyself from thy distress." "Where is it?" asked I; and they
+brought me a great chest, full of vessels of gold and silver;
+which when I saw, I rejoiced and said in myself, "It were
+ungenerous to let them go away empty-handed."
+
+So I took the hundred thousand dinars I had by me and gave it
+to them, thanking them; and they took it and went their way,
+under cover of the night. But, on the morrow, when I examined
+the contents of the chest, I found them gilded brass and
+pewter, worth five hundred dirhems at the most; and this was
+grievous to me, for I had lost what money I had, and trouble
+was added to my trouble.'
+
+Then rose the chief of the police of Old Cairo and said, 'O our
+lord the Sultan, the most remarkable thing that befell me,
+during my term of office, was on this wise:
+
+
+
+
+
+Story of the Chief of the Old Cairo Police
+
+
+
+I once had ten thieves hanged, each on his own gibbet, and set
+guards to watch them and hinder the folk from taking them down.
+Next morning, when I came to look at them, I found two bodies
+hanging from one gibbet and said to the guards, "Who did this,
+and where is the tenth gibbet?" But they denied all knowledge
+of it, and I was about to beat them, when they said, "Know, O
+Amir, that we fell asleep last night, and when we awoke, we
+found one of the bodies gone, gibbet and all, whereat we were
+alarmed, fearing thy wrath. But, presently, up came a peasant,
+jogging along on his ass; so we laid hands on him and killing
+him, hung his body upon this gibbet, in the stead of the
+missing thief."
+
+When I heard this, I marvelled and said to them, "Had he aught
+with him?" "He had a pair of saddle-bags on the ass," answered
+they. "What was in them?" asked I and they said, "We know not."
+Quoth I, "Bring them hither." So they brought them to me and I
+bade open them, when, behold, therein was the body of a
+murdered man, cut in pieces. When I saw this, I marvelled and
+said in myself, "Glory be to God! The cause of the hanging of
+this peasant was no other but his crime against this murdered
+man; and the Lord is no unjust dealer with [His] servants."'
+[FN#56]
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE THIEF AND THE MONEY-CHANGER
+
+
+
+A money-changer, bearing a bag of money, once passed by a
+company of thieves, and one of the latter said to the others,
+'I know how to steal yonder bag of money.' 'How wilt thou do
+it?' asked they. 'Look,' answered he and followed the money-
+changer, till he entered his house, when he threw the bag on a
+shelf and went into the draught-house, to do an occasion,
+calling to the slave-girl to bring him an ewer of water. So she
+took the jug and followed him to the draught-house, leaving the
+door open, whereupon the thief entered and taking the bag of
+money, made off with it to his companions, to whom he related
+what had passed. 'By Allah,' said they, 'this was a clever
+trick! It is not every one could do it: but, presently, the
+money-changer will come out of the draught-house and missing
+the bag of money, will beat the slave-girl and torture her
+grievously. Meseems thou hast at present done nothing worthy of
+praise; but, if thou be indeed a sharper, thou wilt return and
+save the girl from being beaten.' 'If it be the will of God,'
+answered the thief, 'I will save both the girl and the purse.'
+
+Then he went back to the money-changer's house and found him
+beating the girl, because of the bag of money; so he knocked at
+the door and the man said, 'Who is there? Quoth the thief, 'I
+am the servant of thy neighbour in the bazaar.' So he came out
+to him and said, 'What is thy business?' 'My master salutes
+thee,' replied the thief, 'and says to thee, "Surely, thou art
+mad to cast the like of this bag of money down at the door of
+thy shop and go away and leave it! Had a stranger chanced on
+it, he had made off with it." And except my master had seen it
+and taken care of it, it had been lost to thee.' So saying, he
+pulled out the purse and showed it to the money-changer, who
+said, 'That is indeed my purse,' and put out his hand to take
+it; but the thief said, 'By Allah, I will not give it thee,
+till thou write me a receipt; for I fear my master will not
+believe that thou hast duly received the purse, except I bring
+him a writing to that effect, under thy hand and seal.' So the
+money-changer went in to write the receipt; but, in the
+meantime, the thief made off with the bag of money, having
+[thus] saved the slave-girl her beating.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE CHIEF OF THE COUS POLICE AND THE
+ SHARPER
+
+
+
+It is related that Alaeddin, chief of the police of
+Cous[FN#57], was sitting one night in his house, when a man of
+comely aspect and dignified port, followed by a servant bearing
+a chest upon his head, came to the door and said to one of the
+young men, 'Go in and tell the Amir that I would speak with him
+privily.' So the servant went in and told his master, who bade
+admit the visitor. When he entered the Amir saw him to be a man
+of good appearance and carriage; so he received him with
+honour, seating him beside himself, and said to him, 'What is
+thy business?' 'I am a highwayman,' replied the stranger, 'and
+am minded to repent at thy hands and turn to God the Most High
+but I would have thee help me to this, for that I am in thy
+district and under thine eye. I have here a chest, wherein is
+that which is worth nigh forty thousand dinars; and none hath
+so good a right to it as thou; so do thou take it and give me
+in exchange a thousand dinars of thy money, lawfully gotten,
+that I may have a little capital, to aid me in my repentance,
+and not be forced to resort to sin for subsistence; and with
+God the Most High be thy reward!' So saying he opened the chest
+and showed the Amir that it was full of trinkets and jewels and
+bullion and pearls, whereat he was amazed and rejoiced greatly.
+Then he cried out to his treasurer, to bring him a purse of a
+thousand dinars, and gave it to the highwayman, who thanked him
+and went his way, under cover of the night.
+
+On the morrow, the Amir sent for the chief of the goldsmiths and
+showed him the chest and what was therein; but the goldsmith
+found it nothing but pewter and brass and the jewels and pearls
+all of glass; at which Alaeddin was sore chagrined and sent in
+quest of the highwayman; but none could come at him.
+
+
+
+
+
+ IBRAHIM BEN EL MEHDI AND THE MERCHANT'S
+ SISTER.
+
+
+
+The Khalif El Mamoun once said to [his uncle] Ibrahim ben el
+Mehdi, 'Tell us the most remarkable thing that thou hast ever
+seen.' 'I hear and obey, O Commander of the Faithful,' answered
+he. 'Know that I went out one day, a-pleasuring, and my course
+brought me to a place where I smelt the odour of food. My soul
+longed for it and I halted, perplexed and unable either to go
+on or enter. Presently, I raised my eyes and saw a lattice
+window and behind it a hand and wrist, the like of which for
+beauty I never saw. The sight turned my brain and I forgot the
+smell of the food and began to cast about how I should get
+access to the house. After awhile, I espied a tailor hard by
+and going up to him, saluted him. He returned my greeting and I
+said to him, "Whose house is that?" "It belongs to a merchant
+called such an one," answered he, "who consorteth with none but
+merchants."
+
+As we were talking, up came two men of comely and intelligent
+aspect, riding on horseback; and the tailor told me their names
+and that they were the merchant's most intimate friends. So I
+spurred my horse towards them and said to them, "May I be your
+ransom! Abou such an one[FN#58] waits for you!" And I rode with
+them to the gate, where I entered and they also. When the
+master of the house saw me, he doubted not but I was their
+friend; so he welcomed me and made me sit down in the highest
+room. Then they brought the table of food and I said, "God hath
+granted me my desire of the food; and now there remain the hand
+and wrist." After awhile, we removed, for carousal, to another
+room, which I found full of all manner of rarities; and the
+host paid me particular attention, addressing his conversation
+to me, for that he deemed me a guest of his guests; whilst the
+latter, in like manner, made much of me, taking me for a friend
+of the master of the house.
+
+When we had drunk several cups of wine, there came in to us a
+damsel of the utmost beauty and elegance, as she were a
+willow-wand, who took a lute and playing a lively measure, sang
+the following verses:
+
+Is it not passing strange, indeed, one house should hold us
+ tway And still thou drawst not near to me nor yet a word
+ dost say,
+Except the secrets of the souls and hearts that broken be And
+ entrails blazing in the fires of love, the eye bewray
+With meaning looks and knitted brows and eyelids languishing
+ And hands that salutation sign and greeting thus convey?
+
+When I heard this, my entrails were stirred and I was moved to
+delight, for the excess of her grace and the beauty of the
+verses she sang; and I envied her her skill and said, "There
+lacketh somewhat to thee, O damsel!" Whereupon she threw the
+lute from her hand, in anger, and cried, "Since when do you use
+to bring ill-mannered fools into your assemblies?" Then I
+repented of what I had done, seeing that the others were vexed
+with me, and said in myself, "My hopes are at an end;" and I
+saw no way of quitting myself of reproach but to call for a
+lute, saying, "I will show you what escaped her in the air she
+sang." So they brought me a lute and I tuned it and sang the
+following verses:
+
+This is thy lover distraught, absorbed in his passion and pain;
+ Thy lover, the tears of whose eyes run down on his body
+ like rain.
+One hand to his heart ever pressed, whilst the other the
+ Merciful One Imploreth, so He of His grace may grant him
+ his hope to attain.
+O thou, that beholdest a youth for passion that's perished,
+ thine eye And thy hand are the cause of his death and yet
+ might restore him again.
+
+When the damsel heard this, she sprang up and throwing herself
+at my feet, kissed them and said, "It is thine to excuse, O my
+lord! By Allah, I knew not thy quality nor heard I ever the
+like of this fashion!" And they all extolled me and made much
+of me, being beyond measure delighted, and besought me to sing
+again. So I sang a lively air, whereupon they all became as
+drunken men, and their wits left them. Then the guests departed
+to their homes and I abode alone with the host and the girl.
+The former drank some cups with me, then said to me, "O my
+lord, my life hath been wasted, in that I have not known the
+like of thee till now. By Allah, then, tell me who thou art,
+that I may know who is the boon-companion whom God hath
+bestowed on me this night."
+
+I would not at first tell him my name and returned him evasive
+answers; but he conjured me, till I told him who I was;
+whereupon he sprang to his feet and said, "Indeed, I wondered
+that such excellence should belong to any but the like of thee;
+and Fortune hath done me a service for which I cannot avail to
+thank her. But, belike, this is a dream; for how could I hope
+that the family of the Khalifate should visit me in my own
+house and carouse with me this night?" I conjured him to be
+seated; so he sat down and began to question me, in the most
+courteous terms, as to the cause of my visit. So I told him the
+whole matter, concealing nothing, and said to him, "Verily, I
+have had my desire of the food, but not of the hand and wrist."
+Quoth he, "Thou shalt have thy desire of them also, so God
+will." Then said he to the slave-girl, "Bid such an one come
+down." And he called his slave-girls down, one by one and
+showed them to me; but I saw not my mistress among them, and he
+said, "O my lord, there is none left save my mother and sister;
+but, by Allah, I must needs have them also down and show them
+to thee."
+
+I marvelled at his courtesy and large-heartedness and said,
+"May I be thy ransom! Begin with thy sister." "Willingly,"
+replied he. So she came down and behold, it was she whose hand
+and wrist I had seen. "May God make me thy ransom!" said I.
+"This is the damsel whose hand and wrist I saw at the lattice."
+Then he sent at once for witnesses and bringing out two myriads
+of dinars, said to the witnesses, "This our lord Ibrahim ben el
+Mehdi, uncle of the Commander of the Faithful, seeks the hand
+of my sister such an one, and I call you to witness that I
+marry her to him and that he has endowed her with a dowry of
+ten thousand dinars." And he said to me, "I give thee my sister
+in marriage, at the dowry aforesaid." "I consent," answered I.
+Whereupon he gave one of the bags to her and the other to the
+witnesses, and said to me, "O my lord, I desire to array a
+chamber for thee; where thou mayst lie with thy wife." But I
+was abashed at his generosity and was ashamed to foregather
+with her in his house; so I said, "Equip her and send her to my
+house." And by thy life, O Commander of the Faithful, he sent
+me such an equipage with her, that my house was too strait to
+hold it, for all its greatness! And I begot on her this boy
+that stands before thee.'
+
+The Khalif marvelled at the merchant's generosity and said,
+'Gifted of God is he! Never heard I of his like.' And he bade
+Ibrahim bring him to court, that he might see him. So he
+brought him and the Khalif conversed with him; and his wit and
+good breeding so pleased him, that he made him one of his chief
+officers.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE WOMAN WHOSE HANDS WERE CUT OFF FOR
+ THAT SHE GAVE ALMS TO THE POOR.
+
+
+
+A certain King once made proclamation to the people of his
+realm, saying, 'If any of you give alms of aught, I will
+assuredly cut off his hand;' wherefore all the people abstained
+from alms-giving, and none could give to any.
+
+One day a beggar accosted a certain woman (and indeed hunger
+was sore upon him) and said to her, 'Give me an alms.' 'How can
+I give thee aught,' answered she, 'when the King cutteth off
+the hands of all who give alms?' But he said, 'I conjure thee
+by God the Most High, give me an alms.' So, when he adjured her
+by God, she had compassion on him and gave him two cakes of
+bread. The King heard of this; so he called her before him and
+cut off her hands, after which she returned to her house.
+
+A while after, the King said to his mother, 'I have a mind to
+take a wife; so do thou marry me to a fair woman.' Quoth she,
+'There is among our female slaves one who is unsurpassed in
+beauty; but she hath a grievous blemish.' 'What is that?' asked
+the King; and his mother answered, 'She hath had both her hands
+cut off.' Said he, 'Let me see her.' So she brought her to him,
+and he was ravished by her and married her and went in to her;
+and she brought him a son.
+
+Now this was the woman, who had her hands cut off for
+alms-giving; and when she became queen, her fellow-wives envied
+her and wrote to the King [who was then absent] that she was
+unchaste; so he wrote to his mother, bidding her carry the
+woman into the desert and leave her there. The old queen obeyed
+his commandment and abandoned the woman and her son in the
+desert; whereupon she fell to weeping and wailing exceeding
+sore for that which had befallen her. As she went along, with
+the child at her neck, she came to a river and knelt down to
+drink, being overcome with excess of thirst, for fatigue and
+grief; but, as she bent her head, the child fell into the
+water.
+
+Then she sat weeping sore for her child, and as she wept, there
+came up two men, who said to her, 'What makes thee weep?' Quoth
+she, 'I had a child at my neck, and he hath fallen into the
+water.' 'Wilt thou that we bring him out to thee?' asked they,
+and she answered, 'Yes.' So they prayed to God the Most High,
+and the child came forth of the water to her, safe and sound.
+Quoth they, 'Wilt thou that God restore thee thy hands as they
+were?' 'Yes,' replied she: whereupon they prayed to God,
+blessed and exalted be He! and her hands were restored to her,
+goodlier than before. Then said they, 'Knowst thou who we are?'
+'God [only] is all-knowing,' answered she; and they said, 'We
+are thy two cakes of bread, that thou gavest in alms to the
+beggar and which were the cause of the cutting off of thy
+hands. So praise thou God the Most High, for that He hath
+restored thee thy hands and thy child.' So she praised God the
+Most High and glorified Him.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE DEVOUT ISRAELITE.
+
+
+
+There was once a devout man of the children of Israel[FN#59],
+whose family span cotton; and he used every day to sell the
+yarn they span and buy fresh cotton, and with the profit he
+bought the day's victual for his household. One day, he went
+out and sold the day's yarn as usual, when there met him one of
+his brethren, who complained to him of want; so he gave him the
+price of the yarn and returned, empty-handed, to his family,
+who said to him, 'Where is the cotton and the food?' Quoth he,
+'Such an one met me and complained to me of want; so I gave him
+the price of the yarn.' And they said, 'How shall we do? We
+have nothing to sell.' Now they had a broken platter and a jar;
+so he took them to the market; but none would buy them of him.
+
+Presently, as he stood in the market, there came up a man with
+a stinking, swollen fish, which no one would buy of him, and he
+said to the Jew, 'Wilt thou sell me thine unsaleable ware for
+mine?' 'Yes,' answered the Jew and giving him the jar and
+platter, took the fish and carried it home to his family, who
+said, 'What shall we do with this fish?' Quoth he, 'We will
+broil it and eat of it, till it please God to provide for us.'
+So they took it and ripping open its belly, found therein a
+great pearl and told the Jew, who said, 'See if it be pierced.
+If so, it belongs to some one of the folk; if not, it is a
+provision of God for us.' So they examined it and found it
+unpierced.
+
+On the morrow, the Jew carried it to one of his brethren, who
+was skilled in jewels, and he said, 'Whence hadst thou this
+pearl?' 'It was a gift of God the Most High to us,' replied the
+Jew, and the other said, 'It is worth a thousand dirhems, and I
+will give thee that sum; but take it to such an one, for he
+hath more money and skill than I.' So the Jew took it to the
+jeweller, who said, 'It is worth threescore and ten thousand
+dirhems and no more. Then he paid him that sum and the Jew
+hired two porters to carry the money to his house. As he came
+to his door, a beggar accosted him, saying, 'Give me of that
+which God the Most High hath given thee.' Quoth the Jew, 'But
+yesterday, we were even as thou; take half the money.' So he
+made two parts of it, and each took his half. Then said the
+beggar, 'Take back thy money and God prosper thee in it; I am a
+messenger, whom thy Lord hath sent to try thee.' Quoth the Jew,
+'To God be the praise and the thanks!' and abode with his
+family in all delight of life, till death.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOU HASSAN EZ ZIYADI AND THE MAN FROM
+ KHORASSAN.
+
+
+
+Quoth Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi[FN#60], 'I was once in very needy
+case, and the baker and grocer and other purveyors importuned
+me, so that I was in sore straits and knew of no resource nor
+what to do. Things being thus, there came in to me one day one
+of my servants and said to me, "There is a man, a pilgrim, at
+the door, who seeks admission to thee." Quoth I, "Admit him."
+So he came in and behold, he was a native of Khorassan. We
+exchanged salutations and he said to me, "Art thou Abou Hassan
+ez Ziyadi?" "Yes," answered I. "What is thy business?" Quoth
+he, "I am a stranger and am minded to make the pilgrimage; but
+I have with me a great sum of money, which is burdensome to me.
+So I wish to deposit with thee these ten thousand dirhems,
+whilst I make the pilgrimage and return. If the caravan return
+and thou see me not, know that I am dead, in which case the
+money is a gift from me to thee; but if I come back, it shall
+be mine." "Be it as thou wilt," answered I, "so it please God
+the Most High." So he brought out a leather bag and I said to
+the servant, "Fetch the scales." He brought them and the man
+weighed out the money and handed it to me, after which he went
+his way. Then I called the tradesmen and paid them what I owed
+and spent freely, saying in myself, "By the time he returns,
+God will have succoured me with one or another of His bounties."
+However, next day, the servant came in to me and said, "Thy
+friend the man from Khorassan is at the door."
+
+"Admit him," answered I. So he came in and said to me, "I had
+thought to make the pilgrimage; but news hath reached me of the
+death of my father, and I have resolved to return; so give me
+the money I deposited with thee yesterday." When I heard this,
+I was troubled and perplexed beyond measure and knew not what
+reply to make him; for, if I denied it, he would put me to my
+oath, and I should be shamed in the world to come; whilst, if I
+told him that I had spent the money, he would make an outcry
+and disgrace me. So I said to him, "God give thee health! This
+my house is no stronghold nor place of safe custody for this
+money. When I received thy leather bag, I sent it to one with
+whom it now is; so do thou return to us to-morrow and take thy
+money, if it be the will of God."
+
+So he went away, and I passed the night in sore concern, because
+of his return to me. Sleep visited me not nor could I close my
+eyes: so I rose and bade the boy saddle me the mule. "O my lord,"
+answered he, "it is yet but the first watch of the night." So I
+returned to bed, but sleep was forbidden to me and I ceased not
+to awaken the boy and he to put me off, till break of day, when
+he saddled me the mule, and I mounted and rode out, not knowing
+whither to go. I threw the reins on the mule's shoulders and
+gave myself up to anxiety and melancholy thought, whilst she
+fared on with me to the eastward of Baghdad. Presently, as I
+went along, I saw a number of people in front and turned aside
+into another path to avoid them; but they, seeing that I wore
+a professor's hood, followed me and hastening up to me, said,
+"Knowest thou the lodging of Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi?" "I am he,"
+answered I; and they rejoined, "The Commander of the Faithful
+calls for thee." Then they carried me before El Mamoun, who
+said to me, "Who art thou?" Quoth I, "I am a professor of the
+law and traditions, and one of the associates of the Cadi Abou
+Yousuf." "How art thou called?" asked the Khalif. "Abou Hassan
+ez Ziyadi," answered I, and he said, "Expound to me thy case."
+
+So I told him how it was with me and he wept sore and said to
+me, "Out on thee! The Apostle of God (whom may He bless and
+preserve) would not let me sleep this night, because of thee;
+for he appeared to me in my first sleep and said to me,
+'Succour Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi.' Whereupon I awoke and knowing
+thee not, went to sleep again; but he came to me a second time
+and said to me, 'Woe to thee! Succour Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi.' I
+awoke a second time, but knew thee not, so went to sleep again;
+and he came to me a third time and still I knew thee not and
+went to sleep again. Then he came to me once more and said,
+'Out on thee! Succour Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi!' After that I
+dared not go to sleep again, but watched the rest of the night
+and aroused my people and sent them in all directions in quest
+of thee." Then he gave me ten thousand dirhems, saying, "This
+is for the Khorassani," and other ten thousand, saying, "Spend
+freely of this and amend thy case therewith, and set thine
+affairs in order." Moreover, he gave me yet thirty thousand
+dirhems, saying, "Furnish thyself with this, and when the day
+of estate comes round, come thou to me, that I may invest thee
+with an office."
+
+So I took the money and returned home, where I prayed the
+morning-prayer. Presently came the Khorassani, so I carried him
+into the house and brought out to him ten thousand dirhems,
+saying, "Here is thy money." "It is not my very money,"
+answered he. "How cometh this?" So I told him the whole story,
+and he wept and said, "By Allah, hadst thou told me the truth
+at first, I had not pressed thee! And now, by Allah, I will not
+accept aught of the money; and thou art quit of it." So saying,
+he went away and I set my affairs in order and repaired on the
+appointed day to the Divan, where I found the Khalif seated.
+When he saw me, he called me to him and bringing forth to me a
+paper from under his prayer-carpet, said to me, "This is a
+patent, conferring on thee the office of Cadi of the western
+division of the Holy City[FN#61] from the Bab es Selam[FN#62]
+to the end of the town; and I appoint thee such and such
+monthly allowances. So fear God (to whom belong might and
+majesty) and be mindful of the solicitude of His Apostle (whom
+may He bless and preserve) on thine account." The folk marvelled
+at the Khalif's words and questioned me of their meaning; so I
+told them the whole story and it spread abroad amongst the
+people.'
+
+And [quoth he who tells the tale] Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi ceased
+not to be Cadi of the Holy City, till he died in the days of El
+Mamoun, the mercy of God be on him!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE POOR MAN AND HIS GENEROUS FRIEND.
+
+
+
+There was once a rich man, who lost all he had and became poor,
+whereupon his wife counselled him to seek aid of one of his
+friends. So he betook himself to a certain friend of his and
+acquainted him with his strait; and he lent him five hundred
+dinars to trade withal. Now he had aforetime been a jeweller;
+so he took the money and went to the jewel-bazaar, where he
+opened a shop to buy and sell. Presently, three men accosted
+him, as he sat in his shop, and asked for his father. He told
+them that he was dead, and they said, 'Did he leave any
+offspring?' Quoth the jeweller, 'He left a son, your servant.'
+'And who knoweth thee for his son?' asked they. 'The people of
+the bazaar,' replied he; and they said, 'Call them together,
+that they may testify to us that thou art his son.' So he
+called them and they bore witness of this; whereupon the three
+men delivered to him a pair of saddle-bags, containing thirty
+thousand dinars, besides jewels and bullion, saying, 'This was
+deposited with us in trust by thy father.' Then they went away;
+and presently there came to him a woman, who sought of him
+certain of the jewels, worth five hundred dinars, and paid him
+three thousand for them.
+
+So he took five hundred dinars and carrying them to his friend,
+who had lent him the money, said to him, 'Take the five hundred
+dinars I borrowed of thee; for God hath aided and prospered
+me.' 'Not so,' quoth the other. 'I gave them to thee outright,
+for the love of God; so do thou keep them. And take this paper,
+but read it not, till thou be at home, and do according to that
+which is therein.' So he took the paper and returned home,
+where he opened it and read therein the following verses:
+
+The men who came to thee at first my kinsmen were, my sire, His
+ brother and my dam's, Salih ben Ali is his name.
+Moreover, she to whom thou soldst the goods my mother was, And
+ eke the jewels and the gold, from me, to boot, they came;
+Nor, in thus ordering myself to thee, aught did I seek Save of
+ the taking it from me to spare thee from the shame.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE RUINED MAN WHO BECAME RICH AGAIN
+ THROUGH A DREAM.
+
+
+
+There lived once in Baghdad a very wealthy man, who lost all
+his substance and became so poor, that he could only earn his
+living by excessive labour. One night, he lay down to sleep,
+dejected and sick at heart, and saw in a dream one who said to
+him, 'Thy fortune is at Cairo; go thither and seek it.' So he
+set out for Cairo; but, when he arrived there, night overtook
+him and he lay down to sleep in a mosque. Presently, as fate
+would have it, a company of thieves entered the mosque and made
+their way thence into an adjoining house; but the people of the
+house, being aroused by the noise, awoke and cried out;
+whereupon the chief of the police came to their aid with his
+officers. The robbers made off; but the police entered the
+mosque and finding the man from Baghdad asleep there, laid hold
+of him and beat him with palm rods, till he was well-nigh dead.
+Then they cast him into prison, where he abode three days,
+after which the chief of the police sent for him and said to
+him, 'Whence art thou?' 'From Baghdad,' answered he. 'And what
+brought thee to Cairo?' asked the magistrate. Quoth the
+Baghdadi, 'I saw in a dream one who said to me, "Thy fortune is
+at Cairo; go thither to it." But when I came hither, the
+fortune that he promised me proved to be the beating I had of
+thee.'
+
+The chief of the police laughed, till he showed his jaw-teeth,
+and said, 'O man of little wit, thrice have I seen in a dream
+one who said to me, "There is in Baghdad a house of such a
+fashion and situate so-and-so, in the garden whereof is a
+fountain and thereunder a great sum of money buried. Go thither
+and take it." Yet I went not; but thou, of thy little wit, hast
+journeyed from place to place, on the faith of a dream, which
+was but an illusion of sleep.' Then he gave him money, saying,
+'This is to help thee back to thy native land.' Now the house
+he had described was the man's own house in Baghdad; so the
+latter returned thither, and digging underneath the fountain in
+his garden, discovered a great treasure; and [thus] God gave
+him abundant fortune.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF EL MUTAWEKKIL AND HIS
+ FAVOURITE MEHBOUBEH.
+
+
+
+There were in the palace of the Khalif El Mutawekkil ala Allah
+[FN#63] four thousand concubines, whereof two thousand were
+Greeks [and other foreigners] and other two thousand native
+Arabians[FN#64] and Abyssinians; and Obeid ibn Tahir[FN#65]
+had given him two hundred white girls and a like number of
+Abyssinian and native girls[FN#66]. Among these latter was a
+girl of Bassora, Mehboubeh by name, who was of surpassing
+beauty and elegance and voluptuous grace. Moreover, she played
+upon the lute and was skilled in singing and making verses and
+wrote excellent well; so that El Mutawekkil fell passionately
+in love with her and could not endure from her a single hour.
+When she saw this, she presumed upon his favour to use him
+haughtily and capriciously, so that he waxed exceeding wroth
+with her and forsook her, forbidding the people of the palace
+to speak with her.
+
+On this wise she abode some days, but the Khalif still inclined
+to her; and he arose one morning and said to his courtiers,
+'I dreamt, last night, that I was reconciled to Mehboubeh.'
+'Would God this might be on wake!' answered they. As they were
+talking, in came one of the Khalif's maidservants and whispered
+him that they had heard a noise of singing and luting in
+Mehboubeh's chamber and knew not what this meant. So he rose
+and entering the harem, went straight to Mehboubeh's apartment,
+where he heard her playing wonder-sweetly upon the lute and
+singing the following verses:
+
+I wander through the halls, but not a soul I see, To whom I may
+ complain or who will speak with me.
+It is as though I'd wrought so grievous an offence, No
+ penitence avails myself therefrom to free.
+Will no one plead my cause with a king, who came to me In sleep
+ and took me back to favour and to gree;
+But with the break of day to rigour did revert And cast me off
+ from him and far away did flee?
+
+When the Khalif heard these verses, he marvelled at the strange
+coincidence of their dreams and entered the chamber. As soon as
+she was ware of him, she hastened to throw herself at his feet,
+and kissing them, said, 'By Allah, O my lord, this is what I
+dreamt last night; and when I awoke, I made the verses thou
+hast heard.' ''By Allah,' replied El Mutawekkil, 'I also dreamt
+the like!' Then they embraced and made friends and he abode
+with her seven days and nights.
+
+Now she had written upon her cheek, in musk, the Khalif's name,
+which was Jaafer: and when he saw this, he made the following
+verses:
+
+One wrote on her cheek, with musk, a name, yea, Jaafer to wit:
+ My soul be her ransom who wrote on her cheek what I see on
+ it!
+If her fingers, indeed, have traced a single line on her cheek,
+ I trow, in my heart of hearts full many a line she hath
+ writ
+O thou, whom Jaafer alone of men possesses, may God Grant
+ Jaafer to drink his fill of the wine of thy beauty and
+ wit!
+
+When El Mutawekkil died, all his women forgot him save
+Mehboubeh, who ceased not to mourn for him, till she died and
+was buried by his side, the mercy of God be on them both!
+
+
+
+
+
+ WERDAN THE BUTCHER HIS ADVENTURE WITH
+ THE LADY AND THE BEAR.
+
+
+
+There lived once in Cairo, in the days of the Khalif El Hakim
+bi Amrillah, a butcher named Werdan, who dealt in sheep's
+flesh; and there came to him every forenoon a lady and gave him
+a diner, whose weight was nigh two and a half Egyptian diners,
+saying, 'Give me a lamb.' So he took the money and gave her the
+lamb, which she delivered to a porter she had with her; and he
+put it in his basket and she went away with him to her own
+place. This went on for some time, the butcher profiting a
+dinar by her every day, till at last he began to be curious
+about her and said to himself, 'This woman buys a diner's worth
+of meat of me every day, paying ready money, and never misses a
+day. Verily, this is a strange thing!' So he took an occasion
+of questioning the porter, in her absence, and said to him,
+'Whither goest thou every day with yonder woman?' 'I know not
+what to make of her,' answered the porter; 'for, every day,
+after she hath taken the lamb of thee, she buys fresh and dried
+fruits and wax candles and other necessaries of the table, a
+dinar's worth, and takes of a certain Nazarene two flagons of
+wine, for which she pays him another diner. Then she loads me
+with the whole and I go with her to the Vizier's Gardens, where
+she blindfolds me, so that I cannot see where I set my feet,
+and taking me by the hand, leads me I know not whither.
+Presently, she says, "Set down here;" and when I have done so,
+she gives me an empty basket she has ready and taking my hand,
+leads me back to the place, where she bound my eyes, and there
+does off the bandage and gives me ten dirhems.' 'God be her
+helper!' quoth Werdan; but he redoubled in curiosity about her
+case; disquietude increased upon him and he passed the night in
+exceeding restlessness.
+
+Next morning, [quoth Werdan,] she came to me as of wont and
+taking the lamb, delivered it to the porter and went away. So I
+gave my shop in charge to a boy and followed her, unseen of
+her; nor did I cease to keep her in sight, hiding behind her,
+till she left Cairo and came to the Vizier's Gardens. Then I
+hid, whilst she bound the porter's eyes, and followed her again
+from place to place, till she came to the mountain and stopped
+at a place where there was a great stone. Here she made the
+porter set down his crate, and I waited, whilst she carried him
+back to the Vizier's Gardens, after which she returned and
+taking out the contents of the basket, disappeared behind the
+stone. Then I went up to the stone and pulling it away,
+discovered behind it an open trap-door of brass and a flight of
+steps leading downward. So I descended, little by little, into
+a long corridor, brilliantly lighted, and followed it, till I
+came to a [closed] door, as it were the door of a room. I
+looked about till I discovered a recess, with steps therein;
+then climbed up and found a little niche with an opening
+therein giving upon a saloon.
+
+So I looked in and saw the lady cut off the choicest parts of
+the lamb and laying them in a saucepan, throw the rest to a
+huge great bear, who ate it all to the last bit. When she had
+made an end of cooking, she ate her fill, after which she set
+on wine and fruits and confections and fell to drinking, using
+a cup herself and giving the bear to drink in a basin of gold,
+till she was heated with wine, when she put off her trousers
+and lay down. Thereupon the bear came up to her and served her,
+whilst she gave him the best of what belongeth to mankind, till
+he had made an end, when he sat down and rested. Presently, he
+sprang to her and served her again; and thus he did, till he
+had furnished half a score courses, and they both fell down in
+a swoon and abode without motion.
+
+Then said I to myself, "Now is my opportunity," and taking a
+knife I had with me, that would cut bones before flesh, went
+down to them and found them motionless, not a muscle of them
+moving for their much swink. So I put my knife to the bear's
+gullet and bore upon it, till I severed his head from his body,
+and he gave a great snort like thunder, whereat she started up
+in alarm and seeing the bear slain and me standing with the
+knife in my hand, gave such a shriek that I thought the soul
+had left her body. Then said she, "O Werdan, is this how thou
+requitest me my favours?" "O enemy of thine own soul," replied
+I, "dost thou lack of men that thou must do this shameful
+thing?" She made me no answer, but bent down to the bear, and
+finding his head divided from his body, said to me, "O Werdan,
+which were the liefer to thee, to hearken to what I shall say
+to thee and be the means of thine own safety and enrichment to
+the end of thy days, or gainsay me and so bring about thine own
+destruction?" "I choose rather to hearken unto thee," answered
+I. "Say what thou wilt." "Then," said she, "kill me, as thou
+hast killed this bear, and take thy need of this treasure and
+go thy way." Quoth I, "I am better than this bear. Return to
+God the Most High and repent, and I will marry thee, and we
+will live on this treasure the rest of our lives." "O Werdan,"
+rejoined she, "far be it from me! How shall I live after him?
+An thou kill me not, by Allah, I will assuredly do away thy
+life! So leave bandying words with me, or thou art a lost man.
+This is all I have to say to thee and peace be on thee." Then
+said I, "I will slay thee, and thou shalt go to the malediction
+of God." So saying, I caught her by the hair and cut her
+throat; and she went to the malediction of God and of the
+angels and of all mankind.
+
+Then I examined the place and found there gold and pearls and
+jewels, such as no king could bring together. So I filled the
+porter's crate with as much as I could carry and covered it
+with the clothes I had on me. Then I shouldered it and going up
+out of the underground place, set out homeward and fared on,
+till I came to the gate of Cairo, where I fell in with ten of
+the Khalif's body-guard, followed by El Hakim[FN#67] himself,
+who said to me. "Ho, Werdan!" "At thy service, O King," replied
+I. "Hast thou killed the woman and the bear?" asked he and I
+answered, "Yes." Quoth he, "Set down the basket and fear
+naught, for all the treasure thou hast with thee is thine, and
+none shall dispute it with thee." So I set down the basket, and
+he uncovered it and looked at it; then said to me, "Tell me
+their case, though I know it, as if I had been present with
+you." So I told him all that had passed and he said, "Thou hast
+spoken the truth, O Werdan. Come now with me to the treasure."
+
+So I returned with him to the cavern, where he found the
+trap-door closed and said to me, "O Werdan, lift it; none but
+thou can open the treasure, for it is enchanted in thy name and
+favour." "By Allah," answered I, "I cannot open it;" but he
+said, "Go up to it, trusting in the blessing of God." So I
+called upon the name of God the Most High and going up to the
+trap-door, put my hand to it; whereupon it came up, as it had
+been the lightest of things. Then said the Khalif, "Go down and
+bring up what is there; for none but one of thy name and favour
+and quality hath gone down there since the place was made, and
+the slaying of the bear and the woman was appointed to be at
+thy hand. This was recorded with me and I was awaiting its
+fulfilment." Accordingly, I went down and brought up all the
+treasure, whereupon the Khalif sent for beasts of burden and
+carried it away, after giving me the porter's crate, with what
+was therein. So I carried it home and opened me a shop in the
+market. And [quoth he who tells the tale] this market is still
+extant and is known as Werdan's Market.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KING'S DAUGHTER AND THE APE.
+
+
+
+There was once a King's daughter, whose heart was taken with
+love of a black slave: he did away her maidenhead, and she
+became passionately addicted to amorous dalliance, so that she
+could not endure from it a single hour and made moan of her
+case to one of her body women, who told her that no thing doth
+the deed of kind more abundantly than the ape. Now it chanced,
+one day, that an ape-leader passed under her lattice, with a
+great ape; so she unveiled her face and looking upon the ape,
+signed to him with her eyes, whereupon he broke his bonds and
+shackles and climbed up to the princess, who hid him in a place
+with her, and he abode, eating and drinking and cricketing,
+night and day. Her father heard of this and would have killed
+her; but she took the alarm and disguising herself in a [male]
+slave's habit, loaded a mule with gold and jewels and precious
+stuffs past count; then, taking horse with the ape, fled to
+Cairo, where she took up her abode in one of the houses without
+the city.
+
+Now, every day, she used to buy meat of a young man, a butcher,
+but came not to him till after noonday, pale and disordered in
+face; so that he said in himself, 'There hangs some mystery by
+this slave.' For she used to visit him in her slave's habit.
+[Quoth the butcher,] So, one day, when she came to me as usual,
+I went out after her, unseen, and ceased not to follow her from
+place to place, so as she saw me not, till she came to her
+lodging, without the city, and I looked in upon her, through a
+cranny, and saw her light a fire and cook the meat, of which
+she ate her fill and gave the rest to an ape she had with her.
+Then she put off her slave's habit and donned the richest of
+women's apparel; and so I knew that she was a woman. After this
+she set on wine and drank and gave the ape to drink; and he
+served her nigh half a score times, till she swooned away, when
+he threw a silken coverlet over her and returned to his place.
+
+Thereupon I went down into the midst of the place and the ape,
+becoming aware of me, would have torn me in pieces; but I made
+haste to pull out my knife and slit his paunch. The noise
+aroused the young lady, who awoke, terrified and trembling; and
+when she saw the ape in this plight, she gave such a shriek,
+that her soul well-nigh departed her body. Then she fell down
+in a swoon, and when she came to herself, she said to me, "What
+moved thee to do thus? By Allah, I conjure thee to send me after
+him!" But I spoke her fair and engaged to her that I would stand
+in the ape's stead, in the matter of much clicketing, till her
+trouble subsided and I took her to wife.
+
+However, I fell short in this and could not endure to it; so I
+complained of her case to a certain old woman, who engaged to
+manage the affair and said to me, "Thou must bring me a cooking-
+pot full of virgin vinegar and a pound of pyrethrum."[FN#68]
+So I brought her what she sought, and she laid the pyrethrum
+in the pot with the vinegar and set it on the fire, till it
+boiled briskly. Then she bade me serve the girl, and I served
+her, till she fainted away, when the old woman took her up, and
+she unknowing, and set her kaze to the mouth of the cooking-pot.
+The steam of the pot entered her poke and there fell from it
+somewhat, which I examined and behold, it was two worms, one
+black and the other yellow. Quoth the old woman, "The black was
+bred of the embraces of the negro and the yellow of those of
+the ape."
+
+When my wife recovered from her swoon, she abode with me, in
+all delight and solace of life, and sought not copulation, as
+before, for God the Most High had done away from her this
+appetite; whereat I marvelled and acquainted her with the case.
+Moreover, [quoth he who tells the tale,] she took the old woman
+to be to her in the stead of her mother, and she and Werdan and
+his wife abode in joy and cheer, till there came to them the
+Destroyer of Delights and the Sunderer of Companies; and glory
+be to the Living One, who dieth not and in whose hand is the
+empire of the Seen and the Unseen!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE ENCHANTED HORSE.
+
+
+
+There was once, of old time, a great and puissant King, of the
+Kings of the Persians, Sabour by name, who was the richest of
+all the Kings in store of wealth and dominion and surpassed them
+all in wit and wisdom. Generous, open-handed and beneficent, he
+gave to those who sought and repelled not those who resorted to
+him, comforted the broken-hearted and honourably entreated those
+who fled to him for refuge. Moreover, he loved the poor and was
+hospitable to strangers and did the oppressed justice upon those
+who oppressed them. He had three daughters, like shining full
+moons or flowered gardens, and a son as he were the moon; and it
+was his wont to keep two festivals in the year, those of the New
+Year and the Autumnal Equinox, on which occasions he threw open
+his palaces and gave gifts and made proclamation of safety and
+security and advanced his chamberlains and officers; and the
+people of his realm came in to him and saluted him and gave him
+joy of the festival, bringing him gifts and servants.
+
+Now he loved science and geometry, and one day, as he sat on
+his throne of kingship, during one of these festivals, there
+came in to him three sages, cunning artificers and past masters
+in all manner of crafts and inventions, skilled in making
+rarities, such as confound the wit, and versed in the knowledge
+of [occult] truths and subtleties; and they were of three
+different tongues and countries, the first an Indian, the
+second a Greek and the third a Persian. The Indian came forward
+and prostrating himself before the King, gave him joy of the
+festival and laid before him a present befitting [his dignity];
+that is to say, a figure of gold, set with precious stones and
+jewels of price and holding in its hand a golden trumpet. When
+Sabour saw this, he said, 'O sage, what is the virtue of this
+figure?' And the Indian answered, 'O my lord; if this figure be
+set at the gate of thy city, it will be a guardian over it;
+for, if an enemy enter the place, it will blow this trumpet
+against him, and so he will be known and laid hands on.' The
+King marvelled at this and said, 'By Allah, O sage, an this thy
+word be true, I will grant thee thy wish and thy desire.'
+
+Then came forward the Greek and prostrating himself before the
+King, presented him with a basin of silver, in whose midst was
+a peacock of gold, surrounded by four-and-twenty young ones of
+the same metal. Sabour looked at them and turning to the Greek,
+said to him, 'O sage, what is the virtue of this peacock?' 'O
+my lord,' answered he, 'as often as an hour of the day or night
+passes, it pecks one of its young [and cries out and flaps its
+wings,] till the four-and-twenty hours are accomplished; and
+when the month comes to an end, it will open its mouth and thou
+shalt see the new moon therein.' And the King said, 'An thou
+speak sooth, I will bring thee to thy wish and thy desire.'
+
+Then came forward the Persian sage and prostrating himself
+before the King, presented him with a horse of ebony wood,
+inlaid with gold and jewels, ready harnessed with saddle and
+bridle and stirrups such as befit kings; which when Sabour saw,
+he marvelled exceedingly and was confounded at the perfection
+of its form and the ingenuity of its fashion. So he said, 'What
+is the use of this horse of wood, and what is its virtue and
+the secret of its movement?' 'O my lord,' answered the Persian,
+'the virtue of this horse is that, if one mount him, it will
+carry him whither he will and fare with its rider through the
+air for the space of a year and a day.' The King marvelled and
+was amazed at these three wonders, following thus hard upon
+each other in one day, and turning to the sage, said to him,
+'By the Great God and the Bountiful Lord, who created all
+creatures and feedeth them with water and victual, an thy
+speech be true and the virtue of thy handiwork appear, I will
+give thee whatsoever thou seekest and will bring thee to thy
+wish and thy desire!'
+
+Then he entertained the three sages three days, that he might
+make trial of their gifts, after which they brought them before
+him and each took the creature he had wrought and showed him
+the secret of its movement. The trumpeter blew the trumpet, the
+peacock pecked its young and the Persian sage mounted the horse
+of ebony, whereupon it soared with him into the air and
+descended again. When the King saw all this, he was amazed and
+perplexed and was like to fly for joy and said to the three
+sages, 'Now am I certified of the truth of your words and it
+behoves me to quit me of my promise. Seek ye, therefore, what
+ye will, and I will give it you.' Now the report of the [beauty
+of the] King's daughters had reached the sages, so they
+answered, 'If the King be content with us and accept of our
+gifts and give us leave to ask a boon of him, we ask of him
+that he give us his three daughters in marriage, that we may be
+his sons-in-law; for that the stability of kings may not be
+gainsaid.' Quoth the King, 'I grant you that which you desire,'
+and bade summon the Cadi forthright, that he might marry each
+of the sages to one of his daughters.
+
+Now these latter were behind a curtain, looking on; and when they
+heard this, the youngest considered [him that was to be] her
+husband and saw him to be an old man, a hundred years of age,
+with frosted hair, drooping forehead, mangy eyebrows, slitten
+ears, clipped[FN#69] beard and moustaches, red, protruding eyes,
+bleached, hollow, flabby cheeks, nose like an egg-plant and face
+like a cobbler's apron, teeth overlapping one another,[FN#70]
+lips like camel's kidneys, loose and pendulous; brief, a monstrous
+favour; for he was the frightfullest of the folk of his time; his
+grinders had been knocked[FN#71] out and his teeth were like the
+tusks of the Jinn that fright the fowls in the hen-house. Now the
+princess was the fairest and most graceful woman of her time, more
+elegant than the tender gazelle, blander than the gentle zephyr
+and brighter than the moon at her full, confounding the branch
+and outdoing the gazelle in the flexile grace of her shape and
+movements; and she was fairer and sweeter than her sisters. So,
+when she saw her suitor, she went to her chamber and strewed dust
+on her head and tore her clothes and fell to buffeting her face
+and lamenting and weeping.
+
+Now the prince her brother, who loved her with an exceeding
+love, more than her sisters, was then newly returned from a
+journey and hearing her weeping and crying, came in to her and
+said, 'What ails thee? Tell me and conceal nought from me.' 'O
+my brother and my dear one,' answered she, 'if the palace be
+straitened upon thy father, I will go out; and if he be
+resolved upon a foul thing, I will separate myself from him,
+though he consent not to provide for me.' Quoth he, 'Tell me
+what means this talk and what has straitened thy breast and
+troubled thy humour.' 'O my brother and my dear one,' answered
+the princess, 'know that my father hath given me in marriage to
+a sorcerer, who brought him, as a gift, a horse of black wood,
+and hath stricken him with his craft and his sorcery; but, as
+for me, I will none of him, and would, because of him, I had
+never come into this world!' Her brother soothed her and
+comforted her, then betook himself to his father and said to
+him, 'What is this sorcerer to whom thou hast given my youngest
+sister in marriage, and what is this present that he hath
+brought thee, so that thou hast caused my sister to [almost]
+die of chagrin? It is not right that this should be.'
+
+Now the Persian was standing by and when he heard the prince's
+words, he was mortified thereby and filled with rage, and the
+King said, 'O my son, an thou sawest this horse, thy wit would
+be confounded and thou wouldst be filled with amazement.' Then
+he bade the slaves bring the horse before him and they did so;
+and when the prince, who was an accomplished cavalier, saw it,
+it pleased him. So he mounted it forthright and struck its
+belly with the stirrup-irons; but it stirred not and the King
+said to the sage, 'Go and show him its movement, that he also
+may help thee to thy wish.' Now the Persian bore the prince
+malice for that he willed not he should have his sister; so he
+showed him the peg of ascent on the right side [of the horse's
+neck] and saying to him, 'Turn this pin,' left him. So the
+prince turned the pin and forthwith the horse soared with him
+into the air, as it were a bird, and gave not over flying with
+him, till it disappeared from sight, whereat the King was
+troubled and perplexed about his affair and said to the
+Persian, 'O sage, look how thou mayst make him descend.' But he
+answered, 'O my lord, I can do nothing, and thou wilt never see
+him again till the Day of Resurrection, for that he, of his
+ignorance and conceit, asked me not of the peg of descent and I
+forgot to acquaint him therewith.' When the King heard this, he
+was sore enraged and bade beat the sorcerer and clap him in
+prison, whilst he himself cast the crown from his head and
+buffeted his face and beat upon his breast. Moreover, he shut
+the doors of his palaces and gave himself up to weeping and
+lamentation, he and his wife and daughters and all the folk of
+the city; and [thus] their joy was turned to mourning and their
+gladness changed into chagrin and sore affliction.
+
+Meanwhile, the horse gave not over soaring with the prince,
+till he drew near the sun, whereat he gave himself up for lost
+and was confounded at his case, repenting him of having mounted
+the horse and saying in himself, 'Verily, this was a plot of
+the sage to destroy me; but there is no power and no virtue but
+in God the Most High, the Supreme! I am lost without recourse;
+but, I wonder, did not he who made the peg of ascent make a peg
+of descent also?' Now he was a man of wit and intelligence; so
+he fell to examining all the parts of the horse, but saw
+nothing save a peg, like a cock's head, on its right shoulder
+and the like on the left, and turned the right-hand peg,
+whereupon the horse flew upward with increased speed. So he
+left it and turned the left-hand peg, and immediately the
+steed's upward motion ceased and he began to descend, little by
+little, towards the earth. When the prince saw this and knew
+the uses of the horse, he was filled with joy and gladness and
+thanked God the Most High for that He had vouchsafed to deliver
+him from destruction. Then he began to turn the horse's head
+whither he would, making him rise and fall at pleasure, till he
+had gotten complete command of his movement.
+
+He ceased not to descend the whole of that day, for that the
+steed's upward flight had borne him afar from the earth; and as
+he descended, he diverted himself with viewing the various
+towns and countries over which he passed and which he knew not,
+having never seen them in his life. Amongst the rest, he saw a
+city of the goodliest ordinance, in the midst of a green and
+smiling country, abounding in trees and streams; whereat he
+fell a-musing and said in himself, 'Would I knew the name of
+yonder city and in what country it is!' And he began to circle
+about it and observe it right and left. By this time, the day
+began to wane and the sun drew near to its setting; and he
+said, 'I see no goodlier place to pass the night in than this
+city; so I will lodge here this night and on the morrow I will
+return to my people and my kingdom and tell my father and
+family what has passed and what I have seen with my eyes.' Then
+he addressed himself to look for a place, where he might safely
+bestow himself and his horse and where none should see him, and
+presently espied a palace, surrounded by a great wall with
+lofty battlements, rising high into the air from the midst of
+the city and guarded by forty black slaves, clad in complete
+mail and armed with spears and swords and bows and arrows.
+Quoth he, 'This is a goodly place,' and turned the peg of
+descent, whereupon the horse sank down with him and alighted
+gently on the roof of the palace. So the prince dismounted and
+began to go round about the horse and examine it, saying, 'By
+Allah, he who fashioned thee was a cunning craftsman, and if God
+extend the term of my life and restore me to my country and family
+in safety and reunite me with my father, I will assuredly bestow
+upon him all manner of bounties and entreat him with the utmost
+favour.'
+
+By this time the night had overtaken him and he sat on the
+roof, till he was assured that all in the palace slept; and
+indeed hunger and thirst were sore upon him, for that he had
+not tasted food since he parted from his father. So he said in
+himself, 'Surely, the like of this palace will not lack of
+victual,' and leaving the horse there, went in quest of
+somewhat to eat. Presently, he came to a stair and descending
+it, found himself in a court paved with white marble and
+alabaster, that shone in the light of the moon. He marvelled at
+the place and the goodliness of its fashion, but heard no sound
+and saw no living soul and stood in perplexity, looking right
+and left and knowing not whither he should go. Then said he to
+himself, 'I cannot do better than return to where I left my
+horse and pass the night by it; and as soon as it is day, I
+will mount and depart.' However, as he stood talking to
+himself, he espied a light within the palace, and making
+towards it, found that it came from a candle that stood before
+a door of the palace, at the head of an eunuch, as he were one
+of the Afrits of Solomon or a tribesman of the Jinn, longer
+than a plank and wider than a bench. He lay asleep before the
+door, with the pommel of his sword gleaming in the flame of the
+candle, and at his head was a budget of leather[FN#72] hanging
+from a column of granite.
+
+When the prince saw this, he was affrighted and said, 'I crave
+help from God the Supreme! O my God, even as Thou hast [already]
+delivered me from destruction, vouchsafe me strength to quit
+myself of the adventure of this palace!' So saying, he put out
+his hand to the budget and taking it, carried it to a place
+apart and opened it and found in it food of the best. So he
+ate his fill and refreshed himself and drank water, after
+which he hung the budget up in its place and drawing the
+eunuch's sword from its sheath, took it, whilst the latter
+slept on, knowing not whence destiny should come to him. Then
+the prince fared on into the palace, till he came to another
+door, with a curtain drawn before it; so he raised the curtain
+and entering, saw a couch of ivory, inlaid with pearls and
+jacinths and jewels, and four slave-girls sleeping about it. He
+went up to the couch, to see what was therein, and found a
+young lady lying asleep, veiled with her hair, as she were the
+full moon at its rising, with flower-white forehead and
+shining parting and cheeks like blood-red anemones and dainty
+moles thereon.
+
+When he saw this, he was amazed at her beauty and grace and
+symmetry and recked no more of death. So he went up to her,
+trembling in every nerve, and kissed her on the right cheek;
+whereupon she awoke forthright and seeing the prince standing
+at her head, said to him, 'Who art thou and whence comest thou?'
+Quoth he, 'I am thy slave and thy lover.' 'And who brought thee
+hither?' asked she. 'My Lord and my fortune,' answered he; and
+she said, 'Belike thou art he who demanded me yesterday of my
+father in marriage and he rejected thee, pretending that thou
+wast foul of favour. By Allah he lied, when he spoke this thing,
+for thou art not other than handsome.'
+
+Now the son of the King of Hind[FN#73] had sought her in
+marriage, but her father had rejected him, for that he was ill-
+favoured, and she thought the prince was he. So, when she saw
+his beauty and grace, for indeed he was like the radiant moon,
+her heart was taken in the snare of his love, as it were a
+flaming fire, and they fell to talk and converse. Presently,
+her waiting-women awoke from their sleep and seeing the prince
+sitting with their mistress, said to her, 'O my lady, who is
+this with thee?' Quoth she, 'I know not; I found him sitting by
+me, when I awoke. Belike it is he who seeks me in marriage of
+my father.' 'O my lady,' answered they, 'by the Most Great God,
+this is not he who seeks thee in marriage, for he is foul and
+this man is fair and of high condition. Indeed, the other is
+not fit to be his servant.'
+
+Then they went out to the eunuch and finding him asleep, awoke
+him, and he started up in alarm. Quoth they, 'How comes it that
+thou art guardian of the palace and yet men come in to us,
+whilst we are asleep?' When the eunuch heard this, he sprang in
+haste to his sword, but found it not, and fear took him and
+trembling. Then he went in, confounded, to his mistress and
+seeing the prince sitting talking with her, said to the former,
+'O my lord, art thou a man or a genie?' 'O it on thee, O
+unluckiest of slaves!' replied the prince. 'How darest thou
+even a prince of the sons of the Chosroes with one of the
+unbelieving Satans?' Then he took the sword in his hand and
+said, 'I am the King's son-in-law, and he hath married me to
+his daughter and bidden me go in to her.' 'O my lord,' replied
+the eunuch, 'if thou be indeed a man, as thou avouchest, she is
+fit for none but thee, and thou art worthier of her than any
+other.'
+
+Then he ran to the King, shrieking out and rending his clothes
+and casting dust upon his head; and when the King heard his
+outcry, he said to him, 'What has befallen thee? Speak quickly
+and be brief; for thou troublest my heart.' 'O King,' answered
+the eunuch, 'come to thy daughter's succour; for a devil of the
+Jinn, in the likeness of a king's son, hath gotten possession
+of her; so up and at him!' When the King heard this, he thought
+to kill him and said, 'How camest thou to be careless of my
+daughter and let this demon come at her?' Then he betook
+himself to the princess's palace, where he found her women
+standing, [awaiting him] and said to them, 'What is come to my
+daughter?' 'O King,' answered they, 'sleep overcame us and when
+we awoke, we found a young man sitting talking with her, as he
+were the full moon, never saw we a fairer of favour than he. So
+we questioned him of his case and he avouched that thou hadst
+given him thy daughter in marriage. More than this we know not,
+nor do we know if he be a man or a genie; but he is modest and
+well bred, and doth nothing unseemly.'
+
+When the King heard this, his wrath cooled and he raised the
+curtain stealthily and looking in, saw a prince of the goodliest
+fashion, with a face like the shining full moon, sitting talking
+with his daughter. At this sight he could not contain himself,
+of his jealousy for his daughter, and putting the curtain aside,
+rushed in upon them, like a Ghoul, with his drawn sword in his
+hand. When the prince saw him, he said to the princess, 'Is this
+thy father?' 'Yes,' answered she; whereupon he sprang to his
+feet and taking his sword in his hand, cried out at the King
+with such a terrible cry, that he was confounded. Then he would
+have fallen on him with the sword; but the King, seeing that the
+prince was doughtier than he, sheathed his blade and stood till
+the latter came up to him, when he accosted him courteously and
+said to him, 'O youth, art thou a man or a genie?' Quoth the
+prince, 'Did I not respect thy right[FN#74] and thy daughter's
+honour, I would spill thy blood! How darest thou even me with
+devils, me that am a prince of the sons of the Chosroes, who,
+had they a mind to take thy kingdom, could shake thee from thy
+power and thy dominion and despoil thee of all thy possessions?'
+When the King heard his words, he was smitten with awe and fear
+of him and rejoined, 'If thou indeed be of the sons of the kings,
+as thou pretendest, how comes it that thou enterest my palace,
+without my leave, and soilest my honour, making thy way to my
+daughter and feigning that thou art her husband and that I have
+given her to thee to wife, I that have slain kings and kings'
+sons, who sought her of me in marriage? And now who shall save
+thee from my mischief, when, if I cried out to my slaves and
+servants and bade them put thee to death, they would slay thee
+forthright? Who then shall deliver thee out of my hand?'
+
+When the prince heard this speech of the King, he answered,
+'Verily, I wonder at thee and at the poverty of thy wit! Canst
+thou covet for thy daughter a goodlier mate than myself and
+hast ever seen a stouter of heart or a more sufficient or a
+more glorious in rank and dominion than I?' 'Nay, by Allah,'
+rejoined the King. 'But, O youth, I would have had thee make
+suit to me for her hand before witnesses, that I might marry
+her to thee publicly; and now, were I to marry her to thee
+privily, yet hast thou dishonoured me in her person.' 'Thou
+sayst well, O King,' replied the prince; 'but, if thy servants
+and soldiers should fall upon me and slay me, as thou pretendest,
+thou wouldst but publish thine own dishonour, and the folk
+would be divided between belief and disbelief with regard
+to thee. Wherefore, meseems thou wilt do well to turn from
+this thought to that which I shall counsel thee.' Quoth the
+King, 'Let me hear what thou hast to propose.' And the prince
+said, 'What I have to propose to thee is this: either do
+thou meet me in single combat and he who slays the other shall
+be held the worthier and having a better title to the kingdom;
+or else, let me be this night and on the morrow draw out
+against me thy horsemen and footmen and servants; but [first]
+tell me their number.' Quoth the King, 'They are forty thousand
+horse, besides my own slaves and their followers, who are the
+like of them in number.' 'When the day breaks, then,' continued
+the prince, 'do thou array them against me and say to them,
+"This fellow is a suitor to me for my daughter's hand, on
+condition that he shall do battle single-handed against you
+all; for he pretends that he will overcome you and put you to
+the rout and that ye cannot prevail against him." Then leave me
+to do battle with them. If they kill me, then is thy secret the
+safelier hidden and thine honour the better guarded; and if I
+overcome them, then is the like of me one whose alliance a King
+should covet.'
+
+The King approved of his counsel and accepted his proposition,
+despite his awe and amaze at the exorbitant pretension of the
+prince to do battle against his whole army, such as he had
+described it to him, being at heart assured that he would
+perish in the mellay and so he be quit of him and freed from
+the fear of dishonour. So he called the eunuch and bade him go
+forthright to his Vizier and bid him assemble the whole of the
+troops and cause them don their arms and mount their horses.
+The eunuch carried the King's order to the Vizier, who straightway
+summoned the captains of the army and the grandees of the realm
+and bade them don their harness of war and mount their horses
+and sally forth in battle array.
+
+Meanwhile, the King sat conversing with the prince, being
+pleased with his wit and good breeding, till daybreak, when he
+returned to his palace and seating himself on his throne,
+commanded the troops to mount and bade saddle one of the best
+of the royal horses with handsome housings and trappings and
+bring it to the prince. But the latter said, 'O King, I will
+not mount, till I come in sight of the troops and see them.'
+'Be it as thou wilt,' answered the King. Then they repaired to
+the tilting ground, where the troops were drawn up, and the
+prince looked upon them and noted their great number; after
+which the King cried out to them, saying, 'Ho, all ye men,
+there is come to me a youth who seeks my daughter in marriage,
+--never have I seen a goodlier than he, no, nor a stouter of
+heart nor a doughtier, for he pretends that he can overcome
+you, single-handed, and put you to the rout and that, were ye a
+hundred thousand in number, yet would ye be for him but little.
+But, when he charges upon you, do ye receive him upon the
+points of your lances and the edges of your sabres; for,
+indeed, he hath undertaken a grave matter.'
+
+Then said he to the prince, 'Up, O my son, and do thy will on
+them.' 'O King,' answered he, 'thou dealest not fairly with me.
+How shall I go forth against them, seeing that I am afoot and
+they are mounted?' 'I bade thee mount, and thou refusedst,'
+rejoined the King; 'but take which of my horses thou wilt.' But
+he said, 'None of thy horses pleases me, and I will ride none
+but that on which I came.' 'And where is thy horse?' asked the
+King. 'Atop of thy palace,' answered the prince, and the King
+said, 'In what part of my palace?' 'On the roof,' replied the
+prince. 'Out on thee!' quoth the King. 'This is the first sign
+thou hast given of madness. How can the horse be on the roof?
+But we shall soon see if thou speak truth or falsehood.' Then
+he turned to one of his chief officers and said to him, 'Go to
+my palace and bring me what thou findest on the roof.' And all
+the people marvelled at the prince's words, saying, 'How can a
+horse come down the steps from the roof? Verily this is a thing
+whose like we never heard.'
+
+Meanwhile, the King's messenger repaired to the palace,
+accompanied by other of the royal officers, and mounting to the
+roof, found the horse standing there,--never had they looked on
+a handsomer; but when they drew near and examined it, they saw
+that it was made of ebony and ivory; whereat they laughed to
+each other, saying, 'Was it of the like of this horse that the
+youth spoke? Surely, he must be mad; but we shall soon see the
+truth of his case. Belike, there hangs some great mystery by
+him.' Then they lifted up the horse and carrying it to the
+King, set it down before him, and all the people flocked round
+it, staring at it and marvelling at the beauty of its fashion
+and the richness of its saddle and bridle. The King also
+admired it and wondered at it extremely; and he said to the
+prince, 'O youth, is this thy horse?' 'Yes, O King,' answered
+the prince; 'this is my horse, and thou shalt soon see wonders
+of it.' 'Then take and mount it,' rejoined the King, and the
+prince said, 'I will not mount till the troops withdraw afar
+from it.' So the King bade them withdraw a bowshot from the
+horse; whereupon quoth the prince, 'O King, I am about to mount
+my horse and charge upon thy troops and scatter them right and
+left and cleave their hearts in sunder.' 'Do as thou wilt,'
+answered the King; 'and spare them not, for they will not spare
+thee.' Then the prince mounted, whilst the troops ranged
+themselves in ranks before him, and one said to another, 'When
+the youth comes between the ranks, we will take him on the
+points of our pikes and the edges of our swords.' 'By Allah,'
+quoth another, 'it were pity to kill so handsome and well-shaped
+a youth!' 'By Allah,' rejoined a third, 'ye will have hard work
+to get the better of him; for he had not done this, but for what
+he knew of his own prowess and valiantise.'
+
+Meanwhile, the prince, having settled himself in his saddle,
+whilst all eyes were strained to see what he would do, turned
+the peg of ascent; whereupon the horse began to sway to and fro
+and make the strangest of movements, after the manner of
+horses, till its belly was filled with air and it took flight
+with him and soared into the sky. When the King saw this, he
+cried out to his men, saying, 'Out on you! Take him, ere he
+escape you!' But his Viziers and officers said to him, 'O King,
+how shall we overtake the flying bird? This is surely none but
+some mighty enchanter, and God hath saved thee from him. So
+praise thou the Most High for thy deliverance from his hand.'
+Then the King returned to his palace and going in to his
+daughter, acquainted her with what had befallen. He found her
+sore afflicted for the prince and bewailing her separation from
+him; wherefore she fell grievously sick and took to her pillow.
+When her father saw her thus, he pressed her to his bosom and
+kissing her between the eyes, said to her, 'O my daughter,
+praise God and thank Him for that He hath delivered thee from
+this crafty enchanter!' And he repeated to her the story of the
+prince's disappearance; but she paid no heed to his word and
+did but redouble in her tears and lamentations, saying to
+herself, 'By Allah, I will neither eat nor drink, till God
+reunite me with him!' Her father was greatly concerned for her
+plight and mourned sore over her; but, for all he could do to
+comfort her, passion and love-longing still grew on her for the
+prince.
+
+Meanwhile, the King's son, whenas he had risen into the air,
+turned his horse's head towards his native land, musing upon
+the beauty and grace of the princess. Now he had enquired of
+the King's people the name of the princess and of the King her
+father and of the city, which was the city of Senaa of Yemen.
+So he journeyed homeward with all speed, till he drew near his
+father's capital and making a circuit about the city, alighted
+on the roof of the King's palace, where he left his horse, whilst
+he descended into the palace and finding its threshold strewn
+with ashes, bethought him that one of his family was dead. Then
+he entered, as of wont, and found his father and mother and
+sisters clad in mourning raiment of black, pale-faced and lean
+of body. When his father saw him and was assured that it was
+indeed his son, he gave a great cry and fell down in a swoon,
+but presently coming to himself, threw himself upon him and
+embraced him, straining him to his bosom and rejoicing in him
+exceedingly. His mother and sisters heard this; so they came
+in and seeing the prince, fell upon him, kissing him and weeping
+and rejoicing with an exceeding joy. Then they questioned him of
+his case; so he told them all that had befallen him from first
+to last and his father said to him, 'Praised be God for thy
+safety, O solace of my eyes and life-blood of my heart!'
+
+Then the King bade hold high festival, and the glad news flew
+through the city. So they beat the drums and the cymbals and
+putting off the raiment of mourning, donned that of joy and
+decorated the streets and markets; whilst the folk vied with
+one another who should be the first to give the King joy, and
+the latter proclaimed a general pardon and opening the prisons,
+released those who were therein. Moreover, he made banquets to
+the people seven days and nights and all creatures were glad;
+and he took horse with his son and rode out with him, that the
+folk might see him and rejoice. After awhile the prince
+enquired for the maker of the horse, saying, 'O my father, what
+hath fortune done with him?' 'May God not bless him,' answered
+the King, 'nor the hour in which I set eyes on him! For he was
+the cause of thy separation from us, O my son, and he hath lain
+in prison since the day of thy disappearance.' Then he bade
+release him from prison and sending for him, invested him in a
+dress of honour and entreated him with the utmost favour and
+munificence, save that he would not give him his daughter to
+wife; whereat he was sore enraged and repented of that which he
+had done, knowing that the prince had learnt the secret of the
+horse and the manner of its motion. Moreover, the King said to
+his son, 'Methinks thou wilt do well not to mount the horse
+neither go near it henceforth; for thou knowest not its
+properties, and it is perilous for thee to meddle with it.' Now
+the prince had told his father of his adventure with the King's
+daughter of Senaa, and he said, 'If the King had been minded to
+kill thee, he had done so; but thine hour was not yet come.'
+
+When the rejoicings were at an end, the people returned to
+their houses and the King and his son to the palace, where they
+sat down and fell to eating and drinking and making merry. Now
+the King had a handsome slave-girl, who was skilled in playing
+upon the lute; so she took it and began to play upon it and
+sing thereto of separation of lovers before the King and his
+son, and she chanted the following verses:
+
+Think not that absence ever shall win me to forget: For what
+ should I remember, if I'd forgotten you?
+Time passes, but my passion for you shall never end: In love of
+ you, I swear it, I'll die and rise anew.
+
+When the prince heard this, the fires of longing flamed up in
+his heart and passion redoubled upon him. Grief and regret were
+sore upon him and his entrails yearned in him for love of the
+King's daughter of Senaa; so he rose forthright and eluding his
+father's notice, went forth the palace to the horse and
+mounting it, turned the peg of ascent, whereupon it flew up
+into the air with him and soared towards the confines of the
+sky. Presently, his father missed him and going up to the
+summit of the palace, in great concern, saw the prince rising
+into the air; whereat he was sore afflicted and repented
+exceedingly that he had not taken the horse and hidden it: and
+he said in himself, 'By Allah, if but my son return to me, I
+will destroy the horse, that my heart may be at rest concerning
+my son.' And he fell again to weeping and bewailing himself for
+his son.
+
+Meanwhile, the prince flew on through the air till he came to
+the city of Senaa and alighted on the roof as before. Then he
+went down stealthily and finding the eunuch asleep, as of wont,
+raised the curtain and went on, little by little, till he came
+to the door of the princess's chamber and stopped to listen;
+when, behold, he heard her weeping plenteous tears and reciting
+verses, whilst her women slept round her. Presently, they heard
+her weeping and wailing and said, 'O our mistress, why wilt
+thou mourn for one who mourns not for thee?' 'O little of
+wit,' answered she, 'is he for whom I mourn of those who are
+forgotten?' And she fell again to weeping and wailing, till
+sleep overcame her.
+
+Now the prince's heart ached for her, so he entered and seeing
+her lying asleep, without covering, touched her with his hand;
+whereupon she opened her eyes and saw him standing by her.
+Quoth he, 'Why this weeping and mourning?' And when she knew
+him, she threw herself upon him and embraced him and kissed him
+and answered, 'For thy sake and because of my separation from
+thee.' 'O my lady,' said he, 'I have wearied for thee all this
+time!' But she answered, 'It is I who have wearied for thee,
+and hadst thou tarried longer, I had surely died!' 'O my lady,'
+rejoined he, 'what thinkest thou of my case with thy father and
+how he dealt with me? Were it not for my love of thee, O
+ravishment of all creatures, I had surely slain him and made
+him a warning to all beholders; but, even as I love thee, so I
+love him for thy sake.' Quoth she, 'How couldst thou leave me?
+Can life be sweet to me after thee?' Quoth he, 'Let what has
+happened suffice now: I am hungry and thirsty.' So she bade her
+maidens make ready meat and drink, [and they sat eating and
+drinking and conversing] till nigh upon daybreak, when he rose
+to take leave of her and depart, ere the eunuch should awake,
+and she said, 'Whither goest thou?' 'To my father's house,'
+answered he; 'and I plight thee my troth that I will come to
+thee once in every week.' But she wept and said, 'I conjure
+thee, by God the Supreme, take me with thee whither thou goest
+and make me not taste anew the bitterness of separation from
+thee.' Quoth he, 'Wilt thou indeed go with me?' and she
+answered, 'Yes.' 'Then,' said he, 'arise, that we may depart.'
+So she rose forthright and going to a chest, arrayed herself in
+what was richest and dearest to her of her trinkets of gold and
+jewels of price. Then he carried her up to the roof of the
+palace and mounting the horse, took her up behind him and bound
+her fast to himself; after which he turned the peg of ascent,
+and the horse rose with him into the air. When her women saw
+this, they shrieked aloud and told her father and mother, who
+rushed up to the roof of the palace and looking up, saw the
+ebony horse flying away with the prince and princess. At this
+the King was sore troubled and cried out, saying, 'O King's
+son, I conjure thee, by Allah, have compassion on me and my
+wife and bereave us not of our daughter!' The prince made him
+no reply, but, thinking that the princess repented of leaving
+her father and mother, said to her, 'O ravishment of the age,
+wilt thou that I restore thee to thy father and mother?' 'By
+Allah, O my lord, that is not my desire,' answered she; 'my
+only wish is to be with thee wherever thou art; for I am
+distracted by the love of thee from all else, even to my father
+and mother.' At this the prince rejoiced greatly and made
+the horse fare softly with them, so as not to disquiet the
+princess; nor did they stay their flight till they came in
+sight of a green meadow, in which was a spring of running
+water. Here they alighted and ate and drank; after which they
+took horse again and fared on, till they came in sight of his
+father's capital. At this, the prince was filled with joy and
+bethought himself to show her the seat of his dominion and his
+father's power and dignity and give her to know that it was
+greater than that of her father. So he set her down in one of
+his father's pleasance-gardens [without the city] and carrying
+her into a pavilion there, prepared for the King, left the
+horse at the door and charged her keep watch over it, saying,
+'Sit here, till my messenger come to thee; for I go now to my
+father, to make ready a palace for thee and show thee my royal
+estate.' 'Do as thou wilt,' answered she, for she was glad that
+she should not enter but with due honour and observance, as
+became her rank.
+
+Then he left her and betook himself to the palace of the King
+his father, who rejoiced in his return and welcomed him; and
+the prince said to him, 'Know that I have brought with me the
+princess of whom I told thee and have left her without the city
+in such a garden and come to tell thee, that thou mayest make
+ready and go forth to meet her in state and show her thy royal
+dignity and troops and guards.' 'With all my heart,' answered
+the King and straightway bade decorate the city after the
+goodliest fashion. Then he took horse and rode out in all state
+and splendour, he and his troops and household and grandees;
+whilst the prince made ready for her a litter of green and
+red and yellow brocade, in which he set Indian and Greek
+and Abyssinian slave-girls. Moreover, he took forth of his
+treasuries jewellery and apparel and what else of the things
+that kings treasure up and made a rare display of wealth and
+magnificence. Then he left the litter and those who were
+therein and rode forward to the pavilion, where he had left the
+princess; but found both her and the horse gone. When he saw
+this, he buffeted his face and rent his clothes and went round
+about the garden, as he had lost his wits; after which he came
+to his senses and said to himself, 'How could she have come at
+the secret of the horse, seeing I told her nothing of it? Maybe
+the Persian sage who made the horse has chanced upon her and
+stolen her away, in revenge for my father's treatment of him.'
+Then he sought the keepers of the garden and asked them if they
+had seen any enter the garden.
+
+Quoth they, 'We have seen none enter but the Persian sage, who
+came to gather simples.' So the prince was certified that it
+was indeed he that had taken away the princess and abode
+confounded and perplexed concerning his case. And he was
+abashed before the folk and returning to his father, [told him
+what had happened and] said to him, 'Take the troops and return
+to the city. As for me, I will never return till I have cleared
+up this affair.' When the King heard this, he wept and beat his
+breast and said to him, 'O my son, calm thyself and master thy
+chagrin and return with us and look what King's daughter thou
+wouldst fain have, that I may marry thee to her.' But the
+prince paid no heed to his words and bidding him farewell,
+departed, whilst the King returned to the city and their joy
+was changed into mourning.
+
+Now, as Fate would have it, when the prince left the princess
+in the pavilion and betook himself to his father's palace, for
+the ordering of his affair, the Persian entered the garden to
+pluck simples and scenting the fragrance of musk and essences,
+that exhaled from the princess's person and perfumed the whole
+place, followed it till he came to the pavilion and saw the horse,
+that he had made with his own hands, standing at the door. At
+this sight, his heart was filled with joy and gladness, for he
+had mourned sore for it, since it had gone out of his hand. So
+he went up to it and examining its every part, found it safe
+and sound; whereupon he was about to mount and ride away, when
+he bethought himself and said, 'Needs must I first look what
+the prince hath brought and left here with the horse.' So he
+entered the pavilion and seeing the princess sitting there, as
+she were the sun shining in the cloudless sky, knew her to be
+some high-born lady and doubted not but the prince had brought
+her thither on the horse and left her in the pavilion, whilst
+he went to the city, to make ready for her entry in state.
+
+Then he went up to her and kissed the earth before her,
+whereupon she raised her eyes to him and finding him exceeding
+foul of face and favour, said, 'Who art thou?' 'O my lady,'
+answered he, 'I am sent by the prince, who hath bidden me bring
+thee to another garden, nearer the city; for that my lady the
+queen cannot go so far a journey and is unwilling, of her joy
+in thee, that another should forestall her with thee.' 'Where
+is the prince?' asked she; and the Persian replied, 'He is in
+the city, with his father, and will presently come for thee in
+great state.' 'O fellow,' said she, 'could he find none to send
+to me but thee?' At this he laughed and answered, 'O my lady,
+let not the ugliness of my face and the foulness of my favour
+deceive thee. Hadst thou profited of me as hath the prince,
+thou wouldst praise my affair. Indeed, he chose me as his
+messenger to thee, because of my uncomeliness and forbidding
+aspect, in his jealousy and love of thee: else hath he slaves
+and pages and servants, white and black, out of number, each
+goodlier than the other.' When she heard this, it commended
+itself to her reason and she believed him; so she rose and
+putting her hand in his, said, 'O my father, what hast thou
+brought me to ride?' 'O my lady,' answered he, 'thou shalt ride
+the horse thou camest on.' Quoth she, 'I cannot ride it by
+myself.' Whereupon he smiled and knew that she was in his power
+and said, 'I myself will ride with thee.' So he mounted and
+taking her up behind him, bound her fast to himself, for she
+knew not what he would with her. Then he turned the peg of
+ascent, whereupon the belly of the horse became full of wind
+and it swayed to and fro and rose with them into the air nor
+slackened in its flight, till it was out of sight of the city.
+
+When the princess saw this, she said to him, 'O fellow, what
+didst thou tell me of the prince, that he sent thee to me?'
+'Foul befall the prince!' answered the Persian. 'He is a
+scurril knave.' And she said, 'Out on thee! How darest thou
+disobey thy lord's commandment!' 'He is no lord of mine,'
+rejoined the Persian. 'Knowst thou who I am?' 'I know nothing
+of thee,' replied the princess, 'save what thou toldest me.'
+Quoth he, 'What I told thee was a trick of mine against thee
+and the prince. I am he who made this horse under us, and I
+have long regretted its loss; for the prince made himself
+master of it. But now I have gotten possession of it and of
+thee too, and I will rack his heart, even as he hath racked
+mine; nor shall he ever have the horse again. So take comfort
+and be of good cheer, for I can be of more service to thee than
+he.' When she heard this, she buffeted her face and cried out,
+saying, 'Ah, woe is me! I have neither gotten my beloved nor
+kept my father and mother!' And she wept sore over what had
+befallen her, whilst the Persian fared on with her, without
+ceasing, till he came to the land of the Greeks and alighted in
+a verdant meadow, abounding in trees and streams.
+
+Now this meadow was near a city, in which was a king of great
+puissance, and it befell that he went forth that day to hunt
+and divert himself. As he passed by the meadow, he saw the
+Persian standing there, with the princess and the horse by his
+side, and before he was aware, the King's followers fell upon
+him and carried him, the lady and the horse to their master,
+who noting the foulness of his favour and the beauty and grace
+of the princess, said to the latter, 'O my lady, what kin is
+this old fellow to thee?' The Persian made haste to reply, 'She
+is my wife and the daughter of my father's brother.' But she
+gave him the lie and said, 'O King, by Allah, I know him not,
+nor is he my husband, but hath stolen me away by force and
+fraud.' Thereupon the King bade beat the Persian, and they beat
+him, till he was well-nigh dead; after which the King commanded
+to carry him to the city and cast him into prison, and taking
+the princess and the horse from him, set the former in his
+harem and laid up the latter in his treasury, though he knew
+not its properties nor the secret of its motion.
+
+Meanwhile, the prince donned a travelling-habit and taking what
+he needed of money, set out, in very sorry plight, in quest of
+the princess, and journeyed from country to country and city to
+city, enquiring after the ebony horse, whilst all who heard him
+marvelled at him and deemed his talk extravagant. Thus did he a
+long while; but, for all his enquiry and research, he could win
+at no news of her. At last, he came to the city of Senaa and
+there enquired for her, but could get no tidings of her and
+found her father mourning her loss. So he turned back and made
+for the land of the Greeks, pursuing his enquiries as he went,
+till, as chance would have it, he alighted at a certain khan
+and saw a company of merchants sitting talking. He sat down
+near them and heard one say to the others, 'O my friends, I
+happened lately upon a wonder of wonders.' 'What was that?'
+asked they, and he answered, 'I was late in such a city,'
+naming the city wherein was the princess, 'and heard its people
+speak of a strange thing that had lately befallen. It was that
+their King went out one day a-hunting, with a company of his
+courtiers and the grandees of his realm, and coming to a green
+meadow, espied there a man standing, with a horse of ebony, and
+a lady sitting hard by. The man was ugly and foul of favour,
+but the lady was a marvel of beauty and grace and symmetry; and
+as for the ebony horse, it was a wonder, never saw eyes aught
+goodlier than it nor more perfect than its fashion.' 'And
+what did the King with them?' asked the others. 'As for the
+man,' said the merchant, 'he questioned him of the lady and
+he pretended that she was his wife and the daughter of his
+father's brother; but she gave him the lie. So the King took
+her from him and bade beat him and cast him into prison. As
+for the horse, I know not what became of it.' When the prince
+heard this, he drew near unto the speaker and questioned him
+discreetly and courteously, till he told him the name of the
+city and of its king; which when he knew, he passed the night,
+full of joy.
+
+On the morrow, he set out and travelled till he reached the
+city; but, when he would have entered, the gatekeepers laid
+hands on him, that they might bring him before the King; for
+that it was his wont to question all strangers respecting their
+conditions and the crafts in which they were skilled and the
+reason of their coming thither. Now it was eventide, when he
+entered the city, and it was then too late to go in to the King
+or take counsel with him respecting him. So they carried him to
+the prison, thinking to lay him therein for the night; but,
+when the warders saw his beauty and grace, they could not find
+it in their hearts to imprison him, but made him sit with them,
+without the prison; and when food came to them, he ate his fill
+with them. When they had made an end of eating, they turned to
+him and said, 'What countryman art thou?' 'I come from Persia,'
+answered he, 'the land of the Chosroes.' When they heard this,
+they laughed and one of them said, 'O Chosroaen, I have heard
+the talk of men and their histories and looked upon their
+conditions; but never saw or heard I a greater liar than the
+Chosroaen that is with us in the prison.' 'Nor,' quoth another,
+'did I ever see fouler than his favour or more repulsive than
+his aspect.' 'What have ye seen of his lying?' asked the
+prince, and they answered, 'He pretends that he is a sage. Now
+the King came upon him, as he went a-hunting, and found with
+him a most beautiful lady and a horse of ebony, never saw I a
+handsomer. As for the lady, she is with the King, who is
+enamoured of her and would fain marry her; but she is mad, and
+were this man a physician, as he pretends, he would have cured
+her, for the King doth his utmost endeavour to find a remedy
+for her disease, and this whole year past hath he spent
+treasures upon physicians and astrologers, on her account; but
+none can avail to cure her. As for the horse, it is in the
+royal treasury, and the man is here with us in the prison; and
+all night long he weeps and bemoans himself and will not let us
+sleep.'
+
+When the prince heard this, he bethought himself of a device by
+which he might compass his desire; and presently the warders,
+being minded to sleep, clapped him into the prison and locked
+the door. He heard the Persian weeping and bemoaning himself,
+in his own tongue, and saying, 'Woe is me for my sin, that I
+sinned against myself and against the King's son, in that which
+I did with the damsel; for I neither left her nor got my desire
+of her! All this comes of my want of sense, in that I sought
+for myself that which I deserved not and which befitted not the
+like of me; for he, who seeks what befits him not, falleth into
+the like of my predicament.' When the prince heard this, he
+accosted him in Persian, saying, 'How long wilt thou keep up
+this weeping and wailing? Thinkst thou that there hath befallen
+thee what never befell other than thou?' When the Persian heard
+this, he made friends with him and began to complain to him of
+his case and misfortunes.
+
+As soon as it was day, the warders took the prince and carried
+him before the King, informing him that he had entered the city
+on the previous night, at a time when no audience could be had
+of him. Quoth the King to the prince, 'Whence comest thou and
+what is thy name and craft and why comest thou hither?' And he
+answered, 'I am called, in Persian, Herjeh. I come from the
+land of Fars and I am of the men of art and especially of the
+art of medicine and cure the sick and the mad. For this, I go
+round about all countries and cities, adding knowledge to my
+knowledge, and whenever I see a sick person, I heal him; and
+this is my craft.' When the King heard this, he rejoiced
+exceedingly and said, 'O excellent sage, thou hast come to us
+at a time when we have need of thee.' Then he acquainted him
+with the case of the princess, adding, 'If thou win to cure her
+and recover her of her madness, thou shalt have of me whatever
+thou seekest.' 'May God advance the King!' rejoined the prince.
+'Describe to me all thou hast seen of her madness and tell me
+how long it is since it attacked her; also how thou camest by
+her.' So the King told him the whole story, from first to last,
+adding, 'The sage is in prison.' 'O august King,' said the
+prince, 'and what hast thou done with the horse?' 'It is with
+me yet, laid up in one of my treasure-chambers,' replied the
+King; whereupon quoth the prince in himself, 'The first thing
+to do is to see the horse and assure myself of its condition.
+If it be whole and unhurt, all will be well; but, if its works
+be destroyed, I must find some other way of delivering my
+beloved.'
+
+So he turned to the King and said to him, 'O King, I must see
+the horse in question: haply I may find in it somewhat that
+will serve me for the recovery of the damsel.' 'With all my
+heart,' replied the King and taking him by the hand, led him to
+the place where the horse was. The prince went round about it,
+examining its condition, and found it whole and unhurt, whereat
+he rejoiced greatly and said to the King, 'May God exalt the
+King! I would fain go in to the damsel, that I may see how it
+is with her; for I hope, by God's grace, to cure her by means
+of the horse.' Then he bade take care of the horse and the King
+carried him to the princess's apartment, where he found her
+writhing and beating herself against the ground, as was her
+wont; but there was no madness in her, and she did this but
+that none might approach her. When the prince saw her thus, he
+said to her, 'No harm shall betide thee, O ravishment of all
+creatures;' and went on to soothe her and speak her fair, till
+he won to make himself known to her; whereupon she gave a loud
+cry and fell down in a swoon for excess of joy; but the King
+thought this came of her fear of him.
+
+Then the prince put his mouth to her ear and said to her, 'O
+seduction of the universe, have a care for thy life and mine
+and be patient and constant; for we have need of patience and
+skilful ordinance to make shift for our delivery from this
+tyrannical King. To begin with, I will now go out to him and
+tell him that thou art possessed of a genie, and hence thy
+madness; but, that if he will loose thee from thy bonds, I will
+engage to heal thee and drive away the evil spirit. So, when he
+comes in to thee, do thou give him fair words, that he may
+think I have cured thee, and all will be accomplished as we
+desire.' Quoth she, 'I hear and obey;' and he went out to the
+King, full of joy and happiness, and said to him, 'O august
+King, by thy good fortune I have discovered her disease and its
+remedy and have cured her for thee. So now do thou go in to her
+and speak softly to her and entreat her kindly, and promise her
+what may please her; so shall all thou desirest of her be
+accomplished to thee.' So he went in to her and when she saw
+him, she rose and kissing the ground, bade him welcome; whereat
+he was greatly rejoiced and bade the eunuchs and waiting-women
+attend her and carry her to the bath and make ready for her
+dresses and ornaments.
+
+So they went in to her and saluted her, and she returned their
+greeting, after the goodliest and pleasantest fashion; after
+which they clad her in royal apparel and clasping a collar of
+jewels about her neck, carried her to the bath and served her
+there. Then they brought her forth, as she were the full moon;
+and when she came into the King's presence, she saluted him and
+kissed the ground before him, whereupon he rejoiced in her with
+an exceeding joy and said to the prince, 'All this is of thy
+blessing, may God increase us of thy good offices!' Quoth the
+prince, 'O King, it behoves, for the completion of her cure,
+that thou carry her forth, together with the ebony horse, and
+attend her with all thy troops to the place where thou foundest
+her, that there I may expel from her the evil spirit, by whom
+she is possessed, and bind him and kill him, so he may never
+more return to her.' 'With all my heart,' answered the King.
+Then he caused carry out the horse to the meadow in question
+and mounting, rode thither with all his troops and the princess,
+knowing not the prince's purpose.
+
+When they came to the appointed place, the prince bade set the
+horse and the princess as far as the eye could reach from the
+King and his troops and said to the former, 'With thy leave, I
+will now proceed to the needful fumigations and conjurations
+and imprison the genie here, that he may nevermore return to
+her. After this, I shall mount the horse and take the damsel up
+behind me; whereupon it will sway to and fro and fare forward,
+till it come to thee, when the affair will be at an end; and
+after this thou mayst do with her as thou wilt.' And when the
+King heard his words, he rejoiced with an exceeding joy. So the
+prince mounted the horse and taking the princess up behind him,
+bound her fast to him, whilst the King and his troops watched
+him. Then he turned the peg of ascent and the horse took flight
+and soared with them into the air, till he disappeared from
+sight.
+
+The King abode half the day, expecting their return; but they
+returned not. So, when he despaired of them, he returned to the
+city with his troops, repenting him greatly of that which he
+had done and grieving sore for the loss of the damsel. He shut
+himself up in his palace, mourning and afflicted; but his
+Viziers came in to him and applied themselves to comfort him,
+saying, 'Verily, he who took the damsel is an enchanter, and
+praised be God who hath delivered thee from his craft and
+sorcery!' And they ceased not from him, till he was comforted
+for her loss.
+
+Meanwhile, the prince bent his course, in joy and cheer,
+towards his father's capital and stayed not, till he alighted
+on his own palace, where he set the princess in safety; after
+which he went in to his father and mother and acquainted them
+with her coming, whereat they rejoiced exceedingly. Then he
+made great banquets to the townsfolk and they held high
+festival a whole month, at the end of which time he went in to
+the princess and they rejoiced in one another with an exceeding
+joy. But his father broke the horse in pieces and destroyed its
+works. Moreover, the prince wrote a letter to the princess's
+father, advising him of all that had befallen her and how she
+was now married to him and in all health and happiness, and
+sent it by a messenger, together with costly presents and
+rarities. The messenger, in due course, arrived at the city of
+Senaa and delivered the letter and the presents to the King,
+who, when he read the former, rejoiced greatly and accepted the
+presents, rewarding the bearer handsomely. Moreover, he sent
+rich presents to his son-in-law by the same messenger, who
+returned to his master and acquainted him with what had passed,
+whereat he was much cheered. And after this the prince wrote a
+letter every year to his father-in-law and sent him a present,
+till, in course of time, his father King Sabour died and he
+reigned in his stead, ruling justly over his subjects and
+ordering himself well and righteously towards them, so that
+they submitted themselves to him and did him loyal service; and
+he and his wife abode in the enjoyment of all delight and
+solace of life, till there came to them the Destroyer of
+Delights and Sunderer of Companies, He that layeth waste the
+palaces and peopleth the tombs; and glory be to the Living One
+who dieth not and in whose hand is the dominion of the Seen and
+the Unseen!
+
+
+
+
+
+ UNS EL WUJOUD AND THE VIZIER'S DAUGHTER
+ ROSE-IN-BUD.
+
+
+
+
+There was once, of old days and in bygone ages and times, a
+King of great power and glory and dominion, who had a Vizier
+named Ibrahim, and this Vizier had a daughter of extraordinary
+beauty and grace, gifted with surpassing brilliancy and all
+perfection, possessed of abundant wit and perfectly accomplished.
+She loved wine and good cheer and fair faces and choice verses
+and rare stories; and the delicacy of her charms invited all
+hearts to love, even as Saith the poet, describing her:
+
+She shines out like the moon at full, that midst the stars doth
+ fare, And for a wrapping-veil she hath the ringlets of her
+ hair.
+The Eastern zephyr gives her boughs to drink of all its sweets
+ And like a jointed cane, she sways to every breath of air.
+She smiles in passing by. O thou that dost alike accord With
+ red and yellow and arrayed in each, alike art fair,
+Thou sportest with my wit in love, so that indeed meseems As if
+ a sparrow in the clutch of playful urchin 'twere.
+
+Her name was Rose-in-bud and she was so named for the exceeding
+delicacy and perfection of her beauty; and the King loved to
+carouse with her, because of her wit and good breeding.
+
+Now it was the King's custom yearly to gather together all the
+nobles of his realm and play with the ball. So, when the day
+came round, on which the folk assembled for ball-play, the
+Vizier's daughter seated herself at her lattice, to divert
+herself by looking on at the game; and as they were at play,
+her eyes fell upon a youth among them, never was seen a
+handsomer than he or a goodlier of favour, for he was bright of
+face, laughing-teethed, tall and broad-shouldered. She looked
+at him again and again and could not take her fill of gazing on
+him. Then she said to her nurse, 'What is the name of yonder
+handsome young man among the troops?' 'O my daughter,' replied
+the nurse, 'they are all handsome. Which of them dost thou
+mean?' 'Wait till he passes,' said Rose-in-bud, 'and I will
+point him out to thee.' So she took an apple and waited till he
+came under her window, when she dropped it on him, whereupon he
+raised his head, to see who did this, and saw the Vizier's
+daughter at the window, as she were the full moon in the
+darkness of the night; nor did he withdraw his eyes, till he
+had fallen passionately in love with her; and he recited the
+following verses:
+
+Was it an archer shot me or did thine eyes undo The lover's
+ heart that saw thee, what time thou metst his view?
+Did the notched arrow reach me from midst a host, indeed, Or
+ was it from a lattice that launched at me it flew?
+
+ When the game was at an end, he went away with the King,
+[whose servant and favourite he was,] with heart occupied with
+love of her; and she said to her nurse, 'What is the name of
+that youth I showed thee?' 'His name is Uns el Wujoud,'
+answered she; whereat Rose-in-bud shook her head and lay down
+on her couch, with a heart on fire for love. Then, sighing
+deeply, she improvised the following verses:
+
+He erred not who dubbed thee, "All creatures' delight,"[FN#75]
+ That pleasance and bounty[FN#76] at once dust unite.
+Full-moonlike of aspect, O thou whose fair face O'er all the
+ creation sheds glory and light,
+Thou'rt peerless midst mortals, the sovran of grace, And many a
+ witness to this I can cite.
+Thy brows are a Noun[FN#77] and shine eyes are a Sad,[FN#78]
+ That the hand of the loving Creator did write;
+Thy shape is the soft, tender sapling, that gives Of its
+ bounties to all that its favours invite.
+Yea, indeed, thou excellest the world's cavaliers In pleasance
+ and beauty and bounty and might.
+
+When she had finished, she wrote the verses on a sheet of
+paper, which she folded in a piece of gold-embroidered silk and
+laid under her pillow. Now one of her nurses saw her; so she
+came up to her and held her in talk, till she slept, when she
+stole the scroll from under her pillow and reading it, knew
+that she had fallen in love with Uns el Wujoud. Then she
+returned the scroll to its place and when her mistress awoke,
+she said to her, 'O my lady, indeed, I am to thee a faithful
+counsellor and am tenderly solicitous for thee. Know that
+passion is grievous and the hiding it melteth iron and causeth
+sickness and unease; nor is there reproach for whoso confesses
+it.' 'O my nurse,' rejoined Rose-in-bud,'and what is the remedy
+of passion?' 'The remedy of passion is enjoyment,' answered the
+nurse. 'And how may one come by enjoyment?' asked Rose-in-bud.
+'By letters and messages,' replied the nurse, 'and many a
+tender word and greeting; this brings lovers together and makes
+hard matters easy. So, if thou have aught at heart, mistress
+mine, I will engage to keep thy secret and do thy need and
+carry thy letters.'
+
+When the girl heard this, her reason fled for joy; but she
+restrained herself from speech, till she should see the issue
+of the matter, saying in herself, 'None knoweth this thing of
+me, nor will I trust this woman with my secret, till I have
+proved her.' Then said the nurse, 'O my lady, I saw in my sleep
+as though one came to me and said, "Thy mistress and Uns el
+Wujoud love one another; so do thou serve their loves by
+carrying their messages and doing their need and keeping their
+secrets; and much good shall befall thee." So now I have told
+thee my dream, and it is thine to decide.' 'O my nurse,' quoth
+Rose-in-bud, 'canst thou keep secrets?' 'And how should I not
+keep secrets,' answered the nurse, 'I that am of the flower of
+the free-born?' Then Rose-in-bud pulled out the scroll, on
+which she had written the verses afore said, and said to her,'
+Carry this my letter to Uns el Wujoud and bring me his answer.'
+
+So the nurse took the letter and repairing to Uns el Wujoud,
+kissed his hands and saluted him right courteously, then gave
+him the letter; and he read it and wrote on the back the
+following verses:
+
+I temper my heart in passion and hide my case as I may; But my
+ case interprets for me and doth my love bewray.
+And whenas my lids brim over with tears,--lest the spy should
+ see And come to fathom my secret,--"My eye is sore," I
+ say.
+Of old I was empty-hearted and knew not what love was; But now
+ I am passion's bondman, my heart to love's a prey.
+To thee I prefer my petition, complaining of passion and pain,
+ So haply thou mayst be softened and pity my dismay.
+With the tears of my eye I have traced it, that so unto thee it
+ may The tidings of what I suffer for thee to thee convey.
+God watch o'er a visage, that veileth itself with beauty, a
+ face That the full moon serves as a bondman and the stars
+ as slaves obey!
+Yea' Allah protect her beauty, whose like I ne'er beheld! The
+ boughs from her graceful carriage, indeed, might learn to
+ sway.
+I beg thee to grant me a visit; algates, if it irk thee nought.
+ An thou knewst how dearly I'd prize it, thou wouldst not
+ say me nay.
+I give thee my life, so haply thou mayst accept it: to me Thy
+ presence is life eternal and hell thy turning away.
+
+Then he folded the letter and kissing it, gave it to the nurse
+and said to her, 'O nurse, incline thy lady's heart to me.' 'I
+hear and obey,' answered she and carried the letter to her
+mistress, who kissed it and laid it on her head, then wrote at
+the foot of it these verses:
+
+Harkye, thou whose heart is taken with my grace and loveliness,
+ Have but patience, and right surely thou my favours shalt
+ possess.
+When we were assured the passion thou avouchedst was sincere
+ And that that which us betided had betided thee no less,
+Gladly had we then vouchsafed thee what thou sighedst for, and
+ more; But our guardians estopped us to each other from
+ access.
+When night darkens on the dwellings, fires are lighted in our
+ heart And our entrails burn within us, for desire and
+ love's excess.
+Yea, for love and longing, slumber is a stranger to our couch
+ And the burning pangs of fever do our body sore distress.
+'Twas a law of passion ever, love and longing to conceal; Lift
+ not thou the curtain from us nor our secret aye
+ transgress.
+Ah, my heart is overflowing with the love of yon gazelle; Would
+ it had not left our dwellings for the distant wilderness.
+
+Then she folded the letter and gave it to the nurse, who took
+it and went out to go to the young man; but as she went forth
+the door, her master met her and said to her, 'Whither away?'
+'To the bath,' answered she; but, in her trouble, she dropped
+the letter, without knowing it, and one of the servants, seeing
+it lying in the way, picked it up. When she came without the
+door, she sought for it, but found it not, so turned back to
+her mistress and told her of this and what had befallen her
+with the Vizier.
+
+Meanwhile, the latter came out of the harem and seated himself
+on his couch. Presently, the servant, who had picked up the
+letter, came in to him, with it in his hand, and said, 'O my
+lord, I found this paper lying on the floor and picked it up.'
+So the Vizier took it from his hand, folded as it was, and
+opening it, read the verses above set down. Then he examined
+the writing and knew it for his daughter's hand; whereupon he
+went in to her mother, weeping so sore that his beard was
+drenched. 'What makes thee weep, O my lord?' asked she; and he
+answered, 'Take this letter and see what is therein.' So she
+took it and saw it to be a love-letter from her daughter
+Rose-in-bud to Uns el Wujoud; whereupon the tears sprang to her
+eyes; but she mastered herself and swallowing her tears, said
+to her husband, 'O my lord, there is no profit in weeping: the
+right course is to cast about for a means of preserving thine
+honour and concealing thy daughter's affair.' And she went on
+to comfort him and lighten his trouble. Quoth he, 'I am fearful
+of what may ensue this passion of my daughter, and that for two
+reasons. The first concerns myself; it is, that she is my daughter;
+the second, that Uns el Wujoud is a favourite with the Sultan,
+who loves him with an exceeding love, and maybe great troubles
+shall come of this affair. What deemest thou of the matter?'
+'Wait,' answered she, 'whilst I pray to God for direction.'
+So she prayed a two-bow prayer, according to the prophetic
+ordinance of the prayer for divine guidance; after which she
+said to her husband, 'Amiddleward the Sea of Treasures stands
+a mountain called the Mount of the Bereaved Mother,' (the cause
+of which being so named shall follow in its place, if it be the
+will of God,) 'and thither can none come, save with difficulty;
+do thou make her an abiding-place there.'
+
+So the Vizier and his wife agreed to build, on the mountain in
+question, a strong castle and lodge his daughter therein with a
+year's victual, to be annually renewed, and attendants to serve
+and keep her company. Accordingly, he collected builders and
+carpenters and architects and despatched them to the mountain,
+where they builded her an impregnable castle, never saw eyes
+its like. Then he made ready victual and carriage for the
+journey and going in to his daughter by night, bade her make
+ready to set out on a pleasure-excursion. She refused to set
+out by night, but he was instant with her, till she went forth;
+and when she saw the preparations for the journey, her heart
+misgave her of separation from her beloved and she wept sore
+and wrote upon the door the following verses, to acquaint him
+with what had passed and with the transports of passion and
+grief that were upon her, transports such as would make the
+flesh quake, that would cause the hearts of stones to melt and
+eyes to overflow with tears:
+
+By Allah, O house, if the loved one pass in the morning-glow
+ And greet with the greeting of lovers, as they pass to and
+ fro,
+Give him our salutation, a pure and fragrant one, For that we
+ have departed, and whither he may not know.
+Why on this wise they hurry me off by stealth, anights And
+ lightly equipped, I know not, nor whither with me they go.
+Neath cover of night and darkness, they carry me forth, alack I
+ Whilst the birds in the brake bewail us and make their
+ moan for our woe;
+And the tongue of the case interprets their language and cries,
+ "Alas, Alas for the pain of parting from those that we
+ love, heigho!"
+When I saw that the cups of sev'rance were filled and that
+ Fate, indeed, Would give us to drink of its bitter,
+ unmingled, would we or no,
+I blended the draught with patience becoming, as best I might;
+ But patience avails not to solace my heart for your loss,
+ I trow.
+
+Then she mounted, and they set forward with her and fared on
+over desert and plain and hill, till they came to the shore of
+the Sea of Treasures, where they pitched their tents and built
+a great ship, in which they embarked her and her suite and
+carried them over to the mountain. Here they left them in the
+castle and making their way back to the shore, broke up the
+vessel, in obedience to the Vizier's commandment, and returned
+home, weeping over what had befallen.
+
+Meanwhile, Uns el Wujoud arose from sleep and prayed the
+morning prayer, after which he mounted and rode forth to wait
+upon the Sultan. On his way, he passed by the Vizier's house,
+thinking to see some of his followers, as of wont, but saw no
+one and drawing near the door, read the verses aforesaid
+written thereon. At this sight, his senses failed him; fire was
+kindled in his vitals and he returned to his lodging, where he
+passed the rest of the day in ceaseless trouble and anxiety,
+without finding ease or patience, till night darkened upon him,
+when his transport redoubled. So he put off his clothes and
+disguising himself in a fakir's habit, set out, at a venture,
+under cover of the night, distraught and knowing not whither he
+went.
+
+He wandered on all that night and next day, till the heat of
+the sun grew fierce and the mountains flamed like fire and
+thirst was grievous upon him. Presently, he espied a tree, by
+whose side was a spring of running water; so he made towards it
+and sitting down in the shade, on the bank of the rivulet,
+essayed to drink, but found that the water had no taste in his
+mouth. Then, [looking in the stream,] he saw that his body was
+wasted, his colour changed and his face grown pale and his,
+feet, to boot, swollen with walking and weariness. So he shed
+copious tears and repeated the following verses:
+
+The lover is drunken with love of his fair; In longing and heat
+ he redoubles fore'er.
+Love-maddened, confounded, distracted, perplexed, No dwelling
+ is pleasant to him and no fare.
+For how, to a lover cut off from his love, Can life be
+ delightsome? 'Twere strange an it were.
+I melt with the fire of my passion for her And the tears down
+ my cheek roll and never forbear.
+Shall I ever behold her or one from her stead, With whom I may
+ solace my heart in despair?
+
+And he wept till he wet the ground; after which he rose and
+fared on again over deserts and wilds, till there came out upon
+him a lion, with a neck buried in hair, a head the bigness of a
+dome, a mouth wider than the door [thereof] and teeth like
+elephants' tusks. When Uns el Wujoud saw him, he gave himself up
+for lost and turning towards Mecca, pronounced the professions
+of the faith and prepared for death.
+
+Now he had read in books that whoso will flatter the lion,
+beguileth him, for that he is lightly duped by fair words and
+glorieth in praise; so he began and said, 'O lion of the forest
+and the waste! O unconquerable warrior! O father of heroes and
+Sultan of wild beasts! Behold, I am a desireful lover, whom
+passion and severance have undone. Since I parted from my
+beloved, I have lost my reason; wherefore, do thou hearken to
+my speech and have ruth on my passion and love-longing.' When
+the lion heard this, he drew back from him and sitting down on
+his hind-quarters, raised his head to him and began to frisk
+his tail and paws to him; which when Uns el Wujoud saw, he
+recited these verses:
+
+Wilt slay me, O lord of the desert, before My enslaver I meet
+ with, e'en her I adore?
+No fat on me is; I'm no booty for thee; For the loss of my
+ loved one hath wasted me sore.
+Yea, my love's separation hath worn out my soul, And I'm grown
+ like a shape, with a shroud covered o'er.
+Give the railers not cause to exult in my woe, O prince of the
+ spoilers, O lion of war!
+A lover, all sleepless for loss of my dear, I'm drowned in the
+ tears from mine eyelids that pour;
+And my pining for her in the darkness of night Hath robbed me,
+ for passion, of reason and lore.
+
+When he had finished, the lion rose and coming softly up to
+him, with his eyes full of tears, licked him with his tongue,
+then walked on before him, signing to him, as who should say,
+'Follow me.' So he followed him, and he led him on till he
+brought him, over a mountain, to the farther side, where he
+came upon the track of a caravan and knew it to be that of
+Rose-in-bud and her company. When the lion saw that he knew the
+track and set himself to follow it, he turned back and went his
+way; whilst Uns el Wujoud followed the foot-marks, till they
+brought him to a surging sea, swollen with clashing billows. The
+trail led down to the water's edge and there broke off; whereby
+he knew that they had taken ship there and had continued their
+journey by sea. So he lost hope of finding his beloved and
+repeated the following verses, weeping sore:
+
+Far's the place of visitation and my patience faileth me For my
+ love; but how to reach her o'er the abysses of the sea?
+When, for love of her, my vitals are consumed and I've forsworn
+ Slumber, sleep for wake exchanging, ah, how can I patient
+ be?
+Since the day she left the homesteads and departed, hath my
+ heart Burnt with never-ceasing anguish, all a-fire with
+ agony.
+Oxus and Jaxartes, running like Euphrates, are my tears; More
+ than rain and flood abounding, run like rivers to the sea.
+Ulcerated are my eyelids with the running of the tears, And my
+ heart on fires of passion's burnt and wasted utterly.
+Yea, the armies of my longing and my transport on me pressed,
+ And the hosts of my endurance did before them break and
+ flee.
+Lavishly my life I've ventured for the love of her; for life Is
+ the lightest to a lover of all ventures, verily.
+Be an eye of God unpunished that beheld the beauteous one, Than
+ the moon how much more splendid, in the harem's sanctuary!
+Struck was I and smitten prostrate by wide-opened eyes, whose
+ shafts, From a bow all stringless loosened, pierced the
+ hapless heart of me.
+By the soft and flexile motions of her shape she captived me,
+ Swaying as the limber branches sway upon the cassia-tree.
+Union with her I covet, that therewith I may apply Solace to
+ the pains of passion, love and care and misery.
+For the love of her, afflicted, as I am, I have become; All
+ that's fallen on me betided from the evil eye, perdie.
+
+Then he wept, till he swooned away, and abode in his swoon a
+long while. When he came to himself, he looked right and left
+and seeing none in the desert, was fearful of the wild beasts;
+so he climbed to the top of a high mountain, where he heard a
+man's voice speaking within a cavern. He listened and found it
+to be that of a devotee, who had forsworn the world and given
+himself up to pious exercises. So he knocked thrice at the
+cavern door; but the hermit made him no answer, neither came
+forth to him; wherefore he sighed heavily and recited the
+following verses:
+
+What way is open unto me, to my desire to get And put off
+ weariness and toil and trouble and regret?
+All pains and terrors have combined on me, to make me hoar And
+ old of head and heart, whilst I a very child am yet.
+I find no friend to solace me of longing and unease' Nor one
+ 'gainst passion and its stress to aid me and abet.
+Alas, the torments I endure for waste and wistful love!
+ Fortune, meseems, 'gainst me is turned and altogether set.
+Ah, woe's me for the lover's pain, unresting, passion-burnt,
+ Him who in parting's bitter cup his lips perforce hath
+ wet!
+His wit is ravished clean away by separation's woe, Fire in his
+ heart and all consumed his entrails by its fret.
+Ah, what a dreadful day it was, when to her stead I came And
+ that, which on the door was writ, my eyes confounded met!
+I wept, until I gave the earth to drink of my despair; But
+ still from friend and foe I hid the woes that me beset.
+Then strayed I forth till, in the waste, a lion sprang on me
+ And would have slain me straight; but him with flattering
+ words I met
+And soothed him. So he spared my life and succoured me, as
+ 'twere He too had known love's taste and been entangled in
+ its net.
+Yet, for all this, could I but win to come to my desire, All,
+ that I've suffered and endured, straightway I should
+ forget.
+O thou, that harbour'st in thy cave, distracted from the world,
+ Meseems thou'st tasted love and been its slave, O
+ anchoret!
+
+Hardly had he made an end of these verses when, behold, the
+door of the cavern opened and he heard one say' 'Alas, the pity
+of it I' So he entered and saluted the hermit, who returned his
+greeting and said to him, 'What is thy name?' 'Uns el Wujoud,'
+answered the young man. 'And what brings thee hither?' asked
+the hermit. So he told him his whole story, whereat he wept and
+said' 'O Uns el Wujoud, these twenty years have I dwelt in this
+place, but never beheld I any here, till the other day, when I
+heard a noise of cries and weeping, and looking forth in the
+direction of the sound, saw much people and tents pitched on
+the sea-shore. They built a ship, in which they embarked and
+sailed away. Then some of them returned with the ship and
+breaking it up, went their way; and methinks those, who
+embarked in the ship and returned not, are they whom thou
+seekest. In that case, thy trouble must needs be grievous and
+thou art excusable; though never yet was lover but suffered
+sorrows.' Then he recited the following verses:
+
+Uns el Wujoud, thou deem'st me free of heart, but, wel-a-way!
+ Longing and transport and desire fold and unfold me aye.
+Yea, love and passion have I known even from my earliest years,
+ Since at my mother's nursing breast a suckling babe I lay.
+I struggled sore and long with Love, till I his power
+ confessed. If thou enquire at him of me, he will me not
+ unsay.
+I quaffed the cup of passion out, with languor and disease, And
+ as a phantom I became for pining and decay.
+Strong was I, but my strength is gone and neath the swords of
+ eyes, The armies of my patience broke and vanished clean
+ away.
+Hope not to win delight of love, without chagrin and woe; For
+ contrary with contrary conjoined is alway.
+But fear not change from lover true; do thou but constant be
+ Unto thy wish, and thou shalt sure be happy yet some day:
+For unto lovers passion hath ordained that to forget Is heresy,
+ forbidden all its mandates that obey.
+
+Then he rose and coming to the youth, embraced him, and they
+wept together, till the hills rang with their crying and they
+fell down in a swoon. When they revived, they swore brotherhood
+in God the Most High, and the hermit said to Uns el Wujoud,
+'This night will I pray to God and seek of Him direction what
+thou shouldst do to attain thy desire.'
+
+To return to Rose-in-bud. When they brought her into the castle
+and she beheld its ordinance, she wept and exclaimed, 'By
+Allah, thou art a goodly place, save that thou lackest the
+presence of the beloved in thee!' Then, seeing [many] birds in
+the island, she bade her people set snares for them and hang up
+all they caught in cages within the castle; and they did so. But
+she sat at a window of the castle and bethought her of what had
+passed, and passion and transport and love-longing redoubled
+upon her, till she burst into tears and repeated the following
+verses:
+
+To whom, of my desire complaining, shall I cry, To whom, for
+ loss of loves and parting's sorrow, sigh?
+Flames rage within my breast, but I reveal them not, For fear
+ lest they my case discover to the spy.
+I'm grown as thin as e'er a bodkin's wood, so worn With absence
+ and lament and agony am I.
+Where is the loved one's eye, to see how I'm become Even as a
+ blasted tree, stripped bare and like to die?
+They wronged me, when they shut me prisoner in a place, Wherein
+ my love, alas I may never come me nigh.
+Greetings a thousandfold I beg the sun to bear, What time he
+ riseth up and setteth from the sky,
+To a beloved one, who puts the moon to shame, For loveliness,
+ and doth the Indian cane outvie.
+If the rose ape his cheek, "Now God forfend," I say, "That of
+ my portion aught to pilfer thou shouldst try."
+Lo, in his mouth are springs of limpid water sweet, Refreshment
+ that would bring to those in flames who lie.
+How shall I one forget who is my heart and soul, My malady and
+ he that healing can apply?
+
+Then, as the shadows darkened upon her, her longing increased
+and she called to mind the past and recited these verses also:
+
+The shadows darken and passion stirs up my sickness amain And
+ longing rouses within me the old desireful pain.
+The anguish of parting hath taken its sojourn in my breast And
+ love and longing and sorrow have maddened heart and brain.
+Passion hath made me restless and yearning consumes my soul And
+ tears discover my secret, that else concealed had lain.
+I know of no way to ease me of sickness and care and woe; Nor
+ can my weak endeavour reknit Love's severed skein.
+My heart is a raging furnace, because of the heat whereof My
+ entrails are racked with anguish, that nothing can assain.
+O thou, that thinkest to blame me for what is fallen on me,
+ Enough, I suffer with patience whatever the Fates ordain.
+I swear I shall ne'er find comfort nor be consoled for them,
+ The oath of the children of passion, whose oaths are never
+ in vain!
+Bear tidings, O night, to my dear ones and greet them and
+ witness bear That thou knowest in thee I sleep not, but
+ ever to wake am fain.
+
+Meanwhile, the hermit said to Uns el Wujoud, 'Go down into the
+valley and fetch me palm-fibre.' So he went and returned with
+the palm-fibre, which the hermit took and twisting into ropes,
+made therewith a net, such as is used for carrying straw; after
+which he said to the youth, 'O Uns el Wujoud, in the heart of
+the valley grows a gourd, which springs up and dries upon its
+roots. Go thither and fill this net therewith; then tie it
+together and casting it into the water, embark thereon and make
+for the midst of the sea, so haply thou shalt come to thy
+desire; for he, who adventureth not himself, shall not attain
+that he seeketh.' 'I hear and obey,' answered Uns el Wujoud and
+bidding the hermit farewell after he had prayed for him, betook
+himself to the hollow of the valley, where he did as he had
+counselled him and launched out upon the water, supported by
+the net.
+
+Then there arose a wind, which drove him out to sea, till he
+was lost to the hermit's view; and he ceased not to fare on
+over the abysses of the ocean, one billow tossing him up on the
+crest of the wave and another bearing him down into the trough
+of the sea, and he beholding the while the terrors and wonders
+of the deep, for the space of three days, at the end of which
+time Fate cast him upon the Mount of the Bereft Mother, where
+he landed, weak and giddy as a fledgling bird, for hunger and
+thirst; but, finding there streams running and birds warbling
+on the branches and fruit-laden trees, growing in clusters and
+singly, he ate of the fruits and drank of the streams. Then he
+walked on till he saw some white thing alar off, and making for
+it, found that it was a strongly-fortified castle. So he went
+up to the gate and finding it locked, sat down by it.
+
+He sat thus three days and on the fourth, the gate opened and
+an eunuch came out, who seeing Uns el Wujoud seated there, said
+to him, 'Whence comest thou and who brought thee hither?' Quoth
+he, 'I come from Ispahan and was travelling by sea with
+merchandise, when my ship was wrecked and the waves cast me
+upon this island.' When the eunuch heard this, he wept and
+embraced him, saying, 'God preserve thee, O [thou that bringest
+me the] fragrance of the beloved! Ispahan is my own country and
+I have there a cousin, the daughter of my father's brother,
+whom I loved and cherished from a child; but a people stronger
+than we fell upon us and taking me among other booty, docked me
+and sold me for an eunuch, whilst I was yet a lad; and this is
+how I come to be what I am.' Then he carried him into the
+courtyard of the castle, where he saw a great basin of water,
+surrounded by trees, on whose branches hung cages of silver,
+with doors of gold, and therein birds warbling and singing the
+praises of the Requiting King. In the first cage he came to was
+a turtle dove which, seeing him, raised her voice and cried
+out, saying, 'O Bountiful One!'[FN#79] Whereat he fell down in
+a swoon, but, presently coming to himself, sighed heavily and
+recited the following verses:
+
+O turtle, art thou mad for love, as is my case? Then sing, 'O
+ Bountiful!' and seek the Lord His grace!
+Tell me, doth thy descant in joyance tale its rise Or in
+ desireful pain, that in thy heart hath place?
+If for desire thou moan'st of bygone loves or pin'st For dear
+ ones that have gone and left thee but their trace,
+Or if thou'st lost thy love, like me, ah, then, indeed,
+ Severance long-felt desire discovereth apace.
+God guard a lover true! Though my bones rot, nor time Nor
+ absence from my heart her image shall efface.
+
+Then he fainted again and presently coming to his senses, went
+on to the second cage, wherein he found a ring-dove. When it
+saw him, it sang out, 'O Eternal, I praise thee!' and he sighed
+and recited these verses:
+
+I heard a ring-dove say in her plaintive note, "Despite of my
+ woes, O Eternal, I praise Thee still!"
+And God, of His grace, reunion of our loves, in this my travel,
+ may yet to us fulfil.
+She visits me oft,[FN#80] with her dusk-red honeyed lips, And
+ lends to the passion within me an added thrill.
+And I cry, whilst the fires in my tortured heart flame high And
+ my soul for ardour consumes and my eyes distil
+Tears that resemble blood and withouten cease Pour down on my
+ wasted cheeks in many a rill,
+There's none created without affliction, and I Must bear with
+ patience my tribulations, until
+The hour of solace with her I love one day Unite me. Ah, then,
+ by God His power and will,
+In succouring lovers, I vow, I'll spend my good, For they're of
+ my tribe and category still;
+And eke from prison I'll loose the birds, to boot, And leave,
+ for joyance, the thought of every ill!
+
+Then he went on to the third cage, in which was a mocking-bird.
+When it saw him, it set up a song, and he recited the following
+verses:
+
+The mocking-bird delighteth me with his harmonious strain, As
+ 'twere a lover's voice that pines and wastes for love in
+ vain.
+Woe's me for those that lovers be! How many a weary night, For
+ love and anguish and desire, to waken they are fain!
+'Twould seem as if they had no part in morning or in sleep, For
+ all the stress of love and woe that holds their heart and
+ brain.
+When I became distraught for her I love and wistfulness Bound
+ me in fetters strait, the tears from out mine eyes did
+ rain
+So thick and fast, they were as chains, and I to her did say,
+ "My tears have fallen so thick, that now they've bound me
+ with a chain."
+The treasures of my patience fail, absence is long on me And
+ yearning sore; and passion's stress consumeth me amain.
+If God's protection cover me and Fortune be but just And Fate
+ with her whom I adore unite me once again,
+I'll doff my clothes, that she may see how worn my body is, For
+ languishment and severance and solitary pain.
+
+Then he went on to the fourth cage, where he found a
+nightingale, which, at sight of him, began to tune its
+plaintive note. When he heard its descant, he burst into tears
+and repeated the following verses:
+
+The nightingale's note, when the dawning is near, Distracts
+ from the lute-strings the true lover's ear.
+Complaineth, for love-longing, Uns el Wujoud, Of a passion that
+ blotteth his being out sheer.
+How many sweet notes, that would soften, for mirth, The
+ hardness of iron and stone, do I hear!
+The zephyr of morning brings tidings to me Of meadows,
+ full-flower'd for the blossoming year.
+The scents on the breeze and the music of birds, In the
+ dawning, transport me with joyance and cheer.
+But I think of a loved one, that's absent from me, And mine
+ eyes rain in torrents, with tear upon tear;
+And the ardour of longing flames high in my breast, As a fire
+ in the heart of a brasier burns clear.
+May Allah vouchsafe to a lover distraught To see and foregather
+ once more with his dear!
+Yea, for lovers, heart-sickness and longing and woe And wake
+ are excuses that plainly appear.
+
+Then he went on a little and came to a handsome cage, than
+which there was no goodlier there, and in it a culver, that is
+to Say, a wood-pigeon, the bird renowned among the birds as the
+singer of love-longing, with a collar of jewels about its neck,
+wonder-goodly of ordinance. He considered it awhile and seeing
+it mazed and brooding in its cage, shed tears and repeated
+these verses:
+
+O culver of the copse, may peace upon thee light, O friend of
+ all who love and every wistful wight!
+I love a young gazelle, a slender one, whose glance Than
+ sharpest sabre's point is keener and more bright.
+For love of her, my heart and entrails are a-fire And
+ sicknesses consume my body and my spright.
+The sweet of pleasant food's forbidden unto me, And eke I am
+ denied the taste of sleep's delight.
+Solace and fortitude have taken flight from me, And love and
+ longing lodge with me, both day and night.
+How shall my life be sweet to me, while she's afar, That is my
+ life, my wish, the apple of my sight?
+
+When the pigeon heard these verses, it awoke from its brooding
+and cooed and warbled and trilled, till it all but spoke; and
+the tongue of the case interpreted for it and recited the
+following verses:
+
+O lover, thy wailings recall to my mind The time when my youth
+ from me wasted and dwined,
+And A mistress, whose charms and whose grace I adored,
+ Seductive and fair over all of her kind;
+Whose voice, from the twigs of the sandhill upraised, Left the
+ strains of the flute, to my thought, far behind.
+A snare set the fowler and caught me, who cried, "Would he d
+ leave me to range at my will on the wind!"
+I had hoped he was clement or seeing that I Was a lover, would
+ pity my lot and be kind;
+But no, (may God smite him!) he tore me away From my dear and
+ apart from her harshly confined.
+Since then, my desire for her grows without cease, And my heart
+ with the fires of disjunction is mined.
+God guard a true lover, who striveth with love And hath
+ suffered the torments in which I have pined!
+When he seeth me languish for love in my cage, He will loose
+ me, in mercy, my loved one to find
+
+ Then Uns el Wujoud turned to his friend, the Ispahani and said
+to him, 'What palace is this? Who built it and who abideth in
+it?' Quoth the eunuch, 'The Vizier of King Shamikh built it
+for his daughter, fearing for her the assaults of fate and the
+vicissitudes of fortune, and lodged her therein, with her
+attendants; nor do we open it save once in every year, when our
+victual comes to us.' And Uns el Wujoud said in himself, 'I
+have gained my end' though after long travail.'
+
+Meanwhile, Rose-in-bud took no delight in eating nor drinking,
+sitting nor sleeping; but her transport and passion and
+love-longing redoubled on her, and she went wandering about the
+castle, but could find no issue; wherefore she shed plenteous
+tears and recited the following verses:
+
+They have prisoned me straitly from him I adore And given me to
+ eat of mine anguish galore.
+My heart with the flames of love-longing they fired, When me
+ from the sight of my loved one they bore.
+They have cloistered me close in a palace built high On a mount
+ in the midst of a sea without shore.
+If they'd have me forget, their endeavour is vain, For my love
+ but redoubles upon me the more.
+How can I forget him, when all I endure Arose from the sight of
+ his face heretofore?
+My days are consumed in lament, and my nights Pass in thinking
+ of him, as I knew him of yore.
+His memory my solace in solitude is, Since the lack of his
+ presence I needs must deplore.
+I wonder, will Fate grant my heart its desire And my love,
+ after all, to my wishes restore!
+
+Then she donned her richest clothes and trinkets and threw a
+necklace of jewels around her neck; after which she ascended to the
+roof of the castle and tying some strips of Baalbek stuff together,
+[to serve for a rope], made them fast to the battlements and let
+herself down thereby to the ground. Then she fared on over wastes
+and wilds, till she came to the sea-shore, where she saw a
+fishing-boat, and therein a fisherman, whom the wind had driven
+on to the island, as he went, fishing here and there, on the sea.
+When he saw her, he was affrighted, [ taking her for a Jinniyeh]
+and put out again to sea; but she cried out and made pressing
+signs to him to return, reciting the following verses:
+
+Harkye, O fisherman, fear thou no injury; I'm but an earthly
+ maid, a mortal like to thee.
+I do implore thee, stay, give ear unto my prayer And hearken to
+ my true and woeful history.
+Pity, (so God thee spare,) the ardour [of my love,] And say if
+ thou hast seen a loved one, fled from me.
+I love a fair-faced youth and goodly; brighter far Of aspect
+ than the face of sun or moon is he.
+The antelope, that sees his glances, cries, "His slave Am I,"
+ and doth confess inferiority.
+Yea, beauty on his brow these pregnant words hath writ In very
+ dust of musk, significant to see,
+"Who sees the light of love is in the way of right, And he who
+ strays commits foul sin and heresy."
+An thou have ruth on me and bring me to his sight, O rare!
+ Whate'er thou wilt thy recompense shall be;
+Rubies and precious stones and freshly gathered pearls And
+ every kind of gem that is in earth and sea.
+Surely, O friend, thou wilt with my desire comply; For all my
+ heart's on fire with love and agony.
+
+When the fisherman heard this, he wept and sighed and lamented;
+then, recalling what had betided himself in the days of his
+youth, when love had the mastery over him and transport and
+love-longing and distraction were sore upon him and the fires
+of passion consumed him, replied with these verses:
+
+Indeed, the lover's excuse is manifest, Wasting of body and
+ streaming tears, unrest,
+Eyes, in the darkness that waken still, and heart, As 'twere a
+ fire-box, bespeak him love-oppress.
+Passion, indeed, afflicted me in youth, And I good money from
+ bad learnt then to test.
+My soul I bartered, a distant love to win; To gain her favours,
+ I wandered East and West;
+And eke I ventured my life against her grace And deemed the
+ venture would bring me interest.
+For law of lovers it is that whoso buys His love's possession
+ with life, he profits best.
+
+Then he moored his boat to the shore and bade her embark,
+saying, 'I will carry thee whither thou wilt.' So she embarked
+and he put off with her; but they had not gone far, before
+there came out a stern-wind upon the boat and drove it swiftly
+out of sight of land. The fisherman knew not whither he went,
+and the wind blew without ceasing three days, at the end of
+which time it fell, by leave of God the Most High, and they
+sailed on, till they came in sight of a city builded upon the
+seashore, and the fisherman set about making fast to the land.
+
+Now the King of the city, a very powerful prince called Dirbas,
+was at that moment sitting, with his son, at a window in the
+palace giving upon the sea, and chancing to look out to
+sea-ward, they saw the fishing-boat enter the harbour. They
+observed it narrowly and espied therein a young lady, as she
+were the full moon in the mid-heaven, with pendants in her ears
+of fine balass rubies and a collar of precious stones about her
+neck. So the King knew that this must be the daughter of some
+king or great noble, and going forth of the sea-gate of the
+palace, went down to the boat, where he found the lady asleep
+and the fisherman busied in making fast to the shore. He went
+up to her and aroused her, whereupon she awoke, weeping; and he
+said to her, 'Whence comest thou and whose daughter art thou
+and what brings thee hither?' 'I am the daughter of Ibrahim,
+Vizier to King Shamikh,' answered she; 'and the manner of my
+coming hither is strange and the cause thereof extraordinary.'
+And she told him her whole story, hiding nought from him; then
+she sighed deeply and recited the following verses:
+
+Tears have mine eyelids wounded sore, and wonder-fast they flow
+ Adown my cheek for parting's pain and memory and woe,
+For a beloved's sake, who dwells for ever in my heart, Though
+ to foregather with himself I cannot win, heigho!
+Fair, bright and brilliant is his face, in loveliness and
+ grace, Turk, Arab and barbarian he cloth indeed o'ercrow.
+The full moon and the sun contend in deference to him, And when
+ he rises into sight, they, lover-like, bend low.
+His eyes with wondrous witchery are decked, as 'twere with
+ kohl; Even as a bow, that's bent to shoot its shafts, to
+ thee they show.
+O thou, to whom I have perforce revealed my case, have ruth On
+ one with whom the shifts of love have sported long eno'.
+Lo, broken-hearted, Love hath cast me up upon thy coast,
+ Wherefore I trust that thou on me fair favour wilt bestow.
+The noble who, when folk of worth alight within their bounds,
+ Do honour and protect them, win increase of glory so.
+Cover thou then, my lord, my hope, two lovers' follies up And
+ let them to thy succouring hand their loves' reunion owe.
+
+Then she shed plenteous tears and recited these verses also:
+
+I lived, a marvel till I saw in love, then lived no mo'; Each
+ month to thee as Rejeb[FN#81] be, as free from fear of
+ foe!
+Is it not strange that, on the morn they went away, I lit Fire
+ in my vitals with the tears that from mine eyes did flow?
+Indeed, mine eyelids ran with blood, and on the wasted plain Of
+ my sad cheek, that therewithal was watered, gold did grow.
+Yea, for the safflower hue, that thence o'erspread my cheeks,
+ they seem The shirt of Joseph, steeped in blood, to make a
+ lying show.
+
+When the King heard this, he was certified of her passion and
+love-longing and was moved to compassion for her; so he said to
+her, 'Fear nothing and be not troubled; thou hast attained the
+term of thy wishes; for needs must I bring thee to thy desire.'
+And he recited the following verses:
+
+Daughter if nobles, thou hast reached thy wishes' goal, I trow:
+ In happy presage then rejoice and fear not any woe.
+Treasures this very day, will I collect and neath escort Of
+ horsemen and of champions, to Shamikh they shall go.
+Brocade and bladders full of musk I will to him despatch And
+ eke white silver and red gold I'll send to him also.
+Yea, and a letter neath my hand my wish for ties of kin And for
+ alliance with himself shall give him eke to know;
+And all endeavour will I use, forthwith, that he thou lov'st
+ Once more with thee may be conjoined, to part from thee no
+ mo.
+I, too, have battened upon love and know the taste thereof And
+ can excuse the folk who've quaffed the self-same cup of
+ woe.
+
+Then, returning to his palace, he summoned his Vizier and
+causing pack him up countless treasure, bade him carry it to
+King Shamikh and say to him, 'The King is minded to ally
+himself with thee by marrying Uns el Wujoud, shine officer, to
+his daughter. So needs must thou send him with me, that the
+marriage may be solemnized in her father's kingdom.' And he
+wrote a letter to King Shamikh, to this effect, and gave it to
+the Vizier, charging him without fail bring back Uns el Wujoud,
+on pain of deposition from his office. 'I hear and obey,'
+answered the Vizier and setting out forthright, in due course
+arrived at the court of King Shamikh, to whom he delivered the
+letter and presents, saluting him in the name of King Dirbas.
+When Shamikh read the letter and saw the name of Uns el Wujoud,
+he burst into tears and said to the Vizier, 'And where is Uns
+el Wujoud? He went away, and we know not his place of abiding.
+Bring him to me, and I will give thee the sum of the presents
+thou hast brought me, twice told.' And he wept and sighed and
+groaned, reciting the following verses:
+
+Him whom I loved to me restore; By gold and gifts I set no
+ store.
+Nor do I crave largesse, indeed, Of pearls and gems and
+ precious ore.
+As 'twere a moon at full, for us, In beauty's heaven he did
+ soar.
+Passing in wit and grace, gazelles With him comparison gave
+ o'er.
+His shape was as a willow-wand, For fruits that sweet
+ seductions bore;
+But in the willow, to enslave The hearts of men, there is no
+ lore.
+I reared him from a child upon The bed of fondness evermore;
+And now I am at heart distraught For him and sorrow passing
+ sore.
+
+Then said he to the Vizier, 'Go back to thy master and tell him
+that Uns el Wujoud has been missing this year past, and his
+lord knoweth not whither he is gone nor hath any news of him.'
+'O my lord,' answered King Dirbas's Vizier, 'my master said to
+me, "An thou come back without him, thou shalt be ousted from
+the Vizierate and shall not enter my city." How then can I
+return without him?' So King Shamikh said to his Vizier
+Ibrahim, 'Take a company and go with him and make search for
+Uns el Wujoud everywhere.' 'I hear and obey,' answered Ibrahim,
+and taking a company of his own retainers, set out in quest of
+Uns el Wujoud, accompanied by King Dirbas's Vizier; and as
+often as they fell in with Bedouins or others, they enquired at
+them of Uns el Wujoud, saying, 'Have ye seen a man, whose name
+is so and so and his favour thus and thus?' But they answered,
+'We know him not.'
+
+So they fared on, enquiring in city and hamlet and seeking in
+hill and plain and desert and wold, till they came to the
+sea-shore, where they took ship and sailed, till they came to
+the Mountain of the Bereaved Mother; and King Dirbas's Vizier
+said to Ibrahim, 'Why is this mountain thus called?' 'There was
+once of old time,' answered the other Vizier, 'a Jinniych, of
+the Jinn of China, who fell passionately in love with a man and
+being in fear of her own people, searched all the earth for a
+place, where she might hide him from them, till she happened on
+this mountain and finding it inaccessible both to men and Jinn,
+carried off her beloved and lodged him therein. There she used
+to visit him privily, till she had borne him a number of
+children, and the merchants, sailing by the mountain, in their
+voyages over the sea, heard the weeping of the children, as it
+were the wailing of a woman who had lost her young, and said,
+"Is there here a mother bereaved of her children?" For which
+reason the place was named the Mountain of the Bereaved
+Mother.' And King Dirbas's Vizier marvelled at this.
+
+Then they landed and making for the castle, knocked at the gate,
+which was opened to them by an eunuch, who knew the Vizier
+Ibrahim and kissed his hands. Ibrahim entered and finding in
+the courtyard, among the serving men, a man in the habit of a
+fakir,[FN#82] said. 'Whence comes yonder fellow?' Quoth they,
+'He is a merchant, who hath lost his goods by shipwreck, but
+saved himself on a plank; and he is an ecstatic.'[FN#83] Now
+this was none other than Uns el Wujoud, [but the Vizier knew
+him not]; so he left him and went on into the castle. He found
+there no trace of his daughter and questioned her women, who
+answered, 'She abode with us but a little while and went away,
+how and whither we know not.' Whereupon he wept sore and
+repeated the following verses:
+
+O house, whose birds warbled for joyance whilere And whose
+ sills were resplendent with glory and pride,
+Till the lover came to thee, bemooning himself For his passion,
+ and found thy doors open and wide,
+Would I knew where my soul is, my soul that was late In a
+ house, where its masters no longer abide!
+Therein were all things that are costly and rich And with suits
+ of brocade it was decked, like a bride.
+Yea, happy and honoured its doorkeeper were. Would God I knew
+ whither its mistress hath tried!
+
+Then he wept and sighed and bemoaned himself, exclaiming,
+'There is no resource against the ordinance of God neither is
+there any escape from that which He hath decreed!' Then he went
+up to the roof and finding the strips of Baalbek stuff tied to
+the battlements and hanging down to the ground, knew that she
+had descended thence and had fled forth, as one distracted and
+mad with passion. Presently, he turned and seeing there two
+birds, an owl and a raven, deemed this an ill omen; so he
+groaned and recited these verses:
+
+Unto the loved ones' stead I came, as hoping, by their sight,
+ To quench the fire that burnt in me of love-longing and
+ woe;
+But no beloved found I there, nor aught, indeed, I found, Save
+ two ill-omened ones, an owl And eke a corby-crow.
+And quoth the tongue o' the case to me, "Thou hast been
+ tyrannous And hast two longing lovers torn, the one the
+ other fro!
+Taste of the anguish, then, of love what thou hast made them
+ taste And live, 'twixt agony and tears, in sorrow evermo."
+
+Then he descended, weeping, and bade the servants go forth and
+search the island for their mistress; so they sought for her,
+but found her not. As for Uns el Wujoud, when he was certified
+that Rose-in-bud was indeed gone, he gave a great cry and fell
+down in a swoon, nor came to himself for a long time, whilst
+the folk deemed that a ravishment from the Merciful One had
+taken him and that he was absorbed in contemplation of the
+splendour of the majesty of the Requiter of good and evil.
+Then, despairing of finding Uns el Wujoud and seeing that
+Ibrahim was distracted for the loss of his daughter, King
+Dirbas's Vizier addressed himself to return to his own country,
+for all he had not attained the object of his journey, and said
+to Ibrahim? 'I have a mind to take yonder fakir with me; it may
+be God, for his sake, will incline the King's heart to me, for
+that he is a holy man; and after, I will send him to Ispahan,
+which is near our country.' 'Do &as thou wilt,' answered
+Ibrahim.
+
+So they took leave of one another and departed, each for his
+own country, King Dirbas's Vizier carrying with him Uns el
+Wujoud, who was still insensible. They bore him with them on
+muleback, unknowing if he were carried or not, for three days,
+at the end of which time he came to himself and said, 'Where am
+I?' 'Thou art in company with King Dirbas's Vizier,' answered
+they and went and told the latter, who sent him rose-water and
+sherbet of sugar, of which they gave him to drink and restored
+him. Then they fared on till they drew near King Dirbas's
+capital and the King, being advised of his Vizier's coming,
+wrote to him, saying, 'An Uns el Wujoud be not with thee, come
+not to me ever.'
+
+When the Vizier read the royal mandate, it was grievous to him,
+for he knew not that Rose-in-bud was with the King nor why he
+had sent him in quest of Uns el Wujoud, neither knew he that
+the fakir he had with him was Uns el Wujoud himself; and the
+latter in like manner knew not whither they were bound nor that
+the Vizier had been despatched in quest of himself. So, when he
+saw him thus chagrined, he said to him, 'What ails thee?' And
+he answered, 'I was sent by the King on an errand, which I
+have not been able to accomplish. So, when he heard of my
+return, he wrote to me? saying, "Enter not my city, except thou
+have fulfilled my need."' 'And what is the King's need?' asked
+Uns el Wujoud. So the Vizier told him the case, and he said,
+'Fear nothing, but go boldly to the King and take me with thee;
+and I will be surety to thee for the coming of Uns el Wujoud.'
+At this the Vizier rejoiced and said, 'Is this true that thou
+sayest?' 'Yes,' answered he; whereupon the Vizier mounted and
+carried him to King Dirbas, who said to him, 'Where is Uns el
+Wujoud?' 'O King,' answered the young man, 'I know where he
+is.' So the King called him to him and said, 'Where?' 'Near at
+hand, replied Uns d Wujoud. 'Tell me what thou wouldst with
+him, and I will fetch him to thee.' 'With all my heart,'
+answered the King; 'but the case calls for privacy.'
+
+So he bade the folk withdraw and, carrying Uns el Wujoud into
+his closet, told him the whole story; whereupon quoth the
+youth, 'Clothe me in rice apparel, and I will eftsoons bring
+Uns el Wujoud to thee.' So they brought him a sumptuous dress,
+and he donned it and said, 'I am the Delight of the World[FN#84]
+and the Mortification of the Envious.' So saying, he transfixed
+ail hearts with his glances and recited the following verses:
+
+My loved one's memory cheers me still in this my solitude And
+ doth wanhope from me away, as I in absence brood.
+I have no helper but my tears; yet, when from out mine eyes
+ They flow, they lighten my despair and ease my drearihood.
+Sore is my longing; yea, it hath no like and my affair In love
+ and passion's marvellous, beyond all likelihood.
+I lie the night long, wakeiul-eyed,--no sleep is there for
+ me,--And pass, for love, from heaven to hell, according to
+ my mood.
+Yea, patience fair some time I had, but have it now no more;
+ And longing and chagrin increase upon me, like a flood.
+Indeed, my body's worn to nought, for severance from her;
+ Yearnings my aspect and my form to change have all
+ subdued.
+Mine eyelids ulcerated are with weeping, nor can I Avail to
+ stay the constant tears, wherewith they're still bedewed.
+Indeed, I can no more; my strength, my very vitals fail. How
+ many sorrows have I borne, on sorrows still renewed!
+My heart and head are grizzled grown, for loss of a princess In
+ beauty, sure, the fairest maid that ever lover wooed.
+In her despite, our parting was, for no desire hath she Save to
+ be joined with me and feed once more on lovers' food.
+I wonder, will my fate to me union vouchsafe with her I
+ cherish, after absence long and stress of lonelihood,
+And shut the book of severance up, that now is open wide, And
+ blot out troubles from my thought with love's supremest
+ good?
+Shall my beloved, in my land, my cup-companion be And sorrow
+ and affliction be by pure delight ensued?
+
+'By Allah,' exclaimed the King, 'ye are, indeed, a pair of true
+lovers and in the heaven of beauty two shining stars! Your
+story is marvellous and your case extraordinary.' Then he told
+him all that had befallen Rose-in-bud; and Uns el Wujoud said,
+'Where is she, O King of the age?' 'She is with me now,'
+answered Dirbas and sending for the Cadi and the witnesses,
+drew up the contract of marriage between her and him. Then he
+loaded Uns el Wujoud with favours and bounties and sent to King
+Shamikh, advising him of what had befallen, whereat the latter
+rejoiced with an exceeding joy and wrote back to him, saying,
+'Since the marriage contract hath been drawn up at thy court! it
+behoves that the wedding and consummation be at mine.' And he
+made ready camels and horses and men and sent them in quest of
+the lovers.
+
+When the embassy reached King Dirbas, he gave the pair great
+store of treasure and despatched them to King Shamikh's court
+with an escort of his own troops. The day of their arrival was
+a notable day, never was seen a greater; for the King assembled
+all the singers and players on instruments of music and made
+banquets and held high festival seven days; and on each day he
+gave largesse to the folk and bestowed on them sumptuous
+dresses of honour. Then Uns el Wujoud went in to Rose-in-bud,
+and they embraced and sat weeping for excess of joy and
+gladness, whilst she recited the following verses:
+
+Gladness is come, dispelling grief and putting care aside; We
+ are united now and have our enviers mortified.
+The fragrant breeze of union blows fresh and sweet for us,
+ Whereby our bodies, vitals, hearts are all revivified.
+The splendour of fulfilled delight in all its glory shines, And
+ for glad tidings beat the drums about us far and wide.
+Think not we weep for stress Of grief or for affliction; nay,
+ It is for joy our tears flow down and will not be denied.
+How many terrors have we seen, that now are past away! Yet we
+ each agonizing strait did patiently abide.
+In one hour of delight have we forgotten all the woes, Whose
+ stresses made us twain, whilom, grey-haired and
+ hollow-eyed.
+
+Then they clipped each other and ceased not from their embrace,
+till they fell down in a swoon, for the ecstasy of reunion; and
+when they came to themselves, Uns d Wujoud recited these
+verses:
+
+Ah, how peerlessly sweet are the nights of delight, When the
+ loved one to me keeps the troth she did plight,
+When enjoyment enjoyment ensues and the bonds Of estrangement
+ between us are sundered outright,
+And fortune is come to us, favouring and fair, After turning
+ away with aversion and spite!
+Fair fortune hath set up her standards for us And we drink from
+ her hand a cup pure of affright.
+United, our woes each to each we recount And the nights when in
+ torments we watched for the light.
+But now, O my lady, forgotten have we Our griefs, and God
+ pardon the past its upright!
+How pleasant, how lovesome, how joyous is life! Enjoyment my
+ passion doth only excite.
+
+Then they gave themselves up anew to the pleasures of the
+nuptial bed and passed seven whole days thus, carousing and
+conversing and reciting verses and telling pleasant tales and
+anecdotes, in the intervals of amorous dalliance; for so
+drowned were they in the sea of passion, that they knew not
+night from day and it was to them, for very stress of joy and
+gladness and pleasure and delight, as if the seven days were
+but one day, and that without a morrow. Nor did they know the
+seventh day, but by the coming of the singers and players on
+instruments of music;[FN#85] whereat Rose-in-bud was beyond
+measure wondered and improvised the following verses:
+
+Despite the enviers' rage and malice of the spy, I've won of
+ him I love my wish to satisfy;
+Yea, we have crowned our loves with many a close embrace, On
+ cushions of brocade and silken stuffs piled high
+Upon a couch full soft, of perfumed leather made And stuffed
+ with down of birds of rarest kind that fly.
+Thanks to the honeyed dews of my beloved's lips, Illustrious
+ past compare, no need of wine have I.
+Yea, for the sweet excess of our fulfilled delight, The present
+ from the past we know, nor far from nigh.
+A miracle indeed! Seven nights o'er us have passed, Without our
+ taking note of how they flitted by;
+Till, on the seventh day, they wished us joy and said, "Your
+ union God prolong to all eternity!"
+
+When she had finished, Uns el Wujoud kissed her, more than a
+hundred times, and recited the following verses:
+
+O day of pure delight and mutual happiness! The loved one came
+ and set me free from loneliness.
+She blest me with the sweets of all her glorious charms, What
+ while her converse filled my spirit with liesse.
+She plied me with the wine of amorous delight, Till all my
+ senses failed, for very drunkenness.
+Yea, merry each with each we made, together lay, Then fell to
+ wine and did, in song, our cheer express;
+Nor knew we, of the days that fleeted over us, The present from
+ the past, for very joy's excess.
+Fair fall all those that love of ease and twinned delight, And
+ joy to them fulfil its promise none the less!
+Ne'er may they know the taste of parting's bitter cup! God
+ succour them as me He succoured in my stress!
+
+Then they went forth and distributed to the folk alms and
+largesse of money and raiment and so forth; after which
+Rose-in-bud bade empty the bath for her and turning to Uns el
+Wujoud, said to him' 'O solace of my eyes, I have a mind to see
+thee in the bath; and we will be alone together therein.' He
+gladly consented to this, and she bade perfume the bath for
+them with all manner of scented woods and essences and light
+the candles. Then, of the excess of her contentment, she
+recited the following Verses:
+
+O thou aforetime of my heart that mad'st prize (And the present
+ for us on the past still relies),
+Thou, the only companion I crave, for to me None other the want
+ of thy presence supplies,
+To the bath,--that in midst of hell-fire we may see Even
+ Paradise shining,--come, light of mine eyes!
+We will scent it with ambergris, aloes and musk, Till the
+ fragrance in clouds from all quarters arise.
+Yea, Fortune we'll pardon her sins and give thanks, For His
+ grace, to the Merciful One, the All-Wise;
+And I'll say, when I see thee therein, "O my love, All delights
+ be thy lot in the earth and the skies!"
+
+So they went to the bath and took their pleasure there in;
+after which they returned to their palace and there abode in
+the fulness of delight, till there came to them the Destroyer
+of Delights and the Sunderer of Companies; and glory be to Him
+who changeth not neither ceaseth and in whom all things have
+their term!
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOU NUWAS WITH THE THREE BOYS AND THE
+ KHALIF HAROUN ER RESHID.
+
+
+
+Abou Nuwas one day shut himself up and making ready a richly-
+furnished saloon, set out therein a banquet of meats of all
+kinds and colours that lips and tongue can desire. Then he went
+forth, to seek a minion who should befit the entertainment,
+saying, 'O my God and my Master and my Lord, I beseech Thee to
+send me one worthy of this banquet and apt to carouse with me
+this day!' Hardly had he made an end of speaking, when he
+espied three handsome beardless youths, as they were of the
+children of Paradise, differing in complexion but equal in
+perfection of beauty; and all hearts yearned with desire to the
+graceful bending of their shapes, even to what saith the poet:
+
+Two beardless youths I happened on one day And said "I love
+ you." "Hast thou pelf?" asked they.
+"Yes," answered I, "and liberality." "Then is the matter easy,"
+ did they say.
+
+Now Abou Nuwas was on this wise given and loved to sport and
+make merry with the fair and cull the rose from every fresh-
+flowered cheek, even as saith the poet:
+
+Full many a graybeard is amorous and loves Fair faces and music
+ and dalliance and glee:
+From Mosul, the country of pureness,[FN#86] he comes, Yet
+ nought but Aleppo[FN#87] remembereth he.
+
+So he accosted them with the salutation, and they returned his
+greeting with all honour and civility and would have gone their
+way; but he stayed them, repeating these verses:
+
+To none but me your footsteps steer; For I have store of all
+ good cheer;
+Wine that the heart of convent monk Would glad, so bright it is
+ and clear;
+And flesh of sheep, to boot, have I And birds of land and sea
+ and mere.
+Eat ye of these and drink old wine, That doth away chagrin and
+ fear.
+
+The boys were beguiled by his verses and consented to his
+wishes, saying, 'We hear and obey.' So he carried them to his
+lodging, where they found all ready that he had set forth in
+his verses. They sat down and ate and drank and made merry
+awhile, after which they appealed to Abou Nuwas to decide which
+was the handsomest and most shapely of them. So he pointed to
+one of them, after having kissed him twice, and recited the
+following verses:
+
+With my life I will ransom the mole, on the cheek of the
+ loveling that is; For how should I ransom it else with
+ treasure or aught but my soul?
+And blessed for ever be He who fashioned his cheek without hair
+ And made, of His power and His might, all beauty to dwell
+ in yon mole!
+
+Then he pointed to another and kissing his lips, repeated these
+verses:
+
+There's a loveling hath a mole upon his cheek, As 'twere musk
+ on virgin camphor, so to speak.
+My eyes marvel when they see it. Quoth the mole, "Heaven's
+ blessing on the Prophet look ye seek!"[FN#88]
+
+Then he pointed to the third and repeated the following verses,
+after kissing him half a score times:
+
+All in a silver cup he melted gold full fine, A youth whose
+ hands were dyed in ruby-coloured wine,
+And with the skinkers went and handed round one cup Of wine,
+ whilst other two were proffered by his eyne.
+Fairer than all the Turks, an antelope, whose waist Together
+ would attract the mountains of Hunain.[FN#89]
+An if I were content with crooked[FN#90] womankind, Betwixt
+ attractions twain would be this heart of mine.
+One love towards Diyarbeker[FN#91] drawing it, and one That
+ draws it, otherguise, to the land of Jamiain.[FN#92]
+
+Now each of the youths had drunk two cups, and when it came to
+Abou Nuwas's turn, he took the goblet and repeated these
+verses:
+
+Drink not of wine except it be at the hands of a loveling slim,
+ Who in brightness of soul resembles it and it resembles
+ him.
+The drinker of wine, in very truth, hath no delight thereof,
+ Except the cheek of the fair be pure, who doth the goblet
+ brim.
+
+Then he drank off his cup, and when it came round to Him again,
+joyance got the mastery of him and he repeated The following
+verses:
+
+Make thou thy boon-fellow of cups, brimmed up as full as this,
+ And eke to follow cup with cup, I rede thee, do not miss,
+Poured by a damask-lipped one's hand, a wonder-lovely fair,
+ Whose mouth's sweet water, after sleep, as musk on apple
+ is.
+Drink not of wine, except it be from the hand of a gazelle,
+ Whose cheek is goodlier than itself and sweeter still his
+ kiss.
+
+Presently, the wine crept to his head, drunkenness mastered him
+and he knew not hand from head, so that he swayed about for
+mirth, inclining anon to this one, to kiss him, and anon to
+another. Then he fell to glorying in himself and his case and
+the goodliness of his entertainment and his companions, and
+recited these verses:
+
+None knoweth perfection of pleasure but he Who drinketh, with
+ fair ones to hearten him still.
+This sings to him, t'other, when cheer him would be, Revives
+ him forthright with the cups he doth fill;
+And whenever from one he hath need of a kiss, Long draughts
+ from his lips, at his case, he doth swill.
+God bless them! Right sweet has my day with them been, And
+ wonder delightsome and void of all ill!
+We drank of the wine cup, both mingled and pure, And agreed
+ whoso slept, we should touzle at will.
+
+At this moment, there came a knocking at the door; so they bade
+him who knocked enter, and behold, it was the Khalif Haroun er
+Reshid. When they saw him, they all rose to him and kissed the
+ground before him; and the fumes of the wine forsook Abou
+Nuwas's head for awe of the Khalif, who said to him, 'Hallo,
+Abou Nuwas!' 'At thy service, O Commander of the Faithful,'
+answered he, 'may God preserve thee!' 'What state is this I
+find thee in?' asked the Khalif; and the poet replied, 'O
+Commander of the Faithful, methinks my state dispenses with
+question.' Quoth the Khalif, 'O Abou Nuwas, I have sought
+direction of God the Most High and appoint thee Cadi of
+whoremasters.' 'Dost thou indeed invest me with that office, O
+Commander of the Faithful?' asked Abou Nuwas. 'I do,' replied
+the Khalif. 'Then, O Commander of the Faithful,' rejoined Abou
+Nuwas, 'hast thou any suit to prefer to me?' At this the Khalif
+was wroth and turned away and left them, full of rage, and
+passed the night, sore angered against Abou Nuwas, whilst the
+latter spent the merriest and most easeful of nights, till the
+day dawned and the morning-star appeared and shone, when he
+broke up the sitting and dismissing the boys, donned his court-
+dress and set out for the Khalif's palace.
+
+Now it was the latter's custom, when the Divan broke up, to
+withdraw to his sitting-chamber and summon thither his poets
+and minions and musicians, each having his own place, which he
+might not overpass. So, that day, he retired to his saloon, and
+the minions came and seated themselves, each in his place.
+Presently, in came Abou Nuwas and was about to take his usual
+seat, when the Khalif cried out to Mesrour the headsman and
+bade him strip the poet of his clothes and clap an ass's pannel
+on his back. Moreover, he charged him bind a halter about his
+head and a crupper under his rear and carry him round to all
+the lodgings of the slave-girls and the chambers of the harem,
+that the women might make mock of him; then cut off his head
+and bring it to him. 'I hear and obey,' replied Mesrour and
+accoutring Abou Nuwas, as the Khalif had bidden him, carried
+him round to all the lodgings of the harem, in number as the
+days of the year; but he made all the girls laugh with his
+buffooneries and each gave him something, so that he returned
+with a pocketful of money.
+
+Just then, Jaafer the Barmecide, who had been absent on an
+important business for the Khalif, entered and seeing the poet
+in this plight, said to him, 'Hallo, Abou Nuwas!' 'At thy
+service, O our lord,' answered he. 'What offence hast thou
+committed,' asked Jaafer, 'to bring this punishment on thee?'
+'None whatever,' answered the other, 'except that I made our
+lord the Khalif a present of the best of my verses, and he
+presented me, in return, with the best of his clothes.' When
+the Khalif heard this, he laughed, from a heart full of wrath,
+and [not only] pardoned Abou Nuwas, but gave him a myriad of
+money.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABDALLAH BEN MAAMER WITH THE MAN OF
+ BASSORA AND HIS SLAVE-GIRL.
+
+
+
+A certain man of Bassora once bought a slave-girl and reared
+and educated her excellent well. Moreover, he loved her very
+dearly and spent all his substance in pleasuring and making
+merry with her, till he had nothing left and want was very sore
+upon him. So she said to him, 'O my master, sell me; for thou
+needest my price and it makes my heart ache to see the sorry
+plight to which want hath brought thee. It thou sell me and
+make use of my price, it will be better for thee than keeping
+me, and haply God the Most High will prosper thee and mend thy
+fortune.' He agreed to this, of the straitness of his case, and
+carried her to the bazaar, where the broker offered her for
+sale to the Governor of Bassora, by name Abballah ben Maamer et
+Teimi, and she pleased him. So he bought her, for five hundred
+dinars, of her master, who took the money and was about to go
+away, when the girl burst into tears and repeated the following
+verses:
+
+May Allah prosper unto thee the money thou hast got! For me,
+ nought's left me but lament and memory and woe.
+I say to my afflicted soul, "Mourn little or mourn much; It
+ skills not, for the loved one's gone and will return no
+ mo."
+
+When he heard this, he sighed heavily and replied thus:
+
+Though there be no recourse for thee in this thy case and thou
+ Find nought but death to solace thee, excuse me yet and
+ know,
+Evening and morn the thought of thee will company with me,
+ Wherewith a heart I will console, that's all fulfilled of
+ woe.
+Peace be on thee! Henceforth for us no meeting shall there be
+ Nor any union more, except Ben Maamer will it so.
+
+When Abdallah heard these verses and saw their affliction, he
+exclaimed, 'By Allah, I will have no hand in separating you;
+for it is manifest to me that ye indeed love one another. So
+take the money and the damsel, O man, and may God bless thee in
+them! For parting is grievous to true lovers.' So they kissed
+his hand and going away, ceased not to dwell together, till
+death parted them; and glory be to Him whom death overtaketh
+not!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVERS OF THE BENOU UDHREH.
+
+
+
+There was once, among the Benou Udhreh, a handsome and
+accomplished man, who was never a day out of love, and it
+chanced that he became enamoured of a beautiful woman of his
+own tribe and sent her many messages; but she ceased not to use
+him with cruelty and disdain, till, for stress of passion and
+longing and distraction, he fell exceeding sick and took to his
+bed and forswore sleep. His sickness grew on him and his
+anguish redoubled upon him, till he was all but dead; and his
+case became known and his passion noised abroad among the folk.
+His family and hers were instant with her to visit him, but she
+refused, till he was at the point of death, when, being told of
+this, she relented towards him and vouchsafed him a visit. When
+he saw her, his eyes ran over with tears and he repeated the
+following verses, from a broken heart:
+
+If, by thy life, there pass thee by my funeral train, to wit, A
+ bier borne on the necks of four, wilt grudge to follow it?
+Wilt thou not follow in its track, that so thou mayst salute
+ The sepulchre of one who's dead, committed to the pit?
+
+When she heard this, she wept sore and said to him, 'By Allah,
+I thought not that passion had come to such a pass with thee,
+as to cast thee into the arms of death! Had I known this, I had
+been favourable to thee, and thou shouldst have enjoyed thy
+desire.' At this, his tears streamed down, like the cloud-
+showers, and he repeated the following verse:
+
+She draweth near to me, when death hath come betwixt us two And
+ proffereth union, when it no profit can me do.
+
+Then he gave one sigh and died, and she fell on him, kissing
+him and weeping, till she swooned away. When she came to
+herself she charged her people bury her in his grave and
+recited the following verses, with streaming eyes:
+
+We lived upon the earth a life of comfort and delight: Country
+ and tribe and dwelling-place alike of us were proud;
+But Fortune and the shifts of time did rend our loves apart,
+ And now the grave uniteth us within a single shroud.
+
+Then she fell again to weeping and ceased not from tears and
+lament, till she swooned away. She lay three days, senseless;
+then died and was buried in his grave. This is one of the
+strange chances of love.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE VIZIER OF YEMEN AND HIS YOUNG
+ BROTHER
+
+
+
+Bedreddin, Vizier of Yemen, had a young brother of singular
+beauty and kept strait watch over him. So he applied himself to
+seek a governor for him and coming upon an elder of dignified
+and reverend aspect, chaste and pious, lodged him in a house
+next his own, whence he used to come daily to the Vizier's
+dwelling, to teach the latter's brother. After awhile, the old
+man's heart was taken with love for his pupil and longing grew
+upon him and his entrails were troubled, till, one day, he made
+moan of his case to the boy, who said, 'What can I do, seeing
+that I may not leave my brother day or night? Thou seest how
+careful he is over me.' Quoth the governor, 'My lodging adjoins
+thine; so, when thy brother sleeps, do thou rise and entering
+the wardrobe, feign thyself asleep. Then come to the parapet of
+the roof and I will receive thee on the other side of the wall;
+so shalt thou sit with me awhile and return without thy
+brother's knowledge.' 'I hear and obey,' answered the boy. So,
+when awhile of the night was past, he entered the closet and
+waited till his brother lay down on his bed and was drowned in
+sleep, when he rose and going to the parapet of the roof, found
+the governor awaiting him, who gave him his hand and carried
+him to the sitting-chamber, where he had made ready various
+dainties for his entertainment, and they sat down to carouse.
+
+Now it was the night of the full moon, and as they sat, passing
+the wine-cup to one another, her rays shone upon them, and the
+governor fell to singing. But, whilst they were thus in mirth
+and joyance and good cheer, such as confounds the wit and the
+sight and defies description, the Vizier awoke and missing his
+brother, arose in affright and found the door open. So he went
+up to the roof and hearing a noise of talk, peeped over the
+parapet and saw a light shining in the governor's lodging. He
+looked in and espied his brother and his governor sitting
+carousing: but the latter became aware of him and sang the
+following verses, cup in hand, to a lively measure:
+
+He gave me wine to drink, of his mouth's nectar rare, Toasting
+ with down of cheeks and what adjoineth there;
+Then passed with me the night, embracing, cheek to cheek, A
+ loveling midst mankind unpeered and past compare.
+The full moon gazed on us all night; pray then to her, So to
+ his brother she to tell of us forbear.
+
+Now the Vizier was a merry man; so, when he heard this, he
+said, 'By Allah, I will not betray you!' And he went away and
+left them to their diversion.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVES OF THE BOY AND GIRL AT SCHOOL.
+
+
+
+A boy and a girl once learnt together in a school, and the boy
+fell passionately in love with the girl. So, one day, when the
+other boys were heedless, he took her tablet[FN#93] and wrote
+on it the following verses:
+
+Tell me, what sayst thou unto him, whom sickness for thy love
+ Hath worn and wasted, till he's grown distraught and
+ stupefied?
+Him who of passion maketh moan; for love and longing pain, That
+ which is in his heart, indeed, no longer can he hide.
+
+When the girl took her tablet, she read the verses and wept for
+pity of him; then wrote thereunder these others:
+
+An if we see one languishing for very love of us, Our favours,
+ surely, unto him shall nowise be denied.
+Yea, and of us he shall obtain that which he doth desire Of
+ love-delight, whate'er to us in consequence betide.
+
+Now it chanced that the teacher came in on them And taking the
+tablet, unnoticed, read what was written thereon. So he was
+moved to pity of their case and wrote on the tablet the
+following verses, in reply to those of the girl:
+
+Favour thy lover, for he's grown distracted for desire, And
+ reck thou not of punishment nor fear lest any chide.
+As for the master, have no dread of his authority, For he with
+ passion an its pains aforetime hath been tried.
+
+Presently, the girl's master entered the school and finding the
+tablet, read the above verses and wrote under them the following:
+
+May Allah never separate your loves, whilst time abide, And may
+ your slanderer be put to shame and mortified!
+But, for the master of the school, by Allah, all my life, A
+ busier go-between than he I never yet espied.
+
+Then he sent for the Cadi and the witnesses and married them on
+the spot. Moreover, he made them a marriage-feast and entreated
+them with exceeding munificence; and they abode together in joy
+and contentment, till there came to them the Destroyer of
+Delights and the Sunderer of Companies.
+
+
+
+
+
+ EL MUTELEMMIS AND HIS WIFE UMEIMEH.
+
+
+
+It is related that El Mutelemmis[FN#94] once fled from En Numan
+ben Mundhir[FN#95] and was absent so long that the folk deemed
+him dead. Now he had a handsome wife, Umeimeh by name, and her
+family pressed her to marry again; but she refused, for that
+she loved her husband El Mutelemmis very dearly. However, they
+were instant with her, because of the multitude of her suitors,
+and importuned her till she at last reluctantly consented and
+they married her to a man of her own tribe.
+
+On the night of the wedding, El Mutelemmis came back and
+hearing in the camp a noise of pipes and tabrets and seeing
+signs of festival, asked some of the children what was toward,
+to which they replied, 'They have married Umeimeh, widow of El
+Mutelemmis, to such an one, and he goes in to her this night.'
+When he heard this, he made shift to enter the house with the
+women and saw there the bride seated on her throne. By and by,
+the bridegroom came up to her, whereupon she sighed heavily and
+weeping, recited the following verses:
+
+Ah would, (but many are the shifts of good and evil fate), I
+ knew in what far land thou art, O Mutelemmis mine!
+
+Now El Mutelemmis was a renowned poet: so he answered her with
+the following verse:
+
+Right near at hand, Umeimeh! Know, whene'er the caravan Halted,
+ I never ceased for thee with longing heart to pine.
+
+When the bridegroom heard this, he guessed how the case stood
+and went forth from among them in haste, repeating the following
+verse:
+
+I was in luck, but now I'm fall'n into the contrary. A
+ hospitable house and room your reknit loves enshrine!
+
+So El Mutelemmis took his wife again and abode with her in all
+delight and solace of life, till death parted them. And glory
+be to Him at whose command the earth and the heavens shall
+arise!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF HAROUN ER RESHID AND THE
+ PRINCESS ZUBEIDEH IN THE BATH.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid loved the Princess Zubeideh with an
+exceeding love and laid out for her a pleasaunce, in which he
+made a great pool and led thither water from all sides.
+Moreover, he set thereabout a screen of trees, which so grew
+and interlaced over the pool, that one could go in and wash,
+without being seen of any, for the thickness of the leafage. It
+chanced, one day, that Zubeideh entered the garden and coming
+to the basin, gazed upon its goodliness, and the limpidity of
+the water and the interlacing of the trees over it pleased her.
+Now it was a day of exceeding heat; so she put off her clothes
+and entering the pool, which was not deep enough to cover her,
+fell to pouring the water over herself from an ewer of silver.
+
+
+The Khalif heard she was in the pool; so he left his palace and
+came down to spy upon her, through the screen of the leaves. He
+stood behind the trees and saw her naked, with all her secret
+charms displayed. Presently, she became aware of him and
+turning, saw him behind the trees and was ashamed that he
+should see her naked. So she laid her hands on her kaze, but it
+escaped from between them, by reason of its much greatness and
+plumpness; and the Khalif turned and went away, wondering and
+reciting the following verse:
+
+I looked on her whom I adore And longing rose in me full sore.
+
+But he knew not what to say next; so he sent for Abou Nuwas and
+bade him make a piece of verse commencing with the above line. 'I
+hear and obey,' replied the poet and in a twinkling extemporized
+the following lines:
+
+I looked on her whom I adore, And longing rose in me full sore
+For a gazelle that ravished me, By double lote-trees shaded
+ o'er.
+The water on her dainty part With silver ewer did she pour
+And would have hidden it, seeing me, But all too small her
+ hands therefor.
+Would I were on it, wel-a-way, An hour or liefer two or more!
+
+The Khalif smiled and made him a handsome present, and he went
+away rejoicing.
+
+
+
+
+
+ HAROUN ER RESHID AND THE THREE POETS.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid was exceeding restless one night;
+so he rose and walked about his palace, till he happened on a
+damsel overcome with wine. Now he was greatly enamoured of this
+damsel; so he toyed with her and pulled her to him, whereupon
+her girdle fell down and her trousers were unloosed and he
+besought her of amorous dalliance. But she said to him, 'O
+Commander of the Faithful, wait till to-morrow night, for I am
+unprepared for thee, knowing not of thy coming.' So he left her
+and went away.
+
+On the morrow, he sent a page to her to announce his visit to
+her apartment; but she sent back to him, saying, 'The day
+obliterates the promise of the night.' So he said to his
+minions, 'Make me somewhat of verse, introducing these words,
+"The day obliterates the promise of the night."' 'We hear and
+obey,' answered they; and Er Recashi[FN#96] came forward and
+recited the following:
+
+By Allah, an thou feltst my longing and my pain, Repose had
+ turned away from thee and taken flight.
+A maid hath made me love-distraught, nor visiting Nor being
+ visited, a sad and love-lorn wight.
+She promised me her grace, then turned away and said, "The day
+ obliterates the promise of the night."
+
+Then Abou Musab came forward and recited these verses:
+
+When wilt thou put away this dotage from thy spright? Thy heart
+ is dazed and rest to thee forbidden quite.
+Is't not enough for thee to have a weeping eye And vitals still
+ on fire for memory and despite?
+For self-conceit, indeed, he laugheth, when he saith, "The day
+ obliterates the promise of the night."
+
+Last came Abou Nuwas and recited the following:
+
+Love was prolonged and far was union out of sight, Nor skilled
+ it aught to feign aversion and despite.
+One day, she came into the palace, drunk with wine, But even
+ her drunkenness with pudour was bedight.
+Her upper garments dropped and left her shoulders bare And
+ loosened trousers showed the dwelling of delight;
+Yea, and the breeze shook hips, full heavy, and a shape, As
+ 'twere a branch, whereon pomegranates twain unite.
+"Give me a tryst," quoth I; and she replied, "The place Of
+ visiting will be to-morrow clean and right."
+Next day, I came and said, "Thy promise;" but quoth she, "The
+ day obliterates the promise of the night."
+
+The Khalif bestowed a myriad each on Er Recashi and Abou Musab,
+but bade strike off Abou Nuwas's head, saying, 'Thou west with
+us yesternight in the palace.' 'By Allah,' answered the poet,
+'I slept not but in my own house! I was directed to what I said
+by thine own words as to the subject of the poem; and indeed
+quoth God the Most High (and He is the truest of all speakers),
+"As for poets (devils ensue them!) dost thou not see how they
+run wild in each valley and say that they do not?"'[FN#97] So
+the Khalif forgave him and bestowed on him two myriads of gold.
+
+
+
+
+
+ MUSAB BEN EZ ZUBEIR AND AAISHEH
+ DAUGHTER OF TELHEH.
+
+
+
+It is told of Musab ben ez Zubeir[FN#98] that he met Izzeh, who
+was one of the shrewdest of women, in Medina and said to her,
+'I have a mind to marry Aaisheh,[FN#99] daughter of Telheh, and
+I would have thee go to her and spy out for me how she is
+made.' So she went and returning to Musab, said, 'I have seen
+her, and her face is more beautiful than health; she hath large
+and well-opened eyes, an aquiline nose and smooth, oval cheeks
+and a mouth like a cleft pomegranate, a neck like an ewer of
+silver and a bosom with two breasts like twin pomegranates, a
+slim waist and a slender belly, with a navel therein as it were
+a casket of ivory, and backside like a hummock of sand.
+Moreover, she hath plump thighs and legs like columns of
+alabaster; but I saw her feet to be large, and thou wilt fall
+short with her in time of amorous dalliance.' Upon this report,
+he married her and Izzeh invited Aaisheh and the women of the
+tribe of Kureish to her house, when Aaisheh sang the following,
+with Musab standing by:
+
+The mouths of girls, with their odoriferous, Sweet breath and
+ their witching smiles, are sweet to buss;
+Yet ne'er have I tasted them, but in thought of him; And by
+ thought, indeed, the Ruler rules over us.
+
+The night of his going in to her, he departed not from her,
+till after seven courses; and on the morrow, a freed-woman of
+his met him and said to him, 'May I be thy ransom! Thou art
+perfect, even in this.'
+
+Quoth a certain woman, 'I was with Aaisheh, when her husband
+came in to her, and she lusted to him; so he fell upon her and
+she puffed and snorted and made use of all manner of rare
+motions and strange inventions, and I the while within hearing.
+So when he came out from her, I said to her, "How canst thou,
+with thy rank and nobility and condition, do thus, and I in thy
+house?" Quoth she, "A woman should bring her husband all of
+which she is mistress, by way of excitations and rare motions.
+What mislikest thou of this?" And I answered, "I would have
+this anights." "Thus is it by day," rejoined she, "and by night
+I do more than this; for, when he sees me, desire stirs in him
+and he falls on heat; so he puts out his hand to me and I obey
+him, and it is as thou seest."'
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOUL ASWED AND HIS SQUINTING SLAVE-GIRL.
+
+
+
+Aboul Aswed bought a native-born slave-girl, who was squint-
+eyed, and she pleased him; but his people decried her to him;
+whereat he wondered and spreading out his hands, recited the
+following verses:
+
+They run her down to me, and yet no fault in her find I, Except
+ perhaps it be a speck she hath in either eye.
+To compensate this fault, if fault it be, o' the upper parts
+ She's slim and heavy of the parts beneath the waist that
+ lie.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ HAROUN ER RESHID AND THE TWO SLAVE-GIRLS.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid lay one night between two slave-girls,
+one from Medina and the other from Cufa, and the latter rubbed his
+hands, whilst the former rubbed his feet and made his yard to
+stand up. Quoth the Cufan girl, 'I see thou wouldst keep the whole
+of the stock-in-trade to thyself; give me my share of it.' And the
+other answered, 'I have been told by Malik, on the authority of
+Hisham ibn Orweh,[FN#100] who had it of his [grand]father,[FN#101]
+that the Prophet said, "Whoso bringeth the dead to life, it is
+his."' But the Cufan took her unawares and pushing her away, took
+it all in her own hand and said, 'El Aamesh[FN#102] tells us, on
+the authority of Kheithemeh,[FN#103] who had it of Abdallah ben
+Mesoud,[FN#104] that the Prophet said, "Game belongeth to him who
+taketh it, not to him who raiseth it."'
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF HAROUN ER RESHID AND THE THREE
+ SLAVE-GIRLS.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid lay once with three slave-girls, a
+Meccan, a Medinan and an Irakite. The Medina girl put her hand
+to his yard and handled it, whereupon it rose and the Meccan
+sprang up and drew it to herself. Quoth the other, 'What is
+this unjust aggression? I have heard of Malik,[FN#105] on the
+authority of Ez Zuhri,[FN#106] who had it of Abdallah ibn
+Salim,[FN#107] on the report of Said ben Zeid,[FN#108] that the
+Apostle (whom God bless and preserve) said, "Whoso revivifies a
+dead land, it is his."' And the Meccan answered, 'Sufyan[FN#109]
+tells us, on the authority of Abou Zenad,[FN#110] who had it of
+El Aarej,[FN#111] on the report of Abou Hureireh,[FN#112] that
+the Apostle of God said, "The game is his who catches it, not
+his who starts it."' But the Irak girl pushed them both away and
+taking it to herself, said, 'This is mine, till your contention
+be decided.'
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE MILLER AND HIS WIFE.
+
+
+
+
+There was a miller, who had an ass to turn his mill; and he was
+married to a wicked wife, whom he loved; but she hated him and
+loved a neighbour of hers, who liked her not and held aloof
+from her. One night, the miller saw, in his sleep, one who said
+to him, 'Dig in such a spot of the ass's circuit in the mill,
+and thou shalt find a treasure.' When he awoke, he told his
+wife the dream and charged her keep it secret; but she told her
+neighbour, thinking to win his favour, and he appointed with
+her to come to her by night. So he came and they dug in the
+mill and found the treasure and took it forth. Then said he to
+her, 'How shall we do with this?' 'We will share it equally
+between us,' answered she; 'and do thou leave thy wife and I
+will cast about to rid me of my husband. Then shalt thou marry
+me, and when we are united, we will add the two halves of the
+treasure, one to the other, and it will be [all] in our hands.'
+Quoth he, 'I fear lest Satan seduce thee and thou take some man
+other than myself; for gold in the house is like the sun in the
+world. Meseems, therefore, it were better that the money be all
+in my hands, so thou mayst study to win free of thy husband and
+come to me.' 'I fear the like of thee,' rejoined she, 'and I
+will not yield up my part to thee; for it was I directed thee
+to it.' When he heard this, covetise prompted him to kill her;
+so he killed her and threw her body into the empty hole; but
+the day overtook him and hindered him from covering it up; so
+he took the treasure and went away.
+
+Presently, the miller awoke and missing his wife, went into the
+mill, where he fastened the ass to the beam and shouted to it.
+It went on a little, then stopped; whereupon he beat it
+grievously; but the more he beat it, the more it drew back; for
+it was affrighted at the dead woman and could not go on. So he
+took out a knife and goaded it again and again, but still it
+would not budge. Then he was wroth with it, knowing not the
+cause of its obstinacy, and drove the knife into its flanks,
+and it fell down dead. When the sun rose, he saw his wife lying
+dead, in the place of the treasure, and great was his rage and
+sore his chagrin for the loss of the treasure and the death of
+his wife and his ass. All this came of his letting his wife
+into his secret and not keeping it to himself.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE SIMPLETON AND THE SHARPER.
+
+
+
+A certain simple fellow was once going along, haling his ass
+after him by the halter, when a couple of sharpers saw him and
+one said to his fellow, 'I will take that ass from yonder man.'
+'How wilt thou do that?' asked the other. 'Follow me and I will
+show thee,' replied the first. So he went up to the ass and
+loosing it from the halter, gave the beast to his fellow; then
+clapped the halter on his own head and followed the simpleton,
+till he knew that the other had got clean off with the ass,
+when he stood still. The man pulled at the halter, but the
+thief stirred not; so he turned and seeing the halter on a
+man's neck, said to him, 'Who art thou?' Quoth the sharper, 'I
+am thine ass and my story is a strange one. Know that I have a
+pious old mother and came in to her one day, drunk; and she
+said to me, "O my son, repent to God the Most High of these thy
+transgressions." But I took the cudgel and beat her, whereupon
+she cursed me and God the Most High changed me into an ass and
+caused me fall into thy hands, where I have remained till now.
+However, to-day, my mother called me to mind and her heart
+relented towards me; so she prayed for me, and God restored me
+to my former shape of a man.' 'There is no power and no virtue
+but in God the Most High, the Supreme!' cried the simpleton. 'O
+my brother, I conjure thee by Allah, acquit me of what I have
+done with thee, in the way of riding and so forth.'
+
+Then he let the sharper go and returned home, drunken with
+chagrin and concern. His wife asked him, 'What ails thee and
+where is the ass?' And he answered, 'Thou knowest not what was
+this ass; but I will tell thee.' So he told her the story, and
+she exclaimed, 'Woe worth us for God the Most High! How could
+we have used a man as a beast of burden, all this while?' And
+she gave alms and asked pardon of God. Then the man abode
+awhile at home, idle, till she said to him, 'How long wilt thou
+sit at home, idle? Go to the market and buy us an ass and do
+thy business with it.' Accordingly, he went to the market and
+stopping by the ass-stand, saw his own ass for sale. So he went
+up to it and clapping his mouth to its ear, said to it, 'Out on
+thee, thou good-for-nought! Doubtless thou hast been getting
+drunk again and beating thy mother! But, by Allah, I will never
+buy thee more!' And he left it and went away.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE IMAM ABOU YOUSUF WITH HAROUN ER
+ RESHID AND ZUBEIDEH.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid went up one noon-tide to his couch,
+to lie down, and mounting, found thereon fresh semen; whereat
+he was startled and sore perturbed and troubled. So he called
+the princess Zubeideh and said to her, 'What is that spilt on
+the bed?' She looked at it and replied, 'O Commander of the
+Faithful, it is semen.' 'Tell me truly what this means,' said he;
+'or I will lay violent hands on thee forthright.' 'O Commander of
+the Faithful,' answered she, 'indeed, I know not how it came
+there and I am guiltless of that whereof thou suspectest me.'
+So he sent for the Imam Abou Yousuf and told him the case. The
+Imam raised his eyes to the roof and seeing a crack therein,
+said to the Khalif, 'O Commander of the Faithful, the bat hath
+semen like that of a man, and this is bats' semen.' Then he
+called for a lance and thrust it into the crack, whereupon down
+fell the bat. In this manner the Khalif's suspicions were
+dispelled and Zubeideh's innocence was made manifest; whereat
+she gave vent to her joy and promised Abou Yousuf a liberal
+reward.
+
+Now there were with her magnificent fruits, out of their
+season, and she knew of others in the garden; so she said to
+Abou Yousuf, 'O Imam of the Faith, which wouldst thou rather of
+the two kinds of fruits, those that are here or those that are
+not here?' 'Our code forbids us to pronounce judgment on the
+absent,' answered he. 'When they are present, we will give
+judgment.' So she caused bring the two kinds of fruits before
+him, and he ate of both. Quoth she, 'What is the difference
+between them?' And he answered, 'As often as I think to praise
+one kind, the other puts in its claim.' The Khalif laughed at
+his answer and made him a present. Zubeideh also gave him what
+she had promised him, and he went away, rejoicing. See, then,
+the blessed qualities of this Imam and how at his hands were
+made manifest the truth and the innocence of the lady Zubeideh.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF EL HAKIM AND THE MERCHANT.
+
+
+
+The Khalif El Hakim bi Amrillah was riding out in state one day,
+when he came to a garden, in which he saw a man, surrounded by
+slaves and servants. He asked him for a draught of water, and
+the man gave him to drink, saying, 'Peradventure, the Commander
+of the Faithful will honour me by alighting in this my garden.'
+So the Khalif dismounted and entered the garden with his suite;
+whereupon the man brought out to them a hundred carpets and a
+hundred leather mats and a hundred cushions and set before them
+a hundred dishes of fruits, a hundred saucers of sweetmeats and
+a hundred bowls full of sherbets of sugar; whereat the Khalif
+marvelled and said to his host, 'O man, this thy case is a
+strange one. Didst thou know of our coming and make this
+preparation for us?' 'No, by Allah, O Commander of the Faithful,'
+answered the other, 'I knew not of thy coming and am but a
+merchant of the rest of thy subjects. But I have a hundred
+concubines; so, when the Commander of the Faithful honoured
+me by alighting with me, I sent to each of them, bidding her
+send me the morning-meal here. So they sent me each of her
+furniture and of the excess of her meat and drink: and every
+day each sends me a dish of meat and another of marinades, also
+a plate of fruits and a saucer of sweetmeats and a bowl of
+sherbet. This is my every- day noon-meal, nor have I added
+aught thereto for thee.'
+
+The Khalif prostrated himself in thanksgiving to God the Most
+High and said, 'Praised be God, who hath been so bountiful to
+one of our subjects, that he entertaineth the Khalif and his
+suite, without making ready for them, but of the surplus of his
+day's victual!' Then he sent for all the dirhems in the
+treasury, that had been struck that year,--and they were in
+number three thousand and seven hundred thousand;--nor did he
+mount, till the money came, when he gave it to the merchant,
+saying, 'Use this for the maintenance of thy state; and thy
+desert is more than this.' Then he mounted and rode away.
+
+
+
+
+
+ KING KISRA ANOUSHIRWAN AND THE VILLAGE
+ DAMSEL.
+
+
+
+
+The just King, Kisra Anoushirwan,[FN#113] was hunting one day
+and became separated from his suite, in pursuit of an antelope.
+Presently, he caught sight of a hamlet, near at hand, and being
+sore athirst, made for the door of a house, that stood by the
+wayside, and asked for a draught of water. A damsel came out
+and looked at him; then, going back into the house, pressed the
+juice from a sugar-cane into a tankard and mixed it with water;
+after which she strewed on the top somewhat of perfume, as it
+were dust, and carried it to the King. He took it and seeing in
+it what resembled dust, drank it, little by little, till he
+came to the end. Then said he to her, 'O damsel, the drink is
+good and sweet, but for this dust in it, that troubles it.' 'O
+guest,' answered she, 'I put that in, of intent.' 'And why
+didst thou thus?' asked he; and she replied, 'I saw that thou
+wast exceeding thirsty and feared that thou wouldst swallow the
+whole at one draught and that this would do thee a mischief;
+and so hadst thou done, but for this dust that troubled the
+drink.' The King wondered at her wit and good sense and said to
+her, 'How many sugar-canes didst thou press for this draught?'
+'One,' answered she; whereat the King marvelled and calling for
+the roll of the taxes of the village, saw that its assessment
+was but little and bethought him to increase it, on his return
+to his palace, saying in himself, 'Why is a village so lightly
+taxed, where they get this much juice out of one sugar-cane?'
+
+Then he left the village and pursued his chase. As he came back
+at the end of the day, he passed alone by the same door and
+called again for drink; whereupon the same damsel came out and
+knowing him, went in to fetch him drink. It was some time
+before she returned and the King wondered at this and said to
+her, 'Why hast thou tarried?' Quoth she, 'Because one sugar-
+cane yielded not enough for thy need. So I pressed three; but
+they yielded not so much as did one aforetime.' 'What is the
+cause of that?' asked the King; and she answered, 'The cause of
+it is that the King's mind is changed.' Quoth he, 'How knewst
+thou that?' 'We hear from the wise,' replied she, 'that, when
+the King's mind is changed against a folk, their prosperity
+ceaseth and their good waxeth less.' Anoushirwan laughed and
+put away from his mind that which he had purposed against the
+people of the village. Moreover, he took the damsel to wife
+then and there, being pleased with her much wit and acuteness
+and the excellence of her speech.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE WATER-CARRIER AND THE GOLDSMITH'S
+ WIFE.
+
+
+
+There was once, in the city of Bokhara, a water-carrier, who
+used to carry water to the house of a goldsmith and had done
+thus thirty years. Now the goldsmith had a wife of exceeding
+beauty and elegance and withal renowned for modesty, chastity
+and piety. One day, the water-carrier came, as of wont, and
+poured the water into the cisterns. Now the woman was standing
+in the midst of the court; so he went up to her and taking her
+hand, stroked it and pressed it, then went away and left her.
+When her husband came home from the bazaar, she said to him, 'I
+would have thee tell me what thou hast done in the bazaar,
+today, to anger God the Most High.' Quoth he, 'I have done
+nothing.' 'Nay,' rejoined she, 'but, by Allah, thou hast indeed
+done something to anger God; and except thou tell me the truth,
+I will not abide in thy house, and thou shalt not see me, nor
+will I see thee.' 'I will tell thee the truth,' answered he.
+'As I was sitting in my shop this day, a woman came up to me
+and bade me make her a bracelet. Then she went away and I
+wrought her a bracelet of gold and laid it aside. Presently,
+she returned and I brought her out the bracelet. She put out
+her hand and I clasped the bracelet on her wrist; and I
+wondered at the whiteness of her hand and the beauty of her
+wrist and recalled what the poet says:
+
+Bracelets, upon her wrists, of glittering virgin gold She hath,
+ like fire ablaze on running water cold.
+It is as if the wrists and bracelets thereabout Were water girt
+ with fire, right wondrous to behold.
+
+So I took her hand and pressed it and squeezed it.' 'God is
+Most Great!' exclaimed the woman. 'Why didst thou this ill
+thing? Know that the water-carrier, who has come to our house
+these thirty years, nor sawst thou ever any treason in him,
+took my hand to day and pressed and squeezed it.' Quoth her
+husband, 'O woman, let us crave pardon of God! Verily, I repent
+of what I did, and do thou ask forgiveness of God for me.' 'God
+pardon me and thee,' said she, 'and vouchsafe to make good the
+issue of our affair!'
+
+Next day, the water-carrier came in to the jeweller's wife and
+throwing himself at her feet, grovelled in the dust and
+besought pardon of her, saying, 'O my lady, acquit me of that
+which Satan deluded me to do; for it was he that seduced me and
+led me astray.' 'Go thy ways,' answered she; 'the fault was not
+in thee, but in my husband, for that he did what he did in his
+shop, and God hath retaliated upon him in this world.' And it
+is related that the goldsmith, when his wife told him how the
+water-carrier had used her, said, 'Tit for tat! If I had done
+more, the water-carrier had done more.' And this became a
+current byword among the folk.
+
+So it behoveth a wife to be both outward and inward with her
+husband, contenting herself with little from him, if he cannot
+give her much, and taking pattern by Aaisheh[FN#114] the
+Truthful and Fatimeh[FN#115] the Clean Maid, (may God the Most
+High accept of them), that she may be of the company of the
+righteous.[FN#116]
+
+
+
+
+
+ KHUSRAU AND SHIRIN WITH THE FISHERMAN.
+
+
+
+King Khusrau[FN#117] of Persia loved fish; and one day, as he
+sat in his saloon, he and Shirin[FN#118] his wife, there came a
+fisherman, with a great fish, and presented it to the King, who
+was pleased and ordered the man four thousand dirhems. When he
+was gone, Shirin said to the King, 'Thou hast done ill.'
+'Wherefore?' asked he; and she answered, 'Because if, after
+this, thou give one of thy courtiers a like sum, he will
+disdain it and say, "He hath but given me the like of what he
+gave the fisherman." And if thou give him less, he will say,
+"He makes light of me and gives me less than he gave the
+fisherman."' 'Thou art right,' rejoined Khusrau; 'but the thing
+is done and it ill becomes a king to go back on his gift.'
+Quoth Shirin, 'An thou wilt, I will contrive thee a means to
+get it back from him.' 'How so?' asked he; and she said, 'Call
+back the fisherman and ask him if the fish be male or female.
+If he say, "Male," say thou, "We want a female," and if he say,
+"Female," say, "We want a male."'
+
+So he sent for the fisherman, who was a man of wit and
+discernment, and said to him, 'Is this fish male or female?'
+The fisherman kissed the ground and answered, 'It is of the
+neuter gender, neither male nor female.' The King laughed and
+ordered him other four thousand dirhems. So the fisherman went
+to the treasurer and taking his eight thousand dirhems, put
+them in a bag he had with him. Then, throwing the bag over his
+shoulder, he was going away, when he dropped a dirhem; so he
+laid the bag off his back and stooped down to pick it up. Now
+the King and Shirin were looking on, and the latter said, 'O
+King, didst thou note the meanness and greediness of yon man,
+in that he must needs stoop down, to pick up the one dirhem,
+and could not bring himself to leave it for one of the King's
+servants?' When the King heard this, he was wroth with the
+fisherman and said, 'Thou art right, O Shirin!' So he called
+the man back and said to him, 'Thou low-minded fellow! Thou art
+no man! How couldst thou put the bag off thy shoulder and stoop
+to pick up the one dirhem and grudge to leave it where it
+fell?' The fisherman kissed the earth before him and answered,
+'May God prolong the King's life! Indeed, I did not pick up the
+dirhem, because of its value in my eyes; but because on one of
+its faces is the likeness of the King and on the other his
+name; and I feared lest any should unwittingly set his foot
+upon it, thus dishonouring the name and presentment of the
+King, and I be blamed for the offence.' The King wondered at
+his wit and shrewdness and ordered him yet other four thousand
+dirhems. Moreover, he let cry abroad in his kingdom, saying,
+'It behoveth none to order himself by women's counsel; for
+whoso followeth their advice, loseth, with his one dirhem,
+other two.'
+
+
+
+
+
+ YEHYA BEN KHALID THE BARMECIDE AND THE
+ POOR MAN.
+
+
+
+Yehya ben Khalid the Barmecide was returning home, one day,
+from the Khalif's palace, when he saw a man at the gate of his
+house, who rose at his approach and saluted him, saying, 'O
+Yehya, I am in need of that which is in thy hand, and I make
+God my intermediary with thee.' So Yehya caused set apart a
+place for him in his house and bade his treasurer carry him a
+thousand dirhems every day and that his food should be of the
+choicest of his own meat. The man abode thus a whole month, at
+the end of which time, having received in all thirty thousand
+dirhems, he departed by stealth, fearing lest Yehya should take
+the money from him, because of the greatness of the sum; and
+when they told Yehya of this, he said, 'By Allah, though he had
+tarried with me to the end of his days, yet had I not scanted
+him of my largesse nor cut off from him the bounties of my
+hospitality!' For, indeed, the excellences of the Barmecides
+were past count nor can their virtues be told; especially those
+of Yehya teen Khalid, for he abounded in noble qualities, even
+as saith the poet of him:
+
+I asked munificence, "Art free?" It answered, "No, perdie!
+ Yehya ben Khalid's slave am I; my lord and master he."
+"A boughten slave?" asked I; but, "Nay, so heaven forfend!"
+ quoth it. "From ancestor to ancestor he did inherit me."
+
+
+
+
+
+ MOHAMMED EL AMIN AND JAAFER BEN EL HADI.
+
+
+
+Jaafer ben Mousa el Hadi[FN#119] once had a slave-girl, a lute
+player, called El Bedr el Kebir, than whom there was not in her
+time a fairer of face nor a better-shaped nor a more elegant of
+manners nor a more accomplished in singing and smiting the
+strings; she was indeed perfect in beauty and charm. Mohammed
+el Amin,[FN#120] son of Zubeideh, heard of her and was instant
+with Jaafer to sell her to him; but he replied, 'Thou knowest
+it beseems not one of my rank to sell slave-girls nor traffic
+in concubines; but, were it not that she was reared in my
+house, I would send her to thee, as a gift, nor grudge her to
+thee.'
+
+Some days after this, El Amin went to Jaafer's house, to make
+merry; and the latter set before him that which it behoves to
+set before friends and bade El Bedr sing to him and gladden
+him. So she tuned the lute and sang right ravishingly, whilst El
+Amin fell to drinking and making merry and bade the cupbearers
+ply Jaafer with wine, till he became drunken, when he took the
+damsel and carried her to his own house, but laid not a finger
+on her. On the morrow, he sent to invite Jaafer; and when he
+came, he set wine before him and bade the girl sing to him, from
+behind the curtain. Jaafer knew her voice and was angered at
+this, but, of the nobleness of his nature and the greatness of
+his mind, he dissembled his vexation and let no change appear in
+his demeanour.
+
+When the carousel was at an end, El Amin commanded one of his
+servants to fill the boat, in which Jaafer had come, with
+dirhems and dinars and all manner jewels and jacinths and rich
+clothes and other treasures of price. So he laid therein a
+thousand myriads of money and a thousand fine pearls, each
+worth twenty thousand dirhems; nor did he give over loading the
+barge with all manner of precious things, till the boatmen
+cried out for quarter, saying, 'The boat cannot hold any more;'
+whereupon he bade them carry all this to Jaafer's palace. Such
+are the fashions of the magnanimous, may God have mercy on
+them!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE SONS OF YEHYA BEN KHALID AND SAID BEN
+ SALIM EL BAHILI.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Said ben Salim el Bahili[FN#121]), I was once, in the
+days of Haroun er Reshid, in very narrow case and greatly
+oppressed with debts, that had accumulated upon me and that I
+had no means of discharging. My doors were blocked up with
+creditors and I was without cease importuned for payment by
+claimants, who dunned me in crowds, till I was at my wits'
+end what to do. At last, being sore perplexed and troubled,
+I betook myself to Abdallah ben Malik el Khuzai[FN#122] and
+besought him to aid me with his judgment and of his good
+counsel direct me to the door of relief; and he said, "None can
+quit thee of this thy strait but the Barmecides." Quoth I, "Who
+can brook their pride and put up with their arrogance?" And he
+answered, "Thou must put up with it, for the sake of amending
+thy case." So I left him and went straight to El Fezl and
+Jaafer, sons of Yehya ben Khalid, to whom I related my case.
+"God give thee His aid," answered they, "and enable thee by
+His bounties to dispense with the aid of His creatures and
+vouchsafe thee abundant good and bestow on thee what shall
+suffice thee, without the need of any but Himself; for He can
+what He will and is gracious and provident with His servants."
+
+I went out from them and returned to Abdallah, disappointed and
+perplexed and heavy at heart, and told him what they had said.
+Quoth he, "Thou wouldst do well to abide with us this day, that
+we may see what God the Most High will decree." So I sat with
+him awhile, and lo, up came my servant, who said to me, "O my
+lord, there are at our door many laden mules, and with them a
+man, who says he is the agent of Fezl and Jaafer ben Yehya."
+Quoth Abdallah, "I trust that relief is come to thee: go and
+see what is to do." So I left him and running to my house,
+found at the door a man, who gave me a letter, wherein was
+written the following: "Know that, after thou hadst been with
+us and acquainted us with thy case, we betook ourselves to the
+Khalif and informed him that the case had reduced thee to the
+humiliation of begging; whereupon he ordered thee a million
+dirhems from the Treasury. We represented to him that thou
+wouldst spend this money in paying thy creditors and said,
+'Whence shall he provide for his subsistence?' So he ordered
+thee other three hundred thousand, and we have sent thee, of
+our own money, a million dirhems each, so that thou hast now
+three millions and three hundred thousand dirhems, wherewithal
+to order thine affair and amend thine estate."
+
+See, then, the munificence of these generous men; may God the
+Most High have mercy on them!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE WOMAN'S TRICK AGAINST HER HUSBAND.
+
+
+
+A man brought his wife a fish one Friday and bidding her cook
+it against the end of the congregational prayers, went out to
+his business. Meanwhile, there came in her friend,[FN#123] who
+bade her to a wedding at his house; so she agreed and laying
+the fish in a jar of water, went off with him and was absent a
+whole week, whilst her husband sought her from house to house
+and enquired after her; but none could give him any news of
+her.
+
+On the following Friday, she came home, [and he fell to chiding
+and reproaching her;] but she brought out to him the fish alive
+from the jar and assembled the folk against him. He told them
+his case; but they credited him not and said, 'It cannot be
+that the fish should have remained alive all this while.' So
+they caused adjudge him mad and imprisoned him and laughed at
+him, whereupon he wept sore and recited the following verses:
+
+A hag, that holds high rank, indeed, in lewdness! In her face
+ Are witnesses that testify to filth and wantonness.
+When she's unclean, she bawds; and when she's clean, she plays
+ the whore: So, all her time, she's either bawd or else
+ adulteress.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE DEVOUT WOMAN AND THE TWO WICKED
+ ELDERS.[FN#124]
+
+There was once, of old time, a virtuous woman among the children
+of Israel, who was pious and devout and used every day to go out
+to the place of prayer, first entering a garden, which adjoined
+thereto, and there making the ablution. Now there were in this
+garden two old men, its keepers, who fell in love with her
+and sought her favours; but she refused, whereupon said they,
+'Except thou yield thyself to us, we will bear witness against
+thee of fornication.' Quoth she, 'God will preserve me from your
+wickedness!' Then they opened the garden-gate and cried out, and
+the folk came to them from all sides, saying, 'What ails you?'
+Quoth they, 'We found this damsel in company with a youth, who
+was doing lewdness with her; but he escaped from our hands.'
+
+Now it was the use of the people of those days to expose an
+adulteress to public ignominy for three days and after stone
+her. So they pilloried her three days, whilst the two old men
+came up to her daily and laying their hands on her head, said,
+'Praised be God who hath sent down His vengeance on thee!'
+
+On the fourth day, they carried her away, to stone her; but a
+lad of twelve years old, by name Daniel, followed them to the
+place of execution and said to them, 'Hasten not to stone her,
+till I judge between them.' So they set him a chair and he sat
+down and caused bring the old men before him separately. (Now
+he was the first that separated witnesses.) Then said he to the
+first, 'What sawest thou?' So he repeated to him his story, and
+Daniel said, 'In what part of the garden did this befall?' 'On
+the eastern side,' replied the elder, 'under a pear-tree.' Then
+he called the other old man and asked him the same question;
+and he replied, 'On the western side of the garden, under an
+apple-tree.' Meanwhile the damsel stood by, with her hands and
+eyes uplift to heaven, imploring God for deliverance. Then God
+the Most High sent down His vengeful thunder upon the two old
+men and consumed them and made manifest the innocence of the
+damsel.
+
+This was the first of the miracles of the Prophet Daniel, on
+whom and on the Prophet be blessing and peace!
+
+
+
+
+
+ JAAFER THE BARMECIDE AND THE OLD
+ BEDOUIN.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid went out one day, with Abou Yousuf
+the minion and Jaafer the Barmecide and Abou Nuwas, into the
+desert, where they fell in with an old man, leant upon his ass.
+The Khalif bade Jaafer ask him whence he came; so he said to
+him, 'Whence comest thou?' 'From Bassora,' answered the
+Bedouin. 'And whither goest thou?' asked Jaafer. 'To Baghdad,'
+said the other. 'And what wilt thou do there?' asked Jaafer. 'I
+go to seek medicine for my eye,' replied the old man. Quoth the
+Khalif, 'O Jaafer, make us sport with him.' 'If I jest with
+him,' answered Jaafer, 'I shall hear what I shall not like.'
+But Er Reshid rejoined, 'I charge thee, on my authority, jest
+with him.'
+
+So Jaafer said to the Bedouin, 'If I prescribe thee a remedy
+that shall profit thee, what wilt thou give me in return?'
+Quoth the other, 'God the Most High will requite thee for me
+with better than I can give thee.' 'Harkye, then,' said Jaafer,
+'and I will give thee a prescription, which I have given to
+none but thee.' 'What is that?' asked the Bedouin; and Jaafer
+answered, 'Take three ounces of wind-wafts and the like of
+sunbeams and moonshine and lamp-light; mix them together and
+let them lie in the wind three months. Then bray them three
+months in a mortar without a bottom and laying them in a cleft
+platter, set it in the wind other three months; after which use
+three drachms every night in thy sleep, and (God willing) thou
+shalt be cured.'
+
+When the Bedouin heard this, he stretched himself out on the
+ass's back and letting fly a terrible great crack of wind, said
+to Jaafer, 'Take this, in payment of thy prescription. When I
+have followed it, if God grant me recovery, I will give thee a
+slave-girl, who shall serve thee in thy lifetime a service,
+wherewith God shall cut short thy term; and when thou diest and
+God hurries thy soul to the fire, she shall blacken thy face
+with her ordure, of her mourning for thee, and lament and
+buffet her face, saying, "O frosty-beard, what a ninny thou
+wast!"'[FN#125] The Khalif laughed till he fell backward, and
+ordered the Bedouin three thousand dirhems.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF OMAR BEN KHETTAB AND THE
+ YOUNG BEDOUIN.
+
+
+
+The sheriff[FN#126] Hussein ben Reyyan relates that the Khalif
+Omar ben Khettab was sitting one day, attended by his chief
+counsellors, judging the folk and doing justice between his
+subjects, when there came up to him two handsome young men,
+haling by the collar a third youth, perfectly handsome and
+well dressed, whom they set before him. Omar looked at him and
+bade them loose him; then, calling him near to himself, said
+to them, 'What is your case with him?' 'O Commander of the
+Faithful,' answered they, 'we are two brothers by one mother
+and known as followers of the truth. We had a father, a very
+old man of good counsel, held in honour of the tribes, pure of
+basenesses and renowned for virtues, who reared us tenderly,
+whilst we were little, and loaded us with favours, when we
+grew up; in fine, a man abounding in noble and illustrious
+qualities, worthy of the poet's words:
+
+"Is Abou es Sekr of Sheiban[FN#127]?" they questioned of me;
+ and "No," I answered, "my life upon it! But Sheiban's of
+ him, I trow.
+How many a father hath ris'n in repute by a noble son, As
+ Adnan,[FN#128] by God's Apostle, to fame and glory did
+ grow!"
+
+He went forth this day to his garden, to take his pleasure
+amongst its trees and pluck the ripe fruits, when this young
+man slew him and swerved from the road of righteousness;
+wherefore we demand of thee the retribution of his crime and
+call upon thee to pass judgment upon him, according to the
+commandment of God.'
+
+The Khalif cast a terrible look at the accused youth and said
+to him, 'Thou hearest the complaint of these young men; what
+hast thou to say in reply?' Now he was stout of heart and ready
+of speech, having doffed the wede of faint-heartedness and put
+off the apparel of affright; so he smiled and after paying the
+usual ceremonial compliment to the Khalif, in the most eloquent
+and elegant words, said, 'O Commander of the Faithful, I have
+given ear to their complaint, and they have said sooth in that
+which they avouch, so far as they have set out what befell; and
+the commandment of God is a decreed decree.[FN#129] But I will
+state my case before thee, and thine be it to decide thereon.
+
+Know then, O Commander of the Faithful, that I am a very Arab
+of the Arabs, the noblest of those that are beneath the skies.
+I grew up in the dwellings of the desert, till evil and hostile
+times fell upon my tribe, when I came to the utterward of this
+town, with my children and good and household. As I went along
+one of the paths between the gardens, with my she-camels, high
+in esteem with me and precious to me, and midst them a stallion
+of noble race and goodly shape, a plenteous getter, by whom the
+females bore abundantly and who walked among them, as he were a
+crowned king,--behold, one of the she-camels broke away and
+running to the garden of these young men's father, began to
+crop the branches that showed above the wall. I ran to her, to
+drive her away, when there appeared, at a breach of the wall,
+an old man, whose eyes sparkled with anger, holding a stone in
+his right hand and swaying to and fro, like a lion preparing
+for a spring. He cast the stone at my stallion, and it struck
+him in a vital part and killed him. When I saw the stallion
+drop dead beside me, live coals of anger were kindled in my
+heart; so I took up the stone and throwing it at the old man,
+it was the cause of his end: thus his own wrongful act returned
+against him and the man was slain of that wherewith he slew.
+When the stone struck him, he cried out with a terrible great
+cry, and I hastened from the spot; but these young men hurried
+after me and laying hands on me, carried me before thee.'
+
+Quoth Omar, (may God the Most High accept of him), 'Thou hast
+confessed thy crime and acquittal is impossible; for [the law
+of] retaliation is imperative and there is no time of escape.'
+[FN#130] 'I hear and obey the judgment of the Imam,' answered
+the Bedouin, 'and am content to submit me to the requirement
+of the law of Islam; but I have a young brother, whose old
+father, before his death, appointed to him great store of
+wealth and much gold and committed his affair to me, saying,
+"I give this into thy hand for thy brother; keep it for him
+with thy might." So I took the money and buried it; nor doth
+any know of it but I. Now, if thou adjudge me to die forthright,
+the money will be lost and thou wilt be the cause of its loss;
+wherefore the little one will sue thee for his due on the day
+when God shall judge His creatures. But, if thou wilt grant
+me three days' delay, I will appoint one to undertake the boy's
+affair, in my stead, and return to answer my debt; and I have
+one who will be my surety for this my word.'
+
+The Khalif bowed his head awhile, then raised it and looking
+round upon those present, said, 'Who will be surety to me for
+his return?' The Bedouin looked at the faces of those who were
+in company and pointing to Abou Dherr,[FN#131] said, 'This man
+will answer for me and be my surety.' 'O Abou Dherr,' said Omar,
+'dost thou hear what this youth says and wilt thou be surety
+to me for his return?' 'Yes, O Commander of the Faithful,'
+answered Abou Dherr, 'I will be surety for him three days.'
+So the Khalif accepted his guarantee and let the young man go.
+
+Now, at the appointed time, when the days of grace were nearly
+or quite at end and still the Bedouin came not, the Khalif sat
+in his council, with the Companions[FN#132] surrounding him,
+like the stars about the moon, Abou Dherr and the plaintiffs
+being also present; and the latter said, 'O Abou Dherr, where
+is the defendant and how shall he return, having once escaped?
+But we will not stir hence, till thou bring him to us, that we
+may take our wreak of him.' 'As the All-Wise King liveth,'
+replied Abou Dherr, 'if the days of grace expire and the young
+man return not, I will fulfil my warranty and surrender myself
+to the Imam.' 'By Allah,' rejoined Omar, 'if the young man
+tarry, I will assuredly execute on Abou Dherr that which is
+prescribed by the law of Islam!' Thereupon the eyes of the
+bystanders ran over with tears; those who looked on raised
+groans, and great was the clamour. Then the chiefs of the
+Companions were instant with the plaintiffs to accept the
+bloodwit and win the thanks of the folk, but they refused and
+would nothing but the talion. However, as the folk were swaying
+to and fro and clamorously bemoaning Abou Dherr, up came the
+young Bedouin, with face beaded with sweat and shining like the
+new moon, and standing before the Imam, saluted him right
+fairly and said to him, 'I have given the boy in charge to his
+mother's brothers and have made them acquainted with all that
+pertains to his affairs and let them into the secret of his
+good; after which I braved the heats of midday and am come to
+redeem the promise of a free-born man.'
+
+The folk marvelled at his good faith and loyalty and his
+intrepid offering himself to death; and one said to him, 'How
+noble a youth art thou and how loyal to thy promise and thy
+duty!' 'Are ye not certified,' rejoined he, 'that when death
+presenteth itself none can escape from it? And indeed I have
+kept faith, that it be not said, "Loyalty is gone from among
+men."' 'By Allah, O Commander of the Faithful,' said Abou
+Dherr, 'I became warrant for this young man, without knowing to
+what tribe he belonged, nor had I seen him before that day; but
+when he turned away from all else who were present and singled
+me out, saying, "This man will answer for me and be my surety,"
+I thought ill to refuse him, and humanity forbade to baulk his
+expectation, there being no harm in compliance with his desire,
+that it be not said, "Benevolence is gone from among men."'
+Then said the two young men, 'O Commander of the Faithful, we
+forgive this youth our father's blood,--seeing that [by his
+noble behaviour] he hath changed desolation into cheer,--that
+it be not said, "Humanity is gone from among men."'
+
+The Khalif rejoiced in the acquittance of the young Bedouin and
+his truth and good faith; moreover, he extolled the humanity of
+Abou Dherr, over all his companions, and approved the benevolent
+resolve of the two young men, giving them grateful praise and
+applying to their case the saying of the poet:
+
+He who doth good among the folk shall be repaid again; For
+ works of Good are never lost betwixten God and men.
+
+Then he offered to pay them, from the Treasury, the bloodwit
+for their father; but they refused, saying, 'We forgave him but
+of our desire unto God the Bountiful, the Exalted; and he who
+is thus minded followeth not his benefits with reproach neither
+mischief.'
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF EL MAMOUN AND THE PYRAMIDS OF
+ EGYPT.
+
+
+
+It is told that the Khalif El Mamoun, son of Haroun er Reshid,
+when he entered the [God-]guarded city of Cairo, was minded to
+pull down the Pyramids, that he might take what was therein;
+but, when he went about to do this, he could not avail thereto,
+for all his endeavour. He expended great sums of money in the
+attempt, but only succeeded in opening up a small gallery in
+one of them, wherein he found treasure, to the exact amount of
+the money he had spent in the works, neither more nor less; at
+which he marvelled and taking what he found there, desisted
+from his intent.
+
+Now the Pyramids are three in number, and they are one of the
+wonders of the world; nor is there on the face of the earth
+their like for height and fashion and skilful ordinance; for
+they are builded of immense rocks, and they who built them
+proceeded by piercing one block of stone and setting therein
+upright rods of iron; after which they pierced a second block
+of stone and lowered it upon the first. Then they poured melted
+lead upon the joints and set the blocks in geometrical order,
+till the building was complete. The height of each pyramid was
+a hundred cubits, of the measure of the time, and it was four-
+square, each side three hundred cubits long, at the bottom, and
+sloping upward thence to a point. The ancients say that, in the
+western Pyramid, are thirty chambers of vari-coloured granite,
+full of precious stones and treasures galore and rare images
+and utensils and costly arms, which latter are anointed with
+magical unguents, so that they may not rust till the day of
+Resurrection. Therein, also, are vessels of glass, that will
+bend and not break, containing various kinds of compound drugs
+and medicinal waters. In the second Pyramid are the records of
+the priests, written on tablets of granite,--to each priest his
+tablet, on which are set out the wonders of his craft and his
+achievements; and on the walls are figures like idols, working
+with their hands at all manner crafts and seated on thrones. To
+each pyramid there is a guardian, that keeps watch over it and
+guards it, to all eternity, against the ravages of time and the
+vicissitudes of events; and indeed the marvels of these
+pyramids astound all who have eyes and wit. Many are the poems
+that describe them, thou shalt profit no great matter thereby,
+and among the rest, quoth one of them:
+
+The high resolves of kings, if they would have them to abide In
+ memory, after them, are in the tongues of monuments.
+Dost thou not see the Pyramids? They, of a truth, endure And
+ change not for the shifts of time or chances of events.
+
+And again:
+
+Consider but the Pyramids and lend an ear to all They tell of
+ bygone times and that which did of yore befall.
+Could they but speak, assuredly they would to us relate What
+ time and fate have done with first and last and great and
+ small.
+
+And again:
+
+I prithee, tell me, friend of mine, stands there beneath the
+ sky A building with the Pyramids of Egypt that can vie
+In skilful ordinance? Behold, Time's self's afraid of them,
+ Though of all else upon the earth 'tis dreaded, low and
+ high.
+My sight no longer rests upon their wondrous ordinance, Yet are
+ they present evermore unto my spirit's eye.
+
+And again:
+
+Where's he the Pyramids who built? What was his tribe, His time
+ and what the place where he was stricken dead?
+The monuments survive their lords awhile; then death O'ertaketh
+ them and they fall prostrate in their stead.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE THIEF TURNED MERCHANT AND THE OTHER
+ THIEF.
+
+
+
+There was once a thief who repented to God the Most High and
+making good his repentance, opened himself a shop for the sale
+of stuffs, where he continued to trade awhile. One day, he
+locked his shop and went home; and in the night there came to
+the bazaar a cunning thief, disguised in the habit of the
+merchant, and pulling out keys from his sleeve, said to the
+watchman of the market, 'Light me this candle.' So the watchman
+took the candle and went to get a light, whilst the thief
+opened the shop and lit another candle he had with him. When
+the watchman came back, he found him seated in the shop,
+looking over the account-books and reckoning with his fingers;
+nor did he leave to do thus till point of day, when he said to
+the man, 'Fetch me a camel-driver and his camel, to carry some
+goods for me.' So the man fetched him a camel, and the thief
+took four bales of stuffs and gave them to the camel-driver,
+who loaded them on his beast. Then he gave the watchman two
+dirhems and went away after the camel-driver, the watchman the
+while believing him to be the owner of the shop.
+
+Next morning, the merchant came and the watchman greeted
+him with blessings, because of the two dirhems, much to the
+surprise of the former, who knew not what he meant. When he
+opened his shop, he saw the droppings of the wax and the
+account-book lying on the floor, and looking round, found
+four bales of stuffs missing. So he asked the watchman what
+had happened and he told him what had passed in the night,
+whereupon the merchant bade him fetch the camel-driver and said
+to the latter, 'Whither didst thou carry the stuffs?' 'To such
+a wharf,' answered the driver; 'and I stowed them on board such
+a vessel.' 'Come with me thither,' said the merchant. So the
+camel-driver carried him to the wharf and showed him the barque
+and her owner. Quoth the merchant to the latter, 'Whither didst
+thou carry the merchant and the stuff?' 'To such a place,'
+answered the master, 'where he fetched a camel-driver and
+setting the bales on the camel, went I know not whither.'
+'Fetch me the camel-driver,' said the merchant; so he fetched
+him and the merchant said to him, 'Whither didst thou carry the
+bales of stuffs from the ship?' 'To such a khan,' answered he.
+'Come thither with me and show it to me,' said the merchant.
+
+So the camel-driver went with him to a khan at a distance from
+the shore, where he had set down the stuffs, and showed him the
+mock merchant's magazine, which he opened and found therein his
+four bales untouched and unopened. The thief had laid his
+mantle over them; so the merchant took the bales and the cloak
+and delivered them to the camel-driver, who laid them on his
+camel; after which the merchant locked the magazine and went
+away with the camel-driver. On the way, he met the thief, who
+followed him, till he had shipped the bales, when he said to
+him, 'O my brother (God have thee in His keeping!), thou hast
+recovered thy goods, and nought of them is lost; so give me
+back my cloak.' The merchant laughed and giving him back his
+cloak, let him go unhindered.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ MESROUR THE EUNUCH AND IBN EL CARIBI
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid was very restless one night; so he
+said to his Vizier Jaafer, 'I am sleepless tonight and my heart
+is oppressed and I know not what to do.' Now his henchman
+Mesrour was standing before him, and he laughed. Quoth the
+Khalif, 'Dost thou laugh in derision of me or art thou mad?'
+'Neither, by Allah, O Commander of the Faithful,' answered
+Mesrour, 'by thy kinship to the Prince of Apostles, I did it
+not of my free-will; but I went out yesterday to walk and
+coming to the bank of the Tigris, saw there the folk collected
+about a man named Ibn el Caribi, who was making them laugh; and
+but now I recalled what he said, and laughter got the better of
+me; and I crave pardon of thee, O Commander of the Faithful!'
+'Bring him to me forthright,' said the Khalif. So Mesrour
+repaired in all haste to Ibn el Caribi and said to him, 'The
+Commander of the Faithful calls for thee.' 'I hear and obey,'
+answered the droll. 'But on condition,' added Mesrour, 'that,
+if he give thee aught, thou shalt have a fourth and the rest
+shall be mine.' 'Nay,' replied the other, 'thou shalt have half
+and I half.' 'Not so,' insisted Mesrour; 'I will have three-
+quarters.' 'Thou shalt have two-thirds, then,' rejoined Ibn el
+Caribi; 'and I the other third.' To this Mesrour agreed, after
+much haggling, and they returned to the palace together.
+
+When Ibn el Caribi came into the Khalif's presence, he saluted
+him, as became his rank, and stood before him; whereupon said
+Er Reshid to him, 'If thou do not make me laugh, I will give
+thee three blows with this bag.' Quoth Ibn el Caribi in
+himself, 'Three strokes with that bag were a small matter,
+seeing that beating with whips irketh me not;' for he thought
+the bag was empty. Then he clapped into a discourse, such as
+would make a stone laugh, and gave vent to all manner of
+drolleries; but the Khalif laughed not neither smiled, whereat
+Ibn el Caribi marvelled and was chagrined and affrighted. Then
+said the Khalif, 'Now hast thou earned the beating,' and gave
+him a blow with the bag, in which were four pebbles, each two
+pounds in weight. The blow fell on his neck and he gave a great
+cry, then calling to mind his compact with Mesrour, said,
+'Pardon, O Commander of the Faithful! Hear two words from me.'
+'Say on,' replied the Khalif. Quoth Ibn el Caribi, 'Mesrour
+made it a condition with me that, whatsoever might come to me
+of the bounties of the Commander of the Faithful, one-third
+thereof should be mine and the rest his; nor did he agree to
+leave me so much as one-third save after much haggling. Now
+thou hast bestowed on me nothing but beating; I have had my
+share and here stands he, ready to receive his; so give him the
+two other blows.'
+
+When the Khalif heard this, he laughed till he fell backward;
+then calling Mesrour, he gave him a blow, whereat he cried out
+and said, 'O Commander of the Faithful, one-third sufficeth me:
+give him the two-thirds.' The Khalif laughed at them and
+ordered them a thousand diners each, and they went away,
+rejoicing.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE DEVOUT PRINCE.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid had a son, who, from the time he
+attained the age of sixteen, renounced the world and walked in
+the way of ascetics and devotees. He was wont to go out to the
+tombs and say, 'Behold, ye that lie here once possessed the
+world, but that was no deliverer for you [from death], and now
+are ye come to your graves! Would God I knew what ye say and
+what is said to you!' And he wept, as one weeps that is
+troubled and fearful, and repeated the words of the poet:
+
+Whene'er the funerals pass, my heart with fear is torn, And the
+ wailing of the mourners maketh me to mourn.
+
+One day, as he sat among the tombs, according to his wont, his
+father passed by, in all his state, surrounded by his viziers
+and grandees and the officers of his household, who saw the
+Khalif's son, with a gown of woollen stuff on his body and a
+cowl of the same on his head, and said to one another, 'This
+youth dishonours the Commander of the Faithful among Kings:
+but, if he reproved him, he would leave his present way of
+life.' The Khalif heard what they said; so he bespoke his son
+of this, saying, 'O my son, thou puttest me to shame by thy
+present way of life.' The young man looked at him and made no
+reply: then he beckoned to a bird, that was perched on the
+battlements of the palace, and said to it, 'O bird, I conjure
+thee, by Him who created thee, alight upon my hand.' And
+straightway it flew down and perched on his hand. Quoth he,
+'Return to thy place;' and it did so. Then he said, 'Alight on
+the hand of the Commander of the Faithful;' but it refused, and
+he said to his father, 'It is thou that puttest me to shame,
+amongst the friends of God, by thy love of the world; and now I
+am resolved to depart from thee, never to return to thee, save
+in the world to come.' Then he went down to Bassora, where he
+fell to working with those that wrought in mud,[FN#133] taking,
+as his day's hire, but a dirhem and a danic.[FN#134] With the
+danic he fed himself and gave alms of the dirhem.
+
+(Quoth Abou Aamir of Bassora), There fell down a wall in my
+house: so I went out to the station of the artisans, to find
+one who should set it up for me, and my eyes fell on a handsome
+youth of a radiant countenance. So I accosted him and said to
+him, "O my friend, dost thou seek work?" "Yes," answered he;
+and I said, "Come with me and build a wall." "On two conditions,"
+replied he. Quoth I, "What are they, O my friend?" "First,"
+said he, "that my hire be a dirhem and a danic, and secondly,
+that, when the Muezzin calls to prayer, thou shalt let me
+go pray with the congregation." "It is well," answered I
+and carried him to my house, where he fell to work, such work
+as I never saw the like of. Presently, I named to him the
+morning meal; but he said, "No;" and I knew that he was
+fasting. When he heard the call to prayer, he said to me, "Thou
+knowest the condition?" "Yes," answered I. So he loosed his
+girdle and applying himself to the ablution, made it after a
+fashion than which I never saw a goodlier; then went to the
+mosque and prayed with the congregation and returned to his
+work. He did the like upon the call to afternoon-prayer, and
+when I saw him fall to work again thereafterward, I said to
+him, "O my friend, the hours of labour are over for to-day; a
+workman's day is but till the time of afternoon-prayer." "Glory
+be to God," answered he, "my service is till the night." And he
+ceased not to work till nightfall, when I gave him two dirhems.
+Quoth he, "What is this?" "By Allah," answered I, "this is
+[but] part of thy wage, because of thy diligence in my service."
+But he threw me back the two pieces, saying, "I will have no
+more than was agreed upon between us." I pressed him to take
+them, but could not prevail upon him; so I gave him the dirhem
+and the danic, and he went away.
+
+Next morning early, I went to the station, but found him not;
+so I enquired for him and was told that he came thither only on
+Saturdays. So, when Saturday came, I betook me to the market
+and finding him there, said to him, "In the name of God, do me
+the favour to come and work for me." ["Willingly,"] said he,
+"upon the conditions thou wottest of." "It is well," answered I
+and carrying him to my house, stood watching him, unseen of
+him, and saw him take a handful of mud and lay it on the wall,
+when, behold, the stones ranged themselves one upon another;
+and I said, "On this wise are the friends of God." He worked
+out his day and did even more than before; and when it was
+night, I gave him his hire, and he took it and went away.
+
+When the third Saturday came round, I went to the standing, but
+found him not; so I enquired for him and was told that he lay
+sick in the hut of such a woman. Now this was an old woman,
+renowned for piety, who had a hut of reeds in the burial-
+ground. So I went thither and found him lying on the naked
+earth, with a brick for a pillow and his face beaming with
+light. I saluted him and he returned my salute; and I sat
+down at his head, weeping over his tenderness of years and
+strangerhood and submission to the will of his Lord. Then said
+I to him, "Hast thou any need?" "Yes," answered he; and I said,
+"What is it?" He replied, "Come hither tomorrow in the forenoon
+and thou wilt find me dead. Wash me and dig my grave and tell
+none thereof: but shroud me in this my gown, after thou hast
+unsewn it and taken out what thou shalt find in the bosom,
+which keep with thee. Then, when thou hast prayed over me and
+laid me in the dust, go to Baghdad and watch for the Khalif
+Haroun er Reshid, till he come forth, when do thou bear him my
+salutation and give him what thou shalt find in the breast of
+my gown." Then he made the profession of the Faith and glorified
+his Lord in the most eloquent of words, reciting the following
+verses:
+
+Carry the trust of him on whom the wished-for death hath come
+ To Er Reshid, and thy reward with thy Creator stand!
+"An exile greets thee," say, "who longed full sorely for thy
+ sight; With long desire he yearned for thee, far in a
+ foreign strand.
+Nor hate nor weariness from thee estranged him, for, indeed, To
+ God Most High he was brought near by kissing thy right
+ hand.
+But, O my father, 'twas his heart, shunning the vain delights
+ Of this thy world, that drove him forth to seek a distant
+ land!"
+
+Then he betook himself to prayer, asking pardon of God and
+blessing the Lord of the Just[FN#135] and repeating verses of
+the Koran; after which he recited the following:
+
+Let not prosperity delude thee, father mine; For fortune wastes
+ and life itself must pass away.
+Whenas thou com'st to know of folk in evil plight, Think thou
+ must answer it upon the Judgment Day;
+And when thou bearest forth the dead unto the tombs, Think that
+ thou, too, must pass upon the self-same way!
+
+Then I left him and went home. On the morrow, I returned, at
+the appointed hour, and found him indeed dead, the mercy of God
+be on him! So I washed him and unsewing his gown, found in the
+bosom a ruby worth thousands of diners and said to myself, "By
+Allah, this youth was indeed abstracted from the things of this
+world!" After I had buried him, I made my way to Baghdad and
+going to the Khalif's palace, waited till he came forth, when I
+accosted him in one of the streets and gave him the ruby, which
+when he saw, he knew and fell down in a swoon. His attendants
+laid hands on me, but he revived and bade them unhand me and
+bring me courteously to the palace. They did his bidding, and
+when he returned, he sent for me and carrying me into his
+closet, said to me, "How doth the owner of this ruby?" Quoth I,
+"He is dead;" and told him what had passed; whereupon he fell
+a-weeping and said, "The son hath profited, but the father is
+disappointed." Then he called out, saying, "Ho, such an one!"
+And behold, a woman came out to him. When she saw me, she would
+have withdrawn; but he said to her, "Come; and heed him not."
+So she entered and saluted, and he threw her the ruby, which
+when she knew, she gave a great shriek and fell down in a
+swoon. As soon as she came to herself, she said, "O Commander
+of the Faithful, what hath God done with my son?" And he said
+to me, "Do thou tell her;" for he could not speak for weeping.
+So I repeated the story to her, and she began to weep and say
+in a failing voice, "How I have longed for thy sight, O
+consolation of my eyes! Would I might have given thee to drink,
+when thou hadst none to tend thee! Would I might have companied
+with thee, whenas thou foundest none to cheer thee!" And she
+poured forth tears and recited the following verses:
+
+I weep for one to whom death came, an exile and in pain: Alone
+ he died, without a friend to whom he might complain.
+Puissant and honoured and conjoined with those that loved him
+ dear, To live alone and seeing none, unfriended, he was
+ fain.
+That which the days conceal shall yet be manifest to us: Not
+ one of us by death, indeed, unsmitten may remain.
+O absent one, the Lord of all decreed thy strangerhood, And
+ thou left'st far behind the love that was betwixt us
+ twain!
+Though death, my son, forbid me hope to see thee in this life,
+ Tomorrow, on the Reckoning-Day, we two shall meet again.
+
+Quoth I, "O Commander of the Faithful, was he indeed thy son?"
+"Yes," answered he; "and indeed, before I succeeded to this
+office, he was wont to visit the learned and company with the
+devout; but, when I became Khalif, he grew estranged from me
+and withdrew himself apart. Then said I to his mother, 'This
+thy son is absorbed in God the Most High, and it may be that
+tribulations shall befall him and he be smitten with stress of
+evil chance; wherefore, do thou give him this ruby, that it may
+be to him a resource in the hour of need.' So she gave it him,
+conjuring him to take it, and he obeyed her. Then he left the
+things of our world to us and removed himself from us; nor did
+he cease to be absent from us, till he went to the presence of
+God (to whom belong might and majesty) with a holy and pure
+mind." Then said he, "Come, show me his grave." So we repaired
+to Bassora and I showed him his son's grave. When he saw it, he
+wept and lamented, till he fell down in a swoon; after which he
+came to himself and asked pardon of God, saying, "We are God's,
+and to Him we return!" and invoked blessings on the dead. Then he
+besought me of companionship; but I said to him, "O Commander of
+the Faithful, verily, in thy son's case is for me the gravest of
+admonitions!" And I recited the following verses:
+
+'Tis I am the stranger! None harbours the wight, Though he lie
+ in his native city by night.
+'Tis I am the exile! Nor children nor wife Nor comrades have I,
+ to take ruth on my plight.
+The mosques are my refuge; I haunt them indeed: My heart from
+ their shelter shall never take flight.
+To the Lord of all creatures, to God be the praise, Whilst yet
+ in the body abideth the spright!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE SCHOOLMASTER WHO FELL IN LOVE BY
+ REPORT.
+
+
+
+(Quoth one of the erudite), I passed once by a [school, in
+which a] schoolmaster, comely of aspect and well dressed, was
+teaching children; so I entered, and he rose and made me sit
+with him. Then I examined him in the Koran and in syntax and
+poetry and lexicography, and found him perfect in all that was
+required of him and said to him, "God strengthen thy purpose!
+Thou art indeed versed in all that is sought of thee." So I
+frequented him awhile, discovering daily some new excellence
+in him, and said to myself, "This is indeed a wonder in a
+schoolmaster; for the understanding are agreed upon the lack of
+wit of those that teach children." Then I separated myself from
+him and sought him out and visited him [only] every few days,
+till, one day, coming to see him as of wont, I found the school
+shut and made enquiry of the neighbours, who said, "Some one is
+dead in his house." So I said to myself, "It behoves me to pay
+him a visit of condolence," and going to his house, knocked at
+the door. A slave-girl came out to me and said, "What dost thou
+want?" "I want thy master," answered I. Quoth she, "He is
+sitting alone, mourning." "Tell him," rejoined I, "that his
+friend so and so seeks to condole with him." She went in and
+told him; and he said, "Admit him." So she brought me in to
+him, and I found him seated alone and his head bound [with the
+fillets of mourning]. "May God amply requite thee!" said I.
+"This is a road all must perforce travel, and it behoves thee
+to take patience. But who is dead unto thee?" "One who was
+dearest and best beloved of the folk to me," answered he. Quoth
+I, "Perhaps thy father?" He replied, "No;" and I said, "Thy
+mother?" "No," answered he. "Thy brother?" "No." "One of thy
+kindred?" "No." "Then," asked I, "what relation was the dead to
+thee?" "My mistress," answered he. Quoth I to myself, "This is
+the first sign of his lack of wit." Then I said to him, "There
+are others than she and fairer;" and he answered, "I never saw
+her, that I might judge whether or no there be others fairer
+than she." Quoth I to myself, "This is another sign" Then I
+said to him, "And how couldst thou fall in love with one thou
+hast never seen?" Quoth he, "I was sitting one day at the
+window, when there passed by a man, singing the following
+verse:
+
+Umm Amri,[FN#136] God requite thee thy generosity! Give back my
+ heart, prithee, wherever it may be!
+
+When I heard this, I said to myself, 'Except this Umm Amri were
+without equal in the world, the poets had not celebrated her in
+amorous verse.' So I fell in love with her; but, two days
+after, the same man passed, singing the following verse:
+
+The jackass with Umm Amri departed; but, alas, Umm Amri! She
+ returned not again, nor did the ass.
+
+Thereupon I knew that she was dead and mourned for her. This
+was three days ago, and I have been mourning ever since." So I
+left him and went away, having assured myself of the feebleness
+of his wit.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE FOOLISH SCHOOLMASTER
+
+
+
+A man of elegant culture once entered a school and sitting down
+by the master, entered into discourse with him and found him an
+accomplished theologian, poet, grammarian and lexicographer,
+intelligent, well bred and pleasant; whereat he wondered,
+saying in himself, 'It cannot be that a man, who teaches
+children in a school, should have a perfect wit.' When he was
+about to go away, the schoolmaster said to him, 'Thou art my
+guest to-night;' and he consented and accompanied him to his
+house, where he made much of him and set food before him. They
+ate and drank and sat talking, till a third part of the night
+was past, when the host spread his guest a bed and went up to
+his harem. The other lay down and addressed himself to sleep,
+when, behold, there arose a great clamour in the harem. He
+asked what was to do, and they said, 'A terrible thing hath
+befallen the sheikh, and he is at the last gasp.' 'Take me up
+to him,' said he. So they carried him to the schoolmaster, whom
+he found lying insensible, with his blood streaming down. He
+sprinkled water on his face and when he revived, he said to
+him, 'What has betided thee? When thou leftest me, thou west in
+all good cheer and sound of body.' 'O my brother,' answered the
+schoolmaster, 'after I left thee, I sat meditating on the works
+of God the Most High and said to myself, "In every thing God
+hath created for man there is an use; for He (to whom be glory)
+created the hands to seize, the feet to walk, the eyes to see,
+the ears to hear and the yard to do the deed of kind; and so on
+with all the members of the body, except these two cullions;
+there is no use in them." So I took a razor I had by me and cut
+them off; and there befell me what thou seest.' So the guest
+left him and went away, saving, 'He was in the right who said,
+"No schoolmaster who teaches children can have a perfect wit,
+though he know all sciences."
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE IGNORANT MAN WHO SET UP FOR A
+ SCHOOLMASTER.
+
+
+
+There was once, among the hangers-on of the collegiate mosque,
+a man who knew not how to read and write and got his bread by
+gulling the folk. One day, he bethought him to open a school
+and teach children; so he got him tablets and written scrolls
+and hung them up in a [conspicuous] place. Then he enlarged his
+turban and sat down at the door of the school. The people, who
+passed by and saw his turban and the tablets and scrolls,
+thought he must be a very learned doctor; so they brought him
+their children; and he would say to this, 'Write,' and to that,
+'Read;' and thus they taught one another.
+
+One day, as he sat, as of wont, at the door of the school, he
+saw a woman coming up, with a letter in her hand, and said to
+himself, 'This woman doubtless seeks me, that I may read her
+the letter she has in her hand. How shall I do with her seeing
+I cannot read writing?' And he would fain have gone down and
+fled from her; but, before he could do this, she overtook him
+and said to him, 'Whither away?' Quoth he, 'I purpose to pray
+the noontide-prayer and return.' 'Noon is yet distant,' said
+she; 'so read me this letter.' He took the letter and turning
+it upside down, fell to looking at it, now shaking his head and
+anon knitting his eyebrows and showing concern. Now the letter
+came from the woman's husband, who was absent; and when she saw
+the schoolmaster do thus, she said, 'Doubtless my husband is
+dead, and this learned man is ashamed to tell me so.' So she
+said to him, 'O my lord, if he be dead, tell me.' But he shook
+his head and held his peace. Then said she, 'Shall I tear my
+clothes?' 'Tear,' answered he. 'Shall I buffet my face?' asked
+she; and he said, 'Buffet.' So she took the letter from his
+hand and returning home, fell a-weeping, she and her children.
+
+One of her neighbours heard her weeping and asking what ailed
+her, was answered, 'She hath gotten a letter, telling her that
+her husband is dead.' Quoth the man, 'This is a lying saying;
+for I had a letter from him but yesterday, advising me that he
+is in good health and case and will be with her after ten
+days.' So he rose forthright and going in to her, said, 'Where
+is the letter thou hast received?' She brought it to him, and
+he took it and read it; and it ran as follows, after the usual
+salutations, 'I am well and in good health and case and will be
+with thee after ten days. Meanwhile, I send thee a quilt and an
+extinguisher.'[FN#137] So she took the letter and returning
+with it to the schoolmaster, said to him, 'What moved thee to
+deal thus with me?' And she repeated to him what her neighbour
+had told her of her husband's well-being and of his having sent
+her a quilt and an extinguisher. 'Thou art in the right,'
+answered he. 'But excuse me, good woman; for I was, at the
+time, troubled and absent-minded and seeing the extinguisher
+wrapped in the quilt, thought that he was dead and they had
+shrouded him.' The woman, not smoking the cheat, said, 'Thou
+art excused.' and taking the letter, went away.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KING AND THE VIRTUOUS WIFE
+
+
+
+A certain King once went forth in disguise, to look into the
+affairs of his subjects. Presently, he came to a great village
+and being athirst, stopped at the door of a house and asked for
+water. There came out to him a fair woman, with a pitcher of
+water, which she gave him, and he drank. When he looked at her,
+he was ravished with her and required her of love. Now she knew
+him; so she brought him into the house and making him sit down,
+brought out a book and said to him, 'Look in this book, whilst
+I order my affair and return to thee.' So he looked into the
+book, and behold, it treated of the Divine prohibition against
+adultery and of the punishments that God hath prepared for
+those that do it. When he read this, his flesh quaked and he
+repented to God the Most High: then he called the woman and
+giving her the book, went away. Now her husband was absent and
+when he returned, she told him what had passed, whereat he was
+confounded and said in himself, 'I fear lest the King's desire
+have fallen upon her.' And he dared not have to do with her
+after this.
+
+After awhile, the wife told her kinsfolk of her husband's
+conduct, and they complained of him to the King, saying, 'May
+God advance the King! This man hired of us a piece of land, for
+tillage, and tilled it awhile; then left it fallow and tilled
+it not, neither forsook it, that we might let it to one who
+would till it. Indeed, harm is come to the field, and we fear
+its corruption, for that land, if it be not tilled' spoileth.'
+Quoth the King to the man, 'What hinders thee from tilling thy
+land?' 'May God advance the King!' answered he. 'It came to my
+knowledge that a lion entered the field, wherefore I stood in
+awe of him and dared not approach it, seeing that I know I
+cannot cope with the lion, and I stand in fear of him.' The
+King understood the parable and rejoined, saying, 'O fellow,
+the lion trampled not thy land, and it is good for tillage; so
+do thou till it and God prosper thee in it, for the lion hath
+done it no hurt.' Then he bade give the man and his wife a
+handsome present and sent them away.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABDURREHMAN THE MOOR'S STORY OF THE ROC.
+
+
+
+There was once a man of the people of Morocco, called
+Abdurrehman the Moor, and he was known, to boot, as the
+Chinaman, for his long sojourn in Cathay. He had journeyed far
+and wide and traversed many seas and deserts and was wont to
+relate wondrous tales of his travels. He was once cast upon an
+island, where he abode a long while and returning thence to his
+native country, brought with him the quill of the wing-feather
+of a young roe, whilst yet unhatched and in the egg; and this
+quill was big enough to hold a skinful of water, for it is said
+that the length of the young roe's wing, when it comes forth of
+the egg, is a thousand fathoms. The folk marvelled at this
+quill, when they saw it, and Abdurrehman related to them the
+following adventure.
+
+He was on a voyage in the China seas, with a company of
+merchants, when they sighted a great island so they steered
+for it and casting anchor before it, saw that it was large and
+spacious. The ship's people went ashore to get wood and water,
+taking with them skins and ropes and axes, and presently espied
+a great white gleaming dome, a hundred cubits high. So they
+made towards it and drawing near, found that it was a roe's
+egg and fell on it with axes and stones and sticks, till they
+uncovered the young bird and found it as it were a firm-set
+mountain. They went about to pluck out one of its wing-feathers,
+but could not win to do so, save by helping one another, for
+all the feathers were not full grown; after which they took
+what they could carry of the young bird's flesh and cutting
+the quill away from the feather-part, returned to the ship.
+Then they spread the canvas and putting out to sea, sailed
+with a fair wind all that night, till the sun rose, when they
+saw the old roc come flying after them, as he were a vast
+cloud, with a rock in his talons, like a great mountain, bigger
+than the ship. As soon as he came over the vessel, he let fall
+the rock upon it; but the ship, having great way on her,
+forewent the rock, which fell into the sea with a terrible
+crash. So God decreed them safety and delivered them from
+destruction; and they cooked the young bird's flesh and ate it.
+Now there were amongst them old grey bearded men; and when they
+awoke on the morrow, they found that their beards had turned
+black, nor did any who had eaten of the young roc ever grow
+grey. Some held the cause of the return of youth to them and
+the ceasing of hoariness from them to be that they had heated
+the pot with arrow-wood, whilst others would have it that it
+came of eating the young roe's flesh; and this is indeed a
+wonder of wonders.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ADI BEN ZEID AND THE PRINCESS HIND.
+
+
+
+En Numan ben el Mundhir, King of the Arabs [of Irak], had a
+daughter named Hind, who was eleven years old and was the
+loveliest woman of her age and time. She went out one Easter,
+which is a feast-day of the Nazarenes,[FN#138] to the White
+Church, to take the sacrament. Now that day came to El Hireh a
+young man called Adi ben Zeid,[FN#139] with presents from
+Chosroes,[FN#140] to En Numan, and he also went into the White
+Church, to communicate. He was tall and well-favoured, with
+handsome eyes and smooth cheeks, and had with him a company of
+his people. Now there was with Hind a slave-girl named Mariyeh,
+who was enamoured of Adi, but had not been able to win to him.
+So, when she saw him in the church, she said to Hind, 'Look at
+yonder youth. By Allah, he is handsomer than all thou seest!'
+'And who is he?' asked Hind. 'Adi ben Zeid,' answered Mariyeh
+Quoth the princess, 'I fear lest he know me, if I draw near,
+to look on him closelier.' 'How should he know thee,' said
+Mariyeh, 'when he has never seen thee?' So she drew near him
+and found him jesting with his companions; and indeed he
+surpassed them all, not only in his beauty, but in the excellence
+of his speech and the eloquence of his tongue and the richness
+of his apparel. When the princess saw him, she was ravished with
+him, her reason was confounded and her colour changed; and
+Mariyeh, seeing her inclination to him, said to her, 'Speak to
+him.' So she spoke to him and went away.
+
+When he saw her and heard her speech, he was captivated by her
+and his wit was dazed; his colour changed and his heart
+fluttered, so that his companions misdoubted of him, and he
+whispered one of them to follow her and find out who she was.
+The man followed her and returning to his master, informed him
+that she was the princess Hind, daughter of En Numan. So Adi
+left the church, knowing not whither he went, for stress of
+love, and reciting the following verses:
+
+Companions mine, yet one more favour I entreat: Address ye to
+ the ways once more your travelling feet.
+Turn me towards the lands, the lands where Hinda dwells; Then
+ go and her I love with tidings of me greet.
+
+Then he went to his lodging and lay that night, restless nor
+tasting sleep. On the morrow, Mariyeh accosted him, and he
+received her kindly, though before he would not hearken to her,
+and said to her, 'What is thy will?' Quoth she, 'I have a suit
+to thee.' 'Name it,' answered he; 'for, by Allah, thou shalt
+not ask me aught, but I will give it thee!' So she told him
+that she was in love with him, and her suit to him was that he
+would grant her a lover's privacy; and he agreed to do her
+will, on condition that she would serve him with Hind and make
+shift to bring them together. Then he took her into a vintner's
+shop, in one of the by-streets of Hireh, and lay with her;
+after which she returned to Hind and said to her, 'Dost thou
+not long to see Adi?' 'How can this be?' replied the princess.
+'Indeed my longing for him makes me restless, and no repose is
+left me since yesterday, on his account.' Quoth Mariyeh, 'I
+will appoint him to be in such a place, where thou canst look
+on him from the palace.' 'Do what thou wilt,' replied Hind and
+agreed with her upon the place.
+
+So Adi came, and the princess looked out upon him; and when she
+saw him, she was like to fall down from the top of the palace
+and said to Mariyeh, 'Except thou bring him in to me this
+night, I shall die.' So saying, she fell down in a swoon, and
+her serving-women lifted her up and bore her into the palace;
+whilst Mariyeh hastened to En Numan and discovered the whole
+matter to him, saying, 'Verily, she is mad for love of Adi; and
+except thou marry her to him, she will be put to shame and die
+of love for him.' The King bowed his head awhile in thought and
+exclaimed again and again, 'Verily, we are God's and to Him we
+return!' Then said he, 'Out on thee! How shall the marriage be
+brought about, seeing it misliketh me to open the matter to
+him?' 'He is yet more ardently in love and yet more desireful
+of her than she of him,' answered Mariyeh; 'and I will so order
+the matter that he shall be unaware that his case is known to
+thee; but do not betray thyself, O King.'
+
+Them she went to Adi and said to him, 'Make a feast and bid the
+King thereto; and when wine hath gotten the better of him, ask
+of him the hand of his daughter, for he will not refuse thee.'
+Quoth Adi, 'I fear lest this enrage him against me and be the
+cause of enmity between us.'
+
+But she answered, 'I came not to thee, till I had settled the
+whole matter with him.' Then she returned to En Numan and said
+to him, 'Seek of Adi that he entertain thee in his house.'
+'There is no harm in that,' replied the King and after three
+days, besought Adi to give him and his lords the morning-meal
+in his house. The young man consented, and the King went to
+him; and when the wine had taken effect on En Numan, Adi rose
+and sought of him his daughter in marriage. He consented and
+married them and brought her to him after three days; and they
+abode at En Numan's court, in all delight and solace of life,
+three years, at the end of which time the King was wroth with
+Adi and slew him. Hind mourned for him with an exceeding grief
+and built her a convent without the city, whither she retired
+and devoted herself to religious exercises, weeping and
+bemoaning her husband, till she died. And her convent is extant
+to this day without El Hireh.
+
+
+
+
+
+ DIBIL EL KHUZAI WITH THE LADY AND MUSLIM
+ BEN EL WELID.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Dibil el Khuzai[FN#141]), I was sitting one day at the
+gate of El Kerkh,[FN#142] when a lady came up to me, never saw
+I a handsomer or better shaped than she, walking with a swaying
+gait and ravishing, with her flexile grace, all who beheld her.
+When my eyes fell on her, I was captivated by her and my
+entrails trembled and meseemed my heart fled forth of my
+breast; so I accosted her with the following verse:
+
+Unsealed are the springs of tears for mine eyes, heigho! And
+ sealed are the springs of sleep to my lids, for woe.
+
+She turned her head and looking at me, made answer forthright
+with the following:
+
+And surely, an ailing eye to have, for him Whom her looks
+ invite, is a little thing, I trow.
+
+I was astounded at the readiness of her reply and the sweetness
+of her speech and rejoined with this verse:
+
+And doth then the heart of my fair indeed incline To favour him
+ whose tears as a river flow?
+
+She answered me, without hesitation, thus:
+
+If thou desire us of love, betwixt us love Is a loan to be
+ returned, I'd have thee know.
+
+Never entered my ears sweeter than her speech nor ever saw I
+brighter than her face: so I changed the rhyme and measure, to
+try her, in my wonder at her speech, and repeated the following
+verse:
+
+Will destiny e'er gladden us with union and delight And one
+ desireful one at last with other one unite?
+
+She smiled at this, (never saw I fairer than her mouth nor
+sweeter than her lips,) and answered me, without hesitation, as
+follows:
+
+I prithee, what hath destiny to do betwixt us twain? Thou'rt
+ destiny: rejoice us, then, with union and delight.
+
+At this, I sprang up and kissing her hands, said, "I had not
+thought that Fortune would vouchsafe me such an opportunity. Do
+thou follow me, not of command or against thy will, but of thy
+grace and favour to me." Then I went on and she after me.
+
+Now I had not, at that time, a lodging I deemed fit for the
+like of her; Muslim ben El Welid[FN#143] was my fast friend,
+and he had a handsome house. So I made for his abode and
+knocked at the door, whereupon he came out, and I saluted him,
+saying, "It is for a time like this that friends are treasured
+up." "With all my heart," answered he; "enter." So we entered,
+I and the lady, but found money scarce with him. However, he
+gave me a handkerchief, saying, "Carry it to the market and
+sell it and buy meat and what else thou needest." So I took the
+handkerchief and hastening to the market, sold it and bought
+meat and what else we required; but, when I returned, I found
+that Muslim had retired, with the lady, to an underground
+chamber.[FN#144] When he heard me, he came out and said to me,
+"God requite thee the kindness thou hast done me, O Abou
+Ali,[FN#145] and reckon it of thy good deeds on the Day of
+Resurrection!" So saying, he took from me the meat and wine and
+shut the door in my face His words enraged me and I knew not
+what to do; but he stood behind the door, shaking for mirth;
+and when he saw me thus, he said to me, "I conjure thee on my
+life, O Abou Ali, tell me who it was composed this verse?
+
+I lay in the arms of the fair one all night, Whilst my friend
+ slept, clean-limbed, but polluted of spright."
+
+At this, my rage redoubled, and I replied, "He who wrote this
+other verse:
+
+One, I wish him in's girdle a thousand of horns, Exceeding the
+idol Menaf[FN#146] in their height!"
+
+Then I began to revile him and reproach him with the foulness
+of his conduct and his lack of honour; and he was silent. But,
+when I had finished, he smiled and said, "Out on thee, O fool!
+Thou hast entered my house and sold my handkerchief and spent
+my money: so, with whom art thou wroth, O pimp?" Then he left
+me and went away to her, whilst I said, "By Allah, thou art
+right to call me a fool and a pimp!" Then I left his door and
+went away in sore concern, whereof I feel the trace in my heart
+to this day; and I never had my desire of her nor ever heard of
+her more.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ISAAC OF MOSUL AND THE MERCHANT.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Ishac ben Ibrahim el Mausili), One day, being weary of
+assiduous attendance upon the Khalif, I mounted my horse and
+went forth, at break of day, having a mind to ride out and take
+my pleasure in the open country, and I said to my servant, "If
+there come a messenger from the Khalif or another, say that I
+set out at daybreak, upon a pressing business, and that thou
+knowest not whither I am gone." So I rode forth alone and went
+round about the city, till the sun grew hot, when I halted in a
+street, known as El Herem, and stood my horse under the
+spacious jutting porch of one of the houses there, to shelter
+me from the glare of the sun.
+
+I had not stood long, before there came up a black slave,
+leading an ass with jewelled housings, on which sat a damsel,
+clad in the richest of clothes, richness can go no farther; and
+I saw that she was elegantly made, with languorous looks and
+graceful carriage. I asked one of the passers-by who she was,
+and he said, "She is a singer." And I fell in love with her at
+sight, so that I could scarce keep my seat on my horse's back.
+She entered the house at whose gate I stood; and as I cast
+about for a device to gain access to her, there came up two
+comely young men, who sought admission, and the master of the
+house gave them leave to enter. So they alighted and entered,
+and I with them, they supposing that the master of the house
+had invited me; and we sat awhile, till food was brought and we
+ate. Then they set wine before us, and the damsel came out,
+with a lute in her hand. She sang and we drank, till I rose to
+do an occasion. During my absence, the host questioned the two
+others of me, and they replied that they knew me not; whereupon
+quoth he, "This fellow is a spunger, but he is well-bred and
+pleasant; so entreat him fairly." Then I came back and sat down
+in my place, whilst the damsel sang the following verses to a
+pleasing air:
+
+Say thou unto the she-gazelle, who yet is no gazelle, And the
+ wild heifer, languorous-eyed, who yet no heifer is,
+"One, who in dalliance affects the male, no female is, And he
+ who is effeminate of step's no male, ywis."
+
+She sang it excellent well, and the company drank and her song
+pleased them. Then she sang various songs to rare tunes, and
+amongst the rest one of mine, to the following words:
+
+The pleasant girls have gone and left The homesteads empty and
+ bereft
+Of their sweet converse, after cheer, All void and ruined by
+ Time's theft.
+
+She sang this even better than the first; then she sang other
+rare songs, old and new, and amongst them, another of mine,
+with the following words:
+
+To the loved one, who turneth in anger away And vrithdraweth
+ himself far apart from thee, say,
+"The mischief thou wroughtest, thou wroughtest indeed, For all,
+ per-adventure, thou west but in play."
+
+I asked her to repeat the song, that I might correct it for
+her; whereupon one of the men turned to me and said, "Never saw
+I a more brazen-faced parasite than thou. Art thou not content
+with spunging, but thou must meddle, to boot? Verily, in thee
+is the saying made true, 'A parasite and a meddler.'" I hung
+down my head for shame and made him no answer, whilst his
+companion would have restrained him from me; but he would not
+be restrained. Presently, they rose to pray, but I hung behind
+a little and taking the lute, tuned it after a particular
+fashion and stood up to pray with the rest. When we had made an
+end of prayer, the same man fell again to flouting and reviling
+me and persisted in his churlishness, whilst I held my peace.
+Then the damsel took the lute and touching it, knew that it was
+other than as she had left it and said, "Who hath touched my
+lute?" Quoth they, "None of us hath touched it." "Nay, by
+Allah," rejoined she, "some one hath touched it, and he a past
+master in the craft; for he hath ordered the strings and tuned
+them after the fashion of one who is right skilled in the art."
+Quoth I, "It was I tuned it." "Then, God on thee," answered
+she, "take it and play on it!" So I took it and playing a rare
+and difficult measure, that came nigh to deaden the live and
+raise the dead, sang thereto the following verses:
+
+I had a heart, wherewith of yore I lived: 'Twas seared with
+ fire and all consumed indeed.
+Her love, alack I was not vouchsafed to me; Unto the slave
+ 'twas not of Heaven decreed.
+If what I taste be passion's very food, Then all who love upon
+ its like must feed.
+
+When I had finished, there was not one of the company but
+sprang from his place and sat down before me,[FN#147] saying
+"God on thee, O our lord, sing us another song." "With all my
+heart," said I and playing another measure in masterly fashion,
+sang thereto the following:
+
+O thou whose heart, for fortune's blows, is all consumed and
+ sped, Sorrows with whom from every side have taken up
+ their stead,
+Unlawful unto her, my heart who pierces with her shafts, Is
+ that my blood which, breast-bones 'twixt and
+ vitals,[FN#148] she hath shed.
+'Twas plain, upon the parting day, that her resolve, our loves
+ To sunder, unto false suspect must be attributed.
+She pours forth blood she had not shed, if passion had not
+ been. Will none my murderess ensue and wreak me on her
+ head?
+
+When I had made an end of this song, there was not one of them
+but rose to his feet and threw himself to the ground, for
+excess of delight. Then I cast the lute from my hand; but they
+said, "Allah on thee, let us hear another song, so God increase
+thee of His bounty!" "O folk," replied I, "I will sing you
+another song and another and another and will tell you who I
+am. Know that I am Ishac ben Ibrahim el Mausili, and by Allah,
+I bear myself haughtily to the Khalif, when he seeks me. Ye
+have today made me hear [abuse from] an unmannerly fellow such
+as I loathe; and by Allah, I will not speak a word nor sit with
+you, till ye put yonder quarrelsome churl out from among you!"
+Quoth the latter's companion to him, "This is what I feared and
+warned thee against." So they took him by the hand and put him
+out; and I took the lute and sang over again the songs of my
+fashion that the damsel had sung. Then I whispered the host
+that she had taken my heart and that I had no patience to
+endure from her. Quoth he, "Thou shalt have her and all that
+pertains to her of clothes and jewels, on one condition." "What
+is that?" asked I. "It is," answered he, "that thou abide with
+me a month." "It is well," rejoined I; "I will do this." So I
+abode with him a whole month, whilst none knew where I was and
+the Khalif sought me everywhere, but could come by no news of
+me; and at the end of this time, the merchant delivered to me
+the damsel, together with all that pertained to her of things
+of price and an eunuch to attend her.
+
+I brought her to my lodging, feeling as I were lord of the
+whole world, for stress of delight in her; then rode forthright
+to El Mamoun. When he saw me, he said, "Out on thee, O Isaac,
+where hast thou been all this while?" I acquainted him with the
+story and he said, "Bring me the man at once." So I told him
+where he dwelt, and he sent and fetched him and questioned him
+of the case; whereupon he repeated the story and the Khalif
+said to him, "Thou art a man of a generous mind, and it is just
+that thou be upheld in thy generosity." Then he ordered him a
+hundred thousand dirhems and said to me, "O Isaac, bring me the
+damsel." So I brought her to him, and she sang and delighted
+him. He was greatly gladdened by her and ordered her fifty
+thousand dirhems, saying to me, "I appoint her of service every
+Thursday, when she must come and sing to me from behind the
+curtain." So, by Allah, this ride of mine was a source of
+profit both to me and to others.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE THREE UNFORTUNATE LOVERS.
+
+
+
+(Quoth El Utbi[FN#149]), I was sitting one day with a company
+of men of culture, telling stories of the folk, when the talk
+turned upon anecdotes of lovers and each of us said his say
+thereon. Now there was in our company an old man, who remained
+silent, till we had all spoken and had no more to say, when he
+said, "Shall I tell you a thing, the like of which you never
+heard?" "Yes," answered we; and he said, "Know, then, that I
+had a daughter, who loved a youth, but we knew it not. The
+youth in question loved a singing-girl, who, in her turn,
+was enamoured of my daughter. One day, I was present at an
+assembly, where were also the young man and the girl; when the
+latter sang the following verses:
+
+Tears are the token by which, for love, Abjection in lovers
+ still is shown,
+And more by token in one who finds No friend, to whom he may
+ make his moan.
+
+'By Allah, thou hast said well, O my lady!' exclaimed the
+youth. 'Doss thou bid me die?' 'Yes,' answered the girl from
+behind the curtain, 'if thou be in love.' So he laid his head
+on a cushion and closed his eyes; and when the cup came round
+to him, we shook him and found that he was dead. Therewith we
+all flocked to him, and our joy was troubled and we grieved and
+broke up forthright. When I came home, my people taxed me with
+returning before the appointed time, and I told them what had
+befallen the youth, thinking to surprise them. My daughter
+heard my words and rising, went into another chamber, whither I
+followed her and found her lying, with her head on a cushion,
+as I had told of the young man. I shook her and behold, she
+was dead. So we laid her out and set forth next morning with
+her funeral, whilst the friends of the young man carried him
+out, likewise, to bury him. As we were on the way to the
+burial-place, we met a third funeral and enquiring whose it
+was, were told that it was that of the singing-girl, who,
+hearing of my daughter's death, had done even as she and was
+dead. So we buried them all three on one day, and this is the
+rarest story that ever was heard of lovers."
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVERS OF THE BENOU TAI.
+
+
+
+Quoth a man of the Benou Temim (cited by Casim ben Adi), I went
+out one day in search of a stray beast and coming to the waters
+of the Benou Tai, saw two companies of people, near one
+another, and those of each company were disputing among
+themselves. So I watched them and observed, in one of the
+companies, a young man, wasted with sickness, as he were a
+worn-out water-skin. As I looked on him, he repeated the
+following verses:
+
+What ails the fair that she returneth not to me? Is't
+ grudgingness in her or inhumanity?
+I sickened, and my folk to visit me came all. Why 'mongst the
+ visitors wast thou then not to see?
+Hadst thou been sick, I would have hastened to thy side; Nor
+ menaces nor threats had hindered me from thee.
+I miss thee midst the rest, and desolate am I: Thy loss, my
+ heart's abode, is grievous unto me.
+
+A damsel in the other company heard his words and hastened
+towards him. Her people followed her, but she repelled them
+with blows. Then the youth caught sight of her and ran towards
+her, whilst his people ran after him and laid hold of him.
+However, he struggled, till he freed himself from them, and she
+in like manner loosed herself; and they ran to each other and
+meeting between the two parties, embraced and fell down dead.
+
+Thereupon there came out an old man from one of the tents and
+stood over them, weeping sore and exclaiming, "Verily, we are
+God's and to Him we return!" Then, "May God the Most High have
+mercy on you both!" said he. "By Allah, though you were not
+united in your lives, I will at least unite you after death."
+And he bade lay them out. So they washed them and shrouded them
+in one shroud and buried them in one grave, after they had
+prayed over them; nor were there men nor women in the two
+parties but I saw weeping over them and buffeting their faces.
+Then I questioned the old man of them, and he said, "She was my
+daughter and he my brother's son; and love brought them to this
+pass." "May God amend thee!" exclaimed I. "But why didst thou
+not marry them to one another?" Quoth he, "I feared reproach
+and dishonour; and now I am fallen upon both."
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE MAD LOVER.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Aboulabbas el Muberred[FN#150]), I set out one day with
+a company to El Berid on an occasion, and coming to the
+monastery of Heraclius,[FN#151] we alighted in its shade.
+Presently a man came out to us and said, "There are madmen in
+the monastery, and amongst them one who speaketh wisdom; if ye
+saw him, ye would marvel at his speech." So we arose all and
+went into the monastery, where we saw a man seated on a leather
+mat in one of the cells, with bare head and eyes fixed upon the
+wall. We saluted him, and he returned our greeting, without
+looking at us; and one said to us, "Repeat some verses to him;
+for, when he hears verses, he speaks." So I repeated the
+following verses:
+
+O best of all the race whom Eve gave birth unto, Except for
+ thee the world were neither sweet nor bright:
+Thou'rt he, whose face if God unveil to any man, Eternity is
+ his; his head shall ne'er grow white.[FN#152]
+
+When he heard this, he turned towards us and repeated these
+lines:
+
+God indeed knows that I am sore afflicted: I suffer so, I
+ cannot tell the whole.
+I have two souls; one in this place is dwelling; Another
+ country holds my second soul.
+Meseems the absent one is like the present And wearies under
+ the same weight of dole.
+
+Quoth he, "Have I said well or ill?" "Thou hast said well and
+excellent well," replied we. Then he put out his hand and took
+a stone, that was by him; whereupon we fled from him, thinking
+he would throw it at us; but he fell to beating his breast
+therewith violently and said to us, "Fear not, but draw near
+and hear somewhat from me and receive it from me." So we came
+back, and he repeated the following verses:
+
+When they made their beasts of burden kneel as day drew nigh
+ and nigher, Then they mounted and the camels bore away my
+ heart's desire,--
+When my eyes perceived my loved one through the crannied
+ prison-wall, Then I cried, with streaming eyelids and a
+ heart for love a-fire,
+"Turn thou leader of the camels, let me bid my love farewell!"
+ For her absence and estrangement, life and hope in me
+ expire.
+Still I kept my troth and failed not from her love; ah, would I
+ knew What she did with that our troth-plight, if she kept
+ her faith entire!
+
+Then he looked at me and said, "Dost thou know what she did?"
+"Yes," answered I, "she is dead; may God the Most High have
+mercy on her!" At this his face changed and he sprang to his
+feet and cried out, "How knowest thou she is dead?" "Were she
+alive," answered I, "she had not left thee thus." "By Allah,
+thou art right," said he, "and I care not to live after her."
+Then his nerves quivered and he fell on his face; and we ran up
+to him and shook him and found him dead, the mercy of God be on
+him! At this we marvelled and mourned sore for him and laid him
+out and buried him. When I returned to Baghdad and went in to
+the Khalif El Mutawekkil, he saw the trace of tears on my face
+and said to me, "What is this?" So I told him what had passed,
+and it was grievous to him and he said, "What moved thee to
+deal thus with him? By Allah, if I thought thou didst this with
+intent, I would punish thee therefor!" And he mourned for him
+the rest of the day.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE APPLES OF PARADISE.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Abou Bekr Mohammed ibn el Ambari[FN#153]), I once left
+Ambar, on a journey to Ammouriyeh, in the land of the Greeks,
+[FN#154], and alighted midway at the monastery of El Anwar,
+[FN#155], in a village near Ammouriyeh, where there came out
+to me the prior of the monastery and superior of the monks,
+Abdulmesih[FN#156] by name, and brought me into the monastery.
+There I found forty monks, who entertained me that night
+with the most liberal hospitality, and I saw among them such
+abounding piety and diligence in devotion as I never beheld the
+like of in any others. On the morrow, I took leave of them and
+went on to Ammouriyeh, where I did my business and returned to
+Ambar [without again visiting the monastery].
+
+Next year it befell that I made the pilgrimage to Mecca, and as
+I was compassing the Holy House, behold, I saw Abdulmesih the
+monk also making the circuit of the Kaabeh, and with him five
+of his fellows, the monks. When I was certified that it was
+indeed he, I accosted him, saying, "Art thou not Abdulmesih er
+Rahib?"[FN#157] "Nay," answered he; "I am Abdallah er Raghib."
+[FN#158] Therewith I fell to kissing his hoary hairs and weeping;
+then, taking him by the hand, I led him aside into a corner of
+the sanctuary and said to him, "Tell me the manner of thy
+conversion to Islam." "It was a wonder of wonders," answered
+he; "and befell thus. Know that, not long after thy visit to
+us, a company of Muslim devotees came to the village, in which
+is our monastery, and sent a youth to buy them food. He saw,
+in the market, a Christian damsel selling bread, who was of
+the fairest of women, and became then and there so passionately
+enamoured of her, that his senses failed him and he fell on his
+face in a swoon. When he revived, he returned to his companions
+and told them what had happened, saying, 'Go ye about your
+business; I may not go with you.' They blamed him and exhorted
+him, but he paid no heed to them; so they left him and went on,
+whilst he entered the village and seated himself at the door
+of the woman's shop. She asked him what he wanted, and he told
+her that he was in love with her, whereupon she turned from
+him; but he abode in his place three days, without tasting
+food, with his eyes fixed on her face.
+
+When she saw that he departed not from her, she went to her
+people and acquainted them with her case, and they set the boys
+of the village on him, who pelted him with stones and bruised
+his ribs and broke his head; but, for all this, he would not
+budge. Then the people of the village took counsel together to
+kill him; but one of them came to me and told me of his
+condition, and I went out to him and found him lying prostrate
+on the ground. So I wiped the blood from his face and carried
+him to the convent, where I dressed his wounds, and he abode
+with me fourteen days. But, as soon as he could walk, he left
+the convent and returned to the door of the woman's shop, where
+he sat gazing on her as before. When she saw him, she came out
+to him and said, 'By Allah, thou movest me to pity! If thou
+wilt enter my faith, I will marry thee.' 'God forbid,' answered
+he, 'that I should put off the faith of the Unity and enter
+that of Plurality!'[FN#159] Quoth she, 'Come in with me to my
+house and take thy will of me and go thy ways in peace.' 'Not
+so,' answered he, 'I will not barter the pious service of
+twelve years for the lust of a moment.' 'Then depart from me
+forthright,' said she; and he rejoined, 'My heart will not
+suffer me to do that;' whereupon she turned her face from him.
+Presently the boys found him out and began to throw stones
+at him; and he fell on his face, saying, 'Verily, God is my
+keeper, who sent down the Book and who protecteth the righteous!'
+[FN#160] At this juncture, I sallied forth and driving away
+the boys, lifted his head from the ground and heard him say,
+'O my God, unite me with her in Paradise!' Then I took him in
+my arms, to carry him to the monastery; but he died, before
+I could reach it, and I dug him a grave without the village
+and buried him there.
+
+In the middle of that night, the people of the village heard
+the damsel give a great cry, and she in her bed; so they
+flocked to her and questioned her of her case. Quoth she, 'As I
+slept, the Muslim [who ye wot of] came in to me and taking me
+by the hand, carried me to the gate of Paradise; but the keeper
+denied me entrance, saying, "It is forbidden to unbelievers."
+So I embraced Islam at his hands and entering with him, beheld
+therein palaces and trees, such as I cannot describe to you.
+Moreover, he brought me to a pavilion of jewels and said to me,
+"This is my pavilion and thine, nor will I enter it except with
+thee; but, after five nights, thou shalt be with me therein, if
+it be the will of God the Most High." Then, putting his hand to
+a tree that grew at the door of the pavilion, he plucked
+therefrom two apples and gave them to me, saying, "Eat this and
+keep the other, that the monks may see it." So I ate one of
+them and never tasted I aught sweeter than it. Then he took my
+hand and carried me back to my house; and when I awoke, I found
+the taste of the apple in my mouth and the other in my hand.'
+So saying, she brought out the apple, and it shone in the
+darkness of the night, as it were a sparkling star. So they
+carried her to the monastery, where she repeated to us her
+vision and showed us the apple; never saw we its like among all
+the fruits of the world. Then I took a knife and cut the apple
+into as many pieces as we were folk in the company; and never
+knew we aught more delicious than its taste nor sweeter than
+its scent; but we said, 'Haply this was a devil that appeared
+to her, to seduce her from her faith.' Then her people took her
+and went away; but she abstained from eating and drinking till
+the fifth night, when she rose from her bed and going forth the
+village to the grave of the young Muslim, threw herself upon it
+and died.
+
+Her people knew not what was come of her; but, on the morrow,
+there came to the village two Muslim elders, clad in hair-
+cloth, and with them two women in like garb, and said, 'O
+people of the village, with you is a woman of the friends of
+God,[FN#161] who died a Muslim, and we will take charge of her,
+instead of you.' So the damsel's family sought her and found
+her dead on the young Muslim's grave; and they said, 'This our
+sister died in our faith, and we will take charge of her.' 'Not
+so,' rejoined the two old men; 'she died a Muslim and we claim
+her.' And the dispute waxed hot between them, till one of the
+Muslims said, 'Be this the test of her faith. Let the forty
+monks of the monastery come all and [essay to] lift her from
+the grave. If they succeed, then she died a Nazarene; if not,
+one of us shall come and lift her up, and if she yield to him,
+she died a Muslim.' The villagers agreed to this and fetched
+the forty monks, who heartened each other and came to her, to
+lift her, but could not. Then we tied a great rope about her
+middle and tugged at it with our might; but the rope broke in
+sunder, and she stirred nor; and the villagers came and joined
+their endeavour to ours, but could not move her from her place.
+At last, when all our devices failed, we said to one of the two
+old Muslims, 'Come thou and lift her.' So he went up to the
+grave and covering her with his mantle, said, 'In the name of
+God the Compassionate, the Merciful, and of the Faith of the
+Apostle of God, on whom be peace and salvation!' Then he lifted
+her and taking her in his bosom, betook himself with her to a
+cave hard by, where they laid her, and the two women came and
+washed her and shrouded her. Then the two elders bore her to
+the young Muslim's grave and prayed over her and buried her by
+his side and went their way.
+
+Now we were witness of all this; and when we were alone with
+one another, we said, 'Of a verity, the Truth is most worthy to
+be followed;[FN#162] and indeed it hath been publicly manifested
+to us, nor is it possible to have a clearer proof of the truth
+of Islam than that we have seen this day with our eyes.' So I
+and all the monks embraced Islam and on like wise did the people
+of the village; and we sent to the people of Mesopotamia for a
+doctor of the law, to instruct us in the ordinances of Islam and
+the canons of the Faith. They sent us a pious man, who taught us
+the rites of devotion and the tenets of the faith and the
+service of God; and we are now in great good case. To God be
+the praise and the thanks!"
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVES OF ABOU ISA AND CURRET EL AIN.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Amr ben Mesaadeh[FN#163]), Abou Isa, son or Er Reshid
+and brother to El Mamoun, was enamoured of a girl called Curret
+el Ain, belonging to Ali ben Hisham,[FN#164] and she also loved
+him; but he concealed his passion, complaining of it to none
+neither discovering his secret to any, of his pride and
+magnanimity; and he had used his utmost endeavour to buy her of
+her lord, but in vain. At last, when his patience failed him
+and his passion was sore on him and he was at his wits' end
+concerning her affair, he went in, one day of state, to El
+Mamoun, after the folk had retired, and said to him, "O
+Commander of the Faithful, if thou wilt this day make trial of
+thy governors,[FN#165] by visiting them unawares, thou wilt the
+men of worth from those that lack of it and note each one's
+[due] place, after the measure of his faculties." (But he
+purposed, in saying this, to win to sit with Curret el Ain in
+her lord's house.) El Mamoun approved his proposal and bade
+make ready a barge, called the Flyer, in which he embarked,
+with his brother and a party of his chief officers. The first
+house he visited was that of Hemid et Tawil of Tous, whom he
+found seated on a mat and before him singers and players, with
+lutes and hautboys and other instruments of music in their
+hands. El Mamoun sat with him awhile, and presently he set
+before him dishes of nothing but flesh-meat, with no birds
+among them. The Khalif would not taste thereof and Abou Isa
+said to him, "O Commander of the Faithful, we have taken the
+owner of this place unawares, and he knew not of thy coming;
+but now let us go to another place, that is prepared and fitted
+for thee."
+
+So the Khalif arose and betook himself, with his brother and
+his suite, to the abode of Ali ben Hisham, who, on hearing of
+their approach, came out and received them after the goodliest
+fashion, and kissed the earth before El Mamoun. Then he brought
+them into his palace and opened to them a saloon, than which
+never saw eyes a goodlier. Its floors and walls and columns
+were of vari-coloured marble, adorned with Greek paintings: it
+was spread with Indian matting, on which were carpets and
+divans of Bassora make, fitted to the length and breadth of the
+room. The Khalif sat awhile, examining the house and its roof
+and walls, then said, "Give us to eat." So they brought him
+forthwith nigh upon a hundred dishes of fowls, besides other
+birds and brewises and fricassees and marinades. When he had
+eaten, he said, "Give us to drink, O Ali;" and the latter set
+before him raisin-wine, boiled with fruits and spices, in
+vessels of gold and silver and crystal, served by boys like
+moons, clad in garments of Alexandrian cloth of gold and
+bearing on their breasts flagons of crystal, full of rose-water
+mingled with musk. El Mamoun marvelled exceedingly at all this
+and said, "Harkye, Aboulhusn!"[FN#166] Whereupon Ali sprang to
+the carpet [on which the Khalif was seated] and kissing it,
+said, "At thy service, O Commander of the Faithful!" and stood
+before him. Quoth El Mamoun, "Let us hear some pleasant songs."
+"I hear and obey, O Commander of the Faithful," replied Ali and
+said to one of his servants, "Fetch the singing-women."
+
+So he went out and returned in a moment, followed by ten
+eunuchs, bearing ten golden stools, which they set down; and
+these in their turn were followed by ten damsels, as they were
+shining full moons or flowerful gardens, clad in black brocade,
+with crowns of gold on their heads. They sat down on the stools
+and sang various songs. Then El Mamoun looked at one of them
+and captivated by her elegance and the beauty of her aspect,
+said to her, "What is thy name, O damsel?" "My name is Sejahi,
+O Commander of the Faithful," answered she; and he said, "Sing
+to us, O Sejahi!" So she took the lute and playing a lively
+measure, sang the following verses:
+
+Right stealthily, for fearfulness, I fare, the weakling's gait,
+ Who sees unto the watering-place two lion-whelps draw
+ near,
+With cloak, instead of sword, begirt and bosom love-distraught
+ And heart for eyes of enemies and spies fulfilled of fear,
+Till in to one at last I come, a loveling delicate, Like to a
+ desert antelope, that's lost its younglings dear.
+
+"Well done, O damsel!" said the Khalif. "Whose is this song?"
+"The words are by Amr ben Madi Kerib er Zubeidi,"[FN#167]
+answered she, "and the air is Mabid's."[FN#168] Then the Khalif
+and Ali and Abou Isa drank and the damsels went away and were
+succeeded by other ten, clad in flowered silk of Yemen,
+brocaded with gold, who sat down on the chairs and sang various
+songs. The Khalif looked at one of them, who was like a wild
+cow of the desert, and said to her, "What is thy name, O
+damsel?" "My name is Zebiyeh, O Commander of the Faithful,"
+answered she. "Sing to us, O Zebiyeh," said he; so she warbled
+some roulades and sang the following verses:
+
+Houris, noble ladies, that reck not of disquiet, Like antelopes
+ of Mecca, forbidden to be slain;
+Of their soft speech, they're taken for courtezans; but Islam
+ Still makes them from unseemliness and lewdness to
+ refrain.
+
+When she had finished, "Bravo!" cried the Khalif. "Whose is
+this song?" "The words are by Jerir,"[FN#169] answered she,
+"and the air by Suraij." Then the Khalif and his company drank,
+whilst the girls went away and there came yet another ten, as
+they were rubies, bareheaded and clad in red brocade, gold
+inwoven and broidered with pearls and jewels, who sat down on
+the stools and sang various airs. The Khalif looked at one of
+them, who was like the sun of the day, and said to her, "What
+is thy name?" "O Commander of the Faithful," answered she, "my
+name is Fatin." "Sing to us, O Fatin," quoth he. So she played
+a lively measure and sang the following verses:
+
+Vouchsafe me of thy grace; 'tis time to yield consent: Enough
+ have I endured of absence and lament.
+Thou'rt he whose face unites all charms, on whose account My
+ patience have I lost, for very languishment.
+I've spent my life for love of thee; ah, would to God I might
+ receive return for that which I have spent!
+
+"Bravo, O Fatin!" exclaimed the Khalif, when she had finished.
+"Whose song is that?" "The words are by Adi ben Zeid," answered
+she, "and the tune is an old one." Then they drank, whilst the
+damsels retired and were succeeded by other ten, as they were
+sparkling stars, clad in flowered silk, embroidered with gold,
+and girt with jewelled zones. They sat down and sang various
+airs; and the Khalif said to one of them, who was like a
+willow-wand, "What is thy name, O damsel!" "My name is Reshaa,
+O Commander of the Faithful," answered she. "Sing to us, O
+Reshaa," said he. So she played a lively measure and sang the
+following verses:
+
+There's a houri healing passion [with her kiss], Like a sapling
+ or a wild gazelle at gaze.
+Wine I quaff unto the vision of her cheeks[FN#170] And dispute
+ the goblet with her, till she sways.
+Then she lies and sleeps the night long in my arms, And I say,
+ "This is the wish of all my days."
+
+"Well done, O damsel!" said the Khalif. "More." So she rose and
+kissing the ground before him, sang the following verse:
+
+She came out to gaze on the bridal at leisure, In a tunic with
+ ambergris smeared, worth a treasure.
+
+The Khalif was much pleased with this verse, which when Reshaa
+saw, she repeated it several times. Then said El Mamoun, "Bring
+up the barge," being minded to embark and depart: but Ali said
+to him, "O Commander of the Faithful, I have a slave-girl, whom
+I bought for ten thousand dinars; she hath taken my whole
+heart, and I would fain show her to the Commander of the
+Faithful. If she please him and he will accept of her, she is
+his: and if not, let him hear something from her." "Bring her
+to me," said the Khalif; and there came forth a damsel, as she
+were a willow-wand, with heart-seducing eyes and eyebrows like
+a double bow. On her head she wore a crown of red gold, set
+with pearls and jewels, under which was a fillet, wrought in
+letters of chrysolite with the following words:
+
+Behold, a Jinniyeh this is; and Jinn hath she also, I trow, Who
+ teach her men's hearts to transfix, by means of a
+ stringless bow.
+
+She walked, with a gait like that of a fleeing gazelle, till
+she came to a chair, on which she seated herself. The Khalif
+marvelled at her beauty and grace; but when Abou Isa saw her,
+his colour changed and he was in ill case. "O Abou Isa," said
+the Khalif, "what ails thee, to change colour thus?" "O
+Commander of the Faithful," answered he, "it is because of pain
+that seizes me bytimes." "Hast thou known yonder damsel before
+to-day?" asked El Mamoun. "Yes, O Commander of the Faithful,"
+answered he. "Can the moon be hidden?" Then said El Mamoun to
+her, "What is thy name, O damsel?" "My name is Curret el Ain, O
+Commander of the Faithful," replied she; and he said, "Sing to
+us, O Curret el Ain." So she sang the following verses:
+
+The loved ones passed from thee in middle midnight's shade And
+ fared forth in the dawn, with the pilgrims' cavalcade.
+The tents of pride they pitched round their pavilions And
+ veiled themselves about with hangings of brocade.
+
+Quoth the Khalif, "Bravo, O Curret el Ain! Whose song is that?"
+"The words are by Dibil el Khuzai," answered she, "and the air
+by Zourzour es Seghir." Abou Isa looked at her and his tears
+choked him; so that the company marvelled at him. Then she
+turned to El Mamoun and said to him, "O Commander of the
+Faithful, wilt thou give me leave to change the words?" "Sing
+what thou wilt," answered the Khalif. So she played a lively
+measure and sang the following verses:
+
+If thou please me and he please thee in public, look thou hide
+ And keep in secret straiter watch o'er love, lest ill
+ betide.
+And disregard and put away the tales of slanderers; For seldom
+ seeks the sland'rer aught but lovers to divide.
+They say that when a lover's near, he wearies of his love And
+ that by absence passion's cured. 'Tis false; for I have
+ tried
+Both remedies, but am not cured of that which is with me,
+ Withal that nearness easier is than distance to abide.
+Yet nearness of abode, forsooth, may nowise profit thee, An If
+ the grace of him thou lov'st be unto thee denied.
+
+When she finished, Abou Isa said, "O Commander of the Faithful,
+we will be at peace, though we be dishonoured. Dost thou give
+me leave to reply to her?" "Yes," answered the Khalif. "Say
+what thou wilt to her." So he swallowed his tears and sang
+these verses:
+
+I held my peace nor said, "I am in love;" and eke The passion
+ that I felt even from my heart hid I:
+And natheless, if my eyes do manifest my love, It is because
+ they are the shining moon anigh.
+
+Then Curret el Ain took the lute and rejoined with the
+following:
+
+If what thou dost pretend were very truth, Thou woulst not with
+ mere wishing rest content,
+Nor couldst endure to live without a girl, In charms and beauty
+ wonder excellent.
+But there is nought in that thou dost avouch, Save only idle
+ talk and compliment.
+
+When Abou Isa heard this, he fell a-weeping and lamenting and
+discovered the trouble and anguish of his soul. Then he raised
+his eyes to her and sighing, repeated the following:
+
+Under my wede there is a wasted body And in my soul an all-
+ absorbing thought.
+I have a heart, whose suffering is eternal, and eyes with tears
+ like torrents ever fraught.
+When a wise man meets me, he rebukes me, Chiding the love that
+ thou in me hath wrought.
+Lord, I've no strength all this my dole to suffer; Prithee,
+ come Death or quick relief be brought!
+
+When he had ended, Ali ben Hisham sprang up and kissing his
+feet, said, "O my lord, God hath heard thy prayer and answered
+thy supplication, and consenteth to thy taking her with all her
+gear, so the Commander of the Faithful have no mind to her."
+"Had we a mind to her," answered the Khalif, "we would prefer
+Abou Isa before ourselves and help him to his desire." So
+saying, he rose and embarking, went away, whilst Abou Isa
+tarried for Curret al Ain, whom he took and carried to his own
+house, with a breast dilated for gladness. See then the
+generosity of Ali ben Hisham.
+
+
+
+
+
+ EL AMIN BEN ER RESHID AND HIS UNCLE
+ IBRAHIM BEN EL MEHDI.
+
+
+
+El Amin,[FN#171] son of Er Reshid, once entered the house of
+his uncle Ibrahim ben el Mehdi and saw there a slave-girl
+playing upon the lute. She was one of the fairest of women,
+and his heart inclined to her. Ibrahim, seeing how it was with
+him, sent the girl to him, with rich apparel and precious
+jewels. When he saw her, he thought that his uncle had lain
+with her; so he was loath to have to do with her, because of
+this, and sent her back to Ibrahim, accepting the present that
+came with her. Ibrahim learnt the reason of this from one of
+El Amin's servants; so he took a shift of flowered silk and let
+work upon his skirt, in letters of gold, the following lines:
+
+By Him to whom all fronts do bow, of that which is Beneath her
+ skirt, I swear, I'm ignorant outright;
+Nor have I had in aught to meddle with her mouth, Except it
+ were by way of hearing and of sight.
+
+Then he clad her in the shift and giving her a lute sent her
+once more to his nephew. When she came into the latter's
+presence, she kissed the earth before him and tuning the lute,
+sang thereto the following verses:
+
+By returning the gift, thou showest what's hid in thy breast,
+ And thine aversion to me is made manifest.
+As thou bear malice for aught that hath been,--forgive The
+ past, for the Khalifate's sake, and let it rest.
+
+When she had made an end of her song, El Amin looked at her and
+reading that which was wrought upon her skirt, could not
+control himself, but drew near unto her and kissed her and
+appointed her a separate lodging in his palace. Moreover, he
+thanked his uncle for this and bestowed on him the government
+of Er Rei.[FN#172]
+
+
+
+
+
+ EL FETH BEN KHACAN AND THE KHALIF EL
+ MUTAWEKKIL.
+
+
+
+The Khalid El Mutawekkil[FN#173] was once again taking
+medicine, and folk sent him all manner of presents and
+rarities. Amongst others, El Feth ben Khacan[FN#174] sent him
+a virgin slave, high-bosomed, of the fairest of women of her
+time, and with her a vase of crystal, containing red wine, and
+a goblet of red gold, whereon were graven in black the following
+verses:
+
+When th' Imam's made an end of taking medicine And health and
+ strength ensue to him thereon, in fine,
+There's no medicament befits him but to drink, From out this
+ cup, a draught of this decocted wine.
+And break the seal[FN#175] reserved to him, for this, indeed,
+ Right salutary is, hard after medicine.
+
+Now the physician Youhenna[FN#176] was with the Khalif, when
+the damsel entered; and when he read the above verses, he
+smiled and said, 'By Allah, O Commander of the Faithful, Feth
+is better versed than I in the art of medicine: so let not
+the Commander of the Faithful gainsay his prescription.'
+Accordingly, the Khalif followed El Feth's prescription and was
+made whole by the blessing of God.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE MAN'S DISPUTE WITH THE LEARNED
+ WOMAN OF THE RELATIVE EXCELLENCE OF THE
+ MALE AND THE FEMALE.
+
+
+
+(Quoth a certain man of learning) I never saw a woman sharper-
+witted, more intelligent, better furnished in learning, more
+excellent of faculties or more pleasant of ingredients than
+a female preacher of the people of Baghdad, by name Sitt el
+Meshayikh.[FN#177] It chanced that she came to the city of
+Hemah in the year [of the Hegira] 561[FN#178] and there
+delivered salutary exhortations to the folk from the pulpits.
+Now there used to visit her house a number of students of
+divinity and [other] persons of learning and culture, who
+would argue with her upon questions of theology and discuss
+controversial points with her. I went to her one day, with a
+friend of mine, a man of education; and when we had taken our
+seats, she set before us a dish of fruit and seated herself
+behind a curtain. Now she had a [young] brother, a handsome
+youth, who stood by us, to serve us.
+
+When we had eaten, we fell to disputing upon points of divinity,
+and I propounded to her a theological question, bearing upon a
+difference between the Imams.[FN#179] She proceeded to speak in
+answer, whilst I listened; but my friend fell the while to
+looking upon her brother's face and considering his charms,
+without paying any heed to what she said. Now she was watching
+him from behind the curtain; so, when she had made an end of
+her exposition, she turned to him and said, "Meseems thou art
+of those that give men the preference over women!" "Assuredly,"
+answered he. "And why so?" asked she. "Because," replied he,
+"God hath preferred the male over the female; and I love that
+which excels and mislike that which is excelled." She laughed
+and said, "Wilt thou deal fairly with me in argument, if I
+argue the matter with thee?" "I will," answered he. Then said
+she, "What is the evidence of the superiority of the male to
+the female?" "It is of two kinds," answered he, "that which
+is founded on authority and that which is founded on reason.
+The authoritative part derives from the Koran and the Sunneh
+[Traditions of the Prophet]. As for the former, quoth God the
+Most High, 'Men stand above women, in that God hath given
+these the preference over those;'[FN#180] and again, 'If
+there be not two men, then [call] one man and two women;'
+[FN#181] and again, when treating of the law of inheritance,
+'[If there be brothers and sisters,] let each male have the
+like of the portion of two females.'[FN#182] Thus God, blessed
+and exalted be He, hath in these places preferred the male over
+the female and teaches that a woman is as the half of a man,
+for that he is worthier than she. As for the Sunneh, is it not
+reported of the Prophet (whom God bless and preserve) that he
+appointed the blood-wit for a woman to be half that of a man?
+As for the evidence of reason, the male is the agent and the
+female the patient."
+
+"Thou hast said well, O my lord," rejoined she; "but, by Allah,
+thou hast proved my contention with thine own lips and hast
+advanced arguments that tell against thee, and not for thee.
+Thus: God (blessed and exalted be He) preferred the male above
+the female, solely because of the quality of masculinity; and
+in this, there is no difference between us. Now this quality
+[of masculinity] is common to the child, the boy, the youth,
+the adult and the graybeard; nor is there any distinction
+between them in this. Since, then, the superior excellence of
+man enures to him solely by virtue of the quality of masculinity,
+it behoves that thy heart incline to the graybeard and thy soul
+delight in him, equally with the boy, seeing that there is no
+distinction between them, in point of masculinity. But the
+difference between thee and me turns upon the qualities that
+are sought as constituting excellence of intercourse and
+delight of usance; and thou hast adduced no proof of the
+superiority of the male over the female in this."
+
+"O my lady," answered he, "knowest thou not that which is
+proper to the boy of symmetry of shape and rosy cheeks and
+pleasant smile and sweetness of speech? Boys are, in these
+respects, superior to women; and the proof of this is what is
+reported of the Prophet, that he said, 'Stay not thy gaze upon
+the beardless boys, for in them is the similitude[FN#183] of
+the black-eyed girls of Paradise.' Nor indeed is the superiority
+of the boy over the girl hidden to any, and how well saith Abou
+Nuwas:
+
+The least of his virtues it is that thou'rt free From
+ uncleanness with him nor with child can he be.
+
+And what another poet says:
+
+Quoth th' Iman Abou Nuwas, past-master sure was he In every
+ canon of debauch and jolly knavery,
+"O ye that love the downy cheeks of younglings, take your fill
+ Of a delight, in Paradise that will not founden be."
+
+So if one enlarge in praise of a girl and wish to enhance her
+value by the mention of her charms, he likens her to a boy,
+because of the illustrious qualities that belong to the latter,
+even as saith the poet:
+
+Boylike of buttocks, to and fro, in amorous dalliance, She
+ sways as sway the nodding canes that in the north wind
+ dance.
+
+If boys, then, were not superior to girls, why should the
+latter be likened to them? And know also, may God the Most High
+preserve thee, that a boy is easy to be led, adapting himself
+to the wish, pleasant of commerce and manners, inclining to
+assent rather than difference, especially when the down on his
+face creeps lightly and the hair darkens on his lips and the
+vermilion of early youth runs in his cheeks, so that he is like
+the full moon; and how goodly is the saying of Abou Temmam:
+[FN#184]
+
+"The whiskers on his cheek appear;" the slanderers said to me;
+ Quoth I, "That's none of his defect; so give me no more
+ prate."
+What time he came of age to bear buttocks that here and there
+ Pulled him and over beads of pearl his lips' hair darkened
+ late
+And eke the rose a solemn oath, full fast and binding, swore
+ Its ruddy marvels from his cheek should never separate,
+I with my eyelids spoke to him, without the need of speech, And
+ for reply thereto was what his eyebrows answered straight.
+His goodliness still goodlier is than that thou knewst of yore,
+ And the hair guardeth him from those his charms would
+ violate.
+Brighter and sweeter are his charms, now on his cheek the down
+ Shows and the hair upon his lips grows dark and delicate;
+And those who chide me for the love of him, when they take up
+ Their parable of him and me, say evermore, "His mate."
+
+And quoth El Heriri[FN#185] and saith well:
+
+My censors say, "What is this love and doting upon him? Seest
+ not the hair upon his cheeks that sprouts? Where is thy
+ wit?"
+Quoth I, "By Allah, an ye chide at me, I rede you note The
+ exposition of the truth that in his eyes is writ.
+But for the blackness of the down, that veils his chin and
+ cheeks, Upon the brightness of his face no mortal gaze
+ might sit.
+A man who sojourns in a land, wherein no herbage is, Whenas the
+ very Spring arrives, shall he depart from it?"
+
+And quoth another:
+
+"He is consoled," say the censors of me; but, by heaven, they
+ lie! For solace and comfort come hardly to those for
+ longing that sigh.
+When the rose of his cheek stood blooming alone, I was not
+ consoled; So how should I now find solace, that basil has
+ sprung thereby?
+
+And again:
+
+A slender one, whose glances and the down upon his cheeks Each
+ other, in the slaying of folk, abet and aid.
+A sabre of narcissus[FN#186] withal, he sheddeth blood, The
+ hangers[FN#187] of its scabbard of very myrtle made.
+
+And again:
+
+Not with his wine I'm drunken, but with his tresses bright,
+ That make all creatures drunken, yea, all beneath the sky.
+Each of his charms doth envy the others; ay, and each To be the
+ down so silky upon his cheek doth sigh.
+
+These are the excellences of the boy, that women do not
+possess, and these suffice and more to give boys the preference
+in grace and glory over women."
+
+"God give thee health!" cried she. "Verily, thou hast imposed
+the discussion upon thyself; and thou hast spoken and hast not
+stinted and hast adduced these arguments, in support of thy
+contention. But now is the truth made manifest;[FN#188] so
+swerve thou not from the path thereof; and if thou be not
+content with a summary of proof, I will set it out to thee in
+detail. God on thee, where is the boy beside the girl and who
+shall liken the kid to the wild cow? The girl is soft of
+speech, fair of shape, like a stalk of sweet basil, with teeth
+like chamomile-petals and hair like halters. Her cheeks are
+like blood-red anemones and her face like an apple; she hath
+lips like wine and breasts like double pomegranates and a shape
+flexile as a willow-wand. Her body is rounded and well-formed:
+she hath a nose like the point of a shining sword and a
+forehead brilliant with whiteness and joined eyebrows and black
+and melting eyes. If she speak, fresh pearls are scattered from
+her mouth and all hearts are ravished by the daintiness of her
+charms; when she smiles, thou wouldst think the moon shone out
+from between her lips and when she gazes, swords flash from her
+eyes. In her all beauties have their term, and she is the
+centre of attraction of traveller and stay-at-home. She hath
+two red lips softer than cream and sweeter of taste than honey,
+and a bosom, as it were a way between two hills, wherein are a
+pair of breasts like globes of ivory; likewise, a smooth belly,
+soft of flanks as palm-flowers[FN#189] and creased with folds
+and dimples that overlap one another, and luxuriant thighs,
+like columns of pearl, and buttocks, that beat together like
+seas of crystal or mountains of light, and two slender feet and
+hands like ingot of virgin gold. So, O wretched fellow, where
+are mortal men besides the Jinn? Knowest thou not that mighty
+kings and captains and noble princes still submit themselves
+humbly to women and depend on them for delight? Verily, they
+[women] say, 'We rule over [all] necks and captivate [all]
+hearts.' How many a rich man have they not made poor, how many
+a powerful one have they not humbled and how many a noble have
+they not reduced to servitude! Indeed, they seduce the learned
+and bring the pious to shame and make poor the rich and plunge
+the favoured of fortune into misery. Yet, for all this, the
+wise but redouble in love and honour of them, nor do they count
+this oppression or dishonour. How many a man for them hath
+transgressed against his Lord and called down on himself the
+wrath of his father and mother! And all this because of the
+preponderance of the love of them over hearts. Knowest thou
+not, O wretched fellow, that for them are palaces built and
+slave-girls bought, and over them curtains are let down, that
+for them do tears flow and for them armies levied and pleasure-
+houses raised up and riches gathered and heads smitten off? And
+indeed he spoke sooth who said, 'The world is a commentary
+[FN#190] upon women.'
+
+As for thy citation from the Holy Traditions, it is an argument
+against thee and not for thee; for the Prophet (whom God bless
+and preserve) compares boys to the houris of Paradise. Now,
+without doubt, the subject of comparison is more worthy than
+the object compared with it; so, except women be the worthier
+and the goodlier, wherefore should other than they be likened
+to them? As for thy saying that girls are likened to boys, it
+is not so, but the contrary: boys are likened to girls; for
+folk say, 'Yonder boy is like a girl.' As for that thou quotest
+from the poets, the verses in question were the product of an
+unnatural complexion in this respect; and as for the confirmed
+sodomists and debauchees, that sin against religion, whom God
+hath condemned in His Holy Book, wherein He denounceth their
+filthy practices, saying, 'Do ye betake you to males from the
+four corners of the world and forsake that which your Lord hath
+created for you of your wives? Nay, but ye are a froward
+folk.'[FN#191] These it is that liken girls to boys, of their
+exceeding profligacy and frowardness and inclination to follow
+the devil and their own lusts, so that they say, 'She is apt
+for two men;' and these are all wanderers from the path of
+right. Quoth their chief Abou Nuwas:
+
+A slender one, boyish of waist and of wit, For wencher as well
+ as for sodomite fit.
+
+As for what thou sayest of a boy's whiskers and moustaches and
+how they add to his beauty and grace, by Allah, thou wanderest
+from the right path and sayest that which is other than the
+truth; for whiskers change the charms of the comely into
+ugliness; even as saith the poet:
+
+The whiskers, that sprout on the cheek of the wight, His lovers
+ avenge, if he 've done them unright.
+I see not on 's face what is like unto smoke, Except that his
+ curls are as coals to the sight.
+If the most of his paper[FN#192] thus blackened be, where Is
+ there room, deemest thou, for the pen to indite?
+If any prefer him another above, 'Tis ignorance makes them thus
+ turn from the light.
+
+Glory be to God", continued she, "how is it hidden from thee
+that the perfection of delight is in women and that abiding
+pleasure is not to be found but with them? Seeing that God
+(blessed and exalted be He) hath promised His prophets and
+saints black-eyed damsels in Paradise and hath appointed them
+for a recompense of their pious works: and had God the Most
+High known that the supreme delight was in the possession of
+other than women, He had rewarded them therewith and promised
+it to them. And quoth he whom God bless and preserve, 'The
+things in which I most delight of [the things of] your world
+are three: women and perfume and the solace of my eyes in
+prayer.' Verily, God hath appointed boys to serve His prophets
+and saints in Paradise, because Paradise is the abode of
+delight and pleasance, which could not be complete without the
+service of boys; but, as to the use of them for aught but
+service, it is sin and corruption. How well saith the poet:
+
+Men's turning unto boys is very frowardness; Who noble[FN#193]
+women loves is noble[FN#194] none the less.
+What difference 'twixt the lewd and him whose bedfellow A houri
+is, for looks a very sorceress.
+He rises from her couch and she hath given him scent; He
+perfumes all the house therewith and each recess.
+No boy, indeed, is worth to be compared with her: Shall aloes
+evened be with what not filthiness?"
+
+Then said she, "O folk, ye have made me overpass the bounds of
+modesty and the province of free-born women and indulge in idle
+talk and freedoms of speech, that beseem not people of learning.
+But the breasts of the noble are the tombs of secrets, and
+conversations of this kind are in confidence. Moreover, actions
+are according to intents, and I ask pardon of God for myself
+and you and all Muslims, seeing that He is forgiving and
+merciful."
+
+With this she held her peace and thereafter would answer us of
+nought; so we went our way, rejoicing in that we had profited
+by her discourses and sorrowing to part from her.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOU SUWEID AND THE HANDSOME OLD
+ WOMAN.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Abou Suweid), I entered a garden one day, I and a
+company of my friends, to buy somewhat of fruit; and we saw, in
+a corner of the place, an old woman, who was bright of face,
+but her hair was white, and she was combing it with a comb of
+ivory. We stopped before her, but she paid no heed to us
+neither veiled her face So I said to her' "O old woman, wert
+thou to dye thy hair black, thou wouldst be handsomer than a
+girl. What hinders thee from this?" She raised her head and
+looking at me with great eyes, recited the following verses:
+
+That which the years had dyed, I dyed erewhen but, sooth to
+ tell, My dye endureth not, whilst that of Time's
+ perdurable
+Clad in the raiment of my youth and beauty, of old days,
+ Proudly I walked, and back and front, men had with me to
+ mell
+
+"By Allah," cried I, "bravo to thee for an old woman! How
+sincere art thou in thy yearning remembrance of sin and how
+false in thy presence of repentance from for bidden things!"
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE AMIR ALI BEN TAHIR AND THE GIRL MOUNIS.
+
+
+
+There was once shown to the Amir Ali ben Mohammed ben Abdallah
+ben Tahir[FN#195] a slave-girl, who was excellently handsome
+and well-bred and an accomplished poetess; and he asked her of
+her name. 'May God advance the Amir,' replied she, 'my name is
+Mounis.' Now he knew this before; so he bowed his head awhile,
+then raising his eyes to her, recited the following verse:
+
+What dost thou say of one, on whom sickness and pain have
+ wrought, For love and longing after thee, till he is grown
+ distraught?
+
+'God exalt the Amir!' answered she and recited this verse in
+reply:
+
+An if we saw a lover true, on whom the pangs of love Were sore,
+ we would to him vouchsafe the favours that he sought.
+
+Her reply pleased him; so he bought her for threescore and ten
+thousand dirhems and begat on her Obeidallah teen Mohammed,
+after police-magistrate [at Baghdad].
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE WOMAN WHO HAD A BOY AND THE OTHER
+ WHO HAD A MAN TO LOVER.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Abou el Ainaae[FN#196]), There were in our street two
+women, one of whom had to lover a man and the other a beardless
+boy, and they foregathered one night on the roof of a house,
+not knowing that I was within hearing. Quoth one to the other,
+"O my sister, how canst thou brook the harshness of thy lover's
+beard, as it falls on thy breast, when he kisses thee, and his
+moustaches rub thy cheek and lips?" "Silly wench that thou
+art," replied the other, "what adorns the tree but its leaves
+and the cucumber but its bloom? Didst ever see aught uglier
+than a scald-head, with his beard plucked out? Knowest thou not
+that the beard is to men as the side-locks to women; and what
+is the difference between the chin and the cheek? Knowest thou
+not that God (blessed and exalted be He) hath created an angel
+in heaven, who saith, 'Glory be to Him who adorneth men with
+beards and women with tresses?' So, were not the beard even as
+the tresses in comeliness, it had not been coupled with them, O
+silly woman! How shall I underlie a boy, who will be hasty with
+me in emission and forestall me in flaccescence, and leave a
+man, who, when he takes breath, clips close and when he enters,
+goes leisurely, and when he has done, repeats, and when he
+pushes, pushes hard, and as often as he withdraws, returns?"
+The other was edified by her speech and said, "I forswear my
+lover by the Lord of the Kaabeh!"
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE HAUNTED HOUSE IN BAGHDAD.
+
+
+
+There lived once, in the city of Cairo, a merchant by name
+Hassan the Jeweller of Baghdad, who had great store of wealth
+in money and jewels and lands and houses beyond count. God
+had blessed him with a son of perfect beauty and elegance,
+rosy-cheeked, fair of face and well-shaped, whom he named Ali
+of Cairo and taught the Koran and science and elocution and the
+other branches of polite letters, till he became proficient
+in all manner of knowledge and was under his father's hand
+in trade. After awhile, Hassan fell sick and his sickness
+increased upon him, till he made sure of death and calling his
+son to him, said, 'O my son, verily this world passeth away;
+but the next endureth for ever. Every soul must taste of death;
+and now, O my son, my last hour is at hand and I desire to lay
+on thee an injunction, which if thou observe, thou shalt abide
+in peace and prosperity, till thou meet God the Most High; but
+if thou follow it not, there shall befall thee weariness galore
+and thou wilt repent of having transgressed my admonitions.' 'O
+my father,' replied Ali, 'how shall I do other than hearken to
+thee and do after thine enjoinder, seeing that I am bounden by
+the law of God to obey thee and give ear to thy word?' 'O my
+son,' rejoined his father, 'I leave thee lands and houses
+and goods and wealth past count; wert thou each day to spend
+thereof five hundred dinars, thou wouldst miss nought of it.
+But, O my son, look that thou live in the fear of God and
+follow His Chosen One (whom may He bless and preserve) in
+what he is reported to have enjoined and forbidden in his
+traditions. Be thou assiduous in good works and the practice of
+beneficence and in consorting with men of worth and piety and
+learning; and look that thou have a care for the poor and needy
+and shun avarice and meanness and the converse of the wicked or
+those of doubtful character. Look kindly upon thy servants and
+family, and also upon thy wife, for she is of the daughters
+of the notables and is with child by thee; belike God will
+vouchsafe thee virtuous offspring by her.' And he went on to
+exhort him thus, weeping and saying, 'O my son, I beseech God
+the Bountiful, the Lord of the Empyrean, to deliver thee from
+all straits that may betide thee and grant thee His speedy
+relief!'
+
+His son wept sore and said, 'O my father, I am consumed by thy
+words, for they are as the words of one that saith farewell.'
+'Yes, O my son,' replied the merchant, 'I am ware of my
+condition: forget thou not my enjoinder.' Then he fell to
+repeating the professions of the Faith and reciting [verses of
+the Koran], until the appointed hour arrived, when he said,
+'Draw near unto me, O my son.' So Ali drew near and he kissed
+him; then he sighed and his soul departed his body and he went
+to the mercy of God the Most High. Therewith great grief fell
+upon Ali; the noise of lamentation arose in his house and his
+father's friends flocked to him. Then he betook himself to
+preparing him for burial and made him a splendid funeral. They
+bore him to the place of prayer and prayed over him, then to
+the cemetery, where they buried him and recited over him what
+was fitting of the Koran; after which they returned to the
+house and condoled with the dead man's son and went each his
+own way. Moreover, Ali prayed the Friday prayers for his father
+and let make recitations of the whole Koran for the [accustomed]
+space of forty days, during which time he abode in the house
+and went not forth, save to the place of prayer; and every
+Friday he visited his father's tomb.
+
+He ceased not from his prayers and devotions, till, at last,
+his fellows of the sons of the merchants came in to him one
+day and saluting him, said, 'How long wilt thou keep up this
+thy mourning and neglect thy business and the company of
+thy friends? Verily, this is a fashion that will bring thee
+weariness, and thy body will suffer greatly for it.' Now,
+when they came in to him, Iblis the accursed was with them,
+prompting them, and they went on to press him to accompany them
+to the bazaar, whilst Iblis incited him to consent to them,
+till he yielded and went forth the house with them, that the
+will of God (blessed and exalted be He) might be fulfilled.
+'Mount thy mule,' quoth they, 'and ride with us to such a
+garden, that we may divert us there and that thy grief and
+melancholy may depart from thee.' So he mounted and taking his
+slave, went with them to the garden in question, where they
+entered, and one of them went and making ready the morning-
+meal, brought it to them there. So they ate and made merry and
+sat, talking, till the end of the day, when they mounted and
+returned each to his own lodging, where they passed the night.
+On the morrow, they said to Ali, 'Come with us.' 'Whither?'
+asked he, and they answered, 'To such a garden; for it is
+finer than the first and more pleasant.' So he went with them
+to the garden, and one of them, going away, made ready the
+morning-meal and brought it to them, together with strong wine;
+and Ali said, 'What is this?' Quoth they, 'This is what dispels
+grief and unveils gladness.' And they went on to commend it to
+him, till they prevailed upon him and he drank with them. Then
+they sat, drinking and talking, till the end of the day, when
+each returned home.
+
+As for Ali, he was giddy with wine and went in, in this plight,
+to his wife, who said to him, 'What ails thee?' Quoth he, 'We
+were making merry to-day, when one of my companions brought us
+liquor; so my friends drank and I with them, and this giddiness
+came upon me.' 'O my lord,' said she, 'hast thou forgotten thy
+fathers injunction and done that from which he forbade thee, in
+consorting with lewd folk?' 'These are of the sons of the
+merchants,' answered he; 'they are no lewd folk, only lovers of
+mirth and good cheer.' And he continued to lead this life with
+his friends, day after day, going from place to place and
+feasting and drinking with them, till they said to him, 'Our
+turns are ended, and now it is thy turn.' 'Welcome and fair
+welcome!' answered he; so, on the morrow, he made ready all
+that the case called for of meat and drink, double what they
+had provided, and taking cooks and tent-pitchers and coffee-
+makers, repaired with the others to Er Rauzeh[FN#197] and
+the Nilometer, where they abode a whole month, eating and
+drinking and hearing music and making merry. At the end of the
+month, Ali found that he had spent a great sum of money; but
+Satan the Accursed deluded him and said to him, 'Though thou
+shouldst spend every day a like sum, yet would not thy wealth
+fail.' So he took no account of expense and continued this way
+of life three years, whilst his wife remonstrated with him and
+reminded him of his father's injunctions; but he hearkened not
+to her, till he had spent all his ready money, when he fell to
+selling his jewels and spending their price, till they were all
+gone. Then he sold his houses and lands and farms and gardens,
+one after another, till they were all gone and he had nothing
+left but the house in which he lived. So he tore out the marble
+and wood-work and sold it and spent of its price, till he had
+made an end of this also, when he bethought himself and finding
+that he had nothing left to spend, sold the house itself and
+spent the purchase-money.
+
+Presently, the man who had bought the house came to him and
+said, 'Look thyself out a lodging, for I have need of my
+house.' So he bethought himself and considering that he had
+nothing requiring a house, except his wife, who had borne him a
+son and daughter,--for he had not a servant left,--hired a room
+in one of the mean lodging houses and there took up his abode,
+after having lived in honour and luxury, with many servants and
+much wealth, and came to lack of one day's bread. Quoth his
+wife, 'I warned thee of this and exhorted thee to obey thy
+father's injunction, and thou wouldst not hearken to me; but
+there is no power and no virtue save in God the Most High, the
+Supreme! Whence shall the little ones eat? Arise, go round to
+thy friends, the sons of the merchants: it may be they will
+give thee somewhat on which we may live this day.' So he went
+the round of his friends, one by one; but they all hid their
+faces from him and gave him nothing but injurious and revolting
+words; and he returned to his wife and said to her, 'They have
+given me nothing.' Thereupon she went out to beg of her
+neighbours wherewithal to sustain themselves and came to a
+woman, whom she had known in former days. When she came in to
+her and she saw her plight, she rose and receiving her kindly,
+wept and said, 'What hath befallen thee?' So she told her of
+her husband's conduct, and the other said, 'Welcome and fair
+welcome! Whatever thou needest, seek it of me, without price.'
+'May God abundantly requite thee!' answered she. Then her
+friend gave her as much victual as would suffice herself and
+her family a whole month, and she took it and returned to her
+lodging. When her husband saw her, he wept and said, 'Whence
+hadst thou that?' 'I got it of such a woman,' answered she;
+'for, when I told her what had befallen us, she failed me not
+in aught, but said, "Seek of me all thou needest."' 'Since thou
+hast this,' rejoined her husband, 'I will betake myself to a
+place I have in my mind; peradventure God the Most High will
+bring us relief.'
+
+So saying, he took leave of her and kissing the children, went
+out, not knowing whither he should go, and walked on till he
+came to Boulac,[FN#198] where he saw a ship about to sail for
+Damietta. Here he met a man, between whom and his father there
+had been friendship; and he saluted him and said to him,
+'Whither away?' 'To Damietta,' replied Ali; 'I have friends
+there, whom I would fain enquire after and visit and return.'
+The man took him home and entreated him hospitably, then,
+furnishing him with victual [for the voyage] and giving him
+somewhat of money, embarked him on board the vessel bound for
+Damietta. When they reached that place, Ali landed, not knowing
+where to go, but, as he was walking along, a merchant saw him
+and had pity on him. So he carried him to his house, where he
+abode awhile, till he said in himself, 'How long shall this
+sojourning in other folks' houses last?' Then he left the
+merchant's house and went down to the quay, where he saw a ship
+ready to sail for Syria. His host provided him with victual and
+embarked him in the ship; and it set sail and arrived, in due
+course, at the coast of Syria, where he landed and journeyed
+till he entered Damascus. As he walked about the town, a
+benevolent man saw him and took him to his house, where he
+abode awhile, till, one day, going abroad, he saw a caravan
+about to start for Baghdad and bethought himself to journey
+thither with it. So he returned to his host and taking leave of
+him, set out with the caravan.
+
+Now God (blessed and exalted be He) inclined to him the heart
+of one of the merchants, so that he took him with him, and Ali
+ate and drank with him, till they came within one day's journey
+of Baghdad, where a company of highwaymen fell upon the caravan
+and took all they had. But few of the merchants escaped and
+these made each for a [separate] place of refuge. As for Ali,
+he made for Baghdad, where he arrived at sundown, as the
+gatekeepers were about to shut the gates, and said to them
+'Let me in with you.' So they admitted him and asked him
+whence he came and whither he was bound. 'I am a man from
+the city of Cairo,' replied he, 'and have with me mules laden
+with merchandise and slaves and servants. I forewent them, to
+look me out a place wherein to deposit my goods; but as I rode
+along on my mule, there fell upon me a company of highway robbers,
+who took my mule and gear; nor did I escape from them but at
+the last gasp.' The warders entreated him hospitably and bade
+him welcome, saying, 'Abide with us this night, and in the
+morning we will look thee out a place befitting thee.' Then he
+sought in his pocket and finding a dinar remaining of those he
+had gotten of the merchant at Boulac, gave it to one of the
+gatekeepers, saying, 'Take this and change it and bring us
+something to eat.' The man took it and went to the market,
+where he changed it and brought Ali bread and cooked meat. So
+he ate, he and the gatekeepers, and he lay the night with them.
+
+On the morrow, one of the warders carried him to a merchant of
+the town, to whom he told the same story, and he believed him,
+deeming that he was a merchant and had with him loads of
+merchandise. So he took him up into his shop and entreated him
+with honour. Moreover, he sent to his house for a splendid suit
+of his own apparel for him and carried him to the bath. So,
+[quoth Ali], I went with him to the bath, and when we came out,
+he brought me to his house, where he caused set the morning-meal
+before us, and we ate and made merry.
+
+Then said he to one of his slaves, "Harkye, Mesoud, take this
+thy lord and show him the two houses in such a place. Whichever
+pleases him of them, give him the key of it and come back." So
+I went with the slave, till we came to a place where stood
+three houses, side by side, new and shut up. He opened the
+first and the second, and I looked at them; after which he said
+to me, "Of which of them shall I give thee the key?" "To whom
+does yon large house belong?" asked I. "To us," answered he;
+and I said, "Open it, that I may view it." Quoth he, "Thou hast
+no call to it." "Wherefore?" asked I; and he, "Because it is
+haunted, and none lodges there but in the morning he is a dead
+man; nor do we use to open the door, to take out the corpse,
+but mount the roof of one of the other two houses and take it
+up thence. For this reason, my master has abandoned the house
+and says, 'I will never again give it to any one.'" Quoth I,
+"Open it, that I may view it;" and I said in myself, "This is
+what I seek. I will pass the night there and in the morning be
+a dead man and be at peace from this miserable plight of mine."
+So he opened it and I entered and found it a splendid house,
+without its like; and I said to the slave, "I will have none
+other than this house; give me the key." But he answered, "I
+will not give thee this key till I consult my master," and
+going to the latter, said to him, "The Egyptian merchant saith,
+'I will lodge in none but the great house.'"
+
+When the merchant heard this, he rose and coming to Ali, said
+to him, 'O my lord, thou hast no need of this house.' But he
+replied, 'I will lodge in none other than this; for I care
+nothing for this saying.'[FN#199] 'Then,' said the other,
+'write me an acknowledgment that, if aught happen to thee, I am
+not responsible.' 'So be it,' answered Ali; whereupon the
+merchant fetched an assessor from the Cadi's court and taking
+of him the prescribed acknowledgment, delivered him the key,
+which he took and entered the house. The merchant sent him
+bedding by a slave, who spread it for him on the bench behind
+the door and went away. Presently Ali went into the inner court
+and seeing there a well with a bucket, let down the latter and
+drew water, with which he made the ablution and prayed the
+obligatory prayers. Then he sat awhile, till the merchant's
+slave brought him the evening meal from his master's house,
+together with a lamp, a candle and candlestick, a basin and
+ewer and a gugglet; after which he left him and returned home.
+Ali lighted the candle and supped at his ease and prayed the
+evening prayer; after which he said to himself, 'Let us take
+the bed and go upstairs and sleep there, rather than here.' So
+he took the bed and carried it upstairs, where he found a
+splendid saloon, with gilded ceiling and walls and floor of
+variegated marble. He spread his bed there and sitting down,
+began to recite somewhat of the sublime Koran, when suddenly he
+heard one calling to him and saying, 'O Ali, O son of Hassan,
+shall I send thee down the gold?' And he answered, 'Send away.'
+
+Hardly had he spoken, when pieces of gold began to rain down on
+him, like [pebbles from] a mangonel, nor stinted till the
+saloon was full. Then said the voice, 'Set me free, that I may
+go my way; for I have made an end of my service and have
+delivered unto thee that which was committed to me for thee.'
+Quoth Ali, 'I adjure thee by the Most High God to tell me the
+history of this gold.' 'This is a treasure that was enchanted
+to thee of old time,' replied the voice; 'and to every one, who
+entered the house, we used to come and say to him, "O Ali, O
+son of Hassan, shall we send down the gold?" Whereat he would
+be affrighted and cry out, and we would come down to him and
+break his neck and go away. But, when thou camest and we
+accosted thee by thy name and that of thy father, saying,
+"Shall we send thee down the gold?" and thou madest answer,
+saying, "Send away," we knew thee for the owner of it and sent
+it down. Moreover, there is yet another treasure for thee in
+the land of Yemen, whither thou wouldst do well to journey and
+fetch it. And now I would have thee set me free, that I may go
+my way.' 'By Allah,' said Ali, 'I will not set thee free, till
+thou bring me hither the treasure from Yemen!' Quoth the voice,
+'If I bring it thee, wilt thou release me and the servant of
+the other treasure also?' 'Yes,' replied Ali; and the genie
+said, 'Swear to me.' So he swore to him, and he was about to go
+away, when Ali said to him, 'I have one other service to ask of
+thee.' 'What is that?' asked the genie. Quoth Ali, 'I have a
+wife and children at Cairo, in such a place; thou must fetch
+them to me, at their ease and without hurt.' 'I will bring them
+to thee in state,' answered the genie, 'in a litter, with a
+train of slaves and servants, together with the treasure from
+Yemen, if it be the will of God the Most High.' Then he took of
+him leave of absence for three days, at the end of which time
+all this should be with him, and departed.
+
+When it was morning, Ali went round about the saloon, seeking a
+place wherein to lay the gold, and saw in the wall of the dais
+a marble panel, with a knob in it. So he pressed the knob and
+the panel slid back and discovered a door, which he opened and
+entering, found a great closet, full of linen bags. So he took
+out the bags and fell to filling them with gold and replacing
+them in the closet, till he had transported thither the whole
+treasure, whereupon he shut the door and pressing the knob, the
+panel returned to its place. Then he went down and seated
+himself on the bench behind the door. Presently, there came a
+knock at the door; so he opened it and found the merchant's
+slave, who, seeing him, returned in haste to his master with
+the good tidings, saying, 'O my lord, the merchant, who is
+lodged in the haunted house, is alive and well and sits on the
+bench behind the door.' When the merchant heard this, he rose
+joyfully and went to the house, taking breakfast with him; and
+when he saw Ali, he embraced him and kissed him between the
+eyes, saying, 'How hath God dealt with thee?' 'Right well,'
+answered Ali. 'I slept upstairs in the marble saloon.' Quoth
+the merchant, 'Did aught come to thee or didst thou see aught?'
+'No,' replied Ali; 'I recited some little of the Koran and
+slept till morning, when I arose and after making the ablution
+and praying, came down and seated myself on the bench behind
+the door.' 'Praised be God for safety!' exclaimed the merchant,
+then left him and presently sent him slaves and servants, black
+and white and male and female, with furniture. They swept the
+house from top to bottom and furnished it magnificently, after
+which three black slaves and the like number of white and four
+slave-girls abode with him, to serve him, and the rest returned
+to their master's house. When the merchants heard of him, they
+sent him presents of all manner of things of price, even to
+meat and drink and clothes, and took him with them in the
+market, saying, 'When will thy baggage arrive?' And he answered,
+'After three days it will come.'
+
+Accordingly, when the three days had elapsed, the servant of
+the first treasure came to him and said, 'Go forth and meet thy
+harem, together with the treasure I have brought thee from
+Yemen, part of which is by way of costly merchandise; but the
+slaves, black and white, and the horses and camels and mules
+are all of the Jinn. (Now the genie, when he betook himself to
+Cairo, found Ali's wife and children in sore straits for
+nakedness and hunger; so he carried them forth of the town in a
+travelling-litter and clad them in sumptuous raiment of that
+which was in the treasure of Yemen.) When Ali heard this, he
+rose and repairing to the merchants, said to them, 'Come, go
+forth the city with me, to meet the caravan, with my merchandise,
+and honour me with the presence of your harems, to meet my
+harem.' 'We hear and obey,' answered they and sending for
+their harems, went forth all together and alighted in one
+of the gardens without the city. As they sat talking, behold, a
+cloud of dust arose out of the heart of the desert, and they
+came out to see what it was. Presently, it lifted and discovered
+mules and muleteers and tent-pitchers and linkmen, who came on,
+singing and dancing, till they reached the garden, when the
+chief of the muleteers came up to Ali and kissing his hand,
+said to him, 'O my lord, we have been long on the way, for
+we thought to enter some days ago; but we were in fear of
+the highway-robbers, so abode in our station four days, till
+God the Most High rid us of them.'
+
+Then the merchants mounted their mules and rode forward with
+the caravan, wondering at the [number of] mules laden with
+chests, whilst their harems followed them, with Ali's harem,
+marvelling at the richness of the apparel of his wife and
+children and saying to each other, 'Verily, the King of Baghdad
+hath no such raiment, no, nor any other of the kings or
+merchants or notables.' So they entered Baghdad in great state
+and rode on till they came to Ali's house, where they alighted
+and brought the mules and their burdens into the midst of the
+courtyard. Then they unloaded them and laid up the goods in the
+storehouses, whilst the merchants' wives went up with Ali's
+family to the saloon, which they found as it were a luxuriant
+garden, spread with magnificent furniture. They sat in mirth
+and good cheer till noon, when they brought them up the noon
+meal, of all manner meats and sweetmeats of the best; and
+they ate and drank costly sherbets and perfumed themselves
+thereafter with rose-water and scented woods. Then they took
+leave and departed, men and women. When the merchants returned
+home, they all sent presents to Ali, according to their
+conditions; and their wives likewise sent presents to his wife,
+so that there came to them great plenty of slaves, black and
+white and male and female, and store of all manner goods, such
+as grain and sugar and so forth, beyond count. As for the
+landlord of the house, he abode with Ali and quitted him not,
+but said to him, 'Let the slaves and servants take the mules
+and the other cattle into one of my other houses, to rest.'
+Quoth Ali, 'They set out again to-night for such a place.' Then
+he gave them leave to go forth the city, that they might set
+out on their journey at nightfall; whereupon they took leave of
+him forthright and departing the city, flew off through the air
+to their several abodes.
+
+Ali and the merchant sat together till a third of the night
+was past, when the latter returned to his own house and Ali
+went up to his wife and children and greeted them, saying,
+'What hath befallen you all this time?' So she told him what
+they had suffered of hunger and nakedness and toil, and he
+said, 'Praised be God for safety! How did ye come?' 'O my lord,'
+answered she, 'I was asleep, with my children, yesternight,
+when suddenly one raised us from the ground and carried us
+through the air, without doing us any hurt, nor did he give
+over flying with us, till he set us down in a place as it were
+a Bedouin camping-place, where we saw laden mules and a litter
+borne upon two great mules, and round them servants, boys and
+men. So I said to them, "Who are ye and what are these loads
+and where are we?" And they answered, "We are the servants of
+the merchant Ali ibn Hassan of Cairo, who has sent us to fetch
+you to him at Baghdad." Quoth I, "Is it far or near, hence to
+Baghdad?" "Near," answered they; "there lies but the darkness
+of the night between us and the city." Then they mounted us in
+the litter, and on the morrow, we found ourselves with thee,
+without having suffered any hurt. 'Who gave you these clothes?'
+asked he, and she said, 'The chief of the caravan opened one of
+the chests on the mules and taking out the clothes, clad me and
+the children each in a suit; after which he locked the chest
+and gave me the key, saying, "Take care of it, till thou give
+it to thy husband." And here it is, safe.' So saying, she gave
+him the key, and he said, 'Dost thou know the chest?' 'Yes,'
+answered she. So he took her down to the magazine and she
+pointed it out, whereupon he put the key in the lock and opened
+the chest, in which he found much raiment and the keys of all
+the other chests. So he took them out and fell to opening the
+other chests, one after another, and feasting his eyes upon the
+jewels and precious metals they contained, whose like was not
+found with any of the kings; after which he locked them again
+and took the keys, saying to his wife, 'This is of the bounty
+of God the Most High.'
+
+Then he returned with her to the saloon and bringing her to the
+secret panel, pressed the knob and opened the door of the
+closet into which he entered with her and showed her the gold
+he had laid up there. Quoth she, 'Whence hadst thou all this?'
+'It came to me by the grace of my Lord,' answered he and told
+her all that had befallen him, from first to last. 'O my lord,'
+said she, 'all this comes of the blessing of thy father's
+prayers, whenas he prayed for thee, before his death, saying,
+"I beseech God to cast thee into no strait, except He bring
+thee speedy deliverance [therefrom]!" So praised be God the
+Most High for that He hath brought thee relief and hath
+requited thee with more than thou didst lose! But God on thee,
+O my lord, return not to thy sometime fashion and companying
+with folk of lewd life; but look thou fear God the Most High,
+both in public and private!' And she went on to admonish him.
+Quoth he, 'I accept thine admonition and beg God the Most High
+to remove the wicked from us and stablish us in His obedience
+and in the observance of the law of His Prophet, on whom be
+peace and salvation!'
+
+Ali and his wife and children were now in all delight of life and
+gladness; and he opened him a shop in the merchants' bazaar and
+stocking it with jewels and precious metals, sat therein with
+his children and servants. He soon became the most considerable
+of the merchants of Baghdad, and his report reached the King of
+that city, who sent a messenger to command his attendance. So
+he took four trays of red gold and filling them with jewels and
+precious metals, such as no king possessed, went up to the
+palace and presenting himself before the prince, kissed the
+earth before him and wished him continuance of glory and
+prosperity, in the best words he could command. 'O merchant,'
+said the King, 'thou honourest our city with thy presence;'
+and Ali rejoined, saying, 'O King of the age, thy slave hath
+brought thee a present and hopes for acceptance thereof from
+thy favour.' So saying, he laid the four trays before the King,
+who uncovered them and seeing that they contained jewels,
+whose like he possessed not and whose worth equalled treasuries
+of money, said, 'O merchant, thy present is accepted, and so
+God please, we will requite thee with its like.' And Ali kissed
+his hands and went away. Then the King called his grandees
+and said to them, 'How many kings have sought my daughter in
+marriage?' 'Many,' answered they. 'Hath any of them given me
+the like of this gift?' asked he. 'Not one,' replied they;
+'for that none of them hath its like;' and he said, 'I have
+consulted God the Most High,[FN#200] as to marrying my daughter
+to this merchant. What say ye?' 'Be it as thou deemest,'
+answered they. Then he bade the eunuch carry the four trays
+into his harem and going in to his wife, laid them before
+her. She uncovered them and seeing therein that whose like
+she possessed not,--no, nor a fraction thereof,--said to him,
+'Of which of the kings hadst thou these? Peradventure of
+one of those that seek our daughter in marriage?' 'Not so,'
+answered he, 'I had them of an Egyptian merchant, who is lately
+come to our city. I heard tell of him and sent to command him
+to us, thinking to make his acquaintance, so haply we might
+find with him somewhat of jewels and buy them of him for our
+daughter's equipment. He obeyed the summons and brought us
+these four trays, as a present, and I saw him to be a handsome
+and elegant young man[FN#201] of dignified aspect and accomplished
+wit, well-nigh as he were of the sons of the kings. Wherefore my
+heart inclined to him and I rejoiced in him and thought to marry
+my daughter to him.' Then he told her what had passed between
+himself and his grandees on the subject and added, 'But what
+sayst thou?' 'O King of the age,' answered she, 'the affair
+is in God's hand, and thine, and what God willeth shall come
+to pass.' 'If it be His will,' rejoined the King, 'I will marry
+her to none other than this young man.'
+
+So, on the morrow, he went out to his Divan and sending for Ali
+and the rest of the merchants of Baghdad, bade them be seated.
+Then he summoned the Cadi of the Divan and said to him, 'O
+Cadi, draw up the contract of marriage between my daughter and
+the merchant Ali of Cairo.' But the latter said, 'Thy pardon, O
+our lord the Sultan! It befits not that a merchant, such as I,
+be the King's son-in-law.' Quoth the King, 'It is my will to
+bestow this favour upon thee, as well as the Vizierate.' And he
+invested him forthwith in the Vizier's habit. Then Ali sat down
+in the seat of the Vizierate and said, 'O King of the age, thou
+hast bestowed on me this; and indeed I am honoured by thy
+bounties; but hear one word from me.' 'Say on,' answered the
+King, 'and fear not.' Quoth Ali, 'Since it is thine august will
+to marry thy daughter, thou wouldst do better to marry her to
+my son.' 'Hast thou then a son?' asked the King; and Ali
+replied, 'Yes.' 'Send for him forthright,' said the King;
+whereupon, 'I hear and obey,' answered Ali and sent a servant
+to fetch his son, who came and kissing the ground before the
+King, stood in an attitude of respect. The King looked at him
+and seeing him to be yet comelier than his daughter and
+goodlier than she in symmetry and brightness and perfection,
+said to him, 'O my son, what is thy name?' 'O our lord the
+Sultan,' replied the young man, who was then fourteen years
+old, 'my name is Hassan.' Then the Sultan said to the Cadi,
+'Write the contract of marriage between my daughter Husn el
+Wujoud and Hassan, son of the merchant Ali of Cairo.' So he
+wrote the contract of marriage between them, and the affair was
+ended on the goodliest wise; after which all in the Divan went
+their ways and the merchants escorted the Vizier Ali to his
+house, where they gave him joy of his advancement and departed.
+Then he went in to his wife, who, seeing him clad in the
+Vizier's habit, exclaimed, 'What is this?' So he told her all
+that had passed, and she rejoiced therein with an exceeding
+joy.
+
+On the morrow, he went up to the Divan, where the King received
+him with especial favour and seating him beside himself, said
+to him, 'O Vizier, we purpose to celebrate the wedding festivities
+and bring thy son in to our daughter.' 'O our lord the Sultan,'
+replied Ali, 'that thou deemest good is good.' So the Sultan
+gave orders for the festivities, and they decorated the city
+and held high festival thirty days, in all cheer and gladness;
+at the end of which time, the Vizier Ali's son Hassan went
+in to the princess and enjoyed her beauty and grace. When
+the queen saw her daughter's husband, she conceived a warm
+affection for him, and in like manner she rejoiced greatly in
+his mother. Then the King bade build his son-in-law a palace
+beside his own; so they built him with all speed a splendid
+palace, in which he took up his abode; and his mother used to
+abide with her son some days and then return to her own house.
+After awhile, the queen said to her husband, 'O King of the
+age, Hassan's mother cannot take up her abode with her son and
+leave the Vizier; neither can she abide with her husband and
+leave her son.' 'Thou sayst sooth,' replied the King and bade
+build a third palace beside the two others, which being done in
+a few days, he caused remove thither the Vizier's goods, and
+the latter and his wife took up their abode there. Now the
+three palaces communicated with one another, so that, when the
+King had a mind to speak with the Vizier by night, he would go
+to him or send to fetch him; and so with Hassan and his father
+and mother.
+
+They dwelt thus in the greatest happiness and contentment awhile,
+till the King fell ill and his sickness increased on him. So he
+summoned the grandees of his realm and said to them, 'There is
+come upon me a sore sickness, peradventure a mortal one, and I
+have therefore summoned you to consult you respecting a certain
+matter, on which I would have you counsel me as you deem well.'
+'What is the matter of which thou wouldst take counsel with us,
+O King?' asked they; and he answered, 'I am old and sickly and
+I fear for the realm, after me, from the enemies; so I would
+have you all agree upon some one, that I may proclaim him king
+in my lifetime and so ye may be at ease.' Whereupon quoth they
+all, 'We all approve of thy son-in-law Hassan, son of the
+Vizier Ali; for we have seen the perfectness of his wit and
+understanding, and he knows the rank of all, great and small.
+
+'Are ye indeed agreed upon this?' asked the King, and they
+answered, 'Yes.' 'Peradventure,' quoth he, 'ye say this to my
+face, of respect for me; but, behind my back, ye will say
+otherwise.' But they all answered, saying, 'By Allah, our word,
+in public and in private, is one, varying not; and we accept
+him frankly and with all our hearts.' 'Since the case is thus,'
+said the King, 'bring the Cadi of the Holy Law and all the
+chamberlains and captains and officers of state before me
+to-morrow, and we will settle the affair on the goodliest
+wise.' 'We hear and obey,' answered they and withdrawing,
+notified all the doctors of the law and the chief Amirs.
+
+So, on the morrow, they came up to the Divan and saluted the
+King, who said to them, 'O Amirs of Baghdad, whom will ye have
+to be king over you after me, that I may invest him in my
+lifetime, in the presence of you all?' Quoth they all, 'We are
+agreed upon thy daughter's husband, Hassan, son of the Vizier
+Ali.' 'If it be so,' said the King, 'go all of you and bring
+him before me.' So they all arose and repairing to Hassan's
+palace, said to him, 'Come with us to the King.' 'Wherefore?'
+asked he, and they answered, 'For a thing that will advantage
+both us and thee.' So he went in with them to the King and
+kissed the ground before the latter, who bade him be seated and
+said to him, 'O Hassan, all the Amirs have approved of thee and
+agreed to make thee king over them after me; and it is my
+purpose to proclaim thee, whilst I yet live, and so make an end
+of the business.' But Hassan arose and kissing the earth once
+more before the King, said to him, 'O our lord the King, among
+the Amirs there be [many] who are older than I and greater of
+worth; hold me quit therefore of this thing.' Quoth all the
+Amirs, 'We consent not but that thou be king over us.' Then
+said Hassan, 'My father is older than I, and he and I are one
+thing; and it befits not to advance me over him.' But Ali
+said, 'I will consent to nothing but what is pleasing to my
+brethren; and they have all chosen and agreed upon thee.
+Wherefore gainsay thou not the King's commandment and that
+of thy brethren.' And Hassan hung his head in abashment before
+the King and his father. Then said the King to the Amirs, 'Do
+ye all accept of him?' 'We do,' answered they and recited
+thereupon seven Fatihehs.'[FN#202] So the King said to the
+Cadi, 'Draw up a legal act testifying of these Amirs that they
+are agreed to make my daughter's husband Hassan king over
+them.' So the Cadi wrote the act and made it executory,[FN#203]
+after they had all taken the oath of fealty to Hassan. Then the
+King invested him with the insignia of royalty and bade him
+take his seat on the throne; whereupon they all arose and
+kissed King Hassan's hands and did homage to him.
+
+The new king dispensed justice among the people that day, in
+right royal fashion, and invested the grandees of the realm in
+splendid robes of honour. When the Divan broke up, he went in
+to his father-and-law and kissed his hands; and the old King
+said to him, 'O my son, look thou govern the people in the fear
+of God.' 'O my father,' replied Hassan, 'through thy prayers
+for me, the grace of God will come to me.' Then he entered his
+own palace and was met by his wife and her mother and their
+attendants, who kissed his hands and gave him joy of his
+advancement, saying, 'This is a blessed day.' Then he went in
+to his father and mother, who rejoiced with an exceeding joy in
+that which God had vouchsafed him of his advancement to the
+kingship, and his father exhorted him to the fear of God and to
+affectionate solicitude in his dealings with his subjects. He
+passed the night in joy and gladness, and on the morrow, having
+prayed the appointed prayers, concluding with the customary
+recitation of part of the Koran, he repaired to the Divan,
+whither came all his officers and dignitaries. He passed the
+day in dispensing justice among his subjects, enjoining to
+beneficence and forbidding from iniquity and appointing and
+displacing, till nightfall, when the Divan broke up, after the
+goodliest fashion, and all present withdrew and went each his
+own way. Then he arose and went in to the palace, where he
+found his father-in-law's sickness grown heavy upon him and
+said to him, 'May no hurt befall thee!' At this the old King
+opened his eyes and said, 'O Hassan!' 'At thy service, O my
+lord,' replied the young man. Quoth the old King, 'My last hour
+is at hand: be careful of thy wife and her mother and look
+thou fear God and honour thy parents, being still in awe of
+the majesty of the Requiting King and remembering that He
+commandeth to justice and beneficence.' And Hassan replied,
+'I hear and obey.'
+
+The old King lingered three days after this and was then
+received into the mercy of God the Most High. They paid him
+the last offices and buried him and held over him readings and
+recitations of the Koran, to the end of the [customary] forty
+days. And King Hassan, son of the Vizier, reigned in his stead,
+and his subjects rejoiced in him and all his days were gladness.
+Moreover, his father ceased not to be his chief Vizier on his
+right hand, and he took to himself another Vizier, to be at his
+left hand. His reign was a prosperous one and he abode long
+King in Baghdad. God blessed him, by the old King's daughter,
+with three sons, who inherited the kingdom after him; and they
+abode in the enjoyment of all delight and solace of life, till
+there came to them the Destroyer of Delights and the Sunderer
+of Companies. And glory be to Him who is eternal and in whose
+hand are annulment and confirmation!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE PILGRIM AND THE OLD WOMAN WHO DWELT
+ IN THE DESERT.
+
+
+
+A man of the pilgrims once slept a long sleep and awaking,
+found no trace of the caravan. So he arose and walked on, but
+lost his way and presently came to a tent, at whose door he saw
+an old woman and a dog by her, asleep. He went up to the tent
+and saluting the old woman, sought of her food. 'Go to yonder
+valley,' said she, 'and catch thy sufficiency of serpents, that
+I may broil of them for thee and give thee to eat.' 'I dare not
+catch serpents,' answered the pilgrim; 'nor did I ever eat
+them.' Quoth the old woman, 'I will go with thee and catch
+them; fear not.' So she went with him, followed by the dog, to
+the valley, and catching a sufficient number of serpents,
+proceeded to broil them. He saw nothing for it but to eat, for
+fear of hunger and exhaustion; so he ate of the serpents.
+
+Then he was athirst and asked for water to drink. 'Go to the
+spring and drink,' answered she. So he went to the spring and
+found the water thereof bitter; yet needs must he drink of it,
+for all its bitterness, because of the violence of his thirst.
+Then he returned to the old woman and said to her, 'O old
+woman, I marvel at thy choosing to abide in this place and
+putting up with such meat and drink!' 'And how is it then in
+thy country?' asked she. 'In my country,' answered he, 'are
+wide and spacious houses and ripe and delicious fruits and
+sweet and abundant waters and goodly viands and fat meats and
+plentiful flocks and all things pleasant and all the goods of
+life, the like whereof are not, save in the Paradise that God
+the Most High hath promised to His pious servants.' 'All this,'
+replied she, 'have I heard: but tell me, have you a Sultan who
+ruleth over you and is tyrannical in his rule and under whose
+hand you are, who, if one of you commit a fault, taketh his
+goods and undoth him and who, when he will, turneth you out of
+your houses and uprooteth you, stock and branch?' 'Indeed, that
+may be,' answered the man. 'Then, by Allah,' rejoined she,
+'these your delicious viands and dainty life and pleasant
+estate, with tyranny and oppression, are but a corroding
+poison, in comparison wherewith, our food and fashion, with
+freedom and safety, are a healthful medicine. Hast thou not
+heard that the best of all boons, after the true Faith, are
+health and security?'
+
+Now these[FN#204] [quoth he who tells the tale] may be by the
+just rule of the Sultan, the Vicar of God in His earth, and the
+goodness of his policy. The Sultan of times past needed but
+little awfulness, for that, when the people saw him, they
+feared him; but the Sultan of these days hath need of the most
+accomplished policy and the utmost majesty, for that men are
+not as men of time past and this our age is one of folk
+depraved and greatly calamitous, noted for folly and hardness
+of heart and inclined to hatred and enmity. If, therefore, the
+Sultan that is set over them be (which God the Most High
+forfend) weak or lack of policy and majesty, without doubt,
+this will be the cause of the ruin of the land. Quoth the
+proverb, 'A hundred years of the Sultan's tyranny, rather than
+one of the tyranny of the people, one over another.' When the
+people oppress one another, God setteth over them a tyrannical
+Sultan and a despotic King. Thus it is told in history that
+there was, one day, presented to El Hejjaj ben Yousuf[FN#205] a
+docket, in which was written, 'Fear God and oppress not His
+servants with all manner of oppression.' When he read this, he
+mounted the pulpit, (for he was ready of speech,) and said, 'O
+folk' God the Most High hath set me over you, by reason of your
+[evil] deeds; and though I die, yet will ye not be delivered
+from oppression, with your evil deeds; for God the Most High
+hath created many like unto me. If it be not I, it will be a
+more fertile than I in mischief and a mightier in oppression
+and a more strenuous in violence, even as saith the poet:
+
+For no hand is there but the hand of God is over it And no
+ oppressor but shall be with worse than he oppress.
+
+Tyranny is feared: but justice is the best of all things. We
+beg God to better our case.'
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOULHUSN AND HIS SLAVE-GIRL TAWEDDUD.
+
+
+
+There was once in Baghdad a man of rank and rich in money and
+houses and lands, who was one of the chiefs of the merchants,
+and God had largely endowed him with worldly goods, but had
+not vouchsafed him what he longed for of offspring; and there
+passed over him a long space of time, without his being blessed
+with children, male or female. His years waxed great, his bones
+became wasted and his back bent, and weakness and trouble
+increased on him, and he feared the loss of his wealth and
+possessions, seeing he had no child, whom he might make his
+heir and by whom he should be remembered. So he betook himself
+with supplication to God the Most High, fasting by day and
+rising by night [to pray]. Moreover, he made vows to God the
+Living, the Eternal, and visited the pious and was instant in
+supplication to the Most Migh, till He gave ear to him and
+accepted his prayer and took pity on his striving and complaining;
+so that, before many days were past, he lay with one of his women
+and she became with child by him the same night. She accomplished
+the months of her pregnancy and casting her burden, bore a male
+child as he were a piece of the moon; whereupon the merchant,
+in his gratitude to God, (to whom belong might and majesty,)
+fulfilled his vows and gave alms and clothed the widow and the
+orphan.
+
+On the seventh night after the boy's birth, he named him
+Aboulhusn, and the wet-nurses suckled him and the dry-nurses
+dandled him and the slaves and servants carried him, till he
+grew up and throve and learnt the sublime Koran and the
+ordinances of Islam and the things of the True Faith. Moreover,
+he learned writing and poetry and mathematics and archery and
+became the pearl of his age and the goodliest of the folk of
+his time and his day, fair of face and fluent of tongue,
+bearing himself with a proud and graceful port and glorying in
+his symmetry and amorous grace. His cheeks were red and his
+forehead white and brilliant and the tender down of the
+whiskers darkened upon his face, even as saith one, describing
+him:
+
+The Spring of the down on his cheeks to the eye shows clear;
+ And how shall the rose endure, after Spring is here?
+Dost thou not see that the growth on his cheek, forsooth, A
+ violet is, that forth of its leaves doth peer?
+
+He abode awhile with his father, in the best of case, and the
+latter rejoiced and delighted in him, till he came to man's
+estate, when the merchant one day made him sit down before him
+and said to him, 'O my son, the appointed term draws near; my
+last hour is at hand and it remains but to meet God (to whom
+belong might and majesty). I leave thee what shall suffice
+thee, even to thy son's son, of money and farms and houses and
+gardens; wherefore, O my son, fear thou God the Most High in
+[dealing with] that which I leave thee and follow none but
+those who will help thee [in this].' Not long after, he
+sickened and died; so his son ordered his funeral, after the
+goodliest fashion, and burying him, returned to his house and
+sat mourning for him [many] days and nights, till certain of
+his friends came in to him and said to him, 'Whoso leaveth the
+like of thee after him is not dead; indeed, what is past is
+past and mourning beseemeth none but girls and cloistered
+women.' And they ceased not from him, till they wrought on him
+to enter the bath and break off his mourning. Then he forgot
+his father's injunctions, and his head was turned by his
+riches; he thought fortune would still abide with him, as it
+was, and that wealth would never come to an end. So he ate and
+drank and made merry and took his pleasure and gave gifts of
+money and raiment and was profuse with gold and gave himself up
+to eating fowls and breaking the seals of wine-flasks and
+listening to songs and to the laugh of the wine, as it gurgled
+from the flagon; nor did he give over this way of life, till
+his wealth was wasted and the case became straitened [upon him]
+and he bit his hands [for repentance] and gone was all he had.
+
+In good sooth, he had nothing left, after that which he had
+squandered, but a slave-girl that his father had bequeathed to
+him with the rest of his estate: her name was Taweddud and she
+had no equal in beauty and grace and brightness and symmetry
+and all perfection. She was past mistress in all manner of arts
+and accomplishments and endowed with [many] excellences,
+surpassing all the folk of her age and time. She was grown more
+notorious than a way-mark,[FN#206] for the versatility of her
+genius, and outdid the fair both in theory and practice and
+elegant and flexile grace, more by token that she was five feet
+high and in conjunction with fair fortune, with strait arched
+brows, as they were the crescent moon of Shaaban,[FN#207] and
+eyes like those of gazelles, nose like the point of the sabre
+and cheeks like blood-red anemones, mouth like Solomon's seal
+and teeth like necklaces of pearls, navel holding an ounce of
+benzoin ointment and waist more slender than his body whom love
+hath wasted and whom concealment [of his passion] hath made
+sick, and buttocks heavier than two hills of sand; brief, in
+all she answered to the saying of him who says:
+
+Her fair shape ravisheth, if face to face she did appear, And
+ if she turn, for severance from her she slayeth sheer.
+Sun-like, full-moon-like, sapling-like, unto her character
+ Estrangement nowise appertains nor cruelty austere.
+Under the bosom of her shift the garths of Eden are, and the
+ full-moon revolveth still upon her neck-rings' sphere.
+
+She seemed [at once] a rising full moon and a browsing gazelle,
+a girl of nine and five,[FN#208] putting to shame the moon and
+the sun, even as saith of her the eloquent and ingenious poet:
+
+The likeness of the full-moon, faring o'er The heavens, five
+ and five and after four;
+'Tis not my fault, if she have made of me Its likeness, when it
+ first in heaven doth soar.
+
+White of skin, odoriferous of breath, it seemed as if she were
+[at once] fashioned of fire and moulded of crystal; rose-red
+was the cheek of her and perfect her shape and figure; even as
+saith of her one, describing her:
+
+
+Scented with sandal and musk, right proudly doth she go, With
+ gold and silver and rose and saffron-colour aglow.
+A flower in a garden she is, a pearl in an ouch of gold Or an
+ image in chapel set for worship of high and low.
+Slender and shapely she is; vivacity bids her arise, But the
+ weight of her hips says, "Sit, or softly and slowly go."
+Whenas her favours I seek and sue for my heart's desire, "Be
+ gracious," her beauty says; but her coquetry answers,
+ "No."
+Glory to Him who made beauty her portion, and that Of her lover
+ to be the prate of the censurers, heigho!
+
+Indeed, she captivated all who saw her, with the excellence of
+her beauty and the sweetness of her smile, and transpierced
+them with the arrows she launched from her eyes; and withal she
+was eloquent of speech and excellently skilled in poetry.
+
+When Aboulhusn had squandered all his wealth and there remained
+to him nought but this slave-girl, when [I say] the wretchedness
+of his plight became manifest to him, he abode three days
+without tasting food or taking rest in sleep, and Taweddud
+said to him, 'O my lord, carry me to the Khalif Haroun er
+Reshid, fifth of the sons of Abbas, and seek of him ten thousand
+dinars to my price. If he deem me dear at this price, say to
+him, "O Commander of the Faithful, my slave is worth more
+than this: do but prove her, and her value will be magnified
+in thine eyes, for she hath not her equal, and it were unfit
+that any but thou should possess her." And beware, O my lord,
+of selling me for less than the sum I have named, for it is
+but little for the like of me.' (Now Aboulhusn knew not her
+worth nor that she had no equal in her day.) So he carried
+her to the Khalif, to whom he repeated what she had bidden
+him say, and the Khalif said to her, 'What is thy name?'
+'Taweddud,' answered she. 'O Taweddud,' asked he, 'in what
+branches of knowledge dost thou excel?' 'O my lord,' answered
+she, 'I am versed in syntax and poetry and jurisprudence and
+exegesis and lexicography and music and the knowledge of the
+Divine ordinances and in arithmetic and geodesy and the fables
+of the ancients. I know the sublime Koran [by heart] and have
+read it according to the seven and the ten and the fourteen
+[modes]. I know the number of its chapters and verses and
+sections and words and letters and its halves and fourths
+and eighths and tenths, the number of acts of adoration,
+that occur in it, and what there is in it of cancelling and
+cancelled;[FN#209] also what parts of it were revealed at
+Medina and what at Mecca and the manner of the different
+revelations. I know the Holy Traditions, their history and
+variants and the manner of their recitation and interpretation,
+together with those of them whose chain of descent is unbroken
+and those for which it is broken; and I have studied the exact
+sciences, geometry and philosophy and medicine and logic
+and rhetoric and composition; and I know many things and am
+passionately fond of poetry. I can play the lute and know its
+gamut and notation and so forth. If I sing and dance, I ravish,
+and if I adorn and perfume myself, I slay. In fine, I have
+reached a pitch of perfection such as can only be estimated by
+those who are stablished in knowledge.'[FN#210]
+
+When the Khalif heard her words, he wondered at them and at the
+eloquence of her speech, seeing the tenderness of her age, and
+turning to Aboulhusn, said to him, 'I will summon those who
+shall examine her in all she lays claim to; if she answer
+[correctly,] I will give thee the price thou askest for her and
+more; and if not, thou art fitter to [possess] her [than I].'
+'With all my heart, O Commander of the Faithful,' replied
+Aboulhusn. So the Khalif wrote to the Viceroy of Bassora, to
+send him Ibrahim ben Siyyar the poet, who was the first man of
+his day in argument and eloquence and poetry and logic, and
+bade him bring with him readers of the Koran and doctors of the
+law and physicians and astrologers and sages and geometricians
+and philosophers; and Ibrahim was more learned than all. In a
+little while they all arrived at the Khalif's palace, knowing
+not what was to do, and the latter sent for them to his
+sitting-chamber and bade them be seated. So they sat down and
+he bade fetch the damsel Taweddud, who came and unveiling,
+showed herself, as she were a sparkling star. The Khalif caused
+set her a stool of gold; and she saluted and speaking with an
+eloquent tongue, said, 'O Commander of the Faithful, bid the
+learned men present contend with me in argument.' So he said to
+them, 'I desire of you that ye dispute with this damsel on the
+things of her faith and make void her argument, in all she
+avoucheth;' and they answered, saying, 'We hear and obey God
+and thee, O Commander of the Faithful.'
+
+Thereupon Taweddud bowed her head and said, 'Which of you is
+the doctor of the law, the scholar, versed in the interpretation
+of the Koran and in the Traditions?' Quoth one of them, 'I am
+the man thou seekest.' 'Then,' said she, 'ask me of what thou
+wilt.' Quoth the doctor, 'Hast thou read the precious book of
+God and dost thou know its abrogating and abrogated parts and
+hast thou meditated its verses and expressions?' 'Yes,' answered
+she. 'Then,' said he, 'I will proceed to question thee of the
+obligatory ordinances and the immutable institutions: so tell
+me of these, O damsel, and who is thy Lord, who thy prophet,
+and who thy brethren. Also, what is thy [point of] fronting
+[in prayer], what thine exemplar, what thy path and what thy
+highway?' 'Allah is my Lord,' replied she, 'and Mohammed (whom
+God bless and preserve) my prophet and the true-believers are my
+brethren. The Koran is my exemplar and the Kaabeh my [point of]
+fronting; the practice of good is my path and the Sunneh[FN#211]
+my highway.' (Q.) 'With what do we know God the Most High?'
+(A.) 'With the understanding.' (Q.) 'And what is the understanding?'
+(A.) 'It is of two kinds, natural and acquired. The first is that
+which God (to whom belong might and majesty) bestoweth on whom He
+will of His servants; and the other is that which men acquire
+by dint of study and fair knowledge.' (Q.) 'Thou hast answered
+well. Where is the seat of the understanding?' (A.) 'God casteth
+it in the heart, whence its lustre ascendeth to the brain and
+there becometh fixed.' (Q.) 'How knowest thou the Prophet of God?'
+(A.) 'By the reading of God's Holy Book and by signs and proofs
+and portents and miracles.' (Q.) 'What are the obligatory
+ordinances and the immutable institutions?' (A.) 'The obligatory
+ordinances are five in number. (1) Testification that there is no
+god but God alone, that He hath no partner in divinity and that
+Mohammed is His servant and His apostle. (2) The scrupulous
+performance of the enjoined prayers. (3) The payment of the
+poor-rate. (4) Fasting Ramazan. (5) The performance of the
+Pilgrimage to God's Holy House [at Mecca] for all to whom it
+is possible. The immutable institutions are four in number; to
+wit, night and day and sun and moon, the which build up life and
+hope, neither knoweth any son of Adam if they will be destroyed
+on the Day of Judgment.' (Q.) 'What are the obligatory rites of
+the Faith?' (A.) 'Prayer, almsgiving, fasting, pilgrimage,
+fighting for the Faith and abstinence from what is forbidden.'
+(Q.) 'Why dost thou stand up to pray?' (A.) 'To express the
+devout intent of the slave submitting himself to [or acknowledging]
+the Divinity.' (Q.) 'What are the conditions precedent of standing
+up to pray?' (A.) 'Purification, covering the privy parts,
+the avoidance of soiled clothes, standing on a clean place,
+fronting [the Kaabeh,] a standing posture, the intent[FN#212]
+and the magnification of prohibition.'[FN#213] (Q.) 'With what
+shouldest thou go forth thy house to pray? (A.) 'With an intent
+of worship.'[FN#214] (Q.) 'With what intent shouldest thou
+enter the mosque?' (A.) 'With an intent of service.'[FN#215]
+(Q.) 'Why do we front the Kaabeh?' (A.) 'In obedience to three
+Divine and one Traditional ordinance.' (Q.) 'What is the
+commencement, the consecration and the dissolution [end] of
+prayer?' (A.) 'Purification, the magnification of prohibition
+and the salutation of the angels [concluding prayer].' (Q.)
+'What of him who neglecteth prayer?' (A.) 'It is reported,
+among the authentic (Traditions of the Prophet, that he said),
+"He, who neglecteth prayer wilfully and without excuse, hath no
+part in Islam."' (Q.) 'What is prayer?' (A.) 'Prayer is
+communion between the slave and his Lord, and in it are ten
+virtues, to wit, (1) it illumines the heart (2) makes the face
+shine (3) pleases the Merciful One (4) angers Satan (5)
+conjures calamity (6) wards off the mischief of enemies (7)
+multiplies mercy (8) forfends vengeance [or punishment] (9)
+brings the slave nigh unto [or in favour with] his Lord and
+(10) restrains from lewdness and iniquity. It is one of the
+written obligatory ordinances and the pillar of the Faith.'
+(Q.) 'What is the key of prayer?' (A.) 'Ablution.' (Q.) 'What
+is the key of ablution?' (A.) 'Nomination.'[FN#216] (Q.) 'That
+of naming God?' (A.) 'Faith.' (Q.) 'That of Faith?' (A.) 'Trust
+in God.' (Q.) 'That of trust in God?' (A.) 'Hope.' (Q.) 'That
+of Hope?' (A.) 'Obedience.' (Q.) 'That of obedience?' (A.) 'The
+confession of the unity and the acknowledgment of the divinity
+of God.' (Q.) 'What are the Divine ordinances of ablution?'
+(A.) 'They are six in number, according to the canon of the
+Imam Es Shafi Mohammed ben Idris (of whom God accept) to wit,
+(1) intent[FN#217] to wash the face (2) washing the face (3)
+washing the hands and elbows (4) wiping part of the head (5)
+washing the feet and heels and (6) observing the prescribed
+order of ablution, whose statutes are ten in number, to wit,
+(1) nomination (2) washing the hands before putting them into
+the vase (3) rinsing the mouth (4) drawing up water through the
+nostrils (5) wiping the whole head (6) washing the ears within
+and without with fresh water (7) separating a thick beard (8)
+separating the fingers and toes (9) washing the right foot
+before the left and (10) doing each of these thrice and all in
+unbroken succession. When the ablution is ended, the devotee
+should (quoth Es Shafi[FN#218]) say, "I testify that there is
+no god but God alone, who hath no partner, and that Mohammed is
+His servant and apostle. O my God, make me of those who repent
+and are made clean! Glory to Thee, O my God, and in Thy praise
+I testify that there is no god but Thou! I crave pardon of
+Thee and repent to Thee!" For it is reported, in the Holy
+Traditions, that the Prophet (whom God bless and keep) said of
+this prayer, "Whoso ensueth every ablution with this prayer,
+the eight gates of Paradise are open to him; he shall enter at
+which he pleases."' (Q.) 'When a man purposes to make the
+ablution, what betides him from the angels and the devils?'
+(A.) 'When a man prepares for ablution, the angels come and
+stand on his right and the devils on his left hand. If he name
+God, at the beginning of the ablution, the devils flee from him
+and the angels hover over him with a pavilion of light, having
+four ropes, to each an angel glorifying God and craving pardon
+for him, so long as he remains silent or calls upon the name of
+God. But if he omit to begin with naming God (to whom belong
+might and majesty) neither remain silent, the angels depart
+from him and the devils settle upon him and whisper evil
+thoughts unto him, till he falls into doubt and comes short in
+his ablution. For (quoth he on whom be blessing and salvation)
+"A perfect ablution driveth away the devils and assureth
+against the tyranny of the Sultan; and he who neglecteth the
+ablution, if calamity befall him, let him blame none but
+himself."' (Q.) 'What should a man do, when he awakes from
+sleep?' (A.) 'He should wash his hands thrice, before putting
+them into the vessel.' (Q.) 'What are the ordinances, Koranic
+and Traditional, of complete ablution?'[FN#219] (A.) 'The
+Koranic ordinances are intent and covering the whole body with
+water, so that it shall come at every part of the hair and
+skin. The Traditional, previous partial ablution [as before
+prayer,] rubbing the body, separating the hair and deferring in
+words[FN#220] the washing of the feet till the end of the
+ablution.' (Q.) 'What are the reasons [or occasions] for making
+the ablution with other than water, and what are the ordinances
+thereof, Koranic and Traditional?'[FN#221] (A.) 'The reasons
+are seven in number, to wit, lack of water, fear, need thereto,
+going astray on a journey, sickness, having the bones [broken
+and] in splints and wounds. As for its ordinances, the Koranic
+are four in number, to wit, intent, dust, applying it to the
+face and to the hands, and the Traditional two, to wit,
+nomination and preferring the right before the left hand.' (Q.)
+'What are the conditions, the essentials [or fundamentals] and
+the Traditional statutes of prayer?' (A.) 'The conditions are
+five in number, to wit, (1) purification of the members (2)
+covering the privy parts (3) observing the proper hours, either
+of certainty or to the best of one's belief, (4) fronting the
+Kaabeh and (5) standing on a clean place. The essentials are
+twelve in number, to wit, (1) intent (2) the magnification of
+prohibition (3) standing at the proper distance one from
+another (4) repeating the first chapter of the Koran and also
+(according to the Shafiyites) saying, "In the name of God the
+Merciful, the Compassionate!" a verse thereof (5) bowing the
+body and tranquillity [or gravity] therein (6) keeping the feet
+and legs still and in the same position, [whilst the rest of
+the body moves], and tranquillity therein (7) prostration and
+tranquillity therein (8) sitting between two prostrations and
+tranquillity therein (9) repeating the latter profession of
+the Faith and sitting up therefor (10) invoking benediction
+on the Prophet (whom God bless and preserve) (11) the first
+Salutation[FN#222] and (12) the intent of making an end of
+prayer, [expressed] in words. The Traditional statutes are
+the call to prayer, the repetition of the words of the latter,
+raising the hands to either side of the face, whilst pronouncing
+the magnification of prohibition, pronouncing the magnification
+before reciting the Fatiheh [First chapter of the Koran],
+seeking refuge with God,[FN#223] saying "Amen," repeating
+the (obligatory) chapter [of the Koran] after the Fatiheh,
+repeating the magnifications during change of posture, saying,
+"May God hear him who praiseth Him!" and "O our Lord, to Thee
+be the praise!" uttering aloud the prayers in their places
+and in like manner, under the breath, those so prescribed,
+the first testification and sitting up thereto, blessing the
+Prophet therein, blessing his family in the latter profession
+[or testification] and the second Salutation.' (Q.) 'On what
+is the poor-rate taxable?' (A.) 'On gold and silver and camels
+and oxen and sheep and wheat and barley and millet and beans
+and pulse and rice and raisins and dates.' (Q.) 'What is the
+poor-rate on gold ?' (A.) 'Below twenty dinars, nothing; but,
+on that amount and over, half a dinar for every score.'
+(Q.) 'On silver?' (A.) 'Under two hundred dirhems, nothing;
+then, five dirhems on every two hundred.' (Q.) 'On camels?'
+(A.) 'For every five, an ewe, or for every twenty-five a
+pregnant camel.' (Q.) 'On sheep?' (A.) 'On forty and over, an
+ewe for every forty head.' (Q.) 'What are the ordinances of
+the Fast [of Ramazan]?' (A.) 'The Koranic are intent,[FN#224]
+abstinence from eating, drinking and copulation and stoppage of
+vomiting. It is incumbent on all who submit to the Law, save
+women in their courses and forty days after child-birth; and it
+becomes obligatory on sight of the new moon or on news of its
+appearance, brought by a trustworthy person and commending
+itself as truth to the hearer's heart; and among its requisites
+is that it be commenced by night.[FN#225] The Traditional
+ordinances of fasting are, hastening to break the fast,[FN#226]
+deferring the fore-dawn meal[FN#227] and abstaining from
+speech, save for good works and for calling on the name of God
+and reciting the Koran.' (Q.) 'What things vitiate not the
+fast?' (A.) 'The use of unguents and eye-powders and the dust
+of the road and the swallowing of one's spittle and the
+emission of seed in dreams of dalliance or at the sight of a
+strange woman and cupping and letting blood; none of these
+things vitiates the fast.' (Q.) 'What are the prayers of the
+two great [annual] Festivals?' (A.) 'Two one-bow prayers, after
+the traditional ordinance, without call to prayer or the
+repetition thereof by the devotee, who shall say, "Prayer is a
+collector of all folk!"[FN#228] and pronounce the magnification
+seven times in the first prayer, besides the magnification of
+prohibition, and in the second, five times, besides that of
+rising up, (according to the canon of the Imam Es Shafi, on
+whom God have mercy) and make the profession of the Faith.'
+(Q.) 'What are the prayers prescribed on the occasion of an
+eclipse of the sun or moon?' (A.) 'Two one-bow prayers, without
+call to prayer or repetition thereof by the devotee, who shall
+make in each two standings up and two inclinations and two
+prostrations, then sit up and testify and salute.' (Q.) 'What
+is the ritual of prayer for rain?' (A.) 'Two one-bow prayers,
+without call to prayer or repetition; then shall the devotee
+make the profession and salute. Moreover [the Imam] shall
+deliver an exhortation and (in place of the magnification, as
+in the two exhortations of the two great Festivals) ask pardon
+of God and reverse his mantle and pray and supplicate.' (Q.)
+'What are the additional or occasional prayers?' (A.) 'The
+least is a one-bow prayer and the most eleven.' (Q.) 'What
+is the forenoon prayer?' (A.) 'At least, two one-bow prayers
+and at most, twelve.' (Q.) 'What is the service of seclusion?'
+[FN#229] (A.) 'It is a matter of Traditional ordinance.'
+(Q.) 'What are its conditions?' (A.) '(1) Expression of intent
+(2) not leaving the mosque save of necessity (3) not having
+to do with a woman (4) fasting and (5) abstaining from speech.'
+(Q.) 'Under what conditions is pilgrimage obligatory?' (A.)
+'So a man be of full age and understanding and a true-believer
+and it be possible to him; and it is obligatory [on all], once
+before death.' (Q.) 'What are the Koranic statutes of the
+pilgrimage?'' (A.) '(1) Assumption of the pilgrim's habit
+(2) station at Arafat (3) compassing [the Kaabeh] (4) running
+[between Sefa and Merweh[FN#230]] and (5) [previous] shaving
+or clipping the hair.' (Q.) 'What are the Koranic statutes of
+the lesser pilgrimage?' (A.) 'Reassuming the pilgrim's habit and
+compassing and running [as before].' (Q.) 'What are the Koranic
+ordinances of the assumption of the pilgrim's habit?' (A.)
+'Putting off sewn garments, forswearing perfume and ceasing to
+shave the head or cut the nails and avoiding the killing of
+game and copulation.' (Q.) 'What are the Traditional statutes
+of the pilgrimage?' (A.) '(1) The crying out, "Here I am, O our
+Lord!"[FN#231] (2) the circuitings [about the Kaabeh] of
+arrival [at] and departure [from Mecca] (3) the passing the
+night at Muzdelifeh and Mina[FN#232] and (4) the stone-throwing.'
+[FN#233] (Q.) 'What is the war in defence of the Faith and its
+essentials?' (A.) 'Its essentials are (1) the descent of the
+infidels upon us (2) the existence of the Imam[FN#234] (3) a
+state of [armed] preparation and (4) firmness in meeting the
+foe. Its ordinance is incital to battle, in that the Most High
+hath said, "O my Prophet, incite the faithful to battle!"'
+[FN#235] (Q.) 'What are the ordinances of buying and selling?'
+(A.) 'The Koranic are (1) offer and acceptance and (2) if the
+thing sold be a (white) slave, by whom one profiteth, to do
+one's endeavour to convert him to Islam and (3) to abstain
+from usury; the Traditional, resiliation and option before
+separating, after the saying of the Prophet, "The parties
+to a sale shall have the option [of cancelling or altering
+the terms of a bargain,] whilst they are yet unseparated."'
+(Q.) 'What is it forbidden to sell [or exchange] for what?'
+(A.) 'On this point I mind me of an authentic tradition,
+reported by Nafi[FN#236] of the Apostle of God, that he forbade
+the sale of dried dates for fresh and fresh figs for dry and
+jerked for fresh meat and cream for butter; in fine, of all
+eatables of one and the same kind, it is unlawful to sell some
+for other some.'[FN#237] When the professor heard her words
+and knew that she was keen of wit, ingenious and learned in
+jurisprudence and the Traditions and the interpretation of the
+Koran and what not else, he said in himself, 'Needs must I go
+about with her, that I may overcome her in the assembly of the
+Commander of the Faithful.' So he said to her, 'O damsel, what
+is the lexicographical meaning of the word wuzou?'[FN#238]
+And she answered, 'Cleanliness and freedom from impurities.'
+(Q.) 'And of prayer?' (A.) 'An invocation of good.' (Q.) 'And
+of ghusl?'[FN#239] (A.) 'Purification.' (Q.) 'And of fasting?'
+(A.) 'Abstention.' (Q.) 'And of zekat?'[FN#240] (A.) 'Increase.'
+(Q.) 'And of pilgrimage?' (A.) 'Visitation [or quest].' (Q.) 'And
+of jehad?'[FN#241] (A.) '[Endeavour in] repelling.' With this the
+doctor's arguments were exhausted, so he rose to his feet and
+said, 'Bear witness against me, O Commander of the Faithful,
+that this damsel is more learned than I am in the Law. Quoth
+she, 'I will ask thee somewhat, which do thou answer me
+speedily, an thou be indeed a learned man.' 'Say on,' quoth he;
+and she said, 'What are the arrows of the Faith?' 'They are ten
+in number,' answered he; 'to wit, (1) Testification,[FN#242]
+that is, religion (2) Prayer, that is, the Covenant (3) Alms,
+that is, purification (4) Fasting, that is, defensive armour
+(5) Pilgrimage, that is, the Law (6) Fighting for the Faith,
+that is, a general duty (7) Enjoining to beneficence and (8)
+Forbidding from iniquity, both of which are jealousy [for good]
+(9) The communion of the faithful, that is, sociableness, and
+(10) Seeking knowledge, that is, the praiseworthy way.' (Q.)
+'What are the roots[FN#243] of Islam?' (A.) 'They are four
+in number, to wit, sincerity of belief, truth of purpose,
+observance of the limit [prescribed by the Law] and keeping the
+Covenant.' Then said she, 'I have one more question to ask
+thee, which if thou answer, [it is well]; else, I will take thy
+clothes.' Quoth he, 'Speak, O damsel;' and she said, 'What are
+the branches[FN#244] of Islam?' But he was silent and made no
+reply; and she said, 'Put off thy clothes, and I will expound
+them to thee.' Quoth the Khalif, 'Expound them, and I will make
+him put off his clothes for thee.' 'They are two-and-twenty in
+number,' answered she, 'to wit, (1) holding fast to the Book of
+God the Most High (2) taking example by His Apostle (whom God
+bless and preserve) (3) abstaining from doing evil (4) eating
+what is lawful and (5) avoiding what is unlawful (6) restoring
+things wrongfully taken to their owners (7) repentance (8)
+knowledge of the Law (9) love of [Abraham] the Friend [of God]
+(10) and of the followers of the Revelation[FN#245] (11) belief
+in the Apostles (12) fear of apostacy (13) preparation for
+departure[FN#246] (14) strength of conviction (15) clemency in
+time of power (16) strength in time of weakness (17) patience
+under affliction (18) knowledge of God the Most High and (19)
+of what His Prophet hath made known to us (20) gainsaying Iblis
+the accursed (21) striving earnestly against the lusts of the
+soul and gainsaying them and (22) guiltlessness of believing in
+any other god but God.'
+
+When the Commander of the Faithful heard her words, he bade the
+doctor put off his clothes and hood; and he did so and went
+forth, beaten and confounded, from the Khalif's presence.
+Thereupon arose another man and said to her, 'O damsel, hear a
+few questions from me.' 'Say on,' quoth she; and he said, 'What
+are the conditions of valid [purchase by] payment in advance?'
+'That the amount [of the thing bought], the kind and the period
+[of delivery to the purchaser], be [fixed or] known,' replied
+she. (Q.) 'What are the Koranic canons of eating?' (A.) 'The
+confession [by the eater] that God the Most High provideth him
+and giveth him to eat and drink and thanksgiving to Him
+therefor.' (Q.) 'What is thanksgiving?' (A.) 'The use by the
+creature of that which God vouchsafeth to him in the manner and
+to the ends for which He hath created it.' (Q.) 'What are the
+Traditional canons of eating?' (A.) 'The [preliminary] naming
+[of God] and washing the hands, sitting on the left buttock,
+eating with three fingers and eating of that which is chewed.'
+[FN#247] (Q.) 'What are the civilities of eating?' (A.) 'Taking
+small mouthfuls and looking little at one's table-companion.'
+(Q.) 'What are the heart's stays [or articles of faith] and
+their correlatives?' (A.) 'They are three in number, to wit,
+(1) holding fast to the Faith, the correlative whereof is the
+shunning of infidelity, (2) holding fast to the Traditional Law
+and its correlative, the shunning of innovation [or heresy] and
+(3) holding fast to obedience and its correlative, the shunning
+of disobedience.' (Q.) 'What are the conditions of ablution?'
+(A.) '(1) Submission to the will of God[FN#248] (2) possession
+of discernment of good and evil [or having attained the age of
+discretion] (3) purity of the water and (4) absence of legal
+or material impediments.' (Q.) 'What is belief?' (A.) 'It is
+divided into nine parts, to wit, (1) belief in the One worshipped
+(2) belief in the condition of slavery [of the worshipper]
+(3) belief in one God, to the exclusion of all others (4) belief
+in the Two Handfuls[FN#249] (5) belief in Providence (6) belief
+in the Abrogating and (7) in the Abrogated (8) belief in God, His
+angels and apostles and (9) in fore-ordained Fate, general and
+particular, its good and ill, sweet and bitter.' (Q.) 'What
+three things do away other three?' (A.) 'It is told of Sufyan
+eth Thauri[FN#250] that he said, "Three things do away other
+three. Making light of the pious doth away the future life,
+making light of kings doth away [this] life and making light of
+expenditure doth away wealth."' (Q.) 'What are the keys of the
+heavens, and how many gates have they?' (A.) 'Quoth God the Most
+High, "And heaven shall be opened, and it shall be [all] doors,"
+[FN#251] and quoth he whom God bless and keep, "None knoweth the
+number of the gates of heaven, save He who created it, and there
+is no son of Adam but hath two gates allotted to him in the skies,
+one whereby his subsistence cometh down and another where-through
+his works [good and evil] ascend. The former is not closed,
+save when his term of life comes to an end, nor the latter,
+till his soul ascends [for judgment]."' (Q.) 'Tell me of a
+thing and a half thing and a no-thing.' (A.) 'The thing is the
+believer, the half thing the hypocrite and the no-thing the
+infidel.' (Q.) 'Tell me of various kinds of hearts.' (A.)
+'There is the whole [or perfect] heart, which is that of
+[Abraham] the Friend [of God], the sick heart, that of the
+infidel, the contrite heart, that of the pious, fearful ones,
+the heart consecrated to God, that of our Lord Mohammed (whom
+God bless and preserve) and the enlightened [or enlightening]
+heart, that of those who follow him. The hearts of the learned
+are of three kinds, to wit, those that are in love with this
+world, with the next and with their Lord; and it is said that
+hearts are three, the suspended, that of the infidel, the
+non-existent [or lost], that of the hypocrite, and the constant
+[or firm], that of the true-believer. Moreover, it is said that
+the latter is of three kinds, namely, the heart dilated with
+light and faith, that wounded with fear of estrangement and
+that which feareth to be forsaken of God.'
+
+Quoth the second doctor, 'Thou hast said well;' whereupon said
+she to the Khalif, 'O Commander of the Faithful, he has
+questioned me, till he is weary, and now I will ask him two
+questions. If he answer them, it is well, and if not, I will
+take his clothes and he shall depart in peace.' Quoth the
+doctor, 'Ask me what thou wilt,' and she said, 'What is
+religion?' 'Religion,' answered he, 'is confession[FN#252] with
+the tongue and belief with the heart and doing with the
+members. Quoth the Prophet, "The believer is not perfect in
+belief, except five qualities be accomplished in him, namely,
+trust in God, committal of his affair to Him, submission to His
+commandment, acquiescence in His decrees and that he do all for
+His sake; so is he of those who are acceptable to God and who
+give and withhold for His sake, and he is perfect in belief."'
+Then said she, 'What is the Koranic ordinance of ordinances
+and the ordinance which is the preliminary of all ordinances
+and that of which all others stand in need and that which
+comprehendeth all others, and what is the Traditional ordinance
+that entereth into the Koranic, and that whereby the latter is
+completed?' But he was silent and made no reply; whereupon the
+Khalif bade her expound and ordered him to doff his clothes and
+give them to her. 'O doctor,' said she, 'the Koranic ordinance
+of ordinances is the knowledge of God the Most High; that,
+which is the preliminary of all others, is the testifying that
+there is no god but God and that Mohammed is His apostle; that,
+of which all others have need, is ablution; that, which
+compriseth all others, is that of [total] ablution from
+[ceremonial] defilement; the Traditional ordinance, that enters
+into the Koranic, is the separation of the fingers and the
+thick beard; and that, wherewith all Koranic ordinances are
+completed, is circumcision.' Therewith was manifest the
+insufficiency of the doctor, who rose to his feet and said, 'I
+call God to witness, O Commander of the Faithful, that this
+damsel is more learned than I in the Law and what pertains
+thereto.' So saying, he put off his clothes and went away,
+defeated.
+
+Then turned she to the rest of the learned men present and
+said, 'O masters, which of you is the reader,[FN#253] versed in
+the seven readings and in syntax and lexicography?' Thereupon
+the professor arose and seating himself before her, said, 'Hast
+thou read the Book of God the Most High and made thyself
+throughly acquainted with its verses and its various parts,
+abrogating and abrogated, equivocal and unequivocal, Meccan and
+Medinan? Dost thou understand its interpretation and hast thou
+studied it, according to the various versions and readings?'
+'Yes,' answered she; and he said, 'What, then, is the number of
+its chapters, how many are Meccan and how many Medinan? How
+many verses and decades[FN#254] does it contain, how many
+words and how many letters and how many acts of prostration
+and how many prophets and birds are mentioned in it?' 'It
+contains a hundred and fourteen chapters,' replied she, 'whereof
+threescore and ten were revealed at Mecca and forty and four at
+Medina, six thousand three hundred and thirty-six verses, six
+hundred and twenty-one decades, seventy-nine thousand four
+hundred and thirty-nine words and three hundred and twenty-
+three thousand and six hundred and seventy letters; and to the
+reader thereof, for every letter, accrue ten benefits. The
+acts of prostration it contains are fourteen in number, and
+five-and-twenty prophets are named therein, to wit, Adam, Noah,
+Abraham, Ishmael, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Elisha, Jonah, Lot,
+Salih, Houd,[FN#255] Shuaib,[FN#256] David, Solomon, Dhoulkifl,
+[FN#257] Idris,[FN#258] Elias, Yehya,[FN#259] Zacharias, Job,
+Moses, Aaron, Jesus and Mohammed, the peace of God and His
+blessing be on them all! Moreover, nine birds [or flying
+things] are mentioned in the Koran, namely, the gnat, the bee,
+the fly, the ant, the hoopoe, the crow, the locust, the bustard
+and the bird of Jesus[FN#260] (on whom be peace), to wit, the
+bat.' (Q.) 'Which is the most excellent chapter of the Koran?'
+(A.) 'That of the Cow.'[FN#261] (Q.) 'Which is the most magnificent
+verse?' (A.) 'That of the Throne;[FN#262] it has fifty words, in
+each fifty blessings.' (Q.) 'What verse hath in it nine signs [or
+wonders]?' (A.) 'That in which quoth God the Most High, "Verily,
+in the creation of the heavens and the earth and the alternation
+of night and day and the ship that runneth in the sea with what
+profiteth mankind and in what God sendeth down from heaven of
+water and quickeneth therewith the earth, after its dearth, and
+spreadeth abroad therein all manner cattle, and the shifting of
+the winds and the clouds, pressed into service betwixt heaven
+and earth, are signs for folk who understand."'[FN#263] (Q.)
+'Which is the most just?' (A.) 'That in which God saith, "Verily,
+God commandeth to justice and beneficence and giving to those
+that are near unto us and forbiddeth from profligacy and iniquity
+and oppression."'[FN#264] (Q.) 'Which is the most yearnful?' (A.)
+'That in which quoth God, "Shall every man of them yearn to
+enter a garden of delight?"'[FN#265] (Q.) 'Which is the most
+hopeful?' (A.) 'That in which quoth God the Most High, "Say, 'O
+ye my servants, that have transgressed against your own souls,
+despair not of the mercy of God! Indeed, God forgiveth sins,
+all of them, for He is the Forgiving, the Compassionate.'"'
+[FN#266] (Q.) 'By what version dost thou read?' (A.) 'By that of
+the people of Paradise, to wit, the version of Nafi.'[FN#267]
+(Q.) 'In which verse doth God make prophets lie?' (A.) 'In that
+wherein He saith, "They [the brothers of Joseph] brought lying
+blood upon his shirt."'[FN#268] (Q.) 'In which doth He make
+infidels speak the truth?' (A.) 'In that wherein He saith, "The
+Jews say, 'The Nazarenes are [grounded] on nought,' and the
+Nazarenes say, 'The Jews are [grounded] on nought;' and [yet]
+they [both] read the Scripture."[FN#269] And [in this] both speak
+the truth.' (Q.) 'In which doth God speak in His own person [in
+the singular]?' (A.) 'In that in which He saith, "Neither have I
+created Jinn and men, but that they should worship."'[FN#270]
+(Q.) 'In which do the angels speak?' (A.) 'In that which saith,
+"We celebrate Thy praises and hallow Thee."'[FN#271] (Q.) 'What
+sayst thou of the formula, "I seek refuge with God from Satan
+the Stoned"?' (A.) 'It is obligatory, by commandment of God,
+on all who read the Koran, as appears by His saying, "When
+thou readest the Koran, seek refuge with God from Satan the
+Stoned."'[FN#272] (Q.) 'What are the words and variants of
+the formula?' (A.) 'Some say, "I take refuge with God the
+All-hearing and knowing, etc.," and others, "With God the
+Strong;" but the best is that of which the noble Koran and the
+Traditions speak. The Prophet was used, whenas he was about to
+open the Koran, to say, "I take refuge with God from Satan
+the Stoned." And quoth a Tradition, reported by Nafi on the
+authority of his [adopted] father, "The apostle of God used,
+when he rose in the night to pray, to say aloud, 'God is Most
+Great, with [all] greatness! Praise be to God abundantly! Glory
+to God morning and evening!' Then would he say, 'I seek refuge
+with God from Satan the Stoned and from the instigations of the
+Devils and their evil suggestions."' And it is told of Ibn
+Abbas[FN#273] (of whom God accept) that he said, "The first
+time Gabriel came down to the Prophet [with a portion of the
+Koran,] he taught him [the formula of] seeking refuge, saying,
+'O Mohammed, say, "I seek refuge with God the All-hearing and
+knowing;" then say, "In the name of God the Compassionate, the
+Merciful!" And read, in the name of thy Lord who created men
+from clotted blood.'"'[FN#274] (Q.) 'What sayst thou of the
+verse, "In the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful"?
+Is it one of the verses of the Koran?' (A.) 'Yes; it is a verse
+of "The ant"[FN#275] and occurs also [at the head of the first
+and] between every two [following] chapters; and there is much
+difference of opinion, respecting this, among the learned.'
+(Q.) 'Why is not the formula written at the head of the chapter
+of Immunity?'[FN#276] (A.) 'When this chapter was revealed for
+the dissolution of the alliance between the Prophet and the
+idolaters, the former sent Ali ibn Abi Talib (whose face God
+honour) therewith [from Medina to Mecca] at the season of the
+greater pilgrimage;[FN#277] and he read the chapter to them,
+but did not read "In the name, etc."'[FN#278] (Q.) 'What of the
+excellence of the formula and the blessing that attaches to
+it?' (A.) 'It is told of the Prophet that he said, "Never is
+'In the name, etc.' pronounced over aught, but there is a
+blessing in it;" and it is reported, on his authority, that the
+Lord of Glory swore by His glory that never should the formula
+be pronounced over a sick person, but he should be healed of
+his sickness. Moreover, it is said that, when God created the
+empyreal heaven, it was agitated with an exceeding agitation; but
+He wrote on it, "In the name, etc.," and its agitation subsided.
+When the formula was first revealed to the Prophet, he said, "I
+am safe from three things, earthquake and metamorphosis and
+drowning;" and indeed its virtues are great and its blessings
+too many to enumerate. It is told of the Prophet that he said,
+"There will be brought before God, on the judgment day, a man
+with whom He shall reckon and finding no good deed to his account,
+shall order him to the fire; but the man will say, 'O my God,
+Thou hast not dealt justly by me!' Then shall God (to whom belong
+might and majesty) say, 'How so?' and the man will answer, saying,
+'O Lord, for that Thou callest Thyself the Compassionate, the
+Merciful, yet wilt Thou punish me with the fire!' And God
+(extolled be His majesty) shall say, 'I did indeed name myself
+the Compassionate, the Merciful. Carry My servant to Paradise,
+of My mercy, for I am the most Merciful of those that have
+mercy.'"' (Q.) 'What was the origin of the use of the formula?'
+(A.) 'When God revealed the Koran, they wrote, "In Thy name, O
+my God!"; when He revealed the words, "Say, pray ye to God or
+pray ye to the Compassionate, what days ye pray, for to Him
+[belong] the most fair names,"[FN#279] they wrote, "In the name
+of God, the Compassionate;" and when He revealed the words,
+"Your God is one God, there is no god but He, the Compassionate,
+the Merciful,"[FN#280] they wrote, "In the name of God, the
+Compassionate, the Merciful!"' (Q.) 'Did God reveal the Koran
+all at once or at intervals?' (A.) 'Gabriel the Faithful
+[Spirit] (on whom be peace) descended with it from the Lord of
+the Worlds upon His Prophet Mohammed, Prince of the Apostles
+and seal[FN#281] of the Prophets, by detached verses, containing
+commandment and prohibition, promise and menace, anecdotes
+and similitudes, as the occasion called for it, in the course
+of twenty years.' (Q.) 'Which chapter was first revealed?'
+(A.) 'According to Ibn Abbas, that of the Clot of Blood,[FN#282]
+and according to Jabir ben Abdallah,[FN#283] that of the Covered
+[with a cloak].'[FN#284] (Q.) 'Which verse was the last revealed?'
+(A.) 'That of Usury,[FN#285] and it is said [also], the verse,
+"When there cometh God's succour and victory."'[FN#286] (Q.) 'Tell
+me the names of the Companions who collected the Koran, in the
+lifetime of the Apostle of God.' (A.) 'They were four in number,
+to wit, Ubai ibn Kaab, Zeid ibn Thabit, Abou Ubeideh Aamir ben
+Jerrah and Othman ben Affan,[FN#287] may God accept of them all!'
+(Q.) 'Who are the readers, from whom the [accepted] reading of
+the Koran is taken?' (A.) 'They are four in number, namely,
+Abdallah ben Mesoud, Ubai ben Kaab, Maadh ben Jebel[FN#288] and
+Salim ben Abdallah.'[FN#289] (Q.) 'What sayst thou of the words
+of the Most High, "That which is sacrificed to stones"?'[FN#290]
+(A.) 'The stones are idols, which are set up and worshipped, instead
+of God the Most High, and [from this] we seek refuge with Him.'
+(Q.) 'What sayst thou of the words of the Most High, "[Quoth
+Jesus] Thou knowest what is in my soul, and I know not what is
+in Thy soul"?'[FN#291] (A.) 'They mean "Thou [God] knowest the
+truth of me and what is in me and I [Jesus] know not what is in
+Thee;" and the proof of this are his words,[FN#292] "Thou [God]
+art He that knoweth the hidden things;" and it is said, also,
+"Thou [God] knowest my essence, but I [man] know not Thine
+essence."' (Q.) 'What sayst thou of the words of the Most High,
+"O ye that believe, deny not yourselves the good things that
+God hath made lawful to you!"?'[FN#293] (A.) 'My master (on
+whom God have mercy) told me that Ez Zuhak[FN#294] said, "There
+was a people of the true-believers who said, 'We will dock our
+yards and don sackcloth;' whereupon this verse was revealed."
+But El Cutadeh[FN#295] says that it was revealed on account of
+sundry Companions of the Apostle of God, Ali ibn Abi Talib and
+Othman ben Musaab and others, who said, "We will dock ourselves
+and don hair [cloth] and make us monks."' (Q.) 'What sayst thou
+of the words of the Most High, "And God took Abraham to
+friend"?'[FN#296] (A.) 'The friend [of God] is the needy, the
+poor, and (according to another saying) he is the lover, he who
+is absorbed in the love of God the Most High and in whose
+exclusive devotion there is no falling away.'
+
+When the professor saw her pass on in speech with the passing
+of the clouds[FN#297] and that she stayed not in answering, he
+rose to his feet and said, 'I take God to witness, O Commander
+of the Faithful, that this damsel is more learned than I in
+Koranic exegesis and what pertains thereto.' Then said she, 'I
+will ask thee one question, which if thou answer, it is well:
+but if thou answer not, I will strip off thy clothes.' 'Ask
+on,' quoth the Khalif; and she said, 'Which verse of the
+Koran has in it three-and-twenty Kafs,[FN#298] which sixteen
+Mims,[FN#299] which a hundred and forty Ains,[FN#300] and which
+section[FN#301] lacks the formula, "To whom [God] belong might
+and majesty"?' He could not answer, and she said to him, 'Put
+off thy clothes.' So he doffed them, and she said, 'O Commander
+of the Faithful, the verse of the sixteen Mims is in the
+chapter Houd and is the saying of the Most High, "It was
+said, 'O Noah, go down in peace from us, and blessing upon
+thee!'"[FN#302]; that of the three-and-twenty Kafs is the verse
+called of the Faith, in the chapter of the Cow; that of the
+hundred and forty Ains is in the chapter of El Aaraf,[FN#303]
+"And Moses chose seventy men of his tribe to [attend] our
+appointed time;[FN#304] to each man a pair of eyes."[FN#305]
+And the set portion which lacks the formula, "To whom [God]
+belong might and majesty," is that which comprises the chapters
+"The Hour draweth nigh and the Moon is cloven in twain," "The
+Compassionate" and "The Event."'[FN#306] And the professor
+departed in confusion.
+
+Then came forward the skilled physician and said to her, 'We
+have done with theology and come now to physiology. Tell me,
+therefore, how is man made, how many veins, bones and vertebrae
+are there in his body, which is the chief vein and why Adam was
+named Adam?' 'Adam was called Adam,' answered she, 'because of
+the udmeh, to wit, the tawny colour of his complexion and also
+(it is said) because he was created of the adim of the earth,
+that is to say, of the soil of its surface. His breast was made
+of the earth of the Kaabeh, his head of earth from the East and
+his legs of earth from the West. There were created for him
+seven doors [or openings] in his head, to wit, the eyes, the
+ears, the nostrils and the mouth, and two passages, the urethra
+and the anus. The eyes were made the seat of the sense of
+sight, the ears of that of hearing, the nostrils of that of
+smell, the mouth of that of taste and the tongue to speak forth
+what is in the innermost heart of man. Adam was originally
+created of four elements combined, water, earth, fire and air.
+The yellow bile is the humour of fire, being hot and dry, the
+black bile that of earth, being cold and dry, the phlegm that
+of water, being cold and moist, and the blood that of air,
+being hot and moist. There are in man three hundred and
+threescore veins, two hundred and forty bones and three souls
+[or natures], the animal, the rational and the essential or
+[natural], to each of which is allotted a separate function.
+Moreover, God made him a heart and spleen and lungs and six
+guts and a liver and two kidneys and marrow [or brain] and
+buttocks and bones and skin and five senses, hearing, seeing,
+smell, taste and touch. The heart He set on the left side of
+the breast and made the stomach the exemplar [or governor]
+thereof. He appointed the lungs for a ventilator to the heart
+and set the liver on the right side, opposite thereto. Moreover,
+He made, besides this, the midriff and the intestines and set
+up the bones of the breast and ribbed them with the ribs.'
+(Q.) 'How many ventricles are there in a man's head?' (A.) 'Three,
+which contain five faculties, styled the intrinsic senses, i.e.
+common sense, fancy, thought, apperception and memory.' (Q.)
+'Describe to me the scheme of the bones.' (A.) 'It consists of
+two hundred and forty bones, which are divided into three parts,
+the head, the trunk and the extremities. The head is divided
+into skull and face. The skull is constructed of eight bones,
+and to it are attached the teeth, two-and- thirty in number,
+and the hyoid bone, one. The trunk is divided into spinal column,
+breast and basin. The spinal column is made up of four-and-twenty
+bones, called vertebrae, the breast of the breastbone and the ribs,
+which are four-and-twenty in number, twelve on each side, and
+the basin of the hips, the sacrum and the coccyx. The extremities
+are divided into arms and legs. The arms are again divided into
+shoulder, comprising shoulder-blades and collar-bone, the upper-
+arm, one bone, the fore-arm, composed of two bones, the radius and
+the ulna, and the hand, consisting of the wrist, the metacarpus
+and the fingers. The wrist is composed of eight bones, ranked in
+two rows, each comprising four bones; the metacarpus of five
+and the fingers, which are five in number, of three bones each,
+called the phalanges, except the thumb, which has but two.
+The lower extremities are divided into thigh, one bone, leg,
+composed of three bones, the tibia, the fibula and the kneepan,
+and the foot, divided like the hand, with the exception of the
+wrist,[FN#307] which is composed of seven bones, ranged in two
+rows, two in one and five in the other.' (Q.) 'Which is the
+root of the veins?' (A.) 'The aorta from which they ramify, and
+they are many, none knoweth the tale of them save He who
+created them; but, as I have before observed, it is said that
+they are three hundred and threescore in number. Moreover, God
+hath appointed the tongue to interpret [for the thought], the
+eyes to serve as lanterns, the nostrils to smell with, and the
+hands for prehensors. The liver is the seat of pity, the spleen
+of laughter and the kidneys of craft; the lungs are the
+ventilators, the stomach the storehouse and the heart the
+pillar [or mainstay] of the body. When the heart is sound, the
+whole body is sound, and when the heart is corrupt, the whole
+body is corrupt.' (Q.) 'What are the outward signs and symptoms
+of disease in the members of the body, both internal and
+external?' (A.) 'A physician, who is a man of understanding,
+looks into the state of the body and is guided by the feel of
+the hands, according as they are firm [or flabby], hot or cool,
+moist or dry. Internal disorders are also indicated by external
+symptoms, such as yellowness of the [whites of the] eyes, which
+denotes jaundice, and bending of the back, which denotes
+disease of the lungs.' (Q.) 'What are the internal symptoms of
+disease?' (A.) 'The science of the diagnosis of disease by
+internal symptoms is founded upon six canons, to wit, (1) the
+actions [of the patient] (2) what is evacuated from his body
+(3) the nature and (4) site of the pain he feels (5) swelling
+and (6) the effluvia given off by his body.' (Q.) 'How cometh
+hurt to the head?' (A.) 'By the introduction of food upon food,
+before the first be digested, and by satiety upon satiety; this
+it is that wasteth peoples. He who will live long, let him be
+early with the morning-meal and not late with the evening-meal;
+let him be sparing of commerce with women and chary of cupping
+and blood-letting and make of his belly three parts, one for
+food, one for drink and the third for air; for that a man's
+intestines are eighteen spans in length and it befits that he
+appoint six for food, six for drink, and six for air. If he
+walk, let him go gently; it will be wholesomer for him and
+better for his body and more in accordance with the saying of
+God the Most High, "Walk not boisterously [or proudly] upon the
+earth."'[FN#308] (Q.) 'What are the symptoms of yellow bile and
+what is to be feared there-from?' (A.) 'The symptoms are,
+sallow complexion and dryness and bitter taste in the mouth,
+failure of the appetite, and rapid pulse; and the patient has
+to fear high fever and delirium and prickly heat and jaundice
+and tumour and ulceration of the bowels and excessive thirst.'
+(Q.) 'What are the symptoms of black bile and what has the
+patient to fear from it, if it get the mastery of the body?'
+(A.) 'The symptoms are deceptive appetite and great mental
+disquiet and care and anxiety; and it behoves that it be
+evacuated, else it will generate melancholy and leprosy and
+cancer and disease of the spleen and ulceration of the bowels.'
+(Q.) 'Into how many branches is the art of medicine divided?'
+(A.) 'Into two: the art of diagnosing diseases and that of
+restoring the diseased body to health.' (Q.) 'When is the
+drinking of medicine more efficacious than otherwhen?' (A.)
+'When the sap runs in the wood and the grape thickens in
+the cluster and the auspicious planets[FN#309] are in the
+ascendant, then comes in the season of the efficacy of drinking
+medicine and the doing away of disease.' (Q.) 'What time is it,
+when, if a man drink from a new vessel, the drink is wholesomer
+and more digestible to him than at another time, and there
+ascends to him a pleasant and penetrating fragrance?' (A.)
+'When he waits awhile after eating, as quoth the poet:
+
+I rede thee drink not after food in haste, but tarry still;
+ Else with a halter wilt thou lead thy body into ill.
+Yea, wait a little after thou hast eaten, brother mine; Then
+ drink, and peradventure thus shalt thou attain unto thy
+ will.'
+
+
+(Q.) 'What food is it that giveth not rise to ailments?' (A.)
+'That which is not eaten but after hunger, and when it is
+eaten, the ribs are not filled with it, even as saith Galen the
+physician, "Whoso will take in food, let him go slowly and he
+shall not go wrong." To end with the saying of the Prophet,
+(whom God bless and preserve,) "The stomach is the home of
+disease, and abstinence is the beginning[FN#310] of cure,
+[FN#311] for the origin of every disease is indigestion,
+that is to say, corruption of the meat in the stomach."' (Q.)
+'What sayst thou of the bath?' (A.) 'Let not the full man enter
+it. Quoth the Prophet, "The bath is the delight of the house,
+for that it cleanseth the body and calleth to mind the fire [of
+hell]."' (Q.) 'What waters[FN#312] are best for bathing?' (A.)
+'Those whose waters are sweet and plains wide and whose air is
+pleasant and wholesome, its climate [or seasons] being fair,
+autumn and summer and winter and spring.' (Q.) 'What kind of
+food is the most excellent?' (A.) 'That which women make and
+which has not cost overmuch trouble and which is readily
+digested. The most excellent of food is brewis,[FN#313]
+according to the saying of the Prophet, "Brewis excels other
+food, even as Aaisheh excels other women."' (Q.) 'What kind of
+seasoning[FN#314] is most excellent?' (A.) 'Flesh meat (quoth
+the Prophet) is the most excellent of seasonings; for that it
+is the delight of this world and the next.' (Q.) 'What kind of
+meat is the most excellent?' (A.) 'Mutton; but jerked meat is
+to be avoided, for there is no profit in it.' (Q.) 'What of
+fruits?' (A.) 'Eat them in their prime and leave them when
+their season is past.' (Q.) 'What sayst thou of drinking
+water?' (A.) 'Drink it not in large quantities nor by gulps,
+or it will give thee the headache and cause divers kinds of
+harm; neither drink it immediately after the bath nor after
+copulation or eating (except it be after the lapse of fifteen
+minutes for a young and forty for an old man) or waking from
+sleep.' (Q.) 'What of drinking wine?' (A.) 'Doth not the
+prohibition suffice thee in the Book of God the Most High,
+where He saith, "Verily, wine and casting lots and idols and
+divining arrows are an abomination of the fashion of the Devil:
+shun them, so surely shall ye thrive."[FN#315] And again, "If
+they ask thee of wine and casting lots, say, 'In them are great
+sin and advantages to mankind, but the sin of them is greater
+than the advantage.'"[FN#316] Quoth the poet:
+
+O wine-bibber, art not ashamed and afraid To drink of a thing
+ that thy Maker forbade?
+Come, put the cup from thee and mell with it not, For wine and
+ its drinker God still doth upbraid.
+
+And quoth another:
+
+I drank the sweet sin till my wit went astray: 'Tis ill
+ drinking of that which doth reason away.
+
+As for the useful qualities that are therein, it disperses
+gravel from the kidneys and strengthens the bowels, banishes
+care, moves to generosity and preserves health and digestion.
+It assains the body, expels disease from the joints, purifies
+the frame of corrupt humours, engenders cheerfulness and
+gladdens and keeps up the natural heat. It contracts the
+bladder, strengthens the liver and removes obstructions,
+reddens the face, clears away cobwebs from the brain and defers
+gray hairs. In short, had not God (to whom belong might and
+majesty) forbidden it, there were not on the face of the earth
+aught fit to stand in its place. As for drawing lots, it is a
+game of hazard.'[FN#317] (Q.) 'What wine is the best?' (A.)
+'That which is pressed from white grapes and ferments fourscore
+days or more: it resembleth not water and indeed there is
+nothing on the surface of the earth like unto it.' (Q.) 'What
+of cupping?' (A.) 'It is for him who is [over] full of blood
+and has no defect therein. Whoso will be cupped, let it be at
+the wane of the moon, on a day without cloud or wind or rain
+and the seventeenth of the month. If it fall on a Tuesday, it
+will be the more efficacious, and nothing is more salutary for
+the brain and eyes and for clearing the memory than cupping.'
+(Q.) 'What is the best time for cupping?' (A.) 'One should be
+cupped fasting, for this fortifies the wit and the memory. It
+is reported of the Prophet that, when any one complained to him
+of a pain in the head or legs, he would bid him be cupped and
+not eat salt [meat] fasting, for it engendered scurvy, neither
+eat sour milk immediately after [cupping].' (Q.) 'When is
+cupping to be avoided?' (A.) 'On Wednesdays and Saturdays, and
+let him who is cupped on these days blame none but himself.
+Moreover, one should not be cupped in very hot nor in very cold
+weather; and the best season for cupping is Spring.' (Q.) 'Tell
+me of copulation.'
+
+At this Taweddud hung her head, for shame and confusion before
+the Khalif; then said, 'By Allah, O Commander of the Faithful,
+it is not that I am at fault, but that I am ashamed, though,
+indeed, the answer is on the tip of my tongue.' 'Speak, O
+damsel,' said the Khalif; whereupon quoth she, 'Copulation hath
+in it many and exceeding virtues and praiseworthy qualities,
+amongst which are, that it lightens a body full of black bile
+and calms the heat of love and engenders affection and dilates
+the heart and dispels sadness; and the excess of it is more
+harmful in summer and autumn than in spring and winter.' (Q.)
+'What are its good effects?' (A.) 'It doth away trouble and
+disquiet, calms love and chagrin and is good for ulcers in a
+cold and dry humour; but excess of it weakens the sight and
+engenders pains in the legs and head and back: and beware,
+beware of having to do with old women, for they are deadly.
+Quoth the Imam Ali,[FN#318] (whose face God honour), "Four
+things kill and ruin the body: bathing on a full stomach,
+eating salt meat, copulation on a plethora [of blood] and lying
+with an ailing woman; for she will weaken thy strength and
+infect thy body with sickness; and an old woman is deadly
+poison." And quoth one of them, "Beware of taking an old woman
+to wife, though she be richer in goods than Caroun."'[FN#319]
+(Q.) 'What is the best copulation?' (A.) 'If the woman be
+young, well-shaped, fair of face, swelling-breasted and of
+honourable extraction, she will add to thee strength and health
+of body; and let her be even as saith the poet, describing her:
+
+Even by thy looks, I trow, she knows what thou desir'st, By
+ instinct, without sign or setting forth of sense;
+And when thou dost behold her all-surpassing grace, Her charms
+ enable thee with gardens to dispense.'
+
+(Q.) 'At what time is copulation good?' (A.) 'If by day, after
+the morning-meal, and if by night, after food digested.' (Q.)
+'What are the most excellent fruits?' (A.) 'The pomegranate and
+the citron.' (Q.) 'Which is the most excellent of vegetables?'
+(A.) 'The endive.' (Q.) 'Which of sweet-scented flowers?'
+(A.) 'The rose and the violet.' (Q.) 'How is sperma hominis
+secreted?' (A.) 'There is in man a vein that feeds all the
+other veins. Water [or blood] is collected from the three
+hundred and threescore veins and enters, in the form of red
+blood, the left testicle, where it is decocted, by the heat of
+man's temperament, into a thick, white liquid, whose odour is
+as that of the palm-spathe.' (Q.) 'What bird [or flying thing]
+is it that emits seed and menstruates?' (A.) 'The bat, that is,
+the rere-mouse.' (Q.) 'What is that which, when it is shut out
+[from the air], lives, and when it smells the air, dies?' (A.)
+'The fish.' (Q.) 'What serpent lays eggs?' (A.) 'The dragon.'
+
+With this the physician was silent, being weary with much
+questioning, and Taweddud said to the Khalif, 'O Commander of
+the Faithful, he hath questioned me till he is weary, and now I
+will ask him one question, which if he answer not, I will take
+his clothes as lawful prize.' 'Ask on,' quoth the Khalif. So
+she said to the physician, 'What is that which resembles the
+earth in [plane] roundness, whose resting-place and spine are
+hidden, little of value and estimation, narrow-chested, its
+throat shackled, though it be no thief nor runaway slave,
+thrust through and through, though not in fight, and wounded,
+though not in battle; time eats its vigour and water wastes it
+away; now it is beaten without a fault and now made to serve
+without stint; united after separation, submissive, but not to
+him who caresses it, pregnant[FN#320] without a child in its
+belly, drooping, yet not leaning on its side, becoming dirty
+yet purifying itself, cleaving to [its mate], yet changing,
+copulating without a yard, wrestling without arms, resting and
+taking its ease, bitten, yet not crying out, [now] more
+complaisant than a boon-companion and [anon] more troublesome
+than summer-heat, leaving its wife by night and clipping her
+by day and having its abode in the corners of the mansions of
+the noble?' The physician was silent and his colour changed and
+he bowed his head awhile in perplexity and made no reply;
+whereupon she said to him, 'O physician, speak or put off thy
+clothes.' At this, he rose and said, 'O Commander of the
+Faithful, bear witness against me that this damsel is more
+learned than I in medicine and what else and that I cannot cope
+with her.' And he put off his clothes and fled forth. Quoth the
+Khalif to Taweddud, 'Expound to us thy riddle,' and she
+replied, 'O Commander of the Faithful, it is the button and the
+button loop.'
+
+Then said she, 'Let him of you who is an astronomer come
+forward.' So the astronomer came forward and sat down before
+her. When she saw him, she laughed and said, 'Art thou the
+astronomer, the mathematician, the scribe?' 'Yes,' answered he.
+'Ask of what thou wilt,' quoth she; 'success rests with God.'
+So he said, 'Tell me of the sun and its rising and setting?'
+And she replied, 'The sun rises in the Eastern hemisphere and
+sets in the Western, and each hemisphere comprises ninescore
+degrees. Quoth God the Most High, "Verily, I swear by the Lord
+of the places of the sunrise and of the sunsetting."[FN#321]
+And again, "He it is who appointed the sun for a splendour and
+the moon for a light and ordained to her mansions, that ye
+might know the number of the years and the reckoning."[FN#322]
+The moon is Sultan of the night and the sun Sultan of the day,
+and they vie with one another in their courses and follow each
+other in uninterrupted succession. Quoth God the Most High, "It
+befits not that the sun overtake the moon nor that the night
+prevent the day, but each glides in [its own] sphere."'[FN#323]
+(Q.) 'When the day cometh, what becomes of the night, and what
+of the day, when the night cometh?' (A.) 'He maketh the night
+to enter into the day and the day into the night.'[FN#324] (Q.)
+'Enumerate to me the mansions of the moon.' (A.) 'They are
+eight-and-twenty in number, to wit, Sheretan, Butain, Thureya,
+Deberan, Hecaaeh, Henaaeh, Dhiraa, Nethreh, Terf, Jebheh, Zubreh,
+Serfeh, Awwaa, Simak and Ghefr, Zubaniya, Iklil, Kelb, Shauleh,
+Naaim, Beldeh, Saad edh Dhabih, Saad el Bulaa, Saad el Akhbiyeh,
+Saad es Suwoud, Fergh the Former and Fergh the Latter and Rishaa.
+They are disposed in the order of the letters of the alphabet,
+according to their numerical power, and there are in them secret
+virtues which none knoweth save God (glorified and exalted be
+He) and those who are firmly stablished in science. They are
+divided among the twelve signs of the Zodiac, in the ratio of two
+mansions and a third of a mansion to each sign. Thus Sheretan,
+Butain and one-third of Thureya belong to Aries, the other two-
+thirds of Thureya, Deberan and two thirds of Hecaaeh to Taurus,
+the other third of Hecaaeh, Henaaeh and Dhiraa to Gemini, Nethreh,
+Terf, and a third of Jebheh to Cancer, the other two-thirds of
+Jebheh, Zubreh and two-thirds of Serfeh to Leo, the other third
+of Serfeh, Awwaa and Simak to Virgo, Ghefr, Zubaniya and one-third
+of Iklil to Libra, the other two-thirds of Iklil, Kelb and two-
+thirds of Shauleh to Scorpio, the other third of Shauleh, Naaim
+and Beldeh to Sagittarius, Saad edh Dhabih, Saad el Bulaa and
+one-third of Saad es Suwoud to Capricorn, the other two-thirds
+of Saad es Suwoud, Saad el Akbiyeh and two-thirds of Fergh the
+Former to Aquarius, the other third of Fergh the Former, Fergh
+the Latter and Rishaa to Pisces.' (Q.) 'Tell me of the planets
+and their natures, also of their sojourn in the signs of the
+Zodiac, their aspects, favourable and sinister, their houses,
+ascendants and descendants.' (A.) 'The sitting is narrow [for
+so comprehensive a matter], but they are seven in number, to
+wit, the sun, the moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and
+Saturn. The sun is hot and dry, sinister in conjunction,
+favourable in opposition, and abides thirty days in each sign.
+The moon is cold and moist, favourable of aspect, and abides
+two days in each sign and a third of another day. Mercury is of
+a mixed nature, favourable [in conjunction] with the favourable
+and sinister [in conjunction] with the sinister [asterisms],
+and abides in each sign seventeen and a half days. Venus is
+temperate, favourable and abides in each sign five-and-twenty
+days. Mars is sinister and abides in each sign ten months.
+Jupiter is favourable and abides in each sign a year. Saturn is
+cold and dry and sinister and abides in each sign thirty
+months. The house of the sun is Leo, its ascendant is Aries and
+its descendant Aquarius. The moon's house is Cancer, its
+ascendant Taurus, its descendant Scorpio and its sinister
+aspect Capricorn. Saturn's house is Capricorn and Aquarius, its
+ascendant Libra, its descendant Aries and its sinister aspects
+Cancer and Leo. Jupiter's house is Pisces and Sagittarius, its
+ascendant Cancer, its descendant Capricorn and its sinister
+aspects Gemini and Leo. Venus's house is Taurus, its ascendant
+Pisces, its descendant Libra and its sinister aspects Aries and
+Scorpio. Mercury's house is Gemini and Virgo, its ascendant
+Virgo, its descendant Pisces and its sinister aspect Taurus.
+Mars's house is Aries and Scorpio, its ascendant Capricorn, its
+descendant Cancer and its sinister aspect Libra.'
+
+When the astronomer saw her acuteness and skill and heard her
+fair answers, he bethought him for a device to confound her
+before the Commander of the Faithful and said to her, 'O
+damsel, will rain fall this month?' At this she bowed her head
+and pondered so long, that the Khalif thought her at a loss for
+an answer and the astronomer said to her, 'Why dost thou not
+speak?' Quoth she, 'I will not speak except the Commander of
+the Faithful give me leave.' The Khalif laughed and said, 'How
+so?' Said she, 'I would have thee give me a sword, that I may
+strike off his head, for he is an infidel.' At this the Khalif
+and those about him laughed, and she said, 'O astronomer, there
+are five things that none knoweth save God the Most High;' and
+she repeated the following verse: 'Verily, with God is the
+knowledge of the hour; He sendeth down the rain and knoweth
+what is in the wombs. None knoweth what the morrow shall bring
+forth for him nor in what land he shall die. Verily, God is the
+All-wise, the All-knowing.'[FN#325]
+
+Quoth the astronomer, 'Thou hast said well, and by Allah, I
+thought but to try thee.' 'Know,' rejoined she, 'that the
+almanack-makers have certain signs and tokens, referring to the
+planets, relative to the coming in of the year, and in which
+are tribulations for the folk.' (Q.) 'What are they?' (A.)
+'Each day hath a planet that rules it. So, if the first day of
+the year fall on a Sunday, that day is the sun's and this
+portends (though God alone is All-knowing) oppression of kings
+and sultans and governors and much miasma and lack of rain and
+that the folk will be in great disorder and the grain-crop will
+be good, except lentils, which will perish, and the vines will
+rot and flax will be dear and wheat cheap from the beginning of
+Toubeh[FN#326] to the end of Beremhat.[FN#327] Moreover, in
+this year there will be much fighting among kings, and there
+shall be great plenty of good in this year.' (Q.) 'What if the
+first day fall on Monday?' (A.) 'That day belongs to the moon
+and portends righteousness in administrators and deputies and
+that it will be a year of much rain and grain-crops will be
+good, but linseed will decay and wheat will be cheap in the
+month Keyehk;[FN#328] also that plagues will be rife and
+that half the sheep and goats will die, that grapes will be
+plentiful and honey scarce and cotton cheap.' (Q.) 'What if it
+fall on Tuesday?' (A.) 'That is Mars's day and portends death
+of great men and much destruction and outpouring of blood and
+dearness of grain, lack of rain and scarcity of fish, which
+will anon be in excess and anon fail [altogether]. In this
+year, lentils and honey will be cheap and linseed dear and only
+barley will thrive, to the exception of all other grain: great
+will be the fighting among kings and death will be in the blood
+and there will be much mortality among asses.' (Q.) 'What if it
+fall on Wednesday?' (A.) 'That is Mercury's day and portends
+great anarchy among the folk and much enmity and rotting of
+some of the green crops and moderate rains; also that there
+will be great mortality among cattle and infants and much
+fighting by sea, that wheat will be dear from Burmoudeh to
+Misra[FN#329] and other grains cheap: thunder and lightning
+will abound and honey will be dear, palm-trees will thrive and
+bear apace and flax and cotton will be plentiful, but radishes
+and onions will be dear.' (Q.) 'What if it fall on Thursday?'
+(A.) 'That is Jupiter's day and portends equity in viziers and
+righteousness in Cadis and fakirs and the ministers of religion
+and that good will be plentiful: rain and fruits and trees and
+grain and fish will abound and flax, cotton, honey and grapes
+be cheap.' (Q.) 'What if it fall on Friday?' (A.) 'That day
+belongs to Venus and portends oppression in the chiefs of the
+Jinn and talk of forgery and calumny; there will be much dew,
+the autumn crops will be good in the land and there will be
+cheapness in one town and not in another: lewdness will be
+rife by land and sea, linseed will be dear, also wheat, in
+Hatour,[FN#330] but cheap in Amshir:[FN#331] honey will be
+dear and grapes and melons will rot.' (Q.) 'What if it fall
+on Saturday?' (A.) 'That is Saturn's day and portends the
+preferment of slaves and Greeks and those in whom there is no
+good, neither in their neighbourhood; there will be great
+drought and scarcity; clouds will abound and death will be rife
+among mankind and woe to the people of Egypt and Syria from the
+oppression of the Sultan and failure of blessing upon the green
+crops and rotting of grain.'
+
+With this, the astronomer hung his head, [being at an end of
+his questions], and she said to him, 'O astronomer, I will ask
+thee one question, which if thou answer not, I will take thy
+clothes.' 'Ask on,' replied he. Quoth she, 'Where is Saturn's
+dwelling place?' And he answered, 'In the seventh heaven.' (Q.)
+'And that of Jupiter?' (A.) 'In the sixth heaven.' (Q.) 'And
+that of Mars?' (A.) 'In the fifth heaven.' (Q.) 'And that of
+the sun?' (A.) 'In the fourth heaven.' (Q.) 'And that of
+Venus?' (A.) 'In the third heaven.' (Q.) 'And that of Mercury?'
+(A.) 'In the second heaven.' (Q.) 'And that of the moon?' (A.)
+'In the first heaven.' Quoth she, 'Well answered; but I have
+one more question to ask thee. Into how many parts are the
+stars divided?' But he was silent and answered nothing; and she
+said to him, 'Put off thy clothes.' So he put them off and she
+took them; after which the Khalif said to her, 'Tell us the
+answer to thy question.' 'O Commander of the Faithful,'
+answered she, 'the stars are divided into three parts, one
+whereof is hung in the sky of the earth,[FN#332] as it were
+lamps, to give light to the earth, another suspended in the
+air, to give light to the seas and that which is therein, and
+the third is used to transfix the demons withal, when they draw
+near by stealth to [listen to the talk of the angels in]
+heaven. Quoth God the Most High, "Verily, we have decked the
+sky of the earth with lamps and have appointed them for
+projectiles against the demons."'[FN#333] Quoth the astronomer,
+'I have one more question to ask, which if she answer, I will
+avow myself beaten.' 'Say on,' answered she. Then said he,
+'What four incompatible things are based upon other four
+incompatibles?' 'The four elements,' replied she; 'for of heat
+God created fire, which is by nature hot and dry; of dryness,
+earth, which is cold and dry; of cold, water, which is cold and
+moist; of moisture, air, which is hot and moist. Moreover, He
+created twelve signs of the Zodiac, Aries, Taurus, Gemini,
+Cancer, Leo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn,
+Aquarius and Pisces and appointed them of four [several]
+humours, three, Aries, Leo and Sagittarius, fiery, Taurus, Virgo
+and Capricorn, earthy, Gemini, Libra and Aquarius, airy, and
+Cancer, Scorpio and Pisces, watery.' With this, the astronomer
+rose, and saying, 'Bear witness against me that she is more
+learned than I,' went away beaten.
+
+Then said the Khalif, 'Where is the philosopher?' whereupon one
+came forward and said to Taweddud, 'What is Time?' 'Time,'
+answered she, 'is a name applied to the [lapse of the] hours of
+the day and night, which are but the measures of the courses of
+the sun and moon in their several orbits, even as God the Most
+High telleth us, when he saith, "And a sign to them [is] the
+night, from which we strip off the day, and behold, they are in
+darkness, and the sun runneth to a fixed abode, [appointed] to
+it; this is the ordinance of the Sublime, the All-knowing."'
+[FN#334] (Q.) 'How comes unbelief to the son of Adam?' (A.) 'It
+is reported of the Prophet that he said, "Unbelief runs in a man,
+as the blood runs in the veins, when he reviles the world and Time
+and night and the hour." And again, "Let none of you revile Time,
+for Time is God; neither the world, for it saith, 'May God not
+help him that reviles me!' neither the hour, for 'Verily, the hour
+cometh, without doubt;'[FN#335] neither the earth, for it is a
+portent, according to the saying of the Most High, 'From it we
+created you, to it we will return you and from it we will bring
+you forth yet again.'"'[FN#336] (Q.) 'What are the five that ate
+and drank, yet came not out of loins nor belly?' (A.) 'Adam and
+Simeon and Salih's she-camel[FN#337] and Ishmael's ram and the
+bird that Abou Bekr the Truth-teller saw in the cave.'[FN#338]
+(Q.) 'Tell me of five that are in Paradise and are neither
+mortals, Jinn nor angels?' (A.) 'Jacob's wolf and the Seven
+Sleepers' dog and Esdras's ass and Salih's camel and the
+Prophet's mule.' (Q.) 'What man prayed a prayer neither on
+earth nor in heaven?' (A.) 'Solomon [son of David], when he
+prayed on his carpet, borne by the wind.' (Q.) 'A man once
+looked at a handmaid in the morning, and she was unlawful to
+him; but, at noonday, she became lawful to him. By mid-afternoon,
+she was again unlawful, but at sundown, she was lawful to him.
+At evensong, she was a third time unlawful, but by daybreak, she
+became once more lawful to him.' (A.) 'This was a man who looked
+at another's handmaid in the morning, and she was then unlawful
+to him, but at midday he bought her, and she became lawful to him.
+At mid-afternoon he enfranchised her, and she became unlawful to
+him, but at sundown he married her and she was again lawful to
+him. At evensong, he divorced her and she was then a third time
+unlawful to him, but, next morning, at daybreak, he took her back,
+and she became once more lawful to him.' (Q.) 'Tell me what tomb
+fared on with him that lay buried therein?' (A.) 'The whale,
+when it had swallowed Jonah.' (Q.) 'What spot of ground is it,
+upon which the sun shone once, but will never again shine till
+the Day of Judgment?' (A.) 'The bottom of the Red Sea, when Moses
+smote it with his staff, and the sea clove asunder in twelve
+places, according to the number of the tribes; then the sun
+shone on the bottom and will do so never again till the Day of
+Judgment.' (Q.) 'What was the first skirt that trailed upon the
+surface of the earth?' (A.) 'That of Hagar, out of shame before
+Sarah, and it became a custom among the Arabs.' (Q.) 'What is
+that which breathes without life?' (A.) 'Quoth God the Most
+High, "By the morning, when it breathes!"'[FN#339] (Q.) 'A
+number of pigeons came to a high tree and lighted, some on the
+tree and others under it. Said those on the tree to those on
+the ground, "If one of you come up to us, ye will be a third
+part of us [all] in number; and if one of us descend to you, we
+shall be like unto you in number." How many pigeons were there
+in all?' (A.) 'Twelve: seven alighted on the tree and five
+beneath.'
+
+With this the philosopher put off his clothes and fled forth:
+whereupon she turned to those present and said, 'Which of you
+is the rhetorician that can discourse of all kinds of
+knowledge?' There came forward Ibrahim ben Siyyar and said to
+her, 'Think me not like the rest.' Quoth she, 'It is the more
+sure to me that thou wilt be beaten, for that thou art a
+boaster, and God will help me against thee, that I may strip
+thee of thy clothes. So, if thou sentest one to fetch thee
+wherewithal to clothe thyself, it would be well for thee.' 'By
+Allah,' cried he, 'I will assuredly conquer thee and make thee
+a byword among the folk, generation after generation!' 'Do
+penance [in advance] for thy [void] oath,' rejoined she. Then
+said he, 'What five things did God create, before He made man?'
+And she replied, 'Water and earth and light and darkness and
+the fruits [of the earth].' (Q.) 'What did God create with the
+hand of omnipotence?' (A.) 'The empyreal heaven and the tree
+Touba[FN#340] and Adam and the garden of Eden; these God
+created with the hand of His omnipotence; but to all other
+created things He said, "Be,"--and they were.' (Q.) 'Who is thy
+father in Islam?' (A.) 'Mohammed, whom God bless and preserve!'
+(Q.) 'Who was the father [in Islam] of Mohammed?' (A.) 'Abraham
+the Friend of God.' (Q.) 'What is the Faith of Islam?' (A.)
+'The professing that there is no god but God and that Mohammed
+is the apostle of God.' (Q.) 'What is thy first and thy last?'
+(A.) 'My first is troubled water[FN#341] and my last filthy
+carrion. The first of me is dust and the last dust. Quoth the
+poet:
+
+Created wast thou of the dust and didst a man become, Ready in
+ question and reply and fluent in debate.
+Then to the dust return'dst anon and didst become of it, For
+ that, in very deed, of dust at first thou wast create.'
+
+(Q.) 'What thing was it, whose first [state] was wood and its
+last life?' (A.) 'Moses' rod, when he cast it on the ground and
+it became, by permission of God, a writhing serpent.'[FN#342]
+(Q.) 'What is the meaning of the verse in the Koran, "And I
+have other need [or occasion] for it"?'[FN#343] (A.) 'He
+[Moses] was wont to plant his staff in the ground, and it would
+flower and fruit and shade him from the heat and the cold.
+Moreover, it would carry him, when he was weary, and guard his
+sheep from the wild beasts, whilst he slept.' (Q.) 'What woman
+was born of a man alone and what man of a woman alone?' (A.) 'Eve
+of Adam and Jesus of Mary.' (Q.) 'What fire eats and drinks, what
+fire eats but drinks not, what fire drinks but eats not and what
+other neither eats nor drinks?' (A.) 'Hellfire eats and drinks,
+the fire of the world eats but drinks not, the fire of the sun
+drinks but eats not, and that of the moon neither eats nor drinks.'
+(Q.) 'Which is the open [door] and which the shut [door]?' (A.)
+'The Traditional Ordinances are the open, the Koranic the shut
+[door].' (Q.) 'Of what does the poet speak, when he says:
+
+A dweller in the sepulchre, at 's head his victual lies; Whenas
+ he tastes thereof, he speaks and questions and replies.
+He rises up and walks and talks, yet silent is the while, And
+ turns anon unto the tomb wherefrom he did arise.
+No living one is he, that hath a title to respect, Nor dead,
+ that folk should say of him, "God's mercy him comprise!"?'
+
+(A.) 'The pen.' (Q.) 'What does the poet refer to in these
+verses:
+
+Two breasts in one it hath; its blood is eath and quick of
+ flow, Wide-mouthed, though all the rest be black, its ears
+ are white as snow.
+It hath an idol like a cock, that doth its belly peck, And half
+ a dirhem is its worth, if thou its price wouldst know?'
+
+(A.) 'The inkhorn.' (Q.) 'And in these:
+
+Say to men of wit and learning and to doctors everywhere,
+ Skilled to find the hidden meanings riddles and enigmas
+ bear,
+Come expound to me what is it that ye see a bird produce,
+ 'Mongst the Arabs and barbarians and wherever else ye
+ fare;
+Neither flesh nor blood, I warrant, hath the thing whereof I
+ speak; Neither down nor feathers, birdwise, for a garment
+ doth it wear.
+Boiled it is and likewise roasted, eaten hot and eaten cold;
+ Yea, to boot, and when 'tis buried in the glowing embers'
+ flare,
+Colours twain in it are noted, one as silver clear and white,
+ And the other lucent yellow, gold therewith may not
+ compare.
+Living can it not be reckoned, neither may we count it dead:
+ Tell me, then, what is this wonder, rarity of all things
+ rare?'
+
+(A.) 'Thou makest long the questioning of an egg worth a doit.'
+(Q.) 'How many words [or times] did God speak to Moses?' (A.)
+'It is related of the Prophet that he said, "God spoke to Moses
+fifteen hundred and fifteen words [or times]."' (Q.) 'Tell me
+of fourteen things that speak to the Lord of the Worlds?' (A.)
+'The seven heavens and the seven earths, when they say, "We
+come, obedient."'[FN#344] (Q.) 'How was Adam created?' (A.)
+'God created Adam of clay: the clay He made of foam and the
+foam of the sea, the sea of darkness, darkness of light, light
+of a fish, the fish of a rock, the rock of a ruby, the ruby of
+water, and the water He created by the exertion of His omnipotent
+will, according to His saying (exalted be His name!), "His
+commandment is only when He willeth aught, that He say, 'Be,'
+--and it is."'[FN#345] (Q.) 'What is meant by the poet in the
+following verses:
+
+A things sans mouth or maw that eats in wondrous wise; On trees
+ and beasts it feeds and all beneath the skies.
+Give it to eat, it thrives and flourishes amain; But give it
+ not to drink of water, or it dies?'
+
+(A.) 'Fire.' (Q.) 'And in these:
+
+Two lovers, that are still estopped from all delight:
+ Embracing, each with each, they pass the livelong night.
+They guarantee the folk from all calamity, And with the risen
+ sun they're torn apart forthright?'
+
+(A.) 'The leaves of a gate.' (Q.) 'Tell me of the gates of
+Hell?' (A.) 'They are seven in number and their names are
+comprised in the following verses:
+
+Jehennem first, then Leza comes and eke Hetim as well; Then
+ must thou count Sair, and fifth comes Seker, sooth to
+ tell:
+Sixth comes Jehim and last of all, Hawiyeh; thus thou hast, In
+ compass brief of doggrel rhyme, the seven rooms of Hell.'
+
+(Q.) 'To what does the poet refer in these verses:
+
+A pair of ringlets long she hath, that trail for aye Behind
+ her, as she comes and goes upon her way,
+And eye that never knows the taste of sleep nor sheds A tear,
+ for none it hath for shedding, sooth to say;
+Nor wears it aught of clothes, from year to ended year; Yet in
+ all manner wede it doth the folk array?'
+
+(A.) 'A needle.' (Q.) 'What is the length and breadth of the
+bridge Es Sirat?' (A.) 'Its length is three thousand years'
+journey, a thousand in descent, a thousand level and a thousand
+in ascent: it is sharper than a sword and finer than a hair.'
+(Q.) 'How many intercessions [with God] hath the Prophet [for
+each soul]?' (A.) 'Three.' (Q.) 'Was Abou Bekr the first that
+embraced Islam?' (A.) 'Yes.' (Q.) 'Yet Ali[FN#346] became a
+Muslim before him?' (A.) 'All came to the Prophet, when he was
+a boy of seven years old, for God vouchsafed him the knowledge
+of the truth in his tender youth, so that he never prostrated
+himself to idols.' (Q.) 'Which is the more excellent, Ali or
+Abbas?'[FN#347]
+
+Now she knew that, in propounding this question, Ibrahim was
+laying a trap for her; for, if she said, 'Ali is the more
+excellent,' she would fall in disgrace with the Khalif; so she
+bowed her head awhile, now reddening, now paling, then said,
+'Thou askest me of two excellent men, each having [his own
+especial] excellence. Let us return to what we were about.'
+When the Khalif heard her reply, he rose to his feet and said,
+'By the Lord of the Kaabeh, thou hast said well, O Taweddud!'
+Then said Ibrahim, 'What means the poet, when he says:
+
+Slender of skirts and slim of shape and sweet of taste it is,
+ Most like unto the spear, except it lacks of the spontoon.
+In all the countries of the world the folk make use of it, And
+ eaten 'tis in Ramazan, after mid-afternoon?'
+
+She answered, 'The sugar-cane;' and he said, 'Tell me of many
+things.' 'What are they?' asked she; and he said, 'What is
+sweeter than honey, what is sharper than the sword, what is
+swifter than poison, what is the delight of a moment and what
+the contentment of three days, what is the pleasantest of days,
+what is the joy of a week, what is the debt that the worst
+payer denieth not, what is the prison of the tomb, what is the
+joy of the heart, what is the snare of the soul, what is death
+in life, what is the malady that may not be healed, what is the
+reproach that may not be done away, what is the beast that
+harbours not in cultivated fields, but lodges in waste places
+and hates mankind and hath in it somewhat of the make of seven
+strong beasts?' Quoth she, 'Hear what I shall say in answer;
+then put off thy clothes, that I may expound to thee.' Then the
+Khalif said, 'Expound, and he shall put off his clothes.' So
+she said, 'That, which is sweeter than honey, is the love of
+pious children to their parents; that, which is sharper than
+the sword, is the tongue; that, which is swifter than poison,
+is the evil eye; the delight of a moment is coition and the
+contentment of three days is the depilatory for women; the
+pleasantest of days is that of profit on merchandise; the joy
+of a week is the bride; the debt, which the worst payer denieth
+not, is death; the prison of the tomb is an ill son; the joy of
+the heart is a woman obedient to her husband, (and it is said
+also that, when fleshmeat descends upon the heart, it rejoiceth
+therein); the snare [or vexation] of the soul is a disobedient
+slave; death in life is poverty; the malady, that may not be
+healed, is an ill nature and the reproach, that may not be done
+away, is an ill daughter; lastly, the beast that harbours not
+in cultivated fields, but lodges in waste places and hates
+mankind and hath in it somewhat of the make of seven strong
+beasts, is the locust, whose head is as the head of the horse,
+its neck as the neck of the bull, its wings as the wings of the
+vulture, its feet as the feet of the camel, its tail as the
+tail of the serpent, its body as the body of the scorpion and
+its horns as the horns of the gazelle.'
+
+The Khalif was astounded at her quickness and understanding and
+said to Ibrahim, 'Put off thy clothes.' So he rose and said, 'I
+call all who are present in this assembly to witness that she
+is more learned than I and all the learned men.' And he put off
+his clothes and gave them to her, saying, 'Take them and may
+God not bless them to thee!' The Khalif ordered him fresh
+clothes and said to Taweddud, 'There is one thing left of
+that for which thou didst engage, namely, chess.' And he
+sent for professors of chess and draughts and backgammon. The
+chess-player sat down before her, and they set the pieces, and
+he moved and she moved; but, every move he made she speedily
+countered, till she beat him and he found himself check-mated.
+Quoth he, 'I did but lead thee on, that thou mightest think
+thyself skilful; but set up again, and I will show thee.' So
+they placed the pieces a second time, and he said to himself,
+'Open thine eyes, or she will beat thee.' And he fell to moving
+no piece, save after calculation, and ceased not to play, till
+she said, 'Check-mate.' When he saw this, he was confounded at
+her quickness and skill; but she laughed and said, 'O master,
+I will make a wager with thee on this third game. I will give
+thee the queen and the right-hand rook and the left-hand knight;
+if thou beat me, take my clothes, and if I beat thee, I will
+take thine.' 'I agree to this,' replied he, and they replaced
+the pieces, she giving him the queen, rook and knight. Then
+said she, 'Move, O master.' So he moved, saying in himself,
+'I cannot but win, with such an advantage,' and made a combination;
+but she moved on, little by little, till she made one of her pawns
+a queen and pushing up to him pawns and other pieces, to take off
+his attention, set one in his way and tempted him with it.[FN#348]
+Accordingly, he took it and she said to him, 'The measure is meted
+out and the equilibrium established. Eat, O man, till thou pass
+repletion; nought shall be thy ruin but greediness. Knowest thou
+not that I did but tempt thee, that I might beguile thee? See:
+this is check-mate: put off thy clothes.' 'Leave me my trousers,'
+quoth he, 'so God requite thee;' and he swore by Allah that he
+would contend with none, so long as Taweddud abode at the Court
+of Baghdad. Then he took off his clothes and gave them to her
+and went away.
+
+Then came the backgammon-player, and she said to him, 'If I
+beat thee, what wilt thou give me?' Quoth he, 'I will give thee
+ten suits of brocade of Constantinople, figured with gold, and
+ten suits of velvet and a thousand dinars, and if I beat thee,
+I ask nothing but that thou write me an acknowledgment thereof.'
+'To it, then,' replied she, 'and do thy best.' So they played,
+and he lost and went away, jabbering in the Frank jargon and
+saying, 'By the bounty of the Commander of the Faithful, there
+is not her like in all the world!' Then the Khalif summoned
+players on instruments of music and said to her, 'Dost thou
+know aught of music?' 'Yes,' answered she. So he bade bring
+a peeled and polished lute, whose owner [or maker] was ground
+down by exile [or estrangement from the beloved] and of which
+quoth one, describing it:
+
+God watered a land and straight a tree sprang up on its root:
+ It cast forth branches and throve and flourished with many
+ a shoot.
+The birds, when the wood was green, sang o'er it, and when it
+ was dry, Fair women sang to it in turn, for lo, 'twas a
+ minstrel's lute!
+
+So they brought a bag of red satin, with tassels of
+saffron-coloured silk: and she opened the bag, and took out a
+lute, on which were graven the following verses:
+
+Full many a tender branch a lute for singing-girl has grown,
+ Wherewith at banquets to her mates she makes melodious
+ moan.
+She sings; it follows on her song, as 'twere to teach her how
+ Heart's troubles in clear perfect speech of music to make
+ known.
+
+She laid her lute in her lap and letting her breasts hang over
+it, bent to it as bends a mother, suckling her child; then
+preluded in twelve different modes, till the whole assembly was
+agitated with delight, and sang the following verses:
+
+Leave your estrangement, I pray, and bid your cruelty hold,
+ For, by your life, my heart will never for you be
+ consoled.
+Have pity on one who weeps, afflicted and ever sad, A slave of
+ passion, who burns for thee with longings untold.
+
+The Khalif was ravished and exclaimed, 'May God bless thee and
+receive him who taught thee[FN#349] into His mercy!' Whereupon
+she rose and kissed the earth before him. Then he sent for
+money and paid her master Aboulhusn a hundred thousand dinars
+to her price; after which he said to her, 'O Taweddud, ask a
+boon of me.' 'O Commander of the Faithful,' replied she, 'I ask
+of thee that thou restore me to my lord who sold me to thee.'
+'It is well,' answered the Khalif and restored her to her
+master and gave her five thousand dinars for herself. Moreover,
+he appointed Aboulhusn one of his boon-companions and assigned
+him a monthly stipend of a thousand dinars so long as he should
+live, and he abode with the damsel Taweddud in all delight of
+life.
+
+Marvel then, O King, at the eloquence of this damsel and the
+greatness of her learning and understanding and her perfect
+excellence in all branches of knowledge, and consider the
+generosity of the Khalif Haroun er Reshid, in that he gave her
+master this money and said to her, 'Ask a boon of me;' and she
+besought him to restore her to her lord. So he restored her to
+him and gave her five thousand dinars for herself and made him
+one of his boon-companions. Where is such generosity to be
+found after the Abbaside Khalifs, may God the Most High have
+mercy upon them all!
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Vol. IV
+
+
+
+
+ Arabian Nights, Volume 4
+ Footnotes
+
+
+[FN#1] A very famous legist and wit of the eighth century and a
+prime favourite with Er Reshid. He was one of the chief pupils
+of the Imam Abou Henifeh (see note, Vol. II. p. 131 {see Vol. 2
+FN#91}) and was Cadi of Baghdad under the third, fourth and
+fifth Khalifs of the Abbaside dynasty.
+
+[FN#2] Shown in choosing so learned a Cadi.
+
+[FN#3] Governor of the two Iraks (i.e. Bassora and Cufa) in the
+reign of Hisham, tenth Khalif of the Ommiade dynasty (A.D.
+723-741). He was celebrated for his beneficence and liberality.
+
+[FN#4] Koran iii. 178, etc.
+
+[FN#5] "The hand of a thief shall not be cut off for stealing
+less than a quarter of a dinar."--Mischat ul Masabih.
+
+[FN#6] El Asmai the poet, author or compiler of the well-known
+romance of Antar.
+
+[FN#7] Zanzibar (ant. Zengibar).
+
+[FN#8] The word Sherif (lit. noble) signifies strictly a
+descendant of the martyr Hussein, son of the Khalif Ali; but it
+is here used in the sense of "chief" [of the bazaar].
+
+[FN#9] Quaere Mensour en Nemri, a well-known poet of the time
+and (originally) a protege of Yehya's son, El Fezl.
+
+[FN#10] Intendant of the palace to Haroun er Reshid and captain
+of his guards.
+
+[FN#11] i.e. the Khalif
+
+[FN#12] i.e. As if he were an old Bedouin, with forehead
+disfigured by the friction of the rope of camel's hair, which
+is part of the Bedouin headdress.
+
+[FN#13] Mohammed said, "Change the whiteness of your hair, but
+not with anything black." Henna is the approved hairdye for a
+true-believer; it changes the hair to a reddish-brown.
+
+[FN#14] i.e. thou that art as dear to me as my sight and
+hearing.
+
+[FN#15] A fountain of Paradise.
+
+[FN#16] Syn. languishing (munkesir).
+
+[FN#17] A river of Paradise.
+
+[FN#18] i.e. Orthodox.
+
+[FN#19] These words are a quotation from a well-known piece of
+verse.
+
+[FN#20] Of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#21] Usually made of palm-fibres.
+
+[FN#22] The distinctive headdress of the Muslims.
+
+[FN#23] The bridge that spans Hell, finer than a hair and
+sharper than a sword, and over which all must pass on the Day
+of Judgment.
+
+[FN#24] Or leader of the people at prayer, who stands opposite
+the niche sunk into or painted on the wall of the mosque, to
+indicate the direction of Mecca.
+
+[FN#25] All this is an audacious parody of the Muslim ritual of
+prayer.
+
+[FN#26] Lit. "exclamations of 'Glory be to God!'" which are of
+frequent recurrence in the Mohammedan formulas of prayer. See
+last note.
+
+[FN#27] i.e. governor.
+
+[FN#28] The word ucwaneh, here used in the dual number, usually
+designates the teeth, in its common meaning of "camomile-
+flower": but the lips are here expressly mentioned, and this
+fact, together with that of the substitution, in the Breslau
+edition, of the word akikan (two cornelians or rubies) for
+ucwanetan (two camomiles), as in the Calcutta and Boulac
+editions, shows that the word is intended to be taken in its
+rarer meaning of "corn-marigold."
+
+[FN#29] Syn. Fortune (ez zeman).
+
+[FN#30] One of the tribes of the Arabs and that to which the
+renowned Maan ben Zaideh (see Vol. III. p. 317, {Vol. 3,
+FN#121}) belonged.
+
+[FN#31] The Muslims accuse the Jews of having corrupted the
+Pentateuch and others of their sacred books, even as the
+Christians the Gospels (see Vol. II. page 149, note {Vol. 2,
+FN#97}), by expunging or altering the passages foretelling the
+coming of Mohammed.
+
+[FN#32] See Vol. I. p. 135, note 2. {Vol. 1, FN#45}
+
+[FN#33] i.e. as a martyr.
+
+[FN#34] The force of this comparison will best appear from the
+actual figuration of the Arabic double-letter Lam-Alif (Anglice
+L.A.) which is made up of the two letters *<arabic character>,
+(initial form of Lam) and *<arabic character> (final of Alif,)
+and is written thus, *<arabic character>.
+
+[FN#35] i.e. O thou, whose glance is as the light of the
+glowing embers.
+
+[FN#36] Thus figured in Arabic *<arabic character>.
+
+[FN#37] Thus *<arabic character>.
+
+[FN#38] Thus *<arabic character>.
+
+[FN#39] Koran xxvil. 12.
+
+[FN#40] Koran iii. 103.
+
+[FN#41] Koran xcii. 1,2.
+
+[FN#42] Sauda, feminine of aswed (black), syn. black bile
+(melancholia).
+
+[FN#43] The distinctive colour of which is white.
+
+[FN#44] Koran li. 26.
+
+[FN#45] Mohammed.
+
+[FN#46] Koran ii. 64, referring to an expiatory heifer which
+the Jews were commanded, through Moses, to sacrifice.
+
+[FN#47] See note, Vol III. p. 104 {Vol. 3, FN#19}
+
+[FN#48] Sulafeh.
+
+[FN#49] Sewalif, plural of salifeh (equivalent of sulafeh). A
+play upon the double meaning of the word is, of course,
+intended.
+
+[FN#50] Syn. yellowness (isfirar).
+
+[FN#51] A title of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#52] His wife Zubeideh.
+
+[FN#53] i.e. his beautiful slave-girls.
+
+[FN#54] i.e. his beautiful slave-girls.
+
+[FN#55] Title of Saladin (Selaheddin) and several other
+Eyoubite Sultans of Egypt and Syria. It is equivalent to our
+"Defender of the Faith."
+
+[FN#56] Koran xli. 46.
+
+[FN#57] A town of Upper Egypt.
+
+[FN#58] Meaning the merchant, whose name, Abou Jaafer or the
+like, he had learnt from the tailor.
+
+[FN#59] Muslim Jews.
+
+[FN#60] A well-known jurist at Baghdad in the reign of the
+Khalif Mamoun.
+
+[FN#61] Medina.
+
+[FN#62] One of the gates of the great mosque there, wherein is
+the tomb of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#63] Tenth Khalif of the Abbaside dynasty, A.D. 849-861.
+
+[FN#64] Muwelledat, women born in Muslim countries of
+slave-parents; syn. mulatto-women.
+
+[FN#65] Lieutenant of the Prefect of Baghdad.
+
+[FN#66] Muwelledat, women born in Muslim countries of
+slave-parents; syn. mulatto-women.
+
+[FN#67] El Hakim bi Amrillah, sixth Fatimite Khalif of Egypt
+(A.D. 995-1021), cruel and fantastic tyrant, who claimed to be
+an incarnation of the Deity. He was the founder of the religion
+of the Druses, who look to him to reappear and be their Messiah
+
+[FN#68] Bastard or Spanish pellitory.
+
+[FN#69] Or dyed.
+
+[FN#70] Or interlocking.
+
+[FN#71] Or torn.
+
+[FN#72] Sufreh, a round piece of leather used (mostly by
+travellers) as a table-cloth and having a running string
+inserted round its edge, by means of which it can be converted
+into a bag or budget for holding provisions, as in this
+instance.
+
+[FN#73] Lower India.
+
+[FN#74] i.e. as master of the house in which I have sought
+shelter.
+
+[FN#75] Uns el Wujoud.
+
+[FN#76] A pun upon his name, Uns wa joud, pleasance and bounty.
+
+[FN#77] See supra, p. 95, note 3. {Vol. 4, FN#38}
+
+[FN#78] The fourteenth letter of the Arabic alphabet, in its
+medial form (<arabic>) closely resembling an eye underlined
+with kohl.
+
+[FN#79] See Note, Vol. III. p. 274. {Vol. 3, FN#102}
+
+[FN#80] i.e. in dreams..
+
+[FN#81] One of the months in which war was forbidden to the
+pagan Arabs and a sort of Treve de Dieu prevailed.
+
+[FN#82] The Arabic word fakir means literally, "a poor man;"
+but it would appear, from what follows, that Uns el Wujoud had
+disguised himself as a religious mendicant and was taken for
+such by the people of the castle.
+
+[FN#83] i.e. one absorbed in the contemplation of supra-
+terrestrial things.
+
+[FN#84] Uns el Wujoud.
+
+[FN#85] To salute them and wish them joy, according to Oriental
+custom.
+
+[FN#86] Mosul is called the land of purity, in a religious
+sense, it having never been polluted with idolatrous worship.
+
+[FN#87] The people of Aleppo seem to have been noted for
+debauchery.
+
+[FN#88] i.e. Do not express admiration openly, lest it attract
+the evil eye, but vent your wonder by saying, "God bless and
+preserve the Prophet!" according to general Muslim wont.
+
+[FN#89] A gorge near Mecca, the scene of one of Mohammed's
+battles.
+
+[FN#90] i.e. as made out of a crooked rib, according to the
+tradition.
+
+[FN#91] i.e. the land of the virgin.
+
+[FN#92] The word Jamiain means "two congregational mosques,"
+which would only be found in a large town like Baghdad. It is
+possible, therefore, that the expression, "land of Jamiain,"
+may mean Baghdad or some other great city, noted for its
+debauched manners.
+
+[FN#93] Oriental substitute for slate.
+
+
+[FN#94] A pre-Mohammedan poet.
+
+[FN#95] King of Hireh in Chaldaea, a fantastic and bloodthirsty
+tyrant, whom he had lampooned.
+
+[FN#96] Aboulabbas er Recashi, a well-known poet of the time.
+
+[FN#97] Koran xxvi. 224, 5, 6.
+
+[FN#98] Half-brother of Abdallah ben ez Zubeir, the celebrated
+pretender to the Khalifate, see Vol. III. p. 194, note 3. {Vol.
+3, FN#62}
+
+[FN#99] Grand-daughter of the Khalif Aboubekr and the most
+beautiful woman of her day.
+
+[FN#100] A famous Medinan Traditionist of the eighth century.
+
+[FN#101] Er Zubeir ibn el Awwam, cousin-german to Mohammed and
+one of his Companions.
+
+[FN#102] Abou Mohammed el Aamesh, a Cufan Traditionist of the
+eighth century.
+
+[FN#103] A Traditionist of the seventh century.
+
+[FN#104] One of the Companions.
+
+[FN#105] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#106] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#107] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#108] Companions of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#109] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#110] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#111] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#112] Companions of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#113] A.D. 530-579. The founder of the great Persian dynasty
+of the Kisras (Chosroes). Mohammed was born in the reign of
+this monarch, whose name is a synonym with Eastern writers for
+all that is just and noble in a King.
+
+[FN#114] Wife of Mohammed.
+
+[FN#115] Daughter of Mohammed.
+
+[FN#116] Lit. "of the ancestors," i.e. those pious and blessed
+persons who have gone before. The word es selef (the ancestors)
+is specially applied to Mohammed, his wife Aaisheh, the first
+three Khalifs and certain other early Muslims.
+
+[FN#117] Khusrau Perviz, grandson of Kisra Anoushirwan (see
+supra, p. 228). {Vol. 4, FN#113}
+
+[FN#118] The famous beauty, daughter of Maurice, Emperor of the
+East, and heroine of Nizami's well-known poem.
+
+[FN#119] First cousin of Haroun er Reshid.
+
+[FN#120] Son and successor of Er Reshid.
+
+[FN#121] A well-known grammarian and traditionist of the time,
+afterwards governor of part of Khorassan, under the Khalif El
+Mamoun.
+
+[FN#122] Intendant of the palace under Er Reshid.
+
+[FN#123] i.e. lover.
+
+[FN#124] Muslim version of Susannah and the Elders.
+
+[FN#125] Lit. O frosty-beard (fool), how frosty was thy beard!
+
+[FN#126] Descendant of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#127] Name of a tribe.
+
+[FN#128] A descendant of Ishmael, from whom the Arab
+genealogists trace Mohammed's lineage.
+
+[FN#129] Koran xxxiii. 38.
+
+[FN#130] Koran xxxviii. 2.
+
+[FN#131] One of the Companions of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#132] Of the Prophet i.e. those who had personally known
+Mohammed.
+
+[FN#133] i.e. the builders, who, in the East, use mud or clay
+for mortar.
+
+[FN#134] About a penny.
+
+[FN#135] Mohammed.
+
+
+[FN#136] A woman's name.
+
+[FN#137] For putting out the fire in a brasier or
+cooking-stove.
+
+[FN#138] The last Kings of Hireh were Christians.
+
+[FN#139] A prae-Islamitic poet.
+
+[FN#140] King of Persia and En Numan's suzerain.
+
+[FN#141] A celebrated poet of the eighth and ninth centuries at
+the court d the Abbaside Khalifs.
+
+[FN#142] A quarter of Baghdad.
+
+[FN#143] Another well-known poet of the time, Dibil's teacher
+and friend.
+
+[FN#144] Underground rooms are much used in Baghdad and Central
+Asia, for coolness' sake, in the season of the great heats.
+
+[FN#145] Dibil's surname.
+
+[FN#146] An idol of the pagan Arabs, before the coming of
+Mohammed.
+
+[FN#147] In the attitude or a pupil before his master.
+
+[FN#148] i.e. heart's blood.
+
+[FN#149] A well-known poet, who flourished at Baghdad in the
+ninth century
+
+[FN#150] Aboulabbas Mohammed ben Yezid eth Thumali, surnamed El
+Muberred, a famous Baghdad grammarian of the ninth century.
+
+[FN#151] A monastery in the town of Hemah in Syria, so called
+from the Emperor Heraclius, who retired thither, to end his.
+days.
+
+[FN#152] These verses are addressed to the Prophet Mohammed.
+
+[FN#153] The most learned grammarian of his day. He flourished
+at Baghdad in the first half of the tenth century.
+
+[FN#154] Anatolia.
+
+[FN#155] The Lights.
+
+[FN#156] Servant of the Messiah.
+
+[FN#157] The monk.
+
+[FN#158] The desireful servant of God. Abdallah is the name
+commonly given to a Christian convert to Islam. This question
+and answer are a good example of the jingle of rhymes so much
+affected by the Arabs.
+
+[FN#159] i.e. of gods (shirk).
+
+[FN#160] Koran vii. 195.
+
+[FN#161] i.e. saints.
+
+[FN#162] Koran x. 36.
+
+[FN#163] A well-known man of letters and one of El Mamoun's
+viziers.
+
+[FN#164] Prefect of Baghdad under El Mamoun.
+
+[FN#165] i.e. the persons in authority under them.
+
+[FN#166] Surname of Ali ben Hisham.
+
+[FN#167] A renowned chieftain and poet of the time of Mohammed.
+
+[FN#168] A famous singer and composer of the first century of
+the Hegira.
+
+[FN#169] One of the greatest of Arab poets; he flourished in
+the first century of the Hegira.
+
+[FN#170] i.e. as to the sound of music.
+
+[FN#171] Sixth of the Abbaside Khalifs, A.D. 809-813.
+
+[FN#172] See note, Vol. III. p. 324. {See Vol. 3, FN#130}.
+
+[FN#173] Tenth Abbaside Khalif, A.D. 849-861.
+
+[FN#174] Vizier and favourite of El Mutawekkil, killed A.D. 861
+whilst endeavouring to defend the Khalif against the parricide
+El Muntestr.
+
+[FN#175] Virginitatem tollere.
+
+[FN#176] Johannes, a Greek physician in high favour with El
+Mutawekkil and others of the Abbaside Khalifs.
+
+[FN#177] i.e. Princess of the Doctors or men of learning.
+
+[FN#178] A.D. 1166.
+
+[FN#179] Or heads of the various sects or schools of religion.
+
+[FN#180] Koran iv. 38.
+
+[FN#171] As witness to a debt, Koran ii. 282.
+
+[FN#182] Koran iv. 175.
+
+[FN#183] Or "eye-glance."
+
+[FN#184] Abou Temmam et Tai (of the tribe of Tai), a famous
+poet of the first half of the ninth century and postmaster at
+Mosul under the Khalif Wathic Billah (commonly known as
+Vathek), A.D. 842-849. He was the compiler of the famous
+anthology of ancient Arabian poetry, known as the Hemaseh
+(Hamasa).
+
+[FN#185] Aboulcasim el Heriri, the famous poet and grammarian,
+author of the Mecamat, the most celebrated single work in
+Arabic literature. He holds much the same rank in Arabic
+letters as Pope and Boileau in the literature of England
+and France and may, with much better reason, be styled "le
+legislateur du Parnasse (Arabe)." He was a native of Bassora
+and died early in the twelfth century.
+
+[FN#186] i.e. the languishing glance of his eye.
+
+[FN#187] i.e. his whiskers.
+
+[FN#188] Koran xii. 51.
+
+[FN#189] Or quare palm-spathes.
+
+[FN#190] Or quare "an exposition of women."
+
+[FN#191] Koran xxvi. 165, 166.
+
+[FN#192] i.e. the whiteness of his face.
+
+[FN#193] Or "freeborn," the Arabic word used here having this
+double meaning. The Arabs hold that the child of freeborn
+parents (Lat. ingenuus) must of necessity be noble and those
+born of slave parents or a slave mother the contrary.
+
+[FN#194] Or "freeborn," the Arabic word used here having this
+double meaning. The Arabs hold that the child of freeborn
+parents (Lat. ingenuus) must of necessity be noble and those
+born of slave parents or a slave mother the contrary.
+
+[FN#195] A famous statesman, soldier, poet and musician,
+governor of Khorassan, Egypt and other provinces under the
+Khalif El Mamoun.
+
+[FN#196] Abou Abdallah ibn el Casim el Hashimi, surnamed Abou
+el Ainaa, a blind traditionist and man of letters of Bassora,
+in the ninth century, and one of the most celebrated wits of
+his day.
+
+[FN#197] An island near Cairo, on which is situate the
+Nilometer. It is a favourite pleasure-resort of the Cairenes.
+
+[FN#198] The port of Cairo.
+
+[FN#199] i.e. the report of its being haunted.
+
+[FN#200] i.e. by the Sortes Coranicae or other similar process.
+
+[FN#201] The word shabb (young man) is applied by the Arabs to
+men of all ages from early adolescence to forty or even
+(according to some authorities) fifty.
+
+[FN#202] i.e. recited the first chapter of the Koran seven
+times.
+
+[FN#203] i.e. affixed the tughraa, the royal seal or rather
+countermark.
+
+[FN#204] i.e. health and security.
+
+[FN#205] See Vol. III. p. 225, note 1. {Vol. 3 FN#78}
+
+[FN#206] A pile of stones or other land-mark, set up to show
+the way to travellers in the desert.
+
+[FN#207] The eyebrows of a beautiful woman are usually compared
+to the new moon of Ramazan (see note, Vol. I. p. 71 {see Vol. 1
+FN#26}). The meaning here is the same, the allusion being
+apparently to the eagerness with which the pagan Arabs may be
+supposed to have watched for the appearance of the new moon of
+Shaaban, as giving the signal for the renewal of predatory
+excursions, after the enforced close-time or Treve de Dieu of
+the holy month Rejeb.
+
+[FN#208] Quaere fourteen [years old].
+
+[FN#209] i.e. the abrogated passages and those by which they
+are abrogated.
+
+[FN#210] Koran iv. 160.
+
+[FN#211] Traditions of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#212] i.e. saying, "I purpose to pray such and such
+prayers."
+
+[FN#213] i.e. saying, "God is most Great!" So called, because
+its pronunciation after that of the niyeh or intent, prohibits
+the speaking of any words previous to prayer.
+
+[FN#214] i.e. saying, "I purpose, etc."
+
+[FN#215] i.e. saying, "I purpose, etc."
+
+[FN#216] i.e. saying, "In the name of God, etc."
+
+[FN#217] i.e. saying, "I purpose, etc."
+
+[FN#218] It may be noted that these answers of Taweddud form an
+excellent compendium of devotional practice, according to the
+tenets of the Shafy school.
+
+[FN#219] Obligatory as a preparation for the Friday prayer and
+on other occasions when legal purification is necessary.
+
+[FN#220] i.e. saying, "I purpose to defer, etc."
+
+[FN#221] i.e. with sand, earth or dust.
+
+[FN#222] i.e. saying, "Peace be on us and [all] the righteous
+worshippers of God!"
+
+[FN#223] i.e. saying, "I seek refuge with God from Satan the
+accursed."
+
+[FN#224] i.e. saying, "I purpose, etc."
+
+[FN#225] Lit. that the intent shall be by night.
+
+[FN#226] At sundown.
+
+[FN#227] Eaten a little before the break of day, the fast
+commencing as soon as there is light enough to distinguish a
+black thread from a white and lasting till sunset.
+
+[FN#228] A saying of Mohammed.
+
+[FN#229] i.e. retirement to a mosque for pious exercises,
+equivalent to the Roman Catholic retraite.
+
+[FN#230] Two hills near Mecca.
+
+[FN#231] On first catching sight of Mecca.
+
+[FN#232] Places near Mecca.
+
+[FN#233] At a pillar supposed to represent the Devil.
+
+[FN#234] Or chief of the faith.
+
+[FN#235] Koran vii. 66.
+
+[FN#236] One of the followers of Mohammed, i.e. those who had
+known some of the Companions [of the Prophet] though they had
+never seen himself. The freedman [and adopted son] of Abdallah,
+son of Omar ben El Khettab, the most authoritative of all the
+Companions and reporters of the sayings and doings of the
+Prophet.
+
+[FN#237] i.e. at a profit. The exchange must be equal and
+profitless.
+
+[FN#238] Ablution.
+
+[FN#239] Complete ablution.
+
+[FN#240] Poor-rate.
+
+[FN#241] Warring for the Faith.
+
+[FN#242] i.e. saying, "I testify that there is no God, etc."
+
+[FN#243] i.e. fundamentals.
+
+[FN#244] i.e. derivatives.
+
+[FN#245] i.e. the true believers.
+
+[FN#246] i.e. death.
+
+[FN#247] i.e. that which does not require to be cut with a
+knife. "Cut not meat with a knife, because it is of the manners
+and customs of the barbarians; but eat it with your teeth."--
+Mishcat ul Masabih.
+
+[FN#248] Or "being a Muslim."
+
+[FN#249] Apparently referring to the verse, "The earth all
+[shall be] His handful [on the] Day of Resurrection and the
+heavens rolled up in His right [hand]."--Koran xxxix. 67.
+
+[FN#250] See Vol. II. p. 126, note. {Vol. 2, FN#76}
+
+[FN#251] Koran lxxviii. 19.
+
+[FN#252] Of the unity of God.
+
+[FN#253] i.e. professor of Koranic exegesis.
+
+[FN#254] i.e. portions so called.
+
+[FN#255] Heber.
+
+[FN#256] Jethro.
+
+[FN#257] Joshua.
+
+[FN#258] Enoch.
+
+[FN#259] John the Baptist.
+
+[FN#260] i.e. the bird of clay fabled by the Koran (following
+the Apocryphal Gospel of the childhood of Christ) to have been
+animated by him.
+
+[FN#261] Koran ii.
+
+[FN#262] Koran ii. 256, "God, there is no god but He, the
+Living, the Eternal. Slumber taketh him not, neither sleep, and
+His is what is in the heavens and what is in the earth. Who is
+he that intercedeth with Him but by His leave? He knoweth what
+is before them and what is behind them, nor do they comprehend
+aught of the knowledge of Him but of what He willeth. His
+throne embraceth the heavens and the earth and the guarding of
+them oppresseth Him not, for He is the Most High, the Supreme."
+
+[FN#263] Koran ii. 159.
+
+[FN#264] Koran xvi. 92.
+
+[FN#265] Paradise, Koran lxx. 38.
+
+[FN#266] Koran xxxix. 54.
+
+[FN#267] See note, p. 338 supra. {Vol. 4, FN#236}
+
+[FN#268] Koran xii. 18.
+
+[FN#269] Koran ii. 107.
+
+[FN#270] Koran li. 57.
+
+[FN#271] Koran ii. 28.
+
+[FN#272] Koran xvi. 100. The Muslims fable the devil to have
+tempted Abraham to disobey God's commandment to sacrifice
+Ishmael (Isaac) and to have been driven off by the Patriarch
+with stones. Hence he is called "The Stoned."
+
+[FN#273] Abdallah ibn Abbas, first cousin of Mohammed and the
+most learned theologian among the Companions.
+
+[FN#274] Koran xcvi. 1 and 2.
+
+[FN#275] Koran xxvii. 30.
+
+[FN#276] Koran ix.
+
+[FN#277] i.e. the day of the sacrifice at Mina, which completes
+the ceremonies of the pilgrimage.
+
+[FN#278] The better opinion seems to be that this omission
+(unique in the Koran) arose from the ninth chapter having
+originally formed part of the eighth, from which it was
+separated after Mohammed's death.
+
+[FN#279] Koran xvii. 110.
+
+[FN#280] Koran ii. 158.
+
+[FN#281] i.e. him who seals or closes the list of the prophets.
+
+[FN#282] C. xcvi.
+
+[FN#283] A native of Medina and one of the first of Mohammed's
+disciples.
+
+[FN#284] Koran lxxiv.
+
+[FN#285] There are several verses on this subject.
+
+[FN#286] Koran cx. 1.
+
+[FN#287] The third Khalif.
+
+[FN#288] Companions of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#289] One of the Followers.
+
+[FN#290] Koran v. 4.
+
+[FN#291] Koran v. 116.
+
+[FN#292] In the same verse.
+
+[FN#293] Koran v. 89.
+
+[FN#294] Ez Zuhak ben Sufyan, one of the Companions.
+
+[FN#295] One of the Followers.
+
+[FN#296] Koran iv. 124.
+
+[FN#297] i.e. without hesitation or interruption.
+
+[FN#298] Kaf, the 21st letter of the Arabic alphabet.
+
+[FN#299] Mim, the 24th letter of the Arabic alphabet.
+
+[FN#300] Ain, the 18th letter of the Arabic alphabet.
+
+[FN#301] The Koran is divided into sixty set portions,
+answering or equivalent to our Lessons, for convenience of use
+in public worship.
+
+[FN#302] Koran xi. 50.
+
+[FN#303] Name of the partition-wall between heaven and hell.
+
+[FN#304] Koran vii. 154.
+
+[FN#305] A play on the word ain, which means "eye."
+
+[FN#306] Chapters liv. lv. and lvi.
+
+[FN#307] i e. ankle.
+
+[FN#308] Koran xvii. 39.
+
+[FN#309] Two stars in Aquarius and Capricorn.
+
+[FN#310] Or chief part, lit. head.
+
+[FN#311] Or remedial treatment.
+
+[FN#312] Quare hot springs.
+
+[FN#313] A dish of crumpled bread and broth.
+
+[FN#314] Or savoury supplement to bread, rice and so forth.
+
+[FN#315] Koran v. 92.
+
+[FN#316] Koran ii. 216.
+
+[FN#317] Played with headless arrows.
+
+[FN#318] The fourth Khalif.
+
+[FN#319] The Korah of Numbers xvi. fabled by the Muslims
+(following a Talmudic tradition) to have been a man of immense
+wealth. "Now Caroun was of the tribe of Moses [and Aaron], but
+he transgressed against them and we gave him treasures, the
+keys whereof would bear down a company of men of strength."--
+Koran xxviii. 76.
+
+[FN#320] Syn. bearing a load (hamil).
+
+[FN#321] Koran lxx. 40.
+
+[FN#322] Koran x. 5.
+
+[FN#323] Koran xxxvi. 40.
+
+[FN#324] Koran xxii. 60.
+
+[FN#325] Koran xxxi. 34.
+
+[FN#326] Fifth and seventh months of the Coptic year, answering
+(roughly) to our January and March.
+
+[FN#327] Fifth and seventh months of the Coptic year, answering
+(roughly) to our January and March.
+
+[FN#328] Fourth month of the Coptic year.
+
+[FN#329] Eighth and twelfth months of the Coptic year (April
+and August).
+
+[FN#330] Third month (November) of the Coptic year.
+
+[FN#331] Sixth month (February) of the Coptic year.
+
+[FN#332] The lowest of the seven stages into which Mohammedan
+tradition divides the heavens.
+
+[FN#333] Koran lxxvii. 5.
+
+[FN#334] Koran xxxvi. 36, 37, 38.
+
+[FN#335] Koran xxii. 7.
+
+[FN#336] Koran xx. 57.
+
+[FN#337] A she-camel, big with young, miraculously produced,
+according to Muslim legend, from a rock by the Prophet Salih,
+for the purpose of converting the Themoudites.
+
+[FN#338] Where he was hiding with Mohammed from the pursuit of
+the Benou Curaish.
+
+[FN#339] Koran lxxxi. 18.
+
+[FN#340] In Paradise.
+
+[FN#341] Sperma hominis.
+
+[FN#342] The Muslims attribute this miracle to Moses, instead
+of Aaron. See Koran vii. 110 et seq.
+
+[FN#343] [Quoth God] "What is that in thy right hand, O Moses?"
+Quoth he, "It is my staff, on which I lean and wherewith I beat
+down leaves for my flock, and I have other uses for it."--Koran
+xx. 18, 19.
+
+[FN#344] Then He turned to the heaven (now it was smoke) and
+said to it and to the earth, "Come ye twain, obedient or
+loathing." And they said both, "We come, obedient."--Koran xli.
+10.
+
+[FN#345] Koran xxxvi. 82.
+
+[FN#346] Ali ibn Abi Taleb, first cousin of Mohammed and fourth
+Khalif.
+
+[FN#347] Uncle of Mohammed and ancestor of the Abbaside
+Khalifs.
+
+[FN#348] Lit. gave him to eat of it.
+
+[FN#349] Assuming him to be dead.
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, THE BOOK OF THE THOUSAND NIGHTS AND ONE NIGHT, VOLUME IV ***
+
+This file should be named 41001107a.txt or 41001107a.zip
+Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, 41001117a.txt
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, 41001107b.txt
+
+Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we usually do not
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+We are now trying to release all our eBooks one year in advance
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing.
+Please be encouraged to tell us about any error or corrections,
+even years after the official publication date.
+
+Please note neither this listing nor its contents are final til
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg eBooks is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so.
+
+Most people start at our Web sites at:
+http://gutenberg.net or
+http://promo.net/pg
+
+These Web sites include award-winning information about Project
+Gutenberg, including how to donate, how to help produce our new
+eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter (free!).
+
+
+Those of you who want to download any eBook before announcement
+can get to them as follows, and just download by date. This is
+also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as the
+indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after an
+announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter.
+
+http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext05 or
+ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext05
+
+Or /etext04, 03, 02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92,
+91 or 90
+
+Just search by the first five letters of the filename you want,
+as it appears in our Newsletters.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours
+to get any eBook selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. Our
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If the value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour in 2002 as we release over 100 new text
+files per month: 1240 more eBooks in 2001 for a total of 4000+
+We are already on our way to trying for 2000 more eBooks in 2002
+If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the total
+will reach over half a trillion eBooks given away by year's end.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away 1 Trillion eBooks!
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only about 4% of the present number of computer users.
+
+Here is the briefest record of our progress (* means estimated):
+
+eBooks Year Month
+
+ 1 1971 July
+ 10 1991 January
+ 100 1994 January
+ 1000 1997 August
+ 1500 1998 October
+ 2000 1999 December
+ 2500 2000 December
+ 3000 2001 November
+ 4000 2001 October/November
+ 6000 2002 December*
+ 9000 2003 November*
+10000 2004 January*
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been created
+to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next millennium.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+As of February, 2002, contributions are being solicited from people
+and organizations in: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut,
+Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois,
+Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts,
+Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
+Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio,
+Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South
+Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West
+Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
+
+We have filed in all 50 states now, but these are the only ones
+that have responded.
+
+As the requirements for other states are met, additions to this list
+will be made and fund raising will begin in the additional states.
+Please feel free to ask to check the status of your state.
+
+In answer to various questions we have received on this:
+
+We are constantly working on finishing the paperwork to legally
+request donations in all 50 states. If your state is not listed and
+you would like to know if we have added it since the list you have,
+just ask.
+
+While we cannot solicit donations from people in states where we are
+not yet registered, we know of no prohibition against accepting
+donations from donors in these states who approach us with an offer to
+donate.
+
+International donations are accepted, but we don't know ANYTHING about
+how to make them tax-deductible, or even if they CAN be made
+deductible, and don't have the staff to handle it even if there are
+ways.
+
+Donations by check or money order may be sent to:
+
+ PROJECT GUTENBERG LITERARY ARCHIVE FOUNDATION
+ 809 North 1500 West
+ Salt Lake City, UT 84116
+
+Contact us if you want to arrange for a wire transfer or payment
+method other than by check or money order.
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been approved by
+the US Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) organization with EIN
+[Employee Identification Number] 64-622154. Donations are
+tax-deductible to the maximum extent permitted by law. As fund-raising
+requirements for other states are met, additions to this list will be
+made and fund-raising will begin in the additional states.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+You can get up to date donation information online at:
+
+http://www.gutenberg.net/donation.html
+
+
+***
+
+If you can't reach Project Gutenberg,
+you can always email directly to:
+
+Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
+
+Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message.
+
+We would prefer to send you information by email.
+
+
+**The Legal Small Print**
+
+
+(Three Pages)
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this eBook, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you may distribute copies of this eBook if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS EBOOK
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+eBook, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this eBook by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this eBook on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM EBOOKS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBooks,
+is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S. Hart
+through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project").
+Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this eBook
+under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to market
+any commercial products without permission.
+
+To create these eBooks, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's eBooks and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other eBook medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you may
+receive this eBook from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook) disclaims
+all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this eBook within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS EBOOK IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE EBOOK OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation,
+and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated
+with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense, including
+legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the
+following that you do or cause: [1] distribution of this eBook,
+[2] alteration, modification, or addition to the eBook,
+or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this eBook electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ eBook or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this eBook in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word
+ processing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The eBook, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The eBook may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the eBook (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ eBook in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the eBook refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of the
+ gross profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation"
+ the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were
+ legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent
+ periodic) tax return. Please contact us beforehand to
+ let us know your plans and to work out the details.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of
+public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed
+in machine readable form.
+
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money, time,
+public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses.
+Money should be paid to the:
+"Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment or
+software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at:
+hart@pobox.com
+
+[Portions of this eBook's header and trailer may be reprinted only
+when distributed free of all fees. Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 by
+Michael S. Hart. Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be
+used in any sales of Project Gutenberg eBooks or other materials be
+they hardware or software or any other related product without
+express permission.]
+
+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END*
+
diff --git a/old/41001107a.zip b/old/41001107a.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..cd99123
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/41001107a.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/41001108a.txt b/old/41001108a.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..013aa38
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/41001108a.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,14683 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Book Of The Thousand Nights And One Night, Volume IV
+by Anonymous
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
+
+This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project
+Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the
+header without written permission.
+
+Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the
+eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is
+important information about your specific rights and restrictions in
+how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a
+donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: The Book Of The Thousand Nights And One Night, Volume IV
+
+Author: Anonymous
+
+Translator: John Payne
+
+Release Date: August, 2005 [EBook #8658]
+[This file was first posted on July 30, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, THE BOOK OF THE THOUSAND NIGHTS AND ONE NIGHT, VOLUME IV ***
+
+
+
+
+Text scanned by JC Byers (www.wollamshram.ca/1001) and proofread
+by JC Byers, Graeme Houston, Renate Preuss, Coralee Sheehan,
+Marryann Short, and Anne Soulard
+
+
+Editorial Note: Project Gutenberg also has the translation of this work by
+ Richard F. Burton in 16 volumes.
+
+
+
+
+ THE BOOK OF THE THOUSAND NIGHTS AND ONE NIGHT:
+
+ Now First Completely Done Into English
+ Prose and Verse, From The Original Arabic,
+
+ By John Payne
+(Author of "The Masque of Shadows," "Intaglios: Sonnets," "Songs
+ of Life and Death,"
+ "Lautrec," "The Poems of Master Francis Villon of Paris," "New
+ Poems," Etc, Etc.).
+
+ In Nine Volumes:
+
+
+
+ VOLUME THE FOURTH.
+
+
+
+ 1901
+
+ Delhi Edition
+
+
+ Contents of The Fourth Volume.
+
+
+
+1. The Imam Abou Yousuf With Haroun er Reshid and his Vizier
+ Jaafer
+2. The Lover Who Feigned Himself a Thief to save His Mistress's
+ Honour
+3. Jaafer the Barmecide and the Bean-seller
+4. Abou Mohammed the Lazy
+5. Yehya Ben Khalid and Mensour
+6. Yehya Ben Khalid and the Man Who Forged a Letter in His Name
+7. The Khalif el Mamoun and the Strange Doctor
+8. Ali Shar and Zumurrud
+9. The Loves of Jubeir Ben Umeir and the Lady Budour
+10. The Man of Yemen and His Six Slave Girls
+11. Haroun er Reshid with the Damsel and Abou Nuwas
+12. The Man Who Stole The Dog's Dish of Gold
+13. The Sharper of Alexandria and the Master of Police
+14. El Melik en Nasir and the Three Masters of Police
+ a. Story of the Chief of the New Cairo Police
+ b. Story of the Chief of the Boulac Police
+ c. Story of the chief of the Old Cairo Police
+15. The Thief and the Money-Changer
+16. The Chief of the Cous Police and the Sharper
+17. Ibrahim Ben el Mehdi and the Merchant's Sister
+18. The Woman Whose Hands Were Cut Off For Almsgiving
+19. The Devout Israelite
+20. Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi and the Man From Khorassan
+21. The Poor Man and his Generous Friend
+22. The Ruined Man Who Became Rich Again Through a Dream
+23. El Mutawekkil and his Favourite Mehboubeh
+24. Werdan the Butcher's Adventure with the Lady and the Bear
+25. The King's Daughter and the Ape
+26. The Enchanted Horse
+27. Uns El Eoujoud and the Vizier's Daughter Rose-in-Bud
+28. Abou Nuwas with the Three Boys and the Khalif Haroun er
+ Reshid
+29. Abdallah Ben Maamer with the Man of Bassora and His Slave
+ Girl
+30. The Lovers of the Benou Udhreh
+31. The Vizier of Yemen and His Young Brother
+32. Loves of the Boy and Girl at School
+33. El Mutelemmis and His Wife Umeimeh
+34. Haroun er Reshid and Zubeideh in the Bath
+35. Haroun er Reshid and the Three Poets
+36. Musab Ben ez Zubeir and Aaisheh His Wife
+37. Aboulasweh and His Squinting Slave Girl
+38. Haroun er Reshid ad the Two Girls
+39. Hroun er Reshid and the Three Girls
+40. The Miller and his Wife
+41. The Simpleton and the Sharper
+42. The Imam Abou Yousuf with Haroun er Reshid and Zubeideh
+43. The Khalif el Hakim and the Merchant
+44. King Kisra Anoushirwan and the Village Damsel
+45. The Water-Carrier and the Goldsmith's Wife
+46. Khusrau and Shirin and the Fisherman
+47. Yehya Ben Khalid and the Poor Man
+48. Mohammed El Amin and Jaafer Ben el Hadi
+49. Said Ben Salim and the Barmecides
+50. The Woman's Trick Against Her Husband
+51. The Devout Woman and the Two Wicked Elders
+52. Jaafer the Barmecide and the Old Bedouin
+53. Omar Ben Khettab and the Young Bedouin
+54. El Mamoun and the Pyramids of Egypt
+55. The Thief Turned Merchant and the Other Thief
+56. Mesrour and Ibn El Caribi
+57. The Devout Prince
+58. The Schoolmaster Who Fell in Love by Report
+59. The Foolish Schoolmaster
+60. The Ignorant Man Who Set up For a Schoolmaster
+61. The King and the Virtuous Wife
+62. Abdurrehman the Moor's Story of the Roc
+63. Adi Ben Zeid and the Princess Hind
+64. Dibil el Khuzai With the Lady and Muslim Ben el Welid
+65. Isaac of Mosul and the Merchant
+66. The Three Unfortunate Lovers
+67. The Lovers of the Benou Tai
+68. The Mad Lover
+69. The Apples of Paradise
+70. The Loves of Abou Isa and Current El Ain
+71. El Amin and His Uncle Ibrahim Ben el Mehdi
+72. El Feth Ben Khacan and El Mutawekkil
+73. The Man's Dispute with the Learned Woman of the Relative
+ Excellence of the Male and the Female
+74. Abou Suweid and the Handsome Old Woman
+75. Ali Ben Tahir and the Birl Mounis
+76. The Woman Who Has a Boy and the Other Who Had a Man to Lover
+77. The Haunted House in Baghdad
+78. The Pilgrim and the Old Woman Who Dwelt in the Desert
+79. Aboulhusn and His Slave Girl Taweddud
+
+
+
+
+ THE BOOK OF THE THOUSAND NIGHTS
+ AND ONE NIGHT
+
+
+
+
+ HOW THE IMAM ABOU YOUSUF EXTRICATED THE
+ KHALIF HAROUN ER RESHID AND HIS VIZIER
+ JAAFER FROM A DILEMMA.
+
+
+
+It is said that Jaafer the Barmecide was one night carousing with
+Er Reshid, when the latter said to him, 'O Jaafer, I hear that
+thou hast bought such and such a slave-girl. Now I have long
+sought her and my heart is taken up with love of her, for she is
+passing fair; so do thou sell her to me.' 'O Commander of the
+Faithful,' replied Jaafer, 'I will not sell her.' 'Then give her
+to me,' rejoined the Khalif. 'Nor will I give her,' answered
+Jaafer. 'Be Zubeideh triply divorced,' exclaimed Haroun, 'if
+thou shalt not either sell or give her to me!' Quoth Jaafer, 'Be
+my wife triply divorced, if I either sell or give her to thee!'
+After awhile they recovered from their intoxication and were ware
+that they had fallen into a grave dilemma, but knew not how to
+extricate themselves. Then said Er Reshid, 'None can help us in
+this strait but Abou Yousuf.'[FN#1] So they sent for him, and
+this was in the middle of the night. When the messenger reached
+the Imam, he arose in alarm, saying in himself, 'I should not be
+sent for at this hour, save by reason of some crisis in Islam.'
+So he went out in haste and mounted his mule, saying to his
+servant, 'Take the mule's nose-bag with thee; it may be she has
+not finished her feed; and when we come to the Khalif's palace,
+put the bag on her, that she may eat what is left of her fodder,
+whilst I am with the Khalif.' 'I hear and obey,' replied the man.
+
+So the Imam rode to the palace and was admitted to the presence
+of Er Reshid, who made him sit down on the couch beside himself,
+whereas he was used to seat none but him, and said to him, 'We
+have sent for thee at this hour to advise us upon a grave matter,
+with which we know not how to deal' And he expounded to him the
+case. 'O Commander of the Faithful,' replied Abou Yousuf, 'this
+is the easiest of things.' Then he turned to Jaafer and said to
+him, 'O Jaafer, sell half of her to the Commander of the Faithful
+and give him the other half; so shall ye both be quit of your
+oaths.' The Khalif was delighted with this and they did as he
+prescribed. Then said Er Reshid, 'Bring me the girl at once, for
+I long for her exceedingly.' So they brought her and the Khalif
+said to Abou Yousuf, 'I have a mind to lie with her forthright;
+for I cannot endure to abstain from her during the prescribed
+period of purification; how is this to be done?' 'Bring me one of
+thine unenfranchised male slaves,' answered the Imam, 'and give
+me leave to marry her to him; then let him divorce her before
+consummation. So shall it be lawful for thee to lie with her
+before purification.' This expedient pleased the Khalif yet more
+than the first and he sent for the slave. When he came, Er Reshid
+said to the Imam, 'I authorize thee to marry her to him.' So the
+Imam proposed the marriage to the slave, who accepted it, and
+performed the due ceremony; after which he said to the slave,
+'Divorce her, and thou shalt have a hundred diners.' But he
+refused to do this and the Imam went on to increase his offer,
+till he bid him a thousand diners. Then said the slave to him,
+'Doth it rest with me to divorce her, or with thee or the
+Commander of the Faithful?' 'With thee,' answered the Imam.
+'Then, by Allah,' quoth the slave, 'I will never do it!'
+
+At this the Khalif was exceeding wroth and said to the Imam,
+'What is to be done, O Abou Yousuf?' 'Be not concerned, O
+Commander of the Faithful,' replied the Imam; 'the thing is easy.
+Make this slave the damsel's property.' Quoth Er Reshid, 'I give
+him to her;' and the Imam said to the girl, 'Say, "I accept."' So
+she said, 'I accept:' whereupon quoth Abou Yousuf, 'I pronounce
+divorce between them, for that he hath become her property, and
+so the marriage is annulled.' With this, Er Reshid sprang to his
+feet and exclaimed, 'It is the like of thee that shall be Cadi in
+my time.' Then he called for sundry trays of gold and emptied
+them before Abou Yousuf, to whom he said, 'Hast thou wherein to
+put this ?' The Imam bethought him of the mule's nose-bag; so he
+sent for it and filling it with gold, took it and went home; and
+on the morrow, he said to his friends, 'There is no easier or
+shorter road to the goods of this world and the next, than that
+of learning; for, see, I have received all this money for
+answering two or three questions.' Consider, then, O polite
+[reader], the pleasantness of this anecdote, for it comprises
+divers goodly features, amongst which are the complaisance of
+Jaafer to Er Reshid and the wisdom[FN#2] of the Khalif and the
+exceeding wisdom of Abou Yousuf, may God the Most High have mercy
+on all their souls!
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVER WHO FEIGNED HIMSELF A THIEF TO
+ SAVE HIS MISTRESS'S HONOUR.
+
+
+
+There came one day to Khalid ibn Abdallah el Kesri,[FN#3]
+governor of Bassora, a company of men dragging a youth of
+exceeding beauty and lofty bearing, whose aspect expressed good
+breeding and dignity and abundant wit They brought him before the
+governor, who asked what was to do with him, and they replied,
+'This fellow is a thief, whom we caught last night in our
+dwelling.' Khalid looked at him and was struck with wonder at his
+well-favouredness and elegance; so he said to the others, 'Loose
+him,' and going up to the young man, asked what he had to say for
+himself. 'The folk have spoken truly,' answered he; 'and the case
+is as they have said.' 'And what moved thee to this,' asked
+Khalid, 'and thou so noble and comely of aspect?' 'The lust
+after worldly good,' replied the other, 'and the ordinance of
+God, glorified and exalted be He!' 'May thy mother be bereaved of
+thee!' rejoined Khalid. 'Hadst thou not, in thy fair face and
+sound sense and good breeding, what should restrain thee from
+thieving?' 'O Amir,' answered the young man, 'leave this talk
+and proceed to what God the Most High hath ordained; this is
+what my hands have earned, and God is no oppressor of His
+creatures.'[FN#4] Khalid was silent awhile, considering the
+matter; then he said to the young man, 'Verily, thy confession
+before witnesses perplexes me, for I cannot believe thee to be a
+thief. Surely thou hast some story that is other than one of
+theft. Tell it me'. 'O Amir,' replied the youth, 'deem thou
+nought save what I have confessed; for I have no story other than
+that I entered these folk's house and stole what I could lay
+hands on, and they caught me and took the stuff from me and
+carried me before thee.' Then Khalid bade clap him in prison and
+commanded a crier to make proclamation throughout Bassora,
+saying, 'Ho, whoso is minded to look upon the punishment of such
+an one, the thief, and the cutting off of his hand, let him be
+present tomorrow morning at such a place!'
+
+When the youth found himself in prison, with irons on his feet,
+he sighed heavily and repeated the following verses, whilst the
+tears streamed from his eyes:
+
+Khalid doth threaten me with cutting off my hand, Except I do
+ reveal to him my mistress' case.
+But, "God forbid," quoth I, "that I should e'er reveal That which
+ of love for her my bosom doth embrace!"
+The cutting-off my hand, for that I have confessed Unto, less
+ grievous were to me than her disgrace.
+
+The warders heard him and went and told Khalid, who sent for the
+youth after nightfall and conversed with him. He found him
+well-bred and intelligent and of a pleasant and vivacious wit; so
+he ordered him food and he ate. Then said Khalid, 'I know thou
+hast a story to tell that is no thief's; so, when the Cadi comes
+to-morrow morning and questions thee before the folk, do thou
+deny the charge of theft and avouch what may avert the cutting-off
+of thy hand; for the Prophet (whom God bless and preserve) saith,
+"In cases of doubt, eschew [or defer] punishment."' Then he sent
+him back to the prison, where he passed the night.
+
+On the morrow, the folk assembled to see his hand cut off, nor
+was there man or woman in Bassora but came forth to look upon his
+punishment. Then Khalid mounted in company of the notables of the
+city and others and summoning the Cadi, sent for the young man,
+who came, hobbling in his shackles. There none saw him but wept
+for him, and the women lifted up their voices in lamentation. The
+Cadi bade silence the women and said to the prisoner, 'These
+folk avouch that thou didst enter their dwelling and steal their
+goods: belike thou stolest less than a quarter dinar?'[FN#5]
+'Nay,' replied he, 'I stole more than that.' 'Peradventure,'
+rejoined the Cadi, 'thou art partner with them in some of the
+goods?' 'Not so,' replied the young man; 'it was all theirs. I
+had no right in it.' At this Khalid was wroth and rose and smote
+him on the face with his whip, applying this verse to his own
+case:
+
+Man wisheth and seeketh his wish to fulfil, But Allah denieth
+ save that which He will.
+
+Then he called for the executioner, who came and taking the
+prisoner's hand, set the knife to it and was about to cut it off,
+when, behold, a damsel, clad in tattered clothes, pressed through
+the crowd of women and cried out and threw herself on the young
+man. Then she unveiled and showed a face like the moon; whereupon
+the people raised a mighty clamour and there was like to have
+been a riot amongst them. But she cried out her loudest, saying,
+'I conjure thee, by Allah, O Amir, hasten not to cut off this
+man's hand, till thou have read what is in this scroll!' So
+saying, she gave him a scroll, and he took it and read therein
+the following verses:
+
+O Khalid, this man is love-maddened, a cave of desire, Transfixed
+ by the glances that sped from the bows of my eye.
+The shafts of my looks 'twas that pierced him and slew him;
+ indeed, He a bondsman of love, sick for passion and like for
+ to die.
+Yea, rather a crime, that he wrought not, he choose to confess
+ Than suffer on her whom he cherished dishonour to lie.
+Have ruth on a sorrowful lover; indeed he's no thief, But the
+ noblest and truest of mortals for passion that sigh.
+
+When he had read this, he called the girl apart and questioned
+her; and she told him that the young man was her lover and she
+his mistress. He came to the dwelling of her people, thinking to
+visit her, and threw a stone into the house, to warn her of his
+coming. Her father and brothers heard the noise of the stone and
+sallied out on him; but he, hearing them coming, caught up all
+the household stuff and made as if he would have stolen it, to
+cover his mistress's honour. 'So they seized him,' continued she,
+'saying, "A thief!" and brought him before thee, whereupon he
+confessed to the robbery and persisted in his confession, that he
+might spare me dishonour; and this he did, making himself a
+thief, of the exceeding nobility and generosity of his nature.'
+
+'He is indeed worthy to have his desire,' replied Khalid and
+calling the young man to him, kissed him between the eyes. Then
+he sent for the girl's father and bespoke him, saying, 'O elder,
+we thought to punish this young man by cutting off his hand; but
+God (to whom belong might and majesty) hath preserved us from
+this! and I now adjudge him the sum of ten thousand dirhems, for
+that he would have sacrificed his hand for the preservation of
+thine honour and that of thy daughter and the sparing you both
+reproach. Moreover, I adjudge other ten thousand dirhems to thy
+daughter, for that she made known to me the truth of the case;
+and I ask thy leave to marry him to her.' 'O Amir,' rejoined the
+old man, 'thou hast my consent.' So Khalid praised God and
+thanked Him and offered up a goodly exhortation and prayer; after
+which he said to the young man, 'I give thee this damsel to wife,
+with her own and her father's consent; and her dowry shall be
+this money, to wit, ten thousand dirhems. 'I accept this marriage
+at thy hands,' replied the youth and Khalid let carry the money
+on trays in procession to the young man's house, whilst the
+people dispersed, full of gladness. And surely [quoth he who
+tells the tale[FN#6]] never saw I a rarer day than this, for that
+its beginning was weeping and affliction and its end joy and
+gladness.
+
+
+
+
+ JAAFER THE BARMECIDE AND THE BEANSELLER.
+
+
+
+When Haroun er Reshid put Jaafer the Barmecide to death, he
+commanded that all who wept or made moan for him should be
+crucified; so the folk abstained from this. Now there was a
+Bedouin from a distant desert, who used every year to make and
+bring to Jaafer an ode in his honour, for which he rewarded him
+with a thousand diners; and the Bedouin took them and returning
+to his own country, lived upon them, he and his family, for the
+rest of the year. Accordingly, he came with his ode at the wonted
+time and finding Jaafer done to death, betook himself to the
+place where his body was hanging, and there made his camel kneel
+down and wept sore and mourned grievously. Then he recited his
+ode and fell asleep. In his sleep Jaafer the Barmecide appeared
+to him and said, 'Thou hast wearied thyself to come to us and
+findest us as thou seest; but go to Bassora and ask for such a
+man there of the merchants of the town and say to him, "Jaafer
+the Barmecide salutes thee and bids thee give me a thousand
+diners, by the token of the bean."'
+
+When the Bedouin awoke, he repaired to Bassora, where he sought
+out the merchant and repeated to him what Jaafer had said in the
+dream; whereupon he wept sore, till he was like to depart the
+world. Then he welcomed the Bedouin and entertained him three
+days as an honoured guest; and when he was minded to depart, he
+gave him a thousand and five hundred diners, saying, 'The
+thousand are what is commanded to thee, and the five hundred are
+a gift from me to thee; and every year thou shalt have of me a
+thousand diners.' When the Bedouin was about to take leave, he
+said to the merchant, 'I conjure thee, by Allah, tell me the
+story of the bean, that I may know the origin of all this.' 'In
+the early part of my life,' replied the merchant, 'I was
+miserably poor and hawked hot boiled beans about the streets of
+Baghdad for a living.
+
+I went out one cold, rainy day, without clothes enough on my body
+to protect me from the weather, now shivering for excess of cold
+and now stumbling into the pools of rain-water, and altogether in
+so piteous a plight as would make one shudder to look upon. Now
+it chanced that Jaafer was seated that day, with his officers and
+favourites, in an upper chamber overlooking the street, and his
+eye fell on me; so he took pity on my case and sending one of his
+servants to fetch me to him, said to me, "Sell thy beans to my
+people." So I began to mete out the beans with a measure I had
+with me, and each who took a measure of beans filled the vessel
+with gold pieces, till the basket was empty. Then I gathered
+together the money I had gotten, and Jaafer said to me, "Hast
+thou any beans left?" "I know not," answered I and sought in the
+basket, but found only one bean. This Jaafer took and splitting
+it in twain, kept one half himself and gave the other to one of
+his favourites, saying, "For how much wilt thou buy this
+half-bean?" "For the tale of all this money twice-told," replied
+she; whereat I was confounded and said in myself, "This is
+impossible." But, as I stood wondering, she gave an order to one
+of her handmaids and the girl brought me the amount twice-told.
+Then said Jaafer, "And I will buy my half for twice the sum of
+the whole. Take the price of thy bean." And he gave an order to
+one of his servants, who gathered together the whole of the money
+and laid it in my basket; and I took it and departed. Then I
+betook myself to Bassora, where I traded with the money and God
+prospered me, to Him be the praise and the thanks! So, if I give
+thee a thousand diners a year of the bounty of Jaafer, it will in
+no wise irk me.' Consider then the munificence of Jaafer's nature
+and how he was praised both alive and dead, the mercy of God the
+Most High be upon him!
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOU MOHAMMED THE LAZY.
+
+
+
+It is told that Haroun er Reshid was sitting one day on the
+throne of the Khalifate, when there came in to him a youth of his
+eunuchs, bearing a crown of red gold, set with pearls and rubies
+and all manner other jewels, such as money might not buy, and
+kissing the ground before him, said, 'O Commander of the
+Faithful, the lady Zubeideh kisses the earth before thee and
+saith to thee, thou knowest she hath let make this crown, which
+lacks a great jewel for its top; and she hath made search among
+her treasures, but cannot find a jewel to her mind.' Quoth the
+Khalif to his chamberlains and officers, 'Make search for a
+great jewel, such as Zubeideh desires.' So they sought, but found
+nothing befitting her and told the Khalif, who was vexed thereat
+and exclaimed, 'Am I Khalif and king of the kings of the earth
+and lack of a jewel? Out on ye! Enquire of the merchants.' So
+they enquired of the merchants, who replied, 'Our lord the Khalif
+will not find a jewel such as he requires save with a man of
+Bassora, by name Abou Mohammed the Lazy.' They acquainted the
+Khalif with this and he bade his Vizier Jaafer send a letter to
+the Amir Mohammed ez Zubeidi, governor of Bassora, commanding him
+to equip Abou Mohammed the Lazy and bring him to Baghdad.
+
+Jaafer accordingly wrote a letter to that effect and despatched
+it by Mesrour, who set out forthright for Bassora and went in to
+the governor, who rejoiced in him and entreated him with the
+utmost honour. Then Mesrour read him the Khalif's mandate, to
+which he replied, 'I hear and obey,' and forthwith despatched
+him, with a company of his followers, to Abou Mohammed's house.
+When they reached it, they knocked at the door, whereupon a
+servant came out and Mesrour said to him, 'Tell thy master that
+the Commander of the Faithful calls for him.' The servant went in
+and told his master, who came out and found Mesrour, the Khalif's
+chamberlain, and a company of the governor's men at the door. So
+he kissed the earth before Mesrour and said, 'I hear and obey the
+summons of the Commander of the Faithful; but enter ye my house.'
+'We cannot do that,' replied Mesrour, 'save in haste; for the
+Commander of the Faithful awaits thy coming.' But he said, 'Have
+patience with me a little, till I set my affairs in order.' So,
+after much pressure and persuasion, they entered and found the
+corridor hung with curtains of blue brocade, figured with gold,
+and Abou Mohammed bade one of his servants carry Mesrour to the
+bath. Now this bath was in the house and Mesrour found its walls
+and floor of rare and precious marbles, wrought with gold and
+silver, and its waters mingled with rose-water. The servants
+served Mesrour and his company on the most perfect wise and clad
+them, on their going forth of the bath, in robes of honour of
+brocade, interwoven with gold.
+
+Then they went in to Abou Mohammed and found him seated in his
+upper chamber upon a couch inlaid with jewels. Over his head hung
+curtains of gold brocade, wrought with pearls and jewels, and the
+place was spread with cushions, embroidered in red gold. When he
+saw Mesrour, he rose to receive him and bidding him welcome,
+seated him by his side. Then he called for food: so they brought
+the table of food, which when Mesrour saw, he exclaimed, 'By
+Allah, never saw I the like of this in the palace of the
+Commander of the Faithful!' For indeed it comprised all manner of
+meats, served in dishes of gilded porcelain. So they ate and
+drank and made merry till the end of the day, when Abou Mohammed
+gave Mesrour and each of his company five thousand diners; and on
+the morrow he clad them in dresses of honour of green and
+gold and entreated them with the utmost honour. Then said
+Mesrour to him, 'We can abide no longer, for fear of the Khalif's
+displeasure.' 'O my lord,' answered Abou Mohammed, 'have patience
+with us till to-morrow, that we may equip ourselves, and we will
+then depart with you.' So they tarried that day and night with
+him; and next morning, Abou Mohammed's servants saddled him a
+mule with housings and trappings of gold, set with all manner
+pearls and jewels; whereupon quoth Mesrour in himself, 'I wonder
+if, when he presents himself in this equipage before the
+Commander of the Faithful, he will ask him how he came by all
+this wealth.'
+
+Then they took leave of Ez Zubeidi and setting out from Bassora,
+fared on, without stopping, till they reached Baghdad and
+presented themselves before the Khalif who bade Abou Mohammed be
+seated. So he sat down and addressing the Khalif in courtly wise,
+said to him, 'O Commander of the Faithful, I have brought with me
+a present by way of homage: have I thy leave to produce it?'
+'There is no harm in that,' replied the Khalif; whereupon Abou
+Mohammed caused bring in a chest, from which he took a number of
+rarities and amongst the rest, trees of gold, with leaves of
+emerald and fruits of rubies and topazes and pearls. Then he
+fetched another chest and brought out of it a pavilion of
+brocade, adorned with pearls and rubies and emeralds and
+chrysolites and other precious stones; its poles were of the
+finest Indian aloes-wood, and its skirts were set with emeralds.
+Thereon were depicted all manner beasts and birds and other
+created things, spangled with rubies and emeralds and chrysolites
+and balass rubies and other precious stones.
+
+When Er Reshid saw these things, he rejoiced exceedingly, and
+Abou Mohammed said to him, 'O Commander of the Faithful, deem not
+that I have brought these to thee, fearing aught or coveting
+aught; but I knew myself to be but a man of the people and that
+these things befitted none save the Commander of the Faithful.
+And now, with thy leave, I will show thee, for thy diversion,
+something of what I can do.' 'Do what thou wilt,' answered Er
+Reshid, 'that we may see.' 'I hear and obey,' said Abou Mohammed
+and moving his lips, beckoned to the battlements of the palace,
+whereupon they inclined to him; then he made another sign to
+them, and they returned to their place. Then he made a sign with
+his eye, and there appeared before him cabinets with closed
+doors, to which he spoke, and lo, the voices of birds answered
+him [from within]. The Khalif marvelled exceedingly at this and
+said to him, 'How camest thou by all this, seeing that thou art
+only known as Abou Mohammed the Lazy, and they tell me that thy
+father was a barber-surgeon, serving in a public bath, and left
+thee nothing?' 'O Commander of the Faithful,' answered he,
+'listen to my story, for it is an extraordinary one and its
+particulars are wonderful; were it graven with needles upon the
+corners of the eye, it would serve as a lesson to him who can
+profit by admonition.' 'Let us hear it,' said the Khalif.
+
+'Know then, O Commander of the Faithful,' replied Abou Mohammed,
+'(may God prolong to thee glory and dominion,) that the report of
+the folk, that I am known as the Lazy and that my father left me
+nothing, is true; for he was, as thou hast said, but a barber-
+surgeon in a bath. In my youth I was the laziest wight on the
+face of the earth; indeed, so great was my sluggishness that,
+if I lay asleep in the sultry season and the sun came round upon
+me, I was too lazy to rise and remove from the sun to the shade;
+and thus I abode till I reached my fifteenth year, when my father
+was admitted to the mercy of God the Most High and left me
+nothing. However, my mother used to go out to service and feed me
+and give me to drink, whilst I lay on my side.
+
+
+One day, she came in to me, with five silver dirhems, and said to
+me, "O my son, I hear that the Sheikh Aboul Muzeffer is about to
+go a voyage to China." (Now this Sheikh was a good and charitable
+man and loved the poor.) "So come, let us carry him these five
+dirhems and beg him to buy thee therewith somewhat from the land
+of China, so haply thou mayst make a profit of it, by the bounty
+of God the Most High!" I was too lazy to move; but she swore by
+Allah that, except I rose and went with her, she would neither
+bring me meat nor drink nor come in to me, but would leave me to
+die of hunger and thirst. When I heard this, O Commander of the
+Faithful, I knew she would do as she said; so I said to her,
+"Help me to sit up." She did so, and I wept the while and said to
+her, "Bring me my shoes." Accordingly, she brought them and I
+said, "Put them on my feet." She put them on my feet and I said,
+"Lift me up." So she lifted me up and I said, "Support me, that I
+may walk." So she supported me and I went along thus, still
+stumbling in my skirts, till we came to the river-bank, where we
+saluted the Sheikh and I said to him, "O uncle, art thou Aboul
+Muzeffer?" "At thy service," answered he, and I said, "Take these
+dirhems and buy me somewhat from the land of China: haply, God
+may vouchsafe me a profit of it." Quoth the Sheikh to his
+companions, "Do ye know this youth?" "Yes," replied they; "he is
+known as Abou Mohammed the Lazy, and we never saw him stir from
+his house till now." Then said he to me, "O my son, give me the
+dirhems and the blessing of God the Most High go with them!" So
+he took the money, saying, "In the name of God!" and I returned
+home with my mother.
+
+Meanwhile the Sheikh set sail, with a company of merchants, and
+stayed not till they reached the land of China, where they bought
+and sold, and having done their intent, set out on their homeward
+voyage. When they had been three days at sea, the Sheikh said to
+his company, "Stay the ship!" And they asked him what was to do
+with him. "Know," replied he, "that I have forgotten the
+commission with which Abou Mohammed the Lazy charged me; so let
+us turn back, that we may buy him somewhat whereby he may
+profit." "We conjure thee, by God the Most High," exclaimed they,
+"turn not back with us; for we have traversed an exceeding great
+distance and endured sore hardship and many perils." Quoth he,
+"There is no help for it;" and they said "Take from us double the
+profit of the five dirhems and turn not back with us." So he
+agreed to this and they collected for him a great sum of money.
+
+Then they sailed on, till they came to an island, wherein was
+much people; so they moored thereto and the merchants went
+ashore, to buy thence precious metals and pearls and jewels and
+so forth. Presently, Aboul Muzeffer saw a man seated, with many
+apes before him, and amongst them one whose hair had been plucked
+off. As often as the man's attention was diverted from them, the
+other apes fell upon the plucked one and beat him and threw him
+on their master; whereupon the latter rose and beat them and
+bound them and punished them for this; and all the apes were
+wroth with the plucked ape therefor and beat him the more. When
+Aboul Muzeffer saw this, he took compassion upon the plucked ape
+and said to his master, "Wilt thou sell me yonder ape?" "Buy,"
+replied the man, and Aboul Muzeffer rejoined, "I have with me
+five dirhems, belonging to an orphan lad. Wilt thou sell me the
+ape for that sum?" "He is thine," answered the ape-merchant. "May
+God give thee a blessing of him!" So the Sheikh paid the money
+and his slaves took the ape and tied him up in the ship.
+
+Then they loosed sail and made for another island, where they
+cast anchor; and there came down divers, who dived for pearls and
+corals and other jewels. So the merchants hired them for money
+and they dived. When the ape saw this, he did himself loose from
+his bonds and leaping off the ship's side, dived with them;
+whereupon quoth Aboul Muzeffer, "There is no power and no virtue
+but in God the Most High, the Supreme! The ape is lost to us, by
+the [ill] fortune of the poor fellow for whom we bought him." And
+they despaired of him; but, after awhile, the company of divers
+rose to the surface, and with them the ape, with his hands full
+of jewels of price, which he threw down before Aboul Muzeffer,
+who marvelled at this and said, "There hangs some great mystery
+by this ape!"
+
+Then they cast off and sailed till they came to a third island,
+called the Island of the Zunonj,[FN#7] who are a people of the
+blacks, that eat human flesh. When the blacks saw them, they
+boarded them in canoes and taking all in the ship, pinioned them
+and carried them to their king who bade slaughter certain of the
+merchants. So they slaughtered them and ate their flesh; and the
+rest passed the night in prison and sore concern. But, when it
+was [mid]night, the ape arose and going up to Aboul Muzeffer, did
+off his bonds. When the others saw him free, they said, "God
+grant that our deliverance may be at thy hands, O Aboul
+Muzeffer!" But he replied, "Know that he who at delivered me, by
+God's leave, was none other than this ape; and I buy my release
+of him at a thousand dinars." "And we likewise," rejoined the
+merchants, "will pay him a thousand diners each, if he release
+us." With this, the ape went up to them and loosed their bonds,
+one by one, till he had freed them all, when they made for the
+ship and boarding her, found all safe and nothing missing. So
+they cast off and set sail; and presently Aboul Muzeffer said to
+them, "O merchants, fulfil your promise to the ape." "We hear and
+obey," answered they and paid him a thousand diners each, whilst
+Aboul Muzeffer brought out to him the like sum of his own monies,
+so that there was a great sum of money collected for the ape.
+
+Then they fared on till they reached the city of Bassora, where
+their friends came out to meet them; and when they had landed,
+the Sheikh said, "Where is Abou Mohammed the Lazy?" The news
+reached my mother, who came to me, as I lay asleep, and said to
+me, "O my son, the Sheikh Aboul Muzeffer has come back and is now
+in the city; so go thou to him and salute him and enquire what he
+hath brought thee; it may be God hath blessed thee with
+somewhat." "Lift me from the ground," quoth I, "and prop me up,
+whilst I walk to the river-bank." So she lifted me up and I went
+out and walked on, stumbling in my skirts, till I met the Sheikh,
+who exclaimed, at sight of me, "Welcome to him whose money has
+been the means of my delivery and that of these merchants, by
+the will of God the Most High! Take this ape that I bought for
+thee and carry him home and wait till I come to thee." So I
+took the ape, saying in myself, "By Allah, this is indeed rare
+merchandise!" and drove it home, where I said to my mother,
+"Whenever I lie down to sleep, thou biddest me rise and trade;
+see now this merchandise with thine own eyes."
+
+Then I sat down, and presently up came Aboul Muzeffer's slaves
+and said to me, "Art thou Abou Mohammed the Lazy?" "Yes,"
+answered I; and behold, Aboul Muzeffer appeared behind them. So I
+went up to him and kissed his hands; and he said to me, "Come
+with me to my house." "I hear and obey," answered I and followed
+him to his house, where he bade his servants bring me the money
+[and what not else the ape had earned me]. So they brought it and
+he said to me, "O my son, God hath blessed thee with this wealth,
+by way of profit on thy five dirhems." Then the slaves laid the
+treasure in chests, which they set on their heads, and Aboul
+Muzeffer gave me the keys of the chests, saying, "Go before the
+slaves to thy house; for all this wealth is thine." So I returned
+to my mother, who rejoiced in this and said to me, "O my son, God
+hath blessed thee with this much wealth; so put off thy laziness
+and go down to the bazaar and sell and buy." So I shook off my
+sloth, and opened a shop in the bazaar, where the ape used to sit
+on the same divan with me, eating with me when I ate and drinking
+when I drank. But, every day, he was absent from daybreak till
+noon-day, when he came back, bringing with him a purse of a
+thousand diners, which he laid by my side, and sat down. Thus did
+he a great while, till I amassed much wealth, wherewith I bought
+houses and lands and planted gardens and got me slaves, black and
+white and male and female.
+
+One day, as I sat in my shop, with the ape at my side, he began
+to turn right and left, and I said in myself, "What ails the
+beast?" Then God made the ape speak with a glib tongue, and he
+said to me, "O Abou Mohammed!" When I heard him speak, I was sore
+afraid; but he said to me, "Fear not; I will tell thee my case.
+Know that I am a Marid of the Jinn and came to thee, because of
+thy poor estate; but to-day thou knowest not the tale of thy
+wealth; and now I have a need of thee, wherein it thou do my
+will, it shall be well for thee." "What is it?" asked I, and he
+said, "I have a mind to marry thee to a girl like the full moon."
+"How so?" quoth I. "To. morrow," replied he, "don thou thy
+richest clothes and mount thy mule, with the saddle of gold, and
+ride to the forage-market. There enquire for the shop of the
+Sherif[FN#8] and sit down beside him and say to him, 'I come to
+thee a suitor for thy daughter's hand.' If he say to thee, 'Thou
+hast neither money nor condition nor family,' pull out a thousand
+diners and give them to him; and if he ask more, give him more
+and tempt him with money." "I hear and obey," answered I;
+"to-morrow, if it please God, I will do thy bidding."
+
+So on the morrow I donned my richest clothes and mounting my mule
+with trappings of gold, rode, attended by half a score slaves,
+black and white, to the forage-market, where I found the Sherif
+sitting in his shop. I alighted and saluting him, seated myself
+beside him. Quoth he, "Haply, thou hast some business with us,
+which we may have the pleasure of transacting?" "Yes," answered
+I; "I have business with thee." "And what is it?" asked he. Quoth
+I, "I come to thee as a suitor for thy daughter's hand." And he
+said, "Thou hast neither money nor condition nor family;"
+whereupon I pulled out a thousand diners of red gold and said to
+him, "This is my rank and family; and he whom God bless and keep
+hath said, 'The best of ranks is wealth.' And how well saith the
+poet:
+
+Whoso hath money, though it be but dirhems twain, his lips Have
+ learnt all manner speech and he can speak and fear no
+ slight.
+His brethren and his mates draw near and hearken to his word And
+ 'mongst the folk thou seest him walk, a glad and prideful
+ wight.
+But for the money, in the which he glorieth on this wise,
+ Thou'dst find him, midst his fellow-men, in passing sorry
+ plight.
+Yea, whensoe'er the rich man speaks, though in his speech he err,
+ 'Thou hast not spoken a vain thing,' they say; 'indeed,
+ thou'rt right.'
+But, for the poor man, an he speak, albeit he say sooth, They
+ say, 'Thou liest,' and make void his speech and hold it
+ light
+For money, verily, in all the lands beneath the sun, With
+ goodliness and dignity cloth its possessors dight.
+A very tongue it is for him who would be eloquent And eke a
+ weapon to his hand who hath a mind to fight."
+
+When he heard this, he bowed his head awhile, then, raising it,
+said, "If it must be so, I will have of thee other three thousand
+diners." "I hear and obey," answered I and sent one of my
+servants to my house for the money. When he came back with it, I
+handed it to the Sherif, who rose and bidding his servants shut
+his shop, invited his brother-merchants to the wedding; after
+which he carried me to his house and drew up the contract of
+marriage between his daughter and myself, saying to me, "After
+ten days, I will bring thee in to her." So I went home rejoicing
+and shutting myself up with the ape, told him what had passed;
+and he said, "Thou hast done well."
+
+When the time appointed by the Sherif drew near, the ape said to
+me, "There is a thing I would fain have thee do for me; and
+after, thou shalt have of me what thou wilt." "What is that?"
+asked I. Quoth he, "At the upper end of the bridechamber stands a
+cabinet, on whose door is a padlock of brass and the keys under
+it. Take the keys and open the cabinet, in which thou wilt find a
+coffer of iron, with four talismanic flags at its angles. In its
+midst is a brass basin full of money, wherein is tied a white
+cock with a cleft comb; and on one side of the coffer are eleven
+serpents and on the other a knife. Take the knife and kill the
+cock; cut away the flags and overturn the chest; then go back to
+the bride and do away her maidenhead. This is what I have to ask
+of thee." "I hear and obey," answered I and betook myself to the
+Sherif's house.
+
+As soon as I entered the bridechamber, I looked for the cabinet
+and found it even as the ape had described it. Then I went in to
+the bride and marvelled at her beauty and grace and symmetry, for
+indeed they were such as no tongue can set forth. So I rejoiced
+in her with an exceeding joy; and in the middle of the night,
+when she slept, I rose and taking the keys, opened the cabinet.
+Then I took the knife and killed the cock and threw down the
+flags and overturned the coffer, whereupon the girl awoke and
+seeing the closet open and the cock slain, exclaimed, "There is
+no power and no virtue but in God the Most High, the Supreme! The
+Marid hath gotten me!" Hardly had she made an end of speaking,
+when the Marid came down upon the house and seizing the bride,
+flew away with her; whereupon there arose a great clamour and in
+came the Sherif, buffeting his face. "O Abou Mohammed," said he,
+"what is this thou hast done? Is it thus thou requitest us? I
+made the talisman in the cabinet in my fear for my daughter from
+this accursed one; for these six years hath he sought to steal
+away the girl, but could not. But now there is no more abiding
+for thee with us; so go thy ways."
+
+So I went out and returned to my own house, where I made search
+for the ape, but could find no trace of him; whereby I knew that
+he was the Marid, who had taken my wife and had tricked me into
+destroying the talisman that hindered him from taking her, and
+repented, rending my clothes and buffeting my face; and there was
+no land but was straitened upon me. So I made for the desert,
+knowing not whither I should go, and wandered on, absorbed in
+melancholy thought, till night overtook me. Presently, I saw two
+serpents fighting, a white one and a tawny. So I took up a stone
+and throwing it at the tawny serpent, which was the aggressor,
+killed it; whereupon the white serpent made off, but returned
+after awhile accompanied by ten others of the same colour, which
+went up to the dead serpent and tore it in pieces, till but the
+head was left. Then they went their ways and I fell prostrate for
+weariness on the ground where I stood; but, as I lay, pondering
+my case, I heard a voice repeat the following verses, though I
+saw no one:
+
+Let destiny with slackened rein its course appointed fare And lie
+ thou down by night to sleep with heart devoid of care.
+For, twixt the closing of the eyes and th' opening thereof, God
+ hath it in His power to change a case from foul to fair.
+
+When I heard this, great concern got hold of me and I was beyond
+measure troubled; and I heard a voice from behind me repeat these
+verses also:
+
+Muslim, whose guide's the Koran and his due, Rejoice, for succour
+ cometh thee unto.
+Let not the wiles of Satan make thee rue, For we're a folk whose
+ creed's the One, the True.
+
+Then said I, "I conjure thee by Him whom thou worshippest, let me
+know who thou art!" Thereupon the unseen speaker appeared to me,
+in the likeness of a man, and said, "Fear not; for the report of
+thy good deed hath reached us, and we are a people of the
+true-believing Jinn. So, if thou lack aught, let us know it, that
+we may have the pleasure of fulfilling thy need." "Indeed,"
+answered I, "I am in sore need, for there hath befallen me a
+grievous calamity, whose like never yet befell man." Quoth he,
+"Surely, thou art Abou Mohammed the Lazy?" And I answered, "Yes."
+"O Abou Mohammed," rejoined the genie, "I am the brother of the
+white serpent, whose enemy thou slewest. We are four brothers, by
+one father and mother, and we are all indebted to thee for thy
+kindness. Know that he who played this trick on thee, in the
+likeness of an ape, is a Marid of the Marids of the Jinn; and had
+he not used this artifice, he had never been able to take the
+girl; for he hath loved her and had a mind to take her this long
+while, but could not win at her, being hindered of the talisman;
+and had it remained as it was, he could never have done so.
+However, fret not thyself for that; we will bring thee to her and
+kill the Marid; for thy kindness is not lost upon us."
+
+Then he cried out with a terrible voice, and behold, there
+appeared a company of Jinn, of whom he enquired concerning the
+ape; and one of them said, "I know his abiding-place; it is in
+the City of Brass, upon which the sun riseth not." Then said the
+first genie to me, "O Abou Mohammed, take one of these our
+slaves, and he will carry thee on his back and teach thee how
+thou shalt get back the girl: but know that he is a Marid and
+beware lest thou utter the name of God, whilst he is carrying
+thee; or he will flee from thee, and thou wilt fall and be
+destroyed." "I hear and obey," answered I and chose out one of
+the slaves, who bent down and said to me, "Mount." So I mounted
+on his back, and he flew up with me into the air, till I lost
+sight of the earth and saw the stars as they were fixed mountains
+and heard the angels glorifying God in heaven, what while the
+Marid held me in converse, diverting me and hindering me from
+pronouncing the name of God. But, as we flew, behold, one clad in
+green raiment, with streaming tresses and radiant face, holding
+in his hand a javelin whence issued sparks of fire, accosted me,
+saying, "O Abou Mohammed, say, 'There is no god but God and
+Mohammed is His apostle;' or I will smite thee with this
+javelin."
+
+Now I was already sick at heart of my [forced] abstention from
+calling on the name of God; so I said, "There is no god but God
+and Mohammed is His apostle." Whereupon the shining one smote the
+Marid with his javelin and he melted away and became ashes;
+whilst I was precipitated from his back and fell headlong toward
+the earth, till I dropped into the midst of a surging sea,
+swollen with clashing billows. Hard by where I fell was a ship
+and five sailors therein, who, seeing me, made for me and took me
+up into the boat. They began to speak to me in some tongue I knew
+not; but I signed to them that I understood not their speech. So
+they fared on till ended day, when they cast out a net and caught
+a great fish and roasting it, gave me to eat; after which they
+sailed on, till they reached their city and carried me in to
+their king, who understand Arabic. So I kissed the ground before
+him, and he bestowed on me a dress of honour and made me one of
+his officers. I asked him the name of the city, and he replied,
+"It is called Henad and is in the land of China." Then he
+committed me to his Vizier, bidding him show me the city, which
+was formerly peopled by infidels, till God the Most High turned
+them into stones; and there I abode a month's space, diverting
+myself with viewing the place, nor saw I ever greater plenty of
+trees and fruits than there.
+
+One day, as I sat on the bank of a river, there accosted me a
+horseman, who said to me, "Art thou not Abou Mohammed the Lazy?"
+"Yes," answered I; whereupon, "Fear not," said he; "for the
+report of thy good deed hath reached us." Quoth I, "Who art
+thou?" And he answered, "I am a brother of the white serpent, and
+thou art hard by the place where is the damsel whom thou
+seekest." So saying, he took off his [outer] clothes and clad me
+therein, saying, "Fear not; for he, that perished under thee, was
+one of our slaves." Then he took me up behind him and rode on
+with me, till we came to a desert place, when he said to me,
+"Alight now and walk on between yonder mountains till thou seest
+the City of Brass; then halt afar off and enter it not, till I
+return to thee and teach thee how thou shalt do." "I hear and
+obey," replied I and alighting, walked on till I came to the
+city, the walls whereof I found of brass. I went round about it,
+looking for a gate, but found none; and presently, the serpent's
+brother rejoined me and gave me a charmed sword that should
+hinder any from seeing me, then went his way.
+
+He had been gone but a little while, when I heard a noise of
+cries and found myself in the midst of a multitude of folk whose
+eyes were in their breasts. Quoth they, "Who art thou and what
+brings thee hither?" So I told them my story, and they said, "The
+girl thou seekest is in the city with the Marid; but we know not
+what he hath done with her. As for us, we are brethren of the
+white serpent. But go to yonder spring and note where the water
+enters, and enter thou with it; for it will bring thee into the
+city." I did as they bade me and followed the water-course, till
+it brought me to a grotto under the earth, from which I ascended
+and found myself in the midst of the city. Here I saw the damsel
+seated upon a throne of gold, under a canopy of brocade, midmost
+a garden full of trees of gold, whose fruits were jewels of
+price, such as rubies and chrysolites and pearls and coral.
+
+When she saw me, she knew me and accosted me with the
+[obligatory] salutation, saying, "O my lord, who brought thee
+hither?" So I told her all that had passed and she said, "Know
+that the accursed Marid, of the greatness of his love for me,
+hath told me what doth him hurt and what profit and that there is
+here a talisman by means whereof he could, an he would, destroy
+this city and all that are therein. It is in the likeness of an
+eagle, with I know not what written on it, and whoso possesses
+it, the Afrits will do his commandment in everything. It stands
+upon a column in such a place; so go thou thither and take it.
+Then set it before thee and taking a chafing-dish, throw into it
+a little musk, whereupon there will arise a smoke, that will draw
+all the Afrits to thee, and they will all present themselves
+before thee, nor shall one be absent; and whatsoever thou biddest
+them, that will they do. Arise therefore and do this thing, with
+the blessing of God the Most High."
+
+"I hear and obey," answered I and going to the column, did what
+she bade me, whereupon the Afrits presented themselves, saying,
+"Here are we, O our lord! Whatsoever thou biddest us, that will
+we do." Quoth I, "Bind the Marid that brought the damsel hither."
+"We hear and obey," answered they and disappearing, returned
+after awhile and informed me that they had done my bidding. Then
+I dismissed them and returning to my wife, told her what had
+happened and said to her, "Wilt thou go with me?" "Yes," answered
+she. So I carried her forth of the city, by the underground
+channel, and we fared on, till we fell in with the folk who had
+shown me the way into the city. I besought them to teach me how I
+should return to my native land; so they brought us to the
+seashore and set us aboard a ship, which sailed on with us with a
+fair wind, till we reached the city of Bassora. Here we landed,
+and I carried my wife to her father's house; and when her people
+saw her, they rejoiced with an exceeding joy. Then I fumigated
+the eagle with musk and the Afrits flocked to me from all sides,
+saying, "At thy service; what wilt thou have us do?" I bade them
+transport all that was in the City of Brass of gold and silver
+and jewels and precious things to my house in Bassora, which they
+did; and I then ordered them to fetch the ape. So they brought
+him before me, abject and humiliated, and I said to him, "O
+accursed one, why hast thou dealt thus perfidiously with me?"
+Then I commanded the Afrits to shut him in a brazen vessel: so
+they put him in a strait vessel of brass and sealed it with lead.
+But I abode with my wife in joy and delight; and now, O Commander
+of the Faithful, I have under my hand such stores of precious
+things and rare jewels and other treasure as neither reckoning
+may comprise nor measure suffice unto. All this is of the bounty
+of God the Most High, and if thou desire aught of money or what
+not, I will bid the Jinn bring it to thee forthright.'
+
+The Khalif wondered greatly at his story and bestowed on him
+royal gifts, in exchange for his presents, and entreated him with
+the favour he deserved.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE GENEROUS DEALING OF YEHYA BEN KHALID
+ THE BARMECIDE WITH MENSOUR.
+
+
+
+It is told that Haroun er Reshid, in the days before he became
+jealous of the Barmecides, sent once for one of his guards, Salih
+by name, and said to him, 'O Salih, go to Mensour[FN#9] and say
+to him, "Thou owest us a thousand thousand dirhems and we require
+of thee immediate payment of the amount." And I charge thee, O
+Salih, an he pay it not before sundown, sever his head from his
+body and bring it to me.' 'I hear and obey,' answered Salih and
+going to Mensour, acquainted him with what the Khalif had said,
+whereupon quoth he, 'By Allah, I am a lost man; for all my estate
+and all my hand owns, if sold for their utmost value, would not
+fetch more than a hundred thousand dirhems. Whence then, O Salih,
+shall I get the other nine hundred thousand?' 'Contrive how thou
+mayst speedily acquit thyself,' answered Salih; 'else art thou a
+dead man; for I cannot grant thee a moment's delay after the time
+appointed me by the Khalif, nor can I fail of aught that he hath
+enjoined on me. Hasten, therefore, to devise some means of saving
+thyself ere the time expire.' 'O Salih,' quoth Mensour, 'I beg
+thee of thy favour to bring me to my house, that I may take
+leave of my children and family and give my kinsfolk my last
+injunctions.'
+
+So he carried him to his house, where he fell to bidding his
+family farewell, and the house was filled with a clamour of
+weeping and lamentation and calling on God for help. Then Salih
+said to him, 'I have bethought me that God may peradventure
+vouchsafe thee relief at the hands of the Barmecides. Come, let
+us go to the house of Yehya ben Khalid.' So they went to Yehya's
+house, and Mensour told him his case, whereat he was sore
+concerned and bowed his head awhile; then raising it, he called
+his treasurer and said to him, 'How much money have we in our
+treasury?' 'Five thousand dirhems,' answered the treasurer, and
+Yehya bade him bring them and sent a message to his son Fezl,
+saying, 'I am offered for sale estates of great price, that may
+never be laid waste; so send me somewhat of money.' Fezl sent him
+a thousand thousand dirhems, and he despatched a like message to
+his son Jaafer, who also sent him a thousand thousand dirhems;
+nor did he leave sending to his kinsmen of the Barmecides, till
+he had collected from them a great sum of mosey for Mensour. But
+the latter and Salih knew not of this; and Mensour said to Yehya,
+'O my lord, I have laid hold upon thy skirt for I know not
+whither to look for the money but to thee; so discharge thou the
+rest of my debt for me, in accordance with thy wonted generosity,
+and make me thy freed slave.' Thereupon Yehya bowed his head and
+wept; then he said to a page, 'Harkye, boy, the Commander of the
+Faithful gave our slave-girl Denanir a jewel of great price: go
+thou to her and bid her send it us.' The page went out and
+presently returned with the jewel, whereupon quoth Yehya, 'O
+Mensour, I bought this jewel of the merchants for the Commander
+of the Faithful, for two hundred thousand diners, and he gave it
+to our slave-girl Denanir the lutanist. When he sees it with
+thee, he will know it and spare thy life and do thee honour for
+our sake; and now thy money is complete.'
+
+So Salih took the money and the jewel and carried them to the
+Khalif, together with Mensour; but on the way? he heard the
+latter repeat this verse, applying it to his own case:
+
+It was not love, indeed, my feet to them that led; Nay, but
+ because the stroke of th' arrows I did dread.
+
+When Salih heard this, he marvelled at the baseness and
+ingratitude of Mensour's nature, and turning upon him, said,
+'There is none on the face of the earth better than the
+Barmecides, nor any baser nor more depraved than thou; for they
+bought thee off from death and saved thee from destruction,
+giving thee what should deliver thee; yet thou thankest them not
+nor praisest them, neither acquittest thee after the manner of
+the noble; nay, thou requitest their benevolence with this
+speech.' Then he went to Er Reshid and acquainted him with all
+that had passed; and he marvelled at the generosity and
+benevolence of Yehya ben Khalid and the baseness and ingratitude
+of Mensour and bade restore the jewel to Yehya, saying, 'That
+which we have given, it befits not that we take again.'
+
+So Salih returned to Yehya, and acquainted him with Mensour's ill
+conduct; whereupon, 'O Salih,' replied he, 'when a man is in
+distress, sick at heart and distracted with melancholy thought.
+he is not to be blamed for aught that falls from him; for it
+comes not from the heart.' And he fell to seeking excuse for
+Mensour. But Salih wept [in telling the tale] and exclaimed,
+'Never shall the revolving sphere bring forth into being the like
+of thee, O Yehya! Alas, that one of such noble nature and
+generosity should be buried beneath the earth! 'And he repeated
+the following verses:
+
+Hasten to do the kindnesses thou hast a mind unto; For bounty is
+ not possible at every tide and hour.
+How many a man denies his soul to do the generous deed, To which
+ it's fain, till lack of means deprive him of the power!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE GENEROUS DEALING OF YEHYA BEN KHALID
+ WITH A MAN WHO FORGED A LETTER IN HIS
+ NAME.
+
+
+
+There was between Yehya ben Khalid and Abdallah ben Malik el
+Khuzai[FN#10] a secret enmity, the reason whereof was that Haroun
+er Reshid loved the latter with an exceeding love, so that Yehya
+and his sons were wont to say that he had bewitched the Khalif;
+and thus they abode a long while, with rancour in their hearts,
+till it fell out that the Khalif invested Abdallah with the
+government of Armenia and sent him thither. Soon after he had
+established himself in his seat of government, there came to him
+one of the people of Irak, a man of excellent parts and good
+breeding, who had lost his wealth and wasted his substance, and
+his estate was come to nought; so he forged a letter to Abdallah
+in Yehya's name and set out therewith for Armenia. When he came
+to the governor's gate, he gave the letter to one of the
+chamberlains, who carried it to his master. Abdallah read it and
+considering it attentively, knew it to be forged; so he sent for
+the man, who presented himself before him and called down
+blessings upon him and praised him and those of his court. Quoth
+Abdallah to him, 'What moved thee to weary thyself thus and bring
+me a forged letter? But be of good heart; for we will not
+disappoint thy travail.' 'God prolong the life of our lord the
+Vizier!' replied the other. 'If my coming irk thee, cast not
+about for a pretext to repel me, for God's earth is wide and the
+Divine Provider liveth. Indeed, the letter I bring thee from
+Yehya ben Khalid is true and no forgery.' Quoth Abdallah, 'I will
+write a letter to my agent at Baghdad and bid him enquire
+concerning the letter. If it be true, as thou sayest, I will
+bestow on thee the government of one of my cities; or, if thou
+prefer a present, I will give thee two hundred thousand dirhems,
+besides horses and camels of price and a robe of honour. But, if
+the letter prove a forgery, I will have thee beaten with two
+hundred blows of a stick and thy beard shaven.'
+
+Accordingly, he bade confine him in a privy chamber and furnish
+him therein with all he needed, till his case should be made
+manifest. Then he despatched a letter to his agent at Baghdad, to
+the following purport: 'There is come to me a man with a letter
+purporting to be from Yehya ben Khalid. Now I have my doubts of
+this letter: so delay thou not, but go thyself and learn the
+truth of the case and let me have an answer in all speed.' When
+the letter reached the agent, he mounted at once and betook
+himself to the house of Yehya ben Khalid, whom he found sitting
+with his officers and boon-companions. So he gave him the letter
+and he read it and said to the agent, 'Come back to me to-morrow,
+against I write thee an answer.'
+
+When the agent had gone away, Yehya turned to his companions and
+said, 'What doth he deserve who forgeth a letter in my name and
+carrieth it to my enemy?' They all answered, saying this and
+that, each proposing some kind of punishment; but Yehya said, 'Ye
+err in that ye say and this your counsel is of the meanness and
+baseness of your spirits. Ye all know the close favour of
+Abdallah with the Khalif and what is between him and us of
+despite and enmity; and now God the Most High hath made this man
+an intermediary, to effect a reconciliation between us, and hath
+appointed him to quench the fire of hate in our hearts, which
+hath been growing this score years; and by his means our
+differences shall be accorded. Wherefore it behoves me to requite
+him by confirming his expectation and amending his estate; so I
+will write him a letter to Abdallah, to the intent that he may
+use him with increase of honour and liberality.'
+
+When his companions heard what he said, they called down
+blessings on him and marvelled at his generosity and the
+greatness of his magnanimity. Then he called for paper and ink
+and wrote Abdallah a letter in his own hand, to the following
+effect: 'In the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful! Thy
+letter hath reached me (may God give thee long life!) and I have
+read it and rejoice in thy health and well-being. It was thy
+thought that yonder worthy man had forged a letter in my name and
+that he was not the bearer of any message from me; but the case
+is not so, for the letter I myself wrote, and it was no forgery;
+and I hope, of thy courtesy and benevolence and the nobility of
+thy nature, that thou wilt fulfil this generous and excellent man
+of his hope and wish and use him with the honour he deserves and
+bring him to his desire and make him the special object of thy
+favour and munificence. Whatever thou dost with him, it is to me
+that thou dost it, and I am beholden to thee accordingly.' Then
+he superscribed the letter and sealing it, delivered it to the
+agent, who despatched it to Abdallah.
+
+When the latter read it, he was charmed with its contents and
+sending for the man, said to him, 'Now will I give thee which
+thou wilt of the two things I promised thee.' 'The gift were more
+acceptable to me than aught else,' replied the man; whereupon
+Abdallah ordered him two hundred thousand dirhems and ten Arab
+horses, five with housings of silk and other five with richly
+ornamented saddles of state, besides twenty chests of clothes and
+ten mounted white slaves and a proportionate quantity of jewels
+of price. Moreover, he bestowed on him a dress of honour and sent
+him to Baghdad in great state. When he came thither, he repaired
+to Yehya's house, before he went to his own folk, and sought an
+audience of him. So the chamberlain went in to Yehya and said to
+him, 'O my lord, there is one at our door who craves speech of
+thee; and he is a man of apparent wealth and consideration,
+comely of aspect and attended by many servants.' Yehya bade admit
+him; so he entered and kissed the ground before him. 'Who art
+thou?' asked Yehya; and he answered, 'O my lord, I am one who was
+dead from the tyranny of fortune; but thou didst raise me again
+from the grave of calamities and preferredst me to the paradise
+of [my] desires. I am he who forged a letter in thy name and
+carried it to Abdallah ben Malek el Khuzai.' 'How hath he dealt
+with thee,' asked Yehya, 'and what did he give thee?' Quoth the
+man, 'He hath made me rich and overwhelmed me with presents and
+favours, thanks to thee and thy great generosity and magnanimity
+and to thine exceeding goodness and abounding munificence and
+thine all-embracing liberality. And now, behold, I have brought
+all that he gave me, and it is at thy door; for it is thine to
+command, and the decision is in thy hand.' 'Thou hast done me
+better service than I thee,' rejoined Yehya; 'and I owe thee
+thanks without stint and abundant largesse, for that thou hast
+changed the enmity that was between me and yonder man of worship
+into love and friendship. Wherefore I will give thee the like of
+what Abdallah gave thee.' Then he ordered him money and horses
+and apparel, such as Abdallah had given him; and thus that man's
+fortune was restored to him by the munificence of these two
+generous men.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF EL MAMOUN AND THE STRANGE
+ DOCTOR
+
+
+
+It is said that there was none, among the Khalifs of the house of
+Abbas, more accomplished in all branches of knowledge than El
+Mamoun. On two days in each week, he was wont to preside at
+conferences of the learned, when the doctors and theologians met
+and sitting, each in his several rank and room, disputed in his
+presence. One day, as he sat thus, there came into the assembly a
+stranger, clad in worn white clothes, and sat down in an obscure
+place, behind the doctors of the law. Then the assembled scholars
+began to speak and expound difficult questions, it being the
+custom that the various propositions should be submitted to each
+in turn and that whoso bethought him of some subtle addition or
+rare trait, should make mention of it. So the question went round
+till it came to the stranger, who spoke in his turn and made a
+goodlier answer than that of any of the doctors; and the Khalif
+approved his speech and bade advance him to a higher room. When
+the second question came round to him, he made a still more
+admirable answer, and the Khalif ordered him to be preferred to a
+yet higher place. When the third question reached him, he made
+answer more justly and appropriately than on the two previous
+occasions, and El Mamoun bade him come up and sit near himself.
+When the conference broke up, water was brought and they washed
+their hands; after which food was set on and they ate. Then the
+doctors arose and withdrew; but El Mamoun forbade the stranger to
+depart with them and calling him to himself, entreated him with
+especial favour and promised him honour and benefits.
+
+Presently, they made ready the banquet of wine; the fair-faced
+boon-companions came and the cup went round amongst them till it
+came to the stranger, who rose to his feet and said, 'If the
+Commander of the Faithful permit me, I will say one word.' 'Say
+what thou wilt,' answered the Khalif. Quoth the stranger,
+'Verily, the Exalted Intelligence[FN#11] (whose eminence God
+increase!) knoweth that his slave was this day, in the august
+assembly, one of the unknown folk and of the meanest of the
+company, and the Commander of the Faithful distinguished him and
+brought him near to himself, little as was the wit he showed,
+preferring him above the rest and advancing him to a rank whereto
+his thought aspired not: and now he is minded to deprive him of
+that small portion of wit that raised him from obscurity and
+augmented him, after his littleness. God forfend that the
+Commander of the Faithful should envy his slave what little he
+hath of understanding and worth and renown! But, if his slave
+should drink wine, his reason would depart from him and ignorance
+draw near to him and steal away his good breeding; so would he
+revert to that low degree, whence he sprang, and become
+contemptible and ridiculous in the eyes of the folk. I hope,
+therefore, that the August Intelligence, of his power and bounty
+and royal generosity and magnanimity, will not despoil his slave
+of this jewel.'
+
+When the Khalif heard his speech, he praised him and thanked him
+and making him sit down again in his place, showed him high
+honour and ordered him a present of a hundred thousand diners.
+Moreover he mounted him upon a horse and gave him rich apparel;
+and in every assembly he exalted him and showed him favour over
+all the other doctors, till he became the highest of them all in
+rank.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ALI SHAR AND ZUMURRUD.
+
+
+
+There lived once, of old days, in the land of Khorassan, a
+merchant called Mejdeddin, who had great wealth and many slaves
+and servants, black and white; but he was childless until he
+reached the age of threescore, when God the Most High vouchsafed
+him a son, whom he named Ali Shar. The boy grew up like the moon
+on the night of its full, and when he came to man's estate and
+was endowed with all kinds of perfection, his father fell sick of
+a mortal malady and calling his son to him, said to him, 'O my
+son, the hour of my death is at hand, and I desire to give thee
+my last injunctions.' 'And what are they, O my father?' asked
+Ali. 'O my son,' answered Mejdeddin, 'I charge thee, be not [too]
+familiar with any and eschew what leads to evil and mischief.
+Beware lest thou company with the wicked; for he is like the
+blacksmith; if his fire burn thee not, his smoke irks thee: and
+how excellent is the saying of the poet:
+
+There is no man in all the world whose love thou shouldst desire,
+ No friend who, if fate play thee false, will true and
+ constant be.
+Wherefore I'd have thee live apart and lean for help on none. In
+ this I give thee good advice; so let it profit thee.
+
+And what another saith:
+
+Men are a latent malady; Count not on them, I counsel thee.
+An if thou look into their case, They're full of guile and
+ perfidy.
+
+And yet a third:
+
+The company of men will profit thee in nought, Except to pass
+ away the time in idle prate;
+So spare thou to converse with them, except it be For gain of
+ lore and wit or mending of estate.
+
+And a fourth
+
+If a quickwitted man have made proof of mankind, I have eaten of
+ them, where but tasted hath he,
+And have seen their affection but practice and nought But
+ hypocrisy found their religion to be.'
+
+'O my father,' said Ali, 'I hear and obey: what more shall I do?'
+'Do good when thou art able thereto,' answered his father; 'be
+ever courteous and succourable to men and profit by all occasions
+of doing a kindness; for a design is not always easy of
+accomplishment; and how well saith the poet:
+
+'Tis not at every time and season that to do Kind offices,
+ indeed, is easy unto you;
+So, when the occasion serves, make haste to profit by't, Lest by
+ and by the power should fail thee thereunto.'
+
+'I hear and obey,' answered Ali; 'what more?' 'Be mindful of
+God,' continued Mejdeddin, 'and He will be mindful of thee.
+Husband thy wealth and squander it not; for, if thou do, thou
+wilt come to have need of the least of mankind. Know that the
+measure of a man's worth is according to what his right hand
+possesses: and how well saith the poet:
+
+If wealth should fail, there is no friend will bear me company,
+ But whilst my substance yet abounds, all men are friends to
+ me.
+How many a foe for money's sake hath companied with me! How many
+ a friend for loss thereof hath turned mine enemy!'
+
+'What more?' asked Ali. 'O my son,' said Mejdeddin, 'take counsel
+of those who are older than thou and hasten not to do thy heart's
+desire. Have compassion on those that are below thee, so shall
+those that are above thee have compassion on thee; and oppress
+none, lest God set over thee one who shall oppress thee. How well
+saith the poet:
+
+Add others' wit to thine and counsel still ensue; For that the
+ course of right is not concealed from two.
+One mirror shows a man his face, but, if thereto Another one he
+ add, his nape thus can he view.
+
+And as saith another:
+
+Be slow to move and hasten not to match thy heart's desire: Be
+ merciful to all, as thou on mercy reckonest;
+For no hand is there but the hand of God is over it, And no
+ oppressor but shall be with worse than he opprest.
+
+And yet another:
+
+Do no oppression, whilst the power thereto is in thine hand; For
+ still in peril of revenge the sad oppressor goes.
+Thine eyes will sleep anon, what while the opprest, on wake, call
+ down Curses upon thee, and God's eye shuts never in repose.
+
+Beware of drinking wine, for it is the root of all evil: it does
+away the reason and brings him who uses it into contempt; and how
+well saith the poet:
+
+By Allah, wine shall never invade me, whilst my soul Endureth in
+ my body and my thoughts my words control!
+Not a day long will I turn me to the zephyr-freshened bowl, And
+ for friend I'll choose him only who of wine-bibbing is
+ whole.
+
+This, then,' added Mejdeddin, 'is my charge to thee; keep it
+before thine eyes, and may God stand to thee in my stead.' Then
+he swooned away and kept silence awhile. When he came to himself,
+he besought pardon of God and making the profession of the Faith,
+was admitted to the mercy of the Most High. His son wept and
+lamented for him and made due preparation for his burial. Great
+and small attended him to the grave and the readers recited the
+Koran about his bier; nor did Ali Shar omit aught of what was due
+to the dead. Then they prayed over him and committed him to the
+earth, graving these words upon his tomb:
+
+Created of the dust thou wast and cam'st to life And eloquence
+ didst learn and spokest many a word;
+Then to the dust again returnedst and wast dead, As 'twere from
+ out the dust, indeed, thou'dst never stirred.
+
+His son Ali Shar grieved for him and mourned him after the wont
+of men of condition; nor did he cease therefrom till his mother
+died also, not long afterward, when he did with her as he had
+done with his father. Then he sat in the shop, selling and buying
+and consorting with none of God's creatures, in accordance with
+his father's injunction.
+
+On this wise he abode for a year, at the end of which time there
+came in to him certain whoreson fellows by craft and companied
+with him, till he turned with them to lewdness and swerved from
+the right way, drinking wine in goblets and frequenting the fair
+night and day; for he said in himself, 'My father amassed this
+wealth for me, and if I spend it not, to whom shall I leave it?
+By Allah, I will not do save as saith the poet:
+
+If all the days of thy life thou get And heap up treasure, to
+ swell thy hoard,
+When wilt thou use it and so enjoy That thou hast gathered and
+ gained and stored?'
+
+Then he ceased not to squander his wealth all tides of the day
+and watches of the night, till he had made away with it all and
+abode in evil case and troubled at heart. So he sold his shop and
+lands and so forth, and after this he sold the clothes off his
+body, leaving himself but one suit. Then drunkenness left him and
+thought came to him, and he fell into melancholy.
+
+One day, when he had sat from day-break to mid-afternoon without
+breaking his fast, he said in himself, 'I will go round to those
+on whom I spent my wealth: it may be one of them will feed me
+this day.' So he went the round of them all; but, as often as he
+knocked at any one's door, the man denied himself and hid from
+him, till he was consumed with hunger. Then he betook himself to
+the bazaar, where he found a crowd of people, assembled in a ring
+round somewhat, and said in himself, 'I wonder what ails the folk
+to crowd together thus? By Allah, I will not remove hence, till I
+see what is within yonder ring!' So he made his way into the ring
+and found that the crowd was caused by a damsel exposed for sale.
+She was five feet high, slender of shape, rosy-cheeked and high-
+bosomed and surpassed all the people of her time in beauty and
+grace and elegance and perfection; even as saith one, describing
+her:
+
+As she wished, she was created, after such a wise that lo! She in
+ beauty's mould was fashioned, perfect, neither less no mo'.
+Loveliness itself enamoured of her lovely aspect is; Coyness
+ decks her and upon her, pride and pudour sweetly show.
+In her face the full moon glitters and the branch is as her
+ shape; Musk her breath is, nor midst mortals is her equal,
+ high or low.
+'Tis as if she had been moulded out of water of pure pearls; In
+ each member of her beauty is a very moon, I trow.
+
+And her name was Zumurrud.
+
+When Ali Shar saw her, he marvelled at her beauty and grace and
+said, 'By Allah, I will not stir hence till I see what price this
+girl fetches and know who buys her!' So he stood with the rest of
+the merchants, and they thought he had a mind to buy her, knowing
+the wealth he had inherited from his parents. Then the broker
+stood at the damsel's head and said, 'Ho, merchants! Ho, men of
+wealth! Who will open the biddings for this damsel, the mistress
+of moons, the splendid pearl, Zumurrud the Curtain-maker, the aim
+of the seeker and the delight of the desirous? Open the biddings,
+and on the opener be nor blame nor reproach.'
+
+So one merchant said, 'I bid five hundred dinars for her.' 'And
+ten,' said another. 'Six hundred,' cried an old man named
+Reshideddin, blue-eyed and foul of face. 'And ten,' quoth
+another. 'I bid a thousand,' rejoined Reshideddin; whereupon the
+other merchants were silent and the broker took counsel with the
+girl's owner, who said, 'I have sworn not to sell her save to
+whom she shall choose; consult her.' So the broker went up to
+Zumurrud and said to her, 'O mistress of moons, yonder merchant
+hath a mind to buy thee.' She looked as Reshideddin and finding
+him as we have said, replied, 'I will not be sold to a grey-
+beard, whom decrepitude hath brought to evil plight.' 'Bravo,'
+quoth I, 'for one who saith:
+
+I asked her for a kiss one day, but she my hoary head Saw, though
+ of wealth and worldly good I had great plentihead;
+So, with a proud and flouting air, her back she turned on me And,
+ "No, by Him who fashioned men from nothingness!" she said.
+"Now, by God's truth, I never had a mind to hoary hairs, And
+ shall my mouth be stuffed, forsooth, with cotton, ere I'm
+ dead?"
+
+'By Allah,' quoth the broker, 'thou art excusable, and thy value
+is ten thousand dinars!' So he told her owner that she would not
+accept of Reshideddin, and he said, 'Ask her of another.'
+Thereupon another man came forward and said, 'I will take her at
+the same price.' She looked at him and seeing that his beard was
+dyed, said, 'What is this lewd and shameful fashion and
+blackening of the face of hoariness?' And she made a great show
+of amazement and repeated the following verses:
+
+A sight, and what a sight, did such a one present To me! A neck,
+ to beat with shoes, by Allah, meant!
+And eke a beard for lie a coursing-ground that was And brows for
+ binding on of ropes all crook'd and bent.[FN#12]
+Thou that my cheeks and shape have ravished, with a lie Thou dost
+ disguise thyself and reck'st not, impudent;
+Dyeing thy hoary hairs disgracefully with black[FN#13] And hiding
+ what appears, with fraudulent intent;
+As of the puppet-men thou wert, with one beard go'st And with
+ another com'st again, incontinent.
+
+And how well saith another:
+
+Quoth she to me, "I see thou dy'st thy hoariness;" and I, "I do
+ but hide it from thy sight, O thou my ear and eye!"[FN#14]
+She laughed out mockingly and said, "A wonder 'tis indeed! Thou
+ so aboundest in deceit that even thy hair's a lie."
+
+'By Allah,' quoth the broker, 'thou hast spoken truly!' The
+merchant asked what she said: so the broker repeated the verses
+to him, and he knew that she was in the right and desisted from
+buying her. Then another came forward and would have bought her
+at the same price; but she looked at him and seeing that he had
+but one eye, said, 'This man is one-eyed; and it is of such as he
+that the poet saith:
+
+Consort not with him that is one-eyed a day, And be on thy guard
+ 'gainst his mischief and lies:
+For God, if in him aught of good had been found, Had not curst
+ him with blindness in one of his eyes.'
+
+Then the broker brought her another bidder and said to her, 'Wilt
+thou be sold to this man?' She looked at him and seeing that he
+was short of stature and had a beard that reached to his navel,
+said, 'This is he of whom the poet speaks, when he says:
+
+I have a friend, who has a beard, that God Caused flourish
+ without profit, till, behold.
+'Tis, as it were, to look upon, a night Of middle winter, long
+ and dark and cold.'
+
+'O my lady,' said the broker, 'look who pleases thee of these
+that are present, and point him out, that I may sell thee to
+him.' So she looked round the ring of merchants, examining them
+one by one, till her eyes rested on Ali Shar. His sight cost her
+a thousand sighs and her heart was taken with him: for that he
+was passing fair of favour and more pleasant than the northern
+zephyr; and she said, 'O broker, I will be sold to none but my
+lord there, he of the handsome face and slender shape, whom the
+poet describes in the following verses:
+
+They showed thy lovely face and railed At her whom ravishment
+ assailed.
+Had they desired to keep me chaste, Thy face so fair they should
+ have veiled.
+
+None shall possess me but he,' added she; 'for his cheek is
+smooth and the water of his mouth sweet as Selsebil;[FN#15] his
+sight is a cure for the sick and his charms confound poet and
+proser, even as saith one of him:
+
+The water of his mouth is wine, and very musk The fragrance of
+ his breath; his teeth are camphor white.
+Rizwan hath put him our from paradise, for fear The black-eyed
+ girls of heaven be tempted with the wight.
+Men blame him for his pride; but the full moon's excuse, How
+ proud so'er it be, finds favour in our sight.
+
+Him of the curling locks and rose-red cheeks and enchanting
+glances, of whom saith the poet:
+
+A slender loveling promised me his favours fair and free; So my
+ heart's restless and my eye looks still his sight to see.
+His eyelids warranted me the keeping of his troth; But how shall
+ they, that bankrupt[FN#16] are, fulfil their warranty?
+
+And as saith another:
+
+"The script of whiskers on his cheek," quoth they, "is plain to
+ see: How canst thou then enamoured be of him, and whiskered
+ he?"
+Quoth I, "Have done with blame and leave your censuring, I pray.
+ As if it be a very script, it is a forgery.
+Lo, in the gathering of his cheeks the meads of Eden be, And more
+ by token that his lips are Kauther,[FN#17], verily."
+
+When the broker heard the verses she repeated on the charms of
+Ali Shar, he marvelled at her eloquence, no less than at the
+brightness of her beauty; but her owner said to him, 'Marvel not
+at her beauty, that shames the sun of day, nor that her mind is
+stored with the choicest verses of the poets; for, besides this,
+she can repeat the glorious Koran, according to the seven
+readings, and the august Traditions, after the authentic text;
+and she writes the seven hands and is versed in more branches of
+knowledge than the most learned doctor. Moreover, her hands are
+better than gold and silver; for she makes curtains of silk and
+sells them for fifty dinars each; and it takes her eight days to
+make a curtain.' 'Happy the man,' exclaimed the broker, 'who hath
+her in his house and maketh her of his privy treasures!' And her
+owner said, 'Sell her to whom she will.' So the broker went up to
+Ali Shar and kissing his hands, said to him, 'O my lord, buy thou
+this damsel, for she hath made choice of thee.' Then he set forth
+to him all her charms and accomplishments, and added: 'I give
+thee joy, if thou buy her, for she is a gift from Him who is no
+niggard of His giving.'
+
+Ali bowed his head awhile, laughing to himself and saying
+inwardly, 'Up to now I have not broken my fast; yet I am ashamed
+to own before the merchants that I have no money wherewith to buy
+her.' The damsel, seeing him hang down his head, said to the
+broker, 'Take my hand and lead me to him, that I may show myself
+to him and tempt him to buy me; for I will not be sold to any but
+him.' So the broker took her hand and stationed her before Ali
+Shar, saying, 'What is thy pleasure, O my lord?' But he made him
+no answer, and the girl said to him, 'O my lord and darling of my
+heart, what ails thee that thou wilt not bid for me? Buy me for
+what thou wilt, and I will bring thee good fortune.' Ali raised
+his eyes to her and said, 'Must I buy thee perforce? Thou art
+dear at one thousand dinars.' 'Then buy me for nine hundred,'
+answered she. 'Nay,' rejoined he; and she said, 'Then for eight
+hundred;' and ceased not to abate the price, till she came to a
+hundred dinars. Quoth he, 'I have not quite a hundred dinars.'
+'How much dost thou lack of a hundred?' asked she, laughing. 'By
+Allah,' replied he, 'I have neither a hundred dinars, nor any
+other sum; for I own neither white money nor red, neither dinar
+nor dirhem. So look out for another customer.' When she knew that
+he had nothing, she said to him, 'Take me by the hand and carry
+me aside into a passage, as if thou wouldst examine me privily.'
+He did so and she took from her bosom a purse containing a
+thousand dinars, which she gave him saying, 'Pay down nine
+hundred to my price and keep the rest to provide us withal.'
+
+He did as she bade him and buying her for nine hundred dinars,
+paid down the price from the purse and carried her to his house,
+which when she entered, she found nothing but bare floors,
+without carpets or vessels. So she gave him other thousand
+dinars, saying, 'Go to the bazaar and buy three hundred dinars'
+worth of furniture and vessels for the house and three dinars'
+worth of meat and drink, also a piece of silk, the size of a
+curtain, and gold and silver thread and [sewing] silk of seven
+colours.' He did her bidding, and she furnished the house and
+they sat down to eat and drink; after which they went to bed and
+took their pleasure, one of the other. And they lay the night
+embraced and were even as saith the poet:
+
+Cleave fast to her thou lov'st and let the envious rail amain;
+ For calumny and envy ne'er to favour love were fain.
+Lo, whilst I slept, in dreams I saw thee lying by my side And
+ from thy lips the sweetest, sure, of limpid springs did
+ drain.
+Yea, true and certain all I saw is, as I will avouch, And 'spite
+ the envier, thereto I surely will attain.
+There is no goodlier sight, indeed, for eyes to look upon, Than
+ when one couch in its embrace enfoldeth lovers twain,
+Each to the other's bosom clasped, clad in their twinned delight,
+ Whilst hand with hand and arm with arm about their necks
+ enchain.
+Lo, when two hearts are straitly knit in passion and desire, But
+ on cold iron smite the folk who chide at them in vain.
+Thou, that for loving censurest the votaries of love, Canst thou
+ assain a heart diseased or heal a cankered brain?
+If in thy time thou find but one to love thee and be true, I rede
+ thee cast the world away and with that one remain.
+
+They lay together till the morning and love for the other was
+stablished in the heart of each of them. On the morrow, Zumurrud
+took the curtain and embroidered it with coloured silks and gold
+and silver thread, depicting thereon all manner birds and beasts;
+nor is there in the world a beast but she wrought on the curtain
+the semblant thereof. Moreover, she made thereto a band, with
+figures of birds, and wrought at it eight days, till she had made
+an end of it, when she trimmed it and ironed it and gave it to
+Ali, saying, 'Carry it to the bazaar and sell it to one of the
+merchants for fifty dinars; but beware lest thou sell it to a
+passer-by, for this would bring about a separation between us,
+because we have enemies who are not unmindful of us.' 'I hear and
+obey,' answered he and repairing to the bazaar, sold the curtain
+to a merchant, as she bade him; after which he bought stuff for
+another curtain and silk and gold and silver thread as before and
+what they needed of food, and brought all this to her, together
+with the rest of the money.
+
+They abode thus a whole year, and every eight days she made a
+curtain, which he sold for fifty dinars. At the end of the year,
+he went to the bazaar, as usual, with a curtain, which he gave to
+the broker; and there came up to him a Christian, who bid him
+threescore dinars for the curtain; but he refused, and the
+Christian went on to bid higher and higher, till he came to a
+hundred dinars and bribed the broker with ten gold pieces. So the
+latter returned to Ali and told him of this and urged him to
+accept the offer, saying, 'O my lord, be not afraid of this
+Christian, for he can do thee no hurt.' The merchants also were
+instant with him to accept the offer; so he sold the curtain to
+the Christian, though his heart misgave him, and taking the
+price, set off to return home.
+
+Presently, he found the Christian walking behind him; so he said
+to him, 'O Nazarene, why dost thou follow me?' 'O my lord,'
+answered the other, 'I have a need at the end of the street, may
+God never bring thee to need!' Ali went on, but, as he came to
+the door of his house, the Christian overtook him; so he said to
+him, 'O accursed one, what ails thee to follow me wherever I go?'
+'O my lord,' replied the other, 'give me a draught of water, for
+I am athirst; and with God the Most High be thy reward!' Quoth
+Ali in himself, 'Verily, this man is a tributary [of the
+Khalifate] and seeks a draught of water of me; by Allah, I will
+not disappoint him!' So he entered the house and took a mug of
+water; but Zumurrud saw him and said to him, 'O my love, hast
+thou sold the curtain?' 'Yes,' answered he. 'To a merchant or a
+passer-by?' asked she. 'For my heart forethinketh me of
+separation.' 'To a merchant, of course,' replied he. But she
+rejoined, 'Tell me the truth of the case, that I may order my
+affair; and what wantest thou with the mug of water?' 'To give
+the broker a drink,' answered he; whereupon she exclaimed, 'There
+is no power and no virtue but in God the Most High, the Supreme!'
+And repeated the following verses:
+
+O thou that seekest parting, stay thy feet: Let clips and kisses
+ not delude thy spright.
+Softly, for fortune's nature is deceit And parting is the end of
+ love-delight.
+
+Then he took the mug and going out, found the Christian within
+the vestibule and said to him, 'O dog, how darest thou enter my
+house without my leave?' 'O my lord,' answered he, 'there is no
+difference between the door and the vestibule and I will not
+budge hence, save to go out; and I am beholden to thee for thy
+kindness.' Then he took the mug and emptying it, returned it to
+Ali, who took it and waited for him to go; but he did not move.
+So Ali said to him, 'Why dost thou not rise and go thy way?' 'O
+my lord,' answered the Christian, 'be not of those that do a
+kindness and after make a reproach of it, nor one of whom saith
+the poet:
+
+Gone, gone are they who, if thou stoodst before their door of
+ old, Had, at thy seeking, handselled thee with benefits
+ untold!
+And if thou stoodest at their door who follow after them, These
+ latter would begrudge to thee a draught of water cold.
+
+O my lord,' continued he, 'I have drunk, and now I would have
+thee give me to eat of whatever is in the house, though it be but
+a crust of bread or a biscuit and an onion.' 'Begone, without
+more talk,' replied Ali; 'There is nothing in the house.' 'O my
+lord,' insisted the Christian, 'if there be nothing in the house,
+take these hundred dinars and fetch us somewhat from the market,
+if but a cake of bread, that bread and salt may pass between us.'
+With this, quoth Ali to himself, 'This Christian is surely mad; I
+will take the hundred dinars and bring somewhat worth a couple of
+dirhems and laugh at him.' 'O my lord,' added the Christian, 'I
+want but somewhat to stay my hunger, were it but a cake of dry
+bread and an onion; for the best food is that which does away
+hunger, not rich meats; and how well saith the poet:
+
+A cake of dry stale bread will hunger out to flight: Why then are
+ grief and care so heavy on my spright?
+Death is, indeed, most just, since, with an equal hand, Khalif
+ and beggar-wretch, impartial, it doth smite.'
+
+Then said Ali, 'Wait here, whilst I lock the saloon and fetch
+thee somewhat from the market.' 'I hear and obey,' said the
+Christian. So Ali shut up the saloon and locking the door with a
+padlock, put the key in his pocket: after which he repaired to
+the market and bought fried cheese and virgin honey and bananas
+and bread, with which he returned to the Christian. When the
+latter saw this, he said, 'O my lord, this is [too] much; thou
+hast brought enough for half a score men and I am alone; but
+belike thou wilt eat with me.' 'Eat by thyself,' replied Ali; 'I
+am full.' 'O my lord,' rejoined the Christian, 'the wise say, "He
+who eats not with his guest is a base-born churl."'
+
+When Ali heard this, he sat down and ate a little with him, after
+which he would have held his hand: but [whilst he was not
+looking] the Christian took a banana and peeled it, then,
+splitting it in twain, put into one half concentrated henbane,
+mixed with opium, a drachm whereof would overthrow an elephant.
+This half he dipped in the honey and gave to Ali Shar, saying, 'O
+my lord, I swear by thy religion that thou shalt take this.' Ali
+was ashamed to make him forsworn; so he took the half banana and
+swallowed it; but hardly had it reached his stomach, when his
+head fell down in front of his feet and he was as though he had
+been a year asleep.
+
+When the Nazarene saw this, he rose, as he had been a bald wolf
+or a baited cat, and taking the saloon key, made off at a run,
+leaving Ali Shar prostrate. Now this Christian was the brother of
+the decrepit old man who thought to buy Zumurrud for a thousand
+dinars, but she would have none of him and flouted him in verse.
+He was an infidel at heart, though a Muslim in outward show, and
+called himself Reshideddin;[FN#18] and when Zumurrud mocked him
+and would not accept of him to her lord, he complained to his
+brother, the aforesaid Christian, Bersoum by name, who said to
+him, 'Fret not thyself about this affair; for I will make shift
+to get her for thee, without paying a penny.'
+
+Now he was a skilful sorcerer crafty and wicked; so he watched
+his time and played Ali Shar the trick aforesaid; then, taking
+the key, he went to his brother and told him what had passed,
+whereupon Reshideddin mounted his mule and repaired with his
+servants to Ali Shar's house, taking with him a purse of a
+thousand dinars, wherewith to bribe the master of police, should
+he meet him. He unlocked the saloon door, and the men who were
+with him rushed in upon Zumurrud and seized her, threatening her
+with death if she spoke; but they left the house as it was and
+took nothing therefrom. Moreover, they laid the key by Ali's side
+and leaving him lying in the vestibule, shut the door on him and
+went away. The Christian carried the girl to his own house and
+setting her amongst his women and concubines, said to her, 'O
+strumpet, I am the old man, whom thou did reject and lampoon; but
+now I have thee, without paying a penny.' 'God requite thee, O
+wicked old man,' replied she, with her eyes full of tears, 'for
+sundering my lord and me!' 'Wanton doxy that thou art,' rejoined
+he,' thou shalt see how I will punish thee! By the virtue of the
+Messiah and the Virgin, except thou obey me and embrace my faith,
+I will torture thee with all manner of torture!' 'By Allah,'
+answered she, 'though thou cut me in pieces, I will not forswear
+the faith of Islam! It may be God the Most High will bring me
+speedy relief, for He is all-powerful, and the wise say, "Better
+hurt in body than in religion."'
+
+Thereupon the old man called out to his eunuchs and women,
+saying, 'Throw her down!' So they threw her down and he beat her
+grievously, whilst she cried in vain for help, but presently
+stinted and fell to saying, 'God is my sufficiency, and He is
+indeed sufficient!' till her breath failed her and she swooned
+away. When he had taken his fill of beating her, he said to the
+eunuchs, 'Drag her forth by the feet and cast her down in the
+kitchen, and give her nothing to eat.' They did his bidding, and
+on the morrow the accursed old man sent for her and beat her
+again, after which he bade return her to her place. When the pain
+of the blows had subsided, she said, 'There is no god but God and
+Mohammed is His Apostle! God is my sufficiency and excellent is
+He in whom I put my trust!' And she called upon our lord Mohammed
+(whom God bless and preserve) for succour.
+
+Meanwhile, Ali Shar slept on till next day, when the fumes of the
+henbane quitted his brain and he awoke and cried out, 'O
+Zumurrud!' But none answered him. So he entered the saloon and
+found 'the air empty and the place of visitation distant;'[FN#19]
+whereby he knew that it was the Nazarene, who had played him this
+trick. And he wept and groaned and lamented and repeated the
+following verses:
+
+O Fate, thou sparest not nor dost desist from me: Lo, for my soul
+ is racked with dolour and despite!
+Have pity, O my lords, upon a slave laid low, Upon the rich made
+ poor by love and its unright.
+What boots the archer's skill, if, when the foe draw near, His
+ bowstring snap and leave him helpless in the fight?
+And when afflictions press and multiply on man, Ah, whither then
+ shall he from destiny take flight?
+How straitly did I guard 'gainst severance of our loves! But,
+ when as Fate descends, it blinds the keenest sight.
+
+Then he sobbed and repeated these verses also:
+
+Her traces on the encampment's sands a robe of grace bestow: The
+ mourner yearneth to the place where she dwelt whiles ago.
+Towards her native land she turns; a camp in her doth raise
+ Longing, whose very ruins now are scattered to and fro.
+She stops and questions of the place; but with the case's tongue
+ It answers her, "There is no way to union, I trow.
+'Tis as the lost a Levin were, that glittered on the camp Awhile,
+ then vanished and to thee appeareth nevermo'."
+
+And he repented, whenas repentance availed him not, and wept and
+tore his clothes. Then he took two stones and went round the
+city, beating his breast with the stones and crying out, 'O
+Zumurrud!' whilst the children flocked round him, calling out, 'A
+madman! A madman!' and all who knew him wept for him, saying,
+'Yonder is such an one: what hath befallen him?' This he did all
+that day, and when night darkened on him, he lay down in one of
+the by-streets and slept till morning. On the morrow, he went
+round about the city with the stones till eventide, when he
+returned to his house, to pass the night. One of his neighbours,
+a worthy old woman, saw him and said to him, 'God keep thee, O my
+son! How long hast thou been mad?' And he answered her with the
+following verse:
+
+Quoth they, "Thou'rt surely mad for her thou lov'st;" and I
+ replied, "Indeed the sweets of life belong unto the raving
+ race.
+My madness leave and bring me her for whom ye say I'm mad; And if
+ she heal my madness, spare to blame me for my case."
+
+Therewith she knew him for a lover who had lost his mistress and
+said, 'There is no power and no virtue but in God the Most High,
+the Supreme! O my son, I would have thee acquaint me with the
+particulars of thine affliction. Peradventure God may enable me
+to help thee against it, if it so please Him.' So he told her all
+that had happened and she said, 'O my son, indeed thou hast
+excuse.' And her eyes ran over with tears and she repeated the
+following verses:
+
+Torment, indeed, in this our world, true lovers do aby; Hell
+ shall not torture them, by God, whenas they come to die!
+Of love they died and to the past their passions chastely hid; So
+ are they martyrs, as, indeed, traditions[FN#20] testify.
+
+Then she said, 'O my son, go now and buy me a basket, such as the
+jewel-hawkers carry, and stock it with rings and bracelets and
+ear-rings and other women's gear, and spare not money. Bring all
+this to me and I will set it on my head and go round about, in
+the guise of a huckstress, and make search for her in all the
+houses, till I light on news of her, if it be the will of God the
+Most High.' Ali rejoiced in her words and kissed her hands, then,
+going out, speedily returned with all she required; whereupon she
+rose and donning a patched gown and a yellow veil, took a staff
+in her hand and set out, with the basket on her head.
+
+She ceased not to go from quarter to quarter and street to street
+and house to house, till God the Most High led her to the house
+of the accursed Reshideddin the Nazarene. She heard groans within
+and knocked at the door, whereupon a slave-girl came down and
+opening the door to her, saluted her. Quoth the old woman, 'I
+have these trifles for sale: is there any one with you who will
+buy aught of them?' 'Yes,' answered the girl and carrying her
+indoors, made her sit down; whereupon all the women came round
+her and each bought something of her. She spoke to them fair and
+was easy with them as to price, so that they rejoiced in her,
+because of her pleasant speech and easiness. Meanwhile, she
+looked about to see who it was she had heard groaning, till her
+eyes fell on Zumurrud, when she knew her and saw that she was
+laid prostrate. So she wept and said to the girls, 'O my
+children, how comes yonder damsel in this plight?' And they told
+her what had passed, adding, 'Indeed, the thing is not of our
+choice; but our master commanded us to do this, and he is now
+absent on a journey.' 'O my children,' said the old woman, 'I
+have a request to make of you, and it is that you loose this
+unhappy woman of her bonds, till you know of your lord's return,
+when do ye bind her again as she was; and you shall earn a reward
+from the Lord of all creatures.' 'We hear and obey,' answered
+they and loosing Zumurrud, gave her to eat and drink.
+
+Then said the old woman, 'Would my leg had been broken, ere I
+entered your house!' And she went up to Zumurrud and said to her,
+'O my daughter, take heart; God will surely bring thee relief.'
+Then she told her [privily] that she came from her lord Ali Shar
+and appointed her to be on the watch that night, saying, 'Thy
+lord will come to the bench under the gallery and whistle to
+thee; and when thou hearest him, do thou whistle back to him and
+let thyself down to him by a rope from the window, and he will
+take thee and go away.' Zumurrud thanked the old woman, and the
+latter returned to Ali Shar and told him what she had done,
+saying, 'Go to-night, at midnight, to such a quarter,--for the
+accursed fellow's house is there and its fashion is thus and
+thus. Stand under the window of the upper chamber and whistle;
+whereupon she will let herself down to thee; then do thou take
+her and carry her whither thou wilt.' He thanked her for her good
+offices and repeated the following verses, with the tears running
+down his cheeks:
+
+Let censors cease to rail and chide and leave their idle prate:
+ My body's wasted and my heart weary and desolate;
+And from desertion and distress my tears, by many a chain Of true
+ traditions handed down, do trace their lineage straight.
+Thou that art whole of heart and free from that which I endure Of
+ grief and care, cut short thy strife nor question of my
+ state.
+A sweet-lipped maiden, soft of sides and moulded well of shape,
+ With her soft speech my heart hath ta'en, ay, and her
+ graceful gait.
+My heart, since thou art gone, no rest knows nor my eyes do
+ sleep, Nor can the hunger of my hopes itself with patience
+ sate.
+Yea, thou hast left me sorrowful, the hostage of desire, 'Twixt
+ enviers and haters dazed and all disconsolate.
+As for forgetting, 'tis a thing I know not nor will know; For
+ none but thou into my thought shalt enter, soon or late.
+
+Then he sighed and shed tears and repeated these also:
+
+May God be good to him who brought me news that ye were come! For
+ never more delightful news unto my ears was borne.
+If he would take a worn-out wede for boon, I'd proffer him A
+ heart that at the parting hour was all in pieces torn.
+
+He waited until the appointed time, then went to the street,
+where was the Christian's house, and recognizing it from the old
+woman's description, sat down on the bench under the gallery.
+Presently, drowsiness overcame him, for it was long since he had
+slept, for the violence of his passion, and he became as one
+drunken with sleep. Glory be to Him who sleepeth not!
+
+Meanwhile, chance led thither a certain thief, who had come out
+that night to steal somewhat and prowled about the skirts of the
+city, till he happened on Reshideddin's house. He went round
+about it, but found no way of climbing up into it and presently
+came to the bench, where he found Ali Shar asleep and took his
+turban. At that moment, Zumurrud looked out and seeing the thief
+standing in the darkness, took him for her lord; so she whistled
+to him and he whistled back to her; whereupon she let herself
+down to him, with a pair of saddle-bags full of gold. When the
+robber saw this, he said to himself, 'This is a strange thing,
+and there must needs be some extraordinary cause to it.' Then,
+snatching up the saddle-bags, he took Zumurrud on his shoulders
+and made off with both like the blinding lightning.
+
+Quoth she, 'The old woman told me that thou wast weak with
+illness on my account; and behold, thou art stronger than a
+horse.' He made her no reply; so she put her hand to his face and
+felt a beard like a bath-broom,[FN#21] as he were a hog that had
+swallowed feathers and they had come out at his gullet; whereat
+she took fright and said to him, 'What art thou?' 'O strumpet,'
+answered he, 'I am the sharper Jewan the Kurd, of the band of
+Ahmed ed Denef; we are forty sharpers, who will all tilt at thy
+tail this night, from dusk to dawn.' When she heard his words,
+she wept and buffeted her face, knowing that Fate had gotten the
+better of her and that there was nothing for it but to put her
+trust in God the Most High. So she took patience and submitted
+herself to the ordinance of God, saying, 'There is no god but
+God! As often as we escape from one trouble, we fall into a
+worse.'
+
+Now the manner of Jewan's coming thither was thus: he had said to
+Ahmed ed Denef, 'O captain, I have been here before and know a
+cavern without the town, that will hold forty souls; so I will go
+before you thither and set my mother therein. Then will I enter
+the city and steal somewhat on your account and keep it till you
+come; so shall you be my guests this day.' 'Do what thou wilt,'
+replied Ahmed. So Jewan forewent them to the cavern and left his
+mother there; but, as he came out, he found a trooper lying
+asleep, with his horse tethered beside him; so he slew him and
+taking his clothes and arms, hid them with his mother in the
+cave, where also he tied up the horse. Then he betook himself to
+the city and prowled about, till he happened on the Christian's
+house and did with Ali Shar and Zumurrud as we have said. He
+ceased not to run, with Zumurrud on his back, till he came to the
+cavern, where he gave her in charge of his mother, saying, 'Keep
+watch over her till I come back to thee at point of day,' and
+went away.
+
+Meanwhile Zumurrud said to herself, 'Now is the time to cast
+about for a means of escape. If I wait till these forty men come,
+they will take their turns at me, till they make me like a water-
+logged ship.' Then she turned to the old woman and said to her,
+'O my aunt, wilt thou not come without the cave, that I may louse
+thee in the sun?' 'Ay, by Allah, O my daughter!' replied the old
+woman. 'This long time have I been out of reach of the bath; for
+these hogs cease not to hale me from place to place.' So they
+went without the cavern, and Zumurrud combed out the old woman's
+hair and killed the vermin in her head, till this soothed her and
+she fell asleep; whereupon Zumurrud arose and donning the clothes
+of the murdered trooper, girt herself with his sword and covered
+her head with his turban, so that she became as she were a man.
+Then she took the saddle-bags full of gold and mounted the horse,
+saying in herself, 'O kind Protector, I adjure thee by the glory
+of Mohammed, (whom God bless and preserve,) protect me! If I
+enter the city, belike one of the trooper's folk will see me, and
+no good will befall me.' So she turned her back on the city and
+rode forth into the desert.
+
+She fared on ten days, eating of the fruits of the earth and
+drinking of its waters, she and her horse; and on the eleventh
+day, she came in sight of a pleasant and safe city, stablished in
+good; the season of winter had departed from it with its cold and
+the spring-tide came to it with its roses and orange-blossoms;
+its flowers blew bright, its streams welled forth and its birds
+warbled. As she drew near, she saw the troops and Amirs and
+notables of the place drawn up before the gate, at which she
+marvelled and said to herself, 'The people of the city are all
+collected at the gate: there must needs be a reason for this.'
+Then she made towards them; but, as she drew near, the troops
+hastened forward to meet her and dismounting, kissed the ground
+before her and said, 'God aid thee, O our lord the Sultan!'
+
+Then the grandees ranked themselves before her, whilst the troops
+ranged the people in order, saying, 'God aid thee and make thy
+coming a blessing to the Muslims, O Sultan of all men! God
+stablish thee, O king of the age and pearl of the day and the
+time!' 'What ails you, O people of the city?' asked Zumurrud; and
+the chamberlain answered, 'Verily, He who is no niggard in giving
+hath been bountiful to thee and hath made thee Sultan of this
+city and ruler over the necks of all that are therein; for know
+that it is the custom of the citizens, when their king dies,
+leaving no son, that the troops should sally forth of the pace
+and abide there three days; and whoever cometh from the quarter
+whence thou hast come, they make him king over them. So praised
+be God who hath sent us a well-favoured man of the sons of the
+Turks; for had a lesser than thou presented himself, he had been
+Sultan.'
+
+Now Zumurrud was well-advised in all she did; so she said, 'Think
+not that I am of the common folk of the Turks; nay, I am a man of
+condition; but I was wroth with my family, so I went forth and
+left them. See these saddle-bags full of gold I brought with me,
+that I might give alms thereof to the poor and needy by the way.'
+So they called down blessings upon her and rejoiced in her with
+an exceeding joy and she also rejoiced in them and said in
+herself, 'Now that I have attained to this estate, it may be God
+will reunite me with my lord in this place, for He can do what He
+will.' Then the troops escorted her to the city and dismounting,
+walked before her to the palace. Here she alighted and the Amirs
+and grandees, taking her under the armpits, carried her into the
+palace and seated her on the throne; after which they all kissed
+the ground before her. Then she bade open the treasuries and gave
+largesse to the troops, who offered up prayers for the continuance
+of her reign, and all the townsfolk and the people of the kingdom
+accepted her rule.
+
+She abode thus awhile, ordering and forbidding, and remitted
+taxes and released prisoners and redressed grievances, so that
+all the people came to hold her in exceeding reverence and to
+love her, by reason of her generosity and continence; but, as
+often as she bethought her of her lord, she wept and besought God
+to reunite them; and one night, as she was thinking of him and
+calling to mind the days she had passed with him, her eyes ran
+over with tears and she repeated the following verses:
+
+My longing, 'spite of time, for thee is ever new; My weeping
+ wounds my lids and tears on tears ensue.
+Whenas I weep, I weep for anguish of desire; For grievous
+ severance is a lover's heart unto.
+
+Then she wiped away her tears and rising, betook herself to the
+harem, where she appointed to the slave-girls and concubines
+separate lodgings and assigned them pensions and allowances,
+giving out that she was minded to live apart and devote herself
+to works of piety. So she betook herself to fasting and praying,
+till the Amirs said, 'Verily, this Sultan is exceeding devout.'
+Nor would she suffer any attendants about her, save two little
+eunuchs, to serve her.
+
+She held the throne thus a whole year, during which time she
+heard no news of Ali Shar, and this was exceeding grievous to
+her; so, when her distress became excessive, she summoned her
+Viziers and chamberlains and bid them fetch architects and
+builders and make her a tilting ground, a parasang long and the
+like broad, in front of the palace. They hastened to do her
+bidding, and when the place was competed to her liking, she went
+down into it and they pitched her there a great pavilion, wherein
+the chairs of the Amirs were set in their order. Then she bade
+spread in the tilting-ground tables with all manner rich meats
+and ordered the grandees to eat. So they ate and she said to
+them, 'It is my will that, on the first day of each month, ye do
+on this wise and proclaim in the city that none shall open his
+shop, but that all the people shall come and eat of the king's
+banquet, and that whoso disobeyeth shall be hanged over his own
+door.'
+
+They did as she bade them, and when came the first day of the
+next month, Zumurrud went down into the tilting-ground and the
+crier proclaimed aloud, saying, 'Ho, all ye people, great and
+small, whoso openeth shop or house or magazine shall straightway
+be hanged over his own door; for it behoves you all to come and
+eat of the king's banquet.' Then they laid the tables and the
+people came in troops; so she bade them sit down at the tables
+and eat their fill of all the dishes. So they sat down and she
+sat on her chair of estate, watching them, whilst each thought
+she was looking at none but him. Then they fell to eating and the
+Amirs said to them, 'Eat and be not ashamed; for this is pleasing
+to the King.' So they ate their fill and went away, blessing the
+King and saying, one to the other, 'Never saw we a Sultan that
+loved the poor as doth this Sultan.' And they wished her length
+of life, whilst Zumurrud returned to the palace, rejoicing in her
+device and saying in herself, 'If it please God the Most High, I
+shall surely by this means happen on news of my lord Ali Shar.'
+
+When the first day of the second month came round, she made the
+banquet as before and the folk came and sat down at the tables,
+company by company and one by one. As she sat on her throne, at
+the head of the tables, watching the people eat, her eye fell on
+Bersoum, the Nazarene who had bought the curtain of Ali Shar; and
+she knew him and said in herself, 'This is the first of my solace
+and of the accomplishment of my desire.' Bersoum came up to the
+table and sitting down with the rest to eat, espied a dish of
+sweet rice, sprinkled with sugar; but it was far from him. So he
+pushed up to it and putting out his hand to it, took it and set
+it before himself. His next neighbour said to him, 'Why dost thou
+not eat of what is before thee? Art thou not ashamed to reach
+over for a dish that is distant from thee?' Quoth Bersoum, 'I
+will eat of none but this dish.' 'Eat then,' rejoined the other,
+'and small good may it do thee!' But another man, a hashish-
+eater, said, 'Let him eat of it, that I may eat with him.' 'O
+unluckiest of hashish-eaters,' replied the first speaker, 'this
+is no meat for thee; it is eating for Amirs. Let it be, that it
+may return to those for whom it is meant and they eat it.'
+
+But Bersoum heeded him not and putting his hand to the rice, took
+a mouthful and put it in his mouth. He was about to take a second
+mouthful, when Zumurrud, who was watching him, cried out to
+certain of her guards, saying, 'Bring me yonder man with the dish
+of sweet rice before him and let him not eat the mouthful he hath
+ready, but throw it from his hand.' So four of the guards went up
+to Bersoum and throwing the mouthful of rice from his hand, haled
+him forthright before Zumurrud, whilst all the people left eating
+and said to one another, 'By Allah, he did wrong in not eating of
+the food meant for the like of him.' 'For me,' quoth one, 'I was
+content with this frumenty that is before me.' And the hashish-
+eater said, 'Praised be God who hindered me from eating of the
+dish of sweet rice, for I looked for it to stand before him and
+was only waiting for him to have stayed his hunger of it, to eat
+with him, when there befell him what we see.' And they said, one
+to another, 'Wait till we see what befalls him.'
+
+Then said Zumurrud to Bersoum, 'Out on thee, O blue eyes! What is
+thy name and why comest thou hither?' But the accursed fellow
+miscalled himself, having a white turban,[FN#22] and answered, 'O
+King, my name is Ali; I am a weaver and came hither to trade.'
+'Bring me a table of sand and a pen of brass,' quoth Zumurrud,
+and they brought her what she sought. She levelled the sand and
+taking the pen, drew a geomantic figure, in the likeness of an
+ape; then, raising her head, she considered Bersoum straitly and
+said to him, 'O dog, how darest thou lie to kings? Art thou not a
+Nazarene, Bersoum by name, and comest thou not hither in quest of
+somewhat? Speak the truth, or, by the splendour of the Deity, I
+will strike off thy head?' At this, Bersoum was confounded and
+the Amirs and bystanders said, 'Verily, the King understands
+geomancy: blessed be He who hath gifted him!' Then Zumurrud cried
+out upon Bersoum and said, 'Tell me the truth, or I will make an
+end of thee!' 'Pardon, O King of the age,' replied Bersoum; 'the
+table hath told thee aright; thy slave is indeed a Nazarene.'
+Whereupon all present wondered at the King's skill in geomancy,
+saying, 'Verily, the King is a diviner, whose like there is not
+in the world.'
+
+Then Zumurrud bade flay the Christian and stuff his skin with
+straw and hang it over the gate of the tilting-ground. Moreover,
+she commanded to dig a pit without the city and burn his flesh
+and bones therein and throw over his ashes offal and rubbish. 'We
+hear and obey,' answered they and did with him as she bade. When
+the people saw what had befallen the Christian, they said, 'He
+hath his deserts; but what an unlucky mouthful was that for him!'
+And another said, 'Be my wife triply divorced if ever I eat of
+sweet rice as long as I live!' 'Praised be God,' quoth the
+hashish-eater, 'who saved me from this fellow's fate by hindering
+me from eating of the rice!' Then they all went out, minded
+thenceforth to leave sitting in the Christian's place, over
+against the dish of sweet rice.
+
+When the first day of the third month came, they laid the tables
+as of wont, and Queen Zumurrud came down and sat on her throne,
+with her guards in attendance on her, fearing her danger. Then
+the townsfolk entered, as usual, and went round about the tables,
+looking for the place of the dish of sweet rice, and quoth one to
+another, 'Hark ye, Hajji Khelef!' 'At thy service, O Hajji
+Khalid,' answered the other. 'Avoid the dish of sweet rice,' said
+Khalid, 'and look thou eat not thereof; for if thou do, thou wilt
+be hanged.' Then they sat down to meat; and as they were eating,
+Zumurrud chanced to look at the gate of the tilting-ground and
+saw a man come running in. So she considered him and knew him for
+Jewan the Kurd.
+
+Now the manner of his coming was on this wise. When he left his
+mother, he went to his comrades and said to them, 'I had fine
+purchase yesterday; for I slew a trooper and took his horse.
+Moreover there fell to me last night a pair of saddle-bags, full
+of gold, and a girl worth more than the money; and I have left
+them all with my mother in the cave.' At this they rejoiced and
+repaired to the cavern at nightfall, whilst they forewent them,
+that he might fetch them the booty. But he found the place empty
+and questioned his mother, who told him what had befallen;
+whereupon he bit his hands for despite and exclaimed, 'By Allah,
+I will make search for yonder harlot and take her, wherever she
+is, though it be in the shell of a pistachio-nut, and quench my
+malice on her!' So he went forth in quest of her and journeyed
+from place to place, till he came to Queen Zumurrud's city. He
+found the town deserted and enquiring of some women whom he saw
+looking from the windows, learnt that it was the Sultan's custom
+to make a banquet for all the people on the first of each month
+and was directed to the tilting-ground, where the feast was
+spread.
+
+So he came running in and finding no place empty, save that
+before the dish of sweet rice, took his seat there and put out
+his hand to the dish; whereupon the folk cried out to him,
+saying, 'O brother, what wilt thou do?' Quoth he, 'I mean to eat
+my fill of this dish.' 'If thou eat of it,' rejoined one of the
+people, 'thou wilt assuredly be hanged.' But Jewan said, 'Hold
+thy peace and talk not thus.' Then he stretched out his hand to
+the dish aforesaid and drew it to him.
+
+Now the hashish-eater, of whom we have before spoken, was sitting
+by him; but when he saw him do this, the fumes of the hashish
+left his head and he fled from his place and sat down afar off,
+saying, 'I will have nothing to do with yonder dish.' Then Jewan
+put out his hand, as it were a crow's foot, and dipping it in the
+dish, scooped up therewith half the dishful and drew it out, as
+it were a camel's hoof, and the bottom of the dish appeared. He
+rolled the rice in his hand, till it was like a great orange, and
+threw it ravenously into his mouth; and it rolled down his
+gullet, with a noise like thunder. 'Praised by God,' quoth his
+neighbour, 'who hath not made me meat before thee; for thou hast
+emptied the dish at one mouthful.' 'Let him eat,' said the
+hashish-eater; 'methinks he hath a gallows-face.' Then, turning
+to Jewan, 'Eat,' added he, 'and small good may it do thee!'
+
+Jewan put out his hand again and taking another mouthful, was
+rolling it in his hands like the first, when Zumurrud cried out
+to the guards, saying, 'Bring me yonder man in haste and let him
+not eat the mouthful in his hand.' So they ran and seizing him,
+as he bent over the dish, brought him to her, whilst the people
+exulted over him and said, one to the other, 'He hath his
+deserts, for we warned him, but he would not take warning.
+Verily, this place is fated to be the death of whoso sits
+therein, and yonder rice is fatal to all who eat of it.'
+
+Then said Zumurrud to Jewan, 'What is thy name and condition and
+why comest thou hither?' 'O our lord the Sultan,' answered he,
+'my name is Othman; I am a gardener and am come hither in quest
+of somewhat I have lost.' 'Bring me a table of sand,' said
+Zumurrud. So they brought it, and she took the pen and drawing a
+geomantic figure, considered it awhile, then raising her head,
+exclaimed, 'Out on thee, thou sorry knave! How darest thou lie to
+kings? This sand tells me that thy name is Jewan the Kurd and
+that thou art by trade a robber, taking men's goods in the way of
+unright and slaying those whom God hath forbidden to slay, save
+for just cause.' And she cried out upon him, saying, 'O hog, tell
+me the truth of thy case or I will cut off thy head!'
+
+When he heard this, he turned pale and his teeth chattered; then,
+deeming that he might save himself by telling the truth, he
+replied, 'O King, thou sayest sooth; but I repent at thy hands
+henceforth and turn to God the Most High!' Quoth she, 'I may not
+leave a pest in the way of the true-believers.' And she said to
+her guards, 'Take him and flay him and do with him as ye did by
+his like last month.' And they did her commandment. When the
+hashish-eater saw this, he turned his back upon the dish of rice,
+saying, 'It is unlawful to present my face to thee.' Then, when
+they had made an end of eating, they dispersed and Zumurrud
+returned to her palace and dismissed her attendants.
+
+When the fourth month came round, they made the banquet, as of
+wont, and the folk sat awaiting leave to begin. Presently
+Zumurrud entered and sitting down on her throne, looked at the
+tables and saw that room for four people was left void before the
+dish of rice, at which she wondered. As she sat, looking around,
+she saw a man come running in at the gate, who stayed not till he
+reached the tables and finding no room, save before the dish of
+rice, took his seat there. She looked at him and knowing him for
+the accursed Christian, who called himself Reshideddin, said in
+herself, 'How blessed is this device of the food, into whose
+toils this infidel hath fallen!'
+
+Now the manner of his coming was extraordinary, and it was on
+this wise. When he returned from his journey, the people of the
+house told him that Zumurrud was missing and with her a pair of
+saddle-bags full of gold; whereupon he rent his clothes and
+buffeted his face and plucked out his beard. Then he despatched
+his brother Bersoum in quest of her, and when he was weary of
+awaiting news of him, he went forth himself, to seek for him and
+for Zumurrud, and fate led him to the latter's city. He entered
+it on the first day of the month and finding the streets deserted
+and the shops shut, enquired of the women at the windows, who
+told him that the King made a banquet on the first of each month
+for the people, all of whom were bound to attend it, nor might
+any abide in his house or shop that day; and they directed him to
+the tilting-ground.
+
+So he betook himself thither and sitting down before the rice,
+put out his hand to eat thereof, whereupon Zumurrud cried out to
+her guards, saying, 'Bring me him who sits before the dish of
+rice.' So they laid hands on him and brought him before Queen
+Zumurrud, who said to him, 'Out on thee! What is thy name and
+occupation, and what brings thee hither?' 'O King of the age,'
+answered he, 'my name is Rustem and I have no occupation, for
+I am a poor dervish.' Then said she to her attendants, 'Bring
+me a table of sand and pen of brass.' So they brought her what
+she sought, as usual; and she took the pen and drawing a
+geomantic figure, considered it awhile, then raising her head to
+Reshideddin, said, 'O dog, how darest thou lie to kings? Thy name
+is Reshideddin the Nazarene; thou art outwardly a Muslim, but a
+Christian at heart, and thine occupation is to lay snares for the
+slave-girls of the Muslims and take them. Speak the truth, or
+I will smite off thy head.' He hesitated and stammered, then
+replied, 'Thou sayest sooth, O King of the age!' Whereupon she
+commanded to throw him down and give him a hundred blows on each
+sole and a thousand on his body; after which she bade flay him
+and stuff his skin with hards of flax and dig a pit without the
+city, wherein they should burn his body and cast dirt and rubbish
+on his ashes. They did as she bade them and she gave the people
+leave to eat.
+
+So they ate their fill and went their ways, whilst Zumurrud
+returned to her palace, thanking God for that He had solaced her
+heart of those who had wronged her. Then she praised the Creator
+of heaven and earth and repeated the following verses:
+
+Lo, these erst had power and used it with oppression and unright!
+ In a little, their dominion was as it ne'er had been.
+Had they used their power with justice, they had been repaid the
+ like; But they wrought unright and Fortune guerdoned them
+ with dole and teen.
+So they perished and the moral of the case bespeaks them thus,
+ "This is what your crimes have earnt you: Fate is not to
+ blame, I ween."
+
+Then she called to mind her lord Ali Shar and wept, but presently
+recovered herself and said, 'Surely God, who hath given mine
+enemies into my hand, will vouchsafe me speedy reunion with my
+beloved; for He can do what He will and is generous to His
+servants and mindful of their case!' Then she praised God (to
+whom belong might and majesty) and besought forgiveness of Him,
+submitting herself to the course of destiny, assured that to each
+beginning there is an end, and repeating the saying of the poet:
+
+Be at thine ease, for all things' destiny Is in His hands who
+ fashioned earth and sea.
+Nothing of Him forbidden shall befall Nor aught of Him appointed
+ fail to thee.
+
+And what another saith:
+
+Let the days pass, as they list, and fare, And enter thou not the
+ house of despair.
+Full oft, when the quest of a thing is hard, The next hour brings
+ us the end of our care.
+
+And a third:
+
+Be mild what time thou'rt ta'en with anger and despite And
+ patient, if there fall misfortune on thy head.
+Indeed, the nights are quick and great with child by Time And of
+ all wondrous things are hourly brought to bed.
+
+And a fourth:
+
+Take patience, for therein is good; an thou be learn'd in it,
+ Thou shalt be calm of soul nor drink of anguish any whit.
+And know that if, with a good grace, thou do not thee submit, Yet
+ must thou suffer, will or nill, that which the Pen hath
+ writ.
+
+She abode thus another whole month's space, judging the folk and
+commanding and forbidding by day, and by night weeping and
+bewailing her separation from her lord Ali Shar. On the first day
+of the fifth month, she bade spread the banquet as usual and sat
+down at the head of the tables, whilst the people awaited the
+signal to fall to, leaving the space before the dish of rice
+vacant. She sat with eyes fixed upon the gate of the tilting-
+ground, noting all who entered and saying, 'O Thou that
+restoredst Joseph
+to Jacob and didst away the affliction of Job, vouchsafe of Thy
+power and greatness to restore me my lord Ali Shar; for Thou
+canst all things! O Lord of all creatures, O Guide of the erring,
+O Hearer of those that cry, O Answerer of prayer, answer Thou my
+prayer, O Lord of all creatures!'
+
+Hardly had she made an end of her prayer, when she saw entering
+the gate a young man, in shape like the willow wand, the
+comeliest and most accomplished of youths, save that his face was
+sallow and his form wasted. He came up to the tables and finding
+no seat vacant save before the dish of rice, sat down there;
+whereupon Zumurrud's heart fluttered and observing him narrowly,
+she knew him for her lord Ali Shar and was like to have cried out
+for joy, but restrained herself, fearing disgrace before the
+folk. Her bowels were troubled and her heart throbbed; but she
+concealed that which she suffered.
+
+Now the manner of his coming thither was on this wise. When
+he awoke and found himself lying on the bench outside the
+Christian's house, with his head bare, he knew that some one had
+come upon him and robbed him of his turban, whilst he slept. So
+he spoke the word, which whoso saith shall never be confounded,
+that is to say, 'Verily, we are God's and to Him we return!' and
+going back to the old woman's house, knocked at the door. She
+came out and he wept before her, till he swooned away. When he
+came to himself, he told her all that had passed, and she blamed
+him and chid him for his heedlessness, saying, 'Thou hast but
+thyself to thank for thine affliction and calamity.' And she
+gave not over reproaching him, till the blood streamed from his
+nostrils and he again fainted away. When he revived, he saw her
+weeping over him; so he bewailed himself and repeated the
+following verses:
+
+How bitter is parting to friends, and how sweet Reunion to
+ lovers, for sev'rance that sigh!
+May God all unite them and watch over me, For I'm of their number
+ and like for to die.
+
+The old woman mourned over him and said to him, 'Sit here, whilst
+I go in quest of news and return to thee in haste.' 'I hear and
+obey,' answered he. So she left him and was absent till midday,
+when she returned and said to him, 'O Ali, I fear me thou must
+die in thy grief; thou wilt never see thy beloved again save on
+Es Sirat;[FN#23] for the people of the Christian's house, when
+they arose in the morning, found the window giving on the garden
+broken in and Zumurrud missing, and with her a pair of saddle-
+bags, full of the Christian's money. When I came thither, I found
+the Master of Police and his officers standing at the door, and
+there is no power and no virtue save in God the Most High, the
+Supreme!'
+
+When he heard this, the light in his eyes was changed to darkness
+and he despaired of life and made sure of death; nor did he leave
+weeping, till he lost his senses. When he recovered, love and
+longing were sore upon him; there befell him a grievous sickness
+and he kept his house a whole year; during which time the old
+woman ceased not to bring him doctors and ply him with diet-
+drinks and make him broths, till his life returned to him. Then
+he recalled what had passed and repeated the following verses:
+
+Union is parted; in its stead, of grief I am possessed: My tears
+ flow still, my heart's on fire for yearning and unrest.
+Longing redoubles on a wight who hath no peace, so sore Of love
+ and wakefulness and pain he's wasted and oppressed.
+Lord, I beseech Thee, if there be relief for me in aught,
+ Vouchsafe it, whilst a spark of life abideth in my breast.
+
+When the second year began, the old woman said to him, 'O my son,
+all this thy sadness and sorrowing will not bring thee back thy
+mistress. Rise, therefore, take heart and seek for her in the
+lands: haply thou shalt light on some news of her.' And she
+ceased not to exhort and encourage him, till he took heart and
+she carried him to the bath. Then she made him drink wine and eat
+fowls, and thus she did with him for a whole month, till he
+regained strength and setting out, journeyed without ceasing till
+he arrived at Zumurrud's city, when he went to the tilting-ground
+and sitting down before the dish of sweet rice, put out his hand
+to eat of it.
+
+When the folk saw this, they were concerned for him and said to
+him, 'O young man, eat not of that dish, for whoso eats thereof,
+misfortune befalls him.' 'Leave me to eat of it,' answered he,
+'and let them do with me as they list, so haply I may be at rest
+from this weary life.' Then he ate a first mouthful, and Zumurrud
+was minded to have him brought to her; but bethought her that
+belike he was anhungred and said in herself, 'It were well to let
+him eat his fill.' So he went on eating, whilst the people looked
+on in astonishment, waiting to see what would befall him; and
+when he had done, Zumurrud said to certain of her eunuchs, 'Go to
+yonder youth that eateth of the rice and bring him to me on
+courteous wise, saying, 'The King would have speech of thee on
+some slight matter.' 'We hear and obey,' answered they and going
+up to Ali Shar, said to him, 'O my lord, the King desires the
+favour of a word with thee, and let thy heart be easy.' 'I hear
+and obey,' replied he and followed the eunuchs, who carried him
+before Zumurrud, whilst the people said to one another, 'There is
+no power and no virtue save in God the Most High, the Supreme! I
+wonder what the King will do with him!' And others said, 'He will
+do him nought but good; for, were he minded to harm him, he had
+not suffered him to eat his fill.'
+
+When he came before Zumurrud, he saluted and kissed the earth
+before her, whilst she returned his greeting and received him
+with honour. Then said she to him, 'What is thy name and
+condition and what brought thee hither?' 'O King,' answered he,
+'my name is Ali Shar; I am of the sons of the merchants of
+Khorassan and the object of my coming hither is to seek for a
+slave-girl whom I have lost; for she was dearer to me than my
+sight and my hearing, and indeed my soul cleaves to her, since I
+lost her.' And he wept, till he swooned away. She caused sprinkle
+rose-water on his face, till he came to himself, when she said,
+'Bring me the table of sand and the pen.' So they brought them
+and she took the pen and drew a geomantic figure, which she
+considered awhile; then, 'Thou hast spoken sooth,' quoth she.
+'God will grant thee speedy reunion with her; so be not
+troubled.' Then she bade her chamberlain carry him to the bath
+and after clothe him in a handsome suit of royal apparel, and
+mount him an one of the best of the King's horses and bring him
+to the palace at end of day. So the chamberlain took him away,
+whilst the folk said to one another, 'What makes the King deal
+thus courteously with yonder youth?' And one said, 'Did I not
+tell you that he would do him no hurt? For he is fair of aspect;
+and this I knew, when the King suffered him to eat his fill.' And
+each said his say; after which they all dispersed and went their
+ways.
+
+As for Zumurrud, she thought the night would never come, that she
+might be alone with the beloved of her heart. As soon as it was
+dusk, she withdrew to her sleeping-chamber and made as she were
+overcome with sleep; and it was her wont to suffer none to pass
+the night with her, save the two little eunuchs that waited upon
+her. After a little, she sent for Ali Shar and sat down upon the
+bed, with candles burning at her head and feet and the place
+lighted with hanging lamps of gold that shone like the sun. When
+the people heard of her sending for Ali Shar, they marvelled and
+said, 'Algates, the King is enamoured of this young man, and to-
+morrow he will make him commander of the troops.' And each
+thought his thought and said his say. When they brought him in to
+her, he kissed the earth before her and called down blessings on
+her, and she said in herself, 'Needs must I jest with him awhile,
+ere I make myself known to him.' Then said she to him, 'O Ali,
+hast thou been to the bath?' 'Yes, O my lord,' answered he.
+'Come, eat of this fowl and meat and drink of this wine and
+sherbet of sugar,' said she; 'for thou art weary; and after come
+hither.' 'I hear and obey,' replied he and did as she bade him.
+
+When he had made an end of eating and drinking, she said to him,
+'Come up with me on the couch and rub my feet.' So he fell to
+rubbing her feet and legs and found them softer than silk. Then
+said she, 'Go higher with the rubbing;' and he, 'Pardon me, O my
+lord, I will go no higher than the knee.' Whereupon, 'Wilt thou
+gainsay me?' quoth she. 'It shall be an ill-omened night for
+thee! Nay, but it behoves thee to do my bidding and I will make
+thee my minion and appoint thee one of my Amirs.' 'And in what
+must I do thy bidding, O King of the age?' asked Ali. 'Put off
+thy trousers,' answered she, 'and lie down on thy face.' Quoth
+he, 'That is a thing I never in my life did; and if thou force me
+thereto, I will accuse thee thereof before God on the Day of
+Resurrection. Take all thou hast given me and let me go to my own
+city.' And he wept and lamented. But she said, 'Put off thy
+trousers and lie down on thy face, or I will strike off thy
+head.' So he did as she bade him and she mounted upon his back.
+And he felt what was softer than silk and fresher than cream and
+said in himself, 'Of a truth, this King is better than all the
+women!'
+
+She abode a while on his back, then turned over on to the ground,
+and he said [in himself], 'Praised be God! It seems his yard is
+not in point.' Then said she, 'O Ali, it is of the wont of my
+yard that it standeth not on end, except it be rubbed with the
+hand; so, some, rub it with thy hand, till it be in point, else
+will I kill thee.' So saying, she lay down on her back and taking
+his hand, set it to her kaze, and he found it a kaze softer than
+silk, white, plump and great, resembling for heat the hot room of
+the bath or the heart of a lover, whom passion hath wasted. Quoth
+Ali in himself, 'Verily, this King hath a kaze. This is a wonder
+of wonders!' And desire got hold on him and his yard stood on end
+to the utmost; which when Zumurrud saw, she burst out laughing
+and said to him, 'O my lord, all this betideth and yet thou
+knowest me not!' 'And who art thou, O King?' asked he; and she
+said, 'I am thy slave-girl Zumurrud.'
+
+When he knew this and was certified that she was indeed his very
+slave-girl Zumurrud, he threw himself upon her, as the lion upon
+the sheep, and kissed her and embraced her. Then he thrust his
+yard into her poke and stinted not to play the porter at her door
+and the Imam[FN#24] at her prayer-niche, whilst she with him
+ceased not from inclination and prostration and rising up and
+sitting down,[FN#25] accompanying her canticles of praise[FN#26]
+with motitations and other amorous gestures, till the [two
+little] eunuchs [aforesaid] heard [the noise]. So they came and
+peeping out from behind the curtains, saw the King lying [on his
+back] and Ali Shar upon him, thrusting and thronging amain,
+whilst she puffed and blew and wriggled. Quoth they, 'This is no
+man's wriggle; belike this King is a woman.' But they concealed
+their affair and discovered it to none.
+
+On the morrow, Zumurrud summoned all the troops and the grandees
+of the realm and said to them, 'I am minded to journey to this
+man's country; so choose a deputy, who shall rule over you, till
+I return to you.' And they answered, 'We hear and obey.' Then she
+applied herself to making ready for the journey and furnished
+herself with victual and treasure and camels and mules and so
+forth; after which she set out with Ali Shar, and they fared on,
+till they arrived at his native place, where he entered his house
+and gave alms and largesse. God vouchsafed him children by her,
+and they both lived the happiest of lives, till there came to
+them the Destroyer of Delights and Sunderer of Companies. Glory
+be to God, the Eternal without cease, and praised be He in every
+case!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVES OF JUBEIR BEN UMEIR AND THE LADY
+ BUDOUR
+
+
+
+It is related the Khalif Haroun er Reshid was restless one night
+and could not sleep; so that he ceased not to toss from side to
+side for very restlessness, till, growing weary of this, he
+called Mesrour and said to him, 'O Mesrour, look what may solace
+me of this my restlessness.' 'O Commander of the Faithful,'
+answered Mesrour, 'wilt thou walk in the garden of the palace and
+divert thyself with the sight of its flowers and gaze upon the
+stars and note the beauty of their ordinance and the moon among
+them, shining on the water?' 'O Mesrour,' replied the Khalif, 'my
+heart inclines not to aught of this.' 'O my lord,' continued
+Mesrour, 'there are in thy palace three hundred concubines, each
+of whom hath her separate lodging. Do thou bid retire each into
+her own apartment and then go thou about and divert thyself with
+gazing on them, without their knowledge.' 'O Mesrour,' answered
+Haroun, 'the palace is mine and the girls are my property:
+moreover, my soul inclineth not to aught of this.' 'O my lord,'
+said Mesrour, 'summon the doctors and sages and poets and bid
+them contend before thee in argument and recite verses and tell
+thee tales and anecdotes.' 'My soul inclines not to aught of
+this,' answered the Khalif; and Mesrour said, 'O my lord, bid the
+minions and wits and boon-companions attend thee and divert thee
+with witty sallies.' 'O Mesrour,' replied the Khalif, 'indeed my
+soul inclineth not to aught of this.' 'Then, O my lord,' rejoined
+Mesrour, 'strike off my head; maybe, that will dispel thine
+unease and do away the restlessness that is upon thee.'
+
+At this the Khalif laughed and said, 'See which of the boon-
+companions is at the door.' So Mesrour went out and returning,
+said, 'O my lord, he who sits without is Ali ben Mensour of
+Damascus, the Wag.' 'Bring him to me,' quoth Haroun; and Mesrour
+went out and returned with Ibn Mensour, who said, on entering,
+'Peace be on thee, O Commander of the Faithful!' The Khalif
+returned his salutation and said to him, 'O Ibn Mensour, tell us
+one of thy stories.' 'O Commander of the Faithful,' said the
+other, 'shall I tell thee what I have seen with my eyes or what I
+have only heard tell?' 'If thou have seen aught worth telling,'
+replied the Khalif, 'let us hear it; for report is not like eye-
+witness.' 'O Commander of the Faithful,' said Ibn Mensour, 'lend
+me thine ear and thy heart.' 'O Ibn Mensour,' answered the
+Khalif, 'behold, I am listening to thee with mine ears and
+looking at thee with mine eyes and attending to thee with my
+heart.'
+
+'Know then, O Commander of the Faithful,' began Ibn Mensour,
+'that I receive a yearly allowance from Mohammed ben Suleiman el
+Hashimi, Sultan[FN#27] of Bassora; so I went to him, once upon a
+time, as usual, and found him about to ride out a-hunting. I
+saluted him, and he returned my salute and would have me mount and
+go a-hunting with him; but I said, "O my lord, I cannot ride; so
+do thou stablish me in the guest-house and give thy chamberlains
+and officers charge over me." And he did so and departed for the
+chase. His officers entreated me with the utmost honour and
+hospitality; but I said in myself, "By Allah, it is a strange
+thing that I should have used so long to come from Baghdad to
+Bassora, yet know no more of the town than from the palace to
+the garden and back again! When shall I find an occasion like
+this to view the different parts of Bassora? I will rise at once
+and walk forth alone and divert myself and digest what I have
+eaten."
+
+So I donned my richest clothes and went out a-walking in Bassora.
+Now it is known to thee, O Commander of the Faithful, that it
+hath seventy streets, each seventy parasangs long of Irak
+measure; and I lost myself in its by-streets and thirst overcame
+me. Presently, as I went along, I came to a great door, on which
+were two rings of brass, with curtains of red brocade drawn
+before it. Over the door was a trellis, covered with a creeping
+vine, that hung down and shaded the doorway; and on either side
+the porch was a stone bench. I stood still, to gaze upon the
+place, and presently heard a sorrowful voice, proceeding from a
+mourning heart, warbling melodiously and chanting the following
+verses:
+
+My body is become th' abode of sickness and dismay, By reason of
+ a fawn, whose land and stead are far away.
+O zephyr of the waste, that roused my pain in me, I pray, By God
+ your Lord, to him, with whom my heart dwells, take your way
+ And prithee chide him, so reproach may soften him,
+ maybe.
+And if to you he do incline and hearken, then make fair Your
+ speech and tidings unto him of lovers, 'twixt you, bear.
+Yea, and vouchsafe to favour me with service debonair And unto
+ him I love make known my case and my despair,
+ Saying, "What ails thy bounden slave that, for
+ estrangement, she
+Should die without offence of her committed or despite Or
+ disobedience or breach of plighted faith or slight
+Or fraud or turning of her heart to other or unright?" And if he
+ smile, with dulcet speech bespeak ye thus the wight:
+ "An thou thy company wouldst grant to her, 'twere well
+ of thee;
+For she for love of thee's distraught, as needs must be the case;
+ Her eyes are ever void of sleep; she weeps and wails apace."
+If he show favour and incline to grant the wished-for grace, 'Tis
+ well and good; but, if ye still read anger in his face,
+ Dissemble then with him and say, "We know her not, not
+ we."
+
+Quoth I to myself, "Verily, if the owner of this voice be fair,
+she unites beauty of person and eloquence and sweetness of
+voice." Then I drew near the door, and raising the curtain little
+by little, beheld a damsel, white as the moon, when it rises on
+its fourteenth night, with joined eyebrows and languorous
+eyelids, breasts like twin pomegranates and dainty lips like twin
+corn-marigolds,[FN#28] mouth as it were Solomon's seal and teeth
+that sported with the reason of rhymester and proser, even as
+saith the poet:
+
+O mouth of the beloved, who set thy pearls arow And eke with
+ wine fulfilled thee and camomiles like show,
+And lent the morning-glory unto thy smile, and who Hath with a
+ padlock sealed thee of rubies sweet of show?
+Whoso but looks upon thee is mad for joy and pride. How should
+ it fare with him, who kisseth thee, heigho!
+
+And as saith another:
+
+O pearls of the teeth of my love, Have ruth on cornelian and
+ spare To vie with it! Shall it not find You peerless and
+ passing compare?
+
+In fine, she comprised all manner of loveliness and was a
+ravishment to men and women, nor could the beholder satisfy
+himself with the sight of her beauty; for she was as the poet
+hath said of her:
+
+If, face to face, she do appear, unveiled, she slays; and if
+ She turn her back, she makes all men her lovers far and
+ near.
+Like the full moon and eke the sun she is, but cruelty And
+ inhumanity belong not to her nature dear.
+The garden-gates of Paradise are opened with her shift And the
+ full moon revolveth still upon her neck-rings' sphere.
+
+As I looked at her through the opening of the curtains, she
+turned and seeing me standing at the door, said to her maid,
+"See who stands at the door." So the maid came up to me and
+said, "O old man, hast thou no shame, or do gray hairs and
+impudence go together?" "O my mistress," answered I, "I confess
+to the gray hairs, but as for unmannerliness, I think not to be
+guilty of it." "And what can be more unmannerly," rejoined her
+mistress, "than to intrude thyself upon a house other than thy
+house and gaze on a harem other than thy harem?" "O my lady,"
+said I, "I have an excuse." "And what is thine excuse?" asked
+she. Quoth I, "I am a stranger and well-nigh dead of thirst."
+"We accept thine excuse," answered she and calling one of her
+maids, said to her, "O Lutf, give him to drink in the golden
+tankard."
+
+So she brought me a tankard of red gold, set with pearls and
+jewels, full of water mingled with odoriferous musk and covered
+with a napkin of green silk; and I addressed myself to drink
+and was long about it, casting stolen glances at her the while,
+till I could prolong it no longer. Then I returned the tankard
+to the maid, but did not offer to go; and she said to me, "O old
+man, go thy way." "O my lady," replied I, "I am troubled in mind."
+"For what?" asked she; and I answered, "For the uncertainty of
+fortune and the vicissitudes of events." "Well mayst thou be
+troubled thereanent," replied she, "for Time[FN#29] is the
+mother of wonders. But what hast thou seen of them that thou
+shouldst muse upon?" Quoth I, "I was thinking of the former
+owner of this house, for he was my good friend in his lifetime."
+"What was his name?" asked she. "Mohammed ben Ali the Jeweller,"
+answered I; "and he was a man of great wealth. Did he leave
+any children?" "Yes," said she; "he left a daughter, Budour
+by name, who inherited all his wealth." Quoth I, "Meseems
+thou art his daughter?" "Yes," answered she, laughing; then
+added, "O old man, thou hast talked long enough; go thy ways."
+"Needs must I go," replied I; "but I see thou art out of health.
+Tell me thy case; it may be God will give thee solace at
+my hands." "O old man," rejoined she, "if thou be a man of
+discretion, I will discover to thee my secret; but first
+tell me who thou art, that I may know whether thou art worthy
+of confidence or not; for the poet saith:
+
+None keepeth secrets but the man who's trusty and discreet: A
+ secret's ever safely placed with honest fold and leal;
+For me, my secrets I preserve within a locked-up house, Whose
+ key is lost and on whose door is set the Cadi's seal."
+
+"O my lady," answered I, "an thou wouldst know who I am, I am
+Ali ben Mensour of Damascus, the Wag, boon-companion to the
+Khalif Haroun er Reshid." When she heard my name she came down
+from her seat and saluting me, said, "Welcome, O Ibn Mensour!
+Now will I tell thee my case and entrust thee with my secret.
+Know that I am a lover separated from her beloved." "O my
+lady," rejoined I, "thou art fair and shouldst love none but
+the fair. Whom then dost thou love?" Quoth she, "I love Jubeir
+ben Umeir es Sheibani, Prince of the Benou Sheiban;"[FN#30] and
+she described to me a young man than whom there was none
+handsomer in Bassora. "O my lady," asked I, "have letters or
+interviews passed between you?" "Yes," answered she; "but his
+love for me was of the tongue, not of the heart; for he kept
+not his covenant nor was faithful to his troth." "And what was
+the cause of your separation?" asked I.
+
+"I was sitting one day," replied she, "whilst my maid here
+combed my hair. When she had made an end of combing it, she
+plaited my tresses, and my beauty and grace pleased her; so she
+bent down to me and kissed my cheek. At that moment, he came
+in, unawares, and seeing her kiss my cheek, turned away in
+anger, vowing eternal separation and repeating the following
+verses:
+
+If any share with me in her I love, incontinent, I'll cast her
+ off from me and be to live alone content.
+A mistress, sure, is nothing worth, if, in the way of love, She
+ wish for aught but that to which the lover doth consent.
+
+And from that time to this, O Ibn Mensour," continued she, "he
+hath neither written to me nor answered my letters." "And what
+thinkest thou to do?" asked I. Quoth she, "I have a mind to send
+him a letter by thee. If thou bring me back an answer, thou shalt
+have of me five hundred dinars; and if not, then a hundred for
+thy pains." "Do what seemeth good to thee," answered I. So she
+called for inkhorn and paper and wrote the following verses:
+
+Whence this estrangement and despite, beloved of my soul?
+ Whither have kindliness and love between us taken flight?
+What makes thee with aversion turn from me? Indeed, thy face Is
+ not the face I used to know, when we our troth did plight.
+Belike, the slanderers have made a false report of me, And thou
+ inclin'dst to them, and they redoubled in despite.
+If thou believedst their report, far, far it should have been
+ From thee, that art too whole of wit at such a bait to
+ bite!
+Yea, I conjure thee by thy life, tell me what thou hast heard:
+ For lo! thou knowest what was said and wilt not do
+ unright.
+If aught I've said that angered thee, a speech of change
+ admits; Ay, and interpreting, I trow, may change its
+ meaning quite,
+Were it a word sent down from God; for even the Pentateuch Hath
+ falsified and garbled been of this and th' other
+ wight.[FN#31]
+Whilst, as for lies, how many were of folk before us told!
+ Joseph to Jacob was traduced and blackened in his sight.
+Yea, for the slanderer and myself and thee, an awful day Of
+ standing up shall come, when God to judgment all shall
+ cite.
+
+Then she sealed the letter and gave it to me. I took it and
+carried it to the house of Jubeir ben Umeir, whom I found
+absent hunting. So I sat down, to wait for him, and presently
+he returned; and when I saw him come riding up, my wit was
+confounded by his beauty ands grace. As soon as he saw me
+sitting at the door, he dismounted and coming up to me, saluted
+and embraced me; and meseemed I embraced the world and all that
+therein is. Then he carried me into his house and seating me on
+his own couch, called for food. So they brought a table of
+khelenj[FN#32] wood of Khorassan, with feet of gold, whereon
+were all manner of meats, fried and roasted and the like. So I
+seated myself at the table and examining it, found the following
+verses engraved upon it:
+
+Weep for the cranes that erst within the porringers did lie And
+ for the stews and partridges evanished heave a sigh!
+Mourn for the younglings of the grouse; lament unceasingly, As,
+ for the omelettes and the fowls browned in the pan, do I.
+How my heart yearneth for the fish that, in its different
+ kinds, Upon a paste of wheaten flour, lay hidden in the
+ pie!
+Praised be God for the roast meat, as in the dish it lay, With
+ pot-herbs, soaked in vinegar, in porringers hard by,
+And eke the rice with buffaloes' milk dressed and made savoury,
+ Wherein the hands were plunged and arms were buried
+ bracelet high!
+O soul, I rede thee patient be, for God is bountiful: What
+ though thy fortunes straitened be, His succour's ever
+ nigh.
+
+Then said Jubeir, "Put thy hand to our food and ease our heart
+by eating of our victual." "By Allah," answered I, "I will not
+eat a mouthful, till thou grant me my desire." "What is thy
+desire?" asked he. So I brought out the letter and gave it to
+him; but, when he had read it, he tore it into pieces and
+throwing it on the floor, said to me, "O Ibn Mensour, I will
+grant thee whatever thou askest, save this that concerns the
+writer of this letter, for I have no answer to make to her." At
+this, I rose in anger; but he caught hold of my skirts, saying,
+"O Ibn Mensour, I will tell thee what she said to thee, for all
+I was not present with you." "And what did she say to me?"
+asked I. "Did she not say to thee," rejoined he, "'If thou bring
+me back an answer, thou shalt have of me five hundred dinars;
+and if not, a hundred for thy pains?'" "Yes," answered I; and
+he said, "Abide with me this day and eat and drink and make
+merry, and thou shalt have five hundred dinars."
+
+So I sat with him and ate and drank and made merry and
+entertained him with converse; after which I said to him, "O my
+master, is there no music in thy house?" "Indeed," answered he,
+"we have drunk this long while without music." Then he called
+out, saying, "Ho, Shejeret ed Durr!" Whereupon a slave-girl
+answered him from her chamber and came in to us, with a lute of
+Indian make, wrapped in a silken bag. She sat down and laying
+the lute in her lap, preluded in one-and-twenty modes, then,
+returning to the first, sang the following verses to a lively
+measure:
+
+Who hath not tasted the sweet and the bitter of passion, I
+ trow, The presence of her whom he loves from her absence
+ he hardly shall know.
+So he, from the pathway of love who hath wandered and fallen
+ astray, The smooth knoweth not from the rough of the
+ roadway, wherein he doth go.
+I ceased not the votaries of love and of passion to cross and
+ gainsay, Till I too must taste of its sweet and its
+ bitter, its gladness and woe.
+Then I drank a full draught of the cup of its bitters, and
+ humbled was I, and thus to the bondman of Love and its
+ freedman therein was brought low.
+How many a night have I passed with the loved one, carousing
+ with him, Whilst I drank from his lips what was sweeter
+ than nectar and colder than snow!
+How short was the life of the nights of our pleasance! It
+ seemed to us still, No sooner was night fallen down than
+ the daybreak to eastward did glow.
+But Fortune had vowed she would sever our union and sunder our
+ loves; And now, in good sooth, she her vow hath
+ accomplished. Fate ordered it so;
+Fate ordered it thus, and against its ordaining, appeal there
+ is none; For who shall gainsay a supreme one's
+ commandments or causes him forego?
+
+Hardly had she made an end of these verses, when Jubeir gave a
+great cry and fell down in a swoon; whereupon, "May God not
+punish thee, O old man!" exclaimed the damsel. "This long time
+have we drunk without music, for fear the like of this should
+befall our master. But go now to yon chamber and sleep there."
+So I went to the chamber in question and slept till the
+morning, when a page brought me a purse of five hundred dinars
+and said to me, "This is what my master promised thee; but
+return thou not to her who sent thee and let it be as if
+neither thou nor we had heard of this affair." "I hear and
+obey," answered I and taking the purse, went my way.
+
+However, I said in myself, "The lady will have expected me
+since yesterday; and by Allah, I must needs return to her and
+tell her what passed between me and him; or she will curse me
+and all who come from my country." So I went to her and found
+her standing behind the door; and when she saw me, she said, "O
+Ibn Mensour, thou hast gotten me nought." "Who told thee of
+this?" asked I; and she answered, "O Ibn Mensour, yet another
+thing hath been revealed to me; and it is that, when thou
+gavest hum the letter, he tore it in pieces and throwing it on
+the floor, said to thee, 'O Ibn Mensour, ask me anything but
+what relates to the writer of this letter; for I have no reply
+to make to her.' Then didst thou rise from beside him in anger;
+but he laid hold of thy skirts, saying, 'Abide with me to-day,
+for thou art my guest, and eat and drink and make merry; and
+thou shalt have five hundred dinars.' So thou didst sit with
+him, eating and drinking and making merry, and entertainedst
+him with converse; and a slave-girl sand such an air and such
+verses, whereupon he fell down in a swoon." Quoth I, "Wast thou
+then with us?" "O Ibn Mensour," replied she, "hast thou not
+heard the saying of the poet:
+
+The heart of the lover hath eyes, well I wot, That see what the
+ eyes of beholders see not.
+
+But," added she, "day and night alternate not upon aught, but they
+change it." Then she raised her eyes to heaven and said, "O my
+God and my Master and my Lord, like as Thou hast afflicted me
+with love of Jubeir ben Umeir, even so do Thou afflict him with
+love of me and transfer the passion from my heart to his!" Then
+she gave me a hundred dinars for my pains and I took it and
+returned to the palace, when I found the Sultan come back from
+hunting; so I took my pension of him and made my way back to
+Baghdad.
+
+Next year, I repaired to Bassora, as usual, to seek my pension,
+and the Sultan paid it to me; but as I was about to return to
+Baghdad, I bethought me of the lady Budour and said to myself,
+"By Allah, I must needs go and see what hath befallen between
+her and her lover!" So I went to her house and finding the
+porch swept and sprinkled and slaves and servants and pages
+standing before the door, said to myself, "Most like grief hath
+broken the lady's heart and she is dead, and some Amir or other
+hath taken up his abode in her house." So I went on to Jubeir's
+house, where I found the benches of the porch broken down and
+no pages at the door, as of wont, and said to myself, "Belike
+he too is dead." Then I took up my station before the door of
+his house and with my eyes running over with tears, bemoaned it
+in the following verses:
+
+Lords, that are gone, but whom my heart doth evermore ensue,
+ Return; so shall my festal says return to me with you.
+I stand before your sometime stead, bewailing your abodes, With
+ quivering lids, from which the tears rain down, like
+ summer dew.
+Weeping, I question of the house and ruins, "Where is he Who
+ was the source of benefits and bounties ever new?"
+[They answer] "Go thy ways, for those thou lov'st from the
+ abode Departed are and neath the dust are buried; so
+ adieu!"
+May God not stint us of the sight [in dreams] of all their
+ charms Nor be their noble memories aye absent from men's
+ view!
+
+As I was thus bewailing the folk of the house, there came a
+black slave thereout and said to me, "Hold thy peace, O old
+man! May thy mother be bereft of thee! What ails thee to bemoan
+the house thus?" Quoth I, "I knew it of yore, when it belonged
+to a good friend of mine." "What was his name?" asked the
+slave. And I answered, "Jubeir ben Umeir the Sheibani." "And
+what hath befallen him?" rejoined he. "Praised be God, he is
+yet in the enjoyment of wealth and rank and prosperity, except
+that God hath stricken him with love of a damsel called the
+lady Budour; and he is overcome with love of her, that, for the
+violence of his passion and torment, he is like a great rock
+overthrown. If he hunger, he saith not, 'Feed me;' nor, if he
+thirst, doth he say, 'Give me to drink.'" Quoth I, "Ask leave
+me to go in to him." "O my lord," said the slave, "Wilt thou go
+in to him who understands or to him who understands not?" "I
+must needs see him, whatever be his case," answered I.
+
+Se he went in and presently returned with permission for me to
+enter, whereupon I went in to Jubeir and found him like a rock
+overthrown, understanding neither sign nor speech. I spoke to
+him, but he answered me not; and one of his servants said to
+me, "O my lord, if thou know aught of verse, repeat it, and
+raise thy voice; and he will be aroused by this and speak with
+thee." So I recited the following verses:
+
+Budour's love hast thou forgotten or art deaf still to her
+ sighs? Wak'st anights, or do thine eyelids close upon thy
+ sleeping eyes?
+If thy tears flow fast and freely, night and day long, torrent-
+ wise, Know thou, then, that thou shalt sojourn evermore in
+ Paradise.[FN#33]
+
+When he heard this, he opened his eyes and said, "Welcome, O
+Ibn Mensour! Verily, the jest is become earnest." "O my lord,"
+said I, "is there aught thou wouldst have me do for thee?"
+"Yes," answered he; "I would fain write her a letter and send
+it to her by thee. If thou bring me back an answer, thou shalt
+have of me a thousand dinars; and if not, two hundred for thy
+pains." "Do what seemeth good to thee," said I. So he called to
+one of his slave-girls for inkhorn and paper and wrote the
+following verses:
+
+By Allah, O my lady, have ruth on me, I pray! For all my wit by
+ passion is ravished quite away.
+Yea, love for thee and longing have mastered me and clad With
+ sickness and bequeathed me abjection and dismay.
+Aforetime, O my lady, by love I set small store And deemed it
+ light and easy to bear, until to-day;
+But now that Love hath shown me the billows of its sea, Those I
+ excuse, repenting, who languish neath its sway.
+Vouchsafe thy grace to grant me; or, if thou wilt me slay, At
+ least, then, for thy victim forget thou not to pray.
+
+Then he sealed the letter and gave it to me. I took it and
+repairing to Budour's house, raised the curtain of the door,
+little by little, as of wont, and looking in, saw ten damsels,
+high-bosomed maids, like moons, and the lady Budour sitting in
+their midst, as she were the full moon among stars or the sun,
+when it is clear of clouds; nor was there on her any trace of
+pain or care. As I looked and marvelled at her case, she turned
+and seeing me standing at the gate, said to me, "Welcome and
+fair welcome to thee, O Ibn Mensour! Come in." So I entered and
+saluting her, gave her the letter. She read it and laughing,
+said to me, "O Ibn Mensour, the poet lied not when he said:
+
+The love of thee I will endure with patient constancy, Till
+ such time as a messenger shall come to me from thee.
+
+O Ibn Mensour," added she, "I will write thee an answer that
+he may give thee what he promised thee." "May God requite thee
+with good!" answered I. So she called for inkhorn and paper and
+wrote the following verses:
+
+How comes it my vows I fulfilled and thou, thou wast false to
+ thy plight? Thou sawst me do justice and truth, and yet
+ thou thyself didst unright.
+'Twas thou that begannest on me with rupture and rigour, I
+ trow; 'Twas thou that play'dst foul, and with thee began
+ the untruth and the slight.
+Yea, still I was true to my troth and cherished but thee among
+ men And ceased not thine honour to guard and keep it
+ unsullied and bright,
+Till tidings of fashions full foul I heard, as reported of
+ thee, And saw with mine eyes what thou didst, to harm me
+ and work me despite.
+Shall I then abase my estate, that thine may exalted become? By
+ God, hadst thou generous been, the like should thy conduct
+ requite!
+So now unto solace I'll turn my heart, with forgetting, from
+ thee And washing my hands of thy thought, blot despair for
+ thee out of my spright.
+
+"By Allah, O my lady," said I, "there needs but the reading of
+this letter, to kill him!" So I tore it in pieces and said to
+her, "Write him other than this." "I hear and obey," answered
+she and wrote the following:
+
+Indeed, I am consoled and sleep is pleasant to mine eyes; For I
+ have heard what came of prate of slanderers and spies.
+My heart my summons hath obeyed, thee to forget; and eke My
+ lids to stint from wake for thee have seen it good and
+ wise.
+He lies who says that severance is bitterness; for me I find
+ its taste none otherwise than sweet; indeed he lies.
+I've grown to turn away from those who bring me news of thee
+ And look upon it as a thing at which my gorge doth rise.
+Behold, I have forgotten thee with every part of me. Let then
+ the spy and who will else this know and recognise.
+
+"By Allah, O my lady," said I, "when he reads these verses, his
+soul will depart his body!" "O Ibn Mensour," quoth she, "is
+passion indeed come to such a pass with him as thou sayst?"
+"Had I said more than this," replied I, "it were but the truth:
+but clemency is of the nature of the noble." When she heard
+this, her eyes filled with tears and she wrote him a letter, O
+Commander of the Faithful, there is none in thy court could
+avail to write the like of it; and therein were these verses:
+
+How long shall this despite continue and this pride? My enviers'
+ spite on me thou sure hast satisfied.
+Mayhap, I did amiss and knew it not; so tell Me what thou heardst
+ of me, that did our loves divide.
+Even as I welcome sleep unto mine eyes and lids, So would I
+ welcome thee, beloved, to my side.
+I've quaffed the cup of love for thee, unmixed and pure; So, if
+ thou see me drunk, reproach me not nor chide.
+
+Then she sealed it and gave it to me; and I said, "O my lady,
+this thy letter will heal the sick and ease the thirsting soul."
+Then I took it and was going away, when she called me back and
+said to me, "Tell me that I will be his guest this night." At
+this I rejoiced greatly and carried the letter to Jubeir, whom I
+found with his eyes fixed on the door, expecting the reply. I
+gave him the letter and he opened and read it, then gave a great
+cry and fell down in a swoon. When he came to himself, he said to
+me, "O Ibn Mensour, did she indeed write this letter with her
+hand and touch it with her fingers?" "O my lord," answered I, "do
+folk write with their feet?" And by Allah, O Commander of the
+Faithful, I had not done speaking, when we heard the chink of her
+anklets in the vestibule and she entered.
+
+When he saw her, he sprang to his feet, as thou there ailed him
+nought, and embraced her as the letter Lam embraces Alif,[FN#34]
+and the malady, that would not depart, ceased from him. Then he
+sat down, but she abode standing and I said to her, "O my lady,
+why dost thou not sit?" Quoth she, "I will not sit, O Ibn
+Mensour, save on a condition that is between us." "And what is
+that?" asked I. "None may know lovers' secrets," answered she and
+putting her mouth to Jubeir's ear, whispered to him; whereupon,
+"I hear and obey," replied he and rising, said somewhat privily
+to one of his slaves, who went out and returned, in a little,
+with a Cadi and two witnesses. Then Jubeir rose and taking a bag
+containing a hundred thousand dinars, said, "O Cadi, marry me to
+this young lady and write this sum to her dowry." Quoth the Cadi
+to her, "Say, 'I consent to this.'" "I consent to this," said
+she, whereupon he drew up the contract of marriage, and she
+opened the bag and taking out a handful of gold, gave it to the
+Cadi and the witnesses and handed the rest to Jubeir.
+
+Then the Cadi and the witnesses withdrew, and I sat with them, in
+mirth and delight, till the most part of the night was past, when
+I said in myself, "These are lovers and have been this long while
+separated. I will go now and sleep in some place afar from them
+and leave them to be private, one with the other." So I rose, but
+she laid hold of my skirts, saying, "What thinkest thou to do?"
+"So and so," answered I. But she rejoined, "Sit still, when we
+would be rid of thee, we will send thee away." So I sat with them
+till near daybreak, when she said to me, "O Ibn Mensour, go to
+yonder chamber; for we have furnished it for thee, and it is thy
+sleeping-place." So I went thither and slept till morning, when a
+page brought me basin and ewer, and I made the ablution and
+prayed the morning-prayer. Then I sat down and presently, Jubeir
+and his mistress came out of the bath in the house, wringing
+their locks.
+
+I wished them good morning and gave them joy of their safety and
+reunion, saying to Jubeir, "That which began with constraint hath
+ended in contentment." "Thou sayst well," replied he; "and indeed
+thou deservest largesse." And he called his treasurer and bade
+him fetch three thousand dinars. So he brought a purse containing
+that sum, and Jubeir gave it to me, saying, "Favour us by
+accepting this." "I will not take it," answered I, "till thou
+tell me the manner of the transfer of love from her to thee,
+after so great an aversion." "I hear and obey," said he. "Know
+that we have a festival, called the festival of the New Year,
+when all the people use to take boat and go a-pleasuring on the
+river. So I went out, with my comrades, and saw a boat, wherein
+were half a score damsels like moons, and amongst them, the lady
+Budour, with her lute in her hand. She preluded in eleven modes,
+then returning to the first, sang the following verses:
+
+Fire is not so fierce and so hot as the fires in my heart that
+ glow, And granite itself is less hard than the heart of my
+ lord, I trow.
+Indeed, when I think on his make and his fashion, I marvel to see
+ A heart that is harder than rock in a body that's softer
+ than snow.
+
+Quoth I to her, 'Repeat the verses and the air.' But she would
+not; so I bade the boatmen pelt her with oranges, and they pelted
+her till we feared her boat would sink. Then she went her way,
+and this is how the love was transferred from her breast to
+mine." So I gave them joy of their reunion and taking the purse,
+with its contents, returned to Baghdad.
+
+When the Khalif heard Ibn Mensour's story, his heart was
+lightened and the restlessness and oppression from which he
+suffered forsook him.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE MAN OF YEMEN AND HIS SIX SLAVE-GIRLS
+
+
+
+The Khalif El-Mamoun was sitting one day in his palace,
+surrounded by his grandees and officers of state, and there were
+present also before him all his poets and minions, amongst the
+rest one named Mohammed of Bassora. Presently, the Khalif turned
+to the latter and said to him, 'O Mohammed, I wish thee to tell
+me something that I have never before heard.' 'O Commander of the
+Faithful,' answered Mohammed, 'shall I tell thee a thing that I
+have heard with my ears of a thing that I have seen with my
+eyes?' 'Tell me whichever is the rarer,' said El Mamoun.
+
+'Know then, O Commander of the Faithful,' began Mohammed, 'that
+there lived once a wealthy man, who was a native of Yemen; but he
+left his native land and came to this city of Baghdad, whose
+sojourn so pleased him that he transported hither his family and
+possessions. Now he had six slave-girls, the first fair, the
+second dark, the third fat, the fourth thin, the fifth yellow and
+the sixth black, all fair of face and perfectly accomplished and
+skilled in the arts of singing and playing upon instruments of
+music. One day he sent for them all and called for meat and
+drink; and they ate and drank and made merry. Then he filled the
+cup and taking it in his hand, said to the blonde, "O new-moon-
+face, let us hear somewhat pleasing." So she took the lute and
+tuning it, made music thereon with such melodious trills and
+modulations that the place danced to the rhythm; after which she
+played a lively measure and sang the following verses:
+
+I have a friend, whose form is mirrored in mine eye, And deep
+ within my breast, his name doth buried lie.
+Whenas I call him back to mind, I am all heart, And when on him I
+ gaze, all eyes indeed am I.
+"Forswear the love of him," my censor says; and I, "That which is
+ not to be, how shall it be?" reply.
+"Go forth from me," quoth I, "and leave me, censor mine: Feign
+ not that eath and light, that's grievous to aby."
+
+At this their master was moved to mirth and drinking off his cup,
+gave the damsels to drink, after which he said to the brunette,
+"O light of the brasier[FN#35] and delight of souls, let us hear
+thy lovely voice, wherewith all that hearken are ravished." So
+she took the lute and trilled upon it, till the place was moved
+to mirth; then, taking all hearts with her graceful bendings, she
+sang the following verses:
+
+As thy face liveth, none but thee I'll love nor cherish e'er,
+ Till death, nor ever to thy love will I be false, I swear.
+O full moon, shrouded, as it were a veil, with loveliness, All
+ lovely ones on earth that be beneath thy banners fare.
+Thou, that in pleasantness and grace excellest all the fair, May
+ God, the Lord of heaven and earth, be with thee everywhere!
+
+The man was pleased and drank off his cup; after which he filled
+again and taking the goblet in his hand, beckoned to the plump
+girl and bade her sing and play. So she took the lute and
+striking a grief-dispelling measure, sang as follows:
+
+If but thy consent be assured, O thou who art all my desire, Be
+ all the folk angered 'gainst me; I set not a whit by their
+ ire.
+And if thou but show me thy face, thy brilliant and beautiful
+ face, I reck not if all the kings of the earth from my
+ vision retire.
+Thy favour, O thou unto whom all beauty must needs be referred,
+ Of the goods and the sweets of the world is all that I seek
+ and require.
+
+The man was charmed and emptying his cup, gave the girls to
+drink. Then he beckoned to the slender girl and said to her, "O
+houri of Paradise, feed thou our ears with sweet sounds." So she
+took the lute and tuning it, preluded and sang the following
+verses:
+
+Is it not martyrdom that I for thine estrangement dree, Seeing,
+ indeed, I cannot live, if thou depart from me?
+Is there no judge, in Love its law, to judge betwixt us twain, to
+ do me justice on thy head and take my wreak of thee?
+
+Their lord rejoiced and emptying the cup, gave the girls to
+drink. Then he signed to the yellow girl and said to her, "O sun
+of the day, let us hear some pleasant verses." So she took the
+lute and preluding after the goodliest fashion, sang as follows:
+
+I have a lover, whenas I draw him nigh, He bares upon me a sword
+ from either eye.
+May God avenge me some whit of him! For lo, He doth oppress me,
+ whose heart in 's hand doth lie.
+Oft though, "Renounce him, my heart," I say, yet it Will to none
+ other than him itself apply.
+He's all I ask for, of all created things; Yet jealous Fortune
+ doth him to me deny.
+
+The man rejoiced and drank and gave the girls to drink; then he
+filled the cup and taking it in his hand, signed to the black
+girl, saying, "O apple of the eye, let us have a taste of thy
+fashion, though it be but two words." So she took the lute and
+preluded in various modes, then returned to the first and sang
+the following verses to a lively air:
+
+O eyes, be large with tears and pour them forth amain, For, lo,
+ for very love my senses fail and wane.
+All manner of desire I suffer for his sake I cherish, and my foes
+ make merry at my pain.
+My enviers me forbid the roses of a cheek; And yet I have a heart
+ that is to roses fain.
+Ay, once the cups went round with joyance and delight And to the
+ smitten lutes, the goblets did we drain,
+What time my love kept troth and I was mad for him And in faith's
+ heaven, the star of happiness did reign.
+But lo, he turned away from me, sans fault of mine! Is there a
+ bitterer thing than distance and disdain?
+Upon his cheeks there bloom a pair of roses red, Blown ready to
+ be plucked; ah God, those roses twain!
+Were't lawful to prostrate oneself to any else Than God, I'd sure
+ prostrate myself upon the swain.
+
+Then rose the six girls and kissing the ground before their lord,
+said to him, "Judge thou between us, O our lord!" He looked at
+their beauty and grace and the difference of their colours and
+praised God the Most High and glorified Him: then said he, "There
+is none of you but has read the Koran and learnt to sing and is
+versed in the chronicles of the ancients and the doings of past
+peoples; so it is my desire that each of you rise and pointing to
+her opposite, praise herself and dispraise her rival; that is to
+say, let the blonde point to the black, the plump to the slender
+and the yellow to the brunette; and after, the latter shall, each
+in turn, do the like with the former; and be this illustrated
+with citations from the Holy Koran and somewhat of anecdotes and
+verse, so as to show forth your culture and elegance of
+discourse." Quoth they, "We hear and obey."
+
+So the blonde rose first and pointing at the black, said to her,
+"Out on thee, blackamoor! It is told that whiteness saith, 'I am
+the shining light, I am the rising full moon.' My colour is
+patent and my forehead is resplendent, and of my beauty quoth the
+poet:
+
+A blonde with smooth and polished cheeks, right delicate and
+ fair, As if a pearl in beauty hid, as in a shell, she were.
+Her shape a splendid Alif[FN#36] is, her smile a medial
+ Mim[FN#37] And over it her eyebrows make inverted
+ Nouns,[FN#38] a pair.
+Yes, and the glances of her eyes are arrows, and her brows A bow
+ that therewithal is horned with death and with despair.
+If to her cheeks and shape thou pass, her cheeks are roses red,
+ Sweet basil, ay, and eglantine and myrtles rich and rare.
+'Tis of the saplings' wont, to be implanted in the meads But, in
+ the saplings of thy shape, how many meads are there!
+
+My colour is like the wholesome day and the newly-gathered
+orange-blossom and the sparkling star; and indeed quoth God the
+Most High, in His precious book, to His prophet Moses (on whom be
+peace), 'Put thy hand into thy bosom and it shall come forth
+white without hurt.'[FN#39] And again He saith, 'As for those
+whose faces are made white, they are in the mercy of God and
+dwell for ever therein.'[FN#40] My colour is a miracle and my
+grace an extreme and my beauty a term. It is in the like of me
+that clothes show fair and to the like of me that hearts incline.
+Moreover, in whiteness are many excellences; for instance, the
+snow falls white from heaven, and it is traditional that white is
+the most beautiful of colours. The Muslims also glory in white
+turbans; but I should be tedious, were I to repeat all that may
+be said in praise of white; little and enough is better than too
+much. So now I will begin with thy dispraise, O black, O colour
+of ink and blacksmith's dust, thou whose face is like the crow
+that brings about lovers' parting! Verily, the poet saith in
+praise of white and dispraise of black:
+
+Seest not that for their milky hue white pearls in price excel
+ And charcoal for a groat a load the folk do buy and sell?
+And eke white faces, 'tis well known, do enter Paradise, Whilst
+ faces black appointed are to fill the halls of Hell.
+
+And indeed it is told in certain histories, related on the
+authority of devout men, that Noah (on whom be peace) was
+sleeping one day, with his sons Ham and Shem seated at his head,
+when a wind sprang up and lifting his clothes, uncovered his
+nakedness; whereat Ham laughed and did not cover him; but Shem
+rose and covered him. Presently, Noah awoke and learning what had
+passed, blessed Shem and cursed Ham. So Shem's face was whitened
+and from him sprang the prophets and the orthodox Khalifs and
+Kings; whilst Ham's face was blackened and he fled forth to the
+land of Ethiopia, and of his lineage came the blacks. All people
+are of a mind in affirming the lack of understanding of the
+blacks, even as saith the adage, 'How shall one find a black
+having understanding?'"
+
+Quoth her master, "It sufficeth; sit down, thou hast been
+prodigal." And he signed to the negress, who rose, and pointing
+at the blonde, said, "Doth thou not know that, in the Koran sent
+down to His prophet and apostle, is transmitted the saying of God
+the Most High, 'By the night, when it veileth [the world with
+darkness], and by the day, when it appeareth in all its
+glory!'[FN#41] If the night were not more illustrious than the
+day, why should God swear by it and give it precedence of the
+day? And indeed those of sense and understanding accept this.
+Knowst now that black [hair] is the ornament of youth and that,
+when whiteness descends upon the head, delights pass away and the
+hour of death draws nigh? Were not black the most illustrious of
+things, God had not set it in the kernel of the heart and the
+apple of the eye; and how excellent is the saying of the poet:
+
+An if I cherish the dusky maids, this is the reason why; They
+ have the hue of the core of the heart and the apple of the
+ eye
+And youth; nor in error I eschew the whiteness of the blondes;
+ For 'tis the colour of hoary hair and shrouds in them shun
+ I.
+
+And that of another:
+
+The brown, not the white, are first in my love And worthiest
+ eke to be loved of me,
+For the colour of damask lips have they, Whilst the white have
+ the hue of leprosy.
+
+And of a third:
+
+Black women, white of deeds, are like indeed to eyne That, though
+ jet-black they be, with peerless splendours shine.
+If I go mad for her, be not amazed; for black The source of
+ madness is, when in the feminine.[FN#42]
+'Tis as my colour were the middle dark of night; For all no moon
+ it be, yet brings it light, in fine.
+
+Moreover, is the companying together of lovers good but in the
+night? Let this quality and excellence suffice thee. What
+protects lovers from spies and censors like the blackness of the
+shadows? And nought gives them cause to fear discovery like the
+whiteness of the dawn. So, how many claims to honour are there
+not in blackness and how excellent is the saying of the poet:
+
+I visit them, and the mirk of night doth help me to my will And
+ seconds me, but the white of dawn is hostile to me still.
+
+And that of another:
+
+How many a night in joy I've passed with the beloved one, What
+ while the darkness curtained us about with tresses dun!
+Whenas the light of morn appeared, it struck me with affright,
+ And I to him, 'The Magians lie, who worship fire and sun.'
+
+And saith a third:
+
+He came forth to visit me, shrouding himself in the cloak of the
+ night, And hastened his steps, as he wended, for caution and
+ fear and affright.
+Then rose I and laid in his pathway my cheek, as a carpet it
+ were, For abjection, and trailed o'er my traces my skirts,
+ to efface them from sight.
+But lo, the new moon rose and shone, like a nail-paring cleft
+ from the nail, And all but discovered our loves with the
+ gleam of her meddlesome light.
+And then there betided between us what I'll not discover, i'
+ faith: So question no more of the matter and deem not of ill
+ or unright.
+
+And a fourth:
+
+Foregather with thy lover, whilst night your loves may screen;
+ For that the sun's a telltale, the moon a go-between.
+
+And a fifth:
+
+I love not white women, with fat blown out and overlaid; The girl
+ of all girls for me is the slender dusky maid.
+Let others the elephant mount, if it like them; as for me, I'll
+ ride but the fine-trained colt on the day of the cavalcade.
+
+And a sixth:
+
+My loved one came to me by night And we did clip and interlace
+And lay together through the dark; But, lo, the morning broke
+ apace.
+To God, my Lord, I pray that He Will reunite us of His grace
+And make night last to me, what while I hold my love in my
+ embrace.
+
+Were I to set forth all the praise of blackness, I should be
+tedious; but little and enough is better than great plenty and
+too much. As for thee, O blonde, thy colour is that of leprosy
+and thine embrace is suffocation; and it is of report that frost
+and intense cold[FN#43] are in Hell for the torment of the
+wicked. Again, of black things is ink, wherewith is written the
+word of God; and were is not for black ambergris and black musk,
+there would be no perfumes to carry to kings. How many glories
+are there not in blackness and how well saith the poet:
+
+Dost thou not see that musk, indeed, is worth its weight in gold,
+ Whilst for a dirhem and no more a load of lime is sold?
+Black eyes cast arrows at men's hearts; but whiteness of the
+ eyes, In man, is judged of all to be unsightly to behold."
+
+"It sufficeth," said her master. "Sit down." So she sat down and
+he signed to the fat girl, who rose and pointing at the slim
+girl, uncovered her arms and legs and bared her stomach, showing
+its creases and the roundness of her navel. Then she donned a
+shift of fine stuff, that showed her whole body, and said,
+"Praised be God who created me, for that He beautified my face
+and made me fat and fair and likened me to branches laden with
+fruit and bestowed upon me abounding beauty and brightness; and
+praised be He no less, for that He hath given me the precedence
+and honoured me, when He speaks of me in His holy book! Quoth the
+Most High, 'And he brought a fat calf.'[FN#44] And indeed He hath
+made me like unto an orchard, full of peaches and pomegranates.
+Verily, the townsfolk long for fat birds and eat of them and love
+not lean birds; so do the sons of Adam desire fat meat and eat of
+it. How many precious attributes are there not in fatness, and
+how well saith the poet:
+
+Take leave of thy love, for the caravan, indeed, is on the
+ start. O man, canst thou bear to say farewell and thus
+ from her to part?
+'Tis as her going were, I trow, but to her neighbour's house,
+ The faultless gait of a fat fair maid, that never tires
+ the heart.
+
+Sawst thou ever one stop at a butcher's stall, but sought fat
+meat of him? The wise say, 'Pleasure is in three things, eating
+flesh and riding on flesh and the thrusting of flesh into
+flesh.' As for thee, O thin one, thy legs are like sparrow's
+legs or pokers, and thou art like a cruciform plank or a piece
+of poor meat; there is nought in thee to gladden the heart;
+even as saith of thee the poet:
+
+Now God forfend that aught enforce me take for bedfellow A
+ woman like a foot-rasp, wrapt in palm-fibres and tow!
+In every limb she has a horn, that butts me in my sleep, So
+ that at day-break, bruised and sore, I rise from her and
+ go."
+
+"It is enough," quoth her master. "Sit down." So she sat down
+and he signed to the slender girl, who rose, as she were a
+willow-wand or a bamboo-shoot or a plant of sweet basil, and
+said, "Praised be God who created me and beautified me and made
+my embraces the end of all desire and likened me to the branch,
+to which all hearts incline. If I rise, I rise lightly; if
+I sit, I sit with grace; I am nimble-witted at a jest and
+sweeter-souled than cheerfulness [itself]. Never heard I one
+describe his mistress, saying, 'My beloved is the bigness of an
+elephant or like a long wide mountain;' but rather, 'My lady
+hath a slender waist and a slim shape.'
+
+A little food contents me and a little water stays my thirst;
+my sport is nimble and my habit elegant; for I am sprightlier
+than the sparrow and lighter-footed than the starling. My
+favours are the desire of the longing and the delight of the
+seeker; for I am goodly of shape, sweet of smile and graceful
+as the willow-wand or the bamboo-cane of the basil-plant; nor
+is there any can compare with me in grace, even as saith one of
+me:
+
+Thy shape unto the sapling liken I And set my hope to win thee or
+ to die.
+Distraught, I follow thee, and sore afraid, Lest any look on thee
+ with evil eye.
+
+It is for the like of me that lovers run mad and that the longing
+are distracted. If my lover be minded to draw me to him, I am
+drawn to him, and if he would have me incline to him, I incline
+to him and not against him. But as for thee, O fat of body, thine
+eating is as that of an elephant, and neither much not little
+contents thee. When thou liest with a man, he hath no ease of
+thee, nor can he find a way to take his pleasure of thee; for the
+bigness of thy belly holds him off from clipping thee and the
+grossness of thy thighs hinders him from coming at thy kaze. What
+comeliness is there in thy grossness and what pleasantness or
+courtesy in thy coarse nature? Fat meat is fit for nought but
+slaughter, nor is there aught therein that calls for praise. If
+one joke with thee, thou art angry; if one sport with thee, thou
+art sulky; if thou sleep, thou snorest; if thou walk, thou
+pantest; if thou eat, thou art never satisfied. Thou art heavier
+than mountains and fouler than corruption and sin. Thou hast in
+thee nor movement nor blessing nor thinkest of aught but to eat
+and sleep. If thou make water, thou scatterest; if thou void,
+thou gruntest like a bursten wine-skin or a surly elephant. If
+thou go to the draught-house, thou needest one to wash out thy
+privy parts and pluck out the hairs; and this is the extreme of
+laziness and the sign of stupidity. In fine, there is no good
+thing in thee, and indeed the poet saith of thee:
+
+Heavy and swollen with fat, like a blown-out water-skin, With
+ thighs like the pillars of stone that buttress a mountain's
+ head,
+Lo, if she walk in the West, so cumbrous her corpulence is The
+ Eastern hemisphere hears the sound of her heavy tread."
+
+Quoth her master, "It is enough: sit down." So she sat down and
+he signed to the yellow girl, who rose to her feet and praised
+God and magnified His name, calling down peace and blessing on
+the best of His creatures;[FN#45] after which she pointed at the
+brunette and said to her, "I am praised in the Koran, and the
+Compassionate One hath described my colour and its excellence
+over all others in His manifest Book, where He saith, 'A yellow
+[heifer], pure yellow, whose colour rejoices the beholders.'
+[FN#46] Wherefore my colour is a portent and my grace an extreme
+and my beauty a term; for that my colour is the colour of a dinar
+and of the planets and moons and of apples. My fashion is the
+fashion of the fair, and the colour of saffron outvies all
+other colours; so my fashion is rare and my colour wonderful. I
+am soft of body, and of great price, comprising all attributes of
+beauty. My colour, in that which exists, is precious as virgin
+gold, and how many glorious qualities are there not in me! Of the
+like of me quoth the poet:
+
+Yellow she is, as is the sun that shineth in the sky, And like to
+ golden dinars, eke, to see, her beauties are.
+Nor with her brightness, anywise, can saffron hold compare, And
+ even the very moon herself her charms outvie by far.
+
+And now I will begin in thy dispraise, O brown of favour! Thy
+colour is that of the buffalo, and all souls shudder at thy
+sight. If thy colour be in aught, it is blamed; if it be in food,
+it is poisoned; for thy colour is that of flies and is a mark of
+ugliness in dogs. It is, among colours, one which strikes with
+amazement and is of the signs of mourning. Never heard I of brown
+gold or brown pearls or brown jewels. If thou enter the wardrobe,
+thy colour changes, and when thou comest out, thou addest a new
+ugliness to thine ugliness. Thou art neither black, that thou
+mayst be known, nor white, that thou mayst be described; and
+there is no good quality in thee, even as saith of thee the poet:
+
+As a complexion unto her, the hue of soot doth serve; Her mirky
+ colour is as dust on couriers' feet upcast.
+No sooner fall mine eyes on her, thou but a moment's space, Than
+ troubles and misgivings straight beset me thick and fast."
+
+"Enough," said her master. "Sit down." So she sat down and he
+signed to the brunette. Now she was endowed with grace and beauty
+and symmetry and perfection, delicate of body, with coal-back
+hair, slender shape, rosy, oval cheeks, liquid black eyes, fair
+face, eloquent tongue, slim waist and heavy buttocks. So she rose
+and said, "Praised be God who hath created me neither blameably
+fat nor lankily slender, neither white like leprosy nor yellow
+like colic nor black like coal, but hath made my colour to be
+beloved of men of wit; for all the poets praise brunettes in
+every tongue and exalt their colour over all others. Brown of
+hue, praiseworthy of qualities; and God bless him who saith:
+
+In the brunettes a meaning is, couldst read its writ aright,
+ Thine eyes would never again look on others, red or white.
+Free-flowing speech and amorous looks would teach Harout[FN#47]
+ himself The arts of sorcery and spells of magic and of
+ might.
+
+And saith another:
+
+Give me brunettes; the Syrian spears, so limber and so
+ straight, Tell of the slender dusky maids, so lithe and
+ proud of gait.
+Languid of eyelids, with a down like silk upon her cheek,
+ Within her wasting lover's heart she queens it still in
+ state.
+
+And yet another:
+
+Yea, by my life, such virtues in goodly brownness lie, One spot
+ thereof makes whiteness the shining moons outvie;
+But if the like of whiteness is borrowed, then, for sure, Its
+ beauty were transmuted unto reproach thereby.
+Not with her wine[FN#48] I'm drunken, but with her
+ tresses[FN#49] bright That make all creatures drunken that
+ dwell beneath the sky.
+Each of her charms doth envy the others; yea, and each To be
+ the down so silky upon her cheek doth sigh.
+
+And again:
+
+Why should I not incline me unto the silken down On the cheeks
+ of a dusky maiden, like the cane straight and brown,
+Seeing the spot of beauty in waterlilies' cups Is of the poets
+ fabled to be all beauty's crown?
+Yea, and I see all lovers the swarthy-coloured mole, Under the
+ ebon pupil, do honour and renown.
+Why, then, do censors blame me for loving one who's all A mole?
+ May Allah rid me of every railing clown!
+
+My form is beautiful and my shape slender; kings desire my colour
+and all love it, rich and poor. I am pleasant, nimble, handsome,
+elegant, soft of body and great of price. I am perfect in beauty
+and breeding and eloquence; my aspect is comely and my tongue
+fluent, my habit light and my sport graceful. As for thee,
+[O yellow girl,] thou art like unto a mallow of Bab el Louc,
+yellow and made all of sulphur. Perdition to thee, O pennyworth
+of sorrel, O rust of copper, O owl's face and food of the damned!
+Thy bedfellow, for oppression of spirit, is buried in the tombs,
+and there is no good thing in thee, even as saith the poet of the
+like of thee:
+
+Paleness[FN#50] is sore on her, for all no illness doth her
+ fret; My breast is straitened by its sight; ay, and my
+ head aches yet.
+If thou repent thee not, my soul, to punish thee, I vow, I'll
+ humble thee with a kiss of her face, my teeth on edge
+ shall set."
+
+"Enough," said her master; "sit down." Then he made peace
+between them and clad them all in sumptuous dresses of honour
+and handselled them with precious jewels of land and sea. And
+never, O Commander of the Faithful, in any place or time have I
+seen fairer than these six fair damsels.'
+
+When the Khalif El Mamoun heard this story from Mohammed of Bassora,
+he said to him, 'O Mohammed, knowest thou the abiding-place of
+these damsels and their master, and canst thou make shift to buy
+them of him for us?' 'O Commander of the Faithful,' answered he,
+'I have heard that their master is wrapped up in them and cannot
+endure to be parted from them.' 'Take threescore thousand dinars,
+--that is, ten thousand for each girl,--' rejoined the Khalif,
+'and go to his house and buy them of him.' So Mohammed took the
+money and betaking himself to the man of Yemen, acquainted him
+with the Khalif's wish. He consented to sell them at that price,
+to pleasure him, and despatched them to El Mamoun, who assigned
+them an elegant lodging and used to sit with them therein,
+marvelling at their beauty and grace, no less than at their varied
+colours and the excellence of their speech.
+
+After awhile, when their former owner could no longer endure separation
+from them, he sent a letter to the Khalif, complaining of his ardent
+love for them and containing, amongst the rest, the following verses:
+
+Six damsels fair and bright have captivated me; My blessing and
+ my peace the six fair maidens greet!
+My life, indeed, are they, my hearing and my sight, Yea, and my
+ very drink, my pleasance and my meat.
+No other love can bring me solace for their charms, And
+ slumber, after them, no more to me is sweet.
+Alas, my long regret, my weeping for their loss! Would I have
+ ne'er been born, to know this sore defeat!
+For eyes, bedecked and fair with brows like bended bows, Have
+ smitten me to death with arrows keen and fleet.
+
+When the letter came to El Mamoun's hands, he clad the six
+damsels in rich apparel and giving them threescore thousand
+dinars, sent them back to their master, who rejoiced in them
+with an exceeding joy,--more by token of the money they brought
+him,--and abode with them in all delight and pleasance of life,
+till there came to them the Destroyer of Delights and the
+Sunderer of Companies.
+
+
+
+
+
+ HAROUN ER RASHID AND THE DAMSEL AND
+ ABOU NUWAS.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid, being one night exceeding restless
+and oppressed with melancholy thought, went out and walked
+about his palace, till he came to a chamber, over whose doorway
+hung a curtain. He raised the curtain and saw, at the upper end
+of the room, a bed, on which lay something black, as it were a
+man asleep, with a candle on his right hand and another on his
+left and by his side a flagon of old wine, over against which
+stood the cup. The Khalif wondered at this, saying, 'How came
+yonder black by this wine-service?' Then, drawing near the bed,
+he found that it was a girl asleep there, veiled with her hair,
+and uncovering her face, saw that it was like the moon on the
+night of her full. So he filled a cup of wine and drank it to
+the roses of her cheeks; then bent over her and kissed a mole
+on her face, whereupon she awoke and cried out, saying, 'O
+Trusty One of God,[FN#51], what is to do?' 'A guest who knocks
+at thy dwelling by night,' replied the Khalif, '[hoping] that
+thou wilt give him hospitality till the dawn.' 'It is well,'
+answered she; 'I will grace the guest with my hearing and my
+sight.'
+
+So she brought the wine and they drank it together; after which
+she took the lute and tuning it, preluded in one-and-twenty
+modes, then returning to the first, struck a lively measure and
+sang the following verses:
+
+The tongue of passion in my heart bespeaks thee for my soul,
+ Telling I love thee with a love that nothing can control.
+I have an eye, that testifies unto my sore disease, And eke a
+ heart with parting wrung, a-throb for love and dole.
+Indeed, I cannot hide the love that frets my life away; Longing
+ increases still on me, my tears for ever roll.
+Ah me, before the love of thee, I knew not what love was; But
+ God's decree must have its course on every living soul.
+
+Then said she, 'O Commander of the Faithful, I am a wronged
+woman.' 'How so?' quoth he, 'and who hath wronged thee?' She
+answered, 'Thy son bought me awhile ago, for ten thousand
+dirhems, meaning to give me to thee; but the daughter of thine
+uncle[FN#52] sent him the price aforesaid and bade him shut me
+up from thee in this chamber.' Whereupon, 'Ask a boon of me,'
+said the Khalif; and she, 'I ask thee to lie to-morrow night
+with me.' 'If it be the will of God,' replied the Khalif, and
+leaving her, went away.
+
+Next morning, he repaired to his sitting-room and called for
+Abou Nuwas, but found him not and sent his chamberlain to seek
+for him. The chamberlain found him in pawn, in a tavern, for a
+score of a thousand dirhems, that he had spent on a certain
+boy, and questioned him. So he told him what had befallen him
+with the boy and how he had spent a thousand dirhems upon him;
+whereupon quoth the chamberlain, 'Show him to me; and if he be
+worth this, thou art excused.' 'Wait awhile,' replied the poet,
+'and thou shalt see him presently.' As they were talking, up
+came the boy, clad in a white tunic, under which was another of
+red and yet another of black. When Abou Nuwas saw him, he
+sighed and repeated the following verses:
+
+To me he appeared in a garment of white, His eyes and his
+ eyelids with languor bedight.
+Quoth I, "Dost thou pass and salutest me not? Though God knows
+ thy greeting were sweet to my spright.
+Be He blessed who mantled with roses thy cheeks, Who creates,
+ without let, what He will, of His might!"
+"Leave prating," he answered; "for surely my Lord Is wondrous
+ of working, sans flaw or dissight.
+Yea, truly, my garment is even as my face And my fortune, each
+ white upon white upon white."
+
+When the boy heard this, he put off the white tunic and
+appeared in the red one; whereupon Abou Nuwas redoubled in
+expressions of admiration and repeated the following verses:
+
+Appeared in a garment, the colour of flame, A foeman of mine,
+ "The beloved," by name.
+"Thou'rt a full moon," I said in my wonder, "And com'st In a
+ garment that putteth the roses to shame.
+Hath the red of thy cheek clad that vest upon thee Or in
+ heart's blood of lovers hast tinctured the same?"
+Quoth he, "'Twas the sun lately gave me the wede; From the
+ rubicund hue of his setting it came.
+So my garment and wine and the colour so clear Of my cheek are
+ as flame upon flame upon flame."
+
+Then the boy doffed the red tunic and abode in the black;
+whereupon Abou Nuwas redoubled in attention to him and repeated
+the following verses:
+
+He came in a tunic all sable of hue And shone out, thus veiled
+ in the dark, to men's view.
+"Thou passest," quoth I, "without greeting, and thus Givest
+ cause to exult to the rancorous crew.
+Thy garment resembles thy locks and my lot, Yea, blackness and
+ blackness and blackness thereto."
+
+Then the chamberlain returned to Haroun er Reshid and
+acquainted him with the poet's predicament, whereupon he bade
+him take a thousand dirhems and go and take him out of pawn. So
+he returned to Abou Nuwas and paying his score, carried him to
+the Khalif, who said, 'Make me some verses containing the
+words, "O Trusty One of God, what is to do?"' 'I hear and obey,
+O Commander of the Faithful,' answered he and improvised the
+following verses:
+
+My night was long for sleeplessness and care. Weary I was and
+ many my thoughts were.
+I rose and walked awhile in my own place, Then midst the
+ harem's cloistered courts did fare,
+Until I chanced on somewhat black and found It was a damsel
+ shrouded in her hair.
+God bless her for a shining moon! Her shape A willow-wand, and
+ pudour veiled the fair.
+I quaffed a cup to her; then, drawing near, I kissed the mole
+ upon her cheek so rare.
+She woke and swayed about in her amaze, Even as the branch
+ sways in the rain-fraught air;
+Then rose and said, "O Trusty One of God, What is to do, and
+ thou, what dost thou there?"
+"A guest", quoth I, "that sues to thee, by night, For shelter
+ till the hour of morning-prayer."
+"Gladly," she said; "with hearing and with sight To grace the
+ guest, my lord, I will not spare."
+
+'Confound thee!' cried the Khalif. 'It is as if thou hadst been
+present with us.' Then he took him by the hand and carried him
+to the damsel, who was clad in a dress and veil of blue. When
+Abou Nuwas saw her, he was profuse in expressions of admiration
+and recited the following verses:
+
+Say to the lovely maid, i' the veil of azure dight, "By Allah,
+ O my life, have pity on my plight!
+For when the fair entreats her lover cruelly, Sighs of all
+ longing rend his bosom day and night.
+So, by thy charms and by the whiteness of thy cheek, Have ruth
+ upon a heart for love consumed outright.
+Incline to him and be his stay 'gainst stress of love, Nor let
+ what fools may say find favour in thy sight."
+
+Then the damsel set wine before the Khalif and taking the lute,
+played a lively measure and sang the following verses:
+
+Wilt thou be just in thy love to others and deal with me
+ Unjustly and put me away, while others have joy in thee?
+Were there for lovers a judge, to whom I might complain Of
+ thee, he would do me justice and judge with equity.
+If thou forbid me to pass thy door, yet from afar To greet thee
+ and to bless, at least, I shall be free.
+
+The Khalif bade her ply Abou Nuwas with wine, till he lost his
+wits; when he gave him a full cup, and he drank a draught of it
+and held the cup in his hand. Er Reshid bade the girl take the
+cup from him and conceal it; so she took it and hid it between
+her thighs. Then he drew his sword and standing at the poet's
+head, pricked him with the point; whereupon he awoke and saw
+the Khalif standing over him, with a drawn sword. At this sight
+the fumes of the wine fled from his head and the Khalif said to
+him, 'Make me some verses and tell me therein what is come of
+thy cup; or I will cut off thy head.' So he improvised the
+following verses:
+
+My tale, indeed is hard to tell: The thief was none but yon
+ gazelle.
+She stole my cup of wine, whereof My lips had drunken but one
+ spell,
+And hid it in a place, for which My heart's desire's
+ unspeakable.
+I name it not, for awe of him, In whom the right thereof doth
+ dwell.
+
+'Confound thee!' quoth the Khalif. 'How knewst thou that? But
+we accept what thou sayst.' Then he ordered him a dress of
+honour and a thousand dinars, and he went away, rejoicing.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE MAN WHO STOLE THE DISH OF GOLD IN
+ WHICH THE DOG ATE.
+
+
+
+There was once a man, who was overborne with debt, and his case
+was straitened upon him, so that he left his people and family
+and went forth in distraction. He wandered on at random till he
+came to a high-walled and splendidly built city and entered it
+in a state of wretchedness and despair, gnawed with hunger and
+worn with the toil of his journey. As he passed through one of
+the streets, he saw a company of notables going along; so he
+followed them, till they entered a house like to a royal
+palace. He entered with them, and they stayed not till they
+came in presence of a man of the most dignified and majestic
+aspect, seated at the upper end of a saloon and surrounded by
+pages and servants, as he were of the sons of the Viziers. When
+he saw the visitors, he rose and received them with honour; but
+the poor man was confounded at the goodliness of the place and
+the crowd of servants and attendants and drawing back, in fear
+and perplexity, sat down apart in a place afar off, where none
+should see him.
+
+After awhile, in came a man with four hunting-dogs, clad in
+various kinds of silk and brocade and having on their necks
+collars of gold with chains of silver, and tied up each dog in a
+place set apart for him; after which he went out and presently
+returned with four dishes of gold, full of rich meats, one of
+which he set before each dog. Then he went away and left them,
+whilst the poor man began to eye the food, for stress of hunger,
+and would fain have gone up to one of the dogs and eaten with
+him; but fear of them withheld him. Presently, one of the
+dogs looked at him and God the Most High inspired him with a
+knowledge of his case; so he drew back from the platter and
+beckoned to the man, who came and ate, till he was satisfied.
+Then he would have withdrawn, but the dog pushed the dish
+towards him with his paw, signing to him to take it and what
+was left in it for himself. So the man took the dish and
+leaving the house, went his way, and none followed him. Then
+he journeyed to another city, where he sold the dish and buying
+goods with the price, returned to his own town. There he sold
+his stock and paid his debts; and he prospered and became rich
+and at his ease.
+
+After some years had passed, he said to himself, 'Needs must I
+repair to the city of the owner of the dish, which the dog
+bestowed on me, and carry him its price, together with a fit
+and handsome present.' So he took the price of the dish and a
+suitable present and setting out, journeyed night and day, till
+he came to the city and entering, went straight to the place
+where the man's house had been; but lo, he found there nothing
+but mouldering ruins and dwelling-places laid waste, over which
+the raven croaked; for the place was desert and the environs
+changed out of knowledge. At this, his heart and soul were
+troubled and he repeated the words of him who saith:
+
+The privy chambers are void of all their hidden store, As
+ hearts of the fear of God and the virtues all of yore.
+Changed is the vale and strange to me are its gazelles, And
+ those I knew of old its sandhills are no more.
+
+And those of another:
+
+The phantom of Saada came to me by night, near the break of
+ day, And roused me, whenas my comrades all in the desert
+ sleeping lay.
+But, when I awoke to the dream of the night, that came to visit
+ me, I found the air void and the wonted place of our
+ rendezvous far away.
+
+When he saw what the hand of time had manifestly done with the
+place, leaving but traces of the things that had been aforetime,
+the testimony of his eyes made it needless for him to enquire
+of the case; so he turned away and seeing a wretched man, in
+a plight that made the skin quake and would have moved the
+very rock to pity, said to him, 'Harkye, sirrah! What have
+time and fortune done with the master of this place? Where are
+his shining full moons[FN#53] and splendid stars;[FN#54] and
+what is the cause of the ruin that is come upon his abode, so
+that but the walls thereof remain?' Quoth the other, 'He is the
+miserable wretch thou seest bewailing that which hath befallen
+him. Knowest thou not the words of the Prophet (whom God bless
+and preserve), wherein is a lesson to him who will profit by it
+and an admonition to whoso will be guided thereby in the right
+way? "Verily it is the way of God the Most High to raise up
+nothing of this world, except He cast it down again." If thou
+enquire of the cause of this thing, indeed, it is no wonder,
+considering the vicissitudes of fortune. I was the master of
+this place and its builder and founder and owner and lord of
+its shining full moons and radiant damsels and of all its
+splendid circumstance an magnificent garniture; but Fortune
+turned and did away from me wealth and servants, overwhelming
+me unawares with disasters unforeseen and bringing me to this
+sorry plight. But there must needs be some reason for this thy
+question: tell it me and leave wondering.'
+
+So the other told him the whole story, sore concerned at what
+he heard and saw, and added, 'I have brought thee a present
+such as souls desire, and the price of thy dish of gold, that I
+took; for it was the cause of my becoming rich, after poverty,
+and of the reinstating of my dwelling-place, after desolation,
+and of the doing away of my trouble and straitness from me.'
+But the poor man shook his head, groaning and weeping and
+lamenting, and answered, 'O man, methinks thou art mad; for
+this is not the fashion of a man of understanding. How should a
+dog of mine make gift to thee of a dish of gold and I receive
+back its price? This were indeed a strange thing! By Allah,
+were I in the straitest misery and unease, I would not accept
+of thee aught, no, not the worth of a nail-paring! So return
+whence thou camest, in health and safety.'
+
+The merchant kissed his feet and taking leave of him, returned
+whence he came, praising him and reciting the following verse:
+
+The men and eke the dogs are gone and vanished all. Peace be
+ upon the men and dogs, whate'er befall!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE SHARPER OF ALEXANDRIA AND THE
+ MASTER OF POLICE.
+
+
+
+There was once, in the coast-fortress of Alexandria, a Master
+of Police, Husameddin by name, who was one night sitting in his
+seat of office, when there came in to him a trooper, who said
+to him, 'Know, O my lord, that I entered the city this night
+and alighted at such a khan and slept there, till a third part
+of the night was past, when I awoke and found my saddle-bags
+cut open and a purse of a thousand dinars stolen from them.' No
+sooner had he done speaking than the magistrate called his
+officers and bade them lay hands on all in the khan and clap
+them in prison till the morning; and on the morrow, he caused
+bring the instruments of torment and sending for the prisoners,
+was about to torture them, [to make them confess], in the
+presence of the owner of the stolen money, when, behold, a man
+pressed through the crowd and coming up to the chief of the
+police, said, 'O Amir, let these folk go, for they are wrongly
+accused. It was I who robbed the trooper, and here is the purse
+I stole from his saddle-bags.' So saying, he pulled out the
+purse from his sleeve and laid it before Husameddin, who said
+to the soldier, 'Take thy money; thou hast no ground of
+complaint now against the people of the khan.' Thereupon the
+latter and all who were present fell to blessing the thief and
+praising him; but he said, 'O Amir, the skill is not in that I
+came to thee and brought thee the purse, but in taking it a
+second time from the trooper.' 'And how didst thou take it, O
+sharper?' asked Husameddin.
+
+'O Amir,' replied the thief, 'I was standing in the
+money-changers' bazaar at Cairo, when I saw yonder man receive
+the gold and put it in his purse; so I followed him from street
+to street, but found no occasion of stealing it from him. Then
+he left Cairo and I followed him from place to place, casting
+about by the way to rob him, but without avail, till he entered
+this city and I followed him to the khan. I took up my lodging
+beside him and watched him till he fell asleep and I heard him
+snoring, when I went softly up to him and cutting open his
+saddlebags with this knife, took the purse thus--'
+
+So saying, he put out his hand and took the purse from before
+the chief of the police, whilst the latter and the trooper and
+the folk drew back, watching him and thinking he would show them
+how he took the purse from the saddle-bags; but, of a sudden,
+he broke into a run and threw himself into a reservoir hard by.
+The chief of the police called to his officers to pursue him,
+but before they could put off their clothes and descend the
+steps, he had made off; and they sought for him, but found him
+not; for the streets of Alexandria all communicate one with
+another. So they came back, empty-handed, and the chief of the
+police said to the trooper, 'Thou hast no recourse against the
+folk; for thou foundest him who robbed thee and receivedst back
+thy money, but didst not keep it.' So the trooper went away,
+having lost his money, whilst the folk were delivered from his
+hands and those of the chief of the police; and all this was of
+the favour of God the Most High.
+
+
+
+
+
+ EL MELIK EN NASIR AND THE THREE MASTERS
+ OF POLICE.
+
+
+
+El Melik en Nasir[FN#55] once sent for the chiefs of the police
+of New Cairo, Boulac and Old Cairo and said to them, 'I wish
+each of you to tell me the most remarkable thing that hath
+befallen him during his term of office.' 'We hear and obey,'
+answered they. Then said the chief of the police of New Cairo,
+'O our lord the Sultan, the most remarkable thing that befell
+me, during my term of office, was on this wise:
+
+
+
+
+
+Story of the Chief of the Police of New Cairo.
+
+
+
+There were once, in this city, two men apt to bear witness in
+matters of blood and wounds; but they were both given to wine
+and women and debauchery; nor, do what I would, could I succeed
+in bringing them to account. So I charged the vintners and
+confectioners and fruiterers and chandlers and bagnio-keepers
+to acquaint me of these two, when ever they should anywhere be
+engaged in drinking or debauchery, whether together or apart,
+and that, if they or either of them bought of them aught for
+the purpose of carousal, they should not conceal it from me.
+And they replied, "We hear and obey."
+
+One night, a man came to me and said, "O my lord, know that the
+two witnesses are in such a house in such a street, engaged
+in sore wickedness." So I disguised myself and went out,
+accompanied by none but my page, to the street in question.
+When I came to the house, I knocked at the door, whereupon a
+slave-girl came out and opened to me, saying, "Who art thou?" I
+made her no answer, but entered and saw the two witnesses and
+the master of the house sitting, and lewd women with them, and
+great plenty of wine before them. When they saw me, they rose to
+receive me, without showing the least alarm, and made much of me,
+seating me in the place of honour and saying to me, "Welcome for
+an illustrious guest and a pleasant cup-companion!"
+
+Presently, the master of the house went out and returning after
+awhile with three hundred dinars, said to me, without the least
+fear, "O my lord, it is, we know, in thy power both to disgrace
+and punish us; but this will bring thee nothing but weariness.
+So thou wouldst do better to take this money and protect us;
+for God the Most High is named the Protector and loveth those
+of His servants who protect each other; and thou shalt have thy
+reward in the world to come." The money tempted me and I said
+in myself, "I will take the money and protect them this once;
+but, if ever again I have them in my power, I will take my
+wreak of them."
+
+So I took the money and went away; but, next day, one of the
+Cadi's serjeants came to me and cited me before the court. I
+accompanied him thither, knowing not the meaning of the
+summons; and when I came into the Cadi's presence, I saw the
+two witnesses and the master of the house sitting by him. The
+latter rose and sued me for three hundred dinars, nor was it in
+my power to deny the debt; for he produced a written obligation
+and the two others testified against me that I owed the amount.
+
+Their evidence satisfied the Cadi and he ordered me to pay the
+money; nor did I leave the Court till they had of me the three
+hundred dinars. So I went away, in the utmost wrath and
+confusion, vowing vengeance against them and repenting that I
+had not punished them.'
+
+Then rose the chief of the Boulac police and said, 'As for me,
+O our lord the Sultan, the most remarkable thing that befell
+me, during my term of office, was as follows:
+
+
+
+
+
+Story of the Chief of the Boulac Police.
+
+
+
+I was once in debt to the amount of three hundred thousand
+dinars, and being distressed thereby, I sold what was behind me
+and what was before me and all I could lay my hands on, but
+could raise no more than a hundred thousand dinars and abode in
+great perplexity. One night, as I sat at home, in this state of
+mind, there came a knocking at the gate; so I said to one of my
+servants, "See who is at the door." He went out and returned,
+pale and trembling in every nerve; so I said to him, "What ails
+thee?" "There is a man at the door, seeking thee," answered he.
+"He is half naked, clad in skins, with a sword and a knife in
+his girdle, and with him are a company of the same fashion." So
+I took my sword and going out to see who these were, found them
+as the boy had reported and said to them, "What is your
+business?" "We are thieves," answered they, "and have made
+great purchase to-night and appointed it to thy use, that thou
+mayst pay therewith the debts that oppress thee and free
+thyself from thy distress." "Where is it?" asked I; and they
+brought me a great chest, full of vessels of gold and silver;
+which when I saw, I rejoiced and said in myself, "It were
+ungenerous to let them go away empty-handed."
+
+So I took the hundred thousand dinars I had by me and gave it
+to them, thanking them; and they took it and went their way,
+under cover of the night. But, on the morrow, when I examined
+the contents of the chest, I found them gilded brass and
+pewter, worth five hundred dirhems at the most; and this was
+grievous to me, for I had lost what money I had, and trouble
+was added to my trouble.'
+
+Then rose the chief of the police of Old Cairo and said, 'O our
+lord the Sultan, the most remarkable thing that befell me,
+during my term of office, was on this wise:
+
+
+
+
+
+Story of the Chief of the Old Cairo Police
+
+
+
+I once had ten thieves hanged, each on his own gibbet, and set
+guards to watch them and hinder the folk from taking them down.
+Next morning, when I came to look at them, I found two bodies
+hanging from one gibbet and said to the guards, "Who did this,
+and where is the tenth gibbet?" But they denied all knowledge
+of it, and I was about to beat them, when they said, "Know, O
+Amir, that we fell asleep last night, and when we awoke, we
+found one of the bodies gone, gibbet and all, whereat we were
+alarmed, fearing thy wrath. But, presently, up came a peasant,
+jogging along on his ass; so we laid hands on him and killing
+him, hung his body upon this gibbet, in the stead of the
+missing thief."
+
+When I heard this, I marvelled and said to them, "Had he aught
+with him?" "He had a pair of saddle-bags on the ass," answered
+they. "What was in them?" asked I and they said, "We know not."
+Quoth I, "Bring them hither." So they brought them to me and I
+bade open them, when, behold, therein was the body of a
+murdered man, cut in pieces. When I saw this, I marvelled and
+said in myself, "Glory be to God! The cause of the hanging of
+this peasant was no other but his crime against this murdered
+man; and the Lord is no unjust dealer with [His] servants."'
+[FN#56]
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE THIEF AND THE MONEY-CHANGER
+
+
+
+A money-changer, bearing a bag of money, once passed by a
+company of thieves, and one of the latter said to the others,
+'I know how to steal yonder bag of money.' 'How wilt thou do
+it?' asked they. 'Look,' answered he and followed the money-
+changer, till he entered his house, when he threw the bag on a
+shelf and went into the draught-house, to do an occasion,
+calling to the slave-girl to bring him an ewer of water. So she
+took the jug and followed him to the draught-house, leaving the
+door open, whereupon the thief entered and taking the bag of
+money, made off with it to his companions, to whom he related
+what had passed. 'By Allah,' said they, 'this was a clever
+trick! It is not every one could do it: but, presently, the
+money-changer will come out of the draught-house and missing
+the bag of money, will beat the slave-girl and torture her
+grievously. Meseems thou hast at present done nothing worthy of
+praise; but, if thou be indeed a sharper, thou wilt return and
+save the girl from being beaten.' 'If it be the will of God,'
+answered the thief, 'I will save both the girl and the purse.'
+
+Then he went back to the money-changer's house and found him
+beating the girl, because of the bag of money; so he knocked at
+the door and the man said, 'Who is there? Quoth the thief, 'I
+am the servant of thy neighbour in the bazaar.' So he came out
+to him and said, 'What is thy business?' 'My master salutes
+thee,' replied the thief, 'and says to thee, "Surely, thou art
+mad to cast the like of this bag of money down at the door of
+thy shop and go away and leave it! Had a stranger chanced on
+it, he had made off with it." And except my master had seen it
+and taken care of it, it had been lost to thee.' So saying, he
+pulled out the purse and showed it to the money-changer, who
+said, 'That is indeed my purse,' and put out his hand to take
+it; but the thief said, 'By Allah, I will not give it thee,
+till thou write me a receipt; for I fear my master will not
+believe that thou hast duly received the purse, except I bring
+him a writing to that effect, under thy hand and seal.' So the
+money-changer went in to write the receipt; but, in the
+meantime, the thief made off with the bag of money, having
+[thus] saved the slave-girl her beating.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE CHIEF OF THE COUS POLICE AND THE
+ SHARPER
+
+
+
+It is related that Alaeddin, chief of the police of
+Cous[FN#57], was sitting one night in his house, when a man of
+comely aspect and dignified port, followed by a servant bearing
+a chest upon his head, came to the door and said to one of the
+young men, 'Go in and tell the Amir that I would speak with him
+privily.' So the servant went in and told his master, who bade
+admit the visitor. When he entered the Amir saw him to be a man
+of good appearance and carriage; so he received him with
+honour, seating him beside himself, and said to him, 'What is
+thy business?' 'I am a highwayman,' replied the stranger, 'and
+am minded to repent at thy hands and turn to God the Most High
+but I would have thee help me to this, for that I am in thy
+district and under thine eye. I have here a chest, wherein is
+that which is worth nigh forty thousand dinars; and none hath
+so good a right to it as thou; so do thou take it and give me
+in exchange a thousand dinars of thy money, lawfully gotten,
+that I may have a little capital, to aid me in my repentance,
+and not be forced to resort to sin for subsistence; and with
+God the Most High be thy reward!' So saying he opened the chest
+and showed the Amir that it was full of trinkets and jewels and
+bullion and pearls, whereat he was amazed and rejoiced greatly.
+Then he cried out to his treasurer, to bring him a purse of a
+thousand dinars, and gave it to the highwayman, who thanked him
+and went his way, under cover of the night.
+
+On the morrow, the Amir sent for the chief of the goldsmiths and
+showed him the chest and what was therein; but the goldsmith
+found it nothing but pewter and brass and the jewels and pearls
+all of glass; at which Alaeddin was sore chagrined and sent in
+quest of the highwayman; but none could come at him.
+
+
+
+
+
+ IBRAHIM BEN EL MEHDI AND THE MERCHANT'S
+ SISTER.
+
+
+
+The Khalif El Mamoun once said to [his uncle] Ibrahim ben el
+Mehdi, 'Tell us the most remarkable thing that thou hast ever
+seen.' 'I hear and obey, O Commander of the Faithful,' answered
+he. 'Know that I went out one day, a-pleasuring, and my course
+brought me to a place where I smelt the odour of food. My soul
+longed for it and I halted, perplexed and unable either to go
+on or enter. Presently, I raised my eyes and saw a lattice
+window and behind it a hand and wrist, the like of which for
+beauty I never saw. The sight turned my brain and I forgot the
+smell of the food and began to cast about how I should get
+access to the house. After awhile, I espied a tailor hard by
+and going up to him, saluted him. He returned my greeting and I
+said to him, "Whose house is that?" "It belongs to a merchant
+called such an one," answered he, "who consorteth with none but
+merchants."
+
+As we were talking, up came two men of comely and intelligent
+aspect, riding on horseback; and the tailor told me their names
+and that they were the merchant's most intimate friends. So I
+spurred my horse towards them and said to them, "May I be your
+ransom! Abou such an one[FN#58] waits for you!" And I rode with
+them to the gate, where I entered and they also. When the
+master of the house saw me, he doubted not but I was their
+friend; so he welcomed me and made me sit down in the highest
+room. Then they brought the table of food and I said, "God hath
+granted me my desire of the food; and now there remain the hand
+and wrist." After awhile, we removed, for carousal, to another
+room, which I found full of all manner of rarities; and the
+host paid me particular attention, addressing his conversation
+to me, for that he deemed me a guest of his guests; whilst the
+latter, in like manner, made much of me, taking me for a friend
+of the master of the house.
+
+When we had drunk several cups of wine, there came in to us a
+damsel of the utmost beauty and elegance, as she were a
+willow-wand, who took a lute and playing a lively measure, sang
+the following verses:
+
+Is it not passing strange, indeed, one house should hold us
+ tway And still thou drawst not near to me nor yet a word
+ dost say,
+Except the secrets of the souls and hearts that broken be And
+ entrails blazing in the fires of love, the eye bewray
+With meaning looks and knitted brows and eyelids languishing
+ And hands that salutation sign and greeting thus convey?
+
+When I heard this, my entrails were stirred and I was moved to
+delight, for the excess of her grace and the beauty of the
+verses she sang; and I envied her her skill and said, "There
+lacketh somewhat to thee, O damsel!" Whereupon she threw the
+lute from her hand, in anger, and cried, "Since when do you use
+to bring ill-mannered fools into your assemblies?" Then I
+repented of what I had done, seeing that the others were vexed
+with me, and said in myself, "My hopes are at an end;" and I
+saw no way of quitting myself of reproach but to call for a
+lute, saying, "I will show you what escaped her in the air she
+sang." So they brought me a lute and I tuned it and sang the
+following verses:
+
+This is thy lover distraught, absorbed in his passion and pain;
+ Thy lover, the tears of whose eyes run down on his body
+ like rain.
+One hand to his heart ever pressed, whilst the other the
+ Merciful One Imploreth, so He of His grace may grant him
+ his hope to attain.
+O thou, that beholdest a youth for passion that's perished,
+ thine eye And thy hand are the cause of his death and yet
+ might restore him again.
+
+When the damsel heard this, she sprang up and throwing herself
+at my feet, kissed them and said, "It is thine to excuse, O my
+lord! By Allah, I knew not thy quality nor heard I ever the
+like of this fashion!" And they all extolled me and made much
+of me, being beyond measure delighted, and besought me to sing
+again. So I sang a lively air, whereupon they all became as
+drunken men, and their wits left them. Then the guests departed
+to their homes and I abode alone with the host and the girl.
+The former drank some cups with me, then said to me, "O my
+lord, my life hath been wasted, in that I have not known the
+like of thee till now. By Allah, then, tell me who thou art,
+that I may know who is the boon-companion whom God hath
+bestowed on me this night."
+
+I would not at first tell him my name and returned him evasive
+answers; but he conjured me, till I told him who I was;
+whereupon he sprang to his feet and said, "Indeed, I wondered
+that such excellence should belong to any but the like of thee;
+and Fortune hath done me a service for which I cannot avail to
+thank her. But, belike, this is a dream; for how could I hope
+that the family of the Khalifate should visit me in my own
+house and carouse with me this night?" I conjured him to be
+seated; so he sat down and began to question me, in the most
+courteous terms, as to the cause of my visit. So I told him the
+whole matter, concealing nothing, and said to him, "Verily, I
+have had my desire of the food, but not of the hand and wrist."
+Quoth he, "Thou shalt have thy desire of them also, so God
+will." Then said he to the slave-girl, "Bid such an one come
+down." And he called his slave-girls down, one by one and
+showed them to me; but I saw not my mistress among them, and he
+said, "O my lord, there is none left save my mother and sister;
+but, by Allah, I must needs have them also down and show them
+to thee."
+
+I marvelled at his courtesy and large-heartedness and said,
+"May I be thy ransom! Begin with thy sister." "Willingly,"
+replied he. So she came down and behold, it was she whose hand
+and wrist I had seen. "May God make me thy ransom!" said I.
+"This is the damsel whose hand and wrist I saw at the lattice."
+Then he sent at once for witnesses and bringing out two myriads
+of dinars, said to the witnesses, "This our lord Ibrahim ben el
+Mehdi, uncle of the Commander of the Faithful, seeks the hand
+of my sister such an one, and I call you to witness that I
+marry her to him and that he has endowed her with a dowry of
+ten thousand dinars." And he said to me, "I give thee my sister
+in marriage, at the dowry aforesaid." "I consent," answered I.
+Whereupon he gave one of the bags to her and the other to the
+witnesses, and said to me, "O my lord, I desire to array a
+chamber for thee; where thou mayst lie with thy wife." But I
+was abashed at his generosity and was ashamed to foregather
+with her in his house; so I said, "Equip her and send her to my
+house." And by thy life, O Commander of the Faithful, he sent
+me such an equipage with her, that my house was too strait to
+hold it, for all its greatness! And I begot on her this boy
+that stands before thee.'
+
+The Khalif marvelled at the merchant's generosity and said,
+'Gifted of God is he! Never heard I of his like.' And he bade
+Ibrahim bring him to court, that he might see him. So he
+brought him and the Khalif conversed with him; and his wit and
+good breeding so pleased him, that he made him one of his chief
+officers.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE WOMAN WHOSE HANDS WERE CUT OFF FOR
+ THAT SHE GAVE ALMS TO THE POOR.
+
+
+
+A certain King once made proclamation to the people of his
+realm, saying, 'If any of you give alms of aught, I will
+assuredly cut off his hand;' wherefore all the people abstained
+from alms-giving, and none could give to any.
+
+One day a beggar accosted a certain woman (and indeed hunger
+was sore upon him) and said to her, 'Give me an alms.' 'How can
+I give thee aught,' answered she, 'when the King cutteth off
+the hands of all who give alms?' But he said, 'I conjure thee
+by God the Most High, give me an alms.' So, when he adjured her
+by God, she had compassion on him and gave him two cakes of
+bread. The King heard of this; so he called her before him and
+cut off her hands, after which she returned to her house.
+
+A while after, the King said to his mother, 'I have a mind to
+take a wife; so do thou marry me to a fair woman.' Quoth she,
+'There is among our female slaves one who is unsurpassed in
+beauty; but she hath a grievous blemish.' 'What is that?' asked
+the King; and his mother answered, 'She hath had both her hands
+cut off.' Said he, 'Let me see her.' So she brought her to him,
+and he was ravished by her and married her and went in to her;
+and she brought him a son.
+
+Now this was the woman, who had her hands cut off for
+alms-giving; and when she became queen, her fellow-wives envied
+her and wrote to the King [who was then absent] that she was
+unchaste; so he wrote to his mother, bidding her carry the
+woman into the desert and leave her there. The old queen obeyed
+his commandment and abandoned the woman and her son in the
+desert; whereupon she fell to weeping and wailing exceeding
+sore for that which had befallen her. As she went along, with
+the child at her neck, she came to a river and knelt down to
+drink, being overcome with excess of thirst, for fatigue and
+grief; but, as she bent her head, the child fell into the
+water.
+
+Then she sat weeping sore for her child, and as she wept, there
+came up two men, who said to her, 'What makes thee weep?' Quoth
+she, 'I had a child at my neck, and he hath fallen into the
+water.' 'Wilt thou that we bring him out to thee?' asked they,
+and she answered, 'Yes.' So they prayed to God the Most High,
+and the child came forth of the water to her, safe and sound.
+Quoth they, 'Wilt thou that God restore thee thy hands as they
+were?' 'Yes,' replied she: whereupon they prayed to God,
+blessed and exalted be He! and her hands were restored to her,
+goodlier than before. Then said they, 'Knowst thou who we are?'
+'God [only] is all-knowing,' answered she; and they said, 'We
+are thy two cakes of bread, that thou gavest in alms to the
+beggar and which were the cause of the cutting off of thy
+hands. So praise thou God the Most High, for that He hath
+restored thee thy hands and thy child.' So she praised God the
+Most High and glorified Him.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE DEVOUT ISRAELITE.
+
+
+
+There was once a devout man of the children of Israel[FN#59],
+whose family span cotton; and he used every day to sell the
+yarn they span and buy fresh cotton, and with the profit he
+bought the day's victual for his household. One day, he went
+out and sold the day's yarn as usual, when there met him one of
+his brethren, who complained to him of want; so he gave him the
+price of the yarn and returned, empty-handed, to his family,
+who said to him, 'Where is the cotton and the food?' Quoth he,
+'Such an one met me and complained to me of want; so I gave him
+the price of the yarn.' And they said, 'How shall we do? We
+have nothing to sell.' Now they had a broken platter and a jar;
+so he took them to the market; but none would buy them of him.
+
+Presently, as he stood in the market, there came up a man with
+a stinking, swollen fish, which no one would buy of him, and he
+said to the Jew, 'Wilt thou sell me thine unsaleable ware for
+mine?' 'Yes,' answered the Jew and giving him the jar and
+platter, took the fish and carried it home to his family, who
+said, 'What shall we do with this fish?' Quoth he, 'We will
+broil it and eat of it, till it please God to provide for us.'
+So they took it and ripping open its belly, found therein a
+great pearl and told the Jew, who said, 'See if it be pierced.
+If so, it belongs to some one of the folk; if not, it is a
+provision of God for us.' So they examined it and found it
+unpierced.
+
+On the morrow, the Jew carried it to one of his brethren, who
+was skilled in jewels, and he said, 'Whence hadst thou this
+pearl?' 'It was a gift of God the Most High to us,' replied the
+Jew, and the other said, 'It is worth a thousand dirhems, and I
+will give thee that sum; but take it to such an one, for he
+hath more money and skill than I.' So the Jew took it to the
+jeweller, who said, 'It is worth threescore and ten thousand
+dirhems and no more. Then he paid him that sum and the Jew
+hired two porters to carry the money to his house. As he came
+to his door, a beggar accosted him, saying, 'Give me of that
+which God the Most High hath given thee.' Quoth the Jew, 'But
+yesterday, we were even as thou; take half the money.' So he
+made two parts of it, and each took his half. Then said the
+beggar, 'Take back thy money and God prosper thee in it; I am a
+messenger, whom thy Lord hath sent to try thee.' Quoth the Jew,
+'To God be the praise and the thanks!' and abode with his
+family in all delight of life, till death.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOU HASSAN EZ ZIYADI AND THE MAN FROM
+ KHORASSAN.
+
+
+
+Quoth Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi[FN#60], 'I was once in very needy
+case, and the baker and grocer and other purveyors importuned
+me, so that I was in sore straits and knew of no resource nor
+what to do. Things being thus, there came in to me one day one
+of my servants and said to me, "There is a man, a pilgrim, at
+the door, who seeks admission to thee." Quoth I, "Admit him."
+So he came in and behold, he was a native of Khorassan. We
+exchanged salutations and he said to me, "Art thou Abou Hassan
+ez Ziyadi?" "Yes," answered I. "What is thy business?" Quoth
+he, "I am a stranger and am minded to make the pilgrimage; but
+I have with me a great sum of money, which is burdensome to me.
+So I wish to deposit with thee these ten thousand dirhems,
+whilst I make the pilgrimage and return. If the caravan return
+and thou see me not, know that I am dead, in which case the
+money is a gift from me to thee; but if I come back, it shall
+be mine." "Be it as thou wilt," answered I, "so it please God
+the Most High." So he brought out a leather bag and I said to
+the servant, "Fetch the scales." He brought them and the man
+weighed out the money and handed it to me, after which he went
+his way. Then I called the tradesmen and paid them what I owed
+and spent freely, saying in myself, "By the time he returns,
+God will have succoured me with one or another of His bounties."
+However, next day, the servant came in to me and said, "Thy
+friend the man from Khorassan is at the door."
+
+"Admit him," answered I. So he came in and said to me, "I had
+thought to make the pilgrimage; but news hath reached me of the
+death of my father, and I have resolved to return; so give me
+the money I deposited with thee yesterday." When I heard this,
+I was troubled and perplexed beyond measure and knew not what
+reply to make him; for, if I denied it, he would put me to my
+oath, and I should be shamed in the world to come; whilst, if I
+told him that I had spent the money, he would make an outcry
+and disgrace me. So I said to him, "God give thee health! This
+my house is no stronghold nor place of safe custody for this
+money. When I received thy leather bag, I sent it to one with
+whom it now is; so do thou return to us to-morrow and take thy
+money, if it be the will of God."
+
+So he went away, and I passed the night in sore concern, because
+of his return to me. Sleep visited me not nor could I close my
+eyes: so I rose and bade the boy saddle me the mule. "O my lord,"
+answered he, "it is yet but the first watch of the night." So I
+returned to bed, but sleep was forbidden to me and I ceased not
+to awaken the boy and he to put me off, till break of day, when
+he saddled me the mule, and I mounted and rode out, not knowing
+whither to go. I threw the reins on the mule's shoulders and
+gave myself up to anxiety and melancholy thought, whilst she
+fared on with me to the eastward of Baghdad. Presently, as I
+went along, I saw a number of people in front and turned aside
+into another path to avoid them; but they, seeing that I wore
+a professor's hood, followed me and hastening up to me, said,
+"Knowest thou the lodging of Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi?" "I am he,"
+answered I; and they rejoined, "The Commander of the Faithful
+calls for thee." Then they carried me before El Mamoun, who
+said to me, "Who art thou?" Quoth I, "I am a professor of the
+law and traditions, and one of the associates of the Cadi Abou
+Yousuf." "How art thou called?" asked the Khalif. "Abou Hassan
+ez Ziyadi," answered I, and he said, "Expound to me thy case."
+
+So I told him how it was with me and he wept sore and said to
+me, "Out on thee! The Apostle of God (whom may He bless and
+preserve) would not let me sleep this night, because of thee;
+for he appeared to me in my first sleep and said to me,
+'Succour Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi.' Whereupon I awoke and knowing
+thee not, went to sleep again; but he came to me a second time
+and said to me, 'Woe to thee! Succour Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi.' I
+awoke a second time, but knew thee not, so went to sleep again;
+and he came to me a third time and still I knew thee not and
+went to sleep again. Then he came to me once more and said,
+'Out on thee! Succour Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi!' After that I
+dared not go to sleep again, but watched the rest of the night
+and aroused my people and sent them in all directions in quest
+of thee." Then he gave me ten thousand dirhems, saying, "This
+is for the Khorassani," and other ten thousand, saying, "Spend
+freely of this and amend thy case therewith, and set thine
+affairs in order." Moreover, he gave me yet thirty thousand
+dirhems, saying, "Furnish thyself with this, and when the day
+of estate comes round, come thou to me, that I may invest thee
+with an office."
+
+So I took the money and returned home, where I prayed the
+morning-prayer. Presently came the Khorassani, so I carried him
+into the house and brought out to him ten thousand dirhems,
+saying, "Here is thy money." "It is not my very money,"
+answered he. "How cometh this?" So I told him the whole story,
+and he wept and said, "By Allah, hadst thou told me the truth
+at first, I had not pressed thee! And now, by Allah, I will not
+accept aught of the money; and thou art quit of it." So saying,
+he went away and I set my affairs in order and repaired on the
+appointed day to the Divan, where I found the Khalif seated.
+When he saw me, he called me to him and bringing forth to me a
+paper from under his prayer-carpet, said to me, "This is a
+patent, conferring on thee the office of Cadi of the western
+division of the Holy City[FN#61] from the Bab es Selam[FN#62]
+to the end of the town; and I appoint thee such and such
+monthly allowances. So fear God (to whom belong might and
+majesty) and be mindful of the solicitude of His Apostle (whom
+may He bless and preserve) on thine account." The folk marvelled
+at the Khalif's words and questioned me of their meaning; so I
+told them the whole story and it spread abroad amongst the
+people.'
+
+And [quoth he who tells the tale] Abou Hassan ez Ziyadi ceased
+not to be Cadi of the Holy City, till he died in the days of El
+Mamoun, the mercy of God be on him!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE POOR MAN AND HIS GENEROUS FRIEND.
+
+
+
+There was once a rich man, who lost all he had and became poor,
+whereupon his wife counselled him to seek aid of one of his
+friends. So he betook himself to a certain friend of his and
+acquainted him with his strait; and he lent him five hundred
+dinars to trade withal. Now he had aforetime been a jeweller;
+so he took the money and went to the jewel-bazaar, where he
+opened a shop to buy and sell. Presently, three men accosted
+him, as he sat in his shop, and asked for his father. He told
+them that he was dead, and they said, 'Did he leave any
+offspring?' Quoth the jeweller, 'He left a son, your servant.'
+'And who knoweth thee for his son?' asked they. 'The people of
+the bazaar,' replied he; and they said, 'Call them together,
+that they may testify to us that thou art his son.' So he
+called them and they bore witness of this; whereupon the three
+men delivered to him a pair of saddle-bags, containing thirty
+thousand dinars, besides jewels and bullion, saying, 'This was
+deposited with us in trust by thy father.' Then they went away;
+and presently there came to him a woman, who sought of him
+certain of the jewels, worth five hundred dinars, and paid him
+three thousand for them.
+
+So he took five hundred dinars and carrying them to his friend,
+who had lent him the money, said to him, 'Take the five hundred
+dinars I borrowed of thee; for God hath aided and prospered
+me.' 'Not so,' quoth the other. 'I gave them to thee outright,
+for the love of God; so do thou keep them. And take this paper,
+but read it not, till thou be at home, and do according to that
+which is therein.' So he took the paper and returned home,
+where he opened it and read therein the following verses:
+
+The men who came to thee at first my kinsmen were, my sire, His
+ brother and my dam's, Salih ben Ali is his name.
+Moreover, she to whom thou soldst the goods my mother was, And
+ eke the jewels and the gold, from me, to boot, they came;
+Nor, in thus ordering myself to thee, aught did I seek Save of
+ the taking it from me to spare thee from the shame.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE RUINED MAN WHO BECAME RICH AGAIN
+ THROUGH A DREAM.
+
+
+
+There lived once in Baghdad a very wealthy man, who lost all
+his substance and became so poor, that he could only earn his
+living by excessive labour. One night, he lay down to sleep,
+dejected and sick at heart, and saw in a dream one who said to
+him, 'Thy fortune is at Cairo; go thither and seek it.' So he
+set out for Cairo; but, when he arrived there, night overtook
+him and he lay down to sleep in a mosque. Presently, as fate
+would have it, a company of thieves entered the mosque and made
+their way thence into an adjoining house; but the people of the
+house, being aroused by the noise, awoke and cried out;
+whereupon the chief of the police came to their aid with his
+officers. The robbers made off; but the police entered the
+mosque and finding the man from Baghdad asleep there, laid hold
+of him and beat him with palm rods, till he was well-nigh dead.
+Then they cast him into prison, where he abode three days,
+after which the chief of the police sent for him and said to
+him, 'Whence art thou?' 'From Baghdad,' answered he. 'And what
+brought thee to Cairo?' asked the magistrate. Quoth the
+Baghdadi, 'I saw in a dream one who said to me, "Thy fortune is
+at Cairo; go thither to it." But when I came hither, the
+fortune that he promised me proved to be the beating I had of
+thee.'
+
+The chief of the police laughed, till he showed his jaw-teeth,
+and said, 'O man of little wit, thrice have I seen in a dream
+one who said to me, "There is in Baghdad a house of such a
+fashion and situate so-and-so, in the garden whereof is a
+fountain and thereunder a great sum of money buried. Go thither
+and take it." Yet I went not; but thou, of thy little wit, hast
+journeyed from place to place, on the faith of a dream, which
+was but an illusion of sleep.' Then he gave him money, saying,
+'This is to help thee back to thy native land.' Now the house
+he had described was the man's own house in Baghdad; so the
+latter returned thither, and digging underneath the fountain in
+his garden, discovered a great treasure; and [thus] God gave
+him abundant fortune.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF EL MUTAWEKKIL AND HIS
+ FAVOURITE MEHBOUBEH.
+
+
+
+There were in the palace of the Khalif El Mutawekkil ala Allah
+[FN#63] four thousand concubines, whereof two thousand were
+Greeks [and other foreigners] and other two thousand native
+Arabians[FN#64] and Abyssinians; and Obeid ibn Tahir[FN#65]
+had given him two hundred white girls and a like number of
+Abyssinian and native girls[FN#66]. Among these latter was a
+girl of Bassora, Mehboubeh by name, who was of surpassing
+beauty and elegance and voluptuous grace. Moreover, she played
+upon the lute and was skilled in singing and making verses and
+wrote excellent well; so that El Mutawekkil fell passionately
+in love with her and could not endure from her a single hour.
+When she saw this, she presumed upon his favour to use him
+haughtily and capriciously, so that he waxed exceeding wroth
+with her and forsook her, forbidding the people of the palace
+to speak with her.
+
+On this wise she abode some days, but the Khalif still inclined
+to her; and he arose one morning and said to his courtiers,
+'I dreamt, last night, that I was reconciled to Mehboubeh.'
+'Would God this might be on wake!' answered they. As they were
+talking, in came one of the Khalif's maidservants and whispered
+him that they had heard a noise of singing and luting in
+Mehboubeh's chamber and knew not what this meant. So he rose
+and entering the harem, went straight to Mehboubeh's apartment,
+where he heard her playing wonder-sweetly upon the lute and
+singing the following verses:
+
+I wander through the halls, but not a soul I see, To whom I may
+ complain or who will speak with me.
+It is as though I'd wrought so grievous an offence, No
+ penitence avails myself therefrom to free.
+Will no one plead my cause with a king, who came to me In sleep
+ and took me back to favour and to gree;
+But with the break of day to rigour did revert And cast me off
+ from him and far away did flee?
+
+When the Khalif heard these verses, he marvelled at the strange
+coincidence of their dreams and entered the chamber. As soon as
+she was ware of him, she hastened to throw herself at his feet,
+and kissing them, said, 'By Allah, O my lord, this is what I
+dreamt last night; and when I awoke, I made the verses thou
+hast heard.' ''By Allah,' replied El Mutawekkil, 'I also dreamt
+the like!' Then they embraced and made friends and he abode
+with her seven days and nights.
+
+Now she had written upon her cheek, in musk, the Khalif's name,
+which was Jaafer: and when he saw this, he made the following
+verses:
+
+One wrote on her cheek, with musk, a name, yea, Jaafer to wit:
+ My soul be her ransom who wrote on her cheek what I see on
+ it!
+If her fingers, indeed, have traced a single line on her cheek,
+ I trow, in my heart of hearts full many a line she hath
+ writ
+O thou, whom Jaafer alone of men possesses, may God Grant
+ Jaafer to drink his fill of the wine of thy beauty and
+ wit!
+
+When El Mutawekkil died, all his women forgot him save
+Mehboubeh, who ceased not to mourn for him, till she died and
+was buried by his side, the mercy of God be on them both!
+
+
+
+
+
+ WERDAN THE BUTCHER HIS ADVENTURE WITH
+ THE LADY AND THE BEAR.
+
+
+
+There lived once in Cairo, in the days of the Khalif El Hakim
+bi Amrillah, a butcher named Werdan, who dealt in sheep's
+flesh; and there came to him every forenoon a lady and gave him
+a diner, whose weight was nigh two and a half Egyptian diners,
+saying, 'Give me a lamb.' So he took the money and gave her the
+lamb, which she delivered to a porter she had with her; and he
+put it in his basket and she went away with him to her own
+place. This went on for some time, the butcher profiting a
+dinar by her every day, till at last he began to be curious
+about her and said to himself, 'This woman buys a diner's worth
+of meat of me every day, paying ready money, and never misses a
+day. Verily, this is a strange thing!' So he took an occasion
+of questioning the porter, in her absence, and said to him,
+'Whither goest thou every day with yonder woman?' 'I know not
+what to make of her,' answered the porter; 'for, every day,
+after she hath taken the lamb of thee, she buys fresh and dried
+fruits and wax candles and other necessaries of the table, a
+dinar's worth, and takes of a certain Nazarene two flagons of
+wine, for which she pays him another diner. Then she loads me
+with the whole and I go with her to the Vizier's Gardens, where
+she blindfolds me, so that I cannot see where I set my feet,
+and taking me by the hand, leads me I know not whither.
+Presently, she says, "Set down here;" and when I have done so,
+she gives me an empty basket she has ready and taking my hand,
+leads me back to the place, where she bound my eyes, and there
+does off the bandage and gives me ten dirhems.' 'God be her
+helper!' quoth Werdan; but he redoubled in curiosity about her
+case; disquietude increased upon him and he passed the night in
+exceeding restlessness.
+
+Next morning, [quoth Werdan,] she came to me as of wont and
+taking the lamb, delivered it to the porter and went away. So I
+gave my shop in charge to a boy and followed her, unseen of
+her; nor did I cease to keep her in sight, hiding behind her,
+till she left Cairo and came to the Vizier's Gardens. Then I
+hid, whilst she bound the porter's eyes, and followed her again
+from place to place, till she came to the mountain and stopped
+at a place where there was a great stone. Here she made the
+porter set down his crate, and I waited, whilst she carried him
+back to the Vizier's Gardens, after which she returned and
+taking out the contents of the basket, disappeared behind the
+stone. Then I went up to the stone and pulling it away,
+discovered behind it an open trap-door of brass and a flight of
+steps leading downward. So I descended, little by little, into
+a long corridor, brilliantly lighted, and followed it, till I
+came to a [closed] door, as it were the door of a room. I
+looked about till I discovered a recess, with steps therein;
+then climbed up and found a little niche with an opening
+therein giving upon a saloon.
+
+So I looked in and saw the lady cut off the choicest parts of
+the lamb and laying them in a saucepan, throw the rest to a
+huge great bear, who ate it all to the last bit. When she had
+made an end of cooking, she ate her fill, after which she set
+on wine and fruits and confections and fell to drinking, using
+a cup herself and giving the bear to drink in a basin of gold,
+till she was heated with wine, when she put off her trousers
+and lay down. Thereupon the bear came up to her and served her,
+whilst she gave him the best of what belongeth to mankind, till
+he had made an end, when he sat down and rested. Presently, he
+sprang to her and served her again; and thus he did, till he
+had furnished half a score courses, and they both fell down in
+a swoon and abode without motion.
+
+Then said I to myself, "Now is my opportunity," and taking a
+knife I had with me, that would cut bones before flesh, went
+down to them and found them motionless, not a muscle of them
+moving for their much swink. So I put my knife to the bear's
+gullet and bore upon it, till I severed his head from his body,
+and he gave a great snort like thunder, whereat she started up
+in alarm and seeing the bear slain and me standing with the
+knife in my hand, gave such a shriek that I thought the soul
+had left her body. Then said she, "O Werdan, is this how thou
+requitest me my favours?" "O enemy of thine own soul," replied
+I, "dost thou lack of men that thou must do this shameful
+thing?" She made me no answer, but bent down to the bear, and
+finding his head divided from his body, said to me, "O Werdan,
+which were the liefer to thee, to hearken to what I shall say
+to thee and be the means of thine own safety and enrichment to
+the end of thy days, or gainsay me and so bring about thine own
+destruction?" "I choose rather to hearken unto thee," answered
+I. "Say what thou wilt." "Then," said she, "kill me, as thou
+hast killed this bear, and take thy need of this treasure and
+go thy way." Quoth I, "I am better than this bear. Return to
+God the Most High and repent, and I will marry thee, and we
+will live on this treasure the rest of our lives." "O Werdan,"
+rejoined she, "far be it from me! How shall I live after him?
+An thou kill me not, by Allah, I will assuredly do away thy
+life! So leave bandying words with me, or thou art a lost man.
+This is all I have to say to thee and peace be on thee." Then
+said I, "I will slay thee, and thou shalt go to the malediction
+of God." So saying, I caught her by the hair and cut her
+throat; and she went to the malediction of God and of the
+angels and of all mankind.
+
+Then I examined the place and found there gold and pearls and
+jewels, such as no king could bring together. So I filled the
+porter's crate with as much as I could carry and covered it
+with the clothes I had on me. Then I shouldered it and going up
+out of the underground place, set out homeward and fared on,
+till I came to the gate of Cairo, where I fell in with ten of
+the Khalif's body-guard, followed by El Hakim[FN#67] himself,
+who said to me. "Ho, Werdan!" "At thy service, O King," replied
+I. "Hast thou killed the woman and the bear?" asked he and I
+answered, "Yes." Quoth he, "Set down the basket and fear
+naught, for all the treasure thou hast with thee is thine, and
+none shall dispute it with thee." So I set down the basket, and
+he uncovered it and looked at it; then said to me, "Tell me
+their case, though I know it, as if I had been present with
+you." So I told him all that had passed and he said, "Thou hast
+spoken the truth, O Werdan. Come now with me to the treasure."
+
+So I returned with him to the cavern, where he found the
+trap-door closed and said to me, "O Werdan, lift it; none but
+thou can open the treasure, for it is enchanted in thy name and
+favour." "By Allah," answered I, "I cannot open it;" but he
+said, "Go up to it, trusting in the blessing of God." So I
+called upon the name of God the Most High and going up to the
+trap-door, put my hand to it; whereupon it came up, as it had
+been the lightest of things. Then said the Khalif, "Go down and
+bring up what is there; for none but one of thy name and favour
+and quality hath gone down there since the place was made, and
+the slaying of the bear and the woman was appointed to be at
+thy hand. This was recorded with me and I was awaiting its
+fulfilment." Accordingly, I went down and brought up all the
+treasure, whereupon the Khalif sent for beasts of burden and
+carried it away, after giving me the porter's crate, with what
+was therein. So I carried it home and opened me a shop in the
+market. And [quoth he who tells the tale] this market is still
+extant and is known as Werdan's Market.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KING'S DAUGHTER AND THE APE.
+
+
+
+There was once a King's daughter, whose heart was taken with
+love of a black slave: he did away her maidenhead, and she
+became passionately addicted to amorous dalliance, so that she
+could not endure from it a single hour and made moan of her
+case to one of her body women, who told her that no thing doth
+the deed of kind more abundantly than the ape. Now it chanced,
+one day, that an ape-leader passed under her lattice, with a
+great ape; so she unveiled her face and looking upon the ape,
+signed to him with her eyes, whereupon he broke his bonds and
+shackles and climbed up to the princess, who hid him in a place
+with her, and he abode, eating and drinking and cricketing,
+night and day. Her father heard of this and would have killed
+her; but she took the alarm and disguising herself in a [male]
+slave's habit, loaded a mule with gold and jewels and precious
+stuffs past count; then, taking horse with the ape, fled to
+Cairo, where she took up her abode in one of the houses without
+the city.
+
+Now, every day, she used to buy meat of a young man, a butcher,
+but came not to him till after noonday, pale and disordered in
+face; so that he said in himself, 'There hangs some mystery by
+this slave.' For she used to visit him in her slave's habit.
+[Quoth the butcher,] So, one day, when she came to me as usual,
+I went out after her, unseen, and ceased not to follow her from
+place to place, so as she saw me not, till she came to her
+lodging, without the city, and I looked in upon her, through a
+cranny, and saw her light a fire and cook the meat, of which
+she ate her fill and gave the rest to an ape she had with her.
+Then she put off her slave's habit and donned the richest of
+women's apparel; and so I knew that she was a woman. After this
+she set on wine and drank and gave the ape to drink; and he
+served her nigh half a score times, till she swooned away, when
+he threw a silken coverlet over her and returned to his place.
+
+Thereupon I went down into the midst of the place and the ape,
+becoming aware of me, would have torn me in pieces; but I made
+haste to pull out my knife and slit his paunch. The noise
+aroused the young lady, who awoke, terrified and trembling; and
+when she saw the ape in this plight, she gave such a shriek,
+that her soul well-nigh departed her body. Then she fell down
+in a swoon, and when she came to herself, she said to me, "What
+moved thee to do thus? By Allah, I conjure thee to send me after
+him!" But I spoke her fair and engaged to her that I would stand
+in the ape's stead, in the matter of much clicketing, till her
+trouble subsided and I took her to wife.
+
+However, I fell short in this and could not endure to it; so I
+complained of her case to a certain old woman, who engaged to
+manage the affair and said to me, "Thou must bring me a cooking-
+pot full of virgin vinegar and a pound of pyrethrum."[FN#68]
+So I brought her what she sought, and she laid the pyrethrum
+in the pot with the vinegar and set it on the fire, till it
+boiled briskly. Then she bade me serve the girl, and I served
+her, till she fainted away, when the old woman took her up, and
+she unknowing, and set her kaze to the mouth of the cooking-pot.
+The steam of the pot entered her poke and there fell from it
+somewhat, which I examined and behold, it was two worms, one
+black and the other yellow. Quoth the old woman, "The black was
+bred of the embraces of the negro and the yellow of those of
+the ape."
+
+When my wife recovered from her swoon, she abode with me, in
+all delight and solace of life, and sought not copulation, as
+before, for God the Most High had done away from her this
+appetite; whereat I marvelled and acquainted her with the case.
+Moreover, [quoth he who tells the tale,] she took the old woman
+to be to her in the stead of her mother, and she and Werdan and
+his wife abode in joy and cheer, till there came to them the
+Destroyer of Delights and the Sunderer of Companies; and glory
+be to the Living One, who dieth not and in whose hand is the
+empire of the Seen and the Unseen!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE ENCHANTED HORSE.
+
+
+
+There was once, of old time, a great and puissant King, of the
+Kings of the Persians, Sabour by name, who was the richest of
+all the Kings in store of wealth and dominion and surpassed them
+all in wit and wisdom. Generous, open-handed and beneficent, he
+gave to those who sought and repelled not those who resorted to
+him, comforted the broken-hearted and honourably entreated those
+who fled to him for refuge. Moreover, he loved the poor and was
+hospitable to strangers and did the oppressed justice upon those
+who oppressed them. He had three daughters, like shining full
+moons or flowered gardens, and a son as he were the moon; and it
+was his wont to keep two festivals in the year, those of the New
+Year and the Autumnal Equinox, on which occasions he threw open
+his palaces and gave gifts and made proclamation of safety and
+security and advanced his chamberlains and officers; and the
+people of his realm came in to him and saluted him and gave him
+joy of the festival, bringing him gifts and servants.
+
+Now he loved science and geometry, and one day, as he sat on
+his throne of kingship, during one of these festivals, there
+came in to him three sages, cunning artificers and past masters
+in all manner of crafts and inventions, skilled in making
+rarities, such as confound the wit, and versed in the knowledge
+of [occult] truths and subtleties; and they were of three
+different tongues and countries, the first an Indian, the
+second a Greek and the third a Persian. The Indian came forward
+and prostrating himself before the King, gave him joy of the
+festival and laid before him a present befitting [his dignity];
+that is to say, a figure of gold, set with precious stones and
+jewels of price and holding in its hand a golden trumpet. When
+Sabour saw this, he said, 'O sage, what is the virtue of this
+figure?' And the Indian answered, 'O my lord; if this figure be
+set at the gate of thy city, it will be a guardian over it;
+for, if an enemy enter the place, it will blow this trumpet
+against him, and so he will be known and laid hands on.' The
+King marvelled at this and said, 'By Allah, O sage, an this thy
+word be true, I will grant thee thy wish and thy desire.'
+
+Then came forward the Greek and prostrating himself before the
+King, presented him with a basin of silver, in whose midst was
+a peacock of gold, surrounded by four-and-twenty young ones of
+the same metal. Sabour looked at them and turning to the Greek,
+said to him, 'O sage, what is the virtue of this peacock?' 'O
+my lord,' answered he, 'as often as an hour of the day or night
+passes, it pecks one of its young [and cries out and flaps its
+wings,] till the four-and-twenty hours are accomplished; and
+when the month comes to an end, it will open its mouth and thou
+shalt see the new moon therein.' And the King said, 'An thou
+speak sooth, I will bring thee to thy wish and thy desire.'
+
+Then came forward the Persian sage and prostrating himself
+before the King, presented him with a horse of ebony wood,
+inlaid with gold and jewels, ready harnessed with saddle and
+bridle and stirrups such as befit kings; which when Sabour saw,
+he marvelled exceedingly and was confounded at the perfection
+of its form and the ingenuity of its fashion. So he said, 'What
+is the use of this horse of wood, and what is its virtue and
+the secret of its movement?' 'O my lord,' answered the Persian,
+'the virtue of this horse is that, if one mount him, it will
+carry him whither he will and fare with its rider through the
+air for the space of a year and a day.' The King marvelled and
+was amazed at these three wonders, following thus hard upon
+each other in one day, and turning to the sage, said to him,
+'By the Great God and the Bountiful Lord, who created all
+creatures and feedeth them with water and victual, an thy
+speech be true and the virtue of thy handiwork appear, I will
+give thee whatsoever thou seekest and will bring thee to thy
+wish and thy desire!'
+
+Then he entertained the three sages three days, that he might
+make trial of their gifts, after which they brought them before
+him and each took the creature he had wrought and showed him
+the secret of its movement. The trumpeter blew the trumpet, the
+peacock pecked its young and the Persian sage mounted the horse
+of ebony, whereupon it soared with him into the air and
+descended again. When the King saw all this, he was amazed and
+perplexed and was like to fly for joy and said to the three
+sages, 'Now am I certified of the truth of your words and it
+behoves me to quit me of my promise. Seek ye, therefore, what
+ye will, and I will give it you.' Now the report of the [beauty
+of the] King's daughters had reached the sages, so they
+answered, 'If the King be content with us and accept of our
+gifts and give us leave to ask a boon of him, we ask of him
+that he give us his three daughters in marriage, that we may be
+his sons-in-law; for that the stability of kings may not be
+gainsaid.' Quoth the King, 'I grant you that which you desire,'
+and bade summon the Cadi forthright, that he might marry each
+of the sages to one of his daughters.
+
+Now these latter were behind a curtain, looking on; and when they
+heard this, the youngest considered [him that was to be] her
+husband and saw him to be an old man, a hundred years of age,
+with frosted hair, drooping forehead, mangy eyebrows, slitten
+ears, clipped[FN#69] beard and moustaches, red, protruding eyes,
+bleached, hollow, flabby cheeks, nose like an egg-plant and face
+like a cobbler's apron, teeth overlapping one another,[FN#70]
+lips like camel's kidneys, loose and pendulous; brief, a monstrous
+favour; for he was the frightfullest of the folk of his time; his
+grinders had been knocked[FN#71] out and his teeth were like the
+tusks of the Jinn that fright the fowls in the hen-house. Now the
+princess was the fairest and most graceful woman of her time, more
+elegant than the tender gazelle, blander than the gentle zephyr
+and brighter than the moon at her full, confounding the branch
+and outdoing the gazelle in the flexile grace of her shape and
+movements; and she was fairer and sweeter than her sisters. So,
+when she saw her suitor, she went to her chamber and strewed dust
+on her head and tore her clothes and fell to buffeting her face
+and lamenting and weeping.
+
+Now the prince her brother, who loved her with an exceeding
+love, more than her sisters, was then newly returned from a
+journey and hearing her weeping and crying, came in to her and
+said, 'What ails thee? Tell me and conceal nought from me.' 'O
+my brother and my dear one,' answered she, 'if the palace be
+straitened upon thy father, I will go out; and if he be
+resolved upon a foul thing, I will separate myself from him,
+though he consent not to provide for me.' Quoth he, 'Tell me
+what means this talk and what has straitened thy breast and
+troubled thy humour.' 'O my brother and my dear one,' answered
+the princess, 'know that my father hath given me in marriage to
+a sorcerer, who brought him, as a gift, a horse of black wood,
+and hath stricken him with his craft and his sorcery; but, as
+for me, I will none of him, and would, because of him, I had
+never come into this world!' Her brother soothed her and
+comforted her, then betook himself to his father and said to
+him, 'What is this sorcerer to whom thou hast given my youngest
+sister in marriage, and what is this present that he hath
+brought thee, so that thou hast caused my sister to [almost]
+die of chagrin? It is not right that this should be.'
+
+Now the Persian was standing by and when he heard the prince's
+words, he was mortified thereby and filled with rage, and the
+King said, 'O my son, an thou sawest this horse, thy wit would
+be confounded and thou wouldst be filled with amazement.' Then
+he bade the slaves bring the horse before him and they did so;
+and when the prince, who was an accomplished cavalier, saw it,
+it pleased him. So he mounted it forthright and struck its
+belly with the stirrup-irons; but it stirred not and the King
+said to the sage, 'Go and show him its movement, that he also
+may help thee to thy wish.' Now the Persian bore the prince
+malice for that he willed not he should have his sister; so he
+showed him the peg of ascent on the right side [of the horse's
+neck] and saying to him, 'Turn this pin,' left him. So the
+prince turned the pin and forthwith the horse soared with him
+into the air, as it were a bird, and gave not over flying with
+him, till it disappeared from sight, whereat the King was
+troubled and perplexed about his affair and said to the
+Persian, 'O sage, look how thou mayst make him descend.' But he
+answered, 'O my lord, I can do nothing, and thou wilt never see
+him again till the Day of Resurrection, for that he, of his
+ignorance and conceit, asked me not of the peg of descent and I
+forgot to acquaint him therewith.' When the King heard this, he
+was sore enraged and bade beat the sorcerer and clap him in
+prison, whilst he himself cast the crown from his head and
+buffeted his face and beat upon his breast. Moreover, he shut
+the doors of his palaces and gave himself up to weeping and
+lamentation, he and his wife and daughters and all the folk of
+the city; and [thus] their joy was turned to mourning and their
+gladness changed into chagrin and sore affliction.
+
+Meanwhile, the horse gave not over soaring with the prince,
+till he drew near the sun, whereat he gave himself up for lost
+and was confounded at his case, repenting him of having mounted
+the horse and saying in himself, 'Verily, this was a plot of
+the sage to destroy me; but there is no power and no virtue but
+in God the Most High, the Supreme! I am lost without recourse;
+but, I wonder, did not he who made the peg of ascent make a peg
+of descent also?' Now he was a man of wit and intelligence; so
+he fell to examining all the parts of the horse, but saw
+nothing save a peg, like a cock's head, on its right shoulder
+and the like on the left, and turned the right-hand peg,
+whereupon the horse flew upward with increased speed. So he
+left it and turned the left-hand peg, and immediately the
+steed's upward motion ceased and he began to descend, little by
+little, towards the earth. When the prince saw this and knew
+the uses of the horse, he was filled with joy and gladness and
+thanked God the Most High for that He had vouchsafed to deliver
+him from destruction. Then he began to turn the horse's head
+whither he would, making him rise and fall at pleasure, till he
+had gotten complete command of his movement.
+
+He ceased not to descend the whole of that day, for that the
+steed's upward flight had borne him afar from the earth; and as
+he descended, he diverted himself with viewing the various
+towns and countries over which he passed and which he knew not,
+having never seen them in his life. Amongst the rest, he saw a
+city of the goodliest ordinance, in the midst of a green and
+smiling country, abounding in trees and streams; whereat he
+fell a-musing and said in himself, 'Would I knew the name of
+yonder city and in what country it is!' And he began to circle
+about it and observe it right and left. By this time, the day
+began to wane and the sun drew near to its setting; and he
+said, 'I see no goodlier place to pass the night in than this
+city; so I will lodge here this night and on the morrow I will
+return to my people and my kingdom and tell my father and
+family what has passed and what I have seen with my eyes.' Then
+he addressed himself to look for a place, where he might safely
+bestow himself and his horse and where none should see him, and
+presently espied a palace, surrounded by a great wall with
+lofty battlements, rising high into the air from the midst of
+the city and guarded by forty black slaves, clad in complete
+mail and armed with spears and swords and bows and arrows.
+Quoth he, 'This is a goodly place,' and turned the peg of
+descent, whereupon the horse sank down with him and alighted
+gently on the roof of the palace. So the prince dismounted and
+began to go round about the horse and examine it, saying, 'By
+Allah, he who fashioned thee was a cunning craftsman, and if God
+extend the term of my life and restore me to my country and family
+in safety and reunite me with my father, I will assuredly bestow
+upon him all manner of bounties and entreat him with the utmost
+favour.'
+
+By this time the night had overtaken him and he sat on the
+roof, till he was assured that all in the palace slept; and
+indeed hunger and thirst were sore upon him, for that he had
+not tasted food since he parted from his father. So he said in
+himself, 'Surely, the like of this palace will not lack of
+victual,' and leaving the horse there, went in quest of
+somewhat to eat. Presently, he came to a stair and descending
+it, found himself in a court paved with white marble and
+alabaster, that shone in the light of the moon. He marvelled at
+the place and the goodliness of its fashion, but heard no sound
+and saw no living soul and stood in perplexity, looking right
+and left and knowing not whither he should go. Then said he to
+himself, 'I cannot do better than return to where I left my
+horse and pass the night by it; and as soon as it is day, I
+will mount and depart.' However, as he stood talking to
+himself, he espied a light within the palace, and making
+towards it, found that it came from a candle that stood before
+a door of the palace, at the head of an eunuch, as he were one
+of the Afrits of Solomon or a tribesman of the Jinn, longer
+than a plank and wider than a bench. He lay asleep before the
+door, with the pommel of his sword gleaming in the flame of the
+candle, and at his head was a budget of leather[FN#72] hanging
+from a column of granite.
+
+When the prince saw this, he was affrighted and said, 'I crave
+help from God the Supreme! O my God, even as Thou hast [already]
+delivered me from destruction, vouchsafe me strength to quit
+myself of the adventure of this palace!' So saying, he put out
+his hand to the budget and taking it, carried it to a place
+apart and opened it and found in it food of the best. So he
+ate his fill and refreshed himself and drank water, after
+which he hung the budget up in its place and drawing the
+eunuch's sword from its sheath, took it, whilst the latter
+slept on, knowing not whence destiny should come to him. Then
+the prince fared on into the palace, till he came to another
+door, with a curtain drawn before it; so he raised the curtain
+and entering, saw a couch of ivory, inlaid with pearls and
+jacinths and jewels, and four slave-girls sleeping about it. He
+went up to the couch, to see what was therein, and found a
+young lady lying asleep, veiled with her hair, as she were the
+full moon at its rising, with flower-white forehead and
+shining parting and cheeks like blood-red anemones and dainty
+moles thereon.
+
+When he saw this, he was amazed at her beauty and grace and
+symmetry and recked no more of death. So he went up to her,
+trembling in every nerve, and kissed her on the right cheek;
+whereupon she awoke forthright and seeing the prince standing
+at her head, said to him, 'Who art thou and whence comest thou?'
+Quoth he, 'I am thy slave and thy lover.' 'And who brought thee
+hither?' asked she. 'My Lord and my fortune,' answered he; and
+she said, 'Belike thou art he who demanded me yesterday of my
+father in marriage and he rejected thee, pretending that thou
+wast foul of favour. By Allah he lied, when he spoke this thing,
+for thou art not other than handsome.'
+
+Now the son of the King of Hind[FN#73] had sought her in
+marriage, but her father had rejected him, for that he was ill-
+favoured, and she thought the prince was he. So, when she saw
+his beauty and grace, for indeed he was like the radiant moon,
+her heart was taken in the snare of his love, as it were a
+flaming fire, and they fell to talk and converse. Presently,
+her waiting-women awoke from their sleep and seeing the prince
+sitting with their mistress, said to her, 'O my lady, who is
+this with thee?' Quoth she, 'I know not; I found him sitting by
+me, when I awoke. Belike it is he who seeks me in marriage of
+my father.' 'O my lady,' answered they, 'by the Most Great God,
+this is not he who seeks thee in marriage, for he is foul and
+this man is fair and of high condition. Indeed, the other is
+not fit to be his servant.'
+
+Then they went out to the eunuch and finding him asleep, awoke
+him, and he started up in alarm. Quoth they, 'How comes it that
+thou art guardian of the palace and yet men come in to us,
+whilst we are asleep?' When the eunuch heard this, he sprang in
+haste to his sword, but found it not, and fear took him and
+trembling. Then he went in, confounded, to his mistress and
+seeing the prince sitting talking with her, said to the former,
+'O my lord, art thou a man or a genie?' 'O it on thee, O
+unluckiest of slaves!' replied the prince. 'How darest thou
+even a prince of the sons of the Chosroës with one of the
+unbelieving Satans?' Then he took the sword in his hand and
+said, 'I am the King's son-in-law, and he hath married me to
+his daughter and bidden me go in to her.' 'O my lord,' replied
+the eunuch, 'if thou be indeed a man, as thou avouchest, she is
+fit for none but thee, and thou art worthier of her than any
+other.'
+
+Then he ran to the King, shrieking out and rending his clothes
+and casting dust upon his head; and when the King heard his
+outcry, he said to him, 'What has befallen thee? Speak quickly
+and be brief; for thou troublest my heart.' 'O King,' answered
+the eunuch, 'come to thy daughter's succour; for a devil of the
+Jinn, in the likeness of a king's son, hath gotten possession
+of her; so up and at him!' When the King heard this, he thought
+to kill him and said, 'How camest thou to be careless of my
+daughter and let this demon come at her?' Then he betook
+himself to the princess's palace, where he found her women
+standing, [awaiting him] and said to them, 'What is come to my
+daughter?' 'O King,' answered they, 'sleep overcame us and when
+we awoke, we found a young man sitting talking with her, as he
+were the full moon, never saw we a fairer of favour than he. So
+we questioned him of his case and he avouched that thou hadst
+given him thy daughter in marriage. More than this we know not,
+nor do we know if he be a man or a genie; but he is modest and
+well bred, and doth nothing unseemly.'
+
+When the King heard this, his wrath cooled and he raised the
+curtain stealthily and looking in, saw a prince of the goodliest
+fashion, with a face like the shining full moon, sitting talking
+with his daughter. At this sight he could not contain himself,
+of his jealousy for his daughter, and putting the curtain aside,
+rushed in upon them, like a Ghoul, with his drawn sword in his
+hand. When the prince saw him, he said to the princess, 'Is this
+thy father?' 'Yes,' answered she; whereupon he sprang to his
+feet and taking his sword in his hand, cried out at the King
+with such a terrible cry, that he was confounded. Then he would
+have fallen on him with the sword; but the King, seeing that the
+prince was doughtier than he, sheathed his blade and stood till
+the latter came up to him, when he accosted him courteously and
+said to him, 'O youth, art thou a man or a genie?' Quoth the
+prince, 'Did I not respect thy right[FN#74] and thy daughter's
+honour, I would spill thy blood! How darest thou even me with
+devils, me that am a prince of the sons of the Chosroës, who,
+had they a mind to take thy kingdom, could shake thee from thy
+power and thy dominion and despoil thee of all thy possessions?'
+When the King heard his words, he was smitten with awe and fear
+of him and rejoined, 'If thou indeed be of the sons of the kings,
+as thou pretendest, how comes it that thou enterest my palace,
+without my leave, and soilest my honour, making thy way to my
+daughter and feigning that thou art her husband and that I have
+given her to thee to wife, I that have slain kings and kings'
+sons, who sought her of me in marriage? And now who shall save
+thee from my mischief, when, if I cried out to my slaves and
+servants and bade them put thee to death, they would slay thee
+forthright? Who then shall deliver thee out of my hand?'
+
+When the prince heard this speech of the King, he answered,
+'Verily, I wonder at thee and at the poverty of thy wit! Canst
+thou covet for thy daughter a goodlier mate than myself and
+hast ever seen a stouter of heart or a more sufficient or a
+more glorious in rank and dominion than I?' 'Nay, by Allah,'
+rejoined the King. 'But, O youth, I would have had thee make
+suit to me for her hand before witnesses, that I might marry
+her to thee publicly; and now, were I to marry her to thee
+privily, yet hast thou dishonoured me in her person.' 'Thou
+sayst well, O King,' replied the prince; 'but, if thy servants
+and soldiers should fall upon me and slay me, as thou pretendest,
+thou wouldst but publish thine own dishonour, and the folk
+would be divided between belief and disbelief with regard
+to thee. Wherefore, meseems thou wilt do well to turn from
+this thought to that which I shall counsel thee.' Quoth the
+King, 'Let me hear what thou hast to propose.' And the prince
+said, 'What I have to propose to thee is this: either do
+thou meet me in single combat and he who slays the other shall
+be held the worthier and having a better title to the kingdom;
+or else, let me be this night and on the morrow draw out
+against me thy horsemen and footmen and servants; but [first]
+tell me their number.' Quoth the King, 'They are forty thousand
+horse, besides my own slaves and their followers, who are the
+like of them in number.' 'When the day breaks, then,' continued
+the prince, 'do thou array them against me and say to them,
+"This fellow is a suitor to me for my daughter's hand, on
+condition that he shall do battle single-handed against you
+all; for he pretends that he will overcome you and put you to
+the rout and that ye cannot prevail against him." Then leave me
+to do battle with them. If they kill me, then is thy secret the
+safelier hidden and thine honour the better guarded; and if I
+overcome them, then is the like of me one whose alliance a King
+should covet.'
+
+The King approved of his counsel and accepted his proposition,
+despite his awe and amaze at the exorbitant pretension of the
+prince to do battle against his whole army, such as he had
+described it to him, being at heart assured that he would
+perish in the mellay and so he be quit of him and freed from
+the fear of dishonour. So he called the eunuch and bade him go
+forthright to his Vizier and bid him assemble the whole of the
+troops and cause them don their arms and mount their horses.
+The eunuch carried the King's order to the Vizier, who straightway
+summoned the captains of the army and the grandees of the realm
+and bade them don their harness of war and mount their horses
+and sally forth in battle array.
+
+Meanwhile, the King sat conversing with the prince, being
+pleased with his wit and good breeding, till daybreak, when he
+returned to his palace and seating himself on his throne,
+commanded the troops to mount and bade saddle one of the best
+of the royal horses with handsome housings and trappings and
+bring it to the prince. But the latter said, 'O King, I will
+not mount, till I come in sight of the troops and see them.'
+'Be it as thou wilt,' answered the King. Then they repaired to
+the tilting ground, where the troops were drawn up, and the
+prince looked upon them and noted their great number; after
+which the King cried out to them, saying, 'Ho, all ye men,
+there is come to me a youth who seeks my daughter in marriage,
+--never have I seen a goodlier than he, no, nor a stouter of
+heart nor a doughtier, for he pretends that he can overcome
+you, single-handed, and put you to the rout and that, were ye a
+hundred thousand in number, yet would ye be for him but little.
+But, when he charges upon you, do ye receive him upon the
+points of your lances and the edges of your sabres; for,
+indeed, he hath undertaken a grave matter.'
+
+Then said he to the prince, 'Up, O my son, and do thy will on
+them.' 'O King,' answered he, 'thou dealest not fairly with me.
+How shall I go forth against them, seeing that I am afoot and
+they are mounted?' 'I bade thee mount, and thou refusedst,'
+rejoined the King; 'but take which of my horses thou wilt.' But
+he said, 'None of thy horses pleases me, and I will ride none
+but that on which I came.' 'And where is thy horse?' asked the
+King. 'Atop of thy palace,' answered the prince, and the King
+said, 'In what part of my palace?' 'On the roof,' replied the
+prince. 'Out on thee!' quoth the King. 'This is the first sign
+thou hast given of madness. How can the horse be on the roof?
+But we shall soon see if thou speak truth or falsehood.' Then
+he turned to one of his chief officers and said to him, 'Go to
+my palace and bring me what thou findest on the roof.' And all
+the people marvelled at the prince's words, saying, 'How can a
+horse come down the steps from the roof? Verily this is a thing
+whose like we never heard.'
+
+Meanwhile, the King's messenger repaired to the palace,
+accompanied by other of the royal officers, and mounting to the
+roof, found the horse standing there,--never had they looked on
+a handsomer; but when they drew near and examined it, they saw
+that it was made of ebony and ivory; whereat they laughed to
+each other, saying, 'Was it of the like of this horse that the
+youth spoke? Surely, he must be mad; but we shall soon see the
+truth of his case. Belike, there hangs some great mystery by
+him.' Then they lifted up the horse and carrying it to the
+King, set it down before him, and all the people flocked round
+it, staring at it and marvelling at the beauty of its fashion
+and the richness of its saddle and bridle. The King also
+admired it and wondered at it extremely; and he said to the
+prince, 'O youth, is this thy horse?' 'Yes, O King,' answered
+the prince; 'this is my horse, and thou shalt soon see wonders
+of it.' 'Then take and mount it,' rejoined the King, and the
+prince said, 'I will not mount till the troops withdraw afar
+from it.' So the King bade them withdraw a bowshot from the
+horse; whereupon quoth the prince, 'O King, I am about to mount
+my horse and charge upon thy troops and scatter them right and
+left and cleave their hearts in sunder.' 'Do as thou wilt,'
+answered the King; 'and spare them not, for they will not spare
+thee.' Then the prince mounted, whilst the troops ranged
+themselves in ranks before him, and one said to another, 'When
+the youth comes between the ranks, we will take him on the
+points of our pikes and the edges of our swords.' 'By Allah,'
+quoth another, 'it were pity to kill so handsome and well-shaped
+a youth!' 'By Allah,' rejoined a third, 'ye will have hard work
+to get the better of him; for he had not done this, but for what
+he knew of his own prowess and valiantise.'
+
+Meanwhile, the prince, having settled himself in his saddle,
+whilst all eyes were strained to see what he would do, turned
+the peg of ascent; whereupon the horse began to sway to and fro
+and make the strangest of movements, after the manner of
+horses, till its belly was filled with air and it took flight
+with him and soared into the sky. When the King saw this, he
+cried out to his men, saying, 'Out on you! Take him, ere he
+escape you!' But his Viziers and officers said to him, 'O King,
+how shall we overtake the flying bird? This is surely none but
+some mighty enchanter, and God hath saved thee from him. So
+praise thou the Most High for thy deliverance from his hand.'
+Then the King returned to his palace and going in to his
+daughter, acquainted her with what had befallen. He found her
+sore afflicted for the prince and bewailing her separation from
+him; wherefore she fell grievously sick and took to her pillow.
+When her father saw her thus, he pressed her to his bosom and
+kissing her between the eyes, said to her, 'O my daughter,
+praise God and thank Him for that He hath delivered thee from
+this crafty enchanter!' And he repeated to her the story of the
+prince's disappearance; but she paid no heed to his word and
+did but redouble in her tears and lamentations, saying to
+herself, 'By Allah, I will neither eat nor drink, till God
+reunite me with him!' Her father was greatly concerned for her
+plight and mourned sore over her; but, for all he could do to
+comfort her, passion and love-longing still grew on her for the
+prince.
+
+Meanwhile, the King's son, whenas he had risen into the air,
+turned his horse's head towards his native land, musing upon
+the beauty and grace of the princess. Now he had enquired of
+the King's people the name of the princess and of the King her
+father and of the city, which was the city of Senaa of Yemen.
+So he journeyed homeward with all speed, till he drew near his
+father's capital and making a circuit about the city, alighted
+on the roof of the King's palace, where he left his horse, whilst
+he descended into the palace and finding its threshold strewn
+with ashes, bethought him that one of his family was dead. Then
+he entered, as of wont, and found his father and mother and
+sisters clad in mourning raiment of black, pale-faced and lean
+of body. When his father saw him and was assured that it was
+indeed his son, he gave a great cry and fell down in a swoon,
+but presently coming to himself, threw himself upon him and
+embraced him, straining him to his bosom and rejoicing in him
+exceedingly. His mother and sisters heard this; so they came
+in and seeing the prince, fell upon him, kissing him and weeping
+and rejoicing with an exceeding joy. Then they questioned him of
+his case; so he told them all that had befallen him from first
+to last and his father said to him, 'Praised be God for thy
+safety, O solace of my eyes and life-blood of my heart!'
+
+Then the King bade hold high festival, and the glad news flew
+through the city. So they beat the drums and the cymbals and
+putting off the raiment of mourning, donned that of joy and
+decorated the streets and markets; whilst the folk vied with
+one another who should be the first to give the King joy, and
+the latter proclaimed a general pardon and opening the prisons,
+released those who were therein. Moreover, he made banquets to
+the people seven days and nights and all creatures were glad;
+and he took horse with his son and rode out with him, that the
+folk might see him and rejoice. After awhile the prince
+enquired for the maker of the horse, saying, 'O my father, what
+hath fortune done with him?' 'May God not bless him,' answered
+the King, 'nor the hour in which I set eyes on him! For he was
+the cause of thy separation from us, O my son, and he hath lain
+in prison since the day of thy disappearance.' Then he bade
+release him from prison and sending for him, invested him in a
+dress of honour and entreated him with the utmost favour and
+munificence, save that he would not give him his daughter to
+wife; whereat he was sore enraged and repented of that which he
+had done, knowing that the prince had learnt the secret of the
+horse and the manner of its motion. Moreover, the King said to
+his son, 'Methinks thou wilt do well not to mount the horse
+neither go near it henceforth; for thou knowest not its
+properties, and it is perilous for thee to meddle with it.' Now
+the prince had told his father of his adventure with the King's
+daughter of Senaa, and he said, 'If the King had been minded to
+kill thee, he had done so; but thine hour was not yet come.'
+
+When the rejoicings were at an end, the people returned to
+their houses and the King and his son to the palace, where they
+sat down and fell to eating and drinking and making merry. Now
+the King had a handsome slave-girl, who was skilled in playing
+upon the lute; so she took it and began to play upon it and
+sing thereto of separation of lovers before the King and his
+son, and she chanted the following verses:
+
+Think not that absence ever shall win me to forget: For what
+ should I remember, if I'd forgotten you?
+Time passes, but my passion for you shall never end: In love of
+ you, I swear it, I'll die and rise anew.
+
+When the prince heard this, the fires of longing flamed up in
+his heart and passion redoubled upon him. Grief and regret were
+sore upon him and his entrails yearned in him for love of the
+King's daughter of Senaa; so he rose forthright and eluding his
+father's notice, went forth the palace to the horse and
+mounting it, turned the peg of ascent, whereupon it flew up
+into the air with him and soared towards the confines of the
+sky. Presently, his father missed him and going up to the
+summit of the palace, in great concern, saw the prince rising
+into the air; whereat he was sore afflicted and repented
+exceedingly that he had not taken the horse and hidden it: and
+he said in himself, 'By Allah, if but my son return to me, I
+will destroy the horse, that my heart may be at rest concerning
+my son.' And he fell again to weeping and bewailing himself for
+his son.
+
+Meanwhile, the prince flew on through the air till he came to
+the city of Senaa and alighted on the roof as before. Then he
+went down stealthily and finding the eunuch asleep, as of wont,
+raised the curtain and went on, little by little, till he came
+to the door of the princess's chamber and stopped to listen;
+when, behold, he heard her weeping plenteous tears and reciting
+verses, whilst her women slept round her. Presently, they heard
+her weeping and wailing and said, 'O our mistress, why wilt
+thou mourn for one who mourns not for thee?' 'O little of
+wit,' answered she, 'is he for whom I mourn of those who are
+forgotten?' And she fell again to weeping and wailing, till
+sleep overcame her.
+
+Now the prince's heart ached for her, so he entered and seeing
+her lying asleep, without covering, touched her with his hand;
+whereupon she opened her eyes and saw him standing by her.
+Quoth he, 'Why this weeping and mourning?' And when she knew
+him, she threw herself upon him and embraced him and kissed him
+and answered, 'For thy sake and because of my separation from
+thee.' 'O my lady,' said he, 'I have wearied for thee all this
+time!' But she answered, 'It is I who have wearied for thee,
+and hadst thou tarried longer, I had surely died!' 'O my lady,'
+rejoined he, 'what thinkest thou of my case with thy father and
+how he dealt with me? Were it not for my love of thee, O
+ravishment of all creatures, I had surely slain him and made
+him a warning to all beholders; but, even as I love thee, so I
+love him for thy sake.' Quoth she, 'How couldst thou leave me?
+Can life be sweet to me after thee?' Quoth he, 'Let what has
+happened suffice now: I am hungry and thirsty.' So she bade her
+maidens make ready meat and drink, [and they sat eating and
+drinking and conversing] till nigh upon daybreak, when he rose
+to take leave of her and depart, ere the eunuch should awake,
+and she said, 'Whither goest thou?' 'To my father's house,'
+answered he; 'and I plight thee my troth that I will come to
+thee once in every week.' But she wept and said, 'I conjure
+thee, by God the Supreme, take me with thee whither thou goest
+and make me not taste anew the bitterness of separation from
+thee.' Quoth he, 'Wilt thou indeed go with me?' and she
+answered, 'Yes.' 'Then,' said he, 'arise, that we may depart.'
+So she rose forthright and going to a chest, arrayed herself in
+what was richest and dearest to her of her trinkets of gold and
+jewels of price. Then he carried her up to the roof of the
+palace and mounting the horse, took her up behind him and bound
+her fast to himself; after which he turned the peg of ascent,
+and the horse rose with him into the air. When her women saw
+this, they shrieked aloud and told her father and mother, who
+rushed up to the roof of the palace and looking up, saw the
+ebony horse flying away with the prince and princess. At this
+the King was sore troubled and cried out, saying, 'O King's
+son, I conjure thee, by Allah, have compassion on me and my
+wife and bereave us not of our daughter!' The prince made him
+no reply, but, thinking that the princess repented of leaving
+her father and mother, said to her, 'O ravishment of the age,
+wilt thou that I restore thee to thy father and mother?' 'By
+Allah, O my lord, that is not my desire,' answered she; 'my
+only wish is to be with thee wherever thou art; for I am
+distracted by the love of thee from all else, even to my father
+and mother.' At this the prince rejoiced greatly and made
+the horse fare softly with them, so as not to disquiet the
+princess; nor did they stay their flight till they came in
+sight of a green meadow, in which was a spring of running
+water. Here they alighted and ate and drank; after which they
+took horse again and fared on, till they came in sight of his
+father's capital. At this, the prince was filled with joy and
+bethought himself to show her the seat of his dominion and his
+father's power and dignity and give her to know that it was
+greater than that of her father. So he set her down in one of
+his father's pleasance-gardens [without the city] and carrying
+her into a pavilion there, prepared for the King, left the
+horse at the door and charged her keep watch over it, saying,
+'Sit here, till my messenger come to thee; for I go now to my
+father, to make ready a palace for thee and show thee my royal
+estate.' 'Do as thou wilt,' answered she, for she was glad that
+she should not enter but with due honour and observance, as
+became her rank.
+
+Then he left her and betook himself to the palace of the King
+his father, who rejoiced in his return and welcomed him; and
+the prince said to him, 'Know that I have brought with me the
+princess of whom I told thee and have left her without the city
+in such a garden and come to tell thee, that thou mayest make
+ready and go forth to meet her in state and show her thy royal
+dignity and troops and guards.' 'With all my heart,' answered
+the King and straightway bade decorate the city after the
+goodliest fashion. Then he took horse and rode out in all state
+and splendour, he and his troops and household and grandees;
+whilst the prince made ready for her a litter of green and
+red and yellow brocade, in which he set Indian and Greek
+and Abyssinian slave-girls. Moreover, he took forth of his
+treasuries jewellery and apparel and what else of the things
+that kings treasure up and made a rare display of wealth and
+magnificence. Then he left the litter and those who were
+therein and rode forward to the pavilion, where he had left the
+princess; but found both her and the horse gone. When he saw
+this, he buffeted his face and rent his clothes and went round
+about the garden, as he had lost his wits; after which he came
+to his senses and said to himself, 'How could she have come at
+the secret of the horse, seeing I told her nothing of it? Maybe
+the Persian sage who made the horse has chanced upon her and
+stolen her away, in revenge for my father's treatment of him.'
+Then he sought the keepers of the garden and asked them if they
+had seen any enter the garden.
+
+Quoth they, 'We have seen none enter but the Persian sage, who
+came to gather simples.' So the prince was certified that it
+was indeed he that had taken away the princess and abode
+confounded and perplexed concerning his case. And he was
+abashed before the folk and returning to his father, [told him
+what had happened and] said to him, 'Take the troops and return
+to the city. As for me, I will never return till I have cleared
+up this affair.' When the King heard this, he wept and beat his
+breast and said to him, 'O my son, calm thyself and master thy
+chagrin and return with us and look what King's daughter thou
+wouldst fain have, that I may marry thee to her.' But the
+prince paid no heed to his words and bidding him farewell,
+departed, whilst the King returned to the city and their joy
+was changed into mourning.
+
+Now, as Fate would have it, when the prince left the princess
+in the pavilion and betook himself to his father's palace, for
+the ordering of his affair, the Persian entered the garden to
+pluck simples and scenting the fragrance of musk and essences,
+that exhaled from the princess's person and perfumed the whole
+place, followed it till he came to the pavilion and saw the horse,
+that he had made with his own hands, standing at the door. At
+this sight, his heart was filled with joy and gladness, for he
+had mourned sore for it, since it had gone out of his hand. So
+he went up to it and examining its every part, found it safe
+and sound; whereupon he was about to mount and ride away, when
+he bethought himself and said, 'Needs must I first look what
+the prince hath brought and left here with the horse.' So he
+entered the pavilion and seeing the princess sitting there, as
+she were the sun shining in the cloudless sky, knew her to be
+some high-born lady and doubted not but the prince had brought
+her thither on the horse and left her in the pavilion, whilst
+he went to the city, to make ready for her entry in state.
+
+Then he went up to her and kissed the earth before her,
+whereupon she raised her eyes to him and finding him exceeding
+foul of face and favour, said, 'Who art thou?' 'O my lady,'
+answered he, 'I am sent by the prince, who hath bidden me bring
+thee to another garden, nearer the city; for that my lady the
+queen cannot go so far a journey and is unwilling, of her joy
+in thee, that another should forestall her with thee.' 'Where
+is the prince?' asked she; and the Persian replied, 'He is in
+the city, with his father, and will presently come for thee in
+great state.' 'O fellow,' said she, 'could he find none to send
+to me but thee?' At this he laughed and answered, 'O my lady,
+let not the ugliness of my face and the foulness of my favour
+deceive thee. Hadst thou profited of me as hath the prince,
+thou wouldst praise my affair. Indeed, he chose me as his
+messenger to thee, because of my uncomeliness and forbidding
+aspect, in his jealousy and love of thee: else hath he slaves
+and pages and servants, white and black, out of number, each
+goodlier than the other.' When she heard this, it commended
+itself to her reason and she believed him; so she rose and
+putting her hand in his, said, 'O my father, what hast thou
+brought me to ride?' 'O my lady,' answered he, 'thou shalt ride
+the horse thou camest on.' Quoth she, 'I cannot ride it by
+myself.' Whereupon he smiled and knew that she was in his power
+and said, 'I myself will ride with thee.' So he mounted and
+taking her up behind him, bound her fast to himself, for she
+knew not what he would with her. Then he turned the peg of
+ascent, whereupon the belly of the horse became full of wind
+and it swayed to and fro and rose with them into the air nor
+slackened in its flight, till it was out of sight of the city.
+
+When the princess saw this, she said to him, 'O fellow, what
+didst thou tell me of the prince, that he sent thee to me?'
+'Foul befall the prince!' answered the Persian. 'He is a
+scurril knave.' And she said, 'Out on thee! How darest thou
+disobey thy lord's commandment!' 'He is no lord of mine,'
+rejoined the Persian. 'Knowst thou who I am?' 'I know nothing
+of thee,' replied the princess, 'save what thou toldest me.'
+Quoth he, 'What I told thee was a trick of mine against thee
+and the prince. I am he who made this horse under us, and I
+have long regretted its loss; for the prince made himself
+master of it. But now I have gotten possession of it and of
+thee too, and I will rack his heart, even as he hath racked
+mine; nor shall he ever have the horse again. So take comfort
+and be of good cheer, for I can be of more service to thee than
+he.' When she heard this, she buffeted her face and cried out,
+saying, 'Ah, woe is me! I have neither gotten my beloved nor
+kept my father and mother!' And she wept sore over what had
+befallen her, whilst the Persian fared on with her, without
+ceasing, till he came to the land of the Greeks and alighted in
+a verdant meadow, abounding in trees and streams.
+
+Now this meadow was near a city, in which was a king of great
+puissance, and it befell that he went forth that day to hunt
+and divert himself. As he passed by the meadow, he saw the
+Persian standing there, with the princess and the horse by his
+side, and before he was aware, the King's followers fell upon
+him and carried him, the lady and the horse to their master,
+who noting the foulness of his favour and the beauty and grace
+of the princess, said to the latter, 'O my lady, what kin is
+this old fellow to thee?' The Persian made haste to reply, 'She
+is my wife and the daughter of my father's brother.' But she
+gave him the lie and said, 'O King, by Allah, I know him not,
+nor is he my husband, but hath stolen me away by force and
+fraud.' Thereupon the King bade beat the Persian, and they beat
+him, till he was well-nigh dead; after which the King commanded
+to carry him to the city and cast him into prison, and taking
+the princess and the horse from him, set the former in his
+harem and laid up the latter in his treasury, though he knew
+not its properties nor the secret of its motion.
+
+Meanwhile, the prince donned a travelling-habit and taking what
+he needed of money, set out, in very sorry plight, in quest of
+the princess, and journeyed from country to country and city to
+city, enquiring after the ebony horse, whilst all who heard him
+marvelled at him and deemed his talk extravagant. Thus did he a
+long while; but, for all his enquiry and research, he could win
+at no news of her. At last, he came to the city of Senaa and
+there enquired for her, but could get no tidings of her and
+found her father mourning her loss. So he turned back and made
+for the land of the Greeks, pursuing his enquiries as he went,
+till, as chance would have it, he alighted at a certain khan
+and saw a company of merchants sitting talking. He sat down
+near them and heard one say to the others, 'O my friends, I
+happened lately upon a wonder of wonders.' 'What was that?'
+asked they, and he answered, 'I was late in such a city,'
+naming the city wherein was the princess, 'and heard its people
+speak of a strange thing that had lately befallen. It was that
+their King went out one day a-hunting, with a company of his
+courtiers and the grandees of his realm, and coming to a green
+meadow, espied there a man standing, with a horse of ebony, and
+a lady sitting hard by. The man was ugly and foul of favour,
+but the lady was a marvel of beauty and grace and symmetry; and
+as for the ebony horse, it was a wonder, never saw eyes aught
+goodlier than it nor more perfect than its fashion.' 'And
+what did the King with them?' asked the others. 'As for the
+man,' said the merchant, 'he questioned him of the lady and
+he pretended that she was his wife and the daughter of his
+father's brother; but she gave him the lie. So the King took
+her from him and bade beat him and cast him into prison. As
+for the horse, I know not what became of it.' When the prince
+heard this, he drew near unto the speaker and questioned him
+discreetly and courteously, till he told him the name of the
+city and of its king; which when he knew, he passed the night,
+full of joy.
+
+On the morrow, he set out and travelled till he reached the
+city; but, when he would have entered, the gatekeepers laid
+hands on him, that they might bring him before the King; for
+that it was his wont to question all strangers respecting their
+conditions and the crafts in which they were skilled and the
+reason of their coming thither. Now it was eventide, when he
+entered the city, and it was then too late to go in to the King
+or take counsel with him respecting him. So they carried him to
+the prison, thinking to lay him therein for the night; but,
+when the warders saw his beauty and grace, they could not find
+it in their hearts to imprison him, but made him sit with them,
+without the prison; and when food came to them, he ate his fill
+with them. When they had made an end of eating, they turned to
+him and said, 'What countryman art thou?' 'I come from Persia,'
+answered he, 'the land of the Chosroës.' When they heard this,
+they laughed and one of them said, 'O Chosroän, I have heard
+the talk of men and their histories and looked upon their
+conditions; but never saw or heard I a greater liar than the
+Chosroän that is with us in the prison.' 'Nor,' quoth another,
+'did I ever see fouler than his favour or more repulsive than
+his aspect.' 'What have ye seen of his lying?' asked the
+prince, and they answered, 'He pretends that he is a sage. Now
+the King came upon him, as he went a-hunting, and found with
+him a most beautiful lady and a horse of ebony, never saw I a
+handsomer. As for the lady, she is with the King, who is
+enamoured of her and would fain marry her; but she is mad, and
+were this man a physician, as he pretends, he would have cured
+her, for the King doth his utmost endeavour to find a remedy
+for her disease, and this whole year past hath he spent
+treasures upon physicians and astrologers, on her account; but
+none can avail to cure her. As for the horse, it is in the
+royal treasury, and the man is here with us in the prison; and
+all night long he weeps and bemoans himself and will not let us
+sleep.'
+
+When the prince heard this, he bethought himself of a device by
+which he might compass his desire; and presently the warders,
+being minded to sleep, clapped him into the prison and locked
+the door. He heard the Persian weeping and bemoaning himself,
+in his own tongue, and saying, 'Woe is me for my sin, that I
+sinned against myself and against the King's son, in that which
+I did with the damsel; for I neither left her nor got my desire
+of her! All this comes of my want of sense, in that I sought
+for myself that which I deserved not and which befitted not the
+like of me; for he, who seeks what befits him not, falleth into
+the like of my predicament.' When the prince heard this, he
+accosted him in Persian, saying, 'How long wilt thou keep up
+this weeping and wailing? Thinkst thou that there hath befallen
+thee what never befell other than thou?' When the Persian heard
+this, he made friends with him and began to complain to him of
+his case and misfortunes.
+
+As soon as it was day, the warders took the prince and carried
+him before the King, informing him that he had entered the city
+on the previous night, at a time when no audience could be had
+of him. Quoth the King to the prince, 'Whence comest thou and
+what is thy name and craft and why comest thou hither?' And he
+answered, 'I am called, in Persian, Herjeh. I come from the
+land of Fars and I am of the men of art and especially of the
+art of medicine and cure the sick and the mad. For this, I go
+round about all countries and cities, adding knowledge to my
+knowledge, and whenever I see a sick person, I heal him; and
+this is my craft.' When the King heard this, he rejoiced
+exceedingly and said, 'O excellent sage, thou hast come to us
+at a time when we have need of thee.' Then he acquainted him
+with the case of the princess, adding, 'If thou win to cure her
+and recover her of her madness, thou shalt have of me whatever
+thou seekest.' 'May God advance the King!' rejoined the prince.
+'Describe to me all thou hast seen of her madness and tell me
+how long it is since it attacked her; also how thou camest by
+her.' So the King told him the whole story, from first to last,
+adding, 'The sage is in prison.' 'O august King,' said the
+prince, 'and what hast thou done with the horse?' 'It is with
+me yet, laid up in one of my treasure-chambers,' replied the
+King; whereupon quoth the prince in himself, 'The first thing
+to do is to see the horse and assure myself of its condition.
+If it be whole and unhurt, all will be well; but, if its works
+be destroyed, I must find some other way of delivering my
+beloved.'
+
+So he turned to the King and said to him, 'O King, I must see
+the horse in question: haply I may find in it somewhat that
+will serve me for the recovery of the damsel.' 'With all my
+heart,' replied the King and taking him by the hand, led him to
+the place where the horse was. The prince went round about it,
+examining its condition, and found it whole and unhurt, whereat
+he rejoiced greatly and said to the King, 'May God exalt the
+King! I would fain go in to the damsel, that I may see how it
+is with her; for I hope, by God's grace, to cure her by means
+of the horse.' Then he bade take care of the horse and the King
+carried him to the princess's apartment, where he found her
+writhing and beating herself against the ground, as was her
+wont; but there was no madness in her, and she did this but
+that none might approach her. When the prince saw her thus, he
+said to her, 'No harm shall betide thee, O ravishment of all
+creatures;' and went on to soothe her and speak her fair, till
+he won to make himself known to her; whereupon she gave a loud
+cry and fell down in a swoon for excess of joy; but the King
+thought this came of her fear of him.
+
+Then the prince put his mouth to her ear and said to her, 'O
+seduction of the universe, have a care for thy life and mine
+and be patient and constant; for we have need of patience and
+skilful ordinance to make shift for our delivery from this
+tyrannical King. To begin with, I will now go out to him and
+tell him that thou art possessed of a genie, and hence thy
+madness; but, that if he will loose thee from thy bonds, I will
+engage to heal thee and drive away the evil spirit. So, when he
+comes in to thee, do thou give him fair words, that he may
+think I have cured thee, and all will be accomplished as we
+desire.' Quoth she, 'I hear and obey;' and he went out to the
+King, full of joy and happiness, and said to him, 'O august
+King, by thy good fortune I have discovered her disease and its
+remedy and have cured her for thee. So now do thou go in to her
+and speak softly to her and entreat her kindly, and promise her
+what may please her; so shall all thou desirest of her be
+accomplished to thee.' So he went in to her and when she saw
+him, she rose and kissing the ground, bade him welcome; whereat
+he was greatly rejoiced and bade the eunuchs and waiting-women
+attend her and carry her to the bath and make ready for her
+dresses and ornaments.
+
+So they went in to her and saluted her, and she returned their
+greeting, after the goodliest and pleasantest fashion; after
+which they clad her in royal apparel and clasping a collar of
+jewels about her neck, carried her to the bath and served her
+there. Then they brought her forth, as she were the full moon;
+and when she came into the King's presence, she saluted him and
+kissed the ground before him, whereupon he rejoiced in her with
+an exceeding joy and said to the prince, 'All this is of thy
+blessing, may God increase us of thy good offices!' Quoth the
+prince, 'O King, it behoves, for the completion of her cure,
+that thou carry her forth, together with the ebony horse, and
+attend her with all thy troops to the place where thou foundest
+her, that there I may expel from her the evil spirit, by whom
+she is possessed, and bind him and kill him, so he may never
+more return to her.' 'With all my heart,' answered the King.
+Then he caused carry out the horse to the meadow in question
+and mounting, rode thither with all his troops and the princess,
+knowing not the prince's purpose.
+
+When they came to the appointed place, the prince bade set the
+horse and the princess as far as the eye could reach from the
+King and his troops and said to the former, 'With thy leave, I
+will now proceed to the needful fumigations and conjurations
+and imprison the genie here, that he may nevermore return to
+her. After this, I shall mount the horse and take the damsel up
+behind me; whereupon it will sway to and fro and fare forward,
+till it come to thee, when the affair will be at an end; and
+after this thou mayst do with her as thou wilt.' And when the
+King heard his words, he rejoiced with an exceeding joy. So the
+prince mounted the horse and taking the princess up behind him,
+bound her fast to him, whilst the King and his troops watched
+him. Then he turned the peg of ascent and the horse took flight
+and soared with them into the air, till he disappeared from
+sight.
+
+The King abode half the day, expecting their return; but they
+returned not. So, when he despaired of them, he returned to the
+city with his troops, repenting him greatly of that which he
+had done and grieving sore for the loss of the damsel. He shut
+himself up in his palace, mourning and afflicted; but his
+Viziers came in to him and applied themselves to comfort him,
+saying, 'Verily, he who took the damsel is an enchanter, and
+praised be God who hath delivered thee from his craft and
+sorcery!' And they ceased not from him, till he was comforted
+for her loss.
+
+Meanwhile, the prince bent his course, in joy and cheer,
+towards his father's capital and stayed not, till he alighted
+on his own palace, where he set the princess in safety; after
+which he went in to his father and mother and acquainted them
+with her coming, whereat they rejoiced exceedingly. Then he
+made great banquets to the townsfolk and they held high
+festival a whole month, at the end of which time he went in to
+the princess and they rejoiced in one another with an exceeding
+joy. But his father broke the horse in pieces and destroyed its
+works. Moreover, the prince wrote a letter to the princess's
+father, advising him of all that had befallen her and how she
+was now married to him and in all health and happiness, and
+sent it by a messenger, together with costly presents and
+rarities. The messenger, in due course, arrived at the city of
+Senaa and delivered the letter and the presents to the King,
+who, when he read the former, rejoiced greatly and accepted the
+presents, rewarding the bearer handsomely. Moreover, he sent
+rich presents to his son-in-law by the same messenger, who
+returned to his master and acquainted him with what had passed,
+whereat he was much cheered. And after this the prince wrote a
+letter every year to his father-in-law and sent him a present,
+till, in course of time, his father King Sabour died and he
+reigned in his stead, ruling justly over his subjects and
+ordering himself well and righteously towards them, so that
+they submitted themselves to him and did him loyal service; and
+he and his wife abode in the enjoyment of all delight and
+solace of life, till there came to them the Destroyer of
+Delights and Sunderer of Companies, He that layeth waste the
+palaces and peopleth the tombs; and glory be to the Living One
+who dieth not and in whose hand is the dominion of the Seen and
+the Unseen!
+
+
+
+
+
+ UNS EL WUJOUD AND THE VIZIER'S DAUGHTER
+ ROSE-IN-BUD.
+
+
+
+
+There was once, of old days and in bygone ages and times, a
+King of great power and glory and dominion, who had a Vizier
+named Ibrahim, and this Vizier had a daughter of extraordinary
+beauty and grace, gifted with surpassing brilliancy and all
+perfection, possessed of abundant wit and perfectly accomplished.
+She loved wine and good cheer and fair faces and choice verses
+and rare stories; and the delicacy of her charms invited all
+hearts to love, even as Saith the poet, describing her:
+
+She shines out like the moon at full, that midst the stars doth
+ fare, And for a wrapping-veil she hath the ringlets of her
+ hair.
+The Eastern zephyr gives her boughs to drink of all its sweets
+ And like a jointed cane, she sways to every breath of air.
+She smiles in passing by. O thou that dost alike accord With
+ red and yellow and arrayed in each, alike art fair,
+Thou sportest with my wit in love, so that indeed meseems As if
+ a sparrow in the clutch of playful urchin 'twere.
+
+Her name was Rose-in-bud and she was so named for the exceeding
+delicacy and perfection of her beauty; and the King loved to
+carouse with her, because of her wit and good breeding.
+
+Now it was the King's custom yearly to gather together all the
+nobles of his realm and play with the ball. So, when the day
+came round, on which the folk assembled for ball-play, the
+Vizier's daughter seated herself at her lattice, to divert
+herself by looking on at the game; and as they were at play,
+her eyes fell upon a youth among them, never was seen a
+handsomer than he or a goodlier of favour, for he was bright of
+face, laughing-teethed, tall and broad-shouldered. She looked
+at him again and again and could not take her fill of gazing on
+him. Then she said to her nurse, 'What is the name of yonder
+handsome young man among the troops?' 'O my daughter,' replied
+the nurse, 'they are all handsome. Which of them dost thou
+mean?' 'Wait till he passes,' said Rose-in-bud, 'and I will
+point him out to thee.' So she took an apple and waited till he
+came under her window, when she dropped it on him, whereupon he
+raised his head, to see who did this, and saw the Vizier's
+daughter at the window, as she were the full moon in the
+darkness of the night; nor did he withdraw his eyes, till he
+had fallen passionately in love with her; and he recited the
+following verses:
+
+Was it an archer shot me or did thine eyes undo The lover's
+ heart that saw thee, what time thou metst his view?
+Did the notched arrow reach me from midst a host, indeed, Or
+ was it from a lattice that launched at me it flew?
+
+ When the game was at an end, he went away with the King,
+[whose servant and favourite he was,] with heart occupied with
+love of her; and she said to her nurse, 'What is the name of
+that youth I showed thee?' 'His name is Uns el Wujoud,'
+answered she; whereat Rose-in-bud shook her head and lay down
+on her couch, with a heart on fire for love. Then, sighing
+deeply, she improvised the following verses:
+
+He erred not who dubbed thee, "All creatures' delight,"[FN#75]
+ That pleasance and bounty[FN#76] at once dust unite.
+Full-moonlike of aspect, O thou whose fair face O'er all the
+ creation sheds glory and light,
+Thou'rt peerless midst mortals, the sovran of grace, And many a
+ witness to this I can cite.
+Thy brows are a Noun[FN#77] and shine eyes are a Sad,[FN#78]
+ That the hand of the loving Creator did write;
+Thy shape is the soft, tender sapling, that gives Of its
+ bounties to all that its favours invite.
+Yea, indeed, thou excellest the world's cavaliers In pleasance
+ and beauty and bounty and might.
+
+When she had finished, she wrote the verses on a sheet of
+paper, which she folded in a piece of gold-embroidered silk and
+laid under her pillow. Now one of her nurses saw her; so she
+came up to her and held her in talk, till she slept, when she
+stole the scroll from under her pillow and reading it, knew
+that she had fallen in love with Uns el Wujoud. Then she
+returned the scroll to its place and when her mistress awoke,
+she said to her, 'O my lady, indeed, I am to thee a faithful
+counsellor and am tenderly solicitous for thee. Know that
+passion is grievous and the hiding it melteth iron and causeth
+sickness and unease; nor is there reproach for whoso confesses
+it.' 'O my nurse,' rejoined Rose-in-bud,'and what is the remedy
+of passion?' 'The remedy of passion is enjoyment,' answered the
+nurse. 'And how may one come by enjoyment?' asked Rose-in-bud.
+'By letters and messages,' replied the nurse, 'and many a
+tender word and greeting; this brings lovers together and makes
+hard matters easy. So, if thou have aught at heart, mistress
+mine, I will engage to keep thy secret and do thy need and
+carry thy letters.'
+
+When the girl heard this, her reason fled for joy; but she
+restrained herself from speech, till she should see the issue
+of the matter, saying in herself, 'None knoweth this thing of
+me, nor will I trust this woman with my secret, till I have
+proved her.' Then said the nurse, 'O my lady, I saw in my sleep
+as though one came to me and said, "Thy mistress and Uns el
+Wujoud love one another; so do thou serve their loves by
+carrying their messages and doing their need and keeping their
+secrets; and much good shall befall thee." So now I have told
+thee my dream, and it is thine to decide.' 'O my nurse,' quoth
+Rose-in-bud, 'canst thou keep secrets?' 'And how should I not
+keep secrets,' answered the nurse, 'I that am of the flower of
+the free-born?' Then Rose-in-bud pulled out the scroll, on
+which she had written the verses afore said, and said to her,'
+Carry this my letter to Uns el Wujoud and bring me his answer.'
+
+So the nurse took the letter and repairing to Uns el Wujoud,
+kissed his hands and saluted him right courteously, then gave
+him the letter; and he read it and wrote on the back the
+following verses:
+
+I temper my heart in passion and hide my case as I may; But my
+ case interprets for me and doth my love bewray.
+And whenas my lids brim over with tears,--lest the spy should
+ see And come to fathom my secret,--"My eye is sore," I
+ say.
+Of old I was empty-hearted and knew not what love was; But now
+ I am passion's bondman, my heart to love's a prey.
+To thee I prefer my petition, complaining of passion and pain,
+ So haply thou mayst be softened and pity my dismay.
+With the tears of my eye I have traced it, that so unto thee it
+ may The tidings of what I suffer for thee to thee convey.
+God watch o'er a visage, that veileth itself with beauty, a
+ face That the full moon serves as a bondman and the stars
+ as slaves obey!
+Yea' Allah protect her beauty, whose like I ne'er beheld! The
+ boughs from her graceful carriage, indeed, might learn to
+ sway.
+I beg thee to grant me a visit; algates, if it irk thee nought.
+ An thou knewst how dearly I'd prize it, thou wouldst not
+ say me nay.
+I give thee my life, so haply thou mayst accept it: to me Thy
+ presence is life eternal and hell thy turning away.
+
+Then he folded the letter and kissing it, gave it to the nurse
+and said to her, 'O nurse, incline thy lady's heart to me.' 'I
+hear and obey,' answered she and carried the letter to her
+mistress, who kissed it and laid it on her head, then wrote at
+the foot of it these verses:
+
+Harkye, thou whose heart is taken with my grace and loveliness,
+ Have but patience, and right surely thou my favours shalt
+ possess.
+When we were assured the passion thou avouchedst was sincere
+ And that that which us betided had betided thee no less,
+Gladly had we then vouchsafed thee what thou sighedst for, and
+ more; But our guardians estopped us to each other from
+ access.
+When night darkens on the dwellings, fires are lighted in our
+ heart And our entrails burn within us, for desire and
+ love's excess.
+Yea, for love and longing, slumber is a stranger to our couch
+ And the burning pangs of fever do our body sore distress.
+'Twas a law of passion ever, love and longing to conceal; Lift
+ not thou the curtain from us nor our secret aye
+ transgress.
+Ah, my heart is overflowing with the love of yon gazelle; Would
+ it had not left our dwellings for the distant wilderness.
+
+Then she folded the letter and gave it to the nurse, who took
+it and went out to go to the young man; but as she went forth
+the door, her master met her and said to her, 'Whither away?'
+'To the bath,' answered she; but, in her trouble, she dropped
+the letter, without knowing it, and one of the servants, seeing
+it lying in the way, picked it up. When she came without the
+door, she sought for it, but found it not, so turned back to
+her mistress and told her of this and what had befallen her
+with the Vizier.
+
+Meanwhile, the latter came out of the harem and seated himself
+on his couch. Presently, the servant, who had picked up the
+letter, came in to him, with it in his hand, and said, 'O my
+lord, I found this paper lying on the floor and picked it up.'
+So the Vizier took it from his hand, folded as it was, and
+opening it, read the verses above set down. Then he examined
+the writing and knew it for his daughter's hand; whereupon he
+went in to her mother, weeping so sore that his beard was
+drenched. 'What makes thee weep, O my lord?' asked she; and he
+answered, 'Take this letter and see what is therein.' So she
+took it and saw it to be a love-letter from her daughter
+Rose-in-bud to Uns el Wujoud; whereupon the tears sprang to her
+eyes; but she mastered herself and swallowing her tears, said
+to her husband, 'O my lord, there is no profit in weeping: the
+right course is to cast about for a means of preserving thine
+honour and concealing thy daughter's affair.' And she went on
+to comfort him and lighten his trouble. Quoth he, 'I am fearful
+of what may ensue this passion of my daughter, and that for two
+reasons. The first concerns myself; it is, that she is my daughter;
+the second, that Uns el Wujoud is a favourite with the Sultan,
+who loves him with an exceeding love, and maybe great troubles
+shall come of this affair. What deemest thou of the matter?'
+'Wait,' answered she, 'whilst I pray to God for direction.'
+So she prayed a two-bow prayer, according to the prophetic
+ordinance of the prayer for divine guidance; after which she
+said to her husband, 'Amiddleward the Sea of Treasures stands
+a mountain called the Mount of the Bereaved Mother,' (the cause
+of which being so named shall follow in its place, if it be the
+will of God,) 'and thither can none come, save with difficulty;
+do thou make her an abiding-place there.'
+
+So the Vizier and his wife agreed to build, on the mountain in
+question, a strong castle and lodge his daughter therein with a
+year's victual, to be annually renewed, and attendants to serve
+and keep her company. Accordingly, he collected builders and
+carpenters and architects and despatched them to the mountain,
+where they builded her an impregnable castle, never saw eyes
+its like. Then he made ready victual and carriage for the
+journey and going in to his daughter by night, bade her make
+ready to set out on a pleasure-excursion. She refused to set
+out by night, but he was instant with her, till she went forth;
+and when she saw the preparations for the journey, her heart
+misgave her of separation from her beloved and she wept sore
+and wrote upon the door the following verses, to acquaint him
+with what had passed and with the transports of passion and
+grief that were upon her, transports such as would make the
+flesh quake, that would cause the hearts of stones to melt and
+eyes to overflow with tears:
+
+By Allah, O house, if the loved one pass in the morning-glow
+ And greet with the greeting of lovers, as they pass to and
+ fro,
+Give him our salutation, a pure and fragrant one, For that we
+ have departed, and whither he may not know.
+Why on this wise they hurry me off by stealth, anights And
+ lightly equipped, I know not, nor whither with me they go.
+Neath cover of night and darkness, they carry me forth, alack I
+ Whilst the birds in the brake bewail us and make their
+ moan for our woe;
+And the tongue of the case interprets their language and cries,
+ "Alas, Alas for the pain of parting from those that we
+ love, heigho!"
+When I saw that the cups of sev'rance were filled and that
+ Fate, indeed, Would give us to drink of its bitter,
+ unmingled, would we or no,
+I blended the draught with patience becoming, as best I might;
+ But patience avails not to solace my heart for your loss,
+ I trow.
+
+Then she mounted, and they set forward with her and fared on
+over desert and plain and hill, till they came to the shore of
+the Sea of Treasures, where they pitched their tents and built
+a great ship, in which they embarked her and her suite and
+carried them over to the mountain. Here they left them in the
+castle and making their way back to the shore, broke up the
+vessel, in obedience to the Vizier's commandment, and returned
+home, weeping over what had befallen.
+
+Meanwhile, Uns el Wujoud arose from sleep and prayed the
+morning prayer, after which he mounted and rode forth to wait
+upon the Sultan. On his way, he passed by the Vizier's house,
+thinking to see some of his followers, as of wont, but saw no
+one and drawing near the door, read the verses aforesaid
+written thereon. At this sight, his senses failed him; fire was
+kindled in his vitals and he returned to his lodging, where he
+passed the rest of the day in ceaseless trouble and anxiety,
+without finding ease or patience, till night darkened upon him,
+when his transport redoubled. So he put off his clothes and
+disguising himself in a fakir's habit, set out, at a venture,
+under cover of the night, distraught and knowing not whither he
+went.
+
+He wandered on all that night and next day, till the heat of
+the sun grew fierce and the mountains flamed like fire and
+thirst was grievous upon him. Presently, he espied a tree, by
+whose side was a spring of running water; so he made towards it
+and sitting down in the shade, on the bank of the rivulet,
+essayed to drink, but found that the water had no taste in his
+mouth. Then, [looking in the stream,] he saw that his body was
+wasted, his colour changed and his face grown pale and his,
+feet, to boot, swollen with walking and weariness. So he shed
+copious tears and repeated the following verses:
+
+The lover is drunken with love of his fair; In longing and heat
+ he redoubles fore'er.
+Love-maddened, confounded, distracted, perplexed, No dwelling
+ is pleasant to him and no fare.
+For how, to a lover cut off from his love, Can life be
+ delightsome? 'Twere strange an it were.
+I melt with the fire of my passion for her And the tears down
+ my cheek roll and never forbear.
+Shall I ever behold her or one from her stead, With whom I may
+ solace my heart in despair?
+
+And he wept till he wet the ground; after which he rose and
+fared on again over deserts and wilds, till there came out upon
+him a lion, with a neck buried in hair, a head the bigness of a
+dome, a mouth wider than the door [thereof] and teeth like
+elephants' tusks. When Uns el Wujoud saw him, he gave himself up
+for lost and turning towards Mecca, pronounced the professions
+of the faith and prepared for death.
+
+Now he had read in books that whoso will flatter the lion,
+beguileth him, for that he is lightly duped by fair words and
+glorieth in praise; so he began and said, 'O lion of the forest
+and the waste! O unconquerable warrior! O father of heroes and
+Sultan of wild beasts! Behold, I am a desireful lover, whom
+passion and severance have undone. Since I parted from my
+beloved, I have lost my reason; wherefore, do thou hearken to
+my speech and have ruth on my passion and love-longing.' When
+the lion heard this, he drew back from him and sitting down on
+his hind-quarters, raised his head to him and began to frisk
+his tail and paws to him; which when Uns el Wujoud saw, he
+recited these verses:
+
+Wilt slay me, O lord of the desert, before My enslaver I meet
+ with, e'en her I adore?
+No fat on me is; I'm no booty for thee; For the loss of my
+ loved one hath wasted me sore.
+Yea, my love's separation hath worn out my soul, And I'm grown
+ like a shape, with a shroud covered o'er.
+Give the railers not cause to exult in my woe, O prince of the
+ spoilers, O lion of war!
+A lover, all sleepless for loss of my dear, I'm drowned in the
+ tears from mine eyelids that pour;
+And my pining for her in the darkness of night Hath robbed me,
+ for passion, of reason and lore.
+
+When he had finished, the lion rose and coming softly up to
+him, with his eyes full of tears, licked him with his tongue,
+then walked on before him, signing to him, as who should say,
+'Follow me.' So he followed him, and he led him on till he
+brought him, over a mountain, to the farther side, where he
+came upon the track of a caravan and knew it to be that of
+Rose-in-bud and her company. When the lion saw that he knew the
+track and set himself to follow it, he turned back and went his
+way; whilst Uns el Wujoud followed the foot-marks, till they
+brought him to a surging sea, swollen with clashing billows. The
+trail led down to the water's edge and there broke off; whereby
+he knew that they had taken ship there and had continued their
+journey by sea. So he lost hope of finding his beloved and
+repeated the following verses, weeping sore:
+
+Far's the place of visitation and my patience faileth me For my
+ love; but how to reach her o'er the abysses of the sea?
+When, for love of her, my vitals are consumed and I've forsworn
+ Slumber, sleep for wake exchanging, ah, how can I patient
+ be?
+Since the day she left the homesteads and departed, hath my
+ heart Burnt with never-ceasing anguish, all a-fire with
+ agony.
+Oxus and Jaxartes, running like Euphrates, are my tears; More
+ than rain and flood abounding, run like rivers to the sea.
+Ulcerated are my eyelids with the running of the tears, And my
+ heart on fires of passion's burnt and wasted utterly.
+Yea, the armies of my longing and my transport on me pressed,
+ And the hosts of my endurance did before them break and
+ flee.
+Lavishly my life I've ventured for the love of her; for life Is
+ the lightest to a lover of all ventures, verily.
+Be an eye of God unpunished that beheld the beauteous one, Than
+ the moon how much more splendid, in the harem's sanctuary!
+Struck was I and smitten prostrate by wide-opened eyes, whose
+ shafts, From a bow all stringless loosened, pierced the
+ hapless heart of me.
+By the soft and flexile motions of her shape she captived me,
+ Swaying as the limber branches sway upon the cassia-tree.
+Union with her I covet, that therewith I may apply Solace to
+ the pains of passion, love and care and misery.
+For the love of her, afflicted, as I am, I have become; All
+ that's fallen on me betided from the evil eye, perdie.
+
+Then he wept, till he swooned away, and abode in his swoon a
+long while. When he came to himself, he looked right and left
+and seeing none in the desert, was fearful of the wild beasts;
+so he climbed to the top of a high mountain, where he heard a
+man's voice speaking within a cavern. He listened and found it
+to be that of a devotee, who had forsworn the world and given
+himself up to pious exercises. So he knocked thrice at the
+cavern door; but the hermit made him no answer, neither came
+forth to him; wherefore he sighed heavily and recited the
+following verses:
+
+What way is open unto me, to my desire to get And put off
+ weariness and toil and trouble and regret?
+All pains and terrors have combined on me, to make me hoar And
+ old of head and heart, whilst I a very child am yet.
+I find no friend to solace me of longing and unease' Nor one
+ 'gainst passion and its stress to aid me and abet.
+Alas, the torments I endure for waste and wistful love!
+ Fortune, meseems, 'gainst me is turned and altogether set.
+Ah, woe's me for the lover's pain, unresting, passion-burnt,
+ Him who in parting's bitter cup his lips perforce hath
+ wet!
+His wit is ravished clean away by separation's woe, Fire in his
+ heart and all consumed his entrails by its fret.
+Ah, what a dreadful day it was, when to her stead I came And
+ that, which on the door was writ, my eyes confounded met!
+I wept, until I gave the earth to drink of my despair; But
+ still from friend and foe I hid the woes that me beset.
+Then strayed I forth till, in the waste, a lion sprang on me
+ And would have slain me straight; but him with flattering
+ words I met
+And soothed him. So he spared my life and succoured me, as
+ 'twere He too had known love's taste and been entangled in
+ its net.
+Yet, for all this, could I but win to come to my desire, All,
+ that I've suffered and endured, straightway I should
+ forget.
+O thou, that harbour'st in thy cave, distracted from the world,
+ Meseems thou'st tasted love and been its slave, O
+ anchoret!
+
+Hardly had he made an end of these verses when, behold, the
+door of the cavern opened and he heard one say' 'Alas, the pity
+of it I' So he entered and saluted the hermit, who returned his
+greeting and said to him, 'What is thy name?' 'Uns el Wujoud,'
+answered the young man. 'And what brings thee hither?' asked
+the hermit. So he told him his whole story, whereat he wept and
+said' 'O Uns el Wujoud, these twenty years have I dwelt in this
+place, but never beheld I any here, till the other day, when I
+heard a noise of cries and weeping, and looking forth in the
+direction of the sound, saw much people and tents pitched on
+the sea-shore. They built a ship, in which they embarked and
+sailed away. Then some of them returned with the ship and
+breaking it up, went their way; and methinks those, who
+embarked in the ship and returned not, are they whom thou
+seekest. In that case, thy trouble must needs be grievous and
+thou art excusable; though never yet was lover but suffered
+sorrows.' Then he recited the following verses:
+
+Uns el Wujoud, thou deem'st me free of heart, but, wel-a-way!
+ Longing and transport and desire fold and unfold me aye.
+Yea, love and passion have I known even from my earliest years,
+ Since at my mother's nursing breast a suckling babe I lay.
+I struggled sore and long with Love, till I his power
+ confessed. If thou enquire at him of me, he will me not
+ unsay.
+I quaffed the cup of passion out, with languor and disease, And
+ as a phantom I became for pining and decay.
+Strong was I, but my strength is gone and neath the swords of
+ eyes, The armies of my patience broke and vanished clean
+ away.
+Hope not to win delight of love, without chagrin and woe; For
+ contrary with contrary conjoined is alway.
+But fear not change from lover true; do thou but constant be
+ Unto thy wish, and thou shalt sure be happy yet some day:
+For unto lovers passion hath ordained that to forget Is heresy,
+ forbidden all its mandates that obey.
+
+Then he rose and coming to the youth, embraced him, and they
+wept together, till the hills rang with their crying and they
+fell down in a swoon. When they revived, they swore brotherhood
+in God the Most High, and the hermit said to Uns el Wujoud,
+'This night will I pray to God and seek of Him direction what
+thou shouldst do to attain thy desire.'
+
+To return to Rose-in-bud. When they brought her into the castle
+and she beheld its ordinance, she wept and exclaimed, 'By
+Allah, thou art a goodly place, save that thou lackest the
+presence of the beloved in thee!' Then, seeing [many] birds in
+the island, she bade her people set snares for them and hang up
+all they caught in cages within the castle; and they did so. But
+she sat at a window of the castle and bethought her of what had
+passed, and passion and transport and love-longing redoubled
+upon her, till she burst into tears and repeated the following
+verses:
+
+To whom, of my desire complaining, shall I cry, To whom, for
+ loss of loves and parting's sorrow, sigh?
+Flames rage within my breast, but I reveal them not, For fear
+ lest they my case discover to the spy.
+I'm grown as thin as e'er a bodkin's wood, so worn With absence
+ and lament and agony am I.
+Where is the loved one's eye, to see how I'm become Even as a
+ blasted tree, stripped bare and like to die?
+They wronged me, when they shut me prisoner in a place, Wherein
+ my love, alas I may never come me nigh.
+Greetings a thousandfold I beg the sun to bear, What time he
+ riseth up and setteth from the sky,
+To a beloved one, who puts the moon to shame, For loveliness,
+ and doth the Indian cane outvie.
+If the rose ape his cheek, "Now God forfend," I say, "That of
+ my portion aught to pilfer thou shouldst try."
+Lo, in his mouth are springs of limpid water sweet, Refreshment
+ that would bring to those in flames who lie.
+How shall I one forget who is my heart and soul, My malady and
+ he that healing can apply?
+
+Then, as the shadows darkened upon her, her longing increased
+and she called to mind the past and recited these verses also:
+
+The shadows darken and passion stirs up my sickness amain And
+ longing rouses within me the old desireful pain.
+The anguish of parting hath taken its sojourn in my breast And
+ love and longing and sorrow have maddened heart and brain.
+Passion hath made me restless and yearning consumes my soul And
+ tears discover my secret, that else concealed had lain.
+I know of no way to ease me of sickness and care and woe; Nor
+ can my weak endeavour reknit Love's severed skein.
+My heart is a raging furnace, because of the heat whereof My
+ entrails are racked with anguish, that nothing can assain.
+O thou, that thinkest to blame me for what is fallen on me,
+ Enough, I suffer with patience whatever the Fates ordain.
+I swear I shall ne'er find comfort nor be consoled for them,
+ The oath of the children of passion, whose oaths are never
+ in vain!
+Bear tidings, O night, to my dear ones and greet them and
+ witness bear That thou knowest in thee I sleep not, but
+ ever to wake am fain.
+
+Meanwhile, the hermit said to Uns el Wujoud, 'Go down into the
+valley and fetch me palm-fibre.' So he went and returned with
+the palm-fibre, which the hermit took and twisting into ropes,
+made therewith a net, such as is used for carrying straw; after
+which he said to the youth, 'O Uns el Wujoud, in the heart of
+the valley grows a gourd, which springs up and dries upon its
+roots. Go thither and fill this net therewith; then tie it
+together and casting it into the water, embark thereon and make
+for the midst of the sea, so haply thou shalt come to thy
+desire; for he, who adventureth not himself, shall not attain
+that he seeketh.' 'I hear and obey,' answered Uns el Wujoud and
+bidding the hermit farewell after he had prayed for him, betook
+himself to the hollow of the valley, where he did as he had
+counselled him and launched out upon the water, supported by
+the net.
+
+Then there arose a wind, which drove him out to sea, till he
+was lost to the hermit's view; and he ceased not to fare on
+over the abysses of the ocean, one billow tossing him up on the
+crest of the wave and another bearing him down into the trough
+of the sea, and he beholding the while the terrors and wonders
+of the deep, for the space of three days, at the end of which
+time Fate cast him upon the Mount of the Bereft Mother, where
+he landed, weak and giddy as a fledgling bird, for hunger and
+thirst; but, finding there streams running and birds warbling
+on the branches and fruit-laden trees, growing in clusters and
+singly, he ate of the fruits and drank of the streams. Then he
+walked on till he saw some white thing alar off, and making for
+it, found that it was a strongly-fortified castle. So he went
+up to the gate and finding it locked, sat down by it.
+
+He sat thus three days and on the fourth, the gate opened and
+an eunuch came out, who seeing Uns el Wujoud seated there, said
+to him, 'Whence comest thou and who brought thee hither?' Quoth
+he, 'I come from Ispahan and was travelling by sea with
+merchandise, when my ship was wrecked and the waves cast me
+upon this island.' When the eunuch heard this, he wept and
+embraced him, saying, 'God preserve thee, O [thou that bringest
+me the] fragrance of the beloved! Ispahan is my own country and
+I have there a cousin, the daughter of my father's brother,
+whom I loved and cherished from a child; but a people stronger
+than we fell upon us and taking me among other booty, docked me
+and sold me for an eunuch, whilst I was yet a lad; and this is
+how I come to be what I am.' Then he carried him into the
+courtyard of the castle, where he saw a great basin of water,
+surrounded by trees, on whose branches hung cages of silver,
+with doors of gold, and therein birds warbling and singing the
+praises of the Requiting King. In the first cage he came to was
+a turtle dove which, seeing him, raised her voice and cried
+out, saying, 'O Bountiful One!'[FN#79] Whereat he fell down in
+a swoon, but, presently coming to himself, sighed heavily and
+recited the following verses:
+
+O turtle, art thou mad for love, as is my case? Then sing, 'O
+ Bountiful!' and seek the Lord His grace!
+Tell me, doth thy descant in joyance tale its rise Or in
+ desireful pain, that in thy heart hath place?
+If for desire thou moan'st of bygone loves or pin'st For dear
+ ones that have gone and left thee but their trace,
+Or if thou'st lost thy love, like me, ah, then, indeed,
+ Severance long-felt desire discovereth apace.
+God guard a lover true! Though my bones rot, nor time Nor
+ absence from my heart her image shall efface.
+
+Then he fainted again and presently coming to his senses, went
+on to the second cage, wherein he found a ring-dove. When it
+saw him, it sang out, 'O Eternal, I praise thee!' and he sighed
+and recited these verses:
+
+I heard a ring-dove say in her plaintive note, "Despite of my
+ woes, O Eternal, I praise Thee still!"
+And God, of His grace, reunion of our loves, in this my travel,
+ may yet to us fulfil.
+She visits me oft,[FN#80] with her dusk-red honeyed lips, And
+ lends to the passion within me an added thrill.
+And I cry, whilst the fires in my tortured heart flame high And
+ my soul for ardour consumes and my eyes distil
+Tears that resemble blood and withouten cease Pour down on my
+ wasted cheeks in many a rill,
+There's none created without affliction, and I Must bear with
+ patience my tribulations, until
+The hour of solace with her I love one day Unite me. Ah, then,
+ by God His power and will,
+In succouring lovers, I vow, I'll spend my good, For they're of
+ my tribe and category still;
+And eke from prison I'll loose the birds, to boot, And leave,
+ for joyance, the thought of every ill!
+
+Then he went on to the third cage, in which was a mocking-bird.
+When it saw him, it set up a song, and he recited the following
+verses:
+
+The mocking-bird delighteth me with his harmonious strain, As
+ 'twere a lover's voice that pines and wastes for love in
+ vain.
+Woe's me for those that lovers be! How many a weary night, For
+ love and anguish and desire, to waken they are fain!
+'Twould seem as if they had no part in morning or in sleep, For
+ all the stress of love and woe that holds their heart and
+ brain.
+When I became distraught for her I love and wistfulness Bound
+ me in fetters strait, the tears from out mine eyes did
+ rain
+So thick and fast, they were as chains, and I to her did say,
+ "My tears have fallen so thick, that now they've bound me
+ with a chain."
+The treasures of my patience fail, absence is long on me And
+ yearning sore; and passion's stress consumeth me amain.
+If God's protection cover me and Fortune be but just And Fate
+ with her whom I adore unite me once again,
+I'll doff my clothes, that she may see how worn my body is, For
+ languishment and severance and solitary pain.
+
+Then he went on to the fourth cage, where he found a
+nightingale, which, at sight of him, began to tune its
+plaintive note. When he heard its descant, he burst into tears
+and repeated the following verses:
+
+The nightingale's note, when the dawning is near, Distracts
+ from the lute-strings the true lover's ear.
+Complaineth, for love-longing, Uns el Wujoud, Of a passion that
+ blotteth his being out sheer.
+How many sweet notes, that would soften, for mirth, The
+ hardness of iron and stone, do I hear!
+The zephyr of morning brings tidings to me Of meadows,
+ full-flower'd for the blossoming year.
+The scents on the breeze and the music of birds, In the
+ dawning, transport me with joyance and cheer.
+But I think of a loved one, that's absent from me, And mine
+ eyes rain in torrents, with tear upon tear;
+And the ardour of longing flames high in my breast, As a fire
+ in the heart of a brasier burns clear.
+May Allah vouchsafe to a lover distraught To see and foregather
+ once more with his dear!
+Yea, for lovers, heart-sickness and longing and woe And wake
+ are excuses that plainly appear.
+
+Then he went on a little and came to a handsome cage, than
+which there was no goodlier there, and in it a culver, that is
+to Say, a wood-pigeon, the bird renowned among the birds as the
+singer of love-longing, with a collar of jewels about its neck,
+wonder-goodly of ordinance. He considered it awhile and seeing
+it mazed and brooding in its cage, shed tears and repeated
+these verses:
+
+O culver of the copse, may peace upon thee light, O friend of
+ all who love and every wistful wight!
+I love a young gazelle, a slender one, whose glance Than
+ sharpest sabre's point is keener and more bright.
+For love of her, my heart and entrails are a-fire And
+ sicknesses consume my body and my spright.
+The sweet of pleasant food's forbidden unto me, And eke I am
+ denied the taste of sleep's delight.
+Solace and fortitude have taken flight from me, And love and
+ longing lodge with me, both day and night.
+How shall my life be sweet to me, while she's afar, That is my
+ life, my wish, the apple of my sight?
+
+When the pigeon heard these verses, it awoke from its brooding
+and cooed and warbled and trilled, till it all but spoke; and
+the tongue of the case interpreted for it and recited the
+following verses:
+
+O lover, thy wailings recall to my mind The time when my youth
+ from me wasted and dwined,
+And A mistress, whose charms and whose grace I adored,
+ Seductive and fair over all of her kind;
+Whose voice, from the twigs of the sandhill upraised, Left the
+ strains of the flute, to my thought, far behind.
+A snare set the fowler and caught me, who cried, "Would he d
+ leave me to range at my will on the wind!"
+I had hoped he was clement or seeing that I Was a lover, would
+ pity my lot and be kind;
+But no, (may God smite him!) he tore me away From my dear and
+ apart from her harshly confined.
+Since then, my desire for her grows without cease, And my heart
+ with the fires of disjunction is mined.
+God guard a true lover, who striveth with love And hath
+ suffered the torments in which I have pined!
+When he seeth me languish for love in my cage, He will loose
+ me, in mercy, my loved one to find
+
+ Then Uns el Wujoud turned to his friend, the Ispahani and said
+to him, 'What palace is this? Who built it and who abideth in
+it?' Quoth the eunuch, 'The Vizier of King Shamikh built it
+for his daughter, fearing for her the assaults of fate and the
+vicissitudes of fortune, and lodged her therein, with her
+attendants; nor do we open it save once in every year, when our
+victual comes to us.' And Uns el Wujoud said in himself, 'I
+have gained my end' though after long travail.'
+
+Meanwhile, Rose-in-bud took no delight in eating nor drinking,
+sitting nor sleeping; but her transport and passion and
+love-longing redoubled on her, and she went wandering about the
+castle, but could find no issue; wherefore she shed plenteous
+tears and recited the following verses:
+
+They have prisoned me straitly from him I adore And given me to
+ eat of mine anguish galore.
+My heart with the flames of love-longing they fired, When me
+ from the sight of my loved one they bore.
+They have cloistered me close in a palace built high On a mount
+ in the midst of a sea without shore.
+If they'd have me forget, their endeavour is vain, For my love
+ but redoubles upon me the more.
+How can I forget him, when all I endure Arose from the sight of
+ his face heretofore?
+My days are consumed in lament, and my nights Pass in thinking
+ of him, as I knew him of yore.
+His memory my solace in solitude is, Since the lack of his
+ presence I needs must deplore.
+I wonder, will Fate grant my heart its desire And my love,
+ after all, to my wishes restore!
+
+Then she donned her richest clothes and trinkets and threw a
+necklace of jewels around her neck; after which she ascended to the
+roof of the castle and tying some strips of Baalbek stuff together,
+[to serve for a rope], made them fast to the battlements and let
+herself down thereby to the ground. Then she fared on over wastes
+and wilds, till she came to the sea-shore, where she saw a
+fishing-boat, and therein a fisherman, whom the wind had driven
+on to the island, as he went, fishing here and there, on the sea.
+When he saw her, he was affrighted, [ taking her for a Jinniyeh]
+and put out again to sea; but she cried out and made pressing
+signs to him to return, reciting the following verses:
+
+Harkye, O fisherman, fear thou no injury; I'm but an earthly
+ maid, a mortal like to thee.
+I do implore thee, stay, give ear unto my prayer And hearken to
+ my true and woeful history.
+Pity, (so God thee spare,) the ardour [of my love,] And say if
+ thou hast seen a loved one, fled from me.
+I love a fair-faced youth and goodly; brighter far Of aspect
+ than the face of sun or moon is he.
+The antelope, that sees his glances, cries, "His slave Am I,"
+ and doth confess inferiority.
+Yea, beauty on his brow these pregnant words hath writ In very
+ dust of musk, significant to see,
+"Who sees the light of love is in the way of right, And he who
+ strays commits foul sin and heresy."
+An thou have ruth on me and bring me to his sight, O rare!
+ Whate'er thou wilt thy recompense shall be;
+Rubies and precious stones and freshly gathered pearls And
+ every kind of gem that is in earth and sea.
+Surely, O friend, thou wilt with my desire comply; For all my
+ heart's on fire with love and agony.
+
+When the fisherman heard this, he wept and sighed and lamented;
+then, recalling what had betided himself in the days of his
+youth, when love had the mastery over him and transport and
+love-longing and distraction were sore upon him and the fires
+of passion consumed him, replied with these verses:
+
+Indeed, the lover's excuse is manifest, Wasting of body and
+ streaming tears, unrest,
+Eyes, in the darkness that waken still, and heart, As 'twere a
+ fire-box, bespeak him love-oppress.
+Passion, indeed, afflicted me in youth, And I good money from
+ bad learnt then to test.
+My soul I bartered, a distant love to win; To gain her favours,
+ I wandered East and West;
+And eke I ventured my life against her grace And deemed the
+ venture would bring me interest.
+For law of lovers it is that whoso buys His love's possession
+ with life, he profits best.
+
+Then he moored his boat to the shore and bade her embark,
+saying, 'I will carry thee whither thou wilt.' So she embarked
+and he put off with her; but they had not gone far, before
+there came out a stern-wind upon the boat and drove it swiftly
+out of sight of land. The fisherman knew not whither he went,
+and the wind blew without ceasing three days, at the end of
+which time it fell, by leave of God the Most High, and they
+sailed on, till they came in sight of a city builded upon the
+seashore, and the fisherman set about making fast to the land.
+
+Now the King of the city, a very powerful prince called Dirbas,
+was at that moment sitting, with his son, at a window in the
+palace giving upon the sea, and chancing to look out to
+sea-ward, they saw the fishing-boat enter the harbour. They
+observed it narrowly and espied therein a young lady, as she
+were the full moon in the mid-heaven, with pendants in her ears
+of fine balass rubies and a collar of precious stones about her
+neck. So the King knew that this must be the daughter of some
+king or great noble, and going forth of the sea-gate of the
+palace, went down to the boat, where he found the lady asleep
+and the fisherman busied in making fast to the shore. He went
+up to her and aroused her, whereupon she awoke, weeping; and he
+said to her, 'Whence comest thou and whose daughter art thou
+and what brings thee hither?' 'I am the daughter of Ibrahim,
+Vizier to King Shamikh,' answered she; 'and the manner of my
+coming hither is strange and the cause thereof extraordinary.'
+And she told him her whole story, hiding nought from him; then
+she sighed deeply and recited the following verses:
+
+Tears have mine eyelids wounded sore, and wonder-fast they flow
+ Adown my cheek for parting's pain and memory and woe,
+For a beloved's sake, who dwells for ever in my heart, Though
+ to foregather with himself I cannot win, heigho!
+Fair, bright and brilliant is his face, in loveliness and
+ grace, Turk, Arab and barbarian he cloth indeed o'ercrow.
+The full moon and the sun contend in deference to him, And when
+ he rises into sight, they, lover-like, bend low.
+His eyes with wondrous witchery are decked, as 'twere with
+ kohl; Even as a bow, that's bent to shoot its shafts, to
+ thee they show.
+O thou, to whom I have perforce revealed my case, have ruth On
+ one with whom the shifts of love have sported long eno'.
+Lo, broken-hearted, Love hath cast me up upon thy coast,
+ Wherefore I trust that thou on me fair favour wilt bestow.
+The noble who, when folk of worth alight within their bounds,
+ Do honour and protect them, win increase of glory so.
+Cover thou then, my lord, my hope, two lovers' follies up And
+ let them to thy succouring hand their loves' reunion owe.
+
+Then she shed plenteous tears and recited these verses also:
+
+I lived, a marvel till I saw in love, then lived no mo'; Each
+ month to thee as Rejeb[FN#81] be, as free from fear of
+ foe!
+Is it not strange that, on the morn they went away, I lit Fire
+ in my vitals with the tears that from mine eyes did flow?
+Indeed, mine eyelids ran with blood, and on the wasted plain Of
+ my sad cheek, that therewithal was watered, gold did grow.
+Yea, for the safflower hue, that thence o'erspread my cheeks,
+ they seem The shirt of Joseph, steeped in blood, to make a
+ lying show.
+
+When the King heard this, he was certified of her passion and
+love-longing and was moved to compassion for her; so he said to
+her, 'Fear nothing and be not troubled; thou hast attained the
+term of thy wishes; for needs must I bring thee to thy desire.'
+And he recited the following verses:
+
+Daughter if nobles, thou hast reached thy wishes' goal, I trow:
+ In happy presage then rejoice and fear not any woe.
+Treasures this very day, will I collect and neath escort Of
+ horsemen and of champions, to Shamikh they shall go.
+Brocade and bladders full of musk I will to him despatch And
+ eke white silver and red gold I'll send to him also.
+Yea, and a letter neath my hand my wish for ties of kin And for
+ alliance with himself shall give him eke to know;
+And all endeavour will I use, forthwith, that he thou lov'st
+ Once more with thee may be conjoined, to part from thee no
+ mo.
+I, too, have battened upon love and know the taste thereof And
+ can excuse the folk who've quaffed the self-same cup of
+ woe.
+
+Then, returning to his palace, he summoned his Vizier and
+causing pack him up countless treasure, bade him carry it to
+King Shamikh and say to him, 'The King is minded to ally
+himself with thee by marrying Uns el Wujoud, shine officer, to
+his daughter. So needs must thou send him with me, that the
+marriage may be solemnized in her father's kingdom.' And he
+wrote a letter to King Shamikh, to this effect, and gave it to
+the Vizier, charging him without fail bring back Uns el Wujoud,
+on pain of deposition from his office. 'I hear and obey,'
+answered the Vizier and setting out forthright, in due course
+arrived at the court of King Shamikh, to whom he delivered the
+letter and presents, saluting him in the name of King Dirbas.
+When Shamikh read the letter and saw the name of Uns el Wujoud,
+he burst into tears and said to the Vizier, 'And where is Uns
+el Wujoud? He went away, and we know not his place of abiding.
+Bring him to me, and I will give thee the sum of the presents
+thou hast brought me, twice told.' And he wept and sighed and
+groaned, reciting the following verses:
+
+Him whom I loved to me restore; By gold and gifts I set no
+ store.
+Nor do I crave largesse, indeed, Of pearls and gems and
+ precious ore.
+As 'twere a moon at full, for us, In beauty's heaven he did
+ soar.
+Passing in wit and grace, gazelles With him comparison gave
+ o'er.
+His shape was as a willow-wand, For fruits that sweet
+ seductions bore;
+But in the willow, to enslave The hearts of men, there is no
+ lore.
+I reared him from a child upon The bed of fondness evermore;
+And now I am at heart distraught For him and sorrow passing
+ sore.
+
+Then said he to the Vizier, 'Go back to thy master and tell him
+that Uns el Wujoud has been missing this year past, and his
+lord knoweth not whither he is gone nor hath any news of him.'
+'O my lord,' answered King Dirbas's Vizier, 'my master said to
+me, "An thou come back without him, thou shalt be ousted from
+the Vizierate and shall not enter my city." How then can I
+return without him?' So King Shamikh said to his Vizier
+Ibrahim, 'Take a company and go with him and make search for
+Uns el Wujoud everywhere.' 'I hear and obey,' answered Ibrahim,
+and taking a company of his own retainers, set out in quest of
+Uns el Wujoud, accompanied by King Dirbas's Vizier; and as
+often as they fell in with Bedouins or others, they enquired at
+them of Uns el Wujoud, saying, 'Have ye seen a man, whose name
+is so and so and his favour thus and thus?' But they answered,
+'We know him not.'
+
+So they fared on, enquiring in city and hamlet and seeking in
+hill and plain and desert and wold, till they came to the
+sea-shore, where they took ship and sailed, till they came to
+the Mountain of the Bereaved Mother; and King Dirbas's Vizier
+said to Ibrahim, 'Why is this mountain thus called?' 'There was
+once of old time,' answered the other Vizier, 'a Jinniych, of
+the Jinn of China, who fell passionately in love with a man and
+being in fear of her own people, searched all the earth for a
+place, where she might hide him from them, till she happened on
+this mountain and finding it inaccessible both to men and Jinn,
+carried off her beloved and lodged him therein. There she used
+to visit him privily, till she had borne him a number of
+children, and the merchants, sailing by the mountain, in their
+voyages over the sea, heard the weeping of the children, as it
+were the wailing of a woman who had lost her young, and said,
+"Is there here a mother bereaved of her children?" For which
+reason the place was named the Mountain of the Bereaved
+Mother.' And King Dirbas's Vizier marvelled at this.
+
+Then they landed and making for the castle, knocked at the gate,
+which was opened to them by an eunuch, who knew the Vizier
+Ibrahim and kissed his hands. Ibrahim entered and finding in
+the courtyard, among the serving men, a man in the habit of a
+fakir,[FN#82] said. 'Whence comes yonder fellow?' Quoth they,
+'He is a merchant, who hath lost his goods by shipwreck, but
+saved himself on a plank; and he is an ecstatic.'[FN#83] Now
+this was none other than Uns el Wujoud, [but the Vizier knew
+him not]; so he left him and went on into the castle. He found
+there no trace of his daughter and questioned her women, who
+answered, 'She abode with us but a little while and went away,
+how and whither we know not.' Whereupon he wept sore and
+repeated the following verses:
+
+O house, whose birds warbled for joyance whilere And whose
+ sills were resplendent with glory and pride,
+Till the lover came to thee, bemooning himself For his passion,
+ and found thy doors open and wide,
+Would I knew where my soul is, my soul that was late In a
+ house, where its masters no longer abide!
+Therein were all things that are costly and rich And with suits
+ of brocade it was decked, like a bride.
+Yea, happy and honoured its doorkeeper were. Would God I knew
+ whither its mistress hath tried!
+
+Then he wept and sighed and bemoaned himself, exclaiming,
+'There is no resource against the ordinance of God neither is
+there any escape from that which He hath decreed!' Then he went
+up to the roof and finding the strips of Baalbek stuff tied to
+the battlements and hanging down to the ground, knew that she
+had descended thence and had fled forth, as one distracted and
+mad with passion. Presently, he turned and seeing there two
+birds, an owl and a raven, deemed this an ill omen; so he
+groaned and recited these verses:
+
+Unto the loved ones' stead I came, as hoping, by their sight,
+ To quench the fire that burnt in me of love-longing and
+ woe;
+But no beloved found I there, nor aught, indeed, I found, Save
+ two ill-omened ones, an owl And eke a corby-crow.
+And quoth the tongue o' the case to me, "Thou hast been
+ tyrannous And hast two longing lovers torn, the one the
+ other fro!
+Taste of the anguish, then, of love what thou hast made them
+ taste And live, 'twixt agony and tears, in sorrow evermo."
+
+Then he descended, weeping, and bade the servants go forth and
+search the island for their mistress; so they sought for her,
+but found her not. As for Uns el Wujoud, when he was certified
+that Rose-in-bud was indeed gone, he gave a great cry and fell
+down in a swoon, nor came to himself for a long time, whilst
+the folk deemed that a ravishment from the Merciful One had
+taken him and that he was absorbed in contemplation of the
+splendour of the majesty of the Requiter of good and evil.
+Then, despairing of finding Uns el Wujoud and seeing that
+Ibrahim was distracted for the loss of his daughter, King
+Dirbas's Vizier addressed himself to return to his own country,
+for all he had not attained the object of his journey, and said
+to Ibrahim? 'I have a mind to take yonder fakir with me; it may
+be God, for his sake, will incline the King's heart to me, for
+that he is a holy man; and after, I will send him to Ispahan,
+which is near our country.' 'Do &as thou wilt,' answered
+Ibrahim.
+
+So they took leave of one another and departed, each for his
+own country, King Dirbas's Vizier carrying with him Uns el
+Wujoud, who was still insensible. They bore him with them on
+muleback, unknowing if he were carried or not, for three days,
+at the end of which time he came to himself and said, 'Where am
+I?' 'Thou art in company with King Dirbas's Vizier,' answered
+they and went and told the latter, who sent him rose-water and
+sherbet of sugar, of which they gave him to drink and restored
+him. Then they fared on till they drew near King Dirbas's
+capital and the King, being advised of his Vizier's coming,
+wrote to him, saying, 'An Uns el Wujoud be not with thee, come
+not to me ever.'
+
+When the Vizier read the royal mandate, it was grievous to him,
+for he knew not that Rose-in-bud was with the King nor why he
+had sent him in quest of Uns el Wujoud, neither knew he that
+the fakir he had with him was Uns el Wujoud himself; and the
+latter in like manner knew not whither they were bound nor that
+the Vizier had been despatched in quest of himself. So, when he
+saw him thus chagrined, he said to him, 'What ails thee?' And
+he answered, 'I was sent by the King on an errand, which I
+have not been able to accomplish. So, when he heard of my
+return, he wrote to me? saying, "Enter not my city, except thou
+have fulfilled my need."' 'And what is the King's need?' asked
+Uns el Wujoud. So the Vizier told him the case, and he said,
+'Fear nothing, but go boldly to the King and take me with thee;
+and I will be surety to thee for the coming of Uns el Wujoud.'
+At this the Vizier rejoiced and said, 'Is this true that thou
+sayest?' 'Yes,' answered he; whereupon the Vizier mounted and
+carried him to King Dirbas, who said to him, 'Where is Uns el
+Wujoud?' 'O King,' answered the young man, 'I know where he
+is.' So the King called him to him and said, 'Where?' 'Near at
+hand, replied Uns d Wujoud. 'Tell me what thou wouldst with
+him, and I will fetch him to thee.' 'With all my heart,'
+answered the King; 'but the case calls for privacy.'
+
+So he bade the folk withdraw and, carrying Uns el Wujoud into
+his closet, told him the whole story; whereupon quoth the
+youth, 'Clothe me in rice apparel, and I will eftsoons bring
+Uns el Wujoud to thee.' So they brought him a sumptuous dress,
+and he donned it and said, 'I am the Delight of the World[FN#84]
+and the Mortification of the Envious.' So saying, he transfixed
+ail hearts with his glances and recited the following verses:
+
+My loved one's memory cheers me still in this my solitude And
+ doth wanhope from me away, as I in absence brood.
+I have no helper but my tears; yet, when from out mine eyes
+ They flow, they lighten my despair and ease my drearihood.
+Sore is my longing; yea, it hath no like and my affair In love
+ and passion's marvellous, beyond all likelihood.
+I lie the night long, wakeiul-eyed,--no sleep is there for
+ me,--And pass, for love, from heaven to hell, according to
+ my mood.
+Yea, patience fair some time I had, but have it now no more;
+ And longing and chagrin increase upon me, like a flood.
+Indeed, my body's worn to nought, for severance from her;
+ Yearnings my aspect and my form to change have all
+ subdued.
+Mine eyelids ulcerated are with weeping, nor can I Avail to
+ stay the constant tears, wherewith they're still bedewed.
+Indeed, I can no more; my strength, my very vitals fail. How
+ many sorrows have I borne, on sorrows still renewed!
+My heart and head are grizzled grown, for loss of a princess In
+ beauty, sure, the fairest maid that ever lover wooed.
+In her despite, our parting was, for no desire hath she Save to
+ be joined with me and feed once more on lovers' food.
+I wonder, will my fate to me union vouchsafe with her I
+ cherish, after absence long and stress of lonelihood,
+And shut the book of severance up, that now is open wide, And
+ blot out troubles from my thought with love's supremest
+ good?
+Shall my beloved, in my land, my cup-companion be And sorrow
+ and affliction be by pure delight ensued?
+
+'By Allah,' exclaimed the King, 'ye are, indeed, a pair of true
+lovers and in the heaven of beauty two shining stars! Your
+story is marvellous and your case extraordinary.' Then he told
+him all that had befallen Rose-in-bud; and Uns el Wujoud said,
+'Where is she, O King of the age?' 'She is with me now,'
+answered Dirbas and sending for the Cadi and the witnesses,
+drew up the contract of marriage between her and him. Then he
+loaded Uns el Wujoud with favours and bounties and sent to King
+Shamikh, advising him of what had befallen, whereat the latter
+rejoiced with an exceeding joy and wrote back to him, saying,
+'Since the marriage contract hath been drawn up at thy court! it
+behoves that the wedding and consummation be at mine.' And he
+made ready camels and horses and men and sent them in quest of
+the lovers.
+
+When the embassy reached King Dirbas, he gave the pair great
+store of treasure and despatched them to King Shamikh's court
+with an escort of his own troops. The day of their arrival was
+a notable day, never was seen a greater; for the King assembled
+all the singers and players on instruments of music and made
+banquets and held high festival seven days; and on each day he
+gave largesse to the folk and bestowed on them sumptuous
+dresses of honour. Then Uns el Wujoud went in to Rose-in-bud,
+and they embraced and sat weeping for excess of joy and
+gladness, whilst she recited the following verses:
+
+Gladness is come, dispelling grief and putting care aside; We
+ are united now and have our enviers mortified.
+The fragrant breeze of union blows fresh and sweet for us,
+ Whereby our bodies, vitals, hearts are all revivified.
+The splendour of fulfilled delight in all its glory shines, And
+ for glad tidings beat the drums about us far and wide.
+Think not we weep for stress Of grief or for affliction; nay,
+ It is for joy our tears flow down and will not be denied.
+How many terrors have we seen, that now are past away! Yet we
+ each agonizing strait did patiently abide.
+In one hour of delight have we forgotten all the woes, Whose
+ stresses made us twain, whilom, grey-haired and
+ hollow-eyed.
+
+Then they clipped each other and ceased not from their embrace,
+till they fell down in a swoon, for the ecstasy of reunion; and
+when they came to themselves, Uns d Wujoud recited these
+verses:
+
+Ah, how peerlessly sweet are the nights of delight, When the
+ loved one to me keeps the troth she did plight,
+When enjoyment enjoyment ensues and the bonds Of estrangement
+ between us are sundered outright,
+And fortune is come to us, favouring and fair, After turning
+ away with aversion and spite!
+Fair fortune hath set up her standards for us And we drink from
+ her hand a cup pure of affright.
+United, our woes each to each we recount And the nights when in
+ torments we watched for the light.
+But now, O my lady, forgotten have we Our griefs, and God
+ pardon the past its upright!
+How pleasant, how lovesome, how joyous is life! Enjoyment my
+ passion doth only excite.
+
+Then they gave themselves up anew to the pleasures of the
+nuptial bed and passed seven whole days thus, carousing and
+conversing and reciting verses and telling pleasant tales and
+anecdotes, in the intervals of amorous dalliance; for so
+drowned were they in the sea of passion, that they knew not
+night from day and it was to them, for very stress of joy and
+gladness and pleasure and delight, as if the seven days were
+but one day, and that without a morrow. Nor did they know the
+seventh day, but by the coming of the singers and players on
+instruments of music;[FN#85] whereat Rose-in-bud was beyond
+measure wondered and improvised the following verses:
+
+Despite the enviers' rage and malice of the spy, I've won of
+ him I love my wish to satisfy;
+Yea, we have crowned our loves with many a close embrace, On
+ cushions of brocade and silken stuffs piled high
+Upon a couch full soft, of perfumed leather made And stuffed
+ with down of birds of rarest kind that fly.
+Thanks to the honeyed dews of my beloved's lips, Illustrious
+ past compare, no need of wine have I.
+Yea, for the sweet excess of our fulfilled delight, The present
+ from the past we know, nor far from nigh.
+A miracle indeed! Seven nights o'er us have passed, Without our
+ taking note of how they flitted by;
+Till, on the seventh day, they wished us joy and said, "Your
+ union God prolong to all eternity!"
+
+When she had finished, Uns el Wujoud kissed her, more than a
+hundred times, and recited the following verses:
+
+O day of pure delight and mutual happiness! The loved one came
+ and set me free from loneliness.
+She blest me with the sweets of all her glorious charms, What
+ while her converse filled my spirit with liesse.
+She plied me with the wine of amorous delight, Till all my
+ senses failed, for very drunkenness.
+Yea, merry each with each we made, together lay, Then fell to
+ wine and did, in song, our cheer express;
+Nor knew we, of the days that fleeted over us, The present from
+ the past, for very joy's excess.
+Fair fall all those that love of ease and twinned delight, And
+ joy to them fulfil its promise none the less!
+Ne'er may they know the taste of parting's bitter cup! God
+ succour them as me He succoured in my stress!
+
+Then they went forth and distributed to the folk alms and
+largesse of money and raiment and so forth; after which
+Rose-in-bud bade empty the bath for her and turning to Uns el
+Wujoud, said to him' 'O solace of my eyes, I have a mind to see
+thee in the bath; and we will be alone together therein.' He
+gladly consented to this, and she bade perfume the bath for
+them with all manner of scented woods and essences and light
+the candles. Then, of the excess of her contentment, she
+recited the following Verses:
+
+O thou aforetime of my heart that mad'st prize (And the present
+ for us on the past still relies),
+Thou, the only companion I crave, for to me None other the want
+ of thy presence supplies,
+To the bath,--that in midst of hell-fire we may see Even
+ Paradise shining,--come, light of mine eyes!
+We will scent it with ambergris, aloes and musk, Till the
+ fragrance in clouds from all quarters arise.
+Yea, Fortune we'll pardon her sins and give thanks, For His
+ grace, to the Merciful One, the All-Wise;
+And I'll say, when I see thee therein, "O my love, All delights
+ be thy lot in the earth and the skies!"
+
+So they went to the bath and took their pleasure there in;
+after which they returned to their palace and there abode in
+the fulness of delight, till there came to them the Destroyer
+of Delights and the Sunderer of Companies; and glory be to Him
+who changeth not neither ceaseth and in whom all things have
+their term!
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOU NUWAS WITH THE THREE BOYS AND THE
+ KHALIF HAROUN ER RESHID.
+
+
+
+Abou Nuwas one day shut himself up and making ready a richly-
+furnished saloon, set out therein a banquet of meats of all
+kinds and colours that lips and tongue can desire. Then he went
+forth, to seek a minion who should befit the entertainment,
+saying, 'O my God and my Master and my Lord, I beseech Thee to
+send me one worthy of this banquet and apt to carouse with me
+this day!' Hardly had he made an end of speaking, when he
+espied three handsome beardless youths, as they were of the
+children of Paradise, differing in complexion but equal in
+perfection of beauty; and all hearts yearned with desire to the
+graceful bending of their shapes, even to what saith the poet:
+
+Two beardless youths I happened on one day And said "I love
+ you." "Hast thou pelf?" asked they.
+"Yes," answered I, "and liberality." "Then is the matter easy,"
+ did they say.
+
+Now Abou Nuwas was on this wise given and loved to sport and
+make merry with the fair and cull the rose from every fresh-
+flowered cheek, even as saith the poet:
+
+Full many a graybeard is amorous and loves Fair faces and music
+ and dalliance and glee:
+From Mosul, the country of pureness,[FN#86] he comes, Yet
+ nought but Aleppo[FN#87] remembereth he.
+
+So he accosted them with the salutation, and they returned his
+greeting with all honour and civility and would have gone their
+way; but he stayed them, repeating these verses:
+
+To none but me your footsteps steer; For I have store of all
+ good cheer;
+Wine that the heart of convent monk Would glad, so bright it is
+ and clear;
+And flesh of sheep, to boot, have I And birds of land and sea
+ and mere.
+Eat ye of these and drink old wine, That doth away chagrin and
+ fear.
+
+The boys were beguiled by his verses and consented to his
+wishes, saying, 'We hear and obey.' So he carried them to his
+lodging, where they found all ready that he had set forth in
+his verses. They sat down and ate and drank and made merry
+awhile, after which they appealed to Abou Nuwas to decide which
+was the handsomest and most shapely of them. So he pointed to
+one of them, after having kissed him twice, and recited the
+following verses:
+
+With my life I will ransom the mole, on the cheek of the
+ loveling that is; For how should I ransom it else with
+ treasure or aught but my soul?
+And blessed for ever be He who fashioned his cheek without hair
+ And made, of His power and His might, all beauty to dwell
+ in yon mole!
+
+Then he pointed to another and kissing his lips, repeated these
+verses:
+
+There's a loveling hath a mole upon his cheek, As 'twere musk
+ on virgin camphor, so to speak.
+My eyes marvel when they see it. Quoth the mole, "Heaven's
+ blessing on the Prophet look ye seek!"[FN#88]
+
+Then he pointed to the third and repeated the following verses,
+after kissing him half a score times:
+
+All in a silver cup he melted gold full fine, A youth whose
+ hands were dyed in ruby-coloured wine,
+And with the skinkers went and handed round one cup Of wine,
+ whilst other two were proffered by his eyne.
+Fairer than all the Turks, an antelope, whose waist Together
+ would attract the mountains of Hunain.[FN#89]
+An if I were content with crooked[FN#90] womankind, Betwixt
+ attractions twain would be this heart of mine.
+One love towards Diyarbeker[FN#91] drawing it, and one That
+ draws it, otherguise, to the land of Jamiain.[FN#92]
+
+Now each of the youths had drunk two cups, and when it came to
+Abou Nuwas's turn, he took the goblet and repeated these
+verses:
+
+Drink not of wine except it be at the hands of a loveling slim,
+ Who in brightness of soul resembles it and it resembles
+ him.
+The drinker of wine, in very truth, hath no delight thereof,
+ Except the cheek of the fair be pure, who doth the goblet
+ brim.
+
+Then he drank off his cup, and when it came round to Him again,
+joyance got the mastery of him and he repeated The following
+verses:
+
+Make thou thy boon-fellow of cups, brimmed up as full as this,
+ And eke to follow cup with cup, I rede thee, do not miss,
+Poured by a damask-lipped one's hand, a wonder-lovely fair,
+ Whose mouth's sweet water, after sleep, as musk on apple
+ is.
+Drink not of wine, except it be from the hand of a gazelle,
+ Whose cheek is goodlier than itself and sweeter still his
+ kiss.
+
+Presently, the wine crept to his head, drunkenness mastered him
+and he knew not hand from head, so that he swayed about for
+mirth, inclining anon to this one, to kiss him, and anon to
+another. Then he fell to glorying in himself and his case and
+the goodliness of his entertainment and his companions, and
+recited these verses:
+
+None knoweth perfection of pleasure but he Who drinketh, with
+ fair ones to hearten him still.
+This sings to him, t'other, when cheer him would be, Revives
+ him forthright with the cups he doth fill;
+And whenever from one he hath need of a kiss, Long draughts
+ from his lips, at his case, he doth swill.
+God bless them! Right sweet has my day with them been, And
+ wonder delightsome and void of all ill!
+We drank of the wine cup, both mingled and pure, And agreed
+ whoso slept, we should touzle at will.
+
+At this moment, there came a knocking at the door; so they bade
+him who knocked enter, and behold, it was the Khalif Haroun er
+Reshid. When they saw him, they all rose to him and kissed the
+ground before him; and the fumes of the wine forsook Abou
+Nuwas's head for awe of the Khalif, who said to him, 'Hallo,
+Abou Nuwas!' 'At thy service, O Commander of the Faithful,'
+answered he, 'may God preserve thee!' 'What state is this I
+find thee in?' asked the Khalif; and the poet replied, 'O
+Commander of the Faithful, methinks my state dispenses with
+question.' Quoth the Khalif, 'O Abou Nuwas, I have sought
+direction of God the Most High and appoint thee Cadi of
+whoremasters.' 'Dost thou indeed invest me with that office, O
+Commander of the Faithful?' asked Abou Nuwas. 'I do,' replied
+the Khalif. 'Then, O Commander of the Faithful,' rejoined Abou
+Nuwas, 'hast thou any suit to prefer to me?' At this the Khalif
+was wroth and turned away and left them, full of rage, and
+passed the night, sore angered against Abou Nuwas, whilst the
+latter spent the merriest and most easeful of nights, till the
+day dawned and the morning-star appeared and shone, when he
+broke up the sitting and dismissing the boys, donned his court-
+dress and set out for the Khalif's palace.
+
+Now it was the latter's custom, when the Divan broke up, to
+withdraw to his sitting-chamber and summon thither his poets
+and minions and musicians, each having his own place, which he
+might not overpass. So, that day, he retired to his saloon, and
+the minions came and seated themselves, each in his place.
+Presently, in came Abou Nuwas and was about to take his usual
+seat, when the Khalif cried out to Mesrour the headsman and
+bade him strip the poet of his clothes and clap an ass's pannel
+on his back. Moreover, he charged him bind a halter about his
+head and a crupper under his rear and carry him round to all
+the lodgings of the slave-girls and the chambers of the harem,
+that the women might make mock of him; then cut off his head
+and bring it to him. 'I hear and obey,' replied Mesrour and
+accoutring Abou Nuwas, as the Khalif had bidden him, carried
+him round to all the lodgings of the harem, in number as the
+days of the year; but he made all the girls laugh with his
+buffooneries and each gave him something, so that he returned
+with a pocketful of money.
+
+Just then, Jaafer the Barmecide, who had been absent on an
+important business for the Khalif, entered and seeing the poet
+in this plight, said to him, 'Hallo, Abou Nuwas!' 'At thy
+service, O our lord,' answered he. 'What offence hast thou
+committed,' asked Jaafer, 'to bring this punishment on thee?'
+'None whatever,' answered the other, 'except that I made our
+lord the Khalif a present of the best of my verses, and he
+presented me, in return, with the best of his clothes.' When
+the Khalif heard this, he laughed, from a heart full of wrath,
+and [not only] pardoned Abou Nuwas, but gave him a myriad of
+money.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABDALLAH BEN MAAMER WITH THE MAN OF
+ BASSORA AND HIS SLAVE-GIRL.
+
+
+
+A certain man of Bassora once bought a slave-girl and reared
+and educated her excellent well. Moreover, he loved her very
+dearly and spent all his substance in pleasuring and making
+merry with her, till he had nothing left and want was very sore
+upon him. So she said to him, 'O my master, sell me; for thou
+needest my price and it makes my heart ache to see the sorry
+plight to which want hath brought thee. It thou sell me and
+make use of my price, it will be better for thee than keeping
+me, and haply God the Most High will prosper thee and mend thy
+fortune.' He agreed to this, of the straitness of his case, and
+carried her to the bazaar, where the broker offered her for
+sale to the Governor of Bassora, by name Abballah ben Maamer et
+Teimi, and she pleased him. So he bought her, for five hundred
+dinars, of her master, who took the money and was about to go
+away, when the girl burst into tears and repeated the following
+verses:
+
+May Allah prosper unto thee the money thou hast got! For me,
+ nought's left me but lament and memory and woe.
+I say to my afflicted soul, "Mourn little or mourn much; It
+ skills not, for the loved one's gone and will return no
+ mo."
+
+When he heard this, he sighed heavily and replied thus:
+
+Though there be no recourse for thee in this thy case and thou
+ Find nought but death to solace thee, excuse me yet and
+ know,
+Evening and morn the thought of thee will company with me,
+ Wherewith a heart I will console, that's all fulfilled of
+ woe.
+Peace be on thee! Henceforth for us no meeting shall there be
+ Nor any union more, except Ben Maamer will it so.
+
+When Abdallah heard these verses and saw their affliction, he
+exclaimed, 'By Allah, I will have no hand in separating you;
+for it is manifest to me that ye indeed love one another. So
+take the money and the damsel, O man, and may God bless thee in
+them! For parting is grievous to true lovers.' So they kissed
+his hand and going away, ceased not to dwell together, till
+death parted them; and glory be to Him whom death overtaketh
+not!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVERS OF THE BENOU UDHREH.
+
+
+
+There was once, among the Benou Udhreh, a handsome and
+accomplished man, who was never a day out of love, and it
+chanced that he became enamoured of a beautiful woman of his
+own tribe and sent her many messages; but she ceased not to use
+him with cruelty and disdain, till, for stress of passion and
+longing and distraction, he fell exceeding sick and took to his
+bed and forswore sleep. His sickness grew on him and his
+anguish redoubled upon him, till he was all but dead; and his
+case became known and his passion noised abroad among the folk.
+His family and hers were instant with her to visit him, but she
+refused, till he was at the point of death, when, being told of
+this, she relented towards him and vouchsafed him a visit. When
+he saw her, his eyes ran over with tears and he repeated the
+following verses, from a broken heart:
+
+If, by thy life, there pass thee by my funeral train, to wit, A
+ bier borne on the necks of four, wilt grudge to follow it?
+Wilt thou not follow in its track, that so thou mayst salute
+ The sepulchre of one who's dead, committed to the pit?
+
+When she heard this, she wept sore and said to him, 'By Allah,
+I thought not that passion had come to such a pass with thee,
+as to cast thee into the arms of death! Had I known this, I had
+been favourable to thee, and thou shouldst have enjoyed thy
+desire.' At this, his tears streamed down, like the cloud-
+showers, and he repeated the following verse:
+
+She draweth near to me, when death hath come betwixt us two And
+ proffereth union, when it no profit can me do.
+
+Then he gave one sigh and died, and she fell on him, kissing
+him and weeping, till she swooned away. When she came to
+herself she charged her people bury her in his grave and
+recited the following verses, with streaming eyes:
+
+We lived upon the earth a life of comfort and delight: Country
+ and tribe and dwelling-place alike of us were proud;
+But Fortune and the shifts of time did rend our loves apart,
+ And now the grave uniteth us within a single shroud.
+
+Then she fell again to weeping and ceased not from tears and
+lament, till she swooned away. She lay three days, senseless;
+then died and was buried in his grave. This is one of the
+strange chances of love.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE VIZIER OF YEMEN AND HIS YOUNG
+ BROTHER
+
+
+
+Bedreddin, Vizier of Yemen, had a young brother of singular
+beauty and kept strait watch over him. So he applied himself to
+seek a governor for him and coming upon an elder of dignified
+and reverend aspect, chaste and pious, lodged him in a house
+next his own, whence he used to come daily to the Vizier's
+dwelling, to teach the latter's brother. After awhile, the old
+man's heart was taken with love for his pupil and longing grew
+upon him and his entrails were troubled, till, one day, he made
+moan of his case to the boy, who said, 'What can I do, seeing
+that I may not leave my brother day or night? Thou seest how
+careful he is over me.' Quoth the governor, 'My lodging adjoins
+thine; so, when thy brother sleeps, do thou rise and entering
+the wardrobe, feign thyself asleep. Then come to the parapet of
+the roof and I will receive thee on the other side of the wall;
+so shalt thou sit with me awhile and return without thy
+brother's knowledge.' 'I hear and obey,' answered the boy. So,
+when awhile of the night was past, he entered the closet and
+waited till his brother lay down on his bed and was drowned in
+sleep, when he rose and going to the parapet of the roof, found
+the governor awaiting him, who gave him his hand and carried
+him to the sitting-chamber, where he had made ready various
+dainties for his entertainment, and they sat down to carouse.
+
+Now it was the night of the full moon, and as they sat, passing
+the wine-cup to one another, her rays shone upon them, and the
+governor fell to singing. But, whilst they were thus in mirth
+and joyance and good cheer, such as confounds the wit and the
+sight and defies description, the Vizier awoke and missing his
+brother, arose in affright and found the door open. So he went
+up to the roof and hearing a noise of talk, peeped over the
+parapet and saw a light shining in the governor's lodging. He
+looked in and espied his brother and his governor sitting
+carousing: but the latter became aware of him and sang the
+following verses, cup in hand, to a lively measure:
+
+He gave me wine to drink, of his mouth's nectar rare, Toasting
+ with down of cheeks and what adjoineth there;
+Then passed with me the night, embracing, cheek to cheek, A
+ loveling midst mankind unpeered and past compare.
+The full moon gazed on us all night; pray then to her, So to
+ his brother she to tell of us forbear.
+
+Now the Vizier was a merry man; so, when he heard this, he
+said, 'By Allah, I will not betray you!' And he went away and
+left them to their diversion.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVES OF THE BOY AND GIRL AT SCHOOL.
+
+
+
+A boy and a girl once learnt together in a school, and the boy
+fell passionately in love with the girl. So, one day, when the
+other boys were heedless, he took her tablet[FN#93] and wrote
+on it the following verses:
+
+Tell me, what sayst thou unto him, whom sickness for thy love
+ Hath worn and wasted, till he's grown distraught and
+ stupefied?
+Him who of passion maketh moan; for love and longing pain, That
+ which is in his heart, indeed, no longer can he hide.
+
+When the girl took her tablet, she read the verses and wept for
+pity of him; then wrote thereunder these others:
+
+An if we see one languishing for very love of us, Our favours,
+ surely, unto him shall nowise be denied.
+Yea, and of us he shall obtain that which he doth desire Of
+ love-delight, whate'er to us in consequence betide.
+
+Now it chanced that the teacher came in on them And taking the
+tablet, unnoticed, read what was written thereon. So he was
+moved to pity of their case and wrote on the tablet the
+following verses, in reply to those of the girl:
+
+Favour thy lover, for he's grown distracted for desire, And
+ reck thou not of punishment nor fear lest any chide.
+As for the master, have no dread of his authority, For he with
+ passion an its pains aforetime hath been tried.
+
+Presently, the girl's master entered the school and finding the
+tablet, read the above verses and wrote under them the following:
+
+May Allah never separate your loves, whilst time abide, And may
+ your slanderer be put to shame and mortified!
+But, for the master of the school, by Allah, all my life, A
+ busier go-between than he I never yet espied.
+
+Then he sent for the Cadi and the witnesses and married them on
+the spot. Moreover, he made them a marriage-feast and entreated
+them with exceeding munificence; and they abode together in joy
+and contentment, till there came to them the Destroyer of
+Delights and the Sunderer of Companies.
+
+
+
+
+
+ EL MUTELEMMIS AND HIS WIFE UMEIMEH.
+
+
+
+It is related that El Mutelemmis[FN#94] once fled from En Numan
+ben Mundhir[FN#95] and was absent so long that the folk deemed
+him dead. Now he had a handsome wife, Umeimeh by name, and her
+family pressed her to marry again; but she refused, for that
+she loved her husband El Mutelemmis very dearly. However, they
+were instant with her, because of the multitude of her suitors,
+and importuned her till she at last reluctantly consented and
+they married her to a man of her own tribe.
+
+On the night of the wedding, El Mutelemmis came back and
+hearing in the camp a noise of pipes and tabrets and seeing
+signs of festival, asked some of the children what was toward,
+to which they replied, 'They have married Umeimeh, widow of El
+Mutelemmis, to such an one, and he goes in to her this night.'
+When he heard this, he made shift to enter the house with the
+women and saw there the bride seated on her throne. By and by,
+the bridegroom came up to her, whereupon she sighed heavily and
+weeping, recited the following verses:
+
+Ah would, (but many are the shifts of good and evil fate), I
+ knew in what far land thou art, O Mutelemmis mine!
+
+Now El Mutelemmis was a renowned poet: so he answered her with
+the following verse:
+
+Right near at hand, Umeimeh! Know, whene'er the caravan Halted,
+ I never ceased for thee with longing heart to pine.
+
+When the bridegroom heard this, he guessed how the case stood
+and went forth from among them in haste, repeating the following
+verse:
+
+I was in luck, but now I'm fall'n into the contrary. A
+ hospitable house and room your reknit loves enshrine!
+
+So El Mutelemmis took his wife again and abode with her in all
+delight and solace of life, till death parted them. And glory
+be to Him at whose command the earth and the heavens shall
+arise!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF HAROUN ER RESHID AND THE
+ PRINCESS ZUBEIDEH IN THE BATH.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid loved the Princess Zubeideh with an
+exceeding love and laid out for her a pleasaunce, in which he
+made a great pool and led thither water from all sides.
+Moreover, he set thereabout a screen of trees, which so grew
+and interlaced over the pool, that one could go in and wash,
+without being seen of any, for the thickness of the leafage. It
+chanced, one day, that Zubeideh entered the garden and coming
+to the basin, gazed upon its goodliness, and the limpidity of
+the water and the interlacing of the trees over it pleased her.
+Now it was a day of exceeding heat; so she put off her clothes
+and entering the pool, which was not deep enough to cover her,
+fell to pouring the water over herself from an ewer of silver.
+
+
+The Khalif heard she was in the pool; so he left his palace and
+came down to spy upon her, through the screen of the leaves. He
+stood behind the trees and saw her naked, with all her secret
+charms displayed. Presently, she became aware of him and
+turning, saw him behind the trees and was ashamed that he
+should see her naked. So she laid her hands on her kaze, but it
+escaped from between them, by reason of its much greatness and
+plumpness; and the Khalif turned and went away, wondering and
+reciting the following verse:
+
+I looked on her whom I adore And longing rose in me full sore.
+
+But he knew not what to say next; so he sent for Abou Nuwas and
+bade him make a piece of verse commencing with the above line. 'I
+hear and obey,' replied the poet and in a twinkling extemporized
+the following lines:
+
+I looked on her whom I adore, And longing rose in me full sore
+For a gazelle that ravished me, By double lote-trees shaded
+ o'er.
+The water on her dainty part With silver ewer did she pour
+And would have hidden it, seeing me, But all too small her
+ hands therefor.
+Would I were on it, wel-a-way, An hour or liefer two or more!
+
+The Khalif smiled and made him a handsome present, and he went
+away rejoicing.
+
+
+
+
+
+ HAROUN ER RESHID AND THE THREE POETS.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid was exceeding restless one night;
+so he rose and walked about his palace, till he happened on a
+damsel overcome with wine. Now he was greatly enamoured of this
+damsel; so he toyed with her and pulled her to him, whereupon
+her girdle fell down and her trousers were unloosed and he
+besought her of amorous dalliance. But she said to him, 'O
+Commander of the Faithful, wait till to-morrow night, for I am
+unprepared for thee, knowing not of thy coming.' So he left her
+and went away.
+
+On the morrow, he sent a page to her to announce his visit to
+her apartment; but she sent back to him, saying, 'The day
+obliterates the promise of the night.' So he said to his
+minions, 'Make me somewhat of verse, introducing these words,
+"The day obliterates the promise of the night."' 'We hear and
+obey,' answered they; and Er Recashi[FN#96] came forward and
+recited the following:
+
+By Allah, an thou feltst my longing and my pain, Repose had
+ turned away from thee and taken flight.
+A maid hath made me love-distraught, nor visiting Nor being
+ visited, a sad and love-lorn wight.
+She promised me her grace, then turned away and said, "The day
+ obliterates the promise of the night."
+
+Then Abou Musab came forward and recited these verses:
+
+When wilt thou put away this dotage from thy spright? Thy heart
+ is dazed and rest to thee forbidden quite.
+Is't not enough for thee to have a weeping eye And vitals still
+ on fire for memory and despite?
+For self-conceit, indeed, he laugheth, when he saith, "The day
+ obliterates the promise of the night."
+
+Last came Abou Nuwas and recited the following:
+
+Love was prolonged and far was union out of sight, Nor skilled
+ it aught to feign aversion and despite.
+One day, she came into the palace, drunk with wine, But even
+ her drunkenness with pudour was bedight.
+Her upper garments dropped and left her shoulders bare And
+ loosened trousers showed the dwelling of delight;
+Yea, and the breeze shook hips, full heavy, and a shape, As
+ 'twere a branch, whereon pomegranates twain unite.
+"Give me a tryst," quoth I; and she replied, "The place Of
+ visiting will be to-morrow clean and right."
+Next day, I came and said, "Thy promise;" but quoth she, "The
+ day obliterates the promise of the night."
+
+The Khalif bestowed a myriad each on Er Recashi and Abou Musab,
+but bade strike off Abou Nuwas's head, saying, 'Thou west with
+us yesternight in the palace.' 'By Allah,' answered the poet,
+'I slept not but in my own house! I was directed to what I said
+by thine own words as to the subject of the poem; and indeed
+quoth God the Most High (and He is the truest of all speakers),
+"As for poets (devils ensue them!) dost thou not see how they
+run wild in each valley and say that they do not?"'[FN#97] So
+the Khalif forgave him and bestowed on him two myriads of gold.
+
+
+
+
+
+ MUSAB BEN EZ ZUBEIR AND AAISHEH
+ DAUGHTER OF TELHEH.
+
+
+
+It is told of Musab ben ez Zubeir[FN#98] that he met Izzeh, who
+was one of the shrewdest of women, in Medina and said to her,
+'I have a mind to marry Aaisheh,[FN#99] daughter of Telheh, and
+I would have thee go to her and spy out for me how she is
+made.' So she went and returning to Musab, said, 'I have seen
+her, and her face is more beautiful than health; she hath large
+and well-opened eyes, an aquiline nose and smooth, oval cheeks
+and a mouth like a cleft pomegranate, a neck like an ewer of
+silver and a bosom with two breasts like twin pomegranates, a
+slim waist and a slender belly, with a navel therein as it were
+a casket of ivory, and backside like a hummock of sand.
+Moreover, she hath plump thighs and legs like columns of
+alabaster; but I saw her feet to be large, and thou wilt fall
+short with her in time of amorous dalliance.' Upon this report,
+he married her and Izzeh invited Aaisheh and the women of the
+tribe of Kureish to her house, when Aaisheh sang the following,
+with Musab standing by:
+
+The mouths of girls, with their odoriferous, Sweet breath and
+ their witching smiles, are sweet to buss;
+Yet ne'er have I tasted them, but in thought of him; And by
+ thought, indeed, the Ruler rules over us.
+
+The night of his going in to her, he departed not from her,
+till after seven courses; and on the morrow, a freed-woman of
+his met him and said to him, 'May I be thy ransom! Thou art
+perfect, even in this.'
+
+Quoth a certain woman, 'I was with Aaisheh, when her husband
+came in to her, and she lusted to him; so he fell upon her and
+she puffed and snorted and made use of all manner of rare
+motions and strange inventions, and I the while within hearing.
+So when he came out from her, I said to her, "How canst thou,
+with thy rank and nobility and condition, do thus, and I in thy
+house?" Quoth she, "A woman should bring her husband all of
+which she is mistress, by way of excitations and rare motions.
+What mislikest thou of this?" And I answered, "I would have
+this anights." "Thus is it by day," rejoined she, "and by night
+I do more than this; for, when he sees me, desire stirs in him
+and he falls on heat; so he puts out his hand to me and I obey
+him, and it is as thou seest."'
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOUL ASWED AND HIS SQUINTING SLAVE-GIRL.
+
+
+
+Aboul Aswed bought a native-born slave-girl, who was squint-
+eyed, and she pleased him; but his people decried her to him;
+whereat he wondered and spreading out his hands, recited the
+following verses:
+
+They run her down to me, and yet no fault in her find I, Except
+ perhaps it be a speck she hath in either eye.
+To compensate this fault, if fault it be, o' the upper parts
+ She's slim and heavy of the parts beneath the waist that
+ lie.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ HAROUN ER RESHID AND THE TWO SLAVE-GIRLS.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid lay one night between two slave-girls,
+one from Medina and the other from Cufa, and the latter rubbed his
+hands, whilst the former rubbed his feet and made his yard to
+stand up. Quoth the Cufan girl, 'I see thou wouldst keep the whole
+of the stock-in-trade to thyself; give me my share of it.' And the
+other answered, 'I have been told by Malik, on the authority of
+Hisham ibn Orweh,[FN#100] who had it of his [grand]father,[FN#101]
+that the Prophet said, "Whoso bringeth the dead to life, it is
+his."' But the Cufan took her unawares and pushing her away, took
+it all in her own hand and said, 'El Aamesh[FN#102] tells us, on
+the authority of Kheithemeh,[FN#103] who had it of Abdallah ben
+Mesoud,[FN#104] that the Prophet said, "Game belongeth to him who
+taketh it, not to him who raiseth it."'
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF HAROUN ER RESHID AND THE THREE
+ SLAVE-GIRLS.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid lay once with three slave-girls, a
+Meccan, a Medinan and an Irakite. The Medina girl put her hand
+to his yard and handled it, whereupon it rose and the Meccan
+sprang up and drew it to herself. Quoth the other, 'What is
+this unjust aggression? I have heard of Malik,[FN#105] on the
+authority of Ez Zuhri,[FN#106] who had it of Abdallah ibn
+Salim,[FN#107] on the report of Said ben Zeid,[FN#108] that the
+Apostle (whom God bless and preserve) said, "Whoso revivifies a
+dead land, it is his."' And the Meccan answered, 'Sufyan[FN#109]
+tells us, on the authority of Abou Zenad,[FN#110] who had it of
+El Aarej,[FN#111] on the report of Abou Hureireh,[FN#112] that
+the Apostle of God said, "The game is his who catches it, not
+his who starts it."' But the Irak girl pushed them both away and
+taking it to herself, said, 'This is mine, till your contention
+be decided.'
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE MILLER AND HIS WIFE.
+
+
+
+
+There was a miller, who had an ass to turn his mill; and he was
+married to a wicked wife, whom he loved; but she hated him and
+loved a neighbour of hers, who liked her not and held aloof
+from her. One night, the miller saw, in his sleep, one who said
+to him, 'Dig in such a spot of the ass's circuit in the mill,
+and thou shalt find a treasure.' When he awoke, he told his
+wife the dream and charged her keep it secret; but she told her
+neighbour, thinking to win his favour, and he appointed with
+her to come to her by night. So he came and they dug in the
+mill and found the treasure and took it forth. Then said he to
+her, 'How shall we do with this?' 'We will share it equally
+between us,' answered she; 'and do thou leave thy wife and I
+will cast about to rid me of my husband. Then shalt thou marry
+me, and when we are united, we will add the two halves of the
+treasure, one to the other, and it will be [all] in our hands.'
+Quoth he, 'I fear lest Satan seduce thee and thou take some man
+other than myself; for gold in the house is like the sun in the
+world. Meseems, therefore, it were better that the money be all
+in my hands, so thou mayst study to win free of thy husband and
+come to me.' 'I fear the like of thee,' rejoined she, 'and I
+will not yield up my part to thee; for it was I directed thee
+to it.' When he heard this, covetise prompted him to kill her;
+so he killed her and threw her body into the empty hole; but
+the day overtook him and hindered him from covering it up; so
+he took the treasure and went away.
+
+Presently, the miller awoke and missing his wife, went into the
+mill, where he fastened the ass to the beam and shouted to it.
+It went on a little, then stopped; whereupon he beat it
+grievously; but the more he beat it, the more it drew back; for
+it was affrighted at the dead woman and could not go on. So he
+took out a knife and goaded it again and again, but still it
+would not budge. Then he was wroth with it, knowing not the
+cause of its obstinacy, and drove the knife into its flanks,
+and it fell down dead. When the sun rose, he saw his wife lying
+dead, in the place of the treasure, and great was his rage and
+sore his chagrin for the loss of the treasure and the death of
+his wife and his ass. All this came of his letting his wife
+into his secret and not keeping it to himself.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE SIMPLETON AND THE SHARPER.
+
+
+
+A certain simple fellow was once going along, haling his ass
+after him by the halter, when a couple of sharpers saw him and
+one said to his fellow, 'I will take that ass from yonder man.'
+'How wilt thou do that?' asked the other. 'Follow me and I will
+show thee,' replied the first. So he went up to the ass and
+loosing it from the halter, gave the beast to his fellow; then
+clapped the halter on his own head and followed the simpleton,
+till he knew that the other had got clean off with the ass,
+when he stood still. The man pulled at the halter, but the
+thief stirred not; so he turned and seeing the halter on a
+man's neck, said to him, 'Who art thou?' Quoth the sharper, 'I
+am thine ass and my story is a strange one. Know that I have a
+pious old mother and came in to her one day, drunk; and she
+said to me, "O my son, repent to God the Most High of these thy
+transgressions." But I took the cudgel and beat her, whereupon
+she cursed me and God the Most High changed me into an ass and
+caused me fall into thy hands, where I have remained till now.
+However, to-day, my mother called me to mind and her heart
+relented towards me; so she prayed for me, and God restored me
+to my former shape of a man.' 'There is no power and no virtue
+but in God the Most High, the Supreme!' cried the simpleton. 'O
+my brother, I conjure thee by Allah, acquit me of what I have
+done with thee, in the way of riding and so forth.'
+
+Then he let the sharper go and returned home, drunken with
+chagrin and concern. His wife asked him, 'What ails thee and
+where is the ass?' And he answered, 'Thou knowest not what was
+this ass; but I will tell thee.' So he told her the story, and
+she exclaimed, 'Woe worth us for God the Most High! How could
+we have used a man as a beast of burden, all this while?' And
+she gave alms and asked pardon of God. Then the man abode
+awhile at home, idle, till she said to him, 'How long wilt thou
+sit at home, idle? Go to the market and buy us an ass and do
+thy business with it.' Accordingly, he went to the market and
+stopping by the ass-stand, saw his own ass for sale. So he went
+up to it and clapping his mouth to its ear, said to it, 'Out on
+thee, thou good-for-nought! Doubtless thou hast been getting
+drunk again and beating thy mother! But, by Allah, I will never
+buy thee more!' And he left it and went away.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE IMAM ABOU YOUSUF WITH HAROUN ER
+ RESHID AND ZUBEIDEH.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid went up one noon-tide to his couch,
+to lie down, and mounting, found thereon fresh semen; whereat
+he was startled and sore perturbed and troubled. So he called
+the princess Zubeideh and said to her, 'What is that spilt on
+the bed?' She looked at it and replied, 'O Commander of the
+Faithful, it is semen.' 'Tell me truly what this means,' said he;
+'or I will lay violent hands on thee forthright.' 'O Commander of
+the Faithful,' answered she, 'indeed, I know not how it came
+there and I am guiltless of that whereof thou suspectest me.'
+So he sent for the Imam Abou Yousuf and told him the case. The
+Imam raised his eyes to the roof and seeing a crack therein,
+said to the Khalif, 'O Commander of the Faithful, the bat hath
+semen like that of a man, and this is bats' semen.' Then he
+called for a lance and thrust it into the crack, whereupon down
+fell the bat. In this manner the Khalif's suspicions were
+dispelled and Zubeideh's innocence was made manifest; whereat
+she gave vent to her joy and promised Abou Yousuf a liberal
+reward.
+
+Now there were with her magnificent fruits, out of their
+season, and she knew of others in the garden; so she said to
+Abou Yousuf, 'O Imam of the Faith, which wouldst thou rather of
+the two kinds of fruits, those that are here or those that are
+not here?' 'Our code forbids us to pronounce judgment on the
+absent,' answered he. 'When they are present, we will give
+judgment.' So she caused bring the two kinds of fruits before
+him, and he ate of both. Quoth she, 'What is the difference
+between them?' And he answered, 'As often as I think to praise
+one kind, the other puts in its claim.' The Khalif laughed at
+his answer and made him a present. Zubeideh also gave him what
+she had promised him, and he went away, rejoicing. See, then,
+the blessed qualities of this Imam and how at his hands were
+made manifest the truth and the innocence of the lady Zubeideh.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF EL HAKIM AND THE MERCHANT.
+
+
+
+The Khalif El Hakim bi Amrillah was riding out in state one day,
+when he came to a garden, in which he saw a man, surrounded by
+slaves and servants. He asked him for a draught of water, and
+the man gave him to drink, saying, 'Peradventure, the Commander
+of the Faithful will honour me by alighting in this my garden.'
+So the Khalif dismounted and entered the garden with his suite;
+whereupon the man brought out to them a hundred carpets and a
+hundred leather mats and a hundred cushions and set before them
+a hundred dishes of fruits, a hundred saucers of sweetmeats and
+a hundred bowls full of sherbets of sugar; whereat the Khalif
+marvelled and said to his host, 'O man, this thy case is a
+strange one. Didst thou know of our coming and make this
+preparation for us?' 'No, by Allah, O Commander of the Faithful,'
+answered the other, 'I knew not of thy coming and am but a
+merchant of the rest of thy subjects. But I have a hundred
+concubines; so, when the Commander of the Faithful honoured
+me by alighting with me, I sent to each of them, bidding her
+send me the morning-meal here. So they sent me each of her
+furniture and of the excess of her meat and drink: and every
+day each sends me a dish of meat and another of marinades, also
+a plate of fruits and a saucer of sweetmeats and a bowl of
+sherbet. This is my every- day noon-meal, nor have I added
+aught thereto for thee.'
+
+The Khalif prostrated himself in thanksgiving to God the Most
+High and said, 'Praised be God, who hath been so bountiful to
+one of our subjects, that he entertaineth the Khalif and his
+suite, without making ready for them, but of the surplus of his
+day's victual!' Then he sent for all the dirhems in the
+treasury, that had been struck that year,--and they were in
+number three thousand and seven hundred thousand;--nor did he
+mount, till the money came, when he gave it to the merchant,
+saying, 'Use this for the maintenance of thy state; and thy
+desert is more than this.' Then he mounted and rode away.
+
+
+
+
+
+ KING KISRA ANOUSHIRWAN AND THE VILLAGE
+ DAMSEL.
+
+
+
+
+The just King, Kisra Anoushirwan,[FN#113] was hunting one day
+and became separated from his suite, in pursuit of an antelope.
+Presently, he caught sight of a hamlet, near at hand, and being
+sore athirst, made for the door of a house, that stood by the
+wayside, and asked for a draught of water. A damsel came out
+and looked at him; then, going back into the house, pressed the
+juice from a sugar-cane into a tankard and mixed it with water;
+after which she strewed on the top somewhat of perfume, as it
+were dust, and carried it to the King. He took it and seeing in
+it what resembled dust, drank it, little by little, till he
+came to the end. Then said he to her, 'O damsel, the drink is
+good and sweet, but for this dust in it, that troubles it.' 'O
+guest,' answered she, 'I put that in, of intent.' 'And why
+didst thou thus?' asked he; and she replied, 'I saw that thou
+wast exceeding thirsty and feared that thou wouldst swallow the
+whole at one draught and that this would do thee a mischief;
+and so hadst thou done, but for this dust that troubled the
+drink.' The King wondered at her wit and good sense and said to
+her, 'How many sugar-canes didst thou press for this draught?'
+'One,' answered she; whereat the King marvelled and calling for
+the roll of the taxes of the village, saw that its assessment
+was but little and bethought him to increase it, on his return
+to his palace, saying in himself, 'Why is a village so lightly
+taxed, where they get this much juice out of one sugar-cane?'
+
+Then he left the village and pursued his chase. As he came back
+at the end of the day, he passed alone by the same door and
+called again for drink; whereupon the same damsel came out and
+knowing him, went in to fetch him drink. It was some time
+before she returned and the King wondered at this and said to
+her, 'Why hast thou tarried?' Quoth she, 'Because one sugar-
+cane yielded not enough for thy need. So I pressed three; but
+they yielded not so much as did one aforetime.' 'What is the
+cause of that?' asked the King; and she answered, 'The cause of
+it is that the King's mind is changed.' Quoth he, 'How knewst
+thou that?' 'We hear from the wise,' replied she, 'that, when
+the King's mind is changed against a folk, their prosperity
+ceaseth and their good waxeth less.' Anoushirwan laughed and
+put away from his mind that which he had purposed against the
+people of the village. Moreover, he took the damsel to wife
+then and there, being pleased with her much wit and acuteness
+and the excellence of her speech.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE WATER-CARRIER AND THE GOLDSMITH'S
+ WIFE.
+
+
+
+There was once, in the city of Bokhara, a water-carrier, who
+used to carry water to the house of a goldsmith and had done
+thus thirty years. Now the goldsmith had a wife of exceeding
+beauty and elegance and withal renowned for modesty, chastity
+and piety. One day, the water-carrier came, as of wont, and
+poured the water into the cisterns. Now the woman was standing
+in the midst of the court; so he went up to her and taking her
+hand, stroked it and pressed it, then went away and left her.
+When her husband came home from the bazaar, she said to him, 'I
+would have thee tell me what thou hast done in the bazaar,
+today, to anger God the Most High.' Quoth he, 'I have done
+nothing.' 'Nay,' rejoined she, 'but, by Allah, thou hast indeed
+done something to anger God; and except thou tell me the truth,
+I will not abide in thy house, and thou shalt not see me, nor
+will I see thee.' 'I will tell thee the truth,' answered he.
+'As I was sitting in my shop this day, a woman came up to me
+and bade me make her a bracelet. Then she went away and I
+wrought her a bracelet of gold and laid it aside. Presently,
+she returned and I brought her out the bracelet. She put out
+her hand and I clasped the bracelet on her wrist; and I
+wondered at the whiteness of her hand and the beauty of her
+wrist and recalled what the poet says:
+
+Bracelets, upon her wrists, of glittering virgin gold She hath,
+ like fire ablaze on running water cold.
+It is as if the wrists and bracelets thereabout Were water girt
+ with fire, right wondrous to behold.
+
+So I took her hand and pressed it and squeezed it.' 'God is
+Most Great!' exclaimed the woman. 'Why didst thou this ill
+thing? Know that the water-carrier, who has come to our house
+these thirty years, nor sawst thou ever any treason in him,
+took my hand to day and pressed and squeezed it.' Quoth her
+husband, 'O woman, let us crave pardon of God! Verily, I repent
+of what I did, and do thou ask forgiveness of God for me.' 'God
+pardon me and thee,' said she, 'and vouchsafe to make good the
+issue of our affair!'
+
+Next day, the water-carrier came in to the jeweller's wife and
+throwing himself at her feet, grovelled in the dust and
+besought pardon of her, saying, 'O my lady, acquit me of that
+which Satan deluded me to do; for it was he that seduced me and
+led me astray.' 'Go thy ways,' answered she; 'the fault was not
+in thee, but in my husband, for that he did what he did in his
+shop, and God hath retaliated upon him in this world.' And it
+is related that the goldsmith, when his wife told him how the
+water-carrier had used her, said, 'Tit for tat! If I had done
+more, the water-carrier had done more.' And this became a
+current byword among the folk.
+
+So it behoveth a wife to be both outward and inward with her
+husband, contenting herself with little from him, if he cannot
+give her much, and taking pattern by Aaisheh[FN#114] the
+Truthful and Fatimeh[FN#115] the Clean Maid, (may God the Most
+High accept of them), that she may be of the company of the
+righteous.[FN#116]
+
+
+
+
+
+ KHUSRAU AND SHIRIN WITH THE FISHERMAN.
+
+
+
+King Khusrau[FN#117] of Persia loved fish; and one day, as he
+sat in his saloon, he and Shirin[FN#118] his wife, there came a
+fisherman, with a great fish, and presented it to the King, who
+was pleased and ordered the man four thousand dirhems. When he
+was gone, Shirin said to the King, 'Thou hast done ill.'
+'Wherefore?' asked he; and she answered, 'Because if, after
+this, thou give one of thy courtiers a like sum, he will
+disdain it and say, "He hath but given me the like of what he
+gave the fisherman." And if thou give him less, he will say,
+"He makes light of me and gives me less than he gave the
+fisherman."' 'Thou art right,' rejoined Khusrau; 'but the thing
+is done and it ill becomes a king to go back on his gift.'
+Quoth Shirin, 'An thou wilt, I will contrive thee a means to
+get it back from him.' 'How so?' asked he; and she said, 'Call
+back the fisherman and ask him if the fish be male or female.
+If he say, "Male," say thou, "We want a female," and if he say,
+"Female," say, "We want a male."'
+
+So he sent for the fisherman, who was a man of wit and
+discernment, and said to him, 'Is this fish male or female?'
+The fisherman kissed the ground and answered, 'It is of the
+neuter gender, neither male nor female.' The King laughed and
+ordered him other four thousand dirhems. So the fisherman went
+to the treasurer and taking his eight thousand dirhems, put
+them in a bag he had with him. Then, throwing the bag over his
+shoulder, he was going away, when he dropped a dirhem; so he
+laid the bag off his back and stooped down to pick it up. Now
+the King and Shirin were looking on, and the latter said, 'O
+King, didst thou note the meanness and greediness of yon man,
+in that he must needs stoop down, to pick up the one dirhem,
+and could not bring himself to leave it for one of the King's
+servants?' When the King heard this, he was wroth with the
+fisherman and said, 'Thou art right, O Shirin!' So he called
+the man back and said to him, 'Thou low-minded fellow! Thou art
+no man! How couldst thou put the bag off thy shoulder and stoop
+to pick up the one dirhem and grudge to leave it where it
+fell?' The fisherman kissed the earth before him and answered,
+'May God prolong the King's life! Indeed, I did not pick up the
+dirhem, because of its value in my eyes; but because on one of
+its faces is the likeness of the King and on the other his
+name; and I feared lest any should unwittingly set his foot
+upon it, thus dishonouring the name and presentment of the
+King, and I be blamed for the offence.' The King wondered at
+his wit and shrewdness and ordered him yet other four thousand
+dirhems. Moreover, he let cry abroad in his kingdom, saying,
+'It behoveth none to order himself by women's counsel; for
+whoso followeth their advice, loseth, with his one dirhem,
+other two.'
+
+
+
+
+
+ YEHYA BEN KHALID THE BARMECIDE AND THE
+ POOR MAN.
+
+
+
+Yehya ben Khalid the Barmecide was returning home, one day,
+from the Khalif's palace, when he saw a man at the gate of his
+house, who rose at his approach and saluted him, saying, 'O
+Yehya, I am in need of that which is in thy hand, and I make
+God my intermediary with thee.' So Yehya caused set apart a
+place for him in his house and bade his treasurer carry him a
+thousand dirhems every day and that his food should be of the
+choicest of his own meat. The man abode thus a whole month, at
+the end of which time, having received in all thirty thousand
+dirhems, he departed by stealth, fearing lest Yehya should take
+the money from him, because of the greatness of the sum; and
+when they told Yehya of this, he said, 'By Allah, though he had
+tarried with me to the end of his days, yet had I not scanted
+him of my largesse nor cut off from him the bounties of my
+hospitality!' For, indeed, the excellences of the Barmecides
+were past count nor can their virtues be told; especially those
+of Yehya teen Khalid, for he abounded in noble qualities, even
+as saith the poet of him:
+
+I asked munificence, "Art free?" It answered, "No, perdie!
+ Yehya ben Khalid's slave am I; my lord and master he."
+"A boughten slave?" asked I; but, "Nay, so heaven forfend!"
+ quoth it. "From ancestor to ancestor he did inherit me."
+
+
+
+
+
+ MOHAMMED EL AMIN AND JAAFER BEN EL HADI.
+
+
+
+Jaafer ben Mousa el Hadi[FN#119] once had a slave-girl, a lute
+player, called El Bedr el Kebir, than whom there was not in her
+time a fairer of face nor a better-shaped nor a more elegant of
+manners nor a more accomplished in singing and smiting the
+strings; she was indeed perfect in beauty and charm. Mohammed
+el Amin,[FN#120] son of Zubeideh, heard of her and was instant
+with Jaafer to sell her to him; but he replied, 'Thou knowest
+it beseems not one of my rank to sell slave-girls nor traffic
+in concubines; but, were it not that she was reared in my
+house, I would send her to thee, as a gift, nor grudge her to
+thee.'
+
+Some days after this, El Amin went to Jaafer's house, to make
+merry; and the latter set before him that which it behoves to
+set before friends and bade El Bedr sing to him and gladden
+him. So she tuned the lute and sang right ravishingly, whilst El
+Amin fell to drinking and making merry and bade the cupbearers
+ply Jaafer with wine, till he became drunken, when he took the
+damsel and carried her to his own house, but laid not a finger
+on her. On the morrow, he sent to invite Jaafer; and when he
+came, he set wine before him and bade the girl sing to him, from
+behind the curtain. Jaafer knew her voice and was angered at
+this, but, of the nobleness of his nature and the greatness of
+his mind, he dissembled his vexation and let no change appear in
+his demeanour.
+
+When the carousel was at an end, El Amin commanded one of his
+servants to fill the boat, in which Jaafer had come, with
+dirhems and dinars and all manner jewels and jacinths and rich
+clothes and other treasures of price. So he laid therein a
+thousand myriads of money and a thousand fine pearls, each
+worth twenty thousand dirhems; nor did he give over loading the
+barge with all manner of precious things, till the boatmen
+cried out for quarter, saying, 'The boat cannot hold any more;'
+whereupon he bade them carry all this to Jaafer's palace. Such
+are the fashions of the magnanimous, may God have mercy on
+them!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE SONS OF YEHYA BEN KHALID AND SAID BEN
+ SALIM EL BAHILI.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Said ben Salim el Bahili[FN#121]), I was once, in the
+days of Haroun er Reshid, in very narrow case and greatly
+oppressed with debts, that had accumulated upon me and that I
+had no means of discharging. My doors were blocked up with
+creditors and I was without cease importuned for payment by
+claimants, who dunned me in crowds, till I was at my wits'
+end what to do. At last, being sore perplexed and troubled,
+I betook myself to Abdallah ben Malik el Khuzai[FN#122] and
+besought him to aid me with his judgment and of his good
+counsel direct me to the door of relief; and he said, "None can
+quit thee of this thy strait but the Barmecides." Quoth I, "Who
+can brook their pride and put up with their arrogance?" And he
+answered, "Thou must put up with it, for the sake of amending
+thy case." So I left him and went straight to El Fezl and
+Jaafer, sons of Yehya ben Khalid, to whom I related my case.
+"God give thee His aid," answered they, "and enable thee by
+His bounties to dispense with the aid of His creatures and
+vouchsafe thee abundant good and bestow on thee what shall
+suffice thee, without the need of any but Himself; for He can
+what He will and is gracious and provident with His servants."
+
+I went out from them and returned to Abdallah, disappointed and
+perplexed and heavy at heart, and told him what they had said.
+Quoth he, "Thou wouldst do well to abide with us this day, that
+we may see what God the Most High will decree." So I sat with
+him awhile, and lo, up came my servant, who said to me, "O my
+lord, there are at our door many laden mules, and with them a
+man, who says he is the agent of Fezl and Jaafer ben Yehya."
+Quoth Abdallah, "I trust that relief is come to thee: go and
+see what is to do." So I left him and running to my house,
+found at the door a man, who gave me a letter, wherein was
+written the following: "Know that, after thou hadst been with
+us and acquainted us with thy case, we betook ourselves to the
+Khalif and informed him that the case had reduced thee to the
+humiliation of begging; whereupon he ordered thee a million
+dirhems from the Treasury. We represented to him that thou
+wouldst spend this money in paying thy creditors and said,
+'Whence shall he provide for his subsistence?' So he ordered
+thee other three hundred thousand, and we have sent thee, of
+our own money, a million dirhems each, so that thou hast now
+three millions and three hundred thousand dirhems, wherewithal
+to order thine affair and amend thine estate."
+
+See, then, the munificence of these generous men; may God the
+Most High have mercy on them!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE WOMAN'S TRICK AGAINST HER HUSBAND.
+
+
+
+A man brought his wife a fish one Friday and bidding her cook
+it against the end of the congregational prayers, went out to
+his business. Meanwhile, there came in her friend,[FN#123] who
+bade her to a wedding at his house; so she agreed and laying
+the fish in a jar of water, went off with him and was absent a
+whole week, whilst her husband sought her from house to house
+and enquired after her; but none could give him any news of
+her.
+
+On the following Friday, she came home, [and he fell to chiding
+and reproaching her;] but she brought out to him the fish alive
+from the jar and assembled the folk against him. He told them
+his case; but they credited him not and said, 'It cannot be
+that the fish should have remained alive all this while.' So
+they caused adjudge him mad and imprisoned him and laughed at
+him, whereupon he wept sore and recited the following verses:
+
+A hag, that holds high rank, indeed, in lewdness! In her face
+ Are witnesses that testify to filth and wantonness.
+When she's unclean, she bawds; and when she's clean, she plays
+ the whore: So, all her time, she's either bawd or else
+ adulteress.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE DEVOUT WOMAN AND THE TWO WICKED
+ ELDERS.[FN#124]
+
+There was once, of old time, a virtuous woman among the children
+of Israel, who was pious and devout and used every day to go out
+to the place of prayer, first entering a garden, which adjoined
+thereto, and there making the ablution. Now there were in this
+garden two old men, its keepers, who fell in love with her
+and sought her favours; but she refused, whereupon said they,
+'Except thou yield thyself to us, we will bear witness against
+thee of fornication.' Quoth she, 'God will preserve me from your
+wickedness!' Then they opened the garden-gate and cried out, and
+the folk came to them from all sides, saying, 'What ails you?'
+Quoth they, 'We found this damsel in company with a youth, who
+was doing lewdness with her; but he escaped from our hands.'
+
+Now it was the use of the people of those days to expose an
+adulteress to public ignominy for three days and after stone
+her. So they pilloried her three days, whilst the two old men
+came up to her daily and laying their hands on her head, said,
+'Praised be God who hath sent down His vengeance on thee!'
+
+On the fourth day, they carried her away, to stone her; but a
+lad of twelve years old, by name Daniel, followed them to the
+place of execution and said to them, 'Hasten not to stone her,
+till I judge between them.' So they set him a chair and he sat
+down and caused bring the old men before him separately. (Now
+he was the first that separated witnesses.) Then said he to the
+first, 'What sawest thou?' So he repeated to him his story, and
+Daniel said, 'In what part of the garden did this befall?' 'On
+the eastern side,' replied the elder, 'under a pear-tree.' Then
+he called the other old man and asked him the same question;
+and he replied, 'On the western side of the garden, under an
+apple-tree.' Meanwhile the damsel stood by, with her hands and
+eyes uplift to heaven, imploring God for deliverance. Then God
+the Most High sent down His vengeful thunder upon the two old
+men and consumed them and made manifest the innocence of the
+damsel.
+
+This was the first of the miracles of the Prophet Daniel, on
+whom and on the Prophet be blessing and peace!
+
+
+
+
+
+ JAAFER THE BARMECIDE AND THE OLD
+ BEDOUIN.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid went out one day, with Abou Yousuf
+the minion and Jaafer the Barmecide and Abou Nuwas, into the
+desert, where they fell in with an old man, leant upon his ass.
+The Khalif bade Jaafer ask him whence he came; so he said to
+him, 'Whence comest thou?' 'From Bassora,' answered the
+Bedouin. 'And whither goest thou?' asked Jaafer. 'To Baghdad,'
+said the other. 'And what wilt thou do there?' asked Jaafer. 'I
+go to seek medicine for my eye,' replied the old man. Quoth the
+Khalif, 'O Jaafer, make us sport with him.' 'If I jest with
+him,' answered Jaafer, 'I shall hear what I shall not like.'
+But Er Reshid rejoined, 'I charge thee, on my authority, jest
+with him.'
+
+So Jaafer said to the Bedouin, 'If I prescribe thee a remedy
+that shall profit thee, what wilt thou give me in return?'
+Quoth the other, 'God the Most High will requite thee for me
+with better than I can give thee.' 'Harkye, then,' said Jaafer,
+'and I will give thee a prescription, which I have given to
+none but thee.' 'What is that?' asked the Bedouin; and Jaafer
+answered, 'Take three ounces of wind-wafts and the like of
+sunbeams and moonshine and lamp-light; mix them together and
+let them lie in the wind three months. Then bray them three
+months in a mortar without a bottom and laying them in a cleft
+platter, set it in the wind other three months; after which use
+three drachms every night in thy sleep, and (God willing) thou
+shalt be cured.'
+
+When the Bedouin heard this, he stretched himself out on the
+ass's back and letting fly a terrible great crack of wind, said
+to Jaafer, 'Take this, in payment of thy prescription. When I
+have followed it, if God grant me recovery, I will give thee a
+slave-girl, who shall serve thee in thy lifetime a service,
+wherewith God shall cut short thy term; and when thou diest and
+God hurries thy soul to the fire, she shall blacken thy face
+with her ordure, of her mourning for thee, and lament and
+buffet her face, saying, "O frosty-beard, what a ninny thou
+wast!"'[FN#125] The Khalif laughed till he fell backward, and
+ordered the Bedouin three thousand dirhems.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF OMAR BEN KHETTAB AND THE
+ YOUNG BEDOUIN.
+
+
+
+The sheriff[FN#126] Hussein ben Reyyan relates that the Khalif
+Omar ben Khettab was sitting one day, attended by his chief
+counsellors, judging the folk and doing justice between his
+subjects, when there came up to him two handsome young men,
+haling by the collar a third youth, perfectly handsome and
+well dressed, whom they set before him. Omar looked at him and
+bade them loose him; then, calling him near to himself, said
+to them, 'What is your case with him?' 'O Commander of the
+Faithful,' answered they, 'we are two brothers by one mother
+and known as followers of the truth. We had a father, a very
+old man of good counsel, held in honour of the tribes, pure of
+basenesses and renowned for virtues, who reared us tenderly,
+whilst we were little, and loaded us with favours, when we
+grew up; in fine, a man abounding in noble and illustrious
+qualities, worthy of the poet's words:
+
+"Is Abou es Sekr of Sheiban[FN#127]?" they questioned of me;
+ and "No," I answered, "my life upon it! But Sheiban's of
+ him, I trow.
+How many a father hath ris'n in repute by a noble son, As
+ Adnan,[FN#128] by God's Apostle, to fame and glory did
+ grow!"
+
+He went forth this day to his garden, to take his pleasure
+amongst its trees and pluck the ripe fruits, when this young
+man slew him and swerved from the road of righteousness;
+wherefore we demand of thee the retribution of his crime and
+call upon thee to pass judgment upon him, according to the
+commandment of God.'
+
+The Khalif cast a terrible look at the accused youth and said
+to him, 'Thou hearest the complaint of these young men; what
+hast thou to say in reply?' Now he was stout of heart and ready
+of speech, having doffed the wede of faint-heartedness and put
+off the apparel of affright; so he smiled and after paying the
+usual ceremonial compliment to the Khalif, in the most eloquent
+and elegant words, said, 'O Commander of the Faithful, I have
+given ear to their complaint, and they have said sooth in that
+which they avouch, so far as they have set out what befell; and
+the commandment of God is a decreed decree.[FN#129] But I will
+state my case before thee, and thine be it to decide thereon.
+
+Know then, O Commander of the Faithful, that I am a very Arab
+of the Arabs, the noblest of those that are beneath the skies.
+I grew up in the dwellings of the desert, till evil and hostile
+times fell upon my tribe, when I came to the utterward of this
+town, with my children and good and household. As I went along
+one of the paths between the gardens, with my she-camels, high
+in esteem with me and precious to me, and midst them a stallion
+of noble race and goodly shape, a plenteous getter, by whom the
+females bore abundantly and who walked among them, as he were a
+crowned king,--behold, one of the she-camels broke away and
+running to the garden of these young men's father, began to
+crop the branches that showed above the wall. I ran to her, to
+drive her away, when there appeared, at a breach of the wall,
+an old man, whose eyes sparkled with anger, holding a stone in
+his right hand and swaying to and fro, like a lion preparing
+for a spring. He cast the stone at my stallion, and it struck
+him in a vital part and killed him. When I saw the stallion
+drop dead beside me, live coals of anger were kindled in my
+heart; so I took up the stone and throwing it at the old man,
+it was the cause of his end: thus his own wrongful act returned
+against him and the man was slain of that wherewith he slew.
+When the stone struck him, he cried out with a terrible great
+cry, and I hastened from the spot; but these young men hurried
+after me and laying hands on me, carried me before thee.'
+
+Quoth Omar, (may God the Most High accept of him), 'Thou hast
+confessed thy crime and acquittal is impossible; for [the law
+of] retaliation is imperative and there is no time of escape.'
+[FN#130] 'I hear and obey the judgment of the Imam,' answered
+the Bedouin, 'and am content to submit me to the requirement
+of the law of Islam; but I have a young brother, whose old
+father, before his death, appointed to him great store of
+wealth and much gold and committed his affair to me, saying,
+"I give this into thy hand for thy brother; keep it for him
+with thy might." So I took the money and buried it; nor doth
+any know of it but I. Now, if thou adjudge me to die forthright,
+the money will be lost and thou wilt be the cause of its loss;
+wherefore the little one will sue thee for his due on the day
+when God shall judge His creatures. But, if thou wilt grant
+me three days' delay, I will appoint one to undertake the boy's
+affair, in my stead, and return to answer my debt; and I have
+one who will be my surety for this my word.'
+
+The Khalif bowed his head awhile, then raised it and looking
+round upon those present, said, 'Who will be surety to me for
+his return?' The Bedouin looked at the faces of those who were
+in company and pointing to Abou Dherr,[FN#131] said, 'This man
+will answer for me and be my surety.' 'O Abou Dherr,' said Omar,
+'dost thou hear what this youth says and wilt thou be surety
+to me for his return?' 'Yes, O Commander of the Faithful,'
+answered Abou Dherr, 'I will be surety for him three days.'
+So the Khalif accepted his guarantee and let the young man go.
+
+Now, at the appointed time, when the days of grace were nearly
+or quite at end and still the Bedouin came not, the Khalif sat
+in his council, with the Companions[FN#132] surrounding him,
+like the stars about the moon, Abou Dherr and the plaintiffs
+being also present; and the latter said, 'O Abou Dherr, where
+is the defendant and how shall he return, having once escaped?
+But we will not stir hence, till thou bring him to us, that we
+may take our wreak of him.' 'As the All-Wise King liveth,'
+replied Abou Dherr, 'if the days of grace expire and the young
+man return not, I will fulfil my warranty and surrender myself
+to the Imam.' 'By Allah,' rejoined Omar, 'if the young man
+tarry, I will assuredly execute on Abou Dherr that which is
+prescribed by the law of Islam!' Thereupon the eyes of the
+bystanders ran over with tears; those who looked on raised
+groans, and great was the clamour. Then the chiefs of the
+Companions were instant with the plaintiffs to accept the
+bloodwit and win the thanks of the folk, but they refused and
+would nothing but the talion. However, as the folk were swaying
+to and fro and clamorously bemoaning Abou Dherr, up came the
+young Bedouin, with face beaded with sweat and shining like the
+new moon, and standing before the Imam, saluted him right
+fairly and said to him, 'I have given the boy in charge to his
+mother's brothers and have made them acquainted with all that
+pertains to his affairs and let them into the secret of his
+good; after which I braved the heats of midday and am come to
+redeem the promise of a free-born man.'
+
+The folk marvelled at his good faith and loyalty and his
+intrepid offering himself to death; and one said to him, 'How
+noble a youth art thou and how loyal to thy promise and thy
+duty!' 'Are ye not certified,' rejoined he, 'that when death
+presenteth itself none can escape from it? And indeed I have
+kept faith, that it be not said, "Loyalty is gone from among
+men."' 'By Allah, O Commander of the Faithful,' said Abou
+Dherr, 'I became warrant for this young man, without knowing to
+what tribe he belonged, nor had I seen him before that day; but
+when he turned away from all else who were present and singled
+me out, saying, "This man will answer for me and be my surety,"
+I thought ill to refuse him, and humanity forbade to baulk his
+expectation, there being no harm in compliance with his desire,
+that it be not said, "Benevolence is gone from among men."'
+Then said the two young men, 'O Commander of the Faithful, we
+forgive this youth our father's blood,--seeing that [by his
+noble behaviour] he hath changed desolation into cheer,--that
+it be not said, "Humanity is gone from among men."'
+
+The Khalif rejoiced in the acquittance of the young Bedouin and
+his truth and good faith; moreover, he extolled the humanity of
+Abou Dherr, over all his companions, and approved the benevolent
+resolve of the two young men, giving them grateful praise and
+applying to their case the saying of the poet:
+
+He who doth good among the folk shall be repaid again; For
+ works of Good are never lost betwixten God and men.
+
+Then he offered to pay them, from the Treasury, the bloodwit
+for their father; but they refused, saying, 'We forgave him but
+of our desire unto God the Bountiful, the Exalted; and he who
+is thus minded followeth not his benefits with reproach neither
+mischief.'
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KHALIF EL MAMOUN AND THE PYRAMIDS OF
+ EGYPT.
+
+
+
+It is told that the Khalif El Mamoun, son of Haroun er Reshid,
+when he entered the [God-]guarded city of Cairo, was minded to
+pull down the Pyramids, that he might take what was therein;
+but, when he went about to do this, he could not avail thereto,
+for all his endeavour. He expended great sums of money in the
+attempt, but only succeeded in opening up a small gallery in
+one of them, wherein he found treasure, to the exact amount of
+the money he had spent in the works, neither more nor less; at
+which he marvelled and taking what he found there, desisted
+from his intent.
+
+Now the Pyramids are three in number, and they are one of the
+wonders of the world; nor is there on the face of the earth
+their like for height and fashion and skilful ordinance; for
+they are builded of immense rocks, and they who built them
+proceeded by piercing one block of stone and setting therein
+upright rods of iron; after which they pierced a second block
+of stone and lowered it upon the first. Then they poured melted
+lead upon the joints and set the blocks in geometrical order,
+till the building was complete. The height of each pyramid was
+a hundred cubits, of the measure of the time, and it was four-
+square, each side three hundred cubits long, at the bottom, and
+sloping upward thence to a point. The ancients say that, in the
+western Pyramid, are thirty chambers of vari-coloured granite,
+full of precious stones and treasures galore and rare images
+and utensils and costly arms, which latter are anointed with
+magical unguents, so that they may not rust till the day of
+Resurrection. Therein, also, are vessels of glass, that will
+bend and not break, containing various kinds of compound drugs
+and medicinal waters. In the second Pyramid are the records of
+the priests, written on tablets of granite,--to each priest his
+tablet, on which are set out the wonders of his craft and his
+achievements; and on the walls are figures like idols, working
+with their hands at all manner crafts and seated on thrones. To
+each pyramid there is a guardian, that keeps watch over it and
+guards it, to all eternity, against the ravages of time and the
+vicissitudes of events; and indeed the marvels of these
+pyramids astound all who have eyes and wit. Many are the poems
+that describe them, thou shalt profit no great matter thereby,
+and among the rest, quoth one of them:
+
+The high resolves of kings, if they would have them to abide In
+ memory, after them, are in the tongues of monuments.
+Dost thou not see the Pyramids? They, of a truth, endure And
+ change not for the shifts of time or chances of events.
+
+And again:
+
+Consider but the Pyramids and lend an ear to all They tell of
+ bygone times and that which did of yore befall.
+Could they but speak, assuredly they would to us relate What
+ time and fate have done with first and last and great and
+ small.
+
+And again:
+
+I prithee, tell me, friend of mine, stands there beneath the
+ sky A building with the Pyramids of Egypt that can vie
+In skilful ordinance? Behold, Time's self's afraid of them,
+ Though of all else upon the earth 'tis dreaded, low and
+ high.
+My sight no longer rests upon their wondrous ordinance, Yet are
+ they present evermore unto my spirit's eye.
+
+And again:
+
+Where's he the Pyramids who built? What was his tribe, His time
+ and what the place where he was stricken dead?
+The monuments survive their lords awhile; then death O'ertaketh
+ them and they fall prostrate in their stead.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE THIEF TURNED MERCHANT AND THE OTHER
+ THIEF.
+
+
+
+There was once a thief who repented to God the Most High and
+making good his repentance, opened himself a shop for the sale
+of stuffs, where he continued to trade awhile. One day, he
+locked his shop and went home; and in the night there came to
+the bazaar a cunning thief, disguised in the habit of the
+merchant, and pulling out keys from his sleeve, said to the
+watchman of the market, 'Light me this candle.' So the watchman
+took the candle and went to get a light, whilst the thief
+opened the shop and lit another candle he had with him. When
+the watchman came back, he found him seated in the shop,
+looking over the account-books and reckoning with his fingers;
+nor did he leave to do thus till point of day, when he said to
+the man, 'Fetch me a camel-driver and his camel, to carry some
+goods for me.' So the man fetched him a camel, and the thief
+took four bales of stuffs and gave them to the camel-driver,
+who loaded them on his beast. Then he gave the watchman two
+dirhems and went away after the camel-driver, the watchman the
+while believing him to be the owner of the shop.
+
+Next morning, the merchant came and the watchman greeted
+him with blessings, because of the two dirhems, much to the
+surprise of the former, who knew not what he meant. When he
+opened his shop, he saw the droppings of the wax and the
+account-book lying on the floor, and looking round, found
+four bales of stuffs missing. So he asked the watchman what
+had happened and he told him what had passed in the night,
+whereupon the merchant bade him fetch the camel-driver and said
+to the latter, 'Whither didst thou carry the stuffs?' 'To such
+a wharf,' answered the driver; 'and I stowed them on board such
+a vessel.' 'Come with me thither,' said the merchant. So the
+camel-driver carried him to the wharf and showed him the barque
+and her owner. Quoth the merchant to the latter, 'Whither didst
+thou carry the merchant and the stuff?' 'To such a place,'
+answered the master, 'where he fetched a camel-driver and
+setting the bales on the camel, went I know not whither.'
+'Fetch me the camel-driver,' said the merchant; so he fetched
+him and the merchant said to him, 'Whither didst thou carry the
+bales of stuffs from the ship?' 'To such a khan,' answered he.
+'Come thither with me and show it to me,' said the merchant.
+
+So the camel-driver went with him to a khan at a distance from
+the shore, where he had set down the stuffs, and showed him the
+mock merchant's magazine, which he opened and found therein his
+four bales untouched and unopened. The thief had laid his
+mantle over them; so the merchant took the bales and the cloak
+and delivered them to the camel-driver, who laid them on his
+camel; after which the merchant locked the magazine and went
+away with the camel-driver. On the way, he met the thief, who
+followed him, till he had shipped the bales, when he said to
+him, 'O my brother (God have thee in His keeping!), thou hast
+recovered thy goods, and nought of them is lost; so give me
+back my cloak.' The merchant laughed and giving him back his
+cloak, let him go unhindered.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ MESROUR THE EUNUCH AND IBN EL CARIBI
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid was very restless one night; so he
+said to his Vizier Jaafer, 'I am sleepless tonight and my heart
+is oppressed and I know not what to do.' Now his henchman
+Mesrour was standing before him, and he laughed. Quoth the
+Khalif, 'Dost thou laugh in derision of me or art thou mad?'
+'Neither, by Allah, O Commander of the Faithful,' answered
+Mesrour, 'by thy kinship to the Prince of Apostles, I did it
+not of my free-will; but I went out yesterday to walk and
+coming to the bank of the Tigris, saw there the folk collected
+about a man named Ibn el Caribi, who was making them laugh; and
+but now I recalled what he said, and laughter got the better of
+me; and I crave pardon of thee, O Commander of the Faithful!'
+'Bring him to me forthright,' said the Khalif. So Mesrour
+repaired in all haste to Ibn el Caribi and said to him, 'The
+Commander of the Faithful calls for thee.' 'I hear and obey,'
+answered the droll. 'But on condition,' added Mesrour, 'that,
+if he give thee aught, thou shalt have a fourth and the rest
+shall be mine.' 'Nay,' replied the other, 'thou shalt have half
+and I half.' 'Not so,' insisted Mesrour; 'I will have three-
+quarters.' 'Thou shalt have two-thirds, then,' rejoined Ibn el
+Caribi; 'and I the other third.' To this Mesrour agreed, after
+much haggling, and they returned to the palace together.
+
+When Ibn el Caribi came into the Khalif's presence, he saluted
+him, as became his rank, and stood before him; whereupon said
+Er Reshid to him, 'If thou do not make me laugh, I will give
+thee three blows with this bag.' Quoth Ibn el Caribi in
+himself, 'Three strokes with that bag were a small matter,
+seeing that beating with whips irketh me not;' for he thought
+the bag was empty. Then he clapped into a discourse, such as
+would make a stone laugh, and gave vent to all manner of
+drolleries; but the Khalif laughed not neither smiled, whereat
+Ibn el Caribi marvelled and was chagrined and affrighted. Then
+said the Khalif, 'Now hast thou earned the beating,' and gave
+him a blow with the bag, in which were four pebbles, each two
+pounds in weight. The blow fell on his neck and he gave a great
+cry, then calling to mind his compact with Mesrour, said,
+'Pardon, O Commander of the Faithful! Hear two words from me.'
+'Say on,' replied the Khalif. Quoth Ibn el Caribi, 'Mesrour
+made it a condition with me that, whatsoever might come to me
+of the bounties of the Commander of the Faithful, one-third
+thereof should be mine and the rest his; nor did he agree to
+leave me so much as one-third save after much haggling. Now
+thou hast bestowed on me nothing but beating; I have had my
+share and here stands he, ready to receive his; so give him the
+two other blows.'
+
+When the Khalif heard this, he laughed till he fell backward;
+then calling Mesrour, he gave him a blow, whereat he cried out
+and said, 'O Commander of the Faithful, one-third sufficeth me:
+give him the two-thirds.' The Khalif laughed at them and
+ordered them a thousand diners each, and they went away,
+rejoicing.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE DEVOUT PRINCE.
+
+
+
+The Khalif Haroun er Reshid had a son, who, from the time he
+attained the age of sixteen, renounced the world and walked in
+the way of ascetics and devotees. He was wont to go out to the
+tombs and say, 'Behold, ye that lie here once possessed the
+world, but that was no deliverer for you [from death], and now
+are ye come to your graves! Would God I knew what ye say and
+what is said to you!' And he wept, as one weeps that is
+troubled and fearful, and repeated the words of the poet:
+
+Whene'er the funerals pass, my heart with fear is torn, And the
+ wailing of the mourners maketh me to mourn.
+
+One day, as he sat among the tombs, according to his wont, his
+father passed by, in all his state, surrounded by his viziers
+and grandees and the officers of his household, who saw the
+Khalif's son, with a gown of woollen stuff on his body and a
+cowl of the same on his head, and said to one another, 'This
+youth dishonours the Commander of the Faithful among Kings:
+but, if he reproved him, he would leave his present way of
+life.' The Khalif heard what they said; so he bespoke his son
+of this, saying, 'O my son, thou puttest me to shame by thy
+present way of life.' The young man looked at him and made no
+reply: then he beckoned to a bird, that was perched on the
+battlements of the palace, and said to it, 'O bird, I conjure
+thee, by Him who created thee, alight upon my hand.' And
+straightway it flew down and perched on his hand. Quoth he,
+'Return to thy place;' and it did so. Then he said, 'Alight on
+the hand of the Commander of the Faithful;' but it refused, and
+he said to his father, 'It is thou that puttest me to shame,
+amongst the friends of God, by thy love of the world; and now I
+am resolved to depart from thee, never to return to thee, save
+in the world to come.' Then he went down to Bassora, where he
+fell to working with those that wrought in mud,[FN#133] taking,
+as his day's hire, but a dirhem and a danic.[FN#134] With the
+danic he fed himself and gave alms of the dirhem.
+
+(Quoth Abou Aamir of Bassora), There fell down a wall in my
+house: so I went out to the station of the artisans, to find
+one who should set it up for me, and my eyes fell on a handsome
+youth of a radiant countenance. So I accosted him and said to
+him, "O my friend, dost thou seek work?" "Yes," answered he;
+and I said, "Come with me and build a wall." "On two conditions,"
+replied he. Quoth I, "What are they, O my friend?" "First,"
+said he, "that my hire be a dirhem and a danic, and secondly,
+that, when the Muezzin calls to prayer, thou shalt let me
+go pray with the congregation." "It is well," answered I
+and carried him to my house, where he fell to work, such work
+as I never saw the like of. Presently, I named to him the
+morning meal; but he said, "No;" and I knew that he was
+fasting. When he heard the call to prayer, he said to me, "Thou
+knowest the condition?" "Yes," answered I. So he loosed his
+girdle and applying himself to the ablution, made it after a
+fashion than which I never saw a goodlier; then went to the
+mosque and prayed with the congregation and returned to his
+work. He did the like upon the call to afternoon-prayer, and
+when I saw him fall to work again thereafterward, I said to
+him, "O my friend, the hours of labour are over for to-day; a
+workman's day is but till the time of afternoon-prayer." "Glory
+be to God," answered he, "my service is till the night." And he
+ceased not to work till nightfall, when I gave him two dirhems.
+Quoth he, "What is this?" "By Allah," answered I, "this is
+[but] part of thy wage, because of thy diligence in my service."
+But he threw me back the two pieces, saying, "I will have no
+more than was agreed upon between us." I pressed him to take
+them, but could not prevail upon him; so I gave him the dirhem
+and the danic, and he went away.
+
+Next morning early, I went to the station, but found him not;
+so I enquired for him and was told that he came thither only on
+Saturdays. So, when Saturday came, I betook me to the market
+and finding him there, said to him, "In the name of God, do me
+the favour to come and work for me." ["Willingly,"] said he,
+"upon the conditions thou wottest of." "It is well," answered I
+and carrying him to my house, stood watching him, unseen of
+him, and saw him take a handful of mud and lay it on the wall,
+when, behold, the stones ranged themselves one upon another;
+and I said, "On this wise are the friends of God." He worked
+out his day and did even more than before; and when it was
+night, I gave him his hire, and he took it and went away.
+
+When the third Saturday came round, I went to the standing, but
+found him not; so I enquired for him and was told that he lay
+sick in the hut of such a woman. Now this was an old woman,
+renowned for piety, who had a hut of reeds in the burial-
+ground. So I went thither and found him lying on the naked
+earth, with a brick for a pillow and his face beaming with
+light. I saluted him and he returned my salute; and I sat
+down at his head, weeping over his tenderness of years and
+strangerhood and submission to the will of his Lord. Then said
+I to him, "Hast thou any need?" "Yes," answered he; and I said,
+"What is it?" He replied, "Come hither tomorrow in the forenoon
+and thou wilt find me dead. Wash me and dig my grave and tell
+none thereof: but shroud me in this my gown, after thou hast
+unsewn it and taken out what thou shalt find in the bosom,
+which keep with thee. Then, when thou hast prayed over me and
+laid me in the dust, go to Baghdad and watch for the Khalif
+Haroun er Reshid, till he come forth, when do thou bear him my
+salutation and give him what thou shalt find in the breast of
+my gown." Then he made the profession of the Faith and glorified
+his Lord in the most eloquent of words, reciting the following
+verses:
+
+Carry the trust of him on whom the wished-for death hath come
+ To Er Reshid, and thy reward with thy Creator stand!
+"An exile greets thee," say, "who longed full sorely for thy
+ sight; With long desire he yearned for thee, far in a
+ foreign strand.
+Nor hate nor weariness from thee estranged him, for, indeed, To
+ God Most High he was brought near by kissing thy right
+ hand.
+But, O my father, 'twas his heart, shunning the vain delights
+ Of this thy world, that drove him forth to seek a distant
+ land!"
+
+Then he betook himself to prayer, asking pardon of God and
+blessing the Lord of the Just[FN#135] and repeating verses of
+the Koran; after which he recited the following:
+
+Let not prosperity delude thee, father mine; For fortune wastes
+ and life itself must pass away.
+Whenas thou com'st to know of folk in evil plight, Think thou
+ must answer it upon the Judgment Day;
+And when thou bearest forth the dead unto the tombs, Think that
+ thou, too, must pass upon the self-same way!
+
+Then I left him and went home. On the morrow, I returned, at
+the appointed hour, and found him indeed dead, the mercy of God
+be on him! So I washed him and unsewing his gown, found in the
+bosom a ruby worth thousands of diners and said to myself, "By
+Allah, this youth was indeed abstracted from the things of this
+world!" After I had buried him, I made my way to Baghdad and
+going to the Khalif's palace, waited till he came forth, when I
+accosted him in one of the streets and gave him the ruby, which
+when he saw, he knew and fell down in a swoon. His attendants
+laid hands on me, but he revived and bade them unhand me and
+bring me courteously to the palace. They did his bidding, and
+when he returned, he sent for me and carrying me into his
+closet, said to me, "How doth the owner of this ruby?" Quoth I,
+"He is dead;" and told him what had passed; whereupon he fell
+a-weeping and said, "The son hath profited, but the father is
+disappointed." Then he called out, saying, "Ho, such an one!"
+And behold, a woman came out to him. When she saw me, she would
+have withdrawn; but he said to her, "Come; and heed him not."
+So she entered and saluted, and he threw her the ruby, which
+when she knew, she gave a great shriek and fell down in a
+swoon. As soon as she came to herself, she said, "O Commander
+of the Faithful, what hath God done with my son?" And he said
+to me, "Do thou tell her;" for he could not speak for weeping.
+So I repeated the story to her, and she began to weep and say
+in a failing voice, "How I have longed for thy sight, O
+consolation of my eyes! Would I might have given thee to drink,
+when thou hadst none to tend thee! Would I might have companied
+with thee, whenas thou foundest none to cheer thee!" And she
+poured forth tears and recited the following verses:
+
+I weep for one to whom death came, an exile and in pain: Alone
+ he died, without a friend to whom he might complain.
+Puissant and honoured and conjoined with those that loved him
+ dear, To live alone and seeing none, unfriended, he was
+ fain.
+That which the days conceal shall yet be manifest to us: Not
+ one of us by death, indeed, unsmitten may remain.
+O absent one, the Lord of all decreed thy strangerhood, And
+ thou left'st far behind the love that was betwixt us
+ twain!
+Though death, my son, forbid me hope to see thee in this life,
+ Tomorrow, on the Reckoning-Day, we two shall meet again.
+
+Quoth I, "O Commander of the Faithful, was he indeed thy son?"
+"Yes," answered he; "and indeed, before I succeeded to this
+office, he was wont to visit the learned and company with the
+devout; but, when I became Khalif, he grew estranged from me
+and withdrew himself apart. Then said I to his mother, 'This
+thy son is absorbed in God the Most High, and it may be that
+tribulations shall befall him and he be smitten with stress of
+evil chance; wherefore, do thou give him this ruby, that it may
+be to him a resource in the hour of need.' So she gave it him,
+conjuring him to take it, and he obeyed her. Then he left the
+things of our world to us and removed himself from us; nor did
+he cease to be absent from us, till he went to the presence of
+God (to whom belong might and majesty) with a holy and pure
+mind." Then said he, "Come, show me his grave." So we repaired
+to Bassora and I showed him his son's grave. When he saw it, he
+wept and lamented, till he fell down in a swoon; after which he
+came to himself and asked pardon of God, saying, "We are God's,
+and to Him we return!" and invoked blessings on the dead. Then he
+besought me of companionship; but I said to him, "O Commander of
+the Faithful, verily, in thy son's case is for me the gravest of
+admonitions!" And I recited the following verses:
+
+'Tis I am the stranger! None harbours the wight, Though he lie
+ in his native city by night.
+'Tis I am the exile! Nor children nor wife Nor comrades have I,
+ to take ruth on my plight.
+The mosques are my refuge; I haunt them indeed: My heart from
+ their shelter shall never take flight.
+To the Lord of all creatures, to God be the praise, Whilst yet
+ in the body abideth the spright!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE SCHOOLMASTER WHO FELL IN LOVE BY
+ REPORT.
+
+
+
+(Quoth one of the erudite), I passed once by a [school, in
+which a] schoolmaster, comely of aspect and well dressed, was
+teaching children; so I entered, and he rose and made me sit
+with him. Then I examined him in the Koran and in syntax and
+poetry and lexicography, and found him perfect in all that was
+required of him and said to him, "God strengthen thy purpose!
+Thou art indeed versed in all that is sought of thee." So I
+frequented him awhile, discovering daily some new excellence
+in him, and said to myself, "This is indeed a wonder in a
+schoolmaster; for the understanding are agreed upon the lack of
+wit of those that teach children." Then I separated myself from
+him and sought him out and visited him [only] every few days,
+till, one day, coming to see him as of wont, I found the school
+shut and made enquiry of the neighbours, who said, "Some one is
+dead in his house." So I said to myself, "It behoves me to pay
+him a visit of condolence," and going to his house, knocked at
+the door. A slave-girl came out to me and said, "What dost thou
+want?" "I want thy master," answered I. Quoth she, "He is
+sitting alone, mourning." "Tell him," rejoined I, "that his
+friend so and so seeks to condole with him." She went in and
+told him; and he said, "Admit him." So she brought me in to
+him, and I found him seated alone and his head bound [with the
+fillets of mourning]. "May God amply requite thee!" said I.
+"This is a road all must perforce travel, and it behoves thee
+to take patience. But who is dead unto thee?" "One who was
+dearest and best beloved of the folk to me," answered he. Quoth
+I, "Perhaps thy father?" He replied, "No;" and I said, "Thy
+mother?" "No," answered he. "Thy brother?" "No." "One of thy
+kindred?" "No." "Then," asked I, "what relation was the dead to
+thee?" "My mistress," answered he. Quoth I to myself, "This is
+the first sign of his lack of wit." Then I said to him, "There
+are others than she and fairer;" and he answered, "I never saw
+her, that I might judge whether or no there be others fairer
+than she." Quoth I to myself, "This is another sign" Then I
+said to him, "And how couldst thou fall in love with one thou
+hast never seen?" Quoth he, "I was sitting one day at the
+window, when there passed by a man, singing the following
+verse:
+
+Umm Amri,[FN#136] God requite thee thy generosity! Give back my
+ heart, prithee, wherever it may be!
+
+When I heard this, I said to myself, 'Except this Umm Amri were
+without equal in the world, the poets had not celebrated her in
+amorous verse.' So I fell in love with her; but, two days
+after, the same man passed, singing the following verse:
+
+The jackass with Umm Amri departed; but, alas, Umm Amri! She
+ returned not again, nor did the ass.
+
+Thereupon I knew that she was dead and mourned for her. This
+was three days ago, and I have been mourning ever since." So I
+left him and went away, having assured myself of the feebleness
+of his wit.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE FOOLISH SCHOOLMASTER
+
+
+
+A man of elegant culture once entered a school and sitting down
+by the master, entered into discourse with him and found him an
+accomplished theologian, poet, grammarian and lexicographer,
+intelligent, well bred and pleasant; whereat he wondered,
+saying in himself, 'It cannot be that a man, who teaches
+children in a school, should have a perfect wit.' When he was
+about to go away, the schoolmaster said to him, 'Thou art my
+guest to-night;' and he consented and accompanied him to his
+house, where he made much of him and set food before him. They
+ate and drank and sat talking, till a third part of the night
+was past, when the host spread his guest a bed and went up to
+his harem. The other lay down and addressed himself to sleep,
+when, behold, there arose a great clamour in the harem. He
+asked what was to do, and they said, 'A terrible thing hath
+befallen the sheikh, and he is at the last gasp.' 'Take me up
+to him,' said he. So they carried him to the schoolmaster, whom
+he found lying insensible, with his blood streaming down. He
+sprinkled water on his face and when he revived, he said to
+him, 'What has betided thee? When thou leftest me, thou west in
+all good cheer and sound of body.' 'O my brother,' answered the
+schoolmaster, 'after I left thee, I sat meditating on the works
+of God the Most High and said to myself, "In every thing God
+hath created for man there is an use; for He (to whom be glory)
+created the hands to seize, the feet to walk, the eyes to see,
+the ears to hear and the yard to do the deed of kind; and so on
+with all the members of the body, except these two cullions;
+there is no use in them." So I took a razor I had by me and cut
+them off; and there befell me what thou seest.' So the guest
+left him and went away, saving, 'He was in the right who said,
+"No schoolmaster who teaches children can have a perfect wit,
+though he know all sciences."
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE IGNORANT MAN WHO SET UP FOR A
+ SCHOOLMASTER.
+
+
+
+There was once, among the hangers-on of the collegiate mosque,
+a man who knew not how to read and write and got his bread by
+gulling the folk. One day, he bethought him to open a school
+and teach children; so he got him tablets and written scrolls
+and hung them up in a [conspicuous] place. Then he enlarged his
+turban and sat down at the door of the school. The people, who
+passed by and saw his turban and the tablets and scrolls,
+thought he must be a very learned doctor; so they brought him
+their children; and he would say to this, 'Write,' and to that,
+'Read;' and thus they taught one another.
+
+One day, as he sat, as of wont, at the door of the school, he
+saw a woman coming up, with a letter in her hand, and said to
+himself, 'This woman doubtless seeks me, that I may read her
+the letter she has in her hand. How shall I do with her seeing
+I cannot read writing?' And he would fain have gone down and
+fled from her; but, before he could do this, she overtook him
+and said to him, 'Whither away?' Quoth he, 'I purpose to pray
+the noontide-prayer and return.' 'Noon is yet distant,' said
+she; 'so read me this letter.' He took the letter and turning
+it upside down, fell to looking at it, now shaking his head and
+anon knitting his eyebrows and showing concern. Now the letter
+came from the woman's husband, who was absent; and when she saw
+the schoolmaster do thus, she said, 'Doubtless my husband is
+dead, and this learned man is ashamed to tell me so.' So she
+said to him, 'O my lord, if he be dead, tell me.' But he shook
+his head and held his peace. Then said she, 'Shall I tear my
+clothes?' 'Tear,' answered he. 'Shall I buffet my face?' asked
+she; and he said, 'Buffet.' So she took the letter from his
+hand and returning home, fell a-weeping, she and her children.
+
+One of her neighbours heard her weeping and asking what ailed
+her, was answered, 'She hath gotten a letter, telling her that
+her husband is dead.' Quoth the man, 'This is a lying saying;
+for I had a letter from him but yesterday, advising me that he
+is in good health and case and will be with her after ten
+days.' So he rose forthright and going in to her, said, 'Where
+is the letter thou hast received?' She brought it to him, and
+he took it and read it; and it ran as follows, after the usual
+salutations, 'I am well and in good health and case and will be
+with thee after ten days. Meanwhile, I send thee a quilt and an
+extinguisher.'[FN#137] So she took the letter and returning
+with it to the schoolmaster, said to him, 'What moved thee to
+deal thus with me?' And she repeated to him what her neighbour
+had told her of her husband's well-being and of his having sent
+her a quilt and an extinguisher. 'Thou art in the right,'
+answered he. 'But excuse me, good woman; for I was, at the
+time, troubled and absent-minded and seeing the extinguisher
+wrapped in the quilt, thought that he was dead and they had
+shrouded him.' The woman, not smoking the cheat, said, 'Thou
+art excused.' and taking the letter, went away.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE KING AND THE VIRTUOUS WIFE
+
+
+
+A certain King once went forth in disguise, to look into the
+affairs of his subjects. Presently, he came to a great village
+and being athirst, stopped at the door of a house and asked for
+water. There came out to him a fair woman, with a pitcher of
+water, which she gave him, and he drank. When he looked at her,
+he was ravished with her and required her of love. Now she knew
+him; so she brought him into the house and making him sit down,
+brought out a book and said to him, 'Look in this book, whilst
+I order my affair and return to thee.' So he looked into the
+book, and behold, it treated of the Divine prohibition against
+adultery and of the punishments that God hath prepared for
+those that do it. When he read this, his flesh quaked and he
+repented to God the Most High: then he called the woman and
+giving her the book, went away. Now her husband was absent and
+when he returned, she told him what had passed, whereat he was
+confounded and said in himself, 'I fear lest the King's desire
+have fallen upon her.' And he dared not have to do with her
+after this.
+
+After awhile, the wife told her kinsfolk of her husband's
+conduct, and they complained of him to the King, saying, 'May
+God advance the King! This man hired of us a piece of land, for
+tillage, and tilled it awhile; then left it fallow and tilled
+it not, neither forsook it, that we might let it to one who
+would till it. Indeed, harm is come to the field, and we fear
+its corruption, for that land, if it be not tilled' spoileth.'
+Quoth the King to the man, 'What hinders thee from tilling thy
+land?' 'May God advance the King!' answered he. 'It came to my
+knowledge that a lion entered the field, wherefore I stood in
+awe of him and dared not approach it, seeing that I know I
+cannot cope with the lion, and I stand in fear of him.' The
+King understood the parable and rejoined, saying, 'O fellow,
+the lion trampled not thy land, and it is good for tillage; so
+do thou till it and God prosper thee in it, for the lion hath
+done it no hurt.' Then he bade give the man and his wife a
+handsome present and sent them away.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABDURREHMAN THE MOOR'S STORY OF THE ROC.
+
+
+
+There was once a man of the people of Morocco, called
+Abdurrehman the Moor, and he was known, to boot, as the
+Chinaman, for his long sojourn in Cathay. He had journeyed far
+and wide and traversed many seas and deserts and was wont to
+relate wondrous tales of his travels. He was once cast upon an
+island, where he abode a long while and returning thence to his
+native country, brought with him the quill of the wing-feather
+of a young roe, whilst yet unhatched and in the egg; and this
+quill was big enough to hold a skinful of water, for it is said
+that the length of the young roe's wing, when it comes forth of
+the egg, is a thousand fathoms. The folk marvelled at this
+quill, when they saw it, and Abdurrehman related to them the
+following adventure.
+
+He was on a voyage in the China seas, with a company of
+merchants, when they sighted a great island so they steered
+for it and casting anchor before it, saw that it was large and
+spacious. The ship's people went ashore to get wood and water,
+taking with them skins and ropes and axes, and presently espied
+a great white gleaming dome, a hundred cubits high. So they
+made towards it and drawing near, found that it was a roe's
+egg and fell on it with axes and stones and sticks, till they
+uncovered the young bird and found it as it were a firm-set
+mountain. They went about to pluck out one of its wing-feathers,
+but could not win to do so, save by helping one another, for
+all the feathers were not full grown; after which they took
+what they could carry of the young bird's flesh and cutting
+the quill away from the feather-part, returned to the ship.
+Then they spread the canvas and putting out to sea, sailed
+with a fair wind all that night, till the sun rose, when they
+saw the old roc come flying after them, as he were a vast
+cloud, with a rock in his talons, like a great mountain, bigger
+than the ship. As soon as he came over the vessel, he let fall
+the rock upon it; but the ship, having great way on her,
+forewent the rock, which fell into the sea with a terrible
+crash. So God decreed them safety and delivered them from
+destruction; and they cooked the young bird's flesh and ate it.
+Now there were amongst them old grey bearded men; and when they
+awoke on the morrow, they found that their beards had turned
+black, nor did any who had eaten of the young roc ever grow
+grey. Some held the cause of the return of youth to them and
+the ceasing of hoariness from them to be that they had heated
+the pot with arrow-wood, whilst others would have it that it
+came of eating the young roe's flesh; and this is indeed a
+wonder of wonders.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ADI BEN ZEID AND THE PRINCESS HIND.
+
+
+
+En Numan ben el Mundhir, King of the Arabs [of Irak], had a
+daughter named Hind, who was eleven years old and was the
+loveliest woman of her age and time. She went out one Easter,
+which is a feast-day of the Nazarenes,[FN#138] to the White
+Church, to take the sacrament. Now that day came to El Hireh a
+young man called Adi ben Zeid,[FN#139] with presents from
+Chosroës,[FN#140] to En Numan, and he also went into the White
+Church, to communicate. He was tall and well-favoured, with
+handsome eyes and smooth cheeks, and had with him a company of
+his people. Now there was with Hind a slave-girl named Mariyeh,
+who was enamoured of Adi, but had not been able to win to him.
+So, when she saw him in the church, she said to Hind, 'Look at
+yonder youth. By Allah, he is handsomer than all thou seest!'
+'And who is he?' asked Hind. 'Adi ben Zeid,' answered Mariyeh
+Quoth the princess, 'I fear lest he know me, if I draw near,
+to look on him closelier.' 'How should he know thee,' said
+Mariyeh, 'when he has never seen thee?' So she drew near him
+and found him jesting with his companions; and indeed he
+surpassed them all, not only in his beauty, but in the excellence
+of his speech and the eloquence of his tongue and the richness
+of his apparel. When the princess saw him, she was ravished with
+him, her reason was confounded and her colour changed; and
+Mariyeh, seeing her inclination to him, said to her, 'Speak to
+him.' So she spoke to him and went away.
+
+When he saw her and heard her speech, he was captivated by her
+and his wit was dazed; his colour changed and his heart
+fluttered, so that his companions misdoubted of him, and he
+whispered one of them to follow her and find out who she was.
+The man followed her and returning to his master, informed him
+that she was the princess Hind, daughter of En Numan. So Adi
+left the church, knowing not whither he went, for stress of
+love, and reciting the following verses:
+
+Companions mine, yet one more favour I entreat: Address ye to
+ the ways once more your travelling feet.
+Turn me towards the lands, the lands where Hinda dwells; Then
+ go and her I love with tidings of me greet.
+
+Then he went to his lodging and lay that night, restless nor
+tasting sleep. On the morrow, Mariyeh accosted him, and he
+received her kindly, though before he would not hearken to her,
+and said to her, 'What is thy will?' Quoth she, 'I have a suit
+to thee.' 'Name it,' answered he; 'for, by Allah, thou shalt
+not ask me aught, but I will give it thee!' So she told him
+that she was in love with him, and her suit to him was that he
+would grant her a lover's privacy; and he agreed to do her
+will, on condition that she would serve him with Hind and make
+shift to bring them together. Then he took her into a vintner's
+shop, in one of the by-streets of Hireh, and lay with her;
+after which she returned to Hind and said to her, 'Dost thou
+not long to see Adi?' 'How can this be?' replied the princess.
+'Indeed my longing for him makes me restless, and no repose is
+left me since yesterday, on his account.' Quoth Mariyeh, 'I
+will appoint him to be in such a place, where thou canst look
+on him from the palace.' 'Do what thou wilt,' replied Hind and
+agreed with her upon the place.
+
+So Adi came, and the princess looked out upon him; and when she
+saw him, she was like to fall down from the top of the palace
+and said to Mariyeh, 'Except thou bring him in to me this
+night, I shall die.' So saying, she fell down in a swoon, and
+her serving-women lifted her up and bore her into the palace;
+whilst Mariyeh hastened to En Numan and discovered the whole
+matter to him, saying, 'Verily, she is mad for love of Adi; and
+except thou marry her to him, she will be put to shame and die
+of love for him.' The King bowed his head awhile in thought and
+exclaimed again and again, 'Verily, we are God's and to Him we
+return!' Then said he, 'Out on thee! How shall the marriage be
+brought about, seeing it misliketh me to open the matter to
+him?' 'He is yet more ardently in love and yet more desireful
+of her than she of him,' answered Mariyeh; 'and I will so order
+the matter that he shall be unaware that his case is known to
+thee; but do not betray thyself, O King.'
+
+Them she went to Adi and said to him, 'Make a feast and bid the
+King thereto; and when wine hath gotten the better of him, ask
+of him the hand of his daughter, for he will not refuse thee.'
+Quoth Adi, 'I fear lest this enrage him against me and be the
+cause of enmity between us.'
+
+But she answered, 'I came not to thee, till I had settled the
+whole matter with him.' Then she returned to En Numan and said
+to him, 'Seek of Adi that he entertain thee in his house.'
+'There is no harm in that,' replied the King and after three
+days, besought Adi to give him and his lords the morning-meal
+in his house. The young man consented, and the King went to
+him; and when the wine had taken effect on En Numan, Adi rose
+and sought of him his daughter in marriage. He consented and
+married them and brought her to him after three days; and they
+abode at En Numan's court, in all delight and solace of life,
+three years, at the end of which time the King was wroth with
+Adi and slew him. Hind mourned for him with an exceeding grief
+and built her a convent without the city, whither she retired
+and devoted herself to religious exercises, weeping and
+bemoaning her husband, till she died. And her convent is extant
+to this day without El Hireh.
+
+
+
+
+
+ DIBIL EL KHUZAÏ WITH THE LADY AND MUSLIM
+ BEN EL WELID.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Dibil el Khuzaï[FN#141]), I was sitting one day at the
+gate of El Kerkh,[FN#142] when a lady came up to me, never saw
+I a handsomer or better shaped than she, walking with a swaying
+gait and ravishing, with her flexile grace, all who beheld her.
+When my eyes fell on her, I was captivated by her and my
+entrails trembled and meseemed my heart fled forth of my
+breast; so I accosted her with the following verse:
+
+Unsealed are the springs of tears for mine eyes, heigho! And
+ sealed are the springs of sleep to my lids, for woe.
+
+She turned her head and looking at me, made answer forthright
+with the following:
+
+And surely, an ailing eye to have, for him Whom her looks
+ invite, is a little thing, I trow.
+
+I was astounded at the readiness of her reply and the sweetness
+of her speech and rejoined with this verse:
+
+And doth then the heart of my fair indeed incline To favour him
+ whose tears as a river flow?
+
+She answered me, without hesitation, thus:
+
+If thou desire us of love, betwixt us love Is a loan to be
+ returned, I'd have thee know.
+
+Never entered my ears sweeter than her speech nor ever saw I
+brighter than her face: so I changed the rhyme and measure, to
+try her, in my wonder at her speech, and repeated the following
+verse:
+
+Will destiny e'er gladden us with union and delight And one
+ desireful one at last with other one unite?
+
+She smiled at this, (never saw I fairer than her mouth nor
+sweeter than her lips,) and answered me, without hesitation, as
+follows:
+
+I prithee, what hath destiny to do betwixt us twain? Thou'rt
+ destiny: rejoice us, then, with union and delight.
+
+At this, I sprang up and kissing her hands, said, "I had not
+thought that Fortune would vouchsafe me such an opportunity. Do
+thou follow me, not of command or against thy will, but of thy
+grace and favour to me." Then I went on and she after me.
+
+Now I had not, at that time, a lodging I deemed fit for the
+like of her; Muslim ben El Welid[FN#143] was my fast friend,
+and he had a handsome house. So I made for his abode and
+knocked at the door, whereupon he came out, and I saluted him,
+saying, "It is for a time like this that friends are treasured
+up." "With all my heart," answered he; "enter." So we entered,
+I and the lady, but found money scarce with him. However, he
+gave me a handkerchief, saying, "Carry it to the market and
+sell it and buy meat and what else thou needest." So I took the
+handkerchief and hastening to the market, sold it and bought
+meat and what else we required; but, when I returned, I found
+that Muslim had retired, with the lady, to an underground
+chamber.[FN#144] When he heard me, he came out and said to me,
+"God requite thee the kindness thou hast done me, O Abou
+Ali,[FN#145] and reckon it of thy good deeds on the Day of
+Resurrection!" So saying, he took from me the meat and wine and
+shut the door in my face His words enraged me and I knew not
+what to do; but he stood behind the door, shaking for mirth;
+and when he saw me thus, he said to me, "I conjure thee on my
+life, O Abou Ali, tell me who it was composed this verse?
+
+I lay in the arms of the fair one all night, Whilst my friend
+ slept, clean-limbed, but polluted of spright."
+
+At this, my rage redoubled, and I replied, "He who wrote this
+other verse:
+
+One, I wish him in's girdle a thousand of horns, Exceeding the
+idol Menaf[FN#146] in their height!"
+
+Then I began to revile him and reproach him with the foulness
+of his conduct and his lack of honour; and he was silent. But,
+when I had finished, he smiled and said, "Out on thee, O fool!
+Thou hast entered my house and sold my handkerchief and spent
+my money: so, with whom art thou wroth, O pimp?" Then he left
+me and went away to her, whilst I said, "By Allah, thou art
+right to call me a fool and a pimp!" Then I left his door and
+went away in sore concern, whereof I feel the trace in my heart
+to this day; and I never had my desire of her nor ever heard of
+her more.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ISAAC OF MOSUL AND THE MERCHANT.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Ishac ben Ibrahim el Mausili), One day, being weary of
+assiduous attendance upon the Khalif, I mounted my horse and
+went forth, at break of day, having a mind to ride out and take
+my pleasure in the open country, and I said to my servant, "If
+there come a messenger from the Khalif or another, say that I
+set out at daybreak, upon a pressing business, and that thou
+knowest not whither I am gone." So I rode forth alone and went
+round about the city, till the sun grew hot, when I halted in a
+street, known as El Herem, and stood my horse under the
+spacious jutting porch of one of the houses there, to shelter
+me from the glare of the sun.
+
+I had not stood long, before there came up a black slave,
+leading an ass with jewelled housings, on which sat a damsel,
+clad in the richest of clothes, richness can go no farther; and
+I saw that she was elegantly made, with languorous looks and
+graceful carriage. I asked one of the passers-by who she was,
+and he said, "She is a singer." And I fell in love with her at
+sight, so that I could scarce keep my seat on my horse's back.
+She entered the house at whose gate I stood; and as I cast
+about for a device to gain access to her, there came up two
+comely young men, who sought admission, and the master of the
+house gave them leave to enter. So they alighted and entered,
+and I with them, they supposing that the master of the house
+had invited me; and we sat awhile, till food was brought and we
+ate. Then they set wine before us, and the damsel came out,
+with a lute in her hand. She sang and we drank, till I rose to
+do an occasion. During my absence, the host questioned the two
+others of me, and they replied that they knew me not; whereupon
+quoth he, "This fellow is a spunger, but he is well-bred and
+pleasant; so entreat him fairly." Then I came back and sat down
+in my place, whilst the damsel sang the following verses to a
+pleasing air:
+
+Say thou unto the she-gazelle, who yet is no gazelle, And the
+ wild heifer, languorous-eyed, who yet no heifer is,
+"One, who in dalliance affects the male, no female is, And he
+ who is effeminate of step's no male, ywis."
+
+She sang it excellent well, and the company drank and her song
+pleased them. Then she sang various songs to rare tunes, and
+amongst the rest one of mine, to the following words:
+
+The pleasant girls have gone and left The homesteads empty and
+ bereft
+Of their sweet converse, after cheer, All void and ruined by
+ Time's theft.
+
+She sang this even better than the first; then she sang other
+rare songs, old and new, and amongst them, another of mine,
+with the following words:
+
+To the loved one, who turneth in anger away And vrithdraweth
+ himself far apart from thee, say,
+"The mischief thou wroughtest, thou wroughtest indeed, For all,
+ per-adventure, thou west but in play."
+
+I asked her to repeat the song, that I might correct it for
+her; whereupon one of the men turned to me and said, "Never saw
+I a more brazen-faced parasite than thou. Art thou not content
+with spunging, but thou must meddle, to boot? Verily, in thee
+is the saying made true, 'A parasite and a meddler.'" I hung
+down my head for shame and made him no answer, whilst his
+companion would have restrained him from me; but he would not
+be restrained. Presently, they rose to pray, but I hung behind
+a little and taking the lute, tuned it after a particular
+fashion and stood up to pray with the rest. When we had made an
+end of prayer, the same man fell again to flouting and reviling
+me and persisted in his churlishness, whilst I held my peace.
+Then the damsel took the lute and touching it, knew that it was
+other than as she had left it and said, "Who hath touched my
+lute?" Quoth they, "None of us hath touched it." "Nay, by
+Allah," rejoined she, "some one hath touched it, and he a past
+master in the craft; for he hath ordered the strings and tuned
+them after the fashion of one who is right skilled in the art."
+Quoth I, "It was I tuned it." "Then, God on thee," answered
+she, "take it and play on it!" So I took it and playing a rare
+and difficult measure, that came nigh to deaden the live and
+raise the dead, sang thereto the following verses:
+
+I had a heart, wherewith of yore I lived: 'Twas seared with
+ fire and all consumed indeed.
+Her love, alack I was not vouchsafed to me; Unto the slave
+ 'twas not of Heaven decreed.
+If what I taste be passion's very food, Then all who love upon
+ its like must feed.
+
+When I had finished, there was not one of the company but
+sprang from his place and sat down before me,[FN#147] saying
+"God on thee, O our lord, sing us another song." "With all my
+heart," said I and playing another measure in masterly fashion,
+sang thereto the following:
+
+O thou whose heart, for fortune's blows, is all consumed and
+ sped, Sorrows with whom from every side have taken up
+ their stead,
+Unlawful unto her, my heart who pierces with her shafts, Is
+ that my blood which, breast-bones 'twixt and
+ vitals,[FN#148] she hath shed.
+'Twas plain, upon the parting day, that her resolve, our loves
+ To sunder, unto false suspect must be attributed.
+She pours forth blood she had not shed, if passion had not
+ been. Will none my murderess ensue and wreak me on her
+ head?
+
+When I had made an end of this song, there was not one of them
+but rose to his feet and threw himself to the ground, for
+excess of delight. Then I cast the lute from my hand; but they
+said, "Allah on thee, let us hear another song, so God increase
+thee of His bounty!" "O folk," replied I, "I will sing you
+another song and another and another and will tell you who I
+am. Know that I am Ishac ben Ibrahim el Mausili, and by Allah,
+I bear myself haughtily to the Khalif, when he seeks me. Ye
+have today made me hear [abuse from] an unmannerly fellow such
+as I loathe; and by Allah, I will not speak a word nor sit with
+you, till ye put yonder quarrelsome churl out from among you!"
+Quoth the latter's companion to him, "This is what I feared and
+warned thee against." So they took him by the hand and put him
+out; and I took the lute and sang over again the songs of my
+fashion that the damsel had sung. Then I whispered the host
+that she had taken my heart and that I had no patience to
+endure from her. Quoth he, "Thou shalt have her and all that
+pertains to her of clothes and jewels, on one condition." "What
+is that?" asked I. "It is," answered he, "that thou abide with
+me a month." "It is well," rejoined I; "I will do this." So I
+abode with him a whole month, whilst none knew where I was and
+the Khalif sought me everywhere, but could come by no news of
+me; and at the end of this time, the merchant delivered to me
+the damsel, together with all that pertained to her of things
+of price and an eunuch to attend her.
+
+I brought her to my lodging, feeling as I were lord of the
+whole world, for stress of delight in her; then rode forthright
+to El Mamoun. When he saw me, he said, "Out on thee, O Isaac,
+where hast thou been all this while?" I acquainted him with the
+story and he said, "Bring me the man at once." So I told him
+where he dwelt, and he sent and fetched him and questioned him
+of the case; whereupon he repeated the story and the Khalif
+said to him, "Thou art a man of a generous mind, and it is just
+that thou be upheld in thy generosity." Then he ordered him a
+hundred thousand dirhems and said to me, "O Isaac, bring me the
+damsel." So I brought her to him, and she sang and delighted
+him. He was greatly gladdened by her and ordered her fifty
+thousand dirhems, saying to me, "I appoint her of service every
+Thursday, when she must come and sing to me from behind the
+curtain." So, by Allah, this ride of mine was a source of
+profit both to me and to others.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE THREE UNFORTUNATE LOVERS.
+
+
+
+(Quoth El Utbi[FN#149]), I was sitting one day with a company
+of men of culture, telling stories of the folk, when the talk
+turned upon anecdotes of lovers and each of us said his say
+thereon. Now there was in our company an old man, who remained
+silent, till we had all spoken and had no more to say, when he
+said, "Shall I tell you a thing, the like of which you never
+heard?" "Yes," answered we; and he said, "Know, then, that I
+had a daughter, who loved a youth, but we knew it not. The
+youth in question loved a singing-girl, who, in her turn,
+was enamoured of my daughter. One day, I was present at an
+assembly, where were also the young man and the girl; when the
+latter sang the following verses:
+
+Tears are the token by which, for love, Abjection in lovers
+ still is shown,
+And more by token in one who finds No friend, to whom he may
+ make his moan.
+
+'By Allah, thou hast said well, O my lady!' exclaimed the
+youth. 'Doss thou bid me die?' 'Yes,' answered the girl from
+behind the curtain, 'if thou be in love.' So he laid his head
+on a cushion and closed his eyes; and when the cup came round
+to him, we shook him and found that he was dead. Therewith we
+all flocked to him, and our joy was troubled and we grieved and
+broke up forthright. When I came home, my people taxed me with
+returning before the appointed time, and I told them what had
+befallen the youth, thinking to surprise them. My daughter
+heard my words and rising, went into another chamber, whither I
+followed her and found her lying, with her head on a cushion,
+as I had told of the young man. I shook her and behold, she
+was dead. So we laid her out and set forth next morning with
+her funeral, whilst the friends of the young man carried him
+out, likewise, to bury him. As we were on the way to the
+burial-place, we met a third funeral and enquiring whose it
+was, were told that it was that of the singing-girl, who,
+hearing of my daughter's death, had done even as she and was
+dead. So we buried them all three on one day, and this is the
+rarest story that ever was heard of lovers."
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVERS OF THE BENOU TAI.
+
+
+
+Quoth a man of the Benou Temim (cited by Casim ben Adi), I went
+out one day in search of a stray beast and coming to the waters
+of the Benou Tai, saw two companies of people, near one
+another, and those of each company were disputing among
+themselves. So I watched them and observed, in one of the
+companies, a young man, wasted with sickness, as he were a
+worn-out water-skin. As I looked on him, he repeated the
+following verses:
+
+What ails the fair that she returneth not to me? Is't
+ grudgingness in her or inhumanity?
+I sickened, and my folk to visit me came all. Why 'mongst the
+ visitors wast thou then not to see?
+Hadst thou been sick, I would have hastened to thy side; Nor
+ menaces nor threats had hindered me from thee.
+I miss thee midst the rest, and desolate am I: Thy loss, my
+ heart's abode, is grievous unto me.
+
+A damsel in the other company heard his words and hastened
+towards him. Her people followed her, but she repelled them
+with blows. Then the youth caught sight of her and ran towards
+her, whilst his people ran after him and laid hold of him.
+However, he struggled, till he freed himself from them, and she
+in like manner loosed herself; and they ran to each other and
+meeting between the two parties, embraced and fell down dead.
+
+Thereupon there came out an old man from one of the tents and
+stood over them, weeping sore and exclaiming, "Verily, we are
+God's and to Him we return!" Then, "May God the Most High have
+mercy on you both!" said he. "By Allah, though you were not
+united in your lives, I will at least unite you after death."
+And he bade lay them out. So they washed them and shrouded them
+in one shroud and buried them in one grave, after they had
+prayed over them; nor were there men nor women in the two
+parties but I saw weeping over them and buffeting their faces.
+Then I questioned the old man of them, and he said, "She was my
+daughter and he my brother's son; and love brought them to this
+pass." "May God amend thee!" exclaimed I. "But why didst thou
+not marry them to one another?" Quoth he, "I feared reproach
+and dishonour; and now I am fallen upon both."
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE MAD LOVER.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Aboulabbas el Muberred[FN#150]), I set out one day with
+a company to El Berid on an occasion, and coming to the
+monastery of Heraclius,[FN#151] we alighted in its shade.
+Presently a man came out to us and said, "There are madmen in
+the monastery, and amongst them one who speaketh wisdom; if ye
+saw him, ye would marvel at his speech." So we arose all and
+went into the monastery, where we saw a man seated on a leather
+mat in one of the cells, with bare head and eyes fixed upon the
+wall. We saluted him, and he returned our greeting, without
+looking at us; and one said to us, "Repeat some verses to him;
+for, when he hears verses, he speaks." So I repeated the
+following verses:
+
+O best of all the race whom Eve gave birth unto, Except for
+ thee the world were neither sweet nor bright:
+Thou'rt he, whose face if God unveil to any man, Eternity is
+ his; his head shall ne'er grow white.[FN#152]
+
+When he heard this, he turned towards us and repeated these
+lines:
+
+God indeed knows that I am sore afflicted: I suffer so, I
+ cannot tell the whole.
+I have two souls; one in this place is dwelling; Another
+ country holds my second soul.
+Meseems the absent one is like the present And wearies under
+ the same weight of dole.
+
+Quoth he, "Have I said well or ill?" "Thou hast said well and
+excellent well," replied we. Then he put out his hand and took
+a stone, that was by him; whereupon we fled from him, thinking
+he would throw it at us; but he fell to beating his breast
+therewith violently and said to us, "Fear not, but draw near
+and hear somewhat from me and receive it from me." So we came
+back, and he repeated the following verses:
+
+When they made their beasts of burden kneel as day drew nigh
+ and nigher, Then they mounted and the camels bore away my
+ heart's desire,--
+When my eyes perceived my loved one through the crannied
+ prison-wall, Then I cried, with streaming eyelids and a
+ heart for love a-fire,
+"Turn thou leader of the camels, let me bid my love farewell!"
+ For her absence and estrangement, life and hope in me
+ expire.
+Still I kept my troth and failed not from her love; ah, would I
+ knew What she did with that our troth-plight, if she kept
+ her faith entire!
+
+Then he looked at me and said, "Dost thou know what she did?"
+"Yes," answered I, "she is dead; may God the Most High have
+mercy on her!" At this his face changed and he sprang to his
+feet and cried out, "How knowest thou she is dead?" "Were she
+alive," answered I, "she had not left thee thus." "By Allah,
+thou art right," said he, "and I care not to live after her."
+Then his nerves quivered and he fell on his face; and we ran up
+to him and shook him and found him dead, the mercy of God be on
+him! At this we marvelled and mourned sore for him and laid him
+out and buried him. When I returned to Baghdad and went in to
+the Khalif El Mutawekkil, he saw the trace of tears on my face
+and said to me, "What is this?" So I told him what had passed,
+and it was grievous to him and he said, "What moved thee to
+deal thus with him? By Allah, if I thought thou didst this with
+intent, I would punish thee therefor!" And he mourned for him
+the rest of the day.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE APPLES OF PARADISE.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Abou Bekr Mohammed ibn el Ambari[FN#153]), I once left
+Ambar, on a journey to Ammouriyeh, in the land of the Greeks,
+[FN#154], and alighted midway at the monastery of El Anwar,
+[FN#155], in a village near Ammouriyeh, where there came out
+to me the prior of the monastery and superior of the monks,
+Abdulmesih[FN#156] by name, and brought me into the monastery.
+There I found forty monks, who entertained me that night
+with the most liberal hospitality, and I saw among them such
+abounding piety and diligence in devotion as I never beheld the
+like of in any others. On the morrow, I took leave of them and
+went on to Ammouriyeh, where I did my business and returned to
+Ambar [without again visiting the monastery].
+
+Next year it befell that I made the pilgrimage to Mecca, and as
+I was compassing the Holy House, behold, I saw Abdulmesih the
+monk also making the circuit of the Kaabeh, and with him five
+of his fellows, the monks. When I was certified that it was
+indeed he, I accosted him, saying, "Art thou not Abdulmesih er
+Rahib?"[FN#157] "Nay," answered he; "I am Abdallah er Raghib."
+[FN#158] Therewith I fell to kissing his hoary hairs and weeping;
+then, taking him by the hand, I led him aside into a corner of
+the sanctuary and said to him, "Tell me the manner of thy
+conversion to Islam." "It was a wonder of wonders," answered
+he; "and befell thus. Know that, not long after thy visit to
+us, a company of Muslim devotees came to the village, in which
+is our monastery, and sent a youth to buy them food. He saw,
+in the market, a Christian damsel selling bread, who was of
+the fairest of women, and became then and there so passionately
+enamoured of her, that his senses failed him and he fell on his
+face in a swoon. When he revived, he returned to his companions
+and told them what had happened, saying, 'Go ye about your
+business; I may not go with you.' They blamed him and exhorted
+him, but he paid no heed to them; so they left him and went on,
+whilst he entered the village and seated himself at the door
+of the woman's shop. She asked him what he wanted, and he told
+her that he was in love with her, whereupon she turned from
+him; but he abode in his place three days, without tasting
+food, with his eyes fixed on her face.
+
+When she saw that he departed not from her, she went to her
+people and acquainted them with her case, and they set the boys
+of the village on him, who pelted him with stones and bruised
+his ribs and broke his head; but, for all this, he would not
+budge. Then the people of the village took counsel together to
+kill him; but one of them came to me and told me of his
+condition, and I went out to him and found him lying prostrate
+on the ground. So I wiped the blood from his face and carried
+him to the convent, where I dressed his wounds, and he abode
+with me fourteen days. But, as soon as he could walk, he left
+the convent and returned to the door of the woman's shop, where
+he sat gazing on her as before. When she saw him, she came out
+to him and said, 'By Allah, thou movest me to pity! If thou
+wilt enter my faith, I will marry thee.' 'God forbid,' answered
+he, 'that I should put off the faith of the Unity and enter
+that of Plurality!'[FN#159] Quoth she, 'Come in with me to my
+house and take thy will of me and go thy ways in peace.' 'Not
+so,' answered he, 'I will not barter the pious service of
+twelve years for the lust of a moment.' 'Then depart from me
+forthright,' said she; and he rejoined, 'My heart will not
+suffer me to do that;' whereupon she turned her face from him.
+Presently the boys found him out and began to throw stones
+at him; and he fell on his face, saying, 'Verily, God is my
+keeper, who sent down the Book and who protecteth the righteous!'
+[FN#160] At this juncture, I sallied forth and driving away
+the boys, lifted his head from the ground and heard him say,
+'O my God, unite me with her in Paradise!' Then I took him in
+my arms, to carry him to the monastery; but he died, before
+I could reach it, and I dug him a grave without the village
+and buried him there.
+
+In the middle of that night, the people of the village heard
+the damsel give a great cry, and she in her bed; so they
+flocked to her and questioned her of her case. Quoth she, 'As I
+slept, the Muslim [who ye wot of] came in to me and taking me
+by the hand, carried me to the gate of Paradise; but the keeper
+denied me entrance, saying, "It is forbidden to unbelievers."
+So I embraced Islam at his hands and entering with him, beheld
+therein palaces and trees, such as I cannot describe to you.
+Moreover, he brought me to a pavilion of jewels and said to me,
+"This is my pavilion and thine, nor will I enter it except with
+thee; but, after five nights, thou shalt be with me therein, if
+it be the will of God the Most High." Then, putting his hand to
+a tree that grew at the door of the pavilion, he plucked
+therefrom two apples and gave them to me, saying, "Eat this and
+keep the other, that the monks may see it." So I ate one of
+them and never tasted I aught sweeter than it. Then he took my
+hand and carried me back to my house; and when I awoke, I found
+the taste of the apple in my mouth and the other in my hand.'
+So saying, she brought out the apple, and it shone in the
+darkness of the night, as it were a sparkling star. So they
+carried her to the monastery, where she repeated to us her
+vision and showed us the apple; never saw we its like among all
+the fruits of the world. Then I took a knife and cut the apple
+into as many pieces as we were folk in the company; and never
+knew we aught more delicious than its taste nor sweeter than
+its scent; but we said, 'Haply this was a devil that appeared
+to her, to seduce her from her faith.' Then her people took her
+and went away; but she abstained from eating and drinking till
+the fifth night, when she rose from her bed and going forth the
+village to the grave of the young Muslim, threw herself upon it
+and died.
+
+Her people knew not what was come of her; but, on the morrow,
+there came to the village two Muslim elders, clad in hair-
+cloth, and with them two women in like garb, and said, 'O
+people of the village, with you is a woman of the friends of
+God,[FN#161] who died a Muslim, and we will take charge of her,
+instead of you.' So the damsel's family sought her and found
+her dead on the young Muslim's grave; and they said, 'This our
+sister died in our faith, and we will take charge of her.' 'Not
+so,' rejoined the two old men; 'she died a Muslim and we claim
+her.' And the dispute waxed hot between them, till one of the
+Muslims said, 'Be this the test of her faith. Let the forty
+monks of the monastery come all and [essay to] lift her from
+the grave. If they succeed, then she died a Nazarene; if not,
+one of us shall come and lift her up, and if she yield to him,
+she died a Muslim.' The villagers agreed to this and fetched
+the forty monks, who heartened each other and came to her, to
+lift her, but could not. Then we tied a great rope about her
+middle and tugged at it with our might; but the rope broke in
+sunder, and she stirred nor; and the villagers came and joined
+their endeavour to ours, but could not move her from her place.
+At last, when all our devices failed, we said to one of the two
+old Muslims, 'Come thou and lift her.' So he went up to the
+grave and covering her with his mantle, said, 'In the name of
+God the Compassionate, the Merciful, and of the Faith of the
+Apostle of God, on whom be peace and salvation!' Then he lifted
+her and taking her in his bosom, betook himself with her to a
+cave hard by, where they laid her, and the two women came and
+washed her and shrouded her. Then the two elders bore her to
+the young Muslim's grave and prayed over her and buried her by
+his side and went their way.
+
+Now we were witness of all this; and when we were alone with
+one another, we said, 'Of a verity, the Truth is most worthy to
+be followed;[FN#162] and indeed it hath been publicly manifested
+to us, nor is it possible to have a clearer proof of the truth
+of Islam than that we have seen this day with our eyes.' So I
+and all the monks embraced Islam and on like wise did the people
+of the village; and we sent to the people of Mesopotamia for a
+doctor of the law, to instruct us in the ordinances of Islam and
+the canons of the Faith. They sent us a pious man, who taught us
+the rites of devotion and the tenets of the faith and the
+service of God; and we are now in great good case. To God be
+the praise and the thanks!"
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE LOVES OF ABOU ISA AND CURRET EL AIN.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Amr ben Mesaadeh[FN#163]), Abou Isa, son or Er Reshid
+and brother to El Mamoun, was enamoured of a girl called Curret
+el Ain, belonging to Ali ben Hisham,[FN#164] and she also loved
+him; but he concealed his passion, complaining of it to none
+neither discovering his secret to any, of his pride and
+magnanimity; and he had used his utmost endeavour to buy her of
+her lord, but in vain. At last, when his patience failed him
+and his passion was sore on him and he was at his wits' end
+concerning her affair, he went in, one day of state, to El
+Mamoun, after the folk had retired, and said to him, "O
+Commander of the Faithful, if thou wilt this day make trial of
+thy governors,[FN#165] by visiting them unawares, thou wilt the
+men of worth from those that lack of it and note each one's
+[due] place, after the measure of his faculties." (But he
+purposed, in saying this, to win to sit with Curret el Ain in
+her lord's house.) El Mamoun approved his proposal and bade
+make ready a barge, called the Flyer, in which he embarked,
+with his brother and a party of his chief officers. The first
+house he visited was that of Hemid et Tawil of Tous, whom he
+found seated on a mat and before him singers and players, with
+lutes and hautboys and other instruments of music in their
+hands. El Mamoun sat with him awhile, and presently he set
+before him dishes of nothing but flesh-meat, with no birds
+among them. The Khalif would not taste thereof and Abou Isa
+said to him, "O Commander of the Faithful, we have taken the
+owner of this place unawares, and he knew not of thy coming;
+but now let us go to another place, that is prepared and fitted
+for thee."
+
+So the Khalif arose and betook himself, with his brother and
+his suite, to the abode of Ali ben Hisham, who, on hearing of
+their approach, came out and received them after the goodliest
+fashion, and kissed the earth before El Mamoun. Then he brought
+them into his palace and opened to them a saloon, than which
+never saw eyes a goodlier. Its floors and walls and columns
+were of vari-coloured marble, adorned with Greek paintings: it
+was spread with Indian matting, on which were carpets and
+divans of Bassora make, fitted to the length and breadth of the
+room. The Khalif sat awhile, examining the house and its roof
+and walls, then said, "Give us to eat." So they brought him
+forthwith nigh upon a hundred dishes of fowls, besides other
+birds and brewises and fricassees and marinades. When he had
+eaten, he said, "Give us to drink, O Ali;" and the latter set
+before him raisin-wine, boiled with fruits and spices, in
+vessels of gold and silver and crystal, served by boys like
+moons, clad in garments of Alexandrian cloth of gold and
+bearing on their breasts flagons of crystal, full of rose-water
+mingled with musk. El Mamoun marvelled exceedingly at all this
+and said, "Harkye, Aboulhusn!"[FN#166] Whereupon Ali sprang to
+the carpet [on which the Khalif was seated] and kissing it,
+said, "At thy service, O Commander of the Faithful!" and stood
+before him. Quoth El Mamoun, "Let us hear some pleasant songs."
+"I hear and obey, O Commander of the Faithful," replied Ali and
+said to one of his servants, "Fetch the singing-women."
+
+So he went out and returned in a moment, followed by ten
+eunuchs, bearing ten golden stools, which they set down; and
+these in their turn were followed by ten damsels, as they were
+shining full moons or flowerful gardens, clad in black brocade,
+with crowns of gold on their heads. They sat down on the stools
+and sang various songs. Then El Mamoun looked at one of them
+and captivated by her elegance and the beauty of her aspect,
+said to her, "What is thy name, O damsel?" "My name is Sejahi,
+O Commander of the Faithful," answered she; and he said, "Sing
+to us, O Sejahi!" So she took the lute and playing a lively
+measure, sang the following verses:
+
+Right stealthily, for fearfulness, I fare, the weakling's gait,
+ Who sees unto the watering-place two lion-whelps draw
+ near,
+With cloak, instead of sword, begirt and bosom love-distraught
+ And heart for eyes of enemies and spies fulfilled of fear,
+Till in to one at last I come, a loveling delicate, Like to a
+ desert antelope, that's lost its younglings dear.
+
+"Well done, O damsel!" said the Khalif. "Whose is this song?"
+"The words are by Amr ben Madi Kerib er Zubeidi,"[FN#167]
+answered she, "and the air is Mabid's."[FN#168] Then the Khalif
+and Ali and Abou Isa drank and the damsels went away and were
+succeeded by other ten, clad in flowered silk of Yemen,
+brocaded with gold, who sat down on the chairs and sang various
+songs. The Khalif looked at one of them, who was like a wild
+cow of the desert, and said to her, "What is thy name, O
+damsel?" "My name is Zebiyeh, O Commander of the Faithful,"
+answered she. "Sing to us, O Zebiyeh," said he; so she warbled
+some roulades and sang the following verses:
+
+Houris, noble ladies, that reck not of disquiet, Like antelopes
+ of Mecca, forbidden to be slain;
+Of their soft speech, they're taken for courtezans; but Islam
+ Still makes them from unseemliness and lewdness to
+ refrain.
+
+When she had finished, "Bravo!" cried the Khalif. "Whose is
+this song?" "The words are by Jerir,"[FN#169] answered she,
+"and the air by Suraij." Then the Khalif and his company drank,
+whilst the girls went away and there came yet another ten, as
+they were rubies, bareheaded and clad in red brocade, gold
+inwoven and broidered with pearls and jewels, who sat down on
+the stools and sang various airs. The Khalif looked at one of
+them, who was like the sun of the day, and said to her, "What
+is thy name?" "O Commander of the Faithful," answered she, "my
+name is Fatin." "Sing to us, O Fatin," quoth he. So she played
+a lively measure and sang the following verses:
+
+Vouchsafe me of thy grace; 'tis time to yield consent: Enough
+ have I endured of absence and lament.
+Thou'rt he whose face unites all charms, on whose account My
+ patience have I lost, for very languishment.
+I've spent my life for love of thee; ah, would to God I might
+ receive return for that which I have spent!
+
+"Bravo, O Fatin!" exclaimed the Khalif, when she had finished.
+"Whose song is that?" "The words are by Adi ben Zeid," answered
+she, "and the tune is an old one." Then they drank, whilst the
+damsels retired and were succeeded by other ten, as they were
+sparkling stars, clad in flowered silk, embroidered with gold,
+and girt with jewelled zones. They sat down and sang various
+airs; and the Khalif said to one of them, who was like a
+willow-wand, "What is thy name, O damsel!" "My name is Reshaa,
+O Commander of the Faithful," answered she. "Sing to us, O
+Reshaa," said he. So she played a lively measure and sang the
+following verses:
+
+There's a houri healing passion [with her kiss], Like a sapling
+ or a wild gazelle at gaze.
+Wine I quaff unto the vision of her cheeks[FN#170] And dispute
+ the goblet with her, till she sways.
+Then she lies and sleeps the night long in my arms, And I say,
+ "This is the wish of all my days."
+
+"Well done, O damsel!" said the Khalif. "More." So she rose and
+kissing the ground before him, sang the following verse:
+
+She came out to gaze on the bridal at leisure, In a tunic with
+ ambergris smeared, worth a treasure.
+
+The Khalif was much pleased with this verse, which when Reshaa
+saw, she repeated it several times. Then said El Mamoun, "Bring
+up the barge," being minded to embark and depart: but Ali said
+to him, "O Commander of the Faithful, I have a slave-girl, whom
+I bought for ten thousand dinars; she hath taken my whole
+heart, and I would fain show her to the Commander of the
+Faithful. If she please him and he will accept of her, she is
+his: and if not, let him hear something from her." "Bring her
+to me," said the Khalif; and there came forth a damsel, as she
+were a willow-wand, with heart-seducing eyes and eyebrows like
+a double bow. On her head she wore a crown of red gold, set
+with pearls and jewels, under which was a fillet, wrought in
+letters of chrysolite with the following words:
+
+Behold, a Jinniyeh this is; and Jinn hath she also, I trow, Who
+ teach her men's hearts to transfix, by means of a
+ stringless bow.
+
+She walked, with a gait like that of a fleeing gazelle, till
+she came to a chair, on which she seated herself. The Khalif
+marvelled at her beauty and grace; but when Abou Isa saw her,
+his colour changed and he was in ill case. "O Abou Isa," said
+the Khalif, "what ails thee, to change colour thus?" "O
+Commander of the Faithful," answered he, "it is because of pain
+that seizes me bytimes." "Hast thou known yonder damsel before
+to-day?" asked El Mamoun. "Yes, O Commander of the Faithful,"
+answered he. "Can the moon be hidden?" Then said El Mamoun to
+her, "What is thy name, O damsel?" "My name is Curret el Ain, O
+Commander of the Faithful," replied she; and he said, "Sing to
+us, O Curret el Ain." So she sang the following verses:
+
+The loved ones passed from thee in middle midnight's shade And
+ fared forth in the dawn, with the pilgrims' cavalcade.
+The tents of pride they pitched round their pavilions And
+ veiled themselves about with hangings of brocade.
+
+Quoth the Khalif, "Bravo, O Curret el Ain! Whose song is that?"
+"The words are by Dibil el Khuzai," answered she, "and the air
+by Zourzour es Seghir." Abou Isa looked at her and his tears
+choked him; so that the company marvelled at him. Then she
+turned to El Mamoun and said to him, "O Commander of the
+Faithful, wilt thou give me leave to change the words?" "Sing
+what thou wilt," answered the Khalif. So she played a lively
+measure and sang the following verses:
+
+If thou please me and he please thee in public, look thou hide
+ And keep in secret straiter watch o'er love, lest ill
+ betide.
+And disregard and put away the tales of slanderers; For seldom
+ seeks the sland'rer aught but lovers to divide.
+They say that when a lover's near, he wearies of his love And
+ that by absence passion's cured. 'Tis false; for I have
+ tried
+Both remedies, but am not cured of that which is with me,
+ Withal that nearness easier is than distance to abide.
+Yet nearness of abode, forsooth, may nowise profit thee, An If
+ the grace of him thou lov'st be unto thee denied.
+
+When she finished, Abou Isa said, "O Commander of the Faithful,
+we will be at peace, though we be dishonoured. Dost thou give
+me leave to reply to her?" "Yes," answered the Khalif. "Say
+what thou wilt to her." So he swallowed his tears and sang
+these verses:
+
+I held my peace nor said, "I am in love;" and eke The passion
+ that I felt even from my heart hid I:
+And natheless, if my eyes do manifest my love, It is because
+ they are the shining moon anigh.
+
+Then Curret el Ain took the lute and rejoined with the
+following:
+
+If what thou dost pretend were very truth, Thou woulst not with
+ mere wishing rest content,
+Nor couldst endure to live without a girl, In charms and beauty
+ wonder excellent.
+But there is nought in that thou dost avouch, Save only idle
+ talk and compliment.
+
+When Abou Isa heard this, he fell a-weeping and lamenting and
+discovered the trouble and anguish of his soul. Then he raised
+his eyes to her and sighing, repeated the following:
+
+Under my wede there is a wasted body And in my soul an all-
+ absorbing thought.
+I have a heart, whose suffering is eternal, and eyes with tears
+ like torrents ever fraught.
+When a wise man meets me, he rebukes me, Chiding the love that
+ thou in me hath wrought.
+Lord, I've no strength all this my dole to suffer; Prithee,
+ come Death or quick relief be brought!
+
+When he had ended, Ali ben Hisham sprang up and kissing his
+feet, said, "O my lord, God hath heard thy prayer and answered
+thy supplication, and consenteth to thy taking her with all her
+gear, so the Commander of the Faithful have no mind to her."
+"Had we a mind to her," answered the Khalif, "we would prefer
+Abou Isa before ourselves and help him to his desire." So
+saying, he rose and embarking, went away, whilst Abou Isa
+tarried for Curret al Ain, whom he took and carried to his own
+house, with a breast dilated for gladness. See then the
+generosity of Ali ben Hisham.
+
+
+
+
+
+ EL AMIN BEN ER RESHID AND HIS UNCLE
+ IBRAHIM BEN EL MEHDI.
+
+
+
+El Amin,[FN#171] son of Er Reshid, once entered the house of
+his uncle Ibrahim ben el Mehdi and saw there a slave-girl
+playing upon the lute. She was one of the fairest of women,
+and his heart inclined to her. Ibrahim, seeing how it was with
+him, sent the girl to him, with rich apparel and precious
+jewels. When he saw her, he thought that his uncle had lain
+with her; so he was loath to have to do with her, because of
+this, and sent her back to Ibrahim, accepting the present that
+came with her. Ibrahim learnt the reason of this from one of
+El Amin's servants; so he took a shift of flowered silk and let
+work upon his skirt, in letters of gold, the following lines:
+
+By Him to whom all fronts do bow, of that which is Beneath her
+ skirt, I swear, I'm ignorant outright;
+Nor have I had in aught to meddle with her mouth, Except it
+ were by way of hearing and of sight.
+
+Then he clad her in the shift and giving her a lute sent her
+once more to his nephew. When she came into the latter's
+presence, she kissed the earth before him and tuning the lute,
+sang thereto the following verses:
+
+By returning the gift, thou showest what's hid in thy breast,
+ And thine aversion to me is made manifest.
+As thou bear malice for aught that hath been,--forgive The
+ past, for the Khalifate's sake, and let it rest.
+
+When she had made an end of her song, El Amin looked at her and
+reading that which was wrought upon her skirt, could not
+control himself, but drew near unto her and kissed her and
+appointed her a separate lodging in his palace. Moreover, he
+thanked his uncle for this and bestowed on him the government
+of Er Reï.[FN#172]
+
+
+
+
+
+ EL FETH BEN KHACAN AND THE KHALIF EL
+ MUTAWEKKIL.
+
+
+
+The Khalid El Mutawekkil[FN#173] was once again taking
+medicine, and folk sent him all manner of presents and
+rarities. Amongst others, El Feth ben Khacan[FN#174] sent him
+a virgin slave, high-bosomed, of the fairest of women of her
+time, and with her a vase of crystal, containing red wine, and
+a goblet of red gold, whereon were graven in black the following
+verses:
+
+When th' Imam's made an end of taking medicine And health and
+ strength ensue to him thereon, in fine,
+There's no medicament befits him but to drink, From out this
+ cup, a draught of this decocted wine.
+And break the seal[FN#175] reserved to him, for this, indeed,
+ Right salutary is, hard after medicine.
+
+Now the physician Youhenna[FN#176] was with the Khalif, when
+the damsel entered; and when he read the above verses, he
+smiled and said, 'By Allah, O Commander of the Faithful, Feth
+is better versed than I in the art of medicine: so let not
+the Commander of the Faithful gainsay his prescription.'
+Accordingly, the Khalif followed El Feth's prescription and was
+made whole by the blessing of God.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE MAN'S DISPUTE WITH THE LEARNED
+ WOMAN OF THE RELATIVE EXCELLENCE OF THE
+ MALE AND THE FEMALE.
+
+
+
+(Quoth a certain man of learning) I never saw a woman sharper-
+witted, more intelligent, better furnished in learning, more
+excellent of faculties or more pleasant of ingredients than
+a female preacher of the people of Baghdad, by name Sitt el
+Meshayikh.[FN#177] It chanced that she came to the city of
+Hemah in the year [of the Hegira] 561[FN#178] and there
+delivered salutary exhortations to the folk from the pulpits.
+Now there used to visit her house a number of students of
+divinity and [other] persons of learning and culture, who
+would argue with her upon questions of theology and discuss
+controversial points with her. I went to her one day, with a
+friend of mine, a man of education; and when we had taken our
+seats, she set before us a dish of fruit and seated herself
+behind a curtain. Now she had a [young] brother, a handsome
+youth, who stood by us, to serve us.
+
+When we had eaten, we fell to disputing upon points of divinity,
+and I propounded to her a theological question, bearing upon a
+difference between the Imams.[FN#179] She proceeded to speak in
+answer, whilst I listened; but my friend fell the while to
+looking upon her brother's face and considering his charms,
+without paying any heed to what she said. Now she was watching
+him from behind the curtain; so, when she had made an end of
+her exposition, she turned to him and said, "Meseems thou art
+of those that give men the preference over women!" "Assuredly,"
+answered he. "And why so?" asked she. "Because," replied he,
+"God hath preferred the male over the female; and I love that
+which excels and mislike that which is excelled." She laughed
+and said, "Wilt thou deal fairly with me in argument, if I
+argue the matter with thee?" "I will," answered he. Then said
+she, "What is the evidence of the superiority of the male to
+the female?" "It is of two kinds," answered he, "that which
+is founded on authority and that which is founded on reason.
+The authoritative part derives from the Koran and the Sunneh
+[Traditions of the Prophet]. As for the former, quoth God the
+Most High, 'Men stand above women, in that God hath given
+these the preference over those;'[FN#180] and again, 'If
+there be not two men, then [call] one man and two women;'
+[FN#181] and again, when treating of the law of inheritance,
+'[If there be brothers and sisters,] let each male have the
+like of the portion of two females.'[FN#182] Thus God, blessed
+and exalted be He, hath in these places preferred the male over
+the female and teaches that a woman is as the half of a man,
+for that he is worthier than she. As for the Sunneh, is it not
+reported of the Prophet (whom God bless and preserve) that he
+appointed the blood-wit for a woman to be half that of a man?
+As for the evidence of reason, the male is the agent and the
+female the patient."
+
+"Thou hast said well, O my lord," rejoined she; "but, by Allah,
+thou hast proved my contention with thine own lips and hast
+advanced arguments that tell against thee, and not for thee.
+Thus: God (blessed and exalted be He) preferred the male above
+the female, solely because of the quality of masculinity; and
+in this, there is no difference between us. Now this quality
+[of masculinity] is common to the child, the boy, the youth,
+the adult and the graybeard; nor is there any distinction
+between them in this. Since, then, the superior excellence of
+man enures to him solely by virtue of the quality of masculinity,
+it behoves that thy heart incline to the graybeard and thy soul
+delight in him, equally with the boy, seeing that there is no
+distinction between them, in point of masculinity. But the
+difference between thee and me turns upon the qualities that
+are sought as constituting excellence of intercourse and
+delight of usance; and thou hast adduced no proof of the
+superiority of the male over the female in this."
+
+"O my lady," answered he, "knowest thou not that which is
+proper to the boy of symmetry of shape and rosy cheeks and
+pleasant smile and sweetness of speech? Boys are, in these
+respects, superior to women; and the proof of this is what is
+reported of the Prophet, that he said, 'Stay not thy gaze upon
+the beardless boys, for in them is the similitude[FN#183] of
+the black-eyed girls of Paradise.' Nor indeed is the superiority
+of the boy over the girl hidden to any, and how well saith Abou
+Nuwas:
+
+The least of his virtues it is that thou'rt free From
+ uncleanness with him nor with child can he be.
+
+And what another poet says:
+
+Quoth th' Iman Abou Nuwas, past-master sure was he In every
+ canon of debauch and jolly knavery,
+"O ye that love the downy cheeks of younglings, take your fill
+ Of a delight, in Paradise that will not founden be."
+
+So if one enlarge in praise of a girl and wish to enhance her
+value by the mention of her charms, he likens her to a boy,
+because of the illustrious qualities that belong to the latter,
+even as saith the poet:
+
+Boylike of buttocks, to and fro, in amorous dalliance, She
+ sways as sway the nodding canes that in the north wind
+ dance.
+
+If boys, then, were not superior to girls, why should the
+latter be likened to them? And know also, may God the Most High
+preserve thee, that a boy is easy to be led, adapting himself
+to the wish, pleasant of commerce and manners, inclining to
+assent rather than difference, especially when the down on his
+face creeps lightly and the hair darkens on his lips and the
+vermilion of early youth runs in his cheeks, so that he is like
+the full moon; and how goodly is the saying of Abou Temmam:
+[FN#184]
+
+"The whiskers on his cheek appear;" the slanderers said to me;
+ Quoth I, "That's none of his defect; so give me no more
+ prate."
+What time he came of age to bear buttocks that here and there
+ Pulled him and over beads of pearl his lips' hair darkened
+ late
+And eke the rose a solemn oath, full fast and binding, swore
+ Its ruddy marvels from his cheek should never separate,
+I with my eyelids spoke to him, without the need of speech, And
+ for reply thereto was what his eyebrows answered straight.
+His goodliness still goodlier is than that thou knewst of yore,
+ And the hair guardeth him from those his charms would
+ violate.
+Brighter and sweeter are his charms, now on his cheek the down
+ Shows and the hair upon his lips grows dark and delicate;
+And those who chide me for the love of him, when they take up
+ Their parable of him and me, say evermore, "His mate."
+
+And quoth El Heriri[FN#185] and saith well:
+
+My censors say, "What is this love and doting upon him? Seest
+ not the hair upon his cheeks that sprouts? Where is thy
+ wit?"
+Quoth I, "By Allah, an ye chide at me, I rede you note The
+ exposition of the truth that in his eyes is writ.
+But for the blackness of the down, that veils his chin and
+ cheeks, Upon the brightness of his face no mortal gaze
+ might sit.
+A man who sojourns in a land, wherein no herbage is, Whenas the
+ very Spring arrives, shall he depart from it?"
+
+And quoth another:
+
+"He is consoled," say the censors of me; but, by heaven, they
+ lie! For solace and comfort come hardly to those for
+ longing that sigh.
+When the rose of his cheek stood blooming alone, I was not
+ consoled; So how should I now find solace, that basil has
+ sprung thereby?
+
+And again:
+
+A slender one, whose glances and the down upon his cheeks Each
+ other, in the slaying of folk, abet and aid.
+A sabre of narcissus[FN#186] withal, he sheddeth blood, The
+ hangers[FN#187] of its scabbard of very myrtle made.
+
+And again:
+
+Not with his wine I'm drunken, but with his tresses bright,
+ That make all creatures drunken, yea, all beneath the sky.
+Each of his charms doth envy the others; ay, and each To be the
+ down so silky upon his cheek doth sigh.
+
+These are the excellences of the boy, that women do not
+possess, and these suffice and more to give boys the preference
+in grace and glory over women."
+
+"God give thee health!" cried she. "Verily, thou hast imposed
+the discussion upon thyself; and thou hast spoken and hast not
+stinted and hast adduced these arguments, in support of thy
+contention. But now is the truth made manifest;[FN#188] so
+swerve thou not from the path thereof; and if thou be not
+content with a summary of proof, I will set it out to thee in
+detail. God on thee, where is the boy beside the girl and who
+shall liken the kid to the wild cow? The girl is soft of
+speech, fair of shape, like a stalk of sweet basil, with teeth
+like chamomile-petals and hair like halters. Her cheeks are
+like blood-red anemones and her face like an apple; she hath
+lips like wine and breasts like double pomegranates and a shape
+flexile as a willow-wand. Her body is rounded and well-formed:
+she hath a nose like the point of a shining sword and a
+forehead brilliant with whiteness and joined eyebrows and black
+and melting eyes. If she speak, fresh pearls are scattered from
+her mouth and all hearts are ravished by the daintiness of her
+charms; when she smiles, thou wouldst think the moon shone out
+from between her lips and when she gazes, swords flash from her
+eyes. In her all beauties have their term, and she is the
+centre of attraction of traveller and stay-at-home. She hath
+two red lips softer than cream and sweeter of taste than honey,
+and a bosom, as it were a way between two hills, wherein are a
+pair of breasts like globes of ivory; likewise, a smooth belly,
+soft of flanks as palm-flowers[FN#189] and creased with folds
+and dimples that overlap one another, and luxuriant thighs,
+like columns of pearl, and buttocks, that beat together like
+seas of crystal or mountains of light, and two slender feet and
+hands like ingot of virgin gold. So, O wretched fellow, where
+are mortal men besides the Jinn? Knowest thou not that mighty
+kings and captains and noble princes still submit themselves
+humbly to women and depend on them for delight? Verily, they
+[women] say, 'We rule over [all] necks and captivate [all]
+hearts.' How many a rich man have they not made poor, how many
+a powerful one have they not humbled and how many a noble have
+they not reduced to servitude! Indeed, they seduce the learned
+and bring the pious to shame and make poor the rich and plunge
+the favoured of fortune into misery. Yet, for all this, the
+wise but redouble in love and honour of them, nor do they count
+this oppression or dishonour. How many a man for them hath
+transgressed against his Lord and called down on himself the
+wrath of his father and mother! And all this because of the
+preponderance of the love of them over hearts. Knowest thou
+not, O wretched fellow, that for them are palaces built and
+slave-girls bought, and over them curtains are let down, that
+for them do tears flow and for them armies levied and pleasure-
+houses raised up and riches gathered and heads smitten off? And
+indeed he spoke sooth who said, 'The world is a commentary
+[FN#190] upon women.'
+
+As for thy citation from the Holy Traditions, it is an argument
+against thee and not for thee; for the Prophet (whom God bless
+and preserve) compares boys to the houris of Paradise. Now,
+without doubt, the subject of comparison is more worthy than
+the object compared with it; so, except women be the worthier
+and the goodlier, wherefore should other than they be likened
+to them? As for thy saying that girls are likened to boys, it
+is not so, but the contrary: boys are likened to girls; for
+folk say, 'Yonder boy is like a girl.' As for that thou quotest
+from the poets, the verses in question were the product of an
+unnatural complexion in this respect; and as for the confirmed
+sodomists and debauchees, that sin against religion, whom God
+hath condemned in His Holy Book, wherein He denounceth their
+filthy practices, saying, 'Do ye betake you to males from the
+four corners of the world and forsake that which your Lord hath
+created for you of your wives? Nay, but ye are a froward
+folk.'[FN#191] These it is that liken girls to boys, of their
+exceeding profligacy and frowardness and inclination to follow
+the devil and their own lusts, so that they say, 'She is apt
+for two men;' and these are all wanderers from the path of
+right. Quoth their chief Abou Nuwas:
+
+A slender one, boyish of waist and of wit, For wencher as well
+ as for sodomite fit.
+
+As for what thou sayest of a boy's whiskers and moustaches and
+how they add to his beauty and grace, by Allah, thou wanderest
+from the right path and sayest that which is other than the
+truth; for whiskers change the charms of the comely into
+ugliness; even as saith the poet:
+
+The whiskers, that sprout on the cheek of the wight, His lovers
+ avenge, if he 've done them unright.
+I see not on 's face what is like unto smoke, Except that his
+ curls are as coals to the sight.
+If the most of his paper[FN#192] thus blackened be, where Is
+ there room, deemest thou, for the pen to indite?
+If any prefer him another above, 'Tis ignorance makes them thus
+ turn from the light.
+
+Glory be to God", continued she, "how is it hidden from thee
+that the perfection of delight is in women and that abiding
+pleasure is not to be found but with them? Seeing that God
+(blessed and exalted be He) hath promised His prophets and
+saints black-eyed damsels in Paradise and hath appointed them
+for a recompense of their pious works: and had God the Most
+High known that the supreme delight was in the possession of
+other than women, He had rewarded them therewith and promised
+it to them. And quoth he whom God bless and preserve, 'The
+things in which I most delight of [the things of] your world
+are three: women and perfume and the solace of my eyes in
+prayer.' Verily, God hath appointed boys to serve His prophets
+and saints in Paradise, because Paradise is the abode of
+delight and pleasance, which could not be complete without the
+service of boys; but, as to the use of them for aught but
+service, it is sin and corruption. How well saith the poet:
+
+Men's turning unto boys is very frowardness; Who noble[FN#193]
+women loves is noble[FN#194] none the less.
+What difference 'twixt the lewd and him whose bedfellow A houri
+is, for looks a very sorceress.
+He rises from her couch and she hath given him scent; He
+perfumes all the house therewith and each recess.
+No boy, indeed, is worth to be compared with her: Shall aloes
+evened be with what not filthiness?"
+
+Then said she, "O folk, ye have made me overpass the bounds of
+modesty and the province of free-born women and indulge in idle
+talk and freedoms of speech, that beseem not people of learning.
+But the breasts of the noble are the tombs of secrets, and
+conversations of this kind are in confidence. Moreover, actions
+are according to intents, and I ask pardon of God for myself
+and you and all Muslims, seeing that He is forgiving and
+merciful."
+
+With this she held her peace and thereafter would answer us of
+nought; so we went our way, rejoicing in that we had profited
+by her discourses and sorrowing to part from her.
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOU SUWEID AND THE HANDSOME OLD
+ WOMAN.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Abou Suweid), I entered a garden one day, I and a
+company of my friends, to buy somewhat of fruit; and we saw, in
+a corner of the place, an old woman, who was bright of face,
+but her hair was white, and she was combing it with a comb of
+ivory. We stopped before her, but she paid no heed to us
+neither veiled her face So I said to her' "O old woman, wert
+thou to dye thy hair black, thou wouldst be handsomer than a
+girl. What hinders thee from this?" She raised her head and
+looking at me with great eyes, recited the following verses:
+
+That which the years had dyed, I dyed erewhen but, sooth to
+ tell, My dye endureth not, whilst that of Time's
+ perdurable
+Clad in the raiment of my youth and beauty, of old days,
+ Proudly I walked, and back and front, men had with me to
+ mell
+
+"By Allah," cried I, "bravo to thee for an old woman! How
+sincere art thou in thy yearning remembrance of sin and how
+false in thy presence of repentance from for bidden things!"
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE AMIR ALI BEN TAHIR AND THE GIRL MOUNIS.
+
+
+
+There was once shown to the Amir Ali ben Mohammed ben Abdallah
+ben Tahir[FN#195] a slave-girl, who was excellently handsome
+and well-bred and an accomplished poetess; and he asked her of
+her name. 'May God advance the Amir,' replied she, 'my name is
+Mounis.' Now he knew this before; so he bowed his head awhile,
+then raising his eyes to her, recited the following verse:
+
+What dost thou say of one, on whom sickness and pain have
+ wrought, For love and longing after thee, till he is grown
+ distraught?
+
+'God exalt the Amir!' answered she and recited this verse in
+reply:
+
+An if we saw a lover true, on whom the pangs of love Were sore,
+ we would to him vouchsafe the favours that he sought.
+
+Her reply pleased him; so he bought her for threescore and ten
+thousand dirhems and begat on her Obeidallah teen Mohammed,
+after police-magistrate [at Baghdad].
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE WOMAN WHO HAD A BOY AND THE OTHER
+ WHO HAD A MAN TO LOVER.
+
+
+
+(Quoth Abou el Ainaä[FN#196]), There were in our street two
+women, one of whom had to lover a man and the other a beardless
+boy, and they foregathered one night on the roof of a house,
+not knowing that I was within hearing. Quoth one to the other,
+"O my sister, how canst thou brook the harshness of thy lover's
+beard, as it falls on thy breast, when he kisses thee, and his
+moustaches rub thy cheek and lips?" "Silly wench that thou
+art," replied the other, "what adorns the tree but its leaves
+and the cucumber but its bloom? Didst ever see aught uglier
+than a scald-head, with his beard plucked out? Knowest thou not
+that the beard is to men as the side-locks to women; and what
+is the difference between the chin and the cheek? Knowest thou
+not that God (blessed and exalted be He) hath created an angel
+in heaven, who saith, 'Glory be to Him who adorneth men with
+beards and women with tresses?' So, were not the beard even as
+the tresses in comeliness, it had not been coupled with them, O
+silly woman! How shall I underlie a boy, who will be hasty with
+me in emission and forestall me in flaccescence, and leave a
+man, who, when he takes breath, clips close and when he enters,
+goes leisurely, and when he has done, repeats, and when he
+pushes, pushes hard, and as often as he withdraws, returns?"
+The other was edified by her speech and said, "I forswear my
+lover by the Lord of the Kaabeh!"
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE HAUNTED HOUSE IN BAGHDAD.
+
+
+
+There lived once, in the city of Cairo, a merchant by name
+Hassan the Jeweller of Baghdad, who had great store of wealth
+in money and jewels and lands and houses beyond count. God
+had blessed him with a son of perfect beauty and elegance,
+rosy-cheeked, fair of face and well-shaped, whom he named Ali
+of Cairo and taught the Koran and science and elocution and the
+other branches of polite letters, till he became proficient
+in all manner of knowledge and was under his father's hand
+in trade. After awhile, Hassan fell sick and his sickness
+increased upon him, till he made sure of death and calling his
+son to him, said, 'O my son, verily this world passeth away;
+but the next endureth for ever. Every soul must taste of death;
+and now, O my son, my last hour is at hand and I desire to lay
+on thee an injunction, which if thou observe, thou shalt abide
+in peace and prosperity, till thou meet God the Most High; but
+if thou follow it not, there shall befall thee weariness galore
+and thou wilt repent of having transgressed my admonitions.' 'O
+my father,' replied Ali, 'how shall I do other than hearken to
+thee and do after thine enjoinder, seeing that I am bounden by
+the law of God to obey thee and give ear to thy word?' 'O my
+son,' rejoined his father, 'I leave thee lands and houses
+and goods and wealth past count; wert thou each day to spend
+thereof five hundred dinars, thou wouldst miss nought of it.
+But, O my son, look that thou live in the fear of God and
+follow His Chosen One (whom may He bless and preserve) in
+what he is reported to have enjoined and forbidden in his
+traditions. Be thou assiduous in good works and the practice of
+beneficence and in consorting with men of worth and piety and
+learning; and look that thou have a care for the poor and needy
+and shun avarice and meanness and the converse of the wicked or
+those of doubtful character. Look kindly upon thy servants and
+family, and also upon thy wife, for she is of the daughters
+of the notables and is with child by thee; belike God will
+vouchsafe thee virtuous offspring by her.' And he went on to
+exhort him thus, weeping and saying, 'O my son, I beseech God
+the Bountiful, the Lord of the Empyrean, to deliver thee from
+all straits that may betide thee and grant thee His speedy
+relief!'
+
+His son wept sore and said, 'O my father, I am consumed by thy
+words, for they are as the words of one that saith farewell.'
+'Yes, O my son,' replied the merchant, 'I am ware of my
+condition: forget thou not my enjoinder.' Then he fell to
+repeating the professions of the Faith and reciting [verses of
+the Koran], until the appointed hour arrived, when he said,
+'Draw near unto me, O my son.' So Ali drew near and he kissed
+him; then he sighed and his soul departed his body and he went
+to the mercy of God the Most High. Therewith great grief fell
+upon Ali; the noise of lamentation arose in his house and his
+father's friends flocked to him. Then he betook himself to
+preparing him for burial and made him a splendid funeral. They
+bore him to the place of prayer and prayed over him, then to
+the cemetery, where they buried him and recited over him what
+was fitting of the Koran; after which they returned to the
+house and condoled with the dead man's son and went each his
+own way. Moreover, Ali prayed the Friday prayers for his father
+and let make recitations of the whole Koran for the [accustomed]
+space of forty days, during which time he abode in the house
+and went not forth, save to the place of prayer; and every
+Friday he visited his father's tomb.
+
+He ceased not from his prayers and devotions, till, at last,
+his fellows of the sons of the merchants came in to him one
+day and saluting him, said, 'How long wilt thou keep up this
+thy mourning and neglect thy business and the company of
+thy friends? Verily, this is a fashion that will bring thee
+weariness, and thy body will suffer greatly for it.' Now,
+when they came in to him, Iblis the accursed was with them,
+prompting them, and they went on to press him to accompany them
+to the bazaar, whilst Iblis incited him to consent to them,
+till he yielded and went forth the house with them, that the
+will of God (blessed and exalted be He) might be fulfilled.
+'Mount thy mule,' quoth they, 'and ride with us to such a
+garden, that we may divert us there and that thy grief and
+melancholy may depart from thee.' So he mounted and taking his
+slave, went with them to the garden in question, where they
+entered, and one of them went and making ready the morning-
+meal, brought it to them there. So they ate and made merry and
+sat, talking, till the end of the day, when they mounted and
+returned each to his own lodging, where they passed the night.
+On the morrow, they said to Ali, 'Come with us.' 'Whither?'
+asked he, and they answered, 'To such a garden; for it is
+finer than the first and more pleasant.' So he went with them
+to the garden, and one of them, going away, made ready the
+morning-meal and brought it to them, together with strong wine;
+and Ali said, 'What is this?' Quoth they, 'This is what dispels
+grief and unveils gladness.' And they went on to commend it to
+him, till they prevailed upon him and he drank with them. Then
+they sat, drinking and talking, till the end of the day, when
+each returned home.
+
+As for Ali, he was giddy with wine and went in, in this plight,
+to his wife, who said to him, 'What ails thee?' Quoth he, 'We
+were making merry to-day, when one of my companions brought us
+liquor; so my friends drank and I with them, and this giddiness
+came upon me.' 'O my lord,' said she, 'hast thou forgotten thy
+fathers injunction and done that from which he forbade thee, in
+consorting with lewd folk?' 'These are of the sons of the
+merchants,' answered he; 'they are no lewd folk, only lovers of
+mirth and good cheer.' And he continued to lead this life with
+his friends, day after day, going from place to place and
+feasting and drinking with them, till they said to him, 'Our
+turns are ended, and now it is thy turn.' 'Welcome and fair
+welcome!' answered he; so, on the morrow, he made ready all
+that the case called for of meat and drink, double what they
+had provided, and taking cooks and tent-pitchers and coffee-
+makers, repaired with the others to Er Rauzeh[FN#197] and
+the Nilometer, where they abode a whole month, eating and
+drinking and hearing music and making merry. At the end of the
+month, Ali found that he had spent a great sum of money; but
+Satan the Accursed deluded him and said to him, 'Though thou
+shouldst spend every day a like sum, yet would not thy wealth
+fail.' So he took no account of expense and continued this way
+of life three years, whilst his wife remonstrated with him and
+reminded him of his father's injunctions; but he hearkened not
+to her, till he had spent all his ready money, when he fell to
+selling his jewels and spending their price, till they were all
+gone. Then he sold his houses and lands and farms and gardens,
+one after another, till they were all gone and he had nothing
+left but the house in which he lived. So he tore out the marble
+and wood-work and sold it and spent of its price, till he had
+made an end of this also, when he bethought himself and finding
+that he had nothing left to spend, sold the house itself and
+spent the purchase-money.
+
+Presently, the man who had bought the house came to him and
+said, 'Look thyself out a lodging, for I have need of my
+house.' So he bethought himself and considering that he had
+nothing requiring a house, except his wife, who had borne him a
+son and daughter,--for he had not a servant left,--hired a room
+in one of the mean lodging houses and there took up his abode,
+after having lived in honour and luxury, with many servants and
+much wealth, and came to lack of one day's bread. Quoth his
+wife, 'I warned thee of this and exhorted thee to obey thy
+father's injunction, and thou wouldst not hearken to me; but
+there is no power and no virtue save in God the Most High, the
+Supreme! Whence shall the little ones eat? Arise, go round to
+thy friends, the sons of the merchants: it may be they will
+give thee somewhat on which we may live this day.' So he went
+the round of his friends, one by one; but they all hid their
+faces from him and gave him nothing but injurious and revolting
+words; and he returned to his wife and said to her, 'They have
+given me nothing.' Thereupon she went out to beg of her
+neighbours wherewithal to sustain themselves and came to a
+woman, whom she had known in former days. When she came in to
+her and she saw her plight, she rose and receiving her kindly,
+wept and said, 'What hath befallen thee?' So she told her of
+her husband's conduct, and the other said, 'Welcome and fair
+welcome! Whatever thou needest, seek it of me, without price.'
+'May God abundantly requite thee!' answered she. Then her
+friend gave her as much victual as would suffice herself and
+her family a whole month, and she took it and returned to her
+lodging. When her husband saw her, he wept and said, 'Whence
+hadst thou that?' 'I got it of such a woman,' answered she;
+'for, when I told her what had befallen us, she failed me not
+in aught, but said, "Seek of me all thou needest."' 'Since thou
+hast this,' rejoined her husband, 'I will betake myself to a
+place I have in my mind; peradventure God the Most High will
+bring us relief.'
+
+So saying, he took leave of her and kissing the children, went
+out, not knowing whither he should go, and walked on till he
+came to Boulac,[FN#198] where he saw a ship about to sail for
+Damietta. Here he met a man, between whom and his father there
+had been friendship; and he saluted him and said to him,
+'Whither away?' 'To Damietta,' replied Ali; 'I have friends
+there, whom I would fain enquire after and visit and return.'
+The man took him home and entreated him hospitably, then,
+furnishing him with victual [for the voyage] and giving him
+somewhat of money, embarked him on board the vessel bound for
+Damietta. When they reached that place, Ali landed, not knowing
+where to go, but, as he was walking along, a merchant saw him
+and had pity on him. So he carried him to his house, where he
+abode awhile, till he said in himself, 'How long shall this
+sojourning in other folks' houses last?' Then he left the
+merchant's house and went down to the quay, where he saw a ship
+ready to sail for Syria. His host provided him with victual and
+embarked him in the ship; and it set sail and arrived, in due
+course, at the coast of Syria, where he landed and journeyed
+till he entered Damascus. As he walked about the town, a
+benevolent man saw him and took him to his house, where he
+abode awhile, till, one day, going abroad, he saw a caravan
+about to start for Baghdad and bethought himself to journey
+thither with it. So he returned to his host and taking leave of
+him, set out with the caravan.
+
+Now God (blessed and exalted be He) inclined to him the heart
+of one of the merchants, so that he took him with him, and Ali
+ate and drank with him, till they came within one day's journey
+of Baghdad, where a company of highwaymen fell upon the caravan
+and took all they had. But few of the merchants escaped and
+these made each for a [separate] place of refuge. As for Ali,
+he made for Baghdad, where he arrived at sundown, as the
+gatekeepers were about to shut the gates, and said to them
+'Let me in with you.' So they admitted him and asked him
+whence he came and whither he was bound. 'I am a man from
+the city of Cairo,' replied he, 'and have with me mules laden
+with merchandise and slaves and servants. I forewent them, to
+look me out a place wherein to deposit my goods; but as I rode
+along on my mule, there fell upon me a company of highway robbers,
+who took my mule and gear; nor did I escape from them but at
+the last gasp.' The warders entreated him hospitably and bade
+him welcome, saying, 'Abide with us this night, and in the
+morning we will look thee out a place befitting thee.' Then he
+sought in his pocket and finding a dinar remaining of those he
+had gotten of the merchant at Boulac, gave it to one of the
+gatekeepers, saying, 'Take this and change it and bring us
+something to eat.' The man took it and went to the market,
+where he changed it and brought Ali bread and cooked meat. So
+he ate, he and the gatekeepers, and he lay the night with them.
+
+On the morrow, one of the warders carried him to a merchant of
+the town, to whom he told the same story, and he believed him,
+deeming that he was a merchant and had with him loads of
+merchandise. So he took him up into his shop and entreated him
+with honour. Moreover, he sent to his house for a splendid suit
+of his own apparel for him and carried him to the bath. So,
+[quoth Ali], I went with him to the bath, and when we came out,
+he brought me to his house, where he caused set the morning-meal
+before us, and we ate and made merry.
+
+Then said he to one of his slaves, "Harkye, Mesoud, take this
+thy lord and show him the two houses in such a place. Whichever
+pleases him of them, give him the key of it and come back." So
+I went with the slave, till we came to a place where stood
+three houses, side by side, new and shut up. He opened the
+first and the second, and I looked at them; after which he said
+to me, "Of which of them shall I give thee the key?" "To whom
+does yon large house belong?" asked I. "To us," answered he;
+and I said, "Open it, that I may view it." Quoth he, "Thou hast
+no call to it." "Wherefore?" asked I; and he, "Because it is
+haunted, and none lodges there but in the morning he is a dead
+man; nor do we use to open the door, to take out the corpse,
+but mount the roof of one of the other two houses and take it
+up thence. For this reason, my master has abandoned the house
+and says, 'I will never again give it to any one.'" Quoth I,
+"Open it, that I may view it;" and I said in myself, "This is
+what I seek. I will pass the night there and in the morning be
+a dead man and be at peace from this miserable plight of mine."
+So he opened it and I entered and found it a splendid house,
+without its like; and I said to the slave, "I will have none
+other than this house; give me the key." But he answered, "I
+will not give thee this key till I consult my master," and
+going to the latter, said to him, "The Egyptian merchant saith,
+'I will lodge in none but the great house.'"
+
+When the merchant heard this, he rose and coming to Ali, said
+to him, 'O my lord, thou hast no need of this house.' But he
+replied, 'I will lodge in none other than this; for I care
+nothing for this saying.'[FN#199] 'Then,' said the other,
+'write me an acknowledgment that, if aught happen to thee, I am
+not responsible.' 'So be it,' answered Ali; whereupon the
+merchant fetched an assessor from the Cadi's court and taking
+of him the prescribed acknowledgment, delivered him the key,
+which he took and entered the house. The merchant sent him
+bedding by a slave, who spread it for him on the bench behind
+the door and went away. Presently Ali went into the inner court
+and seeing there a well with a bucket, let down the latter and
+drew water, with which he made the ablution and prayed the
+obligatory prayers. Then he sat awhile, till the merchant's
+slave brought him the evening meal from his master's house,
+together with a lamp, a candle and candlestick, a basin and
+ewer and a gugglet; after which he left him and returned home.
+Ali lighted the candle and supped at his ease and prayed the
+evening prayer; after which he said to himself, 'Let us take
+the bed and go upstairs and sleep there, rather than here.' So
+he took the bed and carried it upstairs, where he found a
+splendid saloon, with gilded ceiling and walls and floor of
+variegated marble. He spread his bed there and sitting down,
+began to recite somewhat of the sublime Koran, when suddenly he
+heard one calling to him and saying, 'O Ali, O son of Hassan,
+shall I send thee down the gold?' And he answered, 'Send away.'
+
+Hardly had he spoken, when pieces of gold began to rain down on
+him, like [pebbles from] a mangonel, nor stinted till the
+saloon was full. Then said the voice, 'Set me free, that I may
+go my way; for I have made an end of my service and have
+delivered unto thee that which was committed to me for thee.'
+Quoth Ali, 'I adjure thee by the Most High God to tell me the
+history of this gold.' 'This is a treasure that was enchanted
+to thee of old time,' replied the voice; 'and to every one, who
+entered the house, we used to come and say to him, "O Ali, O
+son of Hassan, shall we send down the gold?" Whereat he would
+be affrighted and cry out, and we would come down to him and
+break his neck and go away. But, when thou camest and we
+accosted thee by thy name and that of thy father, saying,
+"Shall we send thee down the gold?" and thou madest answer,
+saying, "Send away," we knew thee for the owner of it and sent
+it down. Moreover, there is yet another treasure for thee in
+the land of Yemen, whither thou wouldst do well to journey and
+fetch it. And now I would have thee set me free, that I may go
+my way.' 'By Allah,' said Ali, 'I will not set thee free, till
+thou bring me hither the treasure from Yemen!' Quoth the voice,
+'If I bring it thee, wilt thou release me and the servant of
+the other treasure also?' 'Yes,' replied Ali; and the genie
+said, 'Swear to me.' So he swore to him, and he was about to go
+away, when Ali said to him, 'I have one other service to ask of
+thee.' 'What is that?' asked the genie. Quoth Ali, 'I have a
+wife and children at Cairo, in such a place; thou must fetch
+them to me, at their ease and without hurt.' 'I will bring them
+to thee in state,' answered the genie, 'in a litter, with a
+train of slaves and servants, together with the treasure from
+Yemen, if it be the will of God the Most High.' Then he took of
+him leave of absence for three days, at the end of which time
+all this should be with him, and departed.
+
+When it was morning, Ali went round about the saloon, seeking a
+place wherein to lay the gold, and saw in the wall of the dais
+a marble panel, with a knob in it. So he pressed the knob and
+the panel slid back and discovered a door, which he opened and
+entering, found a great closet, full of linen bags. So he took
+out the bags and fell to filling them with gold and replacing
+them in the closet, till he had transported thither the whole
+treasure, whereupon he shut the door and pressing the knob, the
+panel returned to its place. Then he went down and seated
+himself on the bench behind the door. Presently, there came a
+knock at the door; so he opened it and found the merchant's
+slave, who, seeing him, returned in haste to his master with
+the good tidings, saying, 'O my lord, the merchant, who is
+lodged in the haunted house, is alive and well and sits on the
+bench behind the door.' When the merchant heard this, he rose
+joyfully and went to the house, taking breakfast with him; and
+when he saw Ali, he embraced him and kissed him between the
+eyes, saying, 'How hath God dealt with thee?' 'Right well,'
+answered Ali. 'I slept upstairs in the marble saloon.' Quoth
+the merchant, 'Did aught come to thee or didst thou see aught?'
+'No,' replied Ali; 'I recited some little of the Koran and
+slept till morning, when I arose and after making the ablution
+and praying, came down and seated myself on the bench behind
+the door.' 'Praised be God for safety!' exclaimed the merchant,
+then left him and presently sent him slaves and servants, black
+and white and male and female, with furniture. They swept the
+house from top to bottom and furnished it magnificently, after
+which three black slaves and the like number of white and four
+slave-girls abode with him, to serve him, and the rest returned
+to their master's house. When the merchants heard of him, they
+sent him presents of all manner of things of price, even to
+meat and drink and clothes, and took him with them in the
+market, saying, 'When will thy baggage arrive?' And he answered,
+'After three days it will come.'
+
+Accordingly, when the three days had elapsed, the servant of
+the first treasure came to him and said, 'Go forth and meet thy
+harem, together with the treasure I have brought thee from
+Yemen, part of which is by way of costly merchandise; but the
+slaves, black and white, and the horses and camels and mules
+are all of the Jinn. (Now the genie, when he betook himself to
+Cairo, found Ali's wife and children in sore straits for
+nakedness and hunger; so he carried them forth of the town in a
+travelling-litter and clad them in sumptuous raiment of that
+which was in the treasure of Yemen.) When Ali heard this, he
+rose and repairing to the merchants, said to them, 'Come, go
+forth the city with me, to meet the caravan, with my merchandise,
+and honour me with the presence of your harems, to meet my
+harem.' 'We hear and obey,' answered they and sending for
+their harems, went forth all together and alighted in one
+of the gardens without the city. As they sat talking, behold, a
+cloud of dust arose out of the heart of the desert, and they
+came out to see what it was. Presently, it lifted and discovered
+mules and muleteers and tent-pitchers and linkmen, who came on,
+singing and dancing, till they reached the garden, when the
+chief of the muleteers came up to Ali and kissing his hand,
+said to him, 'O my lord, we have been long on the way, for
+we thought to enter some days ago; but we were in fear of
+the highway-robbers, so abode in our station four days, till
+God the Most High rid us of them.'
+
+Then the merchants mounted their mules and rode forward with
+the caravan, wondering at the [number of] mules laden with
+chests, whilst their harems followed them, with Ali's harem,
+marvelling at the richness of the apparel of his wife and
+children and saying to each other, 'Verily, the King of Baghdad
+hath no such raiment, no, nor any other of the kings or
+merchants or notables.' So they entered Baghdad in great state
+and rode on till they came to Ali's house, where they alighted
+and brought the mules and their burdens into the midst of the
+courtyard. Then they unloaded them and laid up the goods in the
+storehouses, whilst the merchants' wives went up with Ali's
+family to the saloon, which they found as it were a luxuriant
+garden, spread with magnificent furniture. They sat in mirth
+and good cheer till noon, when they brought them up the noon
+meal, of all manner meats and sweetmeats of the best; and
+they ate and drank costly sherbets and perfumed themselves
+thereafter with rose-water and scented woods. Then they took
+leave and departed, men and women. When the merchants returned
+home, they all sent presents to Ali, according to their
+conditions; and their wives likewise sent presents to his wife,
+so that there came to them great plenty of slaves, black and
+white and male and female, and store of all manner goods, such
+as grain and sugar and so forth, beyond count. As for the
+landlord of the house, he abode with Ali and quitted him not,
+but said to him, 'Let the slaves and servants take the mules
+and the other cattle into one of my other houses, to rest.'
+Quoth Ali, 'They set out again to-night for such a place.' Then
+he gave them leave to go forth the city, that they might set
+out on their journey at nightfall; whereupon they took leave of
+him forthright and departing the city, flew off through the air
+to their several abodes.
+
+Ali and the merchant sat together till a third of the night
+was past, when the latter returned to his own house and Ali
+went up to his wife and children and greeted them, saying,
+'What hath befallen you all this time?' So she told him what
+they had suffered of hunger and nakedness and toil, and he
+said, 'Praised be God for safety! How did ye come?' 'O my lord,'
+answered she, 'I was asleep, with my children, yesternight,
+when suddenly one raised us from the ground and carried us
+through the air, without doing us any hurt, nor did he give
+over flying with us, till he set us down in a place as it were
+a Bedouin camping-place, where we saw laden mules and a litter
+borne upon two great mules, and round them servants, boys and
+men. So I said to them, "Who are ye and what are these loads
+and where are we?" And they answered, "We are the servants of
+the merchant Ali ibn Hassan of Cairo, who has sent us to fetch
+you to him at Baghdad." Quoth I, "Is it far or near, hence to
+Baghdad?" "Near," answered they; "there lies but the darkness
+of the night between us and the city." Then they mounted us in
+the litter, and on the morrow, we found ourselves with thee,
+without having suffered any hurt. 'Who gave you these clothes?'
+asked he, and she said, 'The chief of the caravan opened one of
+the chests on the mules and taking out the clothes, clad me and
+the children each in a suit; after which he locked the chest
+and gave me the key, saying, "Take care of it, till thou give
+it to thy husband." And here it is, safe.' So saying, she gave
+him the key, and he said, 'Dost thou know the chest?' 'Yes,'
+answered she. So he took her down to the magazine and she
+pointed it out, whereupon he put the key in the lock and opened
+the chest, in which he found much raiment and the keys of all
+the other chests. So he took them out and fell to opening the
+other chests, one after another, and feasting his eyes upon the
+jewels and precious metals they contained, whose like was not
+found with any of the kings; after which he locked them again
+and took the keys, saying to his wife, 'This is of the bounty
+of God the Most High.'
+
+Then he returned with her to the saloon and bringing her to the
+secret panel, pressed the knob and opened the door of the
+closet into which he entered with her and showed her the gold
+he had laid up there. Quoth she, 'Whence hadst thou all this?'
+'It came to me by the grace of my Lord,' answered he and told
+her all that had befallen him, from first to last. 'O my lord,'
+said she, 'all this comes of the blessing of thy father's
+prayers, whenas he prayed for thee, before his death, saying,
+"I beseech God to cast thee into no strait, except He bring
+thee speedy deliverance [therefrom]!" So praised be God the
+Most High for that He hath brought thee relief and hath
+requited thee with more than thou didst lose! But God on thee,
+O my lord, return not to thy sometime fashion and companying
+with folk of lewd life; but look thou fear God the Most High,
+both in public and private!' And she went on to admonish him.
+Quoth he, 'I accept thine admonition and beg God the Most High
+to remove the wicked from us and stablish us in His obedience
+and in the observance of the law of His Prophet, on whom be
+peace and salvation!'
+
+Ali and his wife and children were now in all delight of life and
+gladness; and he opened him a shop in the merchants' bazaar and
+stocking it with jewels and precious metals, sat therein with
+his children and servants. He soon became the most considerable
+of the merchants of Baghdad, and his report reached the King of
+that city, who sent a messenger to command his attendance. So
+he took four trays of red gold and filling them with jewels and
+precious metals, such as no king possessed, went up to the
+palace and presenting himself before the prince, kissed the
+earth before him and wished him continuance of glory and
+prosperity, in the best words he could command. 'O merchant,'
+said the King, 'thou honourest our city with thy presence;'
+and Ali rejoined, saying, 'O King of the age, thy slave hath
+brought thee a present and hopes for acceptance thereof from
+thy favour.' So saying, he laid the four trays before the King,
+who uncovered them and seeing that they contained jewels,
+whose like he possessed not and whose worth equalled treasuries
+of money, said, 'O merchant, thy present is accepted, and so
+God please, we will requite thee with its like.' And Ali kissed
+his hands and went away. Then the King called his grandees
+and said to them, 'How many kings have sought my daughter in
+marriage?' 'Many,' answered they. 'Hath any of them given me
+the like of this gift?' asked he. 'Not one,' replied they;
+'for that none of them hath its like;' and he said, 'I have
+consulted God the Most High,[FN#200] as to marrying my daughter
+to this merchant. What say ye?' 'Be it as thou deemest,'
+answered they. Then he bade the eunuch carry the four trays
+into his harem and going in to his wife, laid them before
+her. She uncovered them and seeing therein that whose like
+she possessed not,--no, nor a fraction thereof,--said to him,
+'Of which of the kings hadst thou these? Peradventure of
+one of those that seek our daughter in marriage?' 'Not so,'
+answered he, 'I had them of an Egyptian merchant, who is lately
+come to our city. I heard tell of him and sent to command him
+to us, thinking to make his acquaintance, so haply we might
+find with him somewhat of jewels and buy them of him for our
+daughter's equipment. He obeyed the summons and brought us
+these four trays, as a present, and I saw him to be a handsome
+and elegant young man[FN#201] of dignified aspect and accomplished
+wit, well-nigh as he were of the sons of the kings. Wherefore my
+heart inclined to him and I rejoiced in him and thought to marry
+my daughter to him.' Then he told her what had passed between
+himself and his grandees on the subject and added, 'But what
+sayst thou?' 'O King of the age,' answered she, 'the affair
+is in God's hand, and thine, and what God willeth shall come
+to pass.' 'If it be His will,' rejoined the King, 'I will marry
+her to none other than this young man.'
+
+So, on the morrow, he went out to his Divan and sending for Ali
+and the rest of the merchants of Baghdad, bade them be seated.
+Then he summoned the Cadi of the Divan and said to him, 'O
+Cadi, draw up the contract of marriage between my daughter and
+the merchant Ali of Cairo.' But the latter said, 'Thy pardon, O
+our lord the Sultan! It befits not that a merchant, such as I,
+be the King's son-in-law.' Quoth the King, 'It is my will to
+bestow this favour upon thee, as well as the Vizierate.' And he
+invested him forthwith in the Vizier's habit. Then Ali sat down
+in the seat of the Vizierate and said, 'O King of the age, thou
+hast bestowed on me this; and indeed I am honoured by thy
+bounties; but hear one word from me.' 'Say on,' answered the
+King, 'and fear not.' Quoth Ali, 'Since it is thine august will
+to marry thy daughter, thou wouldst do better to marry her to
+my son.' 'Hast thou then a son?' asked the King; and Ali
+replied, 'Yes.' 'Send for him forthright,' said the King;
+whereupon, 'I hear and obey,' answered Ali and sent a servant
+to fetch his son, who came and kissing the ground before the
+King, stood in an attitude of respect. The King looked at him
+and seeing him to be yet comelier than his daughter and
+goodlier than she in symmetry and brightness and perfection,
+said to him, 'O my son, what is thy name?' 'O our lord the
+Sultan,' replied the young man, who was then fourteen years
+old, 'my name is Hassan.' Then the Sultan said to the Cadi,
+'Write the contract of marriage between my daughter Husn el
+Wujoud and Hassan, son of the merchant Ali of Cairo.' So he
+wrote the contract of marriage between them, and the affair was
+ended on the goodliest wise; after which all in the Divan went
+their ways and the merchants escorted the Vizier Ali to his
+house, where they gave him joy of his advancement and departed.
+Then he went in to his wife, who, seeing him clad in the
+Vizier's habit, exclaimed, 'What is this?' So he told her all
+that had passed, and she rejoiced therein with an exceeding
+joy.
+
+On the morrow, he went up to the Divan, where the King received
+him with especial favour and seating him beside himself, said
+to him, 'O Vizier, we purpose to celebrate the wedding festivities
+and bring thy son in to our daughter.' 'O our lord the Sultan,'
+replied Ali, 'that thou deemest good is good.' So the Sultan
+gave orders for the festivities, and they decorated the city
+and held high festival thirty days, in all cheer and gladness;
+at the end of which time, the Vizier Ali's son Hassan went
+in to the princess and enjoyed her beauty and grace. When
+the queen saw her daughter's husband, she conceived a warm
+affection for him, and in like manner she rejoiced greatly in
+his mother. Then the King bade build his son-in-law a palace
+beside his own; so they built him with all speed a splendid
+palace, in which he took up his abode; and his mother used to
+abide with her son some days and then return to her own house.
+After awhile, the queen said to her husband, 'O King of the
+age, Hassan's mother cannot take up her abode with her son and
+leave the Vizier; neither can she abide with her husband and
+leave her son.' 'Thou sayst sooth,' replied the King and bade
+build a third palace beside the two others, which being done in
+a few days, he caused remove thither the Vizier's goods, and
+the latter and his wife took up their abode there. Now the
+three palaces communicated with one another, so that, when the
+King had a mind to speak with the Vizier by night, he would go
+to him or send to fetch him; and so with Hassan and his father
+and mother.
+
+They dwelt thus in the greatest happiness and contentment awhile,
+till the King fell ill and his sickness increased on him. So he
+summoned the grandees of his realm and said to them, 'There is
+come upon me a sore sickness, peradventure a mortal one, and I
+have therefore summoned you to consult you respecting a certain
+matter, on which I would have you counsel me as you deem well.'
+'What is the matter of which thou wouldst take counsel with us,
+O King?' asked they; and he answered, 'I am old and sickly and
+I fear for the realm, after me, from the enemies; so I would
+have you all agree upon some one, that I may proclaim him king
+in my lifetime and so ye may be at ease.' Whereupon quoth they
+all, 'We all approve of thy son-in-law Hassan, son of the
+Vizier Ali; for we have seen the perfectness of his wit and
+understanding, and he knows the rank of all, great and small.
+
+'Are ye indeed agreed upon this?' asked the King, and they
+answered, 'Yes.' 'Peradventure,' quoth he, 'ye say this to my
+face, of respect for me; but, behind my back, ye will say
+otherwise.' But they all answered, saying, 'By Allah, our word,
+in public and in private, is one, varying not; and we accept
+him frankly and with all our hearts.' 'Since the case is thus,'
+said the King, 'bring the Cadi of the Holy Law and all the
+chamberlains and captains and officers of state before me
+to-morrow, and we will settle the affair on the goodliest
+wise.' 'We hear and obey,' answered they and withdrawing,
+notified all the doctors of the law and the chief Amirs.
+
+So, on the morrow, they came up to the Divan and saluted the
+King, who said to them, 'O Amirs of Baghdad, whom will ye have
+to be king over you after me, that I may invest him in my
+lifetime, in the presence of you all?' Quoth they all, 'We are
+agreed upon thy daughter's husband, Hassan, son of the Vizier
+Ali.' 'If it be so,' said the King, 'go all of you and bring
+him before me.' So they all arose and repairing to Hassan's
+palace, said to him, 'Come with us to the King.' 'Wherefore?'
+asked he, and they answered, 'For a thing that will advantage
+both us and thee.' So he went in with them to the King and
+kissed the ground before the latter, who bade him be seated and
+said to him, 'O Hassan, all the Amirs have approved of thee and
+agreed to make thee king over them after me; and it is my
+purpose to proclaim thee, whilst I yet live, and so make an end
+of the business.' But Hassan arose and kissing the earth once
+more before the King, said to him, 'O our lord the King, among
+the Amirs there be [many] who are older than I and greater of
+worth; hold me quit therefore of this thing.' Quoth all the
+Amirs, 'We consent not but that thou be king over us.' Then
+said Hassan, 'My father is older than I, and he and I are one
+thing; and it befits not to advance me over him.' But Ali
+said, 'I will consent to nothing but what is pleasing to my
+brethren; and they have all chosen and agreed upon thee.
+Wherefore gainsay thou not the King's commandment and that
+of thy brethren.' And Hassan hung his head in abashment before
+the King and his father. Then said the King to the Amirs, 'Do
+ye all accept of him?' 'We do,' answered they and recited
+thereupon seven Fatihehs.'[FN#202] So the King said to the
+Cadi, 'Draw up a legal act testifying of these Amirs that they
+are agreed to make my daughter's husband Hassan king over
+them.' So the Cadi wrote the act and made it executory,[FN#203]
+after they had all taken the oath of fealty to Hassan. Then the
+King invested him with the insignia of royalty and bade him
+take his seat on the throne; whereupon they all arose and
+kissed King Hassan's hands and did homage to him.
+
+The new king dispensed justice among the people that day, in
+right royal fashion, and invested the grandees of the realm in
+splendid robes of honour. When the Divan broke up, he went in
+to his father-and-law and kissed his hands; and the old King
+said to him, 'O my son, look thou govern the people in the fear
+of God.' 'O my father,' replied Hassan, 'through thy prayers
+for me, the grace of God will come to me.' Then he entered his
+own palace and was met by his wife and her mother and their
+attendants, who kissed his hands and gave him joy of his
+advancement, saying, 'This is a blessed day.' Then he went in
+to his father and mother, who rejoiced with an exceeding joy in
+that which God had vouchsafed him of his advancement to the
+kingship, and his father exhorted him to the fear of God and to
+affectionate solicitude in his dealings with his subjects. He
+passed the night in joy and gladness, and on the morrow, having
+prayed the appointed prayers, concluding with the customary
+recitation of part of the Koran, he repaired to the Divan,
+whither came all his officers and dignitaries. He passed the
+day in dispensing justice among his subjects, enjoining to
+beneficence and forbidding from iniquity and appointing and
+displacing, till nightfall, when the Divan broke up, after the
+goodliest fashion, and all present withdrew and went each his
+own way. Then he arose and went in to the palace, where he
+found his father-in-law's sickness grown heavy upon him and
+said to him, 'May no hurt befall thee!' At this the old King
+opened his eyes and said, 'O Hassan!' 'At thy service, O my
+lord,' replied the young man. Quoth the old King, 'My last hour
+is at hand: be careful of thy wife and her mother and look
+thou fear God and honour thy parents, being still in awe of
+the majesty of the Requiting King and remembering that He
+commandeth to justice and beneficence.' And Hassan replied,
+'I hear and obey.'
+
+The old King lingered three days after this and was then
+received into the mercy of God the Most High. They paid him
+the last offices and buried him and held over him readings and
+recitations of the Koran, to the end of the [customary] forty
+days. And King Hassan, son of the Vizier, reigned in his stead,
+and his subjects rejoiced in him and all his days were gladness.
+Moreover, his father ceased not to be his chief Vizier on his
+right hand, and he took to himself another Vizier, to be at his
+left hand. His reign was a prosperous one and he abode long
+King in Baghdad. God blessed him, by the old King's daughter,
+with three sons, who inherited the kingdom after him; and they
+abode in the enjoyment of all delight and solace of life, till
+there came to them the Destroyer of Delights and the Sunderer
+of Companies. And glory be to Him who is eternal and in whose
+hand are annulment and confirmation!
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE PILGRIM AND THE OLD WOMAN WHO DWELT
+ IN THE DESERT.
+
+
+
+A man of the pilgrims once slept a long sleep and awaking,
+found no trace of the caravan. So he arose and walked on, but
+lost his way and presently came to a tent, at whose door he saw
+an old woman and a dog by her, asleep. He went up to the tent
+and saluting the old woman, sought of her food. 'Go to yonder
+valley,' said she, 'and catch thy sufficiency of serpents, that
+I may broil of them for thee and give thee to eat.' 'I dare not
+catch serpents,' answered the pilgrim; 'nor did I ever eat
+them.' Quoth the old woman, 'I will go with thee and catch
+them; fear not.' So she went with him, followed by the dog, to
+the valley, and catching a sufficient number of serpents,
+proceeded to broil them. He saw nothing for it but to eat, for
+fear of hunger and exhaustion; so he ate of the serpents.
+
+Then he was athirst and asked for water to drink. 'Go to the
+spring and drink,' answered she. So he went to the spring and
+found the water thereof bitter; yet needs must he drink of it,
+for all its bitterness, because of the violence of his thirst.
+Then he returned to the old woman and said to her, 'O old
+woman, I marvel at thy choosing to abide in this place and
+putting up with such meat and drink!' 'And how is it then in
+thy country?' asked she. 'In my country,' answered he, 'are
+wide and spacious houses and ripe and delicious fruits and
+sweet and abundant waters and goodly viands and fat meats and
+plentiful flocks and all things pleasant and all the goods of
+life, the like whereof are not, save in the Paradise that God
+the Most High hath promised to His pious servants.' 'All this,'
+replied she, 'have I heard: but tell me, have you a Sultan who
+ruleth over you and is tyrannical in his rule and under whose
+hand you are, who, if one of you commit a fault, taketh his
+goods and undoth him and who, when he will, turneth you out of
+your houses and uprooteth you, stock and branch?' 'Indeed, that
+may be,' answered the man. 'Then, by Allah,' rejoined she,
+'these your delicious viands and dainty life and pleasant
+estate, with tyranny and oppression, are but a corroding
+poison, in comparison wherewith, our food and fashion, with
+freedom and safety, are a healthful medicine. Hast thou not
+heard that the best of all boons, after the true Faith, are
+health and security?'
+
+Now these[FN#204] [quoth he who tells the tale] may be by the
+just rule of the Sultan, the Vicar of God in His earth, and the
+goodness of his policy. The Sultan of times past needed but
+little awfulness, for that, when the people saw him, they
+feared him; but the Sultan of these days hath need of the most
+accomplished policy and the utmost majesty, for that men are
+not as men of time past and this our age is one of folk
+depraved and greatly calamitous, noted for folly and hardness
+of heart and inclined to hatred and enmity. If, therefore, the
+Sultan that is set over them be (which God the Most High
+forfend) weak or lack of policy and majesty, without doubt,
+this will be the cause of the ruin of the land. Quoth the
+proverb, 'A hundred years of the Sultan's tyranny, rather than
+one of the tyranny of the people, one over another.' When the
+people oppress one another, God setteth over them a tyrannical
+Sultan and a despotic King. Thus it is told in history that
+there was, one day, presented to El Hejjaj ben Yousuf[FN#205] a
+docket, in which was written, 'Fear God and oppress not His
+servants with all manner of oppression.' When he read this, he
+mounted the pulpit, (for he was ready of speech,) and said, 'O
+folk' God the Most High hath set me over you, by reason of your
+[evil] deeds; and though I die, yet will ye not be delivered
+from oppression, with your evil deeds; for God the Most High
+hath created many like unto me. If it be not I, it will be a
+more fertile than I in mischief and a mightier in oppression
+and a more strenuous in violence, even as saith the poet:
+
+For no hand is there but the hand of God is over it And no
+ oppressor but shall be with worse than he oppress.
+
+Tyranny is feared: but justice is the best of all things. We
+beg God to better our case.'
+
+
+
+
+
+ ABOULHUSN AND HIS SLAVE-GIRL TAWEDDUD.
+
+
+
+There was once in Baghdad a man of rank and rich in money and
+houses and lands, who was one of the chiefs of the merchants,
+and God had largely endowed him with worldly goods, but had
+not vouchsafed him what he longed for of offspring; and there
+passed over him a long space of time, without his being blessed
+with children, male or female. His years waxed great, his bones
+became wasted and his back bent, and weakness and trouble
+increased on him, and he feared the loss of his wealth and
+possessions, seeing he had no child, whom he might make his
+heir and by whom he should be remembered. So he betook himself
+with supplication to God the Most High, fasting by day and
+rising by night [to pray]. Moreover, he made vows to God the
+Living, the Eternal, and visited the pious and was instant in
+supplication to the Most Migh, till He gave ear to him and
+accepted his prayer and took pity on his striving and complaining;
+so that, before many days were past, he lay with one of his women
+and she became with child by him the same night. She accomplished
+the months of her pregnancy and casting her burden, bore a male
+child as he were a piece of the moon; whereupon the merchant,
+in his gratitude to God, (to whom belong might and majesty,)
+fulfilled his vows and gave alms and clothed the widow and the
+orphan.
+
+On the seventh night after the boy's birth, he named him
+Aboulhusn, and the wet-nurses suckled him and the dry-nurses
+dandled him and the slaves and servants carried him, till he
+grew up and throve and learnt the sublime Koran and the
+ordinances of Islam and the things of the True Faith. Moreover,
+he learned writing and poetry and mathematics and archery and
+became the pearl of his age and the goodliest of the folk of
+his time and his day, fair of face and fluent of tongue,
+bearing himself with a proud and graceful port and glorying in
+his symmetry and amorous grace. His cheeks were red and his
+forehead white and brilliant and the tender down of the
+whiskers darkened upon his face, even as saith one, describing
+him:
+
+The Spring of the down on his cheeks to the eye shows clear;
+ And how shall the rose endure, after Spring is here?
+Dost thou not see that the growth on his cheek, forsooth, A
+ violet is, that forth of its leaves doth peer?
+
+He abode awhile with his father, in the best of case, and the
+latter rejoiced and delighted in him, till he came to man's
+estate, when the merchant one day made him sit down before him
+and said to him, 'O my son, the appointed term draws near; my
+last hour is at hand and it remains but to meet God (to whom
+belong might and majesty). I leave thee what shall suffice
+thee, even to thy son's son, of money and farms and houses and
+gardens; wherefore, O my son, fear thou God the Most High in
+[dealing with] that which I leave thee and follow none but
+those who will help thee [in this].' Not long after, he
+sickened and died; so his son ordered his funeral, after the
+goodliest fashion, and burying him, returned to his house and
+sat mourning for him [many] days and nights, till certain of
+his friends came in to him and said to him, 'Whoso leaveth the
+like of thee after him is not dead; indeed, what is past is
+past and mourning beseemeth none but girls and cloistered
+women.' And they ceased not from him, till they wrought on him
+to enter the bath and break off his mourning. Then he forgot
+his father's injunctions, and his head was turned by his
+riches; he thought fortune would still abide with him, as it
+was, and that wealth would never come to an end. So he ate and
+drank and made merry and took his pleasure and gave gifts of
+money and raiment and was profuse with gold and gave himself up
+to eating fowls and breaking the seals of wine-flasks and
+listening to songs and to the laugh of the wine, as it gurgled
+from the flagon; nor did he give over this way of life, till
+his wealth was wasted and the case became straitened [upon him]
+and he bit his hands [for repentance] and gone was all he had.
+
+In good sooth, he had nothing left, after that which he had
+squandered, but a slave-girl that his father had bequeathed to
+him with the rest of his estate: her name was Taweddud and she
+had no equal in beauty and grace and brightness and symmetry
+and all perfection. She was past mistress in all manner of arts
+and accomplishments and endowed with [many] excellences,
+surpassing all the folk of her age and time. She was grown more
+notorious than a way-mark,[FN#206] for the versatility of her
+genius, and outdid the fair both in theory and practice and
+elegant and flexile grace, more by token that she was five feet
+high and in conjunction with fair fortune, with strait arched
+brows, as they were the crescent moon of Shaaban,[FN#207] and
+eyes like those of gazelles, nose like the point of the sabre
+and cheeks like blood-red anemones, mouth like Solomon's seal
+and teeth like necklaces of pearls, navel holding an ounce of
+benzoin ointment and waist more slender than his body whom love
+hath wasted and whom concealment [of his passion] hath made
+sick, and buttocks heavier than two hills of sand; brief, in
+all she answered to the saying of him who says:
+
+Her fair shape ravisheth, if face to face she did appear, And
+ if she turn, for severance from her she slayeth sheer.
+Sun-like, full-moon-like, sapling-like, unto her character
+ Estrangement nowise appertains nor cruelty austere.
+Under the bosom of her shift the garths of Eden are, and the
+ full-moon revolveth still upon her neck-rings' sphere.
+
+She seemed [at once] a rising full moon and a browsing gazelle,
+a girl of nine and five,[FN#208] putting to shame the moon and
+the sun, even as saith of her the eloquent and ingenious poet:
+
+The likeness of the full-moon, faring o'er The heavens, five
+ and five and after four;
+'Tis not my fault, if she have made of me Its likeness, when it
+ first in heaven doth soar.
+
+White of skin, odoriferous of breath, it seemed as if she were
+[at once] fashioned of fire and moulded of crystal; rose-red
+was the cheek of her and perfect her shape and figure; even as
+saith of her one, describing her:
+
+
+Scented with sandal and musk, right proudly doth she go, With
+ gold and silver and rose and saffron-colour aglow.
+A flower in a garden she is, a pearl in an ouch of gold Or an
+ image in chapel set for worship of high and low.
+Slender and shapely she is; vivacity bids her arise, But the
+ weight of her hips says, "Sit, or softly and slowly go."
+Whenas her favours I seek and sue for my heart's desire, "Be
+ gracious," her beauty says; but her coquetry answers,
+ "No."
+Glory to Him who made beauty her portion, and that Of her lover
+ to be the prate of the censurers, heigho!
+
+Indeed, she captivated all who saw her, with the excellence of
+her beauty and the sweetness of her smile, and transpierced
+them with the arrows she launched from her eyes; and withal she
+was eloquent of speech and excellently skilled in poetry.
+
+When Aboulhusn had squandered all his wealth and there remained
+to him nought but this slave-girl, when [I say] the wretchedness
+of his plight became manifest to him, he abode three days
+without tasting food or taking rest in sleep, and Taweddud
+said to him, 'O my lord, carry me to the Khalif Haroun er
+Reshid, fifth of the sons of Abbas, and seek of him ten thousand
+dinars to my price. If he deem me dear at this price, say to
+him, "O Commander of the Faithful, my slave is worth more
+than this: do but prove her, and her value will be magnified
+in thine eyes, for she hath not her equal, and it were unfit
+that any but thou should possess her." And beware, O my lord,
+of selling me for less than the sum I have named, for it is
+but little for the like of me.' (Now Aboulhusn knew not her
+worth nor that she had no equal in her day.) So he carried
+her to the Khalif, to whom he repeated what she had bidden
+him say, and the Khalif said to her, 'What is thy name?'
+'Taweddud,' answered she. 'O Taweddud,' asked he, 'in what
+branches of knowledge dost thou excel?' 'O my lord,' answered
+she, 'I am versed in syntax and poetry and jurisprudence and
+exegesis and lexicography and music and the knowledge of the
+Divine ordinances and in arithmetic and geodesy and the fables
+of the ancients. I know the sublime Koran [by heart] and have
+read it according to the seven and the ten and the fourteen
+[modes]. I know the number of its chapters and verses and
+sections and words and letters and its halves and fourths
+and eighths and tenths, the number of acts of adoration,
+that occur in it, and what there is in it of cancelling and
+cancelled;[FN#209] also what parts of it were revealed at
+Medina and what at Mecca and the manner of the different
+revelations. I know the Holy Traditions, their history and
+variants and the manner of their recitation and interpretation,
+together with those of them whose chain of descent is unbroken
+and those for which it is broken; and I have studied the exact
+sciences, geometry and philosophy and medicine and logic
+and rhetoric and composition; and I know many things and am
+passionately fond of poetry. I can play the lute and know its
+gamut and notation and so forth. If I sing and dance, I ravish,
+and if I adorn and perfume myself, I slay. In fine, I have
+reached a pitch of perfection such as can only be estimated by
+those who are stablished in knowledge.'[FN#210]
+
+When the Khalif heard her words, he wondered at them and at the
+eloquence of her speech, seeing the tenderness of her age, and
+turning to Aboulhusn, said to him, 'I will summon those who
+shall examine her in all she lays claim to; if she answer
+[correctly,] I will give thee the price thou askest for her and
+more; and if not, thou art fitter to [possess] her [than I].'
+'With all my heart, O Commander of the Faithful,' replied
+Aboulhusn. So the Khalif wrote to the Viceroy of Bassora, to
+send him Ibrahim ben Siyyar the poet, who was the first man of
+his day in argument and eloquence and poetry and logic, and
+bade him bring with him readers of the Koran and doctors of the
+law and physicians and astrologers and sages and geometricians
+and philosophers; and Ibrahim was more learned than all. In a
+little while they all arrived at the Khalif's palace, knowing
+not what was to do, and the latter sent for them to his
+sitting-chamber and bade them be seated. So they sat down and
+he bade fetch the damsel Taweddud, who came and unveiling,
+showed herself, as she were a sparkling star. The Khalif caused
+set her a stool of gold; and she saluted and speaking with an
+eloquent tongue, said, 'O Commander of the Faithful, bid the
+learned men present contend with me in argument.' So he said to
+them, 'I desire of you that ye dispute with this damsel on the
+things of her faith and make void her argument, in all she
+avoucheth;' and they answered, saying, 'We hear and obey God
+and thee, O Commander of the Faithful.'
+
+Thereupon Taweddud bowed her head and said, 'Which of you is
+the doctor of the law, the scholar, versed in the interpretation
+of the Koran and in the Traditions?' Quoth one of them, 'I am
+the man thou seekest.' 'Then,' said she, 'ask me of what thou
+wilt.' Quoth the doctor, 'Hast thou read the precious book of
+God and dost thou know its abrogating and abrogated parts and
+hast thou meditated its verses and expressions?' 'Yes,' answered
+she. 'Then,' said he, 'I will proceed to question thee of the
+obligatory ordinances and the immutable institutions: so tell
+me of these, O damsel, and who is thy Lord, who thy prophet,
+and who thy brethren. Also, what is thy [point of] fronting
+[in prayer], what thine exemplar, what thy path and what thy
+highway?' 'Allah is my Lord,' replied she, 'and Mohammed (whom
+God bless and preserve) my prophet and the true-believers are my
+brethren. The Koran is my exemplar and the Kaabeh my [point of]
+fronting; the practice of good is my path and the Sunneh[FN#211]
+my highway.' (Q.) 'With what do we know God the Most High?'
+(A.) 'With the understanding.' (Q.) 'And what is the understanding?'
+(A.) 'It is of two kinds, natural and acquired. The first is that
+which God (to whom belong might and majesty) bestoweth on whom He
+will of His servants; and the other is that which men acquire
+by dint of study and fair knowledge.' (Q.) 'Thou hast answered
+well. Where is the seat of the understanding?' (A.) 'God casteth
+it in the heart, whence its lustre ascendeth to the brain and
+there becometh fixed.' (Q.) 'How knowest thou the Prophet of God?'
+(A.) 'By the reading of God's Holy Book and by signs and proofs
+and portents and miracles.' (Q.) 'What are the obligatory
+ordinances and the immutable institutions?' (A.) 'The obligatory
+ordinances are five in number. (1) Testification that there is no
+god but God alone, that He hath no partner in divinity and that
+Mohammed is His servant and His apostle. (2) The scrupulous
+performance of the enjoined prayers. (3) The payment of the
+poor-rate. (4) Fasting Ramazan. (5) The performance of the
+Pilgrimage to God's Holy House [at Mecca] for all to whom it
+is possible. The immutable institutions are four in number; to
+wit, night and day and sun and moon, the which build up life and
+hope, neither knoweth any son of Adam if they will be destroyed
+on the Day of Judgment.' (Q.) 'What are the obligatory rites of
+the Faith?' (A.) 'Prayer, almsgiving, fasting, pilgrimage,
+fighting for the Faith and abstinence from what is forbidden.'
+(Q.) 'Why dost thou stand up to pray?' (A.) 'To express the
+devout intent of the slave submitting himself to [or acknowledging]
+the Divinity.' (Q.) 'What are the conditions precedent of standing
+up to pray?' (A.) 'Purification, covering the privy parts,
+the avoidance of soiled clothes, standing on a clean place,
+fronting [the Kaabeh,] a standing posture, the intent[FN#212]
+and the magnification of prohibition.'[FN#213] (Q.) 'With what
+shouldest thou go forth thy house to pray? (A.) 'With an intent
+of worship.'[FN#214] (Q.) 'With what intent shouldest thou
+enter the mosque?' (A.) 'With an intent of service.'[FN#215]
+(Q.) 'Why do we front the Kaabeh?' (A.) 'In obedience to three
+Divine and one Traditional ordinance.' (Q.) 'What is the
+commencement, the consecration and the dissolution [end] of
+prayer?' (A.) 'Purification, the magnification of prohibition
+and the salutation of the angels [concluding prayer].' (Q.)
+'What of him who neglecteth prayer?' (A.) 'It is reported,
+among the authentic (Traditions of the Prophet, that he said),
+"He, who neglecteth prayer wilfully and without excuse, hath no
+part in Islam."' (Q.) 'What is prayer?' (A.) 'Prayer is
+communion between the slave and his Lord, and in it are ten
+virtues, to wit, (1) it illumines the heart (2) makes the face
+shine (3) pleases the Merciful One (4) angers Satan (5)
+conjures calamity (6) wards off the mischief of enemies (7)
+multiplies mercy (8) forfends vengeance [or punishment] (9)
+brings the slave nigh unto [or in favour with] his Lord and
+(10) restrains from lewdness and iniquity. It is one of the
+written obligatory ordinances and the pillar of the Faith.'
+(Q.) 'What is the key of prayer?' (A.) 'Ablution.' (Q.) 'What
+is the key of ablution?' (A.) 'Nomination.'[FN#216] (Q.) 'That
+of naming God?' (A.) 'Faith.' (Q.) 'That of Faith?' (A.) 'Trust
+in God.' (Q.) 'That of trust in God?' (A.) 'Hope.' (Q.) 'That
+of Hope?' (A.) 'Obedience.' (Q.) 'That of obedience?' (A.) 'The
+confession of the unity and the acknowledgment of the divinity
+of God.' (Q.) 'What are the Divine ordinances of ablution?'
+(A.) 'They are six in number, according to the canon of the
+Imam Es Shafi Mohammed ben Idris (of whom God accept) to wit,
+(1) intent[FN#217] to wash the face (2) washing the face (3)
+washing the hands and elbows (4) wiping part of the head (5)
+washing the feet and heels and (6) observing the prescribed
+order of ablution, whose statutes are ten in number, to wit,
+(1) nomination (2) washing the hands before putting them into
+the vase (3) rinsing the mouth (4) drawing up water through the
+nostrils (5) wiping the whole head (6) washing the ears within
+and without with fresh water (7) separating a thick beard (8)
+separating the fingers and toes (9) washing the right foot
+before the left and (10) doing each of these thrice and all in
+unbroken succession. When the ablution is ended, the devotee
+should (quoth Es Shafi[FN#218]) say, "I testify that there is
+no god but God alone, who hath no partner, and that Mohammed is
+His servant and apostle. O my God, make me of those who repent
+and are made clean! Glory to Thee, O my God, and in Thy praise
+I testify that there is no god but Thou! I crave pardon of
+Thee and repent to Thee!" For it is reported, in the Holy
+Traditions, that the Prophet (whom God bless and keep) said of
+this prayer, "Whoso ensueth every ablution with this prayer,
+the eight gates of Paradise are open to him; he shall enter at
+which he pleases."' (Q.) 'When a man purposes to make the
+ablution, what betides him from the angels and the devils?'
+(A.) 'When a man prepares for ablution, the angels come and
+stand on his right and the devils on his left hand. If he name
+God, at the beginning of the ablution, the devils flee from him
+and the angels hover over him with a pavilion of light, having
+four ropes, to each an angel glorifying God and craving pardon
+for him, so long as he remains silent or calls upon the name of
+God. But if he omit to begin with naming God (to whom belong
+might and majesty) neither remain silent, the angels depart
+from him and the devils settle upon him and whisper evil
+thoughts unto him, till he falls into doubt and comes short in
+his ablution. For (quoth he on whom be blessing and salvation)
+"A perfect ablution driveth away the devils and assureth
+against the tyranny of the Sultan; and he who neglecteth the
+ablution, if calamity befall him, let him blame none but
+himself."' (Q.) 'What should a man do, when he awakes from
+sleep?' (A.) 'He should wash his hands thrice, before putting
+them into the vessel.' (Q.) 'What are the ordinances, Koranic
+and Traditional, of complete ablution?'[FN#219] (A.) 'The
+Koranic ordinances are intent and covering the whole body with
+water, so that it shall come at every part of the hair and
+skin. The Traditional, previous partial ablution [as before
+prayer,] rubbing the body, separating the hair and deferring in
+words[FN#220] the washing of the feet till the end of the
+ablution.' (Q.) 'What are the reasons [or occasions] for making
+the ablution with other than water, and what are the ordinances
+thereof, Koranic and Traditional?'[FN#221] (A.) 'The reasons
+are seven in number, to wit, lack of water, fear, need thereto,
+going astray on a journey, sickness, having the bones [broken
+and] in splints and wounds. As for its ordinances, the Koranic
+are four in number, to wit, intent, dust, applying it to the
+face and to the hands, and the Traditional two, to wit,
+nomination and preferring the right before the left hand.' (Q.)
+'What are the conditions, the essentials [or fundamentals] and
+the Traditional statutes of prayer?' (A.) 'The conditions are
+five in number, to wit, (1) purification of the members (2)
+covering the privy parts (3) observing the proper hours, either
+of certainty or to the best of one's belief, (4) fronting the
+Kaabeh and (5) standing on a clean place. The essentials are
+twelve in number, to wit, (1) intent (2) the magnification of
+prohibition (3) standing at the proper distance one from
+another (4) repeating the first chapter of the Koran and also
+(according to the Shafiyites) saying, "In the name of God the
+Merciful, the Compassionate!" a verse thereof (5) bowing the
+body and tranquillity [or gravity] therein (6) keeping the feet
+and legs still and in the same position, [whilst the rest of
+the body moves], and tranquillity therein (7) prostration and
+tranquillity therein (8) sitting between two prostrations and
+tranquillity therein (9) repeating the latter profession of
+the Faith and sitting up therefor (10) invoking benediction
+on the Prophet (whom God bless and preserve) (11) the first
+Salutation[FN#222] and (12) the intent of making an end of
+prayer, [expressed] in words. The Traditional statutes are
+the call to prayer, the repetition of the words of the latter,
+raising the hands to either side of the face, whilst pronouncing
+the magnification of prohibition, pronouncing the magnification
+before reciting the Fatiheh [First chapter of the Koran],
+seeking refuge with God,[FN#223] saying "Amen," repeating
+the (obligatory) chapter [of the Koran] after the Fatiheh,
+repeating the magnifications during change of posture, saying,
+"May God hear him who praiseth Him!" and "O our Lord, to Thee
+be the praise!" uttering aloud the prayers in their places
+and in like manner, under the breath, those so prescribed,
+the first testification and sitting up thereto, blessing the
+Prophet therein, blessing his family in the latter profession
+[or testification] and the second Salutation.' (Q.) 'On what
+is the poor-rate taxable?' (A.) 'On gold and silver and camels
+and oxen and sheep and wheat and barley and millet and beans
+and pulse and rice and raisins and dates.' (Q.) 'What is the
+poor-rate on gold ?' (A.) 'Below twenty dinars, nothing; but,
+on that amount and over, half a dinar for every score.'
+(Q.) 'On silver?' (A.) 'Under two hundred dirhems, nothing;
+then, five dirhems on every two hundred.' (Q.) 'On camels?'
+(A.) 'For every five, an ewe, or for every twenty-five a
+pregnant camel.' (Q.) 'On sheep?' (A.) 'On forty and over, an
+ewe for every forty head.' (Q.) 'What are the ordinances of
+the Fast [of Ramazan]?' (A.) 'The Koranic are intent,[FN#224]
+abstinence from eating, drinking and copulation and stoppage of
+vomiting. It is incumbent on all who submit to the Law, save
+women in their courses and forty days after child-birth; and it
+becomes obligatory on sight of the new moon or on news of its
+appearance, brought by a trustworthy person and commending
+itself as truth to the hearer's heart; and among its requisites
+is that it be commenced by night.[FN#225] The Traditional
+ordinances of fasting are, hastening to break the fast,[FN#226]
+deferring the fore-dawn meal[FN#227] and abstaining from
+speech, save for good works and for calling on the name of God
+and reciting the Koran.' (Q.) 'What things vitiate not the
+fast?' (A.) 'The use of unguents and eye-powders and the dust
+of the road and the swallowing of one's spittle and the
+emission of seed in dreams of dalliance or at the sight of a
+strange woman and cupping and letting blood; none of these
+things vitiates the fast.' (Q.) 'What are the prayers of the
+two great [annual] Festivals?' (A.) 'Two one-bow prayers, after
+the traditional ordinance, without call to prayer or the
+repetition thereof by the devotee, who shall say, "Prayer is a
+collector of all folk!"[FN#228] and pronounce the magnification
+seven times in the first prayer, besides the magnification of
+prohibition, and in the second, five times, besides that of
+rising up, (according to the canon of the Imam Es Shafi, on
+whom God have mercy) and make the profession of the Faith.'
+(Q.) 'What are the prayers prescribed on the occasion of an
+eclipse of the sun or moon?' (A.) 'Two one-bow prayers, without
+call to prayer or repetition thereof by the devotee, who shall
+make in each two standings up and two inclinations and two
+prostrations, then sit up and testify and salute.' (Q.) 'What
+is the ritual of prayer for rain?' (A.) 'Two one-bow prayers,
+without call to prayer or repetition; then shall the devotee
+make the profession and salute. Moreover [the Imam] shall
+deliver an exhortation and (in place of the magnification, as
+in the two exhortations of the two great Festivals) ask pardon
+of God and reverse his mantle and pray and supplicate.' (Q.)
+'What are the additional or occasional prayers?' (A.) 'The
+least is a one-bow prayer and the most eleven.' (Q.) 'What
+is the forenoon prayer?' (A.) 'At least, two one-bow prayers
+and at most, twelve.' (Q.) 'What is the service of seclusion?'
+[FN#229] (A.) 'It is a matter of Traditional ordinance.'
+(Q.) 'What are its conditions?' (A.) '(1) Expression of intent
+(2) not leaving the mosque save of necessity (3) not having
+to do with a woman (4) fasting and (5) abstaining from speech.'
+(Q.) 'Under what conditions is pilgrimage obligatory?' (A.)
+'So a man be of full age and understanding and a true-believer
+and it be possible to him; and it is obligatory [on all], once
+before death.' (Q.) 'What are the Koranic statutes of the
+pilgrimage?'' (A.) '(1) Assumption of the pilgrim's habit
+(2) station at Arafat (3) compassing [the Kaabeh] (4) running
+[between Sefa and Merweh[FN#230]] and (5) [previous] shaving
+or clipping the hair.' (Q.) 'What are the Koranic statutes of
+the lesser pilgrimage?' (A.) 'Reassuming the pilgrim's habit and
+compassing and running [as before].' (Q.) 'What are the Koranic
+ordinances of the assumption of the pilgrim's habit?' (A.)
+'Putting off sewn garments, forswearing perfume and ceasing to
+shave the head or cut the nails and avoiding the killing of
+game and copulation.' (Q.) 'What are the Traditional statutes
+of the pilgrimage?' (A.) '(1) The crying out, "Here I am, O our
+Lord!"[FN#231] (2) the circuitings [about the Kaabeh] of
+arrival [at] and departure [from Mecca] (3) the passing the
+night at Muzdelifeh and Mina[FN#232] and (4) the stone-throwing.'
+[FN#233] (Q.) 'What is the war in defence of the Faith and its
+essentials?' (A.) 'Its essentials are (1) the descent of the
+infidels upon us (2) the existence of the Imam[FN#234] (3) a
+state of [armed] preparation and (4) firmness in meeting the
+foe. Its ordinance is incital to battle, in that the Most High
+hath said, "O my Prophet, incite the faithful to battle!"'
+[FN#235] (Q.) 'What are the ordinances of buying and selling?'
+(A.) 'The Koranic are (1) offer and acceptance and (2) if the
+thing sold be a (white) slave, by whom one profiteth, to do
+one's endeavour to convert him to Islam and (3) to abstain
+from usury; the Traditional, resiliation and option before
+separating, after the saying of the Prophet, "The parties
+to a sale shall have the option [of cancelling or altering
+the terms of a bargain,] whilst they are yet unseparated."'
+(Q.) 'What is it forbidden to sell [or exchange] for what?'
+(A.) 'On this point I mind me of an authentic tradition,
+reported by Nafi[FN#236] of the Apostle of God, that he forbade
+the sale of dried dates for fresh and fresh figs for dry and
+jerked for fresh meat and cream for butter; in fine, of all
+eatables of one and the same kind, it is unlawful to sell some
+for other some.'[FN#237] When the professor heard her words
+and knew that she was keen of wit, ingenious and learned in
+jurisprudence and the Traditions and the interpretation of the
+Koran and what not else, he said in himself, 'Needs must I go
+about with her, that I may overcome her in the assembly of the
+Commander of the Faithful.' So he said to her, 'O damsel, what
+is the lexicographical meaning of the word wuzou?'[FN#238]
+And she answered, 'Cleanliness and freedom from impurities.'
+(Q.) 'And of prayer?' (A.) 'An invocation of good.' (Q.) 'And
+of ghusl?'[FN#239] (A.) 'Purification.' (Q.) 'And of fasting?'
+(A.) 'Abstention.' (Q.) 'And of zekat?'[FN#240] (A.) 'Increase.'
+(Q.) 'And of pilgrimage?' (A.) 'Visitation [or quest].' (Q.) 'And
+of jehad?'[FN#241] (A.) '[Endeavour in] repelling.' With this the
+doctor's arguments were exhausted, so he rose to his feet and
+said, 'Bear witness against me, O Commander of the Faithful,
+that this damsel is more learned than I am in the Law. Quoth
+she, 'I will ask thee somewhat, which do thou answer me
+speedily, an thou be indeed a learned man.' 'Say on,' quoth he;
+and she said, 'What are the arrows of the Faith?' 'They are ten
+in number,' answered he; 'to wit, (1) Testification,[FN#242]
+that is, religion (2) Prayer, that is, the Covenant (3) Alms,
+that is, purification (4) Fasting, that is, defensive armour
+(5) Pilgrimage, that is, the Law (6) Fighting for the Faith,
+that is, a general duty (7) Enjoining to beneficence and (8)
+Forbidding from iniquity, both of which are jealousy [for good]
+(9) The communion of the faithful, that is, sociableness, and
+(10) Seeking knowledge, that is, the praiseworthy way.' (Q.)
+'What are the roots[FN#243] of Islam?' (A.) 'They are four
+in number, to wit, sincerity of belief, truth of purpose,
+observance of the limit [prescribed by the Law] and keeping the
+Covenant.' Then said she, 'I have one more question to ask
+thee, which if thou answer, [it is well]; else, I will take thy
+clothes.' Quoth he, 'Speak, O damsel;' and she said, 'What are
+the branches[FN#244] of Islam?' But he was silent and made no
+reply; and she said, 'Put off thy clothes, and I will expound
+them to thee.' Quoth the Khalif, 'Expound them, and I will make
+him put off his clothes for thee.' 'They are two-and-twenty in
+number,' answered she, 'to wit, (1) holding fast to the Book of
+God the Most High (2) taking example by His Apostle (whom God
+bless and preserve) (3) abstaining from doing evil (4) eating
+what is lawful and (5) avoiding what is unlawful (6) restoring
+things wrongfully taken to their owners (7) repentance (8)
+knowledge of the Law (9) love of [Abraham] the Friend [of God]
+(10) and of the followers of the Revelation[FN#245] (11) belief
+in the Apostles (12) fear of apostacy (13) preparation for
+departure[FN#246] (14) strength of conviction (15) clemency in
+time of power (16) strength in time of weakness (17) patience
+under affliction (18) knowledge of God the Most High and (19)
+of what His Prophet hath made known to us (20) gainsaying Iblis
+the accursed (21) striving earnestly against the lusts of the
+soul and gainsaying them and (22) guiltlessness of believing in
+any other god but God.'
+
+When the Commander of the Faithful heard her words, he bade the
+doctor put off his clothes and hood; and he did so and went
+forth, beaten and confounded, from the Khalif's presence.
+Thereupon arose another man and said to her, 'O damsel, hear a
+few questions from me.' 'Say on,' quoth she; and he said, 'What
+are the conditions of valid [purchase by] payment in advance?'
+'That the amount [of the thing bought], the kind and the period
+[of delivery to the purchaser], be [fixed or] known,' replied
+she. (Q.) 'What are the Koranic canons of eating?' (A.) 'The
+confession [by the eater] that God the Most High provideth him
+and giveth him to eat and drink and thanksgiving to Him
+therefor.' (Q.) 'What is thanksgiving?' (A.) 'The use by the
+creature of that which God vouchsafeth to him in the manner and
+to the ends for which He hath created it.' (Q.) 'What are the
+Traditional canons of eating?' (A.) 'The [preliminary] naming
+[of God] and washing the hands, sitting on the left buttock,
+eating with three fingers and eating of that which is chewed.'
+[FN#247] (Q.) 'What are the civilities of eating?' (A.) 'Taking
+small mouthfuls and looking little at one's table-companion.'
+(Q.) 'What are the heart's stays [or articles of faith] and
+their correlatives?' (A.) 'They are three in number, to wit,
+(1) holding fast to the Faith, the correlative whereof is the
+shunning of infidelity, (2) holding fast to the Traditional Law
+and its correlative, the shunning of innovation [or heresy] and
+(3) holding fast to obedience and its correlative, the shunning
+of disobedience.' (Q.) 'What are the conditions of ablution?'
+(A.) '(1) Submission to the will of God[FN#248] (2) possession
+of discernment of good and evil [or having attained the age of
+discretion] (3) purity of the water and (4) absence of legal
+or material impediments.' (Q.) 'What is belief?' (A.) 'It is
+divided into nine parts, to wit, (1) belief in the One worshipped
+(2) belief in the condition of slavery [of the worshipper]
+(3) belief in one God, to the exclusion of all others (4) belief
+in the Two Handfuls[FN#249] (5) belief in Providence (6) belief
+in the Abrogating and (7) in the Abrogated (8) belief in God, His
+angels and apostles and (9) in fore-ordained Fate, general and
+particular, its good and ill, sweet and bitter.' (Q.) 'What
+three things do away other three?' (A.) 'It is told of Sufyan
+eth Thauri[FN#250] that he said, "Three things do away other
+three. Making light of the pious doth away the future life,
+making light of kings doth away [this] life and making light of
+expenditure doth away wealth."' (Q.) 'What are the keys of the
+heavens, and how many gates have they?' (A.) 'Quoth God the Most
+High, "And heaven shall be opened, and it shall be [all] doors,"
+[FN#251] and quoth he whom God bless and keep, "None knoweth the
+number of the gates of heaven, save He who created it, and there
+is no son of Adam but hath two gates allotted to him in the skies,
+one whereby his subsistence cometh down and another where-through
+his works [good and evil] ascend. The former is not closed,
+save when his term of life comes to an end, nor the latter,
+till his soul ascends [for judgment]."' (Q.) 'Tell me of a
+thing and a half thing and a no-thing.' (A.) 'The thing is the
+believer, the half thing the hypocrite and the no-thing the
+infidel.' (Q.) 'Tell me of various kinds of hearts.' (A.)
+'There is the whole [or perfect] heart, which is that of
+[Abraham] the Friend [of God], the sick heart, that of the
+infidel, the contrite heart, that of the pious, fearful ones,
+the heart consecrated to God, that of our Lord Mohammed (whom
+God bless and preserve) and the enlightened [or enlightening]
+heart, that of those who follow him. The hearts of the learned
+are of three kinds, to wit, those that are in love with this
+world, with the next and with their Lord; and it is said that
+hearts are three, the suspended, that of the infidel, the
+non-existent [or lost], that of the hypocrite, and the constant
+[or firm], that of the true-believer. Moreover, it is said that
+the latter is of three kinds, namely, the heart dilated with
+light and faith, that wounded with fear of estrangement and
+that which feareth to be forsaken of God.'
+
+Quoth the second doctor, 'Thou hast said well;' whereupon said
+she to the Khalif, 'O Commander of the Faithful, he has
+questioned me, till he is weary, and now I will ask him two
+questions. If he answer them, it is well, and if not, I will
+take his clothes and he shall depart in peace.' Quoth the
+doctor, 'Ask me what thou wilt,' and she said, 'What is
+religion?' 'Religion,' answered he, 'is confession[FN#252] with
+the tongue and belief with the heart and doing with the
+members. Quoth the Prophet, "The believer is not perfect in
+belief, except five qualities be accomplished in him, namely,
+trust in God, committal of his affair to Him, submission to His
+commandment, acquiescence in His decrees and that he do all for
+His sake; so is he of those who are acceptable to God and who
+give and withhold for His sake, and he is perfect in belief."'
+Then said she, 'What is the Koranic ordinance of ordinances
+and the ordinance which is the preliminary of all ordinances
+and that of which all others stand in need and that which
+comprehendeth all others, and what is the Traditional ordinance
+that entereth into the Koranic, and that whereby the latter is
+completed?' But he was silent and made no reply; whereupon the
+Khalif bade her expound and ordered him to doff his clothes and
+give them to her. 'O doctor,' said she, 'the Koranic ordinance
+of ordinances is the knowledge of God the Most High; that,
+which is the preliminary of all others, is the testifying that
+there is no god but God and that Mohammed is His apostle; that,
+of which all others have need, is ablution; that, which
+compriseth all others, is that of [total] ablution from
+[ceremonial] defilement; the Traditional ordinance, that enters
+into the Koranic, is the separation of the fingers and the
+thick beard; and that, wherewith all Koranic ordinances are
+completed, is circumcision.' Therewith was manifest the
+insufficiency of the doctor, who rose to his feet and said, 'I
+call God to witness, O Commander of the Faithful, that this
+damsel is more learned than I in the Law and what pertains
+thereto.' So saying, he put off his clothes and went away,
+defeated.
+
+Then turned she to the rest of the learned men present and
+said, 'O masters, which of you is the reader,[FN#253] versed in
+the seven readings and in syntax and lexicography?' Thereupon
+the professor arose and seating himself before her, said, 'Hast
+thou read the Book of God the Most High and made thyself
+throughly acquainted with its verses and its various parts,
+abrogating and abrogated, equivocal and unequivocal, Meccan and
+Medinan? Dost thou understand its interpretation and hast thou
+studied it, according to the various versions and readings?'
+'Yes,' answered she; and he said, 'What, then, is the number of
+its chapters, how many are Meccan and how many Medinan? How
+many verses and decades[FN#254] does it contain, how many
+words and how many letters and how many acts of prostration
+and how many prophets and birds are mentioned in it?' 'It
+contains a hundred and fourteen chapters,' replied she, 'whereof
+threescore and ten were revealed at Mecca and forty and four at
+Medina, six thousand three hundred and thirty-six verses, six
+hundred and twenty-one decades, seventy-nine thousand four
+hundred and thirty-nine words and three hundred and twenty-
+three thousand and six hundred and seventy letters; and to the
+reader thereof, for every letter, accrue ten benefits. The
+acts of prostration it contains are fourteen in number, and
+five-and-twenty prophets are named therein, to wit, Adam, Noah,
+Abraham, Ishmael, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Elisha, Jonah, Lot,
+Salih, Houd,[FN#255] Shuaib,[FN#256] David, Solomon, Dhoulkifl,
+[FN#257] Idris,[FN#258] Elias, Yehya,[FN#259] Zacharias, Job,
+Moses, Aaron, Jesus and Mohammed, the peace of God and His
+blessing be on them all! Moreover, nine birds [or flying
+things] are mentioned in the Koran, namely, the gnat, the bee,
+the fly, the ant, the hoopoe, the crow, the locust, the bustard
+and the bird of Jesus[FN#260] (on whom be peace), to wit, the
+bat.' (Q.) 'Which is the most excellent chapter of the Koran?'
+(A.) 'That of the Cow.'[FN#261] (Q.) 'Which is the most magnificent
+verse?' (A.) 'That of the Throne;[FN#262] it has fifty words, in
+each fifty blessings.' (Q.) 'What verse hath in it nine signs [or
+wonders]?' (A.) 'That in which quoth God the Most High, "Verily,
+in the creation of the heavens and the earth and the alternation
+of night and day and the ship that runneth in the sea with what
+profiteth mankind and in what God sendeth down from heaven of
+water and quickeneth therewith the earth, after its dearth, and
+spreadeth abroad therein all manner cattle, and the shifting of
+the winds and the clouds, pressed into service betwixt heaven
+and earth, are signs for folk who understand."'[FN#263] (Q.)
+'Which is the most just?' (A.) 'That in which God saith, "Verily,
+God commandeth to justice and beneficence and giving to those
+that are near unto us and forbiddeth from profligacy and iniquity
+and oppression."'[FN#264] (Q.) 'Which is the most yearnful?' (A.)
+'That in which quoth God, "Shall every man of them yearn to
+enter a garden of delight?"'[FN#265] (Q.) 'Which is the most
+hopeful?' (A.) 'That in which quoth God the Most High, "Say, 'O
+ye my servants, that have transgressed against your own souls,
+despair not of the mercy of God! Indeed, God forgiveth sins,
+all of them, for He is the Forgiving, the Compassionate.'"'
+[FN#266] (Q.) 'By what version dost thou read?' (A.) 'By that of
+the people of Paradise, to wit, the version of Nafi.'[FN#267]
+(Q.) 'In which verse doth God make prophets lie?' (A.) 'In that
+wherein He saith, "They [the brothers of Joseph] brought lying
+blood upon his shirt."'[FN#268] (Q.) 'In which doth He make
+infidels speak the truth?' (A.) 'In that wherein He saith, "The
+Jews say, 'The Nazarenes are [grounded] on nought,' and the
+Nazarenes say, 'The Jews are [grounded] on nought;' and [yet]
+they [both] read the Scripture."[FN#269] And [in this] both speak
+the truth.' (Q.) 'In which doth God speak in His own person [in
+the singular]?' (A.) 'In that in which He saith, "Neither have I
+created Jinn and men, but that they should worship."'[FN#270]
+(Q.) 'In which do the angels speak?' (A.) 'In that which saith,
+"We celebrate Thy praises and hallow Thee."'[FN#271] (Q.) 'What
+sayst thou of the formula, "I seek refuge with God from Satan
+the Stoned"?' (A.) 'It is obligatory, by commandment of God,
+on all who read the Koran, as appears by His saying, "When
+thou readest the Koran, seek refuge with God from Satan the
+Stoned."'[FN#272] (Q.) 'What are the words and variants of
+the formula?' (A.) 'Some say, "I take refuge with God the
+All-hearing and knowing, etc.," and others, "With God the
+Strong;" but the best is that of which the noble Koran and the
+Traditions speak. The Prophet was used, whenas he was about to
+open the Koran, to say, "I take refuge with God from Satan
+the Stoned." And quoth a Tradition, reported by Nafi on the
+authority of his [adopted] father, "The apostle of God used,
+when he rose in the night to pray, to say aloud, 'God is Most
+Great, with [all] greatness! Praise be to God abundantly! Glory
+to God morning and evening!' Then would he say, 'I seek refuge
+with God from Satan the Stoned and from the instigations of the
+Devils and their evil suggestions."' And it is told of Ibn
+Abbas[FN#273] (of whom God accept) that he said, "The first
+time Gabriel came down to the Prophet [with a portion of the
+Koran,] he taught him [the formula of] seeking refuge, saying,
+'O Mohammed, say, "I seek refuge with God the All-hearing and
+knowing;" then say, "In the name of God the Compassionate, the
+Merciful!" And read, in the name of thy Lord who created men
+from clotted blood.'"'[FN#274] (Q.) 'What sayst thou of the
+verse, "In the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful"?
+Is it one of the verses of the Koran?' (A.) 'Yes; it is a verse
+of "The ant"[FN#275] and occurs also [at the head of the first
+and] between every two [following] chapters; and there is much
+difference of opinion, respecting this, among the learned.'
+(Q.) 'Why is not the formula written at the head of the chapter
+of Immunity?'[FN#276] (A.) 'When this chapter was revealed for
+the dissolution of the alliance between the Prophet and the
+idolaters, the former sent Ali ibn Abi Talib (whose face God
+honour) therewith [from Medina to Mecca] at the season of the
+greater pilgrimage;[FN#277] and he read the chapter to them,
+but did not read "In the name, etc."'[FN#278] (Q.) 'What of the
+excellence of the formula and the blessing that attaches to
+it?' (A.) 'It is told of the Prophet that he said, "Never is
+'In the name, etc.' pronounced over aught, but there is a
+blessing in it;" and it is reported, on his authority, that the
+Lord of Glory swore by His glory that never should the formula
+be pronounced over a sick person, but he should be healed of
+his sickness. Moreover, it is said that, when God created the
+empyreal heaven, it was agitated with an exceeding agitation; but
+He wrote on it, "In the name, etc.," and its agitation subsided.
+When the formula was first revealed to the Prophet, he said, "I
+am safe from three things, earthquake and metamorphosis and
+drowning;" and indeed its virtues are great and its blessings
+too many to enumerate. It is told of the Prophet that he said,
+"There will be brought before God, on the judgment day, a man
+with whom He shall reckon and finding no good deed to his account,
+shall order him to the fire; but the man will say, 'O my God,
+Thou hast not dealt justly by me!' Then shall God (to whom belong
+might and majesty) say, 'How so?' and the man will answer, saying,
+'O Lord, for that Thou callest Thyself the Compassionate, the
+Merciful, yet wilt Thou punish me with the fire!' And God
+(extolled be His majesty) shall say, 'I did indeed name myself
+the Compassionate, the Merciful. Carry My servant to Paradise,
+of My mercy, for I am the most Merciful of those that have
+mercy.'"' (Q.) 'What was the origin of the use of the formula?'
+(A.) 'When God revealed the Koran, they wrote, "In Thy name, O
+my God!"; when He revealed the words, "Say, pray ye to God or
+pray ye to the Compassionate, what days ye pray, for to Him
+[belong] the most fair names,"[FN#279] they wrote, "In the name
+of God, the Compassionate;" and when He revealed the words,
+"Your God is one God, there is no god but He, the Compassionate,
+the Merciful,"[FN#280] they wrote, "In the name of God, the
+Compassionate, the Merciful!"' (Q.) 'Did God reveal the Koran
+all at once or at intervals?' (A.) 'Gabriel the Faithful
+[Spirit] (on whom be peace) descended with it from the Lord of
+the Worlds upon His Prophet Mohammed, Prince of the Apostles
+and seal[FN#281] of the Prophets, by detached verses, containing
+commandment and prohibition, promise and menace, anecdotes
+and similitudes, as the occasion called for it, in the course
+of twenty years.' (Q.) 'Which chapter was first revealed?'
+(A.) 'According to Ibn Abbas, that of the Clot of Blood,[FN#282]
+and according to Jabir ben Abdallah,[FN#283] that of the Covered
+[with a cloak].'[FN#284] (Q.) 'Which verse was the last revealed?'
+(A.) 'That of Usury,[FN#285] and it is said [also], the verse,
+"When there cometh God's succour and victory."'[FN#286] (Q.) 'Tell
+me the names of the Companions who collected the Koran, in the
+lifetime of the Apostle of God.' (A.) 'They were four in number,
+to wit, Ubaï ibn Kaab, Zeid ibn Thabit, Abou Ubeideh Aamir ben
+Jerrah and Othman ben Affan,[FN#287] may God accept of them all!'
+(Q.) 'Who are the readers, from whom the [accepted] reading of
+the Koran is taken?' (A.) 'They are four in number, namely,
+Abdallah ben Mesoud, Ubaï ben Kaab, Maadh ben Jebel[FN#288] and
+Salim ben Abdallah.'[FN#289] (Q.) 'What sayst thou of the words
+of the Most High, "That which is sacrificed to stones"?'[FN#290]
+(A.) 'The stones are idols, which are set up and worshipped, instead
+of God the Most High, and [from this] we seek refuge with Him.'
+(Q.) 'What sayst thou of the words of the Most High, "[Quoth
+Jesus] Thou knowest what is in my soul, and I know not what is
+in Thy soul"?'[FN#291] (A.) 'They mean "Thou [God] knowest the
+truth of me and what is in me and I [Jesus] know not what is in
+Thee;" and the proof of this are his words,[FN#292] "Thou [God]
+art He that knoweth the hidden things;" and it is said, also,
+"Thou [God] knowest my essence, but I [man] know not Thine
+essence."' (Q.) 'What sayst thou of the words of the Most High,
+"O ye that believe, deny not yourselves the good things that
+God hath made lawful to you!"?'[FN#293] (A.) 'My master (on
+whom God have mercy) told me that Ez Zuhak[FN#294] said, "There
+was a people of the true-believers who said, 'We will dock our
+yards and don sackcloth;' whereupon this verse was revealed."
+But El Cutadeh[FN#295] says that it was revealed on account of
+sundry Companions of the Apostle of God, Ali ibn Abi Talib and
+Othman ben Musaab and others, who said, "We will dock ourselves
+and don hair [cloth] and make us monks."' (Q.) 'What sayst thou
+of the words of the Most High, "And God took Abraham to
+friend"?'[FN#296] (A.) 'The friend [of God] is the needy, the
+poor, and (according to another saying) he is the lover, he who
+is absorbed in the love of God the Most High and in whose
+exclusive devotion there is no falling away.'
+
+When the professor saw her pass on in speech with the passing
+of the clouds[FN#297] and that she stayed not in answering, he
+rose to his feet and said, 'I take God to witness, O Commander
+of the Faithful, that this damsel is more learned than I in
+Koranic exegesis and what pertains thereto.' Then said she, 'I
+will ask thee one question, which if thou answer, it is well:
+but if thou answer not, I will strip off thy clothes.' 'Ask
+on,' quoth the Khalif; and she said, 'Which verse of the
+Koran has in it three-and-twenty Kafs,[FN#298] which sixteen
+Mims,[FN#299] which a hundred and forty Ains,[FN#300] and which
+section[FN#301] lacks the formula, "To whom [God] belong might
+and majesty"?' He could not answer, and she said to him, 'Put
+off thy clothes.' So he doffed them, and she said, 'O Commander
+of the Faithful, the verse of the sixteen Mims is in the
+chapter Houd and is the saying of the Most High, "It was
+said, 'O Noah, go down in peace from us, and blessing upon
+thee!'"[FN#302]; that of the three-and-twenty Kafs is the verse
+called of the Faith, in the chapter of the Cow; that of the
+hundred and forty Ains is in the chapter of El Aaraf,[FN#303]
+"And Moses chose seventy men of his tribe to [attend] our
+appointed time;[FN#304] to each man a pair of eyes."[FN#305]
+And the set portion which lacks the formula, "To whom [God]
+belong might and majesty," is that which comprises the chapters
+"The Hour draweth nigh and the Moon is cloven in twain," "The
+Compassionate" and "The Event."'[FN#306] And the professor
+departed in confusion.
+
+Then came forward the skilled physician and said to her, 'We
+have done with theology and come now to physiology. Tell me,
+therefore, how is man made, how many veins, bones and vertebræ
+are there in his body, which is the chief vein and why Adam was
+named Adam?' 'Adam was called Adam,' answered she, 'because of
+the udmeh, to wit, the tawny colour of his complexion and also
+(it is said) because he was created of the adim of the earth,
+that is to say, of the soil of its surface. His breast was made
+of the earth of the Kaabeh, his head of earth from the East and
+his legs of earth from the West. There were created for him
+seven doors [or openings] in his head, to wit, the eyes, the
+ears, the nostrils and the mouth, and two passages, the urethra
+and the anus. The eyes were made the seat of the sense of
+sight, the ears of that of hearing, the nostrils of that of
+smell, the mouth of that of taste and the tongue to speak forth
+what is in the innermost heart of man. Adam was originally
+created of four elements combined, water, earth, fire and air.
+The yellow bile is the humour of fire, being hot and dry, the
+black bile that of earth, being cold and dry, the phlegm that
+of water, being cold and moist, and the blood that of air,
+being hot and moist. There are in man three hundred and
+threescore veins, two hundred and forty bones and three souls
+[or natures], the animal, the rational and the essential or
+[natural], to each of which is allotted a separate function.
+Moreover, God made him a heart and spleen and lungs and six
+guts and a liver and two kidneys and marrow [or brain] and
+buttocks and bones and skin and five senses, hearing, seeing,
+smell, taste and touch. The heart He set on the left side of
+the breast and made the stomach the exemplar [or governor]
+thereof. He appointed the lungs for a ventilator to the heart
+and set the liver on the right side, opposite thereto. Moreover,
+He made, besides this, the midriff and the intestines and set
+up the bones of the breast and ribbed them with the ribs.'
+(Q.) 'How many ventricles are there in a man's head?' (A.) 'Three,
+which contain five faculties, styled the intrinsic senses, i.e.
+common sense, fancy, thought, apperception and memory.' (Q.)
+'Describe to me the scheme of the bones.' (A.) 'It consists of
+two hundred and forty bones, which are divided into three parts,
+the head, the trunk and the extremities. The head is divided
+into skull and face. The skull is constructed of eight bones,
+and to it are attached the teeth, two-and- thirty in number,
+and the hyoïd bone, one. The trunk is divided into spinal column,
+breast and basin. The spinal column is made up of four-and-twenty
+bones, called vertebræ, the breast of the breastbone and the ribs,
+which are four-and-twenty in number, twelve on each side, and
+the basin of the hips, the sacrum and the coccyx. The extremities
+are divided into arms and legs. The arms are again divided into
+shoulder, comprising shoulder-blades and collar-bone, the upper-
+arm, one bone, the fore-arm, composed of two bones, the radius and
+the ulna, and the hand, consisting of the wrist, the metacarpus
+and the fingers. The wrist is composed of eight bones, ranked in
+two rows, each comprising four bones; the metacarpus of five
+and the fingers, which are five in number, of three bones each,
+called the phalanges, except the thumb, which has but two.
+The lower extremities are divided into thigh, one bone, leg,
+composed of three bones, the tibia, the fibula and the kneepan,
+and the foot, divided like the hand, with the exception of the
+wrist,[FN#307] which is composed of seven bones, ranged in two
+rows, two in one and five in the other.' (Q.) 'Which is the
+root of the veins?' (A.) 'The aorta from which they ramify, and
+they are many, none knoweth the tale of them save He who
+created them; but, as I have before observed, it is said that
+they are three hundred and threescore in number. Moreover, God
+hath appointed the tongue to interpret [for the thought], the
+eyes to serve as lanterns, the nostrils to smell with, and the
+hands for prehensors. The liver is the seat of pity, the spleen
+of laughter and the kidneys of craft; the lungs are the
+ventilators, the stomach the storehouse and the heart the
+pillar [or mainstay] of the body. When the heart is sound, the
+whole body is sound, and when the heart is corrupt, the whole
+body is corrupt.' (Q.) 'What are the outward signs and symptoms
+of disease in the members of the body, both internal and
+external?' (A.) 'A physician, who is a man of understanding,
+looks into the state of the body and is guided by the feel of
+the hands, according as they are firm [or flabby], hot or cool,
+moist or dry. Internal disorders are also indicated by external
+symptoms, such as yellowness of the [whites of the] eyes, which
+denotes jaundice, and bending of the back, which denotes
+disease of the lungs.' (Q.) 'What are the internal symptoms of
+disease?' (A.) 'The science of the diagnosis of disease by
+internal symptoms is founded upon six canons, to wit, (1) the
+actions [of the patient] (2) what is evacuated from his body
+(3) the nature and (4) site of the pain he feels (5) swelling
+and (6) the effluvia given off by his body.' (Q.) 'How cometh
+hurt to the head?' (A.) 'By the introduction of food upon food,
+before the first be digested, and by satiety upon satiety; this
+it is that wasteth peoples. He who will live long, let him be
+early with the morning-meal and not late with the evening-meal;
+let him be sparing of commerce with women and chary of cupping
+and blood-letting and make of his belly three parts, one for
+food, one for drink and the third for air; for that a man's
+intestines are eighteen spans in length and it befits that he
+appoint six for food, six for drink, and six for air. If he
+walk, let him go gently; it will be wholesomer for him and
+better for his body and more in accordance with the saying of
+God the Most High, "Walk not boisterously [or proudly] upon the
+earth."'[FN#308] (Q.) 'What are the symptoms of yellow bile and
+what is to be feared there-from?' (A.) 'The symptoms are,
+sallow complexion and dryness and bitter taste in the mouth,
+failure of the appetite, and rapid pulse; and the patient has
+to fear high fever and delirium and prickly heat and jaundice
+and tumour and ulceration of the bowels and excessive thirst.'
+(Q.) 'What are the symptoms of black bile and what has the
+patient to fear from it, if it get the mastery of the body?'
+(A.) 'The symptoms are deceptive appetite and great mental
+disquiet and care and anxiety; and it behoves that it be
+evacuated, else it will generate melancholy and leprosy and
+cancer and disease of the spleen and ulceration of the bowels.'
+(Q.) 'Into how many branches is the art of medicine divided?'
+(A.) 'Into two: the art of diagnosing diseases and that of
+restoring the diseased body to health.' (Q.) 'When is the
+drinking of medicine more efficacious than otherwhen?' (A.)
+'When the sap runs in the wood and the grape thickens in
+the cluster and the auspicious planets[FN#309] are in the
+ascendant, then comes in the season of the efficacy of drinking
+medicine and the doing away of disease.' (Q.) 'What time is it,
+when, if a man drink from a new vessel, the drink is wholesomer
+and more digestible to him than at another time, and there
+ascends to him a pleasant and penetrating fragrance?' (A.)
+'When he waits awhile after eating, as quoth the poet:
+
+I rede thee drink not after food in haste, but tarry still;
+ Else with a halter wilt thou lead thy body into ill.
+Yea, wait a little after thou hast eaten, brother mine; Then
+ drink, and peradventure thus shalt thou attain unto thy
+ will.'
+
+
+(Q.) 'What food is it that giveth not rise to ailments?' (A.)
+'That which is not eaten but after hunger, and when it is
+eaten, the ribs are not filled with it, even as saith Galen the
+physician, "Whoso will take in food, let him go slowly and he
+shall not go wrong." To end with the saying of the Prophet,
+(whom God bless and preserve,) "The stomach is the home of
+disease, and abstinence is the beginning[FN#310] of cure,
+[FN#311] for the origin of every disease is indigestion,
+that is to say, corruption of the meat in the stomach."' (Q.)
+'What sayst thou of the bath?' (A.) 'Let not the full man enter
+it. Quoth the Prophet, "The bath is the delight of the house,
+for that it cleanseth the body and calleth to mind the fire [of
+hell]."' (Q.) 'What waters[FN#312] are best for bathing?' (A.)
+'Those whose waters are sweet and plains wide and whose air is
+pleasant and wholesome, its climate [or seasons] being fair,
+autumn and summer and winter and spring.' (Q.) 'What kind of
+food is the most excellent?' (A.) 'That which women make and
+which has not cost overmuch trouble and which is readily
+digested. The most excellent of food is brewis,[FN#313]
+according to the saying of the Prophet, "Brewis excels other
+food, even as Aaïsheh excels other women."' (Q.) 'What kind of
+seasoning[FN#314] is most excellent?' (A.) 'Flesh meat (quoth
+the Prophet) is the most excellent of seasonings; for that it
+is the delight of this world and the next.' (Q.) 'What kind of
+meat is the most excellent?' (A.) 'Mutton; but jerked meat is
+to be avoided, for there is no profit in it.' (Q.) 'What of
+fruits?' (A.) 'Eat them in their prime and leave them when
+their season is past.' (Q.) 'What sayst thou of drinking
+water?' (A.) 'Drink it not in large quantities nor by gulps,
+or it will give thee the headache and cause divers kinds of
+harm; neither drink it immediately after the bath nor after
+copulation or eating (except it be after the lapse of fifteen
+minutes for a young and forty for an old man) or waking from
+sleep.' (Q.) 'What of drinking wine?' (A.) 'Doth not the
+prohibition suffice thee in the Book of God the Most High,
+where He saith, "Verily, wine and casting lots and idols and
+divining arrows are an abomination of the fashion of the Devil:
+shun them, so surely shall ye thrive."[FN#315] And again, "If
+they ask thee of wine and casting lots, say, 'In them are great
+sin and advantages to mankind, but the sin of them is greater
+than the advantage.'"[FN#316] Quoth the poet:
+
+O wine-bibber, art not ashamed and afraid To drink of a thing
+ that thy Maker forbade?
+Come, put the cup from thee and mell with it not, For wine and
+ its drinker God still doth upbraid.
+
+And quoth another:
+
+I drank the sweet sin till my wit went astray: 'Tis ill
+ drinking of that which doth reason away.
+
+As for the useful qualities that are therein, it disperses
+gravel from the kidneys and strengthens the bowels, banishes
+care, moves to generosity and preserves health and digestion.
+It assains the body, expels disease from the joints, purifies
+the frame of corrupt humours, engenders cheerfulness and
+gladdens and keeps up the natural heat. It contracts the
+bladder, strengthens the liver and removes obstructions,
+reddens the face, clears away cobwebs from the brain and defers
+gray hairs. In short, had not God (to whom belong might and
+majesty) forbidden it, there were not on the face of the earth
+aught fit to stand in its place. As for drawing lots, it is a
+game of hazard.'[FN#317] (Q.) 'What wine is the best?' (A.)
+'That which is pressed from white grapes and ferments fourscore
+days or more: it resembleth not water and indeed there is
+nothing on the surface of the earth like unto it.' (Q.) 'What
+of cupping?' (A.) 'It is for him who is [over] full of blood
+and has no defect therein. Whoso will be cupped, let it be at
+the wane of the moon, on a day without cloud or wind or rain
+and the seventeenth of the month. If it fall on a Tuesday, it
+will be the more efficacious, and nothing is more salutary for
+the brain and eyes and for clearing the memory than cupping.'
+(Q.) 'What is the best time for cupping?' (A.) 'One should be
+cupped fasting, for this fortifies the wit and the memory. It
+is reported of the Prophet that, when any one complained to him
+of a pain in the head or legs, he would bid him be cupped and
+not eat salt [meat] fasting, for it engendered scurvy, neither
+eat sour milk immediately after [cupping].' (Q.) 'When is
+cupping to be avoided?' (A.) 'On Wednesdays and Saturdays, and
+let him who is cupped on these days blame none but himself.
+Moreover, one should not be cupped in very hot nor in very cold
+weather; and the best season for cupping is Spring.' (Q.) 'Tell
+me of copulation.'
+
+At this Taweddud hung her head, for shame and confusion before
+the Khalif; then said, 'By Allah, O Commander of the Faithful,
+it is not that I am at fault, but that I am ashamed, though,
+indeed, the answer is on the tip of my tongue.' 'Speak, O
+damsel,' said the Khalif; whereupon quoth she, 'Copulation hath
+in it many and exceeding virtues and praiseworthy qualities,
+amongst which are, that it lightens a body full of black bile
+and calms the heat of love and engenders affection and dilates
+the heart and dispels sadness; and the excess of it is more
+harmful in summer and autumn than in spring and winter.' (Q.)
+'What are its good effects?' (A.) 'It doth away trouble and
+disquiet, calms love and chagrin and is good for ulcers in a
+cold and dry humour; but excess of it weakens the sight and
+engenders pains in the legs and head and back: and beware,
+beware of having to do with old women, for they are deadly.
+Quoth the Imam Ali,[FN#318] (whose face God honour), "Four
+things kill and ruin the body: bathing on a full stomach,
+eating salt meat, copulation on a plethora [of blood] and lying
+with an ailing woman; for she will weaken thy strength and
+infect thy body with sickness; and an old woman is deadly
+poison." And quoth one of them, "Beware of taking an old woman
+to wife, though she be richer in goods than Caroun."'[FN#319]
+(Q.) 'What is the best copulation?' (A.) 'If the woman be
+young, well-shaped, fair of face, swelling-breasted and of
+honourable extraction, she will add to thee strength and health
+of body; and let her be even as saith the poet, describing her:
+
+Even by thy looks, I trow, she knows what thou desir'st, By
+ instinct, without sign or setting forth of sense;
+And when thou dost behold her all-surpassing grace, Her charms
+ enable thee with gardens to dispense.'
+
+(Q.) 'At what time is copulation good?' (A.) 'If by day, after
+the morning-meal, and if by night, after food digested.' (Q.)
+'What are the most excellent fruits?' (A.) 'The pomegranate and
+the citron.' (Q.) 'Which is the most excellent of vegetables?'
+(A.) 'The endive.' (Q.) 'Which of sweet-scented flowers?'
+(A.) 'The rose and the violet.' (Q.) 'How is sperma hominis
+secreted?' (A.) 'There is in man a vein that feeds all the
+other veins. Water [or blood] is collected from the three
+hundred and threescore veins and enters, in the form of red
+blood, the left testicle, where it is decocted, by the heat of
+man's temperament, into a thick, white liquid, whose odour is
+as that of the palm-spathe.' (Q.) 'What bird [or flying thing]
+is it that emits seed and menstruates?' (A.) 'The bat, that is,
+the rere-mouse.' (Q.) 'What is that which, when it is shut out
+[from the air], lives, and when it smells the air, dies?' (A.)
+'The fish.' (Q.) 'What serpent lays eggs?' (A.) 'The dragon.'
+
+With this the physician was silent, being weary with much
+questioning, and Taweddud said to the Khalif, 'O Commander of
+the Faithful, he hath questioned me till he is weary, and now I
+will ask him one question, which if he answer not, I will take
+his clothes as lawful prize.' 'Ask on,' quoth the Khalif. So
+she said to the physician, 'What is that which resembles the
+earth in [plane] roundness, whose resting-place and spine are
+hidden, little of value and estimation, narrow-chested, its
+throat shackled, though it be no thief nor runaway slave,
+thrust through and through, though not in fight, and wounded,
+though not in battle; time eats its vigour and water wastes it
+away; now it is beaten without a fault and now made to serve
+without stint; united after separation, submissive, but not to
+him who caresses it, pregnant[FN#320] without a child in its
+belly, drooping, yet not leaning on its side, becoming dirty
+yet purifying itself, cleaving to [its mate], yet changing,
+copulating without a yard, wrestling without arms, resting and
+taking its ease, bitten, yet not crying out, [now] more
+complaisant than a boon-companion and [anon] more troublesome
+than summer-heat, leaving its wife by night and clipping her
+by day and having its abode in the corners of the mansions of
+the noble?' The physician was silent and his colour changed and
+he bowed his head awhile in perplexity and made no reply;
+whereupon she said to him, 'O physician, speak or put off thy
+clothes.' At this, he rose and said, 'O Commander of the
+Faithful, bear witness against me that this damsel is more
+learned than I in medicine and what else and that I cannot cope
+with her.' And he put off his clothes and fled forth. Quoth the
+Khalif to Taweddud, 'Expound to us thy riddle,' and she
+replied, 'O Commander of the Faithful, it is the button and the
+button loop.'
+
+Then said she, 'Let him of you who is an astronomer come
+forward.' So the astronomer came forward and sat down before
+her. When she saw him, she laughed and said, 'Art thou the
+astronomer, the mathematician, the scribe?' 'Yes,' answered he.
+'Ask of what thou wilt,' quoth she; 'success rests with God.'
+So he said, 'Tell me of the sun and its rising and setting?'
+And she replied, 'The sun rises in the Eastern hemisphere and
+sets in the Western, and each hemisphere comprises ninescore
+degrees. Quoth God the Most High, "Verily, I swear by the Lord
+of the places of the sunrise and of the sunsetting."[FN#321]
+And again, "He it is who appointed the sun for a splendour and
+the moon for a light and ordained to her mansions, that ye
+might know the number of the years and the reckoning."[FN#322]
+The moon is Sultan of the night and the sun Sultan of the day,
+and they vie with one another in their courses and follow each
+other in uninterrupted succession. Quoth God the Most High, "It
+befits not that the sun overtake the moon nor that the night
+prevent the day, but each glides in [its own] sphere."'[FN#323]
+(Q.) 'When the day cometh, what becomes of the night, and what
+of the day, when the night cometh?' (A.) 'He maketh the night
+to enter into the day and the day into the night.'[FN#324] (Q.)
+'Enumerate to me the mansions of the moon.' (A.) 'They are
+eight-and-twenty in number, to wit, Sheretan, Butain, Thureya,
+Deberan, Hecaäh, Henaäh, Dhiraa, Nethreh, Terf, Jebheh, Zubreh,
+Serfeh, Awwaa, Simak and Ghefr, Zubaniya, Iklil, Kelb, Shauleh,
+Naaïm, Beldeh, Saad edh Dhabih, Saad el Bulaa, Saad el Akhbiyeh,
+Saad es Suwoud, Fergh the Former and Fergh the Latter and Rishaa.
+They are disposed in the order of the letters of the alphabet,
+according to their numerical power, and there are in them secret
+virtues which none knoweth save God (glorified and exalted be
+He) and those who are firmly stablished in science. They are
+divided among the twelve signs of the Zodiac, in the ratio of two
+mansions and a third of a mansion to each sign. Thus Sheretan,
+Butain and one-third of Thureya belong to Aries, the other two-
+thirds of Thureya, Deberan and two thirds of Hecaäh to Taurus,
+the other third of Hecaäh, Henaäh and Dhiraa to Gemini, Nethreh,
+Terf, and a third of Jebheh to Cancer, the other two-thirds of
+Jebheh, Zubreh and two-thirds of Serfeh to Leo, the other third
+of Serfeh, Awwaa and Simak to Virgo, Ghefr, Zubaniya and one-third
+of Iklil to Libra, the other two-thirds of Iklil, Kelb and two-
+thirds of Shauleh to Scorpio, the other third of Shauleh, Naaïm
+and Beldeh to Sagittarius, Saad edh Dhabih, Saad el Bulaa and
+one-third of Saad es Suwoud to Capricorn, the other two-thirds
+of Saad es Suwoud, Saad el Akbiyeh and two-thirds of Fergh the
+Former to Aquarius, the other third of Fergh the Former, Fergh
+the Latter and Rishaa to Pisces.' (Q.) 'Tell me of the planets
+and their natures, also of their sojourn in the signs of the
+Zodiac, their aspects, favourable and sinister, their houses,
+ascendants and descendants.' (A.) 'The sitting is narrow [for
+so comprehensive a matter], but they are seven in number, to
+wit, the sun, the moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and
+Saturn. The sun is hot and dry, sinister in conjunction,
+favourable in opposition, and abides thirty days in each sign.
+The moon is cold and moist, favourable of aspect, and abides
+two days in each sign and a third of another day. Mercury is of
+a mixed nature, favourable [in conjunction] with the favourable
+and sinister [in conjunction] with the sinister [asterisms],
+and abides in each sign seventeen and a half days. Venus is
+temperate, favourable and abides in each sign five-and-twenty
+days. Mars is sinister and abides in each sign ten months.
+Jupiter is favourable and abides in each sign a year. Saturn is
+cold and dry and sinister and abides in each sign thirty
+months. The house of the sun is Leo, its ascendant is Aries and
+its descendant Aquarius. The moon's house is Cancer, its
+ascendant Taurus, its descendant Scorpio and its sinister
+aspect Capricorn. Saturn's house is Capricorn and Aquarius, its
+ascendant Libra, its descendant Aries and its sinister aspects
+Cancer and Leo. Jupiter's house is Pisces and Sagittarius, its
+ascendant Cancer, its descendant Capricorn and its sinister
+aspects Gemini and Leo. Venus's house is Taurus, its ascendant
+Pisces, its descendant Libra and its sinister aspects Aries and
+Scorpio. Mercury's house is Gemini and Virgo, its ascendant
+Virgo, its descendant Pisces and its sinister aspect Taurus.
+Mars's house is Aries and Scorpio, its ascendant Capricorn, its
+descendant Cancer and its sinister aspect Libra.'
+
+When the astronomer saw her acuteness and skill and heard her
+fair answers, he bethought him for a device to confound her
+before the Commander of the Faithful and said to her, 'O
+damsel, will rain fall this month?' At this she bowed her head
+and pondered so long, that the Khalif thought her at a loss for
+an answer and the astronomer said to her, 'Why dost thou not
+speak?' Quoth she, 'I will not speak except the Commander of
+the Faithful give me leave.' The Khalif laughed and said, 'How
+so?' Said she, 'I would have thee give me a sword, that I may
+strike off his head, for he is an infidel.' At this the Khalif
+and those about him laughed, and she said, 'O astronomer, there
+are five things that none knoweth save God the Most High;' and
+she repeated the following verse: 'Verily, with God is the
+knowledge of the hour; He sendeth down the rain and knoweth
+what is in the wombs. None knoweth what the morrow shall bring
+forth for him nor in what land he shall die. Verily, God is the
+All-wise, the All-knowing.'[FN#325]
+
+Quoth the astronomer, 'Thou hast said well, and by Allah, I
+thought but to try thee.' 'Know,' rejoined she, 'that the
+almanack-makers have certain signs and tokens, referring to the
+planets, relative to the coming in of the year, and in which
+are tribulations for the folk.' (Q.) 'What are they?' (A.)
+'Each day hath a planet that rules it. So, if the first day of
+the year fall on a Sunday, that day is the sun's and this
+portends (though God alone is All-knowing) oppression of kings
+and sultans and governors and much miasma and lack of rain and
+that the folk will be in great disorder and the grain-crop will
+be good, except lentils, which will perish, and the vines will
+rot and flax will be dear and wheat cheap from the beginning of
+Toubeh[FN#326] to the end of Beremhat.[FN#327] Moreover, in
+this year there will be much fighting among kings, and there
+shall be great plenty of good in this year.' (Q.) 'What if the
+first day fall on Monday?' (A.) 'That day belongs to the moon
+and portends righteousness in administrators and deputies and
+that it will be a year of much rain and grain-crops will be
+good, but linseed will decay and wheat will be cheap in the
+month Keyehk;[FN#328] also that plagues will be rife and
+that half the sheep and goats will die, that grapes will be
+plentiful and honey scarce and cotton cheap.' (Q.) 'What if it
+fall on Tuesday?' (A.) 'That is Mars's day and portends death
+of great men and much destruction and outpouring of blood and
+dearness of grain, lack of rain and scarcity of fish, which
+will anon be in excess and anon fail [altogether]. In this
+year, lentils and honey will be cheap and linseed dear and only
+barley will thrive, to the exception of all other grain: great
+will be the fighting among kings and death will be in the blood
+and there will be much mortality among asses.' (Q.) 'What if it
+fall on Wednesday?' (A.) 'That is Mercury's day and portends
+great anarchy among the folk and much enmity and rotting of
+some of the green crops and moderate rains; also that there
+will be great mortality among cattle and infants and much
+fighting by sea, that wheat will be dear from Burmoudeh to
+Misra[FN#329] and other grains cheap: thunder and lightning
+will abound and honey will be dear, palm-trees will thrive and
+bear apace and flax and cotton will be plentiful, but radishes
+and onions will be dear.' (Q.) 'What if it fall on Thursday?'
+(A.) 'That is Jupiter's day and portends equity in viziers and
+righteousness in Cadis and fakirs and the ministers of religion
+and that good will be plentiful: rain and fruits and trees and
+grain and fish will abound and flax, cotton, honey and grapes
+be cheap.' (Q.) 'What if it fall on Friday?' (A.) 'That day
+belongs to Venus and portends oppression in the chiefs of the
+Jinn and talk of forgery and calumny; there will be much dew,
+the autumn crops will be good in the land and there will be
+cheapness in one town and not in another: lewdness will be
+rife by land and sea, linseed will be dear, also wheat, in
+Hatour,[FN#330] but cheap in Amshir:[FN#331] honey will be
+dear and grapes and melons will rot.' (Q.) 'What if it fall
+on Saturday?' (A.) 'That is Saturn's day and portends the
+preferment of slaves and Greeks and those in whom there is no
+good, neither in their neighbourhood; there will be great
+drought and scarcity; clouds will abound and death will be rife
+among mankind and woe to the people of Egypt and Syria from the
+oppression of the Sultan and failure of blessing upon the green
+crops and rotting of grain.'
+
+With this, the astronomer hung his head, [being at an end of
+his questions], and she said to him, 'O astronomer, I will ask
+thee one question, which if thou answer not, I will take thy
+clothes.' 'Ask on,' replied he. Quoth she, 'Where is Saturn's
+dwelling place?' And he answered, 'In the seventh heaven.' (Q.)
+'And that of Jupiter?' (A.) 'In the sixth heaven.' (Q.) 'And
+that of Mars?' (A.) 'In the fifth heaven.' (Q.) 'And that of
+the sun?' (A.) 'In the fourth heaven.' (Q.) 'And that of
+Venus?' (A.) 'In the third heaven.' (Q.) 'And that of Mercury?'
+(A.) 'In the second heaven.' (Q.) 'And that of the moon?' (A.)
+'In the first heaven.' Quoth she, 'Well answered; but I have
+one more question to ask thee. Into how many parts are the
+stars divided?' But he was silent and answered nothing; and she
+said to him, 'Put off thy clothes.' So he put them off and she
+took them; after which the Khalif said to her, 'Tell us the
+answer to thy question.' 'O Commander of the Faithful,'
+answered she, 'the stars are divided into three parts, one
+whereof is hung in the sky of the earth,[FN#332] as it were
+lamps, to give light to the earth, another suspended in the
+air, to give light to the seas and that which is therein, and
+the third is used to transfix the demons withal, when they draw
+near by stealth to [listen to the talk of the angels in]
+heaven. Quoth God the Most High, "Verily, we have decked the
+sky of the earth with lamps and have appointed them for
+projectiles against the demons."'[FN#333] Quoth the astronomer,
+'I have one more question to ask, which if she answer, I will
+avow myself beaten.' 'Say on,' answered she. Then said he,
+'What four incompatible things are based upon other four
+incompatibles?' 'The four elements,' replied she; 'for of heat
+God created fire, which is by nature hot and dry; of dryness,
+earth, which is cold and dry; of cold, water, which is cold and
+moist; of moisture, air, which is hot and moist. Moreover, He
+created twelve signs of the Zodiac, Aries, Taurus, Gemini,
+Cancer, Leo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn,
+Aquarius and Pisces and appointed them of four [several]
+humours, three, Aries, Leo and Sagittarius, fiery, Taurus, Virgo
+and Capricorn, earthy, Gemini, Libra and Aquarius, airy, and
+Cancer, Scorpio and Pisces, watery.' With this, the astronomer
+rose, and saying, 'Bear witness against me that she is more
+learned than I,' went away beaten.
+
+Then said the Khalif, 'Where is the philosopher?' whereupon one
+came forward and said to Taweddud, 'What is Time?' 'Time,'
+answered she, 'is a name applied to the [lapse of the] hours of
+the day and night, which are but the measures of the courses of
+the sun and moon in their several orbits, even as God the Most
+High telleth us, when he saith, "And a sign to them [is] the
+night, from which we strip off the day, and behold, they are in
+darkness, and the sun runneth to a fixed abode, [appointed] to
+it; this is the ordinance of the Sublime, the All-knowing."'
+[FN#334] (Q.) 'How comes unbelief to the son of Adam?' (A.) 'It
+is reported of the Prophet that he said, "Unbelief runs in a man,
+as the blood runs in the veins, when he reviles the world and Time
+and night and the hour." And again, "Let none of you revile Time,
+for Time is God; neither the world, for it saith, 'May God not
+help him that reviles me!' neither the hour, for 'Verily, the hour
+cometh, without doubt;'[FN#335] neither the earth, for it is a
+portent, according to the saying of the Most High, 'From it we
+created you, to it we will return you and from it we will bring
+you forth yet again.'"'[FN#336] (Q.) 'What are the five that ate
+and drank, yet came not out of loins nor belly?' (A.) 'Adam and
+Simeon and Salih's she-camel[FN#337] and Ishmael's ram and the
+bird that Abou Bekr the Truth-teller saw in the cave.'[FN#338]
+(Q.) 'Tell me of five that are in Paradise and are neither
+mortals, Jinn nor angels?' (A.) 'Jacob's wolf and the Seven
+Sleepers' dog and Esdras's ass and Salih's camel and the
+Prophet's mule.' (Q.) 'What man prayed a prayer neither on
+earth nor in heaven?' (A.) 'Solomon [son of David], when he
+prayed on his carpet, borne by the wind.' (Q.) 'A man once
+looked at a handmaid in the morning, and she was unlawful to
+him; but, at noonday, she became lawful to him. By mid-afternoon,
+she was again unlawful, but at sundown, she was lawful to him.
+At evensong, she was a third time unlawful, but by daybreak, she
+became once more lawful to him.' (A.) 'This was a man who looked
+at another's handmaid in the morning, and she was then unlawful
+to him, but at midday he bought her, and she became lawful to him.
+At mid-afternoon he enfranchised her, and she became unlawful to
+him, but at sundown he married her and she was again lawful to
+him. At evensong, he divorced her and she was then a third time
+unlawful to him, but, next morning, at daybreak, he took her back,
+and she became once more lawful to him.' (Q.) 'Tell me what tomb
+fared on with him that lay buried therein?' (A.) 'The whale,
+when it had swallowed Jonah.' (Q.) 'What spot of ground is it,
+upon which the sun shone once, but will never again shine till
+the Day of Judgment?' (A.) 'The bottom of the Red Sea, when Moses
+smote it with his staff, and the sea clove asunder in twelve
+places, according to the number of the tribes; then the sun
+shone on the bottom and will do so never again till the Day of
+Judgment.' (Q.) 'What was the first skirt that trailed upon the
+surface of the earth?' (A.) 'That of Hagar, out of shame before
+Sarah, and it became a custom among the Arabs.' (Q.) 'What is
+that which breathes without life?' (A.) 'Quoth God the Most
+High, "By the morning, when it breathes!"'[FN#339] (Q.) 'A
+number of pigeons came to a high tree and lighted, some on the
+tree and others under it. Said those on the tree to those on
+the ground, "If one of you come up to us, ye will be a third
+part of us [all] in number; and if one of us descend to you, we
+shall be like unto you in number." How many pigeons were there
+in all?' (A.) 'Twelve: seven alighted on the tree and five
+beneath.'
+
+With this the philosopher put off his clothes and fled forth:
+whereupon she turned to those present and said, 'Which of you
+is the rhetorician that can discourse of all kinds of
+knowledge?' There came forward Ibrahim ben Siyyar and said to
+her, 'Think me not like the rest.' Quoth she, 'It is the more
+sure to me that thou wilt be beaten, for that thou art a
+boaster, and God will help me against thee, that I may strip
+thee of thy clothes. So, if thou sentest one to fetch thee
+wherewithal to clothe thyself, it would be well for thee.' 'By
+Allah,' cried he, 'I will assuredly conquer thee and make thee
+a byword among the folk, generation after generation!' 'Do
+penance [in advance] for thy [void] oath,' rejoined she. Then
+said he, 'What five things did God create, before He made man?'
+And she replied, 'Water and earth and light and darkness and
+the fruits [of the earth].' (Q.) 'What did God create with the
+hand of omnipotence?' (A.) 'The empyreal heaven and the tree
+Touba[FN#340] and Adam and the garden of Eden; these God
+created with the hand of His omnipotence; but to all other
+created things He said, "Be,"--and they were.' (Q.) 'Who is thy
+father in Islam?' (A.) 'Mohammed, whom God bless and preserve!'
+(Q.) 'Who was the father [in Islam] of Mohammed?' (A.) 'Abraham
+the Friend of God.' (Q.) 'What is the Faith of Islam?' (A.)
+'The professing that there is no god but God and that Mohammed
+is the apostle of God.' (Q.) 'What is thy first and thy last?'
+(A.) 'My first is troubled water[FN#341] and my last filthy
+carrion. The first of me is dust and the last dust. Quoth the
+poet:
+
+Created wast thou of the dust and didst a man become, Ready in
+ question and reply and fluent in debate.
+Then to the dust return'dst anon and didst become of it, For
+ that, in very deed, of dust at first thou wast create.'
+
+(Q.) 'What thing was it, whose first [state] was wood and its
+last life?' (A.) 'Moses' rod, when he cast it on the ground and
+it became, by permission of God, a writhing serpent.'[FN#342]
+(Q.) 'What is the meaning of the verse in the Koran, "And I
+have other need [or occasion] for it"?'[FN#343] (A.) 'He
+[Moses] was wont to plant his staff in the ground, and it would
+flower and fruit and shade him from the heat and the cold.
+Moreover, it would carry him, when he was weary, and guard his
+sheep from the wild beasts, whilst he slept.' (Q.) 'What woman
+was born of a man alone and what man of a woman alone?' (A.) 'Eve
+of Adam and Jesus of Mary.' (Q.) 'What fire eats and drinks, what
+fire eats but drinks not, what fire drinks but eats not and what
+other neither eats nor drinks?' (A.) 'Hellfire eats and drinks,
+the fire of the world eats but drinks not, the fire of the sun
+drinks but eats not, and that of the moon neither eats nor drinks.'
+(Q.) 'Which is the open [door] and which the shut [door]?' (A.)
+'The Traditional Ordinances are the open, the Koranic the shut
+[door].' (Q.) 'Of what does the poet speak, when he says:
+
+A dweller in the sepulchre, at 's head his victual lies; Whenas
+ he tastes thereof, he speaks and questions and replies.
+He rises up and walks and talks, yet silent is the while, And
+ turns anon unto the tomb wherefrom he did arise.
+No living one is he, that hath a title to respect, Nor dead,
+ that folk should say of him, "God's mercy him comprise!"?'
+
+(A.) 'The pen.' (Q.) 'What does the poet refer to in these
+verses:
+
+Two breasts in one it hath; its blood is eath and quick of
+ flow, Wide-mouthed, though all the rest be black, its ears
+ are white as snow.
+It hath an idol like a cock, that doth its belly peck, And half
+ a dirhem is its worth, if thou its price wouldst know?'
+
+(A.) 'The inkhorn.' (Q.) 'And in these:
+
+Say to men of wit and learning and to doctors everywhere,
+ Skilled to find the hidden meanings riddles and enigmas
+ bear,
+Come expound to me what is it that ye see a bird produce,
+ 'Mongst the Arabs and barbarians and wherever else ye
+ fare;
+Neither flesh nor blood, I warrant, hath the thing whereof I
+ speak; Neither down nor feathers, birdwise, for a garment
+ doth it wear.
+Boiled it is and likewise roasted, eaten hot and eaten cold;
+ Yea, to boot, and when 'tis buried in the glowing embers'
+ flare,
+Colours twain in it are noted, one as silver clear and white,
+ And the other lucent yellow, gold therewith may not
+ compare.
+Living can it not be reckoned, neither may we count it dead:
+ Tell me, then, what is this wonder, rarity of all things
+ rare?'
+
+(A.) 'Thou makest long the questioning of an egg worth a doit.'
+(Q.) 'How many words [or times] did God speak to Moses?' (A.)
+'It is related of the Prophet that he said, "God spoke to Moses
+fifteen hundred and fifteen words [or times]."' (Q.) 'Tell me
+of fourteen things that speak to the Lord of the Worlds?' (A.)
+'The seven heavens and the seven earths, when they say, "We
+come, obedient."'[FN#344] (Q.) 'How was Adam created?' (A.)
+'God created Adam of clay: the clay He made of foam and the
+foam of the sea, the sea of darkness, darkness of light, light
+of a fish, the fish of a rock, the rock of a ruby, the ruby of
+water, and the water He created by the exertion of His omnipotent
+will, according to His saying (exalted be His name!), "His
+commandment is only when He willeth aught, that He say, 'Be,'
+--and it is."'[FN#345] (Q.) 'What is meant by the poet in the
+following verses:
+
+A things sans mouth or maw that eats in wondrous wise; On trees
+ and beasts it feeds and all beneath the skies.
+Give it to eat, it thrives and flourishes amain; But give it
+ not to drink of water, or it dies?'
+
+(A.) 'Fire.' (Q.) 'And in these:
+
+Two lovers, that are still estopped from all delight:
+ Embracing, each with each, they pass the livelong night.
+They guarantee the folk from all calamity, And with the risen
+ sun they're torn apart forthright?'
+
+(A.) 'The leaves of a gate.' (Q.) 'Tell me of the gates of
+Hell?' (A.) 'They are seven in number and their names are
+comprised in the following verses:
+
+Jehennem first, then Leza comes and eke Hetim as well; Then
+ must thou count Saïr, and fifth comes Seker, sooth to
+ tell:
+Sixth comes Jehim and last of all, Hawiyeh; thus thou hast, In
+ compass brief of doggrel rhyme, the seven rooms of Hell.'
+
+(Q.) 'To what does the poet refer in these verses:
+
+A pair of ringlets long she hath, that trail for aye Behind
+ her, as she comes and goes upon her way,
+And eye that never knows the taste of sleep nor sheds A tear,
+ for none it hath for shedding, sooth to say;
+Nor wears it aught of clothes, from year to ended year; Yet in
+ all manner wede it doth the folk array?'
+
+(A.) 'A needle.' (Q.) 'What is the length and breadth of the
+bridge Es Sirat?' (A.) 'Its length is three thousand years'
+journey, a thousand in descent, a thousand level and a thousand
+in ascent: it is sharper than a sword and finer than a hair.'
+(Q.) 'How many intercessions [with God] hath the Prophet [for
+each soul]?' (A.) 'Three.' (Q.) 'Was Abou Bekr the first that
+embraced Islam?' (A.) 'Yes.' (Q.) 'Yet Ali[FN#346] became a
+Muslim before him?' (A.) 'All came to the Prophet, when he was
+a boy of seven years old, for God vouchsafed him the knowledge
+of the truth in his tender youth, so that he never prostrated
+himself to idols.' (Q.) 'Which is the more excellent, Ali or
+Abbas?'[FN#347]
+
+Now she knew that, in propounding this question, Ibrahim was
+laying a trap for her; for, if she said, 'Ali is the more
+excellent,' she would fall in disgrace with the Khalif; so she
+bowed her head awhile, now reddening, now paling, then said,
+'Thou askest me of two excellent men, each having [his own
+especial] excellence. Let us return to what we were about.'
+When the Khalif heard her reply, he rose to his feet and said,
+'By the Lord of the Kaabeh, thou hast said well, O Taweddud!'
+Then said Ibrahim, 'What means the poet, when he says:
+
+Slender of skirts and slim of shape and sweet of taste it is,
+ Most like unto the spear, except it lacks of the spontoon.
+In all the countries of the world the folk make use of it, And
+ eaten 'tis in Ramazan, after mid-afternoon?'
+
+She answered, 'The sugar-cane;' and he said, 'Tell me of many
+things.' 'What are they?' asked she; and he said, 'What is
+sweeter than honey, what is sharper than the sword, what is
+swifter than poison, what is the delight of a moment and what
+the contentment of three days, what is the pleasantest of days,
+what is the joy of a week, what is the debt that the worst
+payer denieth not, what is the prison of the tomb, what is the
+joy of the heart, what is the snare of the soul, what is death
+in life, what is the malady that may not be healed, what is the
+reproach that may not be done away, what is the beast that
+harbours not in cultivated fields, but lodges in waste places
+and hates mankind and hath in it somewhat of the make of seven
+strong beasts?' Quoth she, 'Hear what I shall say in answer;
+then put off thy clothes, that I may expound to thee.' Then the
+Khalif said, 'Expound, and he shall put off his clothes.' So
+she said, 'That, which is sweeter than honey, is the love of
+pious children to their parents; that, which is sharper than
+the sword, is the tongue; that, which is swifter than poison,
+is the evil eye; the delight of a moment is coition and the
+contentment of three days is the depilatory for women; the
+pleasantest of days is that of profit on merchandise; the joy
+of a week is the bride; the debt, which the worst payer denieth
+not, is death; the prison of the tomb is an ill son; the joy of
+the heart is a woman obedient to her husband, (and it is said
+also that, when fleshmeat descends upon the heart, it rejoiceth
+therein); the snare [or vexation] of the soul is a disobedient
+slave; death in life is poverty; the malady, that may not be
+healed, is an ill nature and the reproach, that may not be done
+away, is an ill daughter; lastly, the beast that harbours not
+in cultivated fields, but lodges in waste places and hates
+mankind and hath in it somewhat of the make of seven strong
+beasts, is the locust, whose head is as the head of the horse,
+its neck as the neck of the bull, its wings as the wings of the
+vulture, its feet as the feet of the camel, its tail as the
+tail of the serpent, its body as the body of the scorpion and
+its horns as the horns of the gazelle.'
+
+The Khalif was astounded at her quickness and understanding and
+said to Ibrahim, 'Put off thy clothes.' So he rose and said, 'I
+call all who are present in this assembly to witness that she
+is more learned than I and all the learned men.' And he put off
+his clothes and gave them to her, saying, 'Take them and may
+God not bless them to thee!' The Khalif ordered him fresh
+clothes and said to Taweddud, 'There is one thing left of
+that for which thou didst engage, namely, chess.' And he
+sent for professors of chess and draughts and backgammon. The
+chess-player sat down before her, and they set the pieces, and
+he moved and she moved; but, every move he made she speedily
+countered, till she beat him and he found himself check-mated.
+Quoth he, 'I did but lead thee on, that thou mightest think
+thyself skilful; but set up again, and I will show thee.' So
+they placed the pieces a second time, and he said to himself,
+'Open thine eyes, or she will beat thee.' And he fell to moving
+no piece, save after calculation, and ceased not to play, till
+she said, 'Check-mate.' When he saw this, he was confounded at
+her quickness and skill; but she laughed and said, 'O master,
+I will make a wager with thee on this third game. I will give
+thee the queen and the right-hand rook and the left-hand knight;
+if thou beat me, take my clothes, and if I beat thee, I will
+take thine.' 'I agree to this,' replied he, and they replaced
+the pieces, she giving him the queen, rook and knight. Then
+said she, 'Move, O master.' So he moved, saying in himself,
+'I cannot but win, with such an advantage,' and made a combination;
+but she moved on, little by little, till she made one of her pawns
+a queen and pushing up to him pawns and other pieces, to take off
+his attention, set one in his way and tempted him with it.[FN#348]
+Accordingly, he took it and she said to him, 'The measure is meted
+out and the equilibrium established. Eat, O man, till thou pass
+repletion; nought shall be thy ruin but greediness. Knowest thou
+not that I did but tempt thee, that I might beguile thee? See:
+this is check-mate: put off thy clothes.' 'Leave me my trousers,'
+quoth he, 'so God requite thee;' and he swore by Allah that he
+would contend with none, so long as Taweddud abode at the Court
+of Baghdad. Then he took off his clothes and gave them to her
+and went away.
+
+Then came the backgammon-player, and she said to him, 'If I
+beat thee, what wilt thou give me?' Quoth he, 'I will give thee
+ten suits of brocade of Constantinople, figured with gold, and
+ten suits of velvet and a thousand dinars, and if I beat thee,
+I ask nothing but that thou write me an acknowledgment thereof.'
+'To it, then,' replied she, 'and do thy best.' So they played,
+and he lost and went away, jabbering in the Frank jargon and
+saying, 'By the bounty of the Commander of the Faithful, there
+is not her like in all the world!' Then the Khalif summoned
+players on instruments of music and said to her, 'Dost thou
+know aught of music?' 'Yes,' answered she. So he bade bring
+a peeled and polished lute, whose owner [or maker] was ground
+down by exile [or estrangement from the beloved] and of which
+quoth one, describing it:
+
+God watered a land and straight a tree sprang up on its root:
+ It cast forth branches and throve and flourished with many
+ a shoot.
+The birds, when the wood was green, sang o'er it, and when it
+ was dry, Fair women sang to it in turn, for lo, 'twas a
+ minstrel's lute!
+
+So they brought a bag of red satin, with tassels of
+saffron-coloured silk: and she opened the bag, and took out a
+lute, on which were graven the following verses:
+
+Full many a tender branch a lute for singing-girl has grown,
+ Wherewith at banquets to her mates she makes melodious
+ moan.
+She sings; it follows on her song, as 'twere to teach her how
+ Heart's troubles in clear perfect speech of music to make
+ known.
+
+She laid her lute in her lap and letting her breasts hang over
+it, bent to it as bends a mother, suckling her child; then
+preluded in twelve different modes, till the whole assembly was
+agitated with delight, and sang the following verses:
+
+Leave your estrangement, I pray, and bid your cruelty hold,
+ For, by your life, my heart will never for you be
+ consoled.
+Have pity on one who weeps, afflicted and ever sad, A slave of
+ passion, who burns for thee with longings untold.
+
+The Khalif was ravished and exclaimed, 'May God bless thee and
+receive him who taught thee[FN#349] into His mercy!' Whereupon
+she rose and kissed the earth before him. Then he sent for
+money and paid her master Aboulhusn a hundred thousand dinars
+to her price; after which he said to her, 'O Taweddud, ask a
+boon of me.' 'O Commander of the Faithful,' replied she, 'I ask
+of thee that thou restore me to my lord who sold me to thee.'
+'It is well,' answered the Khalif and restored her to her
+master and gave her five thousand dinars for herself. Moreover,
+he appointed Aboulhusn one of his boon-companions and assigned
+him a monthly stipend of a thousand dinars so long as he should
+live, and he abode with the damsel Taweddud in all delight of
+life.
+
+Marvel then, O King, at the eloquence of this damsel and the
+greatness of her learning and understanding and her perfect
+excellence in all branches of knowledge, and consider the
+generosity of the Khalif Haroun er Reshid, in that he gave her
+master this money and said to her, 'Ask a boon of me;' and she
+besought him to restore her to her lord. So he restored her to
+him and gave her five thousand dinars for herself and made him
+one of his boon-companions. Where is such generosity to be
+found after the Abbaside Khalifs, may God the Most High have
+mercy upon them all!
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Vol. IV
+
+
+
+
+ Arabian Nights, Volume 4
+ Footnotes
+
+
+[FN#1] A very famous legist and wit of the eighth century and a
+prime favourite with Er Reshid. He was one of the chief pupils
+of the Imam Abou Henifeh (see note, Vol. II. p. 131 {see Vol. 2
+FN#91}) and was Cadi of Baghdad under the third, fourth and
+fifth Khalifs of the Abbaside dynasty.
+
+[FN#2] Shown in choosing so learned a Cadi.
+
+[FN#3] Governor of the two Iraks (i.e. Bassora and Cufa) in the
+reign of Hisham, tenth Khalif of the Ommiade dynasty (A.D.
+723-741). He was celebrated for his beneficence and liberality.
+
+[FN#4] Koran iii. 178, etc.
+
+[FN#5] "The hand of a thief shall not be cut off for stealing
+less than a quarter of a dinar."--Mischat ul Masabih.
+
+[FN#6] El Asmai the poet, author or compiler of the well-known
+romance of Antar.
+
+[FN#7] Zanzibar (ant. Zengibar).
+
+[FN#8] The word Sherif (lit. noble) signifies strictly a
+descendant of the martyr Hussein, son of the Khalif Ali; but it
+is here used in the sense of "chief" [of the bazaar].
+
+[FN#9] Quære Mensour en Nemri, a well-known poet of the time
+and (originally) a protege of Yehya's son, El Fezl.
+
+[FN#10] Intendant of the palace to Haroun er Reshid and captain
+of his guards.
+
+[FN#11] i.e. the Khalif
+
+[FN#12] i.e. As if he were an old Bedouin, with forehead
+disfigured by the friction of the rope of camel's hair, which
+is part of the Bedouin headdress.
+
+[FN#13] Mohammed said, "Change the whiteness of your hair, but
+not with anything black." Henna is the approved hairdye for a
+true-believer; it changes the hair to a reddish-brown.
+
+[FN#14] i.e. thou that art as dear to me as my sight and
+hearing.
+
+[FN#15] A fountain of Paradise.
+
+[FN#16] Syn. languishing (munkesir).
+
+[FN#17] A river of Paradise.
+
+[FN#18] i.e. Orthodox.
+
+[FN#19] These words are a quotation from a well-known piece of
+verse.
+
+[FN#20] Of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#21] Usually made of palm-fibres.
+
+[FN#22] The distinctive headdress of the Muslims.
+
+[FN#23] The bridge that spans Hell, finer than a hair and
+sharper than a sword, and over which all must pass on the Day
+of Judgment.
+
+[FN#24] Or leader of the people at prayer, who stands opposite
+the niche sunk into or painted on the wall of the mosque, to
+indicate the direction of Mecca.
+
+[FN#25] All this is an audacious parody of the Muslim ritual of
+prayer.
+
+[FN#26] Lit. "exclamations of 'Glory be to God!'" which are of
+frequent recurrence in the Mohammedan formulas of prayer. See
+last note.
+
+[FN#27] i.e. governor.
+
+[FN#28] The word ucwaneh, here used in the dual number, usually
+designates the teeth, in its common meaning of "camomile-
+flower": but the lips are here expressly mentioned, and this
+fact, together with that of the substitution, in the Breslau
+edition, of the word akikan (two cornelians or rubies) for
+ucwanetan (two camomiles), as in the Calcutta and Boulac
+editions, shows that the word is intended to be taken in its
+rarer meaning of "corn-marigold."
+
+[FN#29] Syn. Fortune (ez zeman).
+
+[FN#30] One of the tribes of the Arabs and that to which the
+renowned Maan ben Zaideh (see Vol. III. p. 317, {Vol. 3,
+FN#121}) belonged.
+
+[FN#31] The Muslims accuse the Jews of having corrupted the
+Pentateuch and others of their sacred books, even as the
+Christians the Gospels (see Vol. II. page 149, note {Vol. 2,
+FN#97}), by expunging or altering the passages foretelling the
+coming of Mohammed.
+
+[FN#32] See Vol. I. p. 135, note 2. {Vol. 1, FN#45}
+
+[FN#33] i.e. as a martyr.
+
+[FN#34] The force of this comparison will best appear from the
+actual figuration of the Arabic double-letter Lam-Alif (Anglice
+L.A.) which is made up of the two letters *<arabic character>,
+(initial form of Lam) and *<arabic character> (final of Alif,)
+and is written thus, *<arabic character>.
+
+[FN#35] i.e. O thou, whose glance is as the light of the
+glowing embers.
+
+[FN#36] Thus figured in Arabic *<arabic character>.
+
+[FN#37] Thus *<arabic character>.
+
+[FN#38] Thus *<arabic character>.
+
+[FN#39] Koran xxvil. 12.
+
+[FN#40] Koran iii. 103.
+
+[FN#41] Koran xcii. 1,2.
+
+[FN#42] Sauda, feminine of aswed (black), syn. black bile
+(melancholia).
+
+[FN#43] The distinctive colour of which is white.
+
+[FN#44] Koran li. 26.
+
+[FN#45] Mohammed.
+
+[FN#46] Koran ii. 64, referring to an expiatory heifer which
+the Jews were commanded, through Moses, to sacrifice.
+
+[FN#47] See note, Vol III. p. 104 {Vol. 3, FN#19}
+
+[FN#48] Sulafeh.
+
+[FN#49] Sewalif, plural of salifeh (equivalent of sulafeh). A
+play upon the double meaning of the word is, of course,
+intended.
+
+[FN#50] Syn. yellowness (isfirar).
+
+[FN#51] A title of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#52] His wife Zubeideh.
+
+[FN#53] i.e. his beautiful slave-girls.
+
+[FN#54] i.e. his beautiful slave-girls.
+
+[FN#55] Title of Saladin (Selaheddin) and several other
+Eyoubite Sultans of Egypt and Syria. It is equivalent to our
+"Defender of the Faith."
+
+[FN#56] Koran xli. 46.
+
+[FN#57] A town of Upper Egypt.
+
+[FN#58] Meaning the merchant, whose name, Abou Jaafer or the
+like, he had learnt from the tailor.
+
+[FN#59] Muslim Jews.
+
+[FN#60] A well-known jurist at Baghdad in the reign of the
+Khalif Mamoun.
+
+[FN#61] Medina.
+
+[FN#62] One of the gates of the great mosque there, wherein is
+the tomb of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#63] Tenth Khalif of the Abbaside dynasty, A.D. 849-861.
+
+[FN#64] Muwelledat, women born in Muslim countries of
+slave-parents; syn. mulatto-women.
+
+[FN#65] Lieutenant of the Prefect of Baghdad.
+
+[FN#66] Muwelledat, women born in Muslim countries of
+slave-parents; syn. mulatto-women.
+
+[FN#67] El Hakim bi Amrillah, sixth Fatimite Khalif of Egypt
+(A.D. 995-1021), cruel and fantastic tyrant, who claimed to be
+an incarnation of the Deity. He was the founder of the religion
+of the Druses, who look to him to reappear and be their Messiah
+
+[FN#68] Bastard or Spanish pellitory.
+
+[FN#69] Or dyed.
+
+[FN#70] Or interlocking.
+
+[FN#71] Or torn.
+
+[FN#72] Sufreh, a round piece of leather used (mostly by
+travellers) as a table-cloth and having a running string
+inserted round its edge, by means of which it can be converted
+into a bag or budget for holding provisions, as in this
+instance.
+
+[FN#73] Lower India.
+
+[FN#74] i.e. as master of the house in which I have sought
+shelter.
+
+[FN#75] Uns el Wujoud.
+
+[FN#76] A pun upon his name, Uns wa joud, pleasance and bounty.
+
+[FN#77] See supra, p. 95, note 3. {Vol. 4, FN#38}
+
+[FN#78] The fourteenth letter of the Arabic alphabet, in its
+medial form (<arabic>) closely resembling an eye underlined
+with kohl.
+
+[FN#79] See Note, Vol. III. p. 274. {Vol. 3, FN#102}
+
+[FN#80] i.e. in dreams..
+
+[FN#81] One of the months in which war was forbidden to the
+pagan Arabs and a sort of Trève de Dieu prevailed.
+
+[FN#82] The Arabic word fakir means literally, "a poor man;"
+but it would appear, from what follows, that Uns el Wujoud had
+disguised himself as a religious mendicant and was taken for
+such by the people of the castle.
+
+[FN#83] i.e. one absorbed in the contemplation of supra-
+terrestrial things.
+
+[FN#84] Uns el Wujoud.
+
+[FN#85] To salute them and wish them joy, according to Oriental
+custom.
+
+[FN#86] Mosul is called the land of purity, in a religious
+sense, it having never been polluted with idolatrous worship.
+
+[FN#87] The people of Aleppo seem to have been noted for
+debauchery.
+
+[FN#88] i.e. Do not express admiration openly, lest it attract
+the evil eye, but vent your wonder by saying, "God bless and
+preserve the Prophet!" according to general Muslim wont.
+
+[FN#89] A gorge near Mecca, the scene of one of Mohammed's
+battles.
+
+[FN#90] i.e. as made out of a crooked rib, according to the
+tradition.
+
+[FN#91] i.e. the land of the virgin.
+
+[FN#92] The word Jamiaïn means "two congregational mosques,"
+which would only be found in a large town like Baghdad. It is
+possible, therefore, that the expression, "land of Jamiaïn,"
+may mean Baghdad or some other great city, noted for its
+debauched manners.
+
+[FN#93] Oriental substitute for slate.
+
+
+[FN#94] A pre-Mohammedan poet.
+
+[FN#95] King of Hireh in Chaldæa, a fantastic and bloodthirsty
+tyrant, whom he had lampooned.
+
+[FN#96] Aboulabbas er Recashi, a well-known poet of the time.
+
+[FN#97] Koran xxvi. 224, 5, 6.
+
+[FN#98] Half-brother of Abdallah ben ez Zubeir, the celebrated
+pretender to the Khalifate, see Vol. III. p. 194, note 3. {Vol.
+3, FN#62}
+
+[FN#99] Grand-daughter of the Khalif Aboubekr and the most
+beautiful woman of her day.
+
+[FN#100] A famous Medinan Traditionist of the eighth century.
+
+[FN#101] Er Zubeir ibn el Awwam, cousin-german to Mohammed and
+one of his Companions.
+
+[FN#102] Abou Mohammed el Aamesh, a Cufan Traditionist of the
+eighth century.
+
+[FN#103] A Traditionist of the seventh century.
+
+[FN#104] One of the Companions.
+
+[FN#105] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#106] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#107] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#108] Companions of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#109] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#110] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#111] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries.
+
+[FN#112] Companions of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#113] A.D. 530-579. The founder of the great Persian dynasty
+of the Kisras (Chosroës). Mohammed was born in the reign of
+this monarch, whose name is a synonym with Eastern writers for
+all that is just and noble in a King.
+
+[FN#114] Wife of Mohammed.
+
+[FN#115] Daughter of Mohammed.
+
+[FN#116] Lit. "of the ancestors," i.e. those pious and blessed
+persons who have gone before. The word es selef (the ancestors)
+is specially applied to Mohammed, his wife Aaisheh, the first
+three Khalifs and certain other early Muslims.
+
+[FN#117] Khusrau Perviz, grandson of Kisra Anoushirwan (see
+supra, p. 228). {Vol. 4, FN#113}
+
+[FN#118] The famous beauty, daughter of Maurice, Emperor of the
+East, and heroine of Nizami's well-known poem.
+
+[FN#119] First cousin of Haroun er Reshid.
+
+[FN#120] Son and successor of Er Reshid.
+
+[FN#121] A well-known grammarian and traditionist of the time,
+afterwards governor of part of Khorassan, under the Khalif El
+Mamoun.
+
+[FN#122] Intendant of the palace under Er Reshid.
+
+[FN#123] i.e. lover.
+
+[FN#124] Muslim version of Susannah and the Elders.
+
+[FN#125] Lit. O frosty-beard (fool), how frosty was thy beard!
+
+[FN#126] Descendant of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#127] Name of a tribe.
+
+[FN#128] A descendant of Ishmael, from whom the Arab
+genealogists trace Mohammed's lineage.
+
+[FN#129] Koran xxxiii. 38.
+
+[FN#130] Koran xxxviii. 2.
+
+[FN#131] One of the Companions of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#132] Of the Prophet i.e. those who had personally known
+Mohammed.
+
+[FN#133] i.e. the builders, who, in the East, use mud or clay
+for mortar.
+
+[FN#134] About a penny.
+
+[FN#135] Mohammed.
+
+
+[FN#136] A woman's name.
+
+[FN#137] For putting out the fire in a brasier or
+cooking-stove.
+
+[FN#138] The last Kings of Hireh were Christians.
+
+[FN#139] A prae-Islamitic poet.
+
+[FN#140] King of Persia and En Numan's suzerain.
+
+[FN#141] A celebrated poet of the eighth and ninth centuries at
+the court d the Abbaside Khalifs.
+
+[FN#142] A quarter of Baghdad.
+
+[FN#143] Another well-known poet of the time, Dibil's teacher
+and friend.
+
+[FN#144] Underground rooms are much used in Baghdad and Central
+Asia, for coolness' sake, in the season of the great heats.
+
+[FN#145] Dibil's surname.
+
+[FN#146] An idol of the pagan Arabs, before the coming of
+Mohammed.
+
+[FN#147] In the attitude or a pupil before his master.
+
+[FN#148] i.e. heart's blood.
+
+[FN#149] A well-known poet, who flourished at Baghdad in the
+ninth century
+
+[FN#150] Aboulabbas Mohammed ben Yezid eth Thumali, surnamed El
+Muberred, a famous Baghdad grammarian of the ninth century.
+
+[FN#151] A monastery in the town of Hemah in Syria, so called
+from the Emperor Heraclius, who retired thither, to end his.
+days.
+
+[FN#152] These verses are addressed to the Prophet Mohammed.
+
+[FN#153] The most learned grammarian of his day. He flourished
+at Baghdad in the first half of the tenth century.
+
+[FN#154] Anatolia.
+
+[FN#155] The Lights.
+
+[FN#156] Servant of the Messiah.
+
+[FN#157] The monk.
+
+[FN#158] The desireful servant of God. Abdallah is the name
+commonly given to a Christian convert to Islam. This question
+and answer are a good example of the jingle of rhymes so much
+affected by the Arabs.
+
+[FN#159] i.e. of gods (shirk).
+
+[FN#160] Koran vii. 195.
+
+[FN#161] i.e. saints.
+
+[FN#162] Koran x. 36.
+
+[FN#163] A well-known man of letters and one of El Mamoun's
+viziers.
+
+[FN#164] Prefect of Baghdad under El Mamoun.
+
+[FN#165] i.e. the persons in authority under them.
+
+[FN#166] Surname of Ali ben Hisham.
+
+[FN#167] A renowned chieftain and poet of the time of Mohammed.
+
+[FN#168] A famous singer and composer of the first century of
+the Hegira.
+
+[FN#169] One of the greatest of Arab poets; he flourished in
+the first century of the Hegira.
+
+[FN#170] i.e. as to the sound of music.
+
+[FN#171] Sixth of the Abbaside Khalifs, A.D. 809-813.
+
+[FN#172] See note, Vol. III. p. 324. {See Vol. 3, FN#130}.
+
+[FN#173] Tenth Abbaside Khalif, A.D. 849-861.
+
+[FN#174] Vizier and favourite of El Mutawekkil, killed A.D. 861
+whilst endeavouring to defend the Khalif against the parricide
+El Muntestr.
+
+[FN#175] Virginitatem tollere.
+
+[FN#176] Johannes, a Greek physician in high favour with El
+Mutawekkil and others of the Abbaside Khalifs.
+
+[FN#177] i.e. Princess of the Doctors or men of learning.
+
+[FN#178] A.D. 1166.
+
+[FN#179] Or heads of the various sects or schools of religion.
+
+[FN#180] Koran iv. 38.
+
+[FN#171] As witness to a debt, Koran ii. 282.
+
+[FN#182] Koran iv. 175.
+
+[FN#183] Or "eye-glance."
+
+[FN#184] Abou Temmam et Tai (of the tribe of Tai), a famous
+poet of the first half of the ninth century and postmaster at
+Mosul under the Khalif Wathic Billah (commonly known as
+Vathek), A.D. 842-849. He was the compiler of the famous
+anthology of ancient Arabian poetry, known as the Hemaseh
+(Hamasa).
+
+[FN#185] Aboulcasim el Heriri, the famous poet and grammarian,
+author of the Mecamat, the most celebrated single work in
+Arabic literature. He holds much the same rank in Arabic
+letters as Pope and Boileau in the literature of England
+and France and may, with much better reason, be styled "le
+legislateur du Parnasse (Arabe)." He was a native of Bassora
+and died early in the twelfth century.
+
+[FN#186] i.e. the languishing glance of his eye.
+
+[FN#187] i.e. his whiskers.
+
+[FN#188] Koran xii. 51.
+
+[FN#189] Or quare palm-spathes.
+
+[FN#190] Or quare "an exposition of women."
+
+[FN#191] Koran xxvi. 165, 166.
+
+[FN#192] i.e. the whiteness of his face.
+
+[FN#193] Or "freeborn," the Arabic word used here having this
+double meaning. The Arabs hold that the child of freeborn
+parents (Lat. ingenuus) must of necessity be noble and those
+born of slave parents or a slave mother the contrary.
+
+[FN#194] Or "freeborn," the Arabic word used here having this
+double meaning. The Arabs hold that the child of freeborn
+parents (Lat. ingenuus) must of necessity be noble and those
+born of slave parents or a slave mother the contrary.
+
+[FN#195] A famous statesman, soldier, poet and musician,
+governor of Khorassan, Egypt and other provinces under the
+Khalif El Mamoun.
+
+[FN#196] Abou Abdallah ibn el Casim el Hashimi, surnamed Abou
+el Ainaa, a blind traditionist and man of letters of Bassora,
+in the ninth century, and one of the most celebrated wits of
+his day.
+
+[FN#197] An island near Cairo, on which is situate the
+Nilometer. It is a favourite pleasure-resort of the Cairenes.
+
+[FN#198] The port of Cairo.
+
+[FN#199] i.e. the report of its being haunted.
+
+[FN#200] i.e. by the Sortes Coranicæ or other similar process.
+
+[FN#201] The word shabb (young man) is applied by the Arabs to
+men of all ages from early adolescence to forty or even
+(according to some authorities) fifty.
+
+[FN#202] i.e. recited the first chapter of the Koran seven
+times.
+
+[FN#203] i.e. affixed the tughraa, the royal seal or rather
+countermark.
+
+[FN#204] i.e. health and security.
+
+[FN#205] See Vol. III. p. 225, note 1. {Vol. 3 FN#78}
+
+[FN#206] A pile of stones or other land-mark, set up to show
+the way to travellers in the desert.
+
+[FN#207] The eyebrows of a beautiful woman are usually compared
+to the new moon of Ramazan (see note, Vol. I. p. 71 {see Vol. 1
+FN#26}). The meaning here is the same, the allusion being
+apparently to the eagerness with which the pagan Arabs may be
+supposed to have watched for the appearance of the new moon of
+Shaaban, as giving the signal for the renewal of predatory
+excursions, after the enforced close-time or Trêve de Dieu of
+the holy month Rejeb.
+
+[FN#208] Quære fourteen [years old].
+
+[FN#209] i.e. the abrogated passages and those by which they
+are abrogated.
+
+[FN#210] Koran iv. 160.
+
+[FN#211] Traditions of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#212] i.e. saying, "I purpose to pray such and such
+prayers."
+
+[FN#213] i.e. saying, "God is most Great!" So called, because
+its pronunciation after that of the niyeh or intent, prohibits
+the speaking of any words previous to prayer.
+
+[FN#214] i.e. saying, "I purpose, etc."
+
+[FN#215] i.e. saying, "I purpose, etc."
+
+[FN#216] i.e. saying, "In the name of God, etc."
+
+[FN#217] i.e. saying, "I purpose, etc."
+
+[FN#218] It may be noted that these answers of Taweddud form an
+excellent compendium of devotional practice, according to the
+tenets of the Shafy school.
+
+[FN#219] Obligatory as a preparation for the Friday prayer and
+on other occasions when legal purification is necessary.
+
+[FN#220] i.e. saying, "I purpose to defer, etc."
+
+[FN#221] i.e. with sand, earth or dust.
+
+[FN#222] i.e. saying, "Peace be on us and [all] the righteous
+worshippers of God!"
+
+[FN#223] i.e. saying, "I seek refuge with God from Satan the
+accursed."
+
+[FN#224] i.e. saying, "I purpose, etc."
+
+[FN#225] Lit. that the intent shall be by night.
+
+[FN#226] At sundown.
+
+[FN#227] Eaten a little before the break of day, the fast
+commencing as soon as there is light enough to distinguish a
+black thread from a white and lasting till sunset.
+
+[FN#228] A saying of Mohammed.
+
+[FN#229] i.e. retirement to a mosque for pious exercises,
+equivalent to the Roman Catholic retraite.
+
+[FN#230] Two hills near Mecca.
+
+[FN#231] On first catching sight of Mecca.
+
+[FN#232] Places near Mecca.
+
+[FN#233] At a pillar supposed to represent the Devil.
+
+[FN#234] Or chief of the faith.
+
+[FN#235] Koran vii. 66.
+
+[FN#236] One of the followers of Mohammed, i.e. those who had
+known some of the Companions [of the Prophet] though they had
+never seen himself. The freedman [and adopted son] of Abdallah,
+son of Omar ben El Khettab, the most authoritative of all the
+Companions and reporters of the sayings and doings of the
+Prophet.
+
+[FN#237] i.e. at a profit. The exchange must be equal and
+profitless.
+
+[FN#238] Ablution.
+
+[FN#239] Complete ablution.
+
+[FN#240] Poor-rate.
+
+[FN#241] Warring for the Faith.
+
+[FN#242] i.e. saying, "I testify that there is no God, etc."
+
+[FN#243] i.e. fundamentals.
+
+[FN#244] i.e. derivatives.
+
+[FN#245] i.e. the true believers.
+
+[FN#246] i.e. death.
+
+[FN#247] i.e. that which does not require to be cut with a
+knife. "Cut not meat with a knife, because it is of the manners
+and customs of the barbarians; but eat it with your teeth."--
+Mishcat ul Masabih.
+
+[FN#248] Or "being a Muslim."
+
+[FN#249] Apparently referring to the verse, "The earth all
+[shall be] His handful [on the] Day of Resurrection and the
+heavens rolled up in His right [hand]."--Koran xxxix. 67.
+
+[FN#250] See Vol. II. p. 126, note. {Vol. 2, FN#76}
+
+[FN#251] Koran lxxviii. 19.
+
+[FN#252] Of the unity of God.
+
+[FN#253] i.e. professor of Koranic exegesis.
+
+[FN#254] i.e. portions so called.
+
+[FN#255] Heber.
+
+[FN#256] Jethro.
+
+[FN#257] Joshua.
+
+[FN#258] Enoch.
+
+[FN#259] John the Baptist.
+
+[FN#260] i.e. the bird of clay fabled by the Koran (following
+the Apocryphal Gospel of the childhood of Christ) to have been
+animated by him.
+
+[FN#261] Koran ii.
+
+[FN#262] Koran ii. 256, "God, there is no god but He, the
+Living, the Eternal. Slumber taketh him not, neither sleep, and
+His is what is in the heavens and what is in the earth. Who is
+he that intercedeth with Him but by His leave? He knoweth what
+is before them and what is behind them, nor do they comprehend
+aught of the knowledge of Him but of what He willeth. His
+throne embraceth the heavens and the earth and the guarding of
+them oppresseth Him not, for He is the Most High, the Supreme."
+
+[FN#263] Koran ii. 159.
+
+[FN#264] Koran xvi. 92.
+
+[FN#265] Paradise, Koran lxx. 38.
+
+[FN#266] Koran xxxix. 54.
+
+[FN#267] See note, p. 338 supra. {Vol. 4, FN#236}
+
+[FN#268] Koran xii. 18.
+
+[FN#269] Koran ii. 107.
+
+[FN#270] Koran li. 57.
+
+[FN#271] Koran ii. 28.
+
+[FN#272] Koran xvi. 100. The Muslims fable the devil to have
+tempted Abraham to disobey God's commandment to sacrifice
+Ishmael (Isaac) and to have been driven off by the Patriarch
+with stones. Hence he is called "The Stoned."
+
+[FN#273] Abdallah ibn Abbas, first cousin of Mohammed and the
+most learned theologian among the Companions.
+
+[FN#274] Koran xcvi. 1 and 2.
+
+[FN#275] Koran xxvii. 30.
+
+[FN#276] Koran ix.
+
+[FN#277] i.e. the day of the sacrifice at Mina, which completes
+the ceremonies of the pilgrimage.
+
+[FN#278] The better opinion seems to be that this omission
+(unique in the Koran) arose from the ninth chapter having
+originally formed part of the eighth, from which it was
+separated after Mohammed's death.
+
+[FN#279] Koran xvii. 110.
+
+[FN#280] Koran ii. 158.
+
+[FN#281] i.e. him who seals or closes the list of the prophets.
+
+[FN#282] C. xcvi.
+
+[FN#283] A native of Medina and one of the first of Mohammed's
+disciples.
+
+[FN#284] Koran lxxiv.
+
+[FN#285] There are several verses on this subject.
+
+[FN#286] Koran cx. 1.
+
+[FN#287] The third Khalif.
+
+[FN#288] Companions of the Prophet.
+
+[FN#289] One of the Followers.
+
+[FN#290] Koran v. 4.
+
+[FN#291] Koran v. 116.
+
+[FN#292] In the same verse.
+
+[FN#293] Koran v. 89.
+
+[FN#294] Ez Zuhak ben Sufyan, one of the Companions.
+
+[FN#295] One of the Followers.
+
+[FN#296] Koran iv. 124.
+
+[FN#297] i.e. without hesitation or interruption.
+
+[FN#298] Kaf, the 21st letter of the Arabic alphabet.
+
+[FN#299] Mim, the 24th letter of the Arabic alphabet.
+
+[FN#300] Ain, the 18th letter of the Arabic alphabet.
+
+[FN#301] The Koran is divided into sixty set portions,
+answering or equivalent to our Lessons, for convenience of use
+in public worship.
+
+[FN#302] Koran xi. 50.
+
+[FN#303] Name of the partition-wall between heaven and hell.
+
+[FN#304] Koran vii. 154.
+
+[FN#305] A play on the word ain, which means "eye."
+
+[FN#306] Chapters liv. lv. and lvi.
+
+[FN#307] i e. ankle.
+
+[FN#308] Koran xvii. 39.
+
+[FN#309] Two stars in Aquarius and Capricorn.
+
+[FN#310] Or chief part, lit. head.
+
+[FN#311] Or remedial treatment.
+
+[FN#312] Quare hot springs.
+
+[FN#313] A dish of crumpled bread and broth.
+
+[FN#314] Or savoury supplement to bread, rice and so forth.
+
+[FN#315] Koran v. 92.
+
+[FN#316] Koran ii. 216.
+
+[FN#317] Played with headless arrows.
+
+[FN#318] The fourth Khalif.
+
+[FN#319] The Korah of Numbers xvi. fabled by the Muslims
+(following a Talmudic tradition) to have been a man of immense
+wealth. "Now Caroun was of the tribe of Moses [and Aaron], but
+he transgressed against them and we gave him treasures, the
+keys whereof would bear down a company of men of strength."--
+Koran xxviii. 76.
+
+[FN#320] Syn. bearing a load (hamil).
+
+[FN#321] Koran lxx. 40.
+
+[FN#322] Koran x. 5.
+
+[FN#323] Koran xxxvi. 40.
+
+[FN#324] Koran xxii. 60.
+
+[FN#325] Koran xxxi. 34.
+
+[FN#326] Fifth and seventh months of the Coptic year, answering
+(roughly) to our January and March.
+
+[FN#327] Fifth and seventh months of the Coptic year, answering
+(roughly) to our January and March.
+
+[FN#328] Fourth month of the Coptic year.
+
+[FN#329] Eighth and twelfth months of the Coptic year (April
+and August).
+
+[FN#330] Third month (November) of the Coptic year.
+
+[FN#331] Sixth month (February) of the Coptic year.
+
+[FN#332] The lowest of the seven stages into which Mohammedan
+tradition divides the heavens.
+
+[FN#333] Koran lxxvii. 5.
+
+[FN#334] Koran xxxvi. 36, 37, 38.
+
+[FN#335] Koran xxii. 7.
+
+[FN#336] Koran xx. 57.
+
+[FN#337] A she-camel, big with young, miraculously produced,
+according to Muslim legend, from a rock by the Prophet Salih,
+for the purpose of converting the Themoudites.
+
+[FN#338] Where he was hiding with Mohammed from the pursuit of
+the Benou Curaish.
+
+[FN#339] Koran lxxxi. 18.
+
+[FN#340] In Paradise.
+
+[FN#341] Sperma hominis.
+
+[FN#342] The Muslims attribute this miracle to Moses, instead
+of Aaron. See Koran vii. 110 et seq.
+
+[FN#343] [Quoth God] "What is that in thy right hand, O Moses?"
+Quoth he, "It is my staff, on which I lean and wherewith I beat
+down leaves for my flock, and I have other uses for it."--Koran
+xx. 18, 19.
+
+[FN#344] Then He turned to the heaven (now it was smoke) and
+said to it and to the earth, "Come ye twain, obedient or
+loathing." And they said both, "We come, obedient."--Koran xli.
+10.
+
+[FN#345] Koran xxxvi. 82.
+
+[FN#346] Ali ibn Abi Taleb, first cousin of Mohammed and fourth
+Khalif.
+
+[FN#347] Uncle of Mohammed and ancestor of the Abbaside
+Khalifs.
+
+[FN#348] Lit. gave him to eat of it.
+
+[FN#349] Assuming him to be dead.
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, THE BOOK OF THE THOUSAND NIGHTS AND ONE NIGHT, VOLUME IV ***
+
+This file should be named 41001108a.txt or 41001108a.zip
+Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, 41001118a.txt
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, 41001108b.txt
+
+Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we usually do not
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+We are now trying to release all our eBooks one year in advance
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing.
+Please be encouraged to tell us about any error or corrections,
+even years after the official publication date.
+
+Please note neither this listing nor its contents are final til
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg eBooks is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so.
+
+Most people start at our Web sites at:
+http://gutenberg.net or
+http://promo.net/pg
+
+These Web sites include award-winning information about Project
+Gutenberg, including how to donate, how to help produce our new
+eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter (free!).
+
+
+Those of you who want to download any eBook before announcement
+can get to them as follows, and just download by date. This is
+also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as the
+indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after an
+announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter.
+
+http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext05 or
+ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext05
+
+Or /etext04, 03, 02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92,
+91 or 90
+
+Just search by the first five letters of the filename you want,
+as it appears in our Newsletters.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours
+to get any eBook selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. Our
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If the value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour in 2002 as we release over 100 new text
+files per month: 1240 more eBooks in 2001 for a total of 4000+
+We are already on our way to trying for 2000 more eBooks in 2002
+If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the total
+will reach over half a trillion eBooks given away by year's end.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away 1 Trillion eBooks!
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only about 4% of the present number of computer users.
+
+Here is the briefest record of our progress (* means estimated):
+
+eBooks Year Month
+
+ 1 1971 July
+ 10 1991 January
+ 100 1994 January
+ 1000 1997 August
+ 1500 1998 October
+ 2000 1999 December
+ 2500 2000 December
+ 3000 2001 November
+ 4000 2001 October/November
+ 6000 2002 December*
+ 9000 2003 November*
+10000 2004 January*
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been created
+to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next millennium.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+As of February, 2002, contributions are being solicited from people
+and organizations in: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut,
+Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois,
+Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts,
+Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
+Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio,
+Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South
+Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West
+Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
+
+We have filed in all 50 states now, but these are the only ones
+that have responded.
+
+As the requirements for other states are met, additions to this list
+will be made and fund raising will begin in the additional states.
+Please feel free to ask to check the status of your state.
+
+In answer to various questions we have received on this:
+
+We are constantly working on finishing the paperwork to legally
+request donations in all 50 states. If your state is not listed and
+you would like to know if we have added it since the list you have,
+just ask.
+
+While we cannot solicit donations from people in states where we are
+not yet registered, we know of no prohibition against accepting
+donations from donors in these states who approach us with an offer to
+donate.
+
+International donations are accepted, but we don't know ANYTHING about
+how to make them tax-deductible, or even if they CAN be made
+deductible, and don't have the staff to handle it even if there are
+ways.
+
+Donations by check or money order may be sent to:
+
+ PROJECT GUTENBERG LITERARY ARCHIVE FOUNDATION
+ 809 North 1500 West
+ Salt Lake City, UT 84116
+
+Contact us if you want to arrange for a wire transfer or payment
+method other than by check or money order.
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been approved by
+the US Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) organization with EIN
+[Employee Identification Number] 64-622154. Donations are
+tax-deductible to the maximum extent permitted by law. As fund-raising
+requirements for other states are met, additions to this list will be
+made and fund-raising will begin in the additional states.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+You can get up to date donation information online at:
+
+http://www.gutenberg.net/donation.html
+
+
+***
+
+If you can't reach Project Gutenberg,
+you can always email directly to:
+
+Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
+
+Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message.
+
+We would prefer to send you information by email.
+
+
+**The Legal Small Print**
+
+
+(Three Pages)
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this eBook, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you may distribute copies of this eBook if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS EBOOK
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+eBook, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this eBook by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this eBook on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM EBOOKS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBooks,
+is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S. Hart
+through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project").
+Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this eBook
+under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to market
+any commercial products without permission.
+
+To create these eBooks, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's eBooks and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other eBook medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you may
+receive this eBook from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook) disclaims
+all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this eBook within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS EBOOK IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE EBOOK OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation,
+and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated
+with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense, including
+legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the
+following that you do or cause: [1] distribution of this eBook,
+[2] alteration, modification, or addition to the eBook,
+or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this eBook electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ eBook or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this eBook in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word
+ processing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The eBook, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The eBook may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the eBook (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ eBook in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the eBook refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of the
+ gross profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation"
+ the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were
+ legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent
+ periodic) tax return. Please contact us beforehand to
+ let us know your plans and to work out the details.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of
+public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed
+in machine readable form.
+
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money, time,
+public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses.
+Money should be paid to the:
+"Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment or
+software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at:
+hart@pobox.com
+
+[Portions of this eBook's header and trailer may be reprinted only
+when distributed free of all fees. Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 by
+Michael S. Hart. Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be
+used in any sales of Project Gutenberg eBooks or other materials be
+they hardware or software or any other related product without
+express permission.]
+
+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END*
+
diff --git a/old/41001108a.zip b/old/41001108a.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..bcb7b3e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/41001108a.zip
Binary files differ