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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night, Volume 5, by Richard F. Burton
+
+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 a Night, Volume 5
+
+Author: Richard F. Burton
+
+Release Date: July 5, 2001 [EBook #3439]
+Last updated: December 11, 2022
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOOK OF THE THOUSAND NIGHTS ***
+*******************************************************************
+THIS EBOOK WAS ONE OF PROJECT GUTENBERG'S EARLY FILES PRODUCED AT A
+TIME WHEN PROOFING METHODS AND TOOLS WERE NOT WELL DEVELOPED. THERE
+IS AN IMPROVED EDITION OF THIS TITLE WHICH MAY BE VIEWED AS EBOOK
+(#54257) at https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54257
+*******************************************************************
+
+
+
+
+This etext was scanned by J.C. Byers and proofread by Doris Ringbloom.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BOOK OF THE
+ THOUSAND NIGHTS AND A NIGHT
+
+
+
+A Plain and Literal Translation
+
+of the Arabian Nights Entertainments
+
+
+Translated and Annotated by
+ Richard F. Burton
+
+
+
+VOLUME FIVE
+
+
+Privately Printed By The Burton Club
+
+
+
+To Doctor George Bird.
+
+
+
+My Dear Bird, This is not a strictly medical work, although in places treating
+of subjects which may modestly be called hygienic. I inscribe it to you
+because your knowledge of Egypt will enable you to appreciate its finer
+touches; and for another and a yet more cogent reason, namely, that you are one
+of my best and oldest friends.
+
+
+
+Ever yours sincerely,
+
+
+
+Richard F. Burton
+
+
+
+Athenæum Club, October 20, 1885.
+
+
+Contents of the Fifth Volume
+
+
+ 59. The Ebony Horse
+ 60. Uns Al-Wujud and the Wazir's Daughter Al-Ward Fi'l-Akmam or Rose-In-Hood
+ 61. Abu Nowas With the Three Boys and the Caliph Harun Al-Rashid
+ 62. Abdallah Bin Ma'amar With the Man of Bassorah and His Slave Girl
+ 63. The Lovers of the Banu Ozrah
+ 64. The Wazir of Al-Yaman and His Younger Brother
+ 65. The Loves of the Boy and Girl at School
+ 66. Al-Mutalammis and His Wife Umaymah
+ 67. The Caliph Marun Al-Rashid and Queen Zubaydah in the Bath
+ 68. Harun Al-Rashid and the Three Poets
+ 69. Mus'ab Bin Al-Zubayr and Ayishah His Wife
+ 70. Abu Al-Aswad and His Slave-Girl
+ 71. Harun Al-Rashid and the Two Slave-Girls
+ 72. The Caliph Harun Al-Rashid and the Three Slave-Girls
+ 73. The Miller and His Wife
+ 74. The Simpleton and the Sharper
+ 75. The Kazi Abu Yusuf With Harum Al-Rashid and Queen Zubaydah
+ 76. The Caliph Al-Hakim and the Merchand
+ 77. King Kisra Anushirwan and the Village Damsel
+ 78. The Water-Carrier and the Goldsmith's Wife
+ 79. Khusrau and Shirin and the Fisherman
+ 80. Yahya Bin Khalid the Barmecide and the Poor Man
+ 81. Mohammed Al-Amin and the Slave-Girl
+ 82. The Sons of Yahya Bin Khalid and Sa'id Bin Salim Al-Bahili
+ 83. The Woman's Trick Against Her Husband
+ 84. The Devout Woman and the Two Wicked Elders
+ 85. Ja'afar the Barmecide and the Old Badawi
+ 86. The Caliph Omar Bin Al-Khattab and the Young Badawi
+ 87. The Caliph Al-Maamum and the Pyramids of Egypt
+ 88. The Thief and the Merchant
+ 89. Masrur the Eunuch and Ibn Al-Karibi
+ 90. The Devotee Prince
+ 91. The Unwise Schoolmaster Who Fell in Love by Report
+ 92. The Foolish Dominie
+ 93. The Illiterate Who Set Up For a Schoolmaster
+ 94. The King and the Virtuous Wife
+ 95. Abd Al-Rahman the Maghribi's Story of the Rukh
+ 96. Adi Bin Zayd and the Princess Hind
+ 97. Di'ibil Al-Khuza'i With the Lady and Muslim Bin Al-Walid
+ 98. Isaac of Mosul and the Merchant
+ 99. The Three Unfortunate Lovers
+ 100. How Abu Hasan Brake Wind
+ 101. The Lovers of the Banu Tayy
+ 102. The Mad Lover
+ 103. The Prior Who Became A Moslem
+ 104. The Loves of Abu Isa and Jurrat Al-Ayn
+ 105. Al-Amin Son of Al-Rashid and His Uncle Ibrahim Bin Al-Mahdi
+ 106. Al-Fath Bin Khakan and Al-Mutawakkil
+ 107. The Man's Dispute With the Learned Woman Concerning the Relative Excellence of Male and Female
+ 108. Abu Suwayd and the Pretty Old Woman
+ 109. The Emir ali Bin Tahir and the Girl Muunis
+ 110. The Woman Who had a Boy and the Other Who had a Man to Lover
+ 111. Ali the Cairene and the Haunted House in Baghdad
+ 112. The Pilgrim Man and the Old Woman
+ 113. Abu Alhusn and His Slave-Girl Tawaddud
+ 114. The Angel of Death With the Proud King and the Devout Man
+ 115. The Angel of Death and the Rich King
+ 116. The Angel of Death and the King of the Children of Israel
+ 117. Iskandar Zu Al-Karnayn and a Certain Tribe of Poor Folk
+ 118. The Righteousness of King Anushirwan
+ 119. The Jewish Kazi and His Pious Wife
+ 120. The Shipwrecked Woman and Her Child
+ 121. The Pious Black Slave
+ 122. The Devout Tray-Maker and His Wife
+ 123. Al-Jajjaj and the Pious Man
+ 124. The Blacksmith Who Could Handle Fire Without Hurt
+ 125. The Devotee To Whom Allah Gave a Cloud for Service and the Devout King
+ 126. The Moslem Champion and the Christian Damsel
+ 127. The Christian King's Daughter and the Moslem
+ 128. The Prophet and the Justice of Providence
+ 129. The Ferryman of the Nile and the Hermit
+ 130. The Island King and the Pious Israelite
+ 131. Abu Al-Hasan and Abu Ja'afar the Leper
+ 132. The Queen of Serpents
+ a. The Adventures of Bulukiya
+ b. The Story of Jansha
+
+
+
+The Book Of The
+
+THOUSAND NIGHTS AND A NIGHT
+
+
+
+THE EBONY HORSE.[FN#1]
+
+There was once in times of yore and ages long gone before, a great and
+puissant King, of the Kings of the Persians, Sαbϊr by name, who was the
+richest of all the Kings in store of wealth and dominion and surpassed
+each and every in wit and wisdom. He was generous, open handed and
+beneficent, and he gave to those who sought him and repelled not those
+who resorted to him; and he 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 the
+oppressor. He had three daughters, like full moons of shining light or
+flower-gardens blooming bright; and a son as he were the moon; and it
+was his wont to keep two festivals in the twelve- month, those of the
+Nau-Roz, or New Year, and Mihrgαn the Autumnal Equinox,[FN#2] on which
+occasions he threw open his palaces and gave largesse and made
+proclamation of safety and security and promoted his chamberlains and
+viceroys; and the people of his realm came in to him and saluted him
+and gave him joy of the holy day, bringing him gifts and servants and
+eunuchs. Now he loved science and geometry, and one festival-day as he
+sat on his kingly throne there came in to him three wise men, cunning
+artificers and past masters in all manner of craft and inventions,
+skilled in making things curious and rare, such as confound the wit;
+and versed in the knowledge of occult truths and perfect in mysteries
+and subtleties. And they were of three different tongues and countries,
+the first a Hindi or Indian,[FN#3] the second a Roumi or Greek and the
+third a Farsi or Persian. The Indian came forwards and, prostrating
+himself before the King, wished him joy of the festival and laid before
+him a present befitting his dignity; that is to say, a man of gold, set
+with precious gems and jewels of price and hending in hand a golden
+trumpet. When Sabur[FN#4] saw this, he asked, "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, in an enemy enter the place, it will blow this clarion against him
+and he will be seized with a palsy and drop down dead." Much the King
+marvelled at this and cried, "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 chicks of the same metal. Sabur 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 passeth, it pecketh one of its young and crieth out and flappeth
+its wings, till the four-and-twenty hours are accomplished; and when
+the month cometh to an end, it will open its mouth and thou shalt see
+the crescent 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[FN#5] of the blackest ebony-wood inlaid with gold and jewels, and
+ready harnessed with saddle, bridle and stirrups such as befit Kings;
+which when Sabur saw, he marvelled with exceeding marvel and was
+confounded at the beauty of its form and the ingenuity of its fashion.
+So he asked, "What is the use of this horse of wood, and what is its
+virtue and what the secret of its movement?"; and the Persian answered,
+"O my lord, 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 and
+cover the space of a year in a single day." The King marvelled and was
+amazed at these three wonders, following thus hard upon one another on
+the same day, and turning to the sage, said to him, "By Allah the
+Omnipotent, and our Lord the Beneficent, who created all creatures and
+feedeth them with meat and drink, an thy speech be veritable and the
+virtue of thy contrivance appear, I will assuredly give thee whatsoever
+thou lustest for and will bring thee to thy desire and thy wish!"[FN#6]
+Then he entertained the sages three days, that he might make trial of
+their gifts; after which they brought the figures before him and each
+took the creature he had wroughten and showed him the mystery of its
+movement. The trumpeter blew the trump; the peacock pecked its chicks
+and the Persian sage mounted the ebony house, whereupon it soared with
+him high in air and descended again. When King Sabur saw all this, he
+was amazed and perplexed and felt like to fly for joy and said to the
+three sages, "Now I am certified of the truth of your words and it
+behoveth me to quit me of my promise. Ask ye, therefore, what ye will,
+and I will give you that same." Now the report 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 allow us to prefer a request to him, we
+crave 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 wish and you
+desire," and bade summon the Kazi forthright, that he might marry each
+of the sages to one of his daughters. Now it fortuned that the
+Princesses were behind a curtain, looking on; and when they heard this,
+the youngest considered her husband to be and behold, he was an old
+man,[FN#7] an hundred years of age, with hair frosted, forehead
+drooping, eyebrows mangy, ears slitten, beard and mustachios stained
+and dyed; eyes red and goggle; cheeks bleached and hollow; flabby nose
+like a brinjall, or egg- plant[FN#8]; face like a cobbler's apron,
+teeth overlapping and lips like camel's kidneys, loose and pendulous;
+in brief a terror, a horror, a monster, for he was of the folk of his
+time the unsightliest and of his age the frightfullest; sundry of his
+grinders had been knocked out and his eye-teeth were like the tusks of
+the Jinni who frighteneth poultry in hen-houses. Now the girl was the
+fairest and most graceful of her time, more elegant than the gazelle
+however tender, than the gentlest zephyr blander and brighter than the
+moon at her full; for amorous fray right suitable; confounding in
+graceful sway the waving bough and outdoing in swimming gait the pacing
+roe; in fine she was fairer and sweeter by far than all 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
+weeping and wailing. Now the Prince, her brother, Kamar al-Akmαr, or
+the Moon of Moons hight, was then newly returned from a journey and,
+hearing her weeping and crying came in to her (for he loved her with
+fond affection, more than his other sisters) and asked her, "What
+aileth thee? What hath befallen thee? Tell me and conceal naught from
+me." So she smote her breast and answered, "O my brother and my dear
+one, I have nothing to hide. 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 make provision for
+me; and my Lord will provide." Quoth he, "Tell me what meaneth this
+talk and what hath straitened thy breast and troubled thy temper." "O
+my brother and my dear one," answered the Princess, "Know that my
+father hath promised me in marriage to a wicked magician who brought
+him, as a gift, a horse of black wood, and hath bewitched him with his
+craft and his egromancy; 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 solaced her, then fared to his sire and said, "What be this
+wizard to whom thou hast given my youngest sister in marriage, and what
+is this present which he hath brought thee, so that thou hast
+killed[FN#9] my sister with 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 and filled with fury and the King said, "O my
+son, an thou sawest this horse, thy wit would be confounded and thou
+wouldst be amated with amazement." Then he bade the slaves bring the
+horse before him and they did so; and, when the Prince saw it, it
+pleased him. So (being an accomplished cavalier) he mounted it
+forthright and struck its sides with the shovel-shaped stirrup-irons;
+but it stirred not and the King said to the Sage, "Go show him its
+movement, that he also may help thee to win thy wish." Now the Persian
+bore the Prince a grudge because he willed not he should have his
+sister; so he showed him the pin of ascent on the right side of the
+horse and saying to him, "Trill this," left him. Thereupon the Prince
+trilled the pin and lo! the horse forthwith soared with him high in
+ether, as it were a bird, and gave not overflying till it disappeared
+from men's espying, whereat the King was troubled and perplexed about
+his case and said to the Persian, "O sage, look how thou mayest make
+him descend." But he replied, "O my lord, I can do nothing, and thou
+wilt never see him again till Resurrection-day, for he, of his
+ignorance and pride, asked me not of the pin of descent and I forgot to
+acquaint him therewith." When the King heard this, he was enraged with
+sore rage; and bade bastinado the sorcerer and clap him in jail, whilst
+he himself cast the crown from his head and beat his face and smote his
+breast. Moreover, he shut the doors of his palaces and gave himself up
+to weeping and keening, he and his wife and daughters and all the folk
+of the city; and thus their joy was turned to annoy and their gladness
+changed into sore affliction and sadness. Thus far concerning them; but
+as regards the Prince, the horse gave not over soaring with him till he
+drew near the sun, whereat he gave himself up for lost and saw death in
+the skies, and was confounded at his case, repenting him of having
+mounted the horse and saying to himself, "Verily, this was a device of
+the Sage to destroy me on account of my youngest sister; but there is
+no Majesty and there is no Might save in Allah, the Glorious, the
+Great! I am lost without recourse; but I wonder, did not he who made
+the ascent-pin make also a descent-pin?" Now he was a man of wit and
+knowledge and intelligence; so he fell to feeling all the parts of the
+horse, but saw nothing save a screw, like a cock's head, on its right
+shoulder and the like on the left, when quoth he to himself, "I see no
+sign save these things like buttons." Presently he turned the
+right-hand pin, whereupon the horse flew heavenwards with increased
+speed. So he left it and looking at the sinister shoulder and finding
+another pin, he wound it up and immediately the steed's upwards motion
+slowed and ceased and it began to descend, little by little, towards
+the face of the earth, while the rider became yet more cautious and
+careful of his life.—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased
+to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Fifty-eighth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the Prince
+wound up the sinister screw, the steed's upward motion slowed and
+ceased, and it began to descend, little by little, towards the earth
+while the rider became yet more cautious and careful of his life. And
+when he saw this and knew the uses of the horse, his heart was filled
+with joy and gladness and he thanked Almighty Allah for that He had
+deigned deliver him from destruction. Then he began to turn the horse's
+head whithersoever he would, making it rise and fall at pleasure, till
+he had gotten complete mastery over its every movement. He ceased not
+to descend the whole of that day, for that the steed's ascending flight
+had borne him afar from the earth; and, as he descended, he diverted
+himself with viewing the various cities and countries over which he
+passed and which he knew not, never having seen them in his life.
+Amongst the rest, he descried a city ordered after the fairest fashion
+in the midst of a verdant and riant land, rich in trees and streams,
+with gazelles pacing daintily over the plains; whereat he fell a-musing
+and said to himself, "Would I knew the name of yon town and in what
+land it is!" And he took to circling about it and observing it right
+and left. By this time, the day began to decline and the sun drew near
+to its downing; and he said in his mind, "Verily I find no goodlier
+place to night in than this city; so I will lodge here and early on the
+morrow I will return to my kith and kin and my kingdom; and tell my
+father and family what hath passed and acquaint him with what mine eyes
+have seen." Then he addressed himself to seeking a place wherein he
+might safely bestow himself and his horse and where none should descry
+him, and presently behold, he espied a-middlemost of the city a palace
+rising high in upper air surrounded by a great wall with lofty
+crenelles and battlements, guarded by forty black slaves, clad in
+complete mail and armed with spears and swords, bows and arrows. Quoth
+he, "This is a goodly place," and turned the descent-pin, whereupon the
+horse sank down with him like a weary bird, and alighted gently on the
+terrace-roof of the palace. So the Prince dismounted and ejaculating
+"Alhamdolillah"—praise be to Allah[FN#10]—he began to go round about
+the horse and examine it, saying, "By Allah, he who fashioned thee with
+these perfections was a cunning craftsman, and if the Almighty extend
+the term of my life and restore me to my country and kinsfolk in safety
+and reunite me with my father, I will assuredly bestow upon him all
+manner bounties and benefit him with the utmost beneficence." By this
+time 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 nor drunk water since he
+parted from his sire. So he said within himself, "Surely the like of
+this palace will not lack of victual;" and, leaving the horse above,
+went down in search of somewhat to eat. Presently, he came to a
+staircase and descending it to the bottom, found himself in a court
+paved with white marble and alabaster, which shone in the light of the
+moon. He marvelled at the place and the goodliness of its fashion, but
+sensed no sound of speaker and saw no living soul and stood in
+perplexed surprise, looking right and left and knowing not whither he
+should wend. Then said he to himself, "I may not do better than return
+to where I left my horse and pass the night by it; and as soon as day
+shall dawn I will mount and ride away."— And Shahrazad perceived the
+dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Fifty-ninth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that quoth the king's
+son to himself, "I may not do better than pass the night by my horse;
+and as soon as day shall dawn I will mount and ride away." However, as
+he tarried 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 Harim, at the head of a sleeping eunuch, as he were one of
+the Ifrits of Solomon or a tribesman of the Jinn, longer than lumber
+and broader than a bench. He lay before the door, with the pommel of
+his sword gleaming in the flame of the candle, and at his head was a
+bag of leather[FN#11] hanging from a column of granite. When the Prince
+saw this, he was affrighted and said, "I crave help from Allah the
+Supreme! O mine Holy One, even as Thou hast already delivered me from
+destruction, so 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 aside and opened it and found in it food of the
+best. He ate his fill and refreshed himself and drank water, after
+which he hung up the provision-bag in its place and drawing the
+eunuch's sword from its sheath, took it, whilst the slave slept on,
+knowing not whence destiny should come to him. Then the Prince fared
+forwards into the palace and ceased not till he came to a second door,
+with a curtain drawn before it; so he raised the curtain and behold, on
+entering he saw a couch of the whitest 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 thereon, and found a young lady lying
+asleep, chemised with her hair[FN#12] as she were the full moon
+rising[FN#13] over the Eastern horizon, with flower-white brow and
+shining hair-paring and cheeks like blood-red anemones and dainty moles
+thereon. He was amazed at her as she lay in her beauty and loveliness,
+her symmetry and grace, and he recked no more of death. So he went up
+to her, trembling in every nerve and, shuddering with pleasure, kissed
+her on the right cheek; whereupon she awoke forthright and opened her
+eyes, 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."
+Asked she, "And who brought thee hither?" and he answered, "My Lord and
+my fortune." Then said Shams al-Nahαr[FN#14] (for such was her name),
+"Haply 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, my sire lied in his throat when he spoke this thing, for thou
+art not other than beautiful." Now the son of the King of Hind had
+sought her in marriage, but her father had rejected him, for that he
+was ugly and uncouth, and she thought the Prince was he. So, when she
+saw his beauty and grace (for indeed he was like the radiant moon) the
+syntheism[FN#15] of love gat hold of her heart as it were a flaming
+fire, and they fell to talk and converse. Suddenly, her waiting-women
+awoke and, seeing the Prince with their mistress, said to her, "Oh my
+lady, who is this with thee?" Quoth she, "I know not; I found him
+sitting by me, when I woke up: haply 'tis he who seeketh me in marriage
+of my sire." Quoth they, "O my lady, by Allah the All-Father, this is
+not he who seeketh thee in marriage, for he is hideous and this man is
+handsome and of high degree. Indeed, the other is not fit to be his
+servant."[FN#16] Then the handmaidens went out to the eunuch, and
+finding him slumbering awoke him, and he started up in alarm. Said
+they, "How happeth it that thou art on guard at the palace and yet men
+come in to us, whilst we are asleep?" When the black 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 at talk with her, said to him, "O my lord, art thou man
+or Jinni?" Replied the Prince, "Woe to thee, O unluckiest of slaves:
+how darest thou even the sons of the royal Chosroes[FN#17] with one of
+the unbelieving Satans?" And he was as a raging lion. Then he took the
+sword in his hand and said to the slave, "I am the King's son-in-law,
+and he hath married me to his daughter and bidden me go in to her." And
+when the eunuch heard these words he replied, "O my lord, if thou be
+indeed of kind a man as thou avouchest, she is fit for none but for
+thee, and thou art worthier of her than any other." Thereupon the
+eunuch ran to the King, shrieking loud and rending his raiment and
+heaving dust upon his head; and when the King heard his outcry, he said
+to him, "What hath befallen thee?: speak quickly and be brief; for thou
+hast fluttered my heart." Answered the eunuch, "O King, come to thy
+daughter's succour; for a devil of the Jinn, in the likeness of a
+King's son, hath got 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 slave-women
+standing to await him and asked them, "What is come to my daughter?" "O
+King," answered they, "slumber overcame us and, when we awoke, we found
+a young man sitting upon her couch in talk with her, as he were the
+full moon; never saw we aught fairer of favour than he. So we
+questioned him of his case and he declared 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 Jinni; but he is modest and well bred, and doth
+nothing unseemly or which leadeth to disgrace." Now when the King heard
+these words, his wrath cooled and he raised the curtain little by
+little and looking in, saw sitting at talk with his daughter a Prince
+of the goodliest with a face like the full moon for sheen. At this
+sight he could not contain himself, of his jealousy for his daughter's
+honour; and, putting aside the curtain, rushed in upon them drawn sword
+in hand like a furious Ghul. Now when the Prince saw him he asked the
+Princess, "Is this thy sire?"; and she answered, "Yes."—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Sixtieth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the Price
+saw the King rushing in upon them, drawn sword in hand, like a furious
+Ghul he asked the Princess, "Is this thy sire?"; and she answered,
+"Yes." Whereupon he sprang to his feet and, seizing his sword, cried
+out at the King with so terrible a cry that he was confounded. Then the
+youth would have fallen on him with the sword; but the King seeing that
+the Prince was doughtier than he, sheathed his scymitar and stood till
+the young man came up to him, when he accosted him courteously and said
+to him, "O youth, art thou a man or a Jinni?" Quoth the Prince, "Did I
+not respect thy right as mine host and thy daughter's honour, I would
+spill thy blood! How darest thou fellow me with devils, me that am a
+Prince of the sons of the royal Chosroes who, had they wished to take
+thy kingdom, could shake thee like an earthquake from thy glory and thy
+dominions and spoil thee of all thy possessions?" Now when the King
+heard his words, he was confounded with awe and bodily fear of him and
+rejoined, "If thou indeed be of the sons of the Kings, as thou
+pretendest, how cometh it that thou enterest my palace without my
+permission, and smirchest mine honour, making thy way to my daughter
+and feigning that thou art her husband and claiming 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 might
+and majesty when, if I cried out to my slaves and servants and bade
+them put thee to the vilest of deaths they would slay thee forthright?
+Who 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
+shortness and denseness of thy wit! Say me, canst covet for thy
+daughter a mate comelier than myself, and hast ever seen a stouter
+hearted man or one better fitted for a Sultan or a more glorious in
+rank and dominion than I?" Rejoined the King, "Nay, by Allah! but I
+would have had thee, O youth, act after the custom of Kings and demand
+her from me to wife before witnesses, that I might have married her to
+thee publicly; and now, even were I to marry her to thee privily, yet
+hast thou dishonoured me in her person." Rejoined the Prince, "Thou
+sayest sooth, O King, but if thou summon thy slaves and thy soldiers
+and they fall upon me and slay me, as thou pretendest, thou wouldst but
+publish thine own disgrace, and the folk would be divided between
+belief in thee and disbelief in thee. Wherefore, O King, thou wilt do
+well, meseemeth, to turn from this thought to that which I shall
+counsel thee." Quoth the King, "Let me hear what thou hast to advise;"
+and quoth the Prince, "What I have to propose to thee is this: either
+do thou meet me in combat singular, I and thou; and he who slayeth his
+adversary shall be held the worthier and having a better title to the
+kingdom; or else, let me be this night and, whenas dawns the morn, draw
+out against me thy horsemen and footmen and servants; but first tell me
+their number." Said the King, "They are forty thousand horse, beside my
+own slaves and their followers,[FN#18] who are the like of them in
+number." Thereupon said the Prince, "When the day shall break, do thou
+array them against me and say to them"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn
+of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Sixty-first Night,
+
+She continued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that quoth the
+Prince, "When day shall break, do thou array them against me and say to
+them: 'This man is a suitor to me for my daughter's hand, on condition
+that he shall do battle single-handed against you all; for he
+pretendeth that he will overcome you and put you to the rout, and
+indeed that ye cannot prevail against him.' After which, leave me to do
+battle with them: if they slay me, then is thy secret surer guarded and
+thine honour the better warded; and if I overcome them and see their
+backs, then is it the like of me a King should covet to his
+son-in-law." So the King approved of his opinion and accepted his
+proposition, despite his awe at the boldness of his speech and amaze at
+the pretensions of the Prince to meet in fight his whole host, such as
+he had described to him, being at heart assured that he would perish in
+the fray and so he should be quit of him and freed from the fear of
+dishonour. Thereupon he called the eunuch and bade him go to his Wazir
+without stay and delay and command him to assemble the whole of the
+army and cause them don their arms and armour and mount their steeds.
+So the eunuch carried the King's order to the Minister, who
+straightaway summoned the Captains of the host and the Lords of the
+realm and bade them don their harness of derring-do and mount horse and
+sally forth in battle array. Such was their case; but as regards the
+King, he sat a long while conversing with the young Prince, being
+pleased with his wise speech and good sense and fine breeding. And when
+it was day-break he returned to his palace and, seating himself on his
+throne, commanded his merry men to mount and bade them saddle one of
+the best of the royal steeds with handsome selle and housings and
+trappings and bring it to the Prince. But the youth said, "O King, I
+will not mount horse, till I come in view of the troops and review
+them." "Be it as thou wilt," replied the King. Then the two repaired to
+the parade-ground, where the troops were drawn up, and the young 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 seeketh my daughter in marriage; and in very sooth never have I
+seen a goodlier than he; no, nor a stouter of heart nor a doughtier of
+arm, for he pretendeth that he can overcome you, single-handed, and
+force you to flight and that, were ye an hundred thousand in number,
+yet for him would ye be but few. Now when he chargeth down on you, do
+ye receive him upon point of pike and sharp of sabre; for, indeed, he
+hath undertaken a mighty matter." Then quoth the King to the Prince,
+"Up, O my son, and do thy devoir on them." Answered he, "O King, thou
+dealest not justly and fairly by me: how shall I go forth against them,
+seeing that I am afoot and the men be mounted?" The King retorted, "I
+bade thee mount, and thou refusedst; but choose thou which of my horses
+thou wilt." Then he said, "Not one of thy horses pleaseth me, and I
+will ride none but that on which I came." Asked the King, "And where is
+thy horse?" "Atop of thy palace." "In what part of my palace?" "On the
+roof." Now when the King heard these words, he cried, "Out on thee!
+this is the first sign thou hast given of madness. How can the horse be
+on the roof? But we shall at once see if thou speak the truth or lies."
+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." So all the people
+marvelled at the young Prince's words, saying one to other, "How can a
+horse come down the steps from the roof? Verily this is a thing whose
+like we never heard." In the meantime the King's messenger repaired to
+the palace and mounting to the roof, found the horse standing there and
+never had he looked on a handsomer; but when he drew near and examined
+it, he saw that it was made of ebony and ivory. Now the officer was
+accompanied by other high officers, who also looked on and they laughed
+to one another, saying, "Was it of the like of this horse that the
+youth spake? We cannot deem him other than mad; however, we shall soon
+see the truth of his case."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and
+ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Sixty-second Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the high
+officials looked upon the horse, they laughed one to other and said,
+"Was it of the like of his horse that the youth spake? We cannot deem
+him other than mad; however, we shall soon see the truth of his case.
+Peradventure herein is some mighty matter, and he is a man of high
+degree." Then they lifted up the horse bodily and, carrying it to the
+King, set it down before him, and all the lieges flocked round to look
+at it, marvelling at the beauty of its proportions and the richness of
+its saddle and bridle. The King also admired it and wondered at it with
+extreme wonder; and he asked the Prince, "O youth, is this thy horse?"
+He answered, "Yes, O King, this is my horse, and thou shalt soon see
+the marvel it showeth." Rejoined the King, "Then take and mount it,"
+and the Prince retorted, "I will not mount till the troops withdraw
+afar from it." So the King bade them retire a bowshot from the horse;
+whereupon quoth its owner, "O King, see thou; I am about to mount my
+horse and charge upon thy host and scatter them right and left and
+split their hearts asunder." Said the King, "Do as thou wilt; and spare
+not their lives, for they will not spare thine." Then the Prince
+mounted, whilst the troops ranged themselves in ranks before him, and
+one said to another, "When the youth cometh between the ranks, we will
+take him on the points of our pikes and the sharps of our sabres."
+Quoth another, "By Allah, this a mere misfortune: how shall we slay a
+youth so comely of face and shapely of form?" And a third continued,
+"Ye will have hard work to get the better of him; for the youth had not
+done this, but for what he knew of his own prowess and pre- eminence of
+valour." Meanwhile, having settled himself in his saddle, the Prince
+turned the pin of ascent; whilst all eyes were strained to see what he
+would do, whereupon the horse began to heave and rock and sway to and
+fro and make the strangest of movements steed ever made, till its belly
+was filled with air and it took flight with its rider and soared high
+into the sky. When the King saw this, he cried out to his men, saying,
+"Woe to you! catch him, catch him, ere he 'scape you!" But his Wazirs
+and Viceroys said to him, "O King, can a man overtake the flying bird?
+This is surely none but some mighty magician or Marid of the Jinn or
+devil, and Allah save thee from him. So praise thou the Almighty for
+deliverance of thee and of all thy host from his hand." Then the King
+returned to his palace after seeing the feat of the Prince and, going
+in to his daughter, acquainted her with what had befallen them both on
+the parade-ground. He found her grievously afflicted for the Prince and
+bewailing her separation from him; wherefore she fell sick with violent
+sickness and took to her pillow. Now when her father saw her on this
+wise, he pressed her to his breast and kissing her between the eyes,
+said to her, "O my daughter, praise Allah Almighty and thank Him for
+that He hath delivered us from this crafty enchanter, this villain,
+this low fellow, this thief who thought only of seducing thee!" And he
+repeated to her the story of the Prince and how he had disappeared in
+the firmament; and he abused him and cursed him knowing not how dearly
+his daughter loved him. But she paid no heed to his words and did but
+redouble in her tears and wails, saying to herself, "By Allah, I will
+neither eat meat nor drain drink, till Allah reunite me with him!" Her
+father was greatly concerned for her case and mourned much over her
+plight; but, for all he could do to soother her, love-longing only
+increased on her.—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased
+saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Sixty-third Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the King mourned
+much over his daughter's plight but, for all he could do to soothe her,
+love-longing only increased on her. Thus far concerning the King and
+Princess Shams al-Nahαr; but as regards Prince Kamar al-Akmar, when he
+had risen high in air, he turned his horse's head towards his native
+land, and being alone mused upon the beauty of the Princess and her
+loveliness. Now he had enquired of the King's people the name of the
+city and of its King and his daughter; and men had told him that it was
+the city of Sana'α.[FN#19] So he journeyed with all speed, till he drew
+near his father's capital and, making an airy 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 seeing its threshold strewn
+with ashes, though 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, all pale of faces and lean of frames. When his sire
+descried him and was assured that it was indeed his son, he cried out
+with a great cry and fell down in a fit, but after a time coming to
+himself, threw himself upon him and embraced him, clipping him to his
+bosom and rejoicing in him with exceeding joy and extreme gladness. His
+mother and sisters heard this; so they came in and seeing the Prince,
+fell upon him, kissing him and weeping, and joying with exceeding
+joyance. Then they questioned him of his case; so he told them all that
+had passed from first to last, and his father said to him, "Praised be
+Allah for thy safety, O coolth of my eyes and core of my heart!" Then
+the King bade hold high festival, and the glad tidings flew through the
+city. So they beat drums and cymbals and, doffing the weed of mourning,
+they donned the gay garb of gladness 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 King proclaimed a general pardon and
+opening the prisons, released those who were therein prisoned.
+Moreover, he made banquets for the people, with great abundance of
+eating and drinking, for seven days and nights and all creatures were
+gladsomest; and he took horse with his son and rode out with him, that
+the folk might see him and rejoice. After awhile the Prince asked about
+the maker of the horse, saying, "O my father, what hath fortune done
+with him?"; and the King answered, "Allah never bless him nor the hour
+wherein I set eyes on him! For he was the cause of thy separation from
+us, O my son, and he hath lain in gaol since the day of thy
+disappearance." Then the King bade release him from prison and, sending
+for him, invested him in a dress of satisfaction and entreated him with
+the utmost favour and munificence, save that he would not give him his
+daughter to wife; whereat the Sage raged with sore rage and repented of
+that which he had done, knowing that the Prince had secured the secret
+of the steed and the manner of its motion. Moreover, the King said to
+his son, "I reck thou wilt do will not to go near the horse henceforth
+and more especially not to mount it after this day; for thou knowest
+not its properties, and belike thou art in error about it." Not the
+Prince had told his father of his adventure with the King of Sana'a and
+his daughter and he said, "Had the King intended 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 places 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 handmaiden who was skilled in
+playing the lute; so she took it and began to sweep the strings and
+sing thereto before the King and his son of separation of lovers, and
+she chanted the following verses:—
+
+"Deem not that absence breeds in me aught of forgetfulness; *
+
+
+ What should remember I did you fro' my remembrance wane?
+
+
+Time dies but never dies the fondest love for you we bear; *
+
+
+ And in your love I'll die and in your love I'll arise
+
+
+ again."[FN#20]
+
+
+
+When the Prince heard these verses, the fires of longing flamed up in
+his heart and pine and passion redoubled upon him. Grief and regret
+were sore upon him and his bowels yearned in him for love of the King's
+daughter of Sana'a; so he rose forthright and, escaping his father's
+notice, went forth the palace to the horse and mounting it, turned the
+pin of ascent, whereupon bird-like it flew with him high in air and
+soared towards the upper regions of the sky. In early morning his
+father missed him and, going up to the pinnacle of the palace, in great
+concern, saw his son rising into the firmament; whereat he was sore
+afflicted and repented in all penitence that he had not taken the horse
+and hidden it; and he said to 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.—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Sixty-fourth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the King again
+fell to weeping and bewailing himself for his son. Such was his case;
+but as regards the Prince, he ceased not flying on through air till he
+came to the city of Sana'a and alighted on the roof as before. Then he
+crept 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 alcove-[FN#21]chamber and stopped to listen;
+when lo! he heard her shedding plenteous tears and reciting verses,
+whilst her women slept round her. Presently, overhearing her weeping
+and wailing quoth they, "O our mistress, why wilt thou mourn for one
+who mourneth not for thee?" Quoth she, "O ye little of wit, is he for
+whom I mourn of those who forget or who are forgotten?" And she fell
+again to wailing and weeping, till sleep overcame her. Hereat the
+Prince's heart melted for her and his gall-bladder was like to burst,
+so he entered and, seeing her lying asleep without covering,[FN#22]
+touched her with his hand; whereupon she opened her eyes and espied him
+standing by her. Said he, "Why all this crying and mourning?" And when
+she knew him, she threw herself upon him, and took him around the neck
+and kissed him and answered, "For thy sake and because of my separation
+from thee." Said he, "O my lady, I have been made desolate by thee all
+this long time!" But she replied, "'Tis thou who hast desolated me; and
+hadst thou tarried longer, I had surely died!" Rejoined he, "O my lady,
+what thinkest thou of my case with thy father and how he dealt with me?
+Were it not for my love of thee, O temptation and seduction of the
+Three Worlds, I had certainly 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 my life be sweet to me after
+thee?" Quoth he, "Let what hath happened suffice: I am now hungry, and
+thirsty." So she bade her maidens make ready meat and drink, and they
+sat eating and drinking and conversing till night was well nigh ended;
+and when day broke he rose to take leave of her and depart, ere the
+eunuch should awake. Shams al-Nahar asked him, "Whither goest thou?";
+and he answered, "To my father's house, 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 Allah the Almighty, take me with thee whereso thou
+wendest and make me not taste anew the bittergourd[FN#23] of separation
+from thee." Quoth he, "Wilt thou indeed go with me?" and quoth she,
+"Yes." "Then," said he, "arise that we 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, and she fared
+forth, her handmaids recking naught. So he carried her up to the roof
+of the palace and, mounting the ebony horse, took her up behind him and
+made her fast to himself, binding her with strong bonds; after which he
+turned the shoulder-pin of ascent, and the horse rose with him high in
+air. When her slave-women saw this, they shrieked aloud and told her
+father and mother, who in hot haste ran to the palace-roof and looking
+up, saw the magical horse flying away with the Prince and Princess. At
+this the King was troubled with ever-increasing trouble and cried out,
+saying, "O King's son, I conjure thee, by Allah, have ruth on me and my
+wife and bereave us not of our daughter!" The Prince made him no reply;
+but, thinking in himself that the maiden repented of leaving father and
+mother, asked her, "O ravishment of the age, say me, wilt thou that I
+restore thee to thy mother and father?": whereupon she answered, "By
+Allah, O my lord, that is not my desire: my only wish is to be with
+thee, wherever thou art; for I am distracted by the love of thee from
+all else, even from my father and mother." Hearing these words the
+Prince joyed with great joy, and made the horse fly and fare softly
+with them, so as not to disquiet her; nor did they stay their flight
+till they came in sight of a green meadow, wherein was a spring of
+running water. Here they alighted and ate and drank; after which the
+Prince took horse again and set her behind him, binding her in his fear
+for her safety; after which they 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 his beloved 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 sire. So he set her down in one of his father's
+gardens without the city where his parent was wont to take his
+pleasure; and, carrying her into a domed summer-house prepared there
+for the King, left the ebony horse at the door and charged the damsel
+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." She was delighted when she heard these words and
+said to him, "Do as thou wilt;"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day
+and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Sixty-fifth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the maiden was
+delighted when she heard these words and said to him, "Do as thou
+wilt;" for she thereby understood that she should not enter the city
+but with due honour and worship, as became her rank. Then the Prince
+left her and betook himself to the palace of the King his father, who
+rejoiced in his return and met him and welcomed him; and the Prince
+said to him, "Know that I have brought with me the King's daughter of
+whom I told thee; and have left her without the city in such a garden
+and come to tell thee, that thou mayst make ready the procession of
+estate and go forth to meet her and show her thy royal dignity and
+troops and guards." Answered the King, "With joy and gladness"; and
+straightaway bade decorate the town with the goodliest adornment. Then
+he took horse and rode out in all magnificence and majesty, he and his
+host, high officers and household, with drums and kettle-drums, fifes
+and clarions and all manner instruments; whilst the Prince drew forth
+of his treasuries jewellery and apparel and what else of the things
+which Kings hoards and made a rare display of wealth and splendour:
+moreover he got ready for the Princess a canopied litter of brocades,
+green, red and yellow, wherein he set Indian and Greek and Abyssinian
+slave- girls. Then he left the litter and those who were therein and
+preceded them to the pavilion where he had set her down; and searched
+but found naught, neither Princess nor horse. When he saw this, he beat
+his face, and rent his raiment and began to wander 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 this horse,
+seeing I told her nothing of it? Maybe the Persian sage who made the
+horse hath chanced upon her and stolen her away, in revenge for my
+father's treatment of him." Then he sought the guardians of the garden
+and asked them if they had seen any pass the precincts; and said, "Hath
+any one come in here? Tell me the truth and the whole truth or I will
+at once strike off your heads." They were terrified by his threats; but
+they answered with one voice, "We have seen no man enter save the
+Persian sage, who came to gather healing herbs." So the Prince was
+certified that it was indeed he that had taken away the maiden,—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Sixty-sixth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the Prince
+heard their answer, he was certified that the Sage had taken away the
+maiden and abode confounded and perplexed concerning his case. And he
+was abashed before the folk and, turning to his sire, told him what had
+happened and said to him, "Take the troops and march them back 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 thy choler and master thy chagrin and come home
+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
+farewelling him departed, whilst the King returned to the city and
+their joy was changed into sore annoy. Now, as Destiny issued her
+decree, when the Prince left the Princess in the garden-house and
+betook himself to his father's palace, for the ordering of his affair,
+the Persian entered the garden to pluck certain simples and, scenting
+the sweet savour of musk and perfumes that exhaled from the Princess
+and impregnated the whole place, followed it till he came to the
+pavilion and saw standing at the door the horse which he had made with
+his own hands. His heart was filled with joy and gladness, for he had
+bemourned its loss much since it had gone out of his hand: so he went
+up to it and, examining its every part, found it whole 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 sheen in the
+sky serene, knew her at the first glance 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 procession with all splendor. Then he went up to her
+and kissed the earth between her hands, whereupon she raised her eyes
+to him and, finding him exceedingly foul of face and favour, asked,
+"Who art thou?"; and he answered, "O my lady, I am a messenger sent by
+the Prince who hath bidden me bring thee to another pleasance nearer
+the city; for that my lady the Queen cannot walk so far and is
+unwilling, of her joy in thee, that another should forestall her with
+thee." Quoth she, "Where is the Prince?"; and quoth the Persian, "He is
+in the city, with his sire and forthwith he shall come for thee in
+great state." Said she, "O thou! say me, could he find none handsomer
+to send to me?"; whereat loud laughed the Sage and said, "Yea verily,
+he hath not a Mameluke as ugly as I am; but, O my lady, let not the
+ill-favour of my face and the foulness of my form deceive thee. Hadst
+thou profited of me as hath the Prince, verily thou wouldst praise my
+affair. Indeed, he chose me as his messenger to thee, because of my
+uncomeliness and loathsomeness in his jealous love of thee; else hath
+he Mamelukes and negro slaves, pages, eunuchs and attendants out of
+number, each goodlier than other." Whenas she heard this, it commended
+itself to her reason and she believed him; so she rose forthright;—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Sixty-seventh Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the Persian
+sage acquainted the Princess with the case of the King's son, she
+believed him; so she rose forthright; and, putting her hand in his,
+said, "O my father, what hast thou brought me to ride?" He replied, "O
+my lady, thou shalt ride the horse thou camest on;" and she, "I cannot
+ride it by myself." Whereupon he smiled and knew that he was her master
+and said, "I will ride with thee myself." So he mounted and, taking her
+up behind him bound her to himself with firm bonds, while she knew not
+what he would with her. Then he turned the ascent-pin, whereupon the
+belly of the horse became full of wind and it swayed to and fro like a
+wave of the sea, and rose with them high in air nor slackened in its
+flight, till it was out of sight of the city. Now when Shams al-Nahir
+saw this, she asked him, "Ho thou! what is become of that thou toldest
+me of my Prince, making me believe that he sent thee to me?" Answered
+the Persian, "Allah damn the Prince! he is a mean and skin-flint
+knave." She cried, "Woe to thee! How darest thou disobey thy lord's
+commandment?" Whereto the Persian replied, "He is no lord of mine:
+knowest thou who I am?" Rejoined the Princess, "I know nothing of thee
+save what thou toldest me;" and retorted he, "What I told thee was a
+trick of mine against thee and the King's son: I have long lamented the
+loss of this horse which is under us; for I constructed it and made
+myself master of it. But now I have gotten firm hold of it and of thee
+too, and I will burn his heart even as he hath burnt mine; nor shall he
+ever have the horse again; no, never! So be of good cheer and keep
+thine eyes cool and clear; for I can be of more use to thee than he;
+and I am generous as I am wealthy; my servants and slaves shall obey
+thee as their mistress; I will robe thee in finest raiment and thine
+every wish shall be at thy will." When she heard this, she buffeted her
+face and cried out, saying, "Ah, well-away! I have not won my beloved
+and I have lost my father and mother!" And she wept bitter tears over
+what had befallen her, whilst the Sage fared on with her, without
+ceasing, till he came to the land of the Greeks[FN#24] and alighted in
+a verdant mead, abounding in streams and trees. Now this meadow lay
+near a city wherein was a King of high puissance, and it chanced 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 damsel and the
+horse by his side; and, before the Sage was ware, the King's slaves
+fell upon him and carried him and the lady and the horse to their
+master who, noting the foulness of the man's favour and his
+loathsomeness and the beauty of the girl and her loveliness, said, "O
+my lady, what kin is this oldster to thee?" The Persian made haste to
+reply, saying, "She is my wife and the daughter of my father's
+brother." But the lady at once gave him the lie and said, "O King, by
+Allah, I know him not, nor is he my husband; nay, he is a wicked
+magician who hath stolen me away by force and fraud." Thereupon the
+King bade bastinado 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 jail; and, taking from him the damsel and the ebony horse
+(though he knew not its properties nor the secret of its motion), set
+the girl in his serraglio and the horse amongst his hoards. Such was
+the case with the Sage and the lady; but as regards Prince Kamar
+al-Akmar, he garbed himself in travelling gear and taking what he
+needed of money, set out tracking their trail in very sorry plight; and
+journeyed from country to country and city to city seeking the Princess
+and enquiring after the ebony horse, whilst all who heard him marvelled
+at him and deemed his talk extravagant. Thus he continued doing a long
+while; but, for all his enquiry and quest, he could hit on no new news
+of her. At last he came to her father's city of Sana'a and there asked
+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,
+continuing to enquire concerning the twain as he went,— And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Sixty-eighth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the King's son
+made for the land of the Greeks, continuing to enquire concerning the
+two as he went along, till, as chance would have it, he alighted at a
+certain Khan and saw a company of merchants sitting at talk. So he sat
+down near them and heard one say, "O my friends, I lately witnessed a
+wonder of wonders." They asked, "What was that?" and he answered, "I
+was visiting such a district in such a city (naming the city wherein
+was the Princess), and I heard its people chatting of a strange thing
+which had lately befallen. It was that their King went out one day
+hunting and coursing with a company of his courtiers and the lords of
+his realm; and, issuing from the city, they came to a green meadow
+where they espied an old man standing, with a woman sitting hard by a
+horse of ebony. The man was foulest-foul of face and loathly of form,
+but the woman was a marvel of beauty and loveliness and elegance and
+perfect grace; and as for the wooden horse, it was a miracle, never saw
+eyes aught goodlier than it nor more gracious than its make." Asked the
+others, "And what did the King with them?"; and the merchant answered,
+"As for the man the King seized him and questioned him of the damsel
+and he pretended that she was his wife and the daughter of his paternal
+uncle; but she gave him the lie forthright and declared that he was a
+sorcerer and a villain. So the King took her from the old man and bade
+beat him and cast him into the trunk-house. As for the ebony horse, I
+know not what became of it." When the Prince heard these words, he drew
+near to the merchant and began questioning him discreetly and
+courteously touching the name of the city and of its King; which when
+he knew, he passed the night full of joy. And as soon as dawned the day
+he set out and travelled sans surcease till he reached that city; but,
+when he would have entered, the gate-keepers laid hands on him, that
+they might bring him before the King to question him of his condition
+and the craft in which he was skilled and the cause of his coming
+thither-such being the usage and custom of their ruler. Now it was
+supper-time when he entered the city, and it was then impossible to go
+in to the King or take counsel with him respecting the stranger. So the
+guards carried him to the jail, thinking to lay him by the heels there
+for the night; but, when the warders saw his beauty and loveliness,
+they could not find it in their hearts to imprison him: they made him
+sit with them without the walls; and, when food came to them, he ate
+with them what sufficed him. As soon as they had made an end of eating,
+they turned to the Prince and said, "What countryman art thou?" "I come
+from Fars," answered he, "the land of the Chosroλs." When they heard
+this they laughed and one of them said, "O Chosroan,[FN#25] I have
+heard the talk of men and their histories and I have looked into their
+conditions; but never saw I or heard I a bigger liar than the Chosroan
+which is with us in the jail." Quoth another, "And never did I see
+aught fouler than his favour or more hideous than his visnomy." Asked
+the Prince. "What have ye seen of his lying?"; and they answered, "He
+pretendeth that he is one of the wise! Now the King came upon him, as
+he went a- hunting, and found with him a most beautiful woman and a
+horse of the blackest ebony, never saw I a handsomer. As for the
+damsel, she is with the King, who is enamoured of her and would fain
+marry her; but she is mad, and were this man a leach as he claimeth to
+be, he would have healed her, for the King doth his utmost to discover
+a cure for her case and a remedy for her disease, and this whole year
+past hath he spent treasure upon physicians and astrologers, on her
+account; but none can avail to cure her. As for the horse, it is in the
+royal hoard-house, and the ugly man is here with us in prison; and as
+soon as night falleth, he weepeth and bemoaneth himself and will not
+let us sleep."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to
+say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Sixty-ninth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the warders
+had recounted the case of the Persian egromancer they held in prison
+and his weeping and wailing, the Prince at once devised a device
+whereby he might compass his desire; and presently the guards of the
+gate, being minded to sleep, led him into the jail and locked the door.
+So he overheard the Persian weeping and bemoaning himself, in his own
+tongue, and saying, "Alack, and alas 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 won my will of her! All this cometh of my
+lack of sense, in that I sought for myself that which I deserved not
+and which befitted not the like of me; for whoso seeketh what suiteth
+him not at all, falleth with the like of my fall." Now when the King's
+son heard this, he accosted him in Persian, saying, "How long will this
+weeping and wailing last? Say me, thinkest thou that hath befallen thee
+that which never befel other than thou?" Now when the Persian heard
+this, he made friends with him and began to complain to him of his case
+and misfortunes. And as soon as the morning morrowed, the warders took
+the Prince and carried him before their King, informing him that he had
+entered the city on the previous night, at a time when audience was
+impossible. Quoth the King to the Prince, "Whence comest thou and what
+is thy name and trade and why hast thou travelled hither?" He replied,
+"As to my name I am called in Persian Harjah;[FN#26] as to my country I
+come from the land of Fars; and I am of the men of art and especially
+of the art of medicine and healing the sick and those whom the Jinns
+drive mad. For this I go round about all countries and cities, to
+profit by adding knowledge to my knowledge, and whenever I see a
+patient I heal him and this is my craft."[FN#27] Now when the King
+heard this, he rejoiced with exceeding joy and said, "O excellent Sage,
+thou hast indeed come to us at a time when we need thee." Then he
+acquainted him with the case of the Princess, adding, "If thou cure her
+and recover her from her madness, thou shalt have of me everything thou
+seekest." Replied the Prince, "Allah save and favour the King: describe
+to me all thou hast seen of her insanity and tell me how long it is
+since the access attacked her; also how thou camest by her and the
+horse and the Sage." So the King told him the whole story, from first
+to last, adding, "The Sage is in goal." Quoth the Prince, "O auspicious
+King, and what hast thou done with the horse?" Quoth the King, "O
+youth, it is with me yet, laid up in one of my treasure-chambers,"
+whereupon said the Prince within himself, "The best thing I can do is
+first to see the horse and assure myself of its condition. If it be
+whole and sound, all will be well and end well; but, if its motor-works
+be destroyed, I must find some other way of delivering my beloved."
+Thereupon 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, showed him into the place where the
+horse was. The Prince went round about it, examining its condition, and
+found it whole and sound, whereat he rejoiced greatly and said to the
+King, "Allah save and exalt the King! I would fain go in to the damsel,
+that I may see how it is with her; for I hope in Allah to heal her by
+my healing hand through means of the horse." Then he bade them take
+care of the horse and the King carried him to the Princess's apartment
+where her lover found her wringing her hands and writhing and beating
+herself against the ground, and tearing her garments to tatters as was
+her wont; but there was no madness of Jinn 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 the three worlds;" and
+went on to soothe her and speak her fair, till he managed to whisper,
+"I am Kamar al-Akmar;" whereupon she cried out with a loud cry and fell
+down fainting for excess of joy; but the King thought this was
+epilepsy[FN#28] brought on by her fear of him, and by her suddenly
+being startled. Then the Prince put his mouth to her ear and said to
+her, "O Shams al-Nahar, O seduction of the universe, have a care for
+thy life and mine and be patient and constant; for this our position
+needeth sufferance and skilful contrivance to make shift for our
+delivery from the tyrannical King. My first move will be now to go out
+to him and tell him that thou art possessed of a Jinn and hence thy
+madness; but that I will engage to heal thee and drive away the evil
+spirit, if he will at once unbind thy bonds. So when he cometh in to
+thee, do thou speak him smooth words, that he may think I have cured
+thee, and all will be done for us as we desire." Quoth she, "Hearkening
+and obedience;" and he went out to the King in joy and gladness, and
+said to him, "O august King, I have, by thy good fortune, discovered
+her disease and its remedy, and have cured her for thee. So now do thou
+go in to her and speak her softly and treat her kindly, and promise her
+what may please her; so shall all thou desirest of her be accomplished
+to thee."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Seventieth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the Prince
+feigned himself a leach and went in to the damsel and made himself
+known to her and told her how he purposed to deliver her, she cried
+"Hearkening and obedience!" He then fared forth from her and sought the
+King and said, "Go thou in to her and speak her softly and promise her
+what may please her; so shall all thou desirest of her be accomplished
+to thee." Thereupon the King went in to her and when she saw him, she
+rose and kissing the ground before him, bade him welcome and said, "I
+admire how thou hast come to visit thy handmaid this day;" whereat he
+was ready to fly for joy and bade the waiting-women and the eunuchs
+attend her and carry her to the Hammam and make ready for her dresses
+and adornment. So they went in to her and saluted her, and she returned
+their salams with the goodliest language and after the pleasantest
+fashion; whereupon 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
+ground before him; whereupon he joyed in her with joy exceeding and
+said to the Prince, "O Sage, O philosopher, all this is of thy
+blessing. Allah increase to us the benefit of thy healing
+breath!"[FN#29] The Prince replied, "O King, for the completion of her
+cure it behoveth that thou go forth, thou and all thy troops and
+guards, to the place where thou foundest her, not forgetting the beast
+of black wood which was with her; for therein is a devil; and, unless I
+exorcise him, he will return to her and afflict her at the head of
+every month." "With love and gladness," cried the King, "O thou Prince
+of all philosophers and most learned of all who see the light of day."
+Then he brought out the ebony horse to the meadow in question and rode
+thither with all his troops and the Princess, little weeting the
+purpose of the Prince. Now when they came to the appointed place, the
+Prince, still habited as a leach, bade them set the Princess and the
+steed as far as eye could reach from the King and his troops, and said
+to him, "With thy leave, and at thy word, I will now proceed to the
+fumigations and conjurations, and here imprison the adversary of
+mankind, that he may never more return to her. After this, I shall
+mount this wooden horse which seemeth to be made of ebony, and take the
+damsel up behind me; whereupon it will shake and sway to and fro and
+fare forwards, till it come to thee, when the affair will be at an end;
+and after this thou mayst do with her as thou wilt." When the King
+heard his words, he rejoiced with extreme joy; so the Prince mounted
+the horse and, taking the damsel up behind him, whilst the King and his
+troops watched him, bound her fast to him. Then he turned the
+ascending-pin and the horse took flight and soared with them high in
+air, till they disappeared from every eye. After this the King abode
+half the day, expecting their return; but they returned not. So when he
+despaired of them, repenting him greatly of that which he had done and
+grieving sore for the loss of the damsel, he went back to the city with
+his troops. He then sent for the Persian who was in prison and said to
+him, "O thou traitor, O thou villian, why didst thou hide from me the
+mystery of the ebony horse? And now a sharper hath come to me and hath
+carried it off, together with a slave-girl whose ornaments are worth a
+mint of money, and I shall never see anyone or anything of them again!"
+So the Persian related to him all his past, first and last, and the
+King was seized with a fit of fury which well-nigh ended his life. He
+shut himself up in his palace for a while, mourning and afflicted; but
+at last his Wazirs came in to him and applied themselves to comfort
+him, saying, "Verily, he who took the damsel is an enchanter, and
+praised be Allah who hath delivered thee from his craft and sorcery!"
+And they ceased not from him, till he was comforted for her loss. Thus
+far concerning the King; but as for the Prince, he continued his career
+towards his father's capital in joy and cheer, and stayed not till he
+alighted on his own palace, where he set the lady in safety; after
+which he went in to his father and mother and saluted them and
+acquainted them with her coming, whereat they were filled with solace
+and gladness. Then he spread great banquets for the towns-folk,—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Seventy-first Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the King's son
+spread great banquets for the towns-folk and they held high festival a
+whole month, at the end of which time he went in to the Princess and
+they took their joy of each other with exceeding joy. But his father
+brake the ebony horse in pieces and destroyed its mechanism for flight;
+moreover the Prince wrote a letter to the Princess's father, advising
+him of all that had befallen her and informing him how she was now
+married to him and in all health and happiness, and sent it by a
+messenger, together with costly presents and curious rarities. And when
+the messenger arrived at the city which was Sana'a and delivered the
+letter and the presents to the King, he read the missive and rejoiced
+greatly thereat and accepted the presents, honouring and rewarding the
+bearer handsomely. Moreover, he forwarded rich gifts 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
+presents till, in course of time, his sire King Sabur deceased and he
+reigned in his stead, ruling justly over his lieges and conducting
+himself well and righteously towards them, so that the land submitted
+to him and his subjects did him loyal service; and Kamar al-Akmar and
+his wife Shams al-Nahar abode in the enjoyment of all satisfaction and
+solace of life, till there came to them the Destroyer of deligights and
+Sunderer of societies; the Plunderer of palaces, the Caterer for
+cemeteries and the Garnerer of graves. And now glory be to the Living
+One who dieth not and in whose hand is the dominion of the worlds
+visible and invisible! Moreover I have heard tell the tale of
+
+
+
+
+UNS AL-WUJUD AND THE WAZIR'S DAUGHTER AL-WARD FI'L-AKMAM OR
+ROSE-IN-HOOD.[FN#30]
+
+There was once, in days of yore and in ages and times long gone before,
+a King of great power and lord of glory and dominion galore; who had a
+Wazir Ibrahim hight, and this Wazir's daughter was a damsel of
+extraordinary beauty and loveliness, gifted with passing brilliancy and
+the perfection of grace, possessed of abundant wit, and in all good
+breeding complete. But she loved wassail and wine and the human face
+divine and choice verses and rare stories; and the delicacy of her
+inner gifts invited all hearts to love, even as saith the poet,
+describing her,
+
+ "Like moon she shines amid the starry sky, *
+
+
+ Robing in tresses blackest ink outvie.
+
+
+ The morning-breezes give her boughs fair drink, *
+
+
+ And like a branch she sways with supple ply:
+
+
+ She smiles in passing us. O thou that art *
+
+
+ Fairest in yellow robed, or cramoisie,
+
+
+ Thou playest with my wit in love, as though *
+
+
+ Sparrow in hand of playful boy were I."[FN#31]
+
+
+
+Her name was Rose-in-Hood and she was so named for her young and tender
+beauty and the freshness of her brilliancy; and the King loved her in
+his cups because of her accomplishments and fine manners. Now it was
+the King's custom yearly to gather together all the nobles of his realm
+and play with the ball.[FN#32] So when the day came round whereon the
+folk assembled for ballplay, the Minister's daughter seated herself at
+her lattice, to divert herself by looking on at the game; and, as they
+were at play, her glance fell upon a youth among the guards than whom
+never was seen a comelier face nor a goodlier form; for he was bright
+of favour showing white teeth when he smiled, tall-statured and
+broad-shouldered. She looked at him again and again and could not take
+her fill of gazing; and presently said to her nurse, "What is the name
+of yonder handsome young man among the troops?" Replied the nurse, "O
+my daughter, the dear fellows are all handsome. Which of them dost thou
+mean?" Said Rose-in-Hood, "Wait till he come past and I will point him
+out to thee." So she took an apple and as he rode by dropped it on him,
+whereupon he raised his head, to see who did this, and espied the
+Wazir's daughter at the window, as she were the moon of fullest light
+in the darkness of the night; nor did he withdraw his eyes, till his
+heart was utterly lost to her, and he recited these lines,
+
+ "Was't archer shot me, or was't thine eyes *
+
+
+ Ruined lover's heart that thy charms espies?
+
+
+ Was the notched shaft[FN#33] from a host outshot, *
+
+
+ Or from latticed window in sudden guise?"
+
+
+
+When the game was at an end, and all had left the ground, she asked her
+nurse, "What is the name of that youth I showed thee?"; and the good
+woman answered, "His name is Uns al-Wujud;" whereat Rose-in-Hood shook
+her head and lay down on her couch, with thoughts a-fire for love.
+Then, sighing deeply, she improvised these couplets,
+
+ "He missed not who dubbed thee, 'World's delight,' *
+
+
+ A world's love conjoining to bounty's light:[FN#34]
+
+
+ O thou, whose favour the full moon favours, *
+
+
+ Whose charms make life and the living bright!
+
+
+ Thou hast none equal among mankind; *
+
+
+ Sultan of Beauty, and proof I'll cite:
+
+
+ Thine eye-brows are likest a well-formed Nϊn,[FN#35] *
+
+
+ And thine eyes a Sαd,[FN#36] by His hand indite;
+
+
+ Thy shape is the soft, green bough that gives *
+
+
+ When asked to all with all-gracious sprite:
+
+
+ Thou excellest knights of the world in stowre, *
+
+
+ With delight and beauty and bounty dight."
+
+
+
+When she had finished her verses, she wrote them on a sheet of paper,
+which she folded in a piece of golf-embroidered silk and placed under
+her pillow. Now one of her nurses had seen 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, after reading it, knew that she had fallen in
+love with Uns al-Wujud. 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 true counsellor and am tenderly anxious on thy account. Know
+that love is a tyrant and the hiding it melteth iron and entaileth
+sickness and unease; nor for whoso confesseth it is there aught of
+reproach." Rejoined Rose-in-Hood, "And what is the medicine of passion,
+O nurse mine?" Answered the nurse, "The medicine of passion is
+enjoyment" Quoth she, "And how may one come by enjoyment?" Quoth the
+other, "By letters and messages, my lady; by whispered words of
+compliment and by greetings before the world;[FN#37] all this bringeth
+lovers together and makes hard matters easy. So if thou have aught at
+heart, mistress mine, I am the fittest to keep thy secret and do thy
+desires and carry thy letters." Now when the damsel heard this, her
+reason flew and fled for joy; but she restrained herself from speech
+till she should see the issue of the matter, saying within herself,
+"None knoweth this thing of me, nor will I trust this one with my
+secret, till I have tried her." Then said the woman, "O my lady, I saw
+in my sleep as though a man came to me and said: 'Thy mistress and Uns
+al-Wujud love each other; so do thou serve their case by carrying their
+messages and doing their desires and keeping their secrets; and much
+good shall befal thee.' So now I have told thee my vision and it is
+thine to decide." Quoth Rose-in-Hood, after she heard of the dream,—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Seventy-second Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Rose-in- Hood
+asked her nurse after hearing of the dream, "Tell me, canst thou keep a
+secret, O my nurse?"; whereto she answered, "And how should I not keep
+secrecy, I that am of the flower of the free?"[FN#38] Then the maiden
+pulled out the scroll, whereon she had written the verses and said,
+"Carry me this my letter to Uns al-Wujud and bring me his reply." The
+nurse took the letter and, repairing to Uns al-Wujud, kissed his hands
+and greeted him right courteously, then gave him the paper; and he read
+it and, comprehending the contents, wrote on the back these couplets,
+
+ "I soothe my heart and my love repel; *
+
+
+ But my state interprets my love too well:
+
+
+ When tears flow I tell them mine eyes are ill, *
+
+
+ Lest the censor see and my case fortell,
+
+
+ I was fancy-free and unknew I Love; *
+
+
+ But I fell in love and in madness fell.
+
+
+ I show you my case and complain of pain, *
+
+
+ Pine and ecstasy that your ruth compel:
+
+
+ I write you with tears of eyes, so belike *
+
+
+ They explain the love come my heart to quell;
+
+
+ Allah guard a face that is veiled with charms, *
+
+
+ Whose thrall is Moon and the Stars as well:
+
+
+ In her beauty I never beheld the like; *
+
+
+ From her sway the branches learn sway and swell:
+
+
+ I beg you, an 'tis not too much of pains, *
+
+
+ To call;[FN#39] 'twere boon without parallel.
+
+
+ I give you a soul you will haply take. *
+
+
+ To which Union is Heaven, Disunion Hell."
+
+
+
+Then he folded the letter and kissing it, gave it to the go- between
+and said to her, "O nurse, incline the lady's heart to me." "To hear is
+to obey," answered she and carried the script to her mistress, who
+kissed it and laid it on her head, then she opened it and read it and
+understood it and wrote at the foot of it these couplets,
+
+ "O whose heart by our beauty is captive ta'en, *
+
+
+ Have patience and all thou shalt haply gain!
+
+
+ When we knew that thy love was a true affect, *
+
+
+ And what pained our heart to thy heart gave pain,
+
+
+ We had granted thee wished-for call and more; *
+
+
+ But hindered so doing the chamberlain.
+
+
+ When the night grows dark, through our love's excess *
+
+
+ Fire burns our vitals with might and main:
+
+
+ And sleep from our beds is driven afar, *
+
+
+ And our bodies are tortured by passion-bane.
+
+
+ 'Hide Love!' in Love's code is the first command; *
+
+
+ And from raising his veil thy hand restrain:
+
+
+ I fell love-fulfilled by yon gazelle: *
+
+
+ Would he never wander from where I dwell!"
+
+
+
+Then she folded the letter and gave it to the nurse, who took it and
+went out from her mistress to seek the young man; but, as she would
+fare forth, the chamberlain met her and said to her, "Whither away?"
+"To the bath," answered she; but in her fear and confusion, she dropped
+the letter, without knowing it, and went off unrecking what she had
+done; when one of the eunuchs, seeing it lying in the way, picked it
+up. When the nurse 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. Meanwhile, the Wazir came out of the Harim and seated
+himself on his couch; whereupon behold, the eunuch, who had picked up
+the letter, came in to him, hending it in hand and said, "O my lord, I
+found this paper lying upon the floor and picked it up." So the
+Minister took it from his hand, folded as it was, and opening it, read
+the verses as above set down. Then, after mastering the meaning, he
+examined the writing and knew it for his daughter's hand; whereupon he
+went to her mother, weeping so abundant tears that his beard was
+wetted. His wife asked him, "What maketh thee weep, O my lord?"; and he
+answered, "Take this letter and see what is therein." So she took it
+and found it to be a love-letter from her daughter Rose-in-Hood to Uns
+al-Wujud: whereupon the ready drops sprang to her eyes; but she
+composed her mind, and, gulping down 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 keeping thine honour and concealing the affair of
+thy daughter." And she went on to comfort him and lighten his trouble;
+but he said, "I am fearful for my daughter by reason of this new
+passion. Knowest thou not that the Sultan loveth Uns al- Wujud with
+exceeding love? And my fear hath two causes. The first concerneth
+myself; it is, that she is my daughter: the second is on account of the
+King; for that Uns al-Wujud is a favourite with the Sultan and
+peradventure great troubles shall come out of this affair. What deemest
+thou should be done?"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and
+ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Seventy-third Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Wazir, after
+recounting the affair of his daughter, asked his wife, "What deemest
+thou should be done?" And she answered, "Have patience whilst I pray
+the prayer for right direction." So she prayed a two-bow prayer
+according to the prophetic[FN#40] ordinance for seeking divine
+guidance; after which she said to her husband, "In the midst of the Sea
+of Treasures[FN#41] standeth a mountain named the Mount of the Bereaved
+Mother (the cause of which being so called shall presently follow in
+its place, Inshallah!); and thither can none have access, save with
+pains and difficulty and distress: do thou make that same her
+abiding-place." Accordingly the Minister and his wife agreed to build
+on that mountain a virgin castle and lodge their daughter therein with
+the necessary provision to be renewed year by year and attendants to
+cheer and to serve her. Accordingly he collected carpenters, builders
+and architects and despatched them to the mountain, where they builded
+her an impregnable castle, never saw eyes the like thereof. Then he
+made ready vivers and carriage for the journey and, going in to his
+daughter by night, bade her prepare to set out on a pleasure-excursion.
+Thereupon her heart presaged the sorrows of separation and, when she
+went forth and saw the preparations for the journey, she wept with sore
+weeping and wrote that upon the door which might acquaint her lover
+with what had passed and with the transports of passion and grief that
+were upon her, transports such as would make the flesh to shiver and
+hair to stare, and melt the hardest stone with care, and tear from
+every eye a tear. And what she wrote were these couplets,
+
+ "By Allah, O thou house, if my beloved a morn go by, *
+
+
+ And greet with signs and signals lover e'er is wont to fly,
+
+
+ I pray thee give him our salams in pure and fragrant guise, *
+
+
+ For he indeed may never know where we this eve shall lie.
+
+
+ I wot not whither they have fared, thus bearing us afar *
+
+
+ At speed, and lightly-quipt, the lighter from one love to
+
+
+ fly:
+
+
+ When starkens night, the birds in brake or branches snugly
+
+
+ perched * Wail for our sorrow and announce our hapless
+
+
+ destiny:
+
+
+ The tongue of their condition saith, 'Alas, alas for woe, *
+
+
+ And heavy brunt of parting-blow two lovers must aby':
+
+
+ When viewed I separation-cups were filled to the brim *
+
+
+ And us with merest sorrow-wine Fate came so fast to ply,
+
+
+ I mixed them with becoming share of patience self to excuse, *
+
+
+ But Patience for the loss of you her solace doth refuse."
+
+
+
+Now when she ended her lines, she mounted and they set forward with
+her, crossing and cutting over wold and wild and riant dale and rugged
+hill, till they came to the shore of the Sea of Treasures; here they
+pitched their tents and built her a great ship, wherein they went down
+with her and her suite and carried them over to the mountain. The
+Minister had ordered them, on reaching the journey's end, to set her in
+the castle and to make their way back to the shore, where they were to
+break up the vessel. So they did his bidding and returned home, weeping
+over what had befallen. Such was their case; but as regards Uns al-
+Wujud, he arose from sleep and prayed the dawn-prayer, after which he
+took horse and rode forth to attend upon the Sultan. On his way, he
+passed by the Wazir's house, thinking perchance to see some of his
+followers as of wont; but he saw no one and, looking upon the door, he
+read written thereon the verses aforesaid. At this sight, his senses
+failed him; fire was kindled in his vitals and he returned to his
+lodging, where he passed the day in trouble and transports of grief,
+without finding ease or patience, till night darkened upon him, when
+his yearning and love-longing redoubled. Thereupon, by way of
+concealment, he disguised himself in the ragged garb of a Fakir,[FN#42]
+and set out wandering at random through the glooms of night, distracted
+and knowing not whither he went. So he wandered on all that night and
+next day, till the heat of the sun waxed fierce and the mountains
+flamed like fire and thirst was grievous upon him. Presently, he espied
+a tree, by whose side was a thin thread 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;[FN#43] and, indeed his colour had changed and his face had
+yellowed, and his feet were swollen with travel and travail. So he shed
+copious tears and repeated these couplets,
+
+ "The lover is drunken with love of friend; *
+
+
+ On a longing that groweth his joys depend:
+
+
+ Love-distracted, ardent, bewildered, lost *
+
+
+ From home, nor may food aught of pleasure lend:
+
+
+ How can life be delightsome to one in love, *
+
+
+ And from lover parted, 'twere strange, unkenned!
+
+
+ I melt with the fire of my pine for them, *
+
+
+ And the tears down my cheek in a stream descend.
+
+
+ Shall I see them, say me, or one that comes *
+
+
+ From the camp, who th' afflicted heart shall tend?"
+
+
+
+And after thus reciting he wept till he wetted the hard dry ground; but
+anon without loss of time he rose and fared on again over waste and
+wold, till there came out upon him a lion, with a neck buried in
+tangled mane, a head the bigness of a dome, a mouth wider than the door
+thereof and teeth like elephants' tusks. Now when Uns al-Wujud saw him,
+he gave himself up for lost, and turning[FN#44] towards the Temple of
+Meccah, pronounced the professions of the faith and prepared for death.
+He had read in books that whoso will flatter the lion, beguileth
+him,[FN#45] for that he is readily duped by smooth speech and gentled
+by being glorified; so he began and said, "O Lion of the forest! O Lord
+of the waste! O terrible Leo! O father of fighters! O Sultan of wild
+beasts! Behold, I am a lover in longing, whom passion and severance
+have been wronging; since I parted from my dear, I have lost my
+reasoning gear; wherefore, to my speech do thou give ear and have ruth
+on my passion and hope and fear." When the lion heard this, he drew
+back from him and sitting down on his hindquarters, raised his head to
+him and began to frisk tail and paws; which when Uns al-Wujud saw, he
+recited these couplets,
+
+ "Lion of the wold wilt thou murther me, *
+
+
+ Ere I meet her who doomed me to slavery?
+
+
+ I am not game and I bear no fat; *
+
+
+ For the loss of my love makes me sickness dree;
+
+
+ And estrangement from her hath so worn me down *
+
+
+ I am like a shape in a shroud we see.
+
+
+ O thou sire of spoils,[FN#46] O thou lion of war, *
+
+
+ Give not my pains to the blamer's gree.
+
+
+ I burn with love, I am drowned in tears *
+
+
+ For a parting from lover, sore misery!
+
+
+ And my thoughts of her in the murk of night *
+
+
+ For love hath make my being unbe."
+
+
+
+As he had finished his lines the lion rose,—And Shahrazad perceived the
+dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Seventy-fourth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that as Uns al- Wujud
+ended his lines, the lion arose and stalked slowly up to him, with eyes
+tear-railing and licked him with his tongue, then walked on before him,
+signing to him as though saying, "Follow me." So he followed him, and
+the beast ceased not leading him on for a while till he brought him up
+a mountain, and guided him to the farther side, where he came upon the
+track of a caravan over the desert, and knew it to be that of
+Rose-in-Hood and her company. Then he took the trail and, when the lion
+saw that he knew the track for that of the party which escorted her, he
+turned back and went his way; whilst Uns al-Wujud walked along the
+foot-marks day and night, till they brought him to a dashing sea,
+swollen with clashing surge. The trail led down to the sandy shore and
+there broke off; whereby he knew that they had taken ship and had
+continued their journey by water. So he lost hope of finding his lover
+and with hot tears he repeated these couplets,
+
+ "Far is the fane and patience faileth me; *
+
+
+ How can I seek them[FN#47] o'er the abyssmal sea;
+
+
+ Or how be patient, when my vitals burn *
+
+
+ For love of them, and sleep waxed insomny?
+
+
+ Since the sad day they left the home and fled, *
+
+
+ My heart's consumed by love's ardency:
+
+
+ Sayhun, Jayhun,[FN#48] Euphrates-like my tears, *
+
+
+ Make flood no deluged rain its like can see:
+
+
+ Mine eyelids chafed with running tears remain, *
+
+
+ My heart from fiery sparks is never free;
+
+
+ The hosts of love and longing pressed me *
+
+
+ And made the hosts of patience break and flee.
+
+
+ I've risked my life too freely for their love; *
+
+
+ And risk of life the least of ills shall be.
+
+
+ Allah ne'er punish eye that saw those charms *
+
+
+ Enshrined, and passing full moon's brilliancy!
+
+
+ I found me felled by fair wide-opened eyes, *
+
+
+ Which pierced my heart with stringless archery:
+
+
+ And soft, lithe, swaying shape enraptured me *
+
+
+ As sway the branches of the willow-tree:
+
+
+ Wi' them I covet union that I win, *
+
+
+ O'er love-pains cark and care, a mastery.
+
+
+ For love of them aye, morn and eve I pine, *
+
+
+ And doubt all came to me from evil eyne."
+
+
+
+And when his lines were ended he wept, till he swooned away, and abode
+in his swoon a long while; but as soon as he came to himself, he looked
+right and left and seeing no one in the desert, he became fearful of
+the wild beasts; so he clomb to the top of a high mountain, where he
+heard the voice of a son of Adam speaking within a cave. He listened
+and lo! they were the accents of a devotee, who had forsworn the world
+and given himself up to pious works and worship. He knocked thrice at
+the cavern-door, but the hermit made him no answer, neither came forth
+to him; wherefore he groaned aloud and recited these couplets.
+
+ "What pathway find I my desire t'obtain, *
+
+
+ How 'scape from care and cark and pain and bane?
+
+
+ All terrors join to make me old and hoar *
+
+
+ Of head and heart, ere youth from me is ta'en:
+
+
+ Nor find I any aid my passion, nor *
+
+
+ A friend to lighten load of bane and pain.
+
+
+ How great and many troubles I've endured! *
+
+
+ Fortune hath turned her back I see unfain.
+
+
+ Ah mercy, mercy on the lover's heart, *
+
+
+ Doomed cup of parting and desertion drain!
+
+
+ A fire is in his heart, his vitals waste, *
+
+
+ And severance made his reason vainest vain.
+
+
+ How dread the day I came to her abode *
+
+
+ And saw the writ they wrote on doorway lain!
+
+
+ I wept, till gave I earth to drink my grief; *
+
+
+ But still to near and far[FN#49] I did but feign:
+
+
+ Then strayed I till in waste a lion sprang *
+
+
+ On me, and but for flattering words had slain:
+
+
+ I soothed him: so he spared me and lent me aid, *
+
+
+ He too might haply of love's taste complain.
+
+
+ O devotee, that idlest in thy cave, *
+
+
+ Meseems eke thou hast learned Love's might and main;
+
+
+ But if, at end of woes, with them I league, *
+
+
+ Straight I'll forget all suffering and fatigue."
+
+
+
+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!"[FN#50] So
+he entered and saluted the devotee, who returned his salam and asked
+him, "What is thy name?" Answered the young man, "Uns al-Wujud." "And
+what caused thee to come hither?" quoth the hermit. So he told him his
+story in its entirety, omitting naught of his misfortunes; whereat he
+wept and said, "O Uns al- Wujud, these twenty years have I passed in
+this place, but never beheld I any man here, until yesterday, when I
+heard a noise of weeping and lamentation and, looking forth in the
+direction of the sound, saw many people and tents pitched on the
+sea-shore; and the party at once proceeded to build a ship, in which
+certain of them embarked and sailed over the waters. Then some of the
+crew returned with the ship and breaking it up, went their way; and I
+suspect that those who embarked in the ship and returned not, are they
+whom thou seekest. In that case, O Uns al-Wujud, thy grief must needs
+be great and sore and thou art excusable, though never yet was lover
+but suffered love-longing." Then he recited these couplets,
+
+ "Uns al-Wujud, dost deem me fancy-free, *
+
+
+ When pine and longing slay and quicken me?
+
+
+ I have known love and yearning from the years *
+
+
+ Since mother-milk I drank, nor e'er was free.
+
+
+ Long struggled I with Love, till learnt his might; *
+
+
+ Ask thou of him, he'll tell with willing gree.
+
+
+ Love-sick and pining drank I passion-cup, *
+
+
+ And well-nigh perished in mine agony.
+
+
+ Strong was I, but my strength to weakness turned, *
+
+
+ And eye-sword brake through Patience armoury:
+
+
+ Hope not to win love-joys, without annoy; *
+
+
+ Contrary ever links with contrary.
+
+
+ But fear not change from lover true; be true *
+
+
+ Unto thy wish, some day thine own 'twill be.
+
+
+ Love hath forbidden to his votaries *
+
+
+ Relinquishment as deadliest heresy."
+
+
+
+The eremite, having ended his verse, rose and, coming up to Uns
+al-Wujud, embraced him,—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and
+ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Seventy-fifth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the eremite
+having ended his verse, rose and coming up to Uns al-Wujud embraced
+him, and they wept together, till the hills rang with their cries and
+they fell down fainting. When they revived, they swore
+brotherhood[FN#51] in Allah Almighty; after which said Uns al-Wujud,
+"This very night will I pray to God and seek of Him direction[FN#52]
+anent what thou shouldst do to attain thy desire." Thus it was with
+them; but as regards Rose-in-Hood, when they brought her to the
+mountain and set her in the castle and she beheld its ordering, she
+wept and exclaimed, "By Allah, thou art a goodly place, save that thou
+lackest in thee the presence of the beloved!"[FN#53] Then seeing birds
+in the island, she bade her people set snares for them and put all they
+caught in cages within the castle; and they did so. But she sat at a
+lattice and bethought her of what had passed, and desire and passion
+and distraction redoubled upon her, till she burst into tears and
+repeated these couplets,
+
+ "O to whom now, of my desire complaining sore, shall I *
+
+
+ Bewail my parting from my fere compellθd thus to fly?
+
+
+ Flames rage within what underlies my ribs, yet hide them I *
+
+
+ In deepest secret dreading aye the jealous hostile spy:
+
+
+ I am grown as lean, attenuate as any pick of tooth,[FN#54] *
+
+
+ By sore estrangement, absence, ardour, ceaseless sob and
+
+
+ sigh.
+
+
+ Where is the eye of my beloved to see how I'm become *
+
+
+ Like tree stripped bare of leafage left to linger and to
+
+
+ die.
+
+
+ They tyrannised over me whom they confined in place *
+
+
+ Whereto the lover of my heart may never draw him nigh:
+
+
+ I beg the Sun for me to give greetings a thousandfold, *
+
+
+ At time of rising and again when setting from the sky,
+
+
+ To the beloved one who shames a full moon's loveliness, *
+
+
+ When shows that slender form that doth the willow-branch
+
+
+ outvie.
+
+
+ If Rose herself would even with his cheek, I say of her *
+
+
+ 'Thou art not like it if to me my portion thou
+
+
+ deny:'[FN#55]
+
+
+ His honey-dew of lips is like the grateful water draught *
+
+
+ Would cool me when a fire in heart upflameth fierce and
+
+
+ high:
+
+
+ How shall I give him up who is my heart and soul of me, *
+
+
+ My malady my wasting cause, my love, sole leach of me?"
+
+
+
+Then, as the glooms of night closed around her, her yearning increased
+and she called to mind the past and recited also these couplets,
+
+ "'Tis dark: my transport and unease now gather might and main,
+
+
+ * And love-desire provoketh me to wake my wonted pain:
+
+
+ The pang of parting takes for ever place within my breast, *
+
+
+ And pining makes me desolate in destitution lain.
+
+
+ Ecstasy sore maltreats my soul and yearning burns my sprite, *
+
+
+ And tears betray love's secresy which I would lief contain:
+
+
+ I weet no way, I know no case that can make light my load, *
+
+
+ Or heal my wasting body or cast out from me this bane.
+
+
+ A hell of fire is in my heart upflames with lambent tongue *
+
+
+ And Laza's furnace-fires within my liver place have ta'en.
+
+
+ O thou, exaggerating blame for what befel, enough *
+
+
+ I bear with patience whatsoe'er hath writ for me the Pen!
+
+
+ I swear, by Allah, ne'er to find aught comfort for their loss;
+
+
+ * "Tis oath of passion's children and their oaths are ne'er
+
+
+ in vain.
+
+
+ O Night! Salams of me to friends and let to them be known *
+
+
+ Of thee true knowledge how I wake and waking ever wone."
+
+
+
+Meanwhile, the hermit said to Uns al-Wujud, "Go down to the palm- grove
+in the valley and fetch some fibre."[FN#56] So he went and returned
+with the palm-fibre, which the hermit took and, twisting into ropes,
+make therewith a net,[FN#57] such as is used for carrying straw; after
+which he said, "O Uns al-Wujud, in the heart of the valley groweth a
+gourd, which springeth up and drieth upon its roots. Go down there and
+fill this sack 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 win thy wish; for whoso never ventureth shall not have what he
+seeketh." "I hear and obey," answered Uns al-Wujud. Then he bade the
+hermit farewell after the holy man had prayed for him; and, betaking
+himself to the sole of the valley, did as his adviser had counselled
+him; made the sack, launched it upon the water, and pushed from shore.
+Then there arose a wind, which drave him out to sea, till he was lost
+to the eremite's view; and he ceased not to float over the abysses of
+the ocean, one billow tossing him up and another bearing him down (and
+he beholding the while the dangers and marvels of the deep), for the
+space of three days. At the end of that time Fate cast him upon the
+Mount of the Bereft Mother, where he landed, giddy and tottering like a
+chick unfledged, and at the last of his strength for hunger and thirst;
+but, finding there streams flowing and birds on the branches cooing and
+fruit-laden trees in clusters and singly growing, he ate of the fruits
+and drank of the rills. Then he walked on till he saw some white thing
+afar off, and making for it, found that it was a strongly fortified
+castle. So he went up to the gate and seeing it locked, sat down by it;
+and there he sat for three days when behold, the gate opened and an
+eunuch came out, who finding Uns al-Wujud there seated, said to him,
+"Whence camest thou and who brought thee hither?" Quoth he, "From
+Ispahan and I was voyaging with merchandise when my ship was wrecked
+and the waves cast me upon the farther side of this island." Whereupon
+the eunuch wept and embraced him, saying, "Allah preserve thee, O thou
+friendly face! Ispahan is mine own country and I have there a cousin,
+the daughter of my father's brother, whom I loved from my childhood and
+cherished with fond affection; but a people stronger than we fell upon
+us in foray and taking me among other booty, cut off my yard[FN#58] and
+sold me for a castrato, whilst I was yet a lad; and this is how I came
+to be in such case."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased
+to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Seventy-sixth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the eunuch who
+came forth from the castle, where Rose-in-Hood was confined, told Uns
+al-Wujud all his tale and said:—"The raiders who captured me cut off my
+yard and sold me for a castrato; and this is how I came to be in such
+case."[FN#59] And after saluting him and wishing him long life, the
+eunuch carried him into the courtyard of the castle, where he saw a
+great tank of water, surrounded by trees, on whose branches hung cages
+of silver, with doors of gold, and therein birds were warbling and
+singing the praises of the Requiting King. And when he came to the
+first cage he looked in and lo! a turtle dove, on seeing him, raised
+her voice and cried out, saying, "O Thou Bounty-fraught!" Whereat he
+fell down fainting and after coming to himself, he sighed heavily and
+recited these couplets,
+
+ "O turtle dove, like me art thou distraught? *
+
+
+ Then pray the Lord and sing 'O Bounty-fraught!'
+
+
+ Would I knew an thy moan were sign of joy, *
+
+
+ Or cry of love-desire in heart inwrought,—
+
+
+ An moan thou pining for a lover gone *
+
+
+ Who left thee woe begone to pine in thought,—
+
+
+ Or if like me hast lost thy fondest friend, *
+
+
+ And severance long desire to memory brought?
+
+
+ O Allah, guard a faithful lover's lot *
+
+
+ I will not leave her though my bones go rot!"
+
+
+
+Then, after ending his verses, he fainted again; and, presently
+reviving he went on to the second cage, wherein he found a ringdove.
+When it saw him, it sang out, "O Eternal, I thank thee!" and he groaned
+and recited these couplets,
+
+ "I heard a ringdove chanting plaintively, *
+
+
+ 'I thank Thee, O Eternal for this misery!'
+
+
+ Haply, perchance, may Allah, of His grace, *
+
+
+ Send me by this long round my love to see.
+
+
+ Full oft[FN#60] she comes with honeyed lips dark red, *
+
+
+ And heaps up lowe upon love's ardency.
+
+
+ Quoth I (while longing fires flame high and fierce *
+
+
+ In heart, and wasting life's vitality,
+
+
+ And tears like gouts of blood go railing down *
+
+
+ In torrents over cheeks now pale of blee),
+
+
+ 'None e'er trod earth that was not born to woe, *
+
+
+ But I will patient dree mine agony,
+
+
+ So help me Allah! till that happy day *
+
+
+ When with my mistress I unite shall be:
+
+
+ Then will I spend my good on lover-wights, *
+
+
+ Who're of my tribe and of the faith of me;
+
+
+ And loose the very birds from jail set free, *
+
+
+ And change my grief for gladdest gree and glee!'"
+
+
+
+Then he went on to the third cage, wherein he found a
+mockingbird[FN#61] which, when it saw him, set up a song, and he
+recited the following couplets,
+
+ "Pleaseth me yon Hazar of mocking strain *
+
+
+ Like voice of lover pained by love in vain.
+
+
+ Woe's me for lovers! Ah how many men *
+
+
+ By nights and pine and passion low are lain!
+
+
+ As though by stress of love they had been made *
+
+
+ Morn-less and sleep-less by their pain and bane.
+
+
+ When I went daft for him who conquered me *
+
+
+ And pined for him who proved of proudest strain,
+
+
+ My tears in streams down trickled and I cried *
+
+
+ 'These long-linkt tears bind like an adamant-chain:'
+
+
+ Grew concupiscence, severance long, and I *
+
+
+ Lost Patience' hoards and grief waxed sovereign:
+
+
+ If Justice bide in world and me unite *
+
+
+ With him I love and Allah veil us deign,
+
+
+ I'll strip my clothes that he my form shall sight *
+
+
+ With parting, distance, grief, how poor of plight!"
+
+
+
+Then he went to the fourth cage, where he found a Bulbul[FN#62] which,
+at sight of him, began to sway to and fro and sing its plaintive
+descant; and when he heard its complaint, he burst into tears and
+repeated these couplets.
+
+ "The Bulbul's note, whenas dawn is nigh, *
+
+
+ Tells the lover from strains of strings to fly:
+
+
+ Complaineth for passion Uns al-Wujud, *
+
+
+ For pine that would being to him deny.
+
+
+ How many a strain do we hear, whose sound *
+
+
+ Softens stones and the rock can mollify:
+
+
+ And the breeze of morning that sweetly speaks *
+
+
+ Of meadows in flowered greenery.
+
+
+ And scents and sounds in the morning-tide *
+
+
+ Of birds and zephyrs in fragrance vie;
+
+
+ But I think of one, of an absent friend, *
+
+
+ And tears rail like rain from a showery sky;
+
+
+ And the flamy tongues in my breast uprise *
+
+
+ As sparks from gleed that in dark air fly.
+
+
+ Allah deign vouchsafe to a lover distraught *
+
+
+ Someday the face of his dear to descry!
+
+
+ For lovers, indeed, no excuse is clear, *
+
+
+ Save excuse of sight and excuse of eye."
+
+
+
+Then he walked on a little and came to a goodly cage, than which was no
+goodlier there, and in it a culver of the forest, that is to say, a
+wood-pigeon,[FN#63] the bird renowned among birds as the minstrel of
+love-longing, with a collar of jewels about its neck marvellous fine
+and fair. He considered it awhile and, seeing it absently brooding in
+its cage, he shed tears and repeated these couplets,
+
+ "O culver of copse,[FN#64] with salams I greet; *
+
+
+ O brother of lovers who woe must weet!
+
+
+ I love a gazelle who is slender-slim, *
+
+
+ Whose glances for keenness the scymitar beat:
+
+
+ For her love are my heart and my vitals a-fire, *
+
+
+ And my frame consumes in love's fever-heat.
+
+
+ The sweet taste of food is unlawful for me, *
+
+
+ And forbidden is slumber, unlawfullest sweet.
+
+
+ Endurance and solace have travelled from me, *
+
+
+ And love homes in my heart and grief takes firm seat:
+
+
+ How shall life deal joy when they flee my sight *
+
+
+ Who are joy and gladness and life and sprite?"
+
+
+
+As soon as Uns al-Wujud had ended his verse,—And Shahrazad perceived
+the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Seventy-seventh Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that as soon as Uns
+al-Wujud had ended his verse, the wood-culver awoke from its brooding
+and cooed a reply to his lines and shrilled and trilled with its
+thrilling notes till it all but spake with human speech;[FN#65] and the
+tongue of the case talked for it and recited these couplets,
+
+ "O lover, thou bringest to thought a tide *
+
+
+ When the strength of my youth first faded and died;
+
+
+ And a friend of whose form I was 'namoured, *
+
+
+ Seductive and dight with beauty's pride;
+
+
+ Whose voice, as he sat on the sandhill-tree, *
+
+
+ From the Nay's[FN#66] sweet sound turned my heart aside;
+
+
+ A fowler snared him in net, the while *
+
+
+ 'O that man would leave me at large!' he cried;
+
+
+ I had hoped he might somewhat of mercy show *
+
+
+ When a hapless lover he so espied;
+
+
+ But Allah smite him who tore me away, *
+
+
+ In his hardness of heart, from my lover's side;
+
+
+ But aye my desire for him groweth more, *
+
+
+ And my heart with the fires of disjunction is fried:
+
+
+ Allah guard a true lover, who strives with love, *
+
+
+ And hath borne the torments I still abide!
+
+
+ And, seeing me bound in this cage, with mind *
+
+
+ Of ruth, release me my love to find."
+
+
+
+Then Uns al-Wujud turned to his companion, the Ispahahi, and said,
+"What palace is this? Who built it and who abideth in it?" Quoth the
+eunuch, "The Wazir of a certain King built it to guard his daughter,
+fearing for her the accidents of Time and the incidents of Fortune, and
+lodged her herein, her and her attendants; nor do we open it save once
+in every year, when their provision cometh to them." And Uns al-Wujud
+said to himself, "I have gained my end, though I may have long to
+wait." Such was his case; but as regards Rose-in-Hood, of a truth she
+took no pleasure in eating or drinking, sitting or sleeping; but her
+desire and passion and distraction redoubled on her, and she went
+wandering about the castle-corners, but could find no issue; wherefore
+she shed tears and recited these couplets,
+
+ "They have cruelly ta'en me from him, my beloved, *
+
+
+ And made me taste anguish in prison ta'en:
+
+
+ They have fired my heart with the flames of love, *
+
+
+ Barred all sight of him whom to see I'm fain:
+
+
+ In a lofty palace they prisoned me *
+
+
+ On a mountain placed in the middle main.
+
+
+ If they'd have me forget him, right vain's their wish, *
+
+
+ For my love is grown of a stronger strain.
+
+
+ How can I forget him whose face was cause *
+
+
+ Of all I suffer, of all I 'plain?
+
+
+ The whole of my days in sorrow's spent, *
+
+
+ And in thought of him through the night I'm lain.
+
+
+ Remembrance of him cheers my solitude, *
+
+
+ While I lorn of his presence and lone remain.
+
+
+ Would I knew if, after this all, my fate *
+
+
+ To oblige the desire of my hear will deign."
+
+
+
+When her verses were ended, she ascended to the terrace-roof of the
+castle after donning her richest clothes and trinkets and throwing a
+necklace of jewels around her neck. Then binding together some dresses
+of Ba'albak[FN#67] stuff by way of rope, she tied them to the crenelles
+and let herself down thereby to the ground. And she fared on over
+wastes and waterless wilds, till she came to the shore, where she saw a
+fisherman plying here and there over the sea, for the wind had driven
+him on to the island. When he saw her, he was affrighted[FN#68] and
+pushed off again, flying from her; but she cried out and made pressing
+signs to him to return, versifying with these couplets,
+
+ "O fisherman no care hast thou to fear, *
+
+
+ I'm but an earth-born maid in mortal sphere;
+
+
+ I pray thee linger and my prayer grant *
+
+
+ And to my true unhappy tale give ear:
+
+
+ Pity (so Allah spare thee!) warmest love; *
+
+
+ Say, hast thou seen him-my beloved fere?
+
+
+ I love a lovely youth whose face excels *
+
+
+ Sunlight, and passes moon when clearest clear:
+
+
+ The fawn, that sees his glance, is fain to cry *
+
+
+ 'I am his thrall' and own himself no peer:
+
+
+ Beauty hath written, on his winsome cheek, *
+
+
+ Rare lines of pregnant sense for every seer;
+
+
+ Who sights the light of love his soul is saved; *
+
+
+ Who strays is Infidel to Hell anear:
+
+
+ An thou in mercy show his sight, O rare![FN#69] *
+
+
+ Thou shalt have every wish, the dearest dear,
+
+
+ Of rubies and what likest are to them *
+
+
+ Fresh pearls and unions new, the seashell's tear:
+
+
+ My friend, thou wilt forsure grant my desire *
+
+
+ Whose heart is melted in love's hottest fire.
+
+
+
+When the fisherman heard her words, he wept and made moan and lamented;
+then, recalling what had betided himself in the days of his youth, when
+love had the mastery over him and longing and desire and distraction
+were sore upon him and the fires of passion consumed him, replied with
+these couplets,
+
+ "What fair excuse is this my pining plight, *
+
+
+ With wasted limbs and tears' unceasing blight;
+
+
+ And eyelids open in the nightly murk, *
+
+
+ And heart like fire-stick[FN#70] ready fire to smite;
+
+
+ Indeed love burdened us in early youth, *
+
+
+ And true from false coin soon we learned aright:
+
+
+ Then did we sell our soul on way of love, *
+
+
+ And drunk of many a well[FN#71] to win her sight;
+
+
+ Venturing very life to gain her grace, *
+
+
+ And make high profit perilling a mite.
+
+
+ 'Tis Love's religion whoso buys with life *
+
+
+ His lover's grace, with highest gain is dight."
+
+
+
+And when he ended his verse, he moored his boat to the beach and said
+to her, "Embark, so may I carry thee whither thou wilt." Thereupon she
+embarked and he put off with her; but they had not gone far from land,
+before there came out a stern-wind upon the boat and drove it swiftly
+out of sight of shore. Now the fisherman knew not whither he went, and
+the strong wind blew without ceasing three days, when it fell by leave
+of Allah Almighty, and they sailed on and ceased not sailing till they
+came in sight of a city sitting upon the sea-shore,—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Seventy-eighth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the
+fisherman's craft, carrying Rose-in-Hood, made the city sitting upon
+the sea-shore, the man set about making fast to the land. Now the King
+of the city was a Prince of pith and puissance named Dirbas, the Lion;
+and he chanced at that moment to be seated, with his son, at a window
+in the royal palace giving upon the sea; and happening to look out
+seawards, they saw the fishing- boat make the land. They observed it
+narrowly and espied therein a young lady, as she were the full moon
+overhanging the horizon- edge, with pendants in her ears of costly
+balass-rubies and a collar of precious stones about her throat. Hereby
+the King knew that this must indeed 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 shore. So he went up to her and aroused her, whereupon
+she awoke, weeping; and he asked her, "Whence comest thou and whose
+daughter art thou and what be the cause of thy coming hither?"; and she
+answered, "I am the daughter of Ibrahim, Wazir to King Shamikh; and the
+manner of my coming hither is wondrous and the cause thereof
+marvellous." And she told him her whole story first and last, hiding
+naught from him; then she groaned aloud and recited these couplets,
+
+"Tear-drops have chafed mine eyelids and rail down in wondrous
+
+
+ wise, * For parting pain that fills my sprite and turns to
+
+
+ springs mine eyes,
+
+
+For sake of friend who ever dwells within my vitals homed, * And
+
+
+ I may never win my wish of him in any guise.
+
+
+He hath a favour fair and bright, and brilliant is his face, *
+
+
+ Which every Turk and Arab wight in loveliness outvies:
+
+
+The Sun and fullest Moon lout low whenas his charms they sight, *
+
+
+ And lover-like they bend to him whene'er he deigneth rise.
+
+
+A wondrous spell of gramarye like Kohl bedecks his eyne, * And
+
+
+ shows thee bow with shaft on string make ready ere it flies:
+
+
+O thou, to whom I told my case expecting all excuse, * Pity a
+
+
+ lover-wight for whom Love-shafts such fate devise!
+
+
+Verily, Love hath cast me on your coast despite of me * Of will
+
+
+ now weak, and fain I trust mine honour thou wilt prize:
+
+
+For noble men, whenas perchance alight upon their bounds, *
+
+
+ Grace-worthy guests, confess their worth and raise to
+
+
+ dignities. Then,
+
+
+O thou hope of me, to lovers' folly veil afford * And be to them
+
+
+ reunion cause, thou only liefest lord!"
+
+
+
+And when she had ended her verses, she again told the King her sad tale
+and shed plenteous tears and recited these couplets bearing on her
+case,
+
+"We lived till saw we all the marvels Love can bear; * Each month
+
+
+ to thee we hope shall fare as Rajab[FN#72] fare:
+
+
+Is it not wondrous, when I saw them march amorn * That I with
+
+
+ water o' eyes in heart lit flames that flare?
+
+
+That these mine eyelids rain fast dropping gouts of blood? * That
+
+
+ now my cheek grows gold where rose and lily were?
+
+
+As though the safflower hue, that overspread my cheeks, * Were
+
+
+ Joseph's coat made stain of lying blood to wear."
+
+
+
+Now when the King heard her words he was certified of her love and
+longing and was moved to ruth for her; so he said to her, "Fear nothing
+and be not troubled; thou hast come to the term of thy wishes; for
+there is no help but that I win for thee thy will and bring thee to thy
+desire." And he improvised these couplets,
+
+ "Daughter of nobles, who thine aim shalt gain; *
+
+
+ Hear gladdest news nor fear aught hurt of bane!
+
+
+ This day I'll pack up wealth, and send it on *
+
+
+ To Shαmikh, guarded by a champion-train;
+
+
+ Fresh pods of musk I'll send him and brocades, *
+
+
+ And silver white and gold of yellow vein:
+
+
+ Yes, and a letter shall inform him eke *
+
+
+ That I of kinship with that King am fain:
+
+
+ And I this day will lend thee bestest aid, *
+
+
+ That all thou covetest thy soul assain.
+
+
+ I, too, have tasted love and know its taste *
+
+
+ And can excuse whoso the same cup drain."[FN#73]
+
+
+
+Then, ending his verse, he went forth to his troops and summoned his
+Wazir; and, causing him to pack up countless treasure, commanded him
+carry it to King Shamikh and say to him, "Needs must thou send me a
+person named Uns al-Wujud;" and say moreover "The King is minded to
+ally himself with thee by marrying his daughter to Uns al-Wujud, thine
+officer. So there is no help but thou despatch him to 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 Minister,
+charging him strictly to bring back Uns al-Wujud and warning him, "An
+thou fail thou shalt be deposed and degraded." Answered the Wazir, "I
+hear and obey;" and, setting out forthright with the treasures, in due
+course arrived at the court of King Shamikh whom he saluted in the name
+of King Dirbas and delivered the letter and the presents. Now when King
+Shamikh read the letter and saw the name of Uns al-Wujud, he burst into
+tears and said to the Wazir "And where, or where, is Uns al-Wujud?; he
+went from us and we know not his place of abiding; only bring him to
+me, and I will give thee double the presents thou hast brought me." And
+he wept and groaned and lamented, saying these couplets,
+
+ "To me restore my dear; * I want not wealth untold:
+
+
+ Nor crave I gifts of pearls * Or gems or store of gold:
+
+
+ He was to us a moon * In beauty's heavenly fold.
+
+
+ Passing in form and soul; * With roe compare withhold!
+
+
+ His form a willow-wand, * His fruit, lures manifold;
+
+
+ But willow lacketh power * Men's hearts to have and hold.
+
+
+ I reared him from a babe * On cot of coaxing roll'd;
+
+
+ And now I mourn for him * With woe in soul ensoul'd."
+
+
+
+Then, turning to the Wazir who had brought the presents and the
+missive, he said, "Go back to thy liege and acquaint him that Uns
+al-Wujud hath been missing this year past, and his lord knoweth not
+whither he is gone nor hath any tidings of him." Answered the Minister
+of King Dirbas, "O my lord, my master said to me, 'An thou fail to
+bring him back, thou shalt be degraded from the Wazirate and shall not
+enter my city. How then can I return without him?'" So King Shamikh
+said to his Wazir Ibrahim, "Take a company and go with him and make ye
+search for Uns al-Wujud everywhere." He replied, "Hearkening and
+obedience;" and, taking a body of his own retainers, set out
+accompanied by the Wazir of King Dirbas seeking Uns al-Wujud.—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Seventy-ninth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Ibrahim, Wazir to
+King Shamikh, took him a body of his retainers and, accompanied by the
+Minister of King Dirbas, set out seeking Uns al-Wujud. And as often as
+they fell in with wild Arabs or others they asked of the youth, saying,
+"Tell us have ye seen a man whose name is so and so and his semblance
+thus and thus?" But they all answered, "We know him not." Still they
+continued their quest, enquiring in city and hamlet and seeking in
+fertile plain and stony hall and in the wild and in the wold, till they
+made the Mountain of the Bereaved Mother; and the Wazir of King Dirbas
+said to Ibrahim, "Why is this mountain thus called?" He answered, "Once
+of old time, here sojourned a Jinniyah, of the Jinn of China, who loved
+a mortal with passionate love; and, being in fear of her life from her
+own people, searched all the earth over for a place, where she might
+hide him from them, till she happened on this mountain and, finding it
+cut off from both men and Jinn, there being no access to it, carried
+off her beloved and lodged him therein. There, when she could escape
+notice of her kith and kin, she used privily to visit him, and
+continued so doing till she had borne him a number of children; and the
+merchants, sailing by the mountain, in their voyages over the main,
+heard the weeping of the children, as it were the wailing of a woman
+bereft of her babes, 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 the Wazir of King Dirbas marvelled at his words.
+Then they landed and, making for the castle, knocked at the gate which
+was opened to them by an eunuch, who knew the Wazir Ibrahim and kissed
+his hands. The Minister entered and found in the courtyard, among the
+serving- men, a Fakir, which was Uns al-Wujud, but he knew him not and
+said, "Whence cometh yonder wight?" Quoth they, "He is a merchant, who
+hath lost his goods, but saved himself; and he is an ecstatic."[FN#74]
+So the Wazir left him and went on into the castle, where he found no
+trace of his daughter and questioned her women, who answered, "We wot
+not how or whither she went; this place misliked her and she tarried in
+it but a short time." Whereupon he wept sore and repeated these
+couplets,
+
+ "Ho thou, the house, whose birds were singing gay, *
+
+
+ Whose sills their wealth and pride were wont display!
+
+
+ Till came the lover wailing for his love, *
+
+
+ And found thy doors wide open to the way;
+
+
+ Would Heaven I knew where is my soul that erst *
+
+
+ Was homed in house, whose owners fared away!
+
+
+ 'Twas stored with all things bright and beautiful, *
+
+
+ And showed its porters ranged in fair array:
+
+
+ They clothed it with brocades a bride become;[FN#75] *
+
+
+ Would I knew whither went its lords, ah, say!"
+
+
+
+After ending his verses he again shed tears, and groaned and bemoaned
+himself, exclaiming, "There is no deliverance from the destiny decreed
+by Allah; nor is there any escape from that which He hath predestined!"
+Then he went up to the roof and found the strips of Ba'albak stuff tied
+to the crenelles and hanging down to the ground, and thus it was he
+knew that she had descended thence and had fled forth, as one
+distracted and demented with desire and passion. Presently, he turned
+and seeing there two birds, a gor-crow and an owl he justly deemed this
+an omen of ill; so he groaned and recited these couplets,
+
+ "I came to my dear friends' door, of my hopes the goal, *
+
+
+ Whose sight mote assuage my sorrow and woes of soul:
+
+
+ No friends found I there, nor was there another thing *
+
+
+ To find, save a corby-crow and an ill-omened owl.
+
+
+ And the tongue o' the case to me seemed to say, *
+
+
+ 'Indeed This parting two lovers fond was cruel and
+
+
+ foul!
+
+
+ So taste thou the sorrow thou madest them taste and live *
+
+
+ In grief: wend thy ways and now in thy sorrow prowl!'"
+
+
+
+Then he descended from the castle-roof, weeping, and bade the servants
+fare forth and search the mount for their mistress; so they sought for
+her, but found her not. Such was their case; but as regards Uns
+al-Wujud, when he was certified that Rose-in-Hood was indeed gone, he
+cried with a great cry and fell down in a fainting-fit, nor came to
+himself for a long time, whilst the folk deemed that his spirit had
+been withdrawn by the Compassionating One; and that he was absorbed in
+contemplation of the splendour, majesty and beauty of the Requiting
+One. Then, despairing of finding Uns al-Wujud, and seeing that the
+Wazir Ibrahim was distracted for the loss of his daughter, the Minister
+of King Dirbas addressed himself to return to his own country, albeit
+he had not attained the object of his journey, and while bidding his
+companion adieu, said to him, "I have a mind to take the Fakir with me;
+it may be Allah Almighty will incline the King's heart to me by his
+blessing, for that he is a holy man; and thereafter, I will send him to
+Ispahan, which is near our country." "Do as thou wilt," answered
+Ibrahim. So they took leave of each other and departed, each for his
+own mother land, the Wazir of King Dirbas carrying with him Uns
+al-Wujud,—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Eightieth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Wazir of King
+Dirbas carried with him Uns al-Wujud who was still insensible. They
+bore him with them on mule-back (he unknowing if he were carried or
+not) for three days, when he came to himself and said, "Where am I?"
+"Thou art in company with the Minister of King Dirbas," replied they
+and went and gave news of his recovering to the Wazir, who sent him
+rose-water and sherbet of sugar, of which they gave him to drink and
+restored him. Then they ceased not faring on till they drew near King
+Dirbas's capital and the King, being advised of his Wazir's coming,
+wrote to him, saying, "If Uns al-Wujud be not with thee, come not to me
+ever." Now when the Wazir read the royal mandate, it was grievous to
+him, for he knew not that Rose-in-Hood was with the King, nor why he
+had been sent in quest of Uns al-Wujud, nor the King's reason for
+desiring the alliance; whilst Uns al-Wujud also knew not whither they
+were bearing him or that the Wazir had been sent in quest of him; nor
+did the Wazir know that the Fakir he had with him was Uns al-Wujud
+himself. And when the Minister saw that the sick man was whole, he said
+to him, "I was despatched 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, 'Except thou have fulfilled my need enter not my city.'"
+"And what is the King's need?" asked Uns al-Wujud. So the Wazir told
+him the whole tale, 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 al-Wujud." At this the Wazir rejoiced and cried, "Is this true
+which thou sayest?" "Yes," replied he; whereupon the Wazir mounted and
+carried him to King Dirbas who, after receiving their salutations said
+to him, "Where is Uns al-Wujud?" Answered the young man, "O King, I
+know where he is." So the King called him to him and said, "Where?"
+Returned Uns al-Wujud, "He is near-hand and very near; but tell me what
+thou wouldst with him, and I will fetch him into thy presence." The
+King replied, "With joy and good gree, but the case calleth for
+privacy." So he ordered the folk to withdraw and, carrying Uns al-Wujud
+into his cabinet, told him the whole story; whereupon quoth the youth,
+"Robe me in rich raiment, and I will forthright bring Uns al-Wujud to
+thee." So they brought him a sumptuous dress, and he donned it and
+said, "I am Uns al-Wujud, the World's Delight, and to the envious a
+despite"; and presently he smote with his glances every sprite, and
+began these couplets to recite,
+
+"My loved one's name in cheerless solitude aye cheereth me * And
+
+
+ driveth off my desperance and despondency:
+
+
+I have no helper[FN#76] but my tears that ever flow in fount, *
+
+
+ And as they flow, they lighten woe and force my grief to
+
+
+ flee.
+
+
+My longing is so violent naught like it ere was seen; * My love-
+
+
+ tale is a marvel and my love a sight to see:
+
+
+I spend the night with lids of eye that never close in sleep, *
+
+
+ And pass in passion twixt the Hells and Edens heavenly.
+
+
+I had of patience fairish store, but now no more have I; * And
+
+
+ love's sole gift to me hath been aye-growing misery:
+
+
+My frame is wasted by the pain of parting from my own, * And
+
+
+ longing changed my shape and form and made me other be.
+
+
+Mine eyelids by my torrent tears are chafed, and ulcerate, * The
+
+
+ tears, whose flow to stay is mere impossibility.
+
+
+My manly strength is sore impaired for I have lost my heart; *
+
+
+ How many griefs upon my griefs have I been doomed to dree!
+
+
+My heart and head are like in age with similar hoariness * By
+
+
+ loss of Beauty's lord,[FN#77] of lords the galaxy:
+
+
+Despite our wills they parted us and doomed us parted wone, *
+
+
+ While they (our lords) desire no more than love in unity.
+
+
+Then ah, would Heaven that I wot if stress of parting done, *
+
+
+ The world will grant me sight of them in union fain and
+
+
+ free—
+
+
+Roll up the scroll of severance which others would unroll— *
+
+
+ Efface my trouble by the grace of meeting's jubilee!
+
+
+And shall I see them homed with me in cup-company, * And change
+
+
+ my melancholic mood for joy and jollity?"
+
+
+
+And when he had ended his verses the King cried aloud, "By Allah, ye
+are indeed a pair of lovers true and fain and in Beauty's heaven of
+shining stars a twain: your story is wondrous and your case
+marvellous." Then he told him all that had befalled Rose-in- Hood; and
+Uns al-Wujud said, "Where is she, O King of the age?" "She is with me
+now," answered Dirbas and, sending for the Kazi and the witnesses, drew
+up the contract of marriage between her and him. Then he honoured Uns
+al-Wujud with favours and bounties and sent to King Shamikh acquainting
+him with what had befallen, whereat this King joyed with exceeding joy
+and wrote back the following purport. "Since the ceremony of contract
+hath been performed at thy court, it behoveth that the marriage and its
+consummation be at mine." Then he made ready camels, horses and men and
+sent them in quest of the pair; and when the embassy reached King
+Dirbas, he gave the lovers much treasure and despatched them to King
+Shamikh's court with a company of his own troops. The day of their
+arrival was a notable day, never was seen a grander; for the King
+gathered together all the singing- women and players on instruments of
+music and made wedding banquets and held high festival seven days; and
+on each day he gave largesse to the folk and bestowed on them sumptuous
+robes of honour. Then Uns al-Wujud went in to Rose-in-Hood and they
+embraced and sat weeping for excess of joy and gladness, whilst she
+recited these couplets,
+
+ "Joyance is come, dispelling cark and care; *
+
+
+ We are united, enviers may despair.
+
+
+ The breeze of union blows, enquickening *
+
+
+ Forms, hearts and vitals, fresh with fragrant air:
+
+
+ The splendour of delight with scents appears, *
+
+
+ And round us[FN#78] flags and drums show gladness rare.
+
+
+ Deem not we're weeping for our stress of grief;*
+
+
+ It is for joy our tears as torrents fare:
+
+
+ How many fears we've seen that now are past! *
+
+
+ And bore we patient what was sore to bear:
+
+
+ One hour of joyance made us both forget *
+
+
+ What from excess of terror grey'd our hair."
+
+
+
+And when the verses were ended, they again embraced and ceased not from
+their embrace, till they fell down in a swoon,—And Shahrazad perceived
+the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Eighty-first Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Uns al- Wujud and
+Rose-in-Hood embraced when they foregathered and ceased not from their
+embrace, till they fell down in a swoon for the delight of reunion; and
+when they came to themselves, Uns al- Wujud recited these couplets,
+
+ "How joyously sweet are the nights that unite, *
+
+
+ When my dearling deigns keep me the troth she did
+
+
+ plight;
+
+
+ When union conjoins us in all that we have, *
+
+
+ And parting is severed and sundered from sight,
+
+
+ To us comes the world with her favour so fair, *
+
+
+ After frown and aversion and might despight!
+
+
+ Hath planted her banner Good Fortune for us, *
+
+
+ And we drink of her cup in the purest delight.
+
+
+ We have met and complained of the pitiful Past, *
+
+
+ And of nights a full many that doomed us to blight.
+
+
+ But now, O my lady, the Past is forgot; *
+
+
+ The Compassionate pardon the Past for unright!
+
+
+ How sweet is existence, how glad is to be! *
+
+
+ This union my passion doth only incite."
+
+
+
+And when he ended his verses they once more embraced, drowned in the
+sea of passion; and lay down together in the private apartment
+carousing and conversing and quoting verses and telling pleasant tales
+and anecdotes. On this wise seven days passed over them whilst they
+knew not night from day and it was to them, for very stress of gaiety
+and gladness, pleasure and possession, as if the seven days were but
+one day with ne'er a morrow. Not did they know the seventh day,[FN#79]
+but by the coming of the singers and players on instruments of music;
+whereat Rose-in-Hood beyond measure wondered and improvised these
+couplets,
+
+ "In spite of enviers' jealousy, at end *
+
+
+ We have won all we hoped of the friend:
+
+
+ We've crowned our meeting with a close embrace *
+
+
+ On quilts where new brocades with sendal blend;
+
+
+ On bed of perfumed leather, which the spoils *
+
+
+ Of downy birds luxuriously distend.
+
+
+ But I abstain me from unneeded wine, *
+
+
+ When honey-dews of lips sweet musk can lend:
+
+
+ Now from the sweets of union we unknow *
+
+
+ Time near and far, if slow or fast it wend,
+
+
+ The seventh night hath come and gone, O strange! *
+
+
+ How went the nights we never reckt or kenned;
+
+
+ Till, on the seventh wishing joy they said, *
+
+
+ 'Allah prolong the meet of friend with friend!'"
+
+
+
+When she had finished her song, Uns al-Wujud kissed her, more than an
+hundred times, and recited these couplets,
+
+ "O day of joys to either lover fain! *
+
+
+ The loved one came and freed from lonely pain:
+
+
+ She blest me with all inner charms she hath; *
+
+
+ And companied with inner grace deep lain:
+
+
+ She made me drain the wine of love till I, *
+
+
+ Was faint with joys her love had made me drain:
+
+
+ We toyed and joyed and on each other lay; *
+
+
+ Then fell to wine and soft melodious strain:
+
+
+ And for excess of joyance never knew, *
+
+
+ How went the day and how it came again.
+
+
+ Fair fall each lover, may he union win *
+
+
+ And gain of joy like me the amplest gain;
+
+
+ Nor weet the taste of severance' bitter fruit *
+
+
+ And joys assain them as they us assain!"
+
+
+
+Then they went forth and distributed to the folk alms and presents of
+money and raiment and rare gifts and other tokens of generosity; after
+which Rose-in-Hood bade clear the bath for her[FN#80] and, turning to
+Uns al-Wujud said to him, "O coolth of my eyes, I have a mind to see
+thee in the Hammam, and therein we will be alone together." He joyfully
+consented to this, and she let scent the Hammam with all sorts of
+perfumed woods and essences, and light the wax-candles. Then of the
+excess of her contentment she recited these couplets,
+
+ "O who didst win my love in other date *
+
+
+ (And Present e'er must speak of past estate);
+
+
+ And, oh! who art my sole sufficiency, *
+
+
+ Nor want I other friends with me to mate:
+
+
+ Come to the Hammam, O my light of eyes, *
+
+
+ And enter Eden through Gehenna-gate!
+
+
+ We'll scent with ambergris and aloes-wood *
+
+
+ Till float the heavy clouds with fragrant freight;
+
+
+ And to the World we'll pardon all her sins *
+
+
+ And sue for mercy the Compassionate;
+
+
+ And I will cry, when I descry thee there, *
+
+
+ 'Good cheer, sweet love, all blessings on thee
+
+
+ wait!'"[FN#81]
+
+
+
+Whereupon they arose and fared to the bath and took their pleasure
+therein; after which they returned to their palace and there abode in
+the fulness of enjoyment, till there came to them the Destroyer of
+Delights and the Sunderer of societies; and glory be to Him who
+changeth not neither ceaseth, and to whom everything returneth! And
+they also tell a tale of
+
+
+
+
+ABU NOWAS WITH THE THREE BOYS AND THE CALIPH HARUN AL-RASHID[FN#82]
+
+Abu Nowas one day shut himself up and, making ready a richly-furnished
+feast, collected for it meats of all kinds and of every colour that
+lips and tongue can desire. Then he went forth, to seek a minion worthy
+of such entertainment, saying, "Allah, my Lord and my Master, I beseech
+Thee to send me one who befitteth this banquet and who is fit to
+carouse with me this day!" Hardly had he made an end of speaking when
+he espied three youths handsome and beardless, as they were of the boys
+of Paradise,[FN#83] differing in complexion but fellows in incomparable
+beauty; and all hearts yearned with desire to the swaying of their
+bending shapes, even to what saith the poet,
+
+ "I passed a beardless pair without compare *
+
+
+ And cried, 'I love you, both you ferly fir!'
+
+
+ 'Money'd?' quoth one: quoth I, 'And lavish too;' *
+
+
+ Then said the fair pair, 'Pere, c'est notre affaire.'"
+
+
+
+Now Abu Nowas was given to these joys and loved to sport and make merry
+with fair boys and cull the rose from every brightly blooming check,
+even as saith the bard,
+
+ Full many a reverend Shaykh feels sting of flesh, *
+
+
+ Loves pretty faces, shows at Pleasure's depot:
+
+
+ Awakes in Mosul,[FN#84] land of purity; *
+
+
+ And all the day dreams only of Aleppo.[FN#85]
+
+
+
+So he accosted them with the salutation, and they returned his greeting
+with civility and all honour and would have gone their several ways,
+but he stayed them, repeating these couplets,
+
+ "Steer ye your steps to none but me *
+
+
+ Who hath a mine of luxury:-
+
+
+ Old wine that shines with brightest blee *
+
+
+ Made by the monk in monastery;
+
+
+ And mutton-meat the toothsomest *
+
+
+ And birds of all variety.
+
+
+ Then eat of these and drink of those *
+
+
+ Old wines that bring you jollity:
+
+
+ And have each other, turn by turn, *
+
+
+ Shampooing this my tool you see."[FN#86]
+
+
+
+Thereupon the youths were beguiled by his verses and consented to his
+wishes,—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three hundred and Eighty-second Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when Abu Nowas
+beguiled the youths with his wishes, saying, "We hear and obey;" and
+accompanied him to his lodging, where they found all ready that he had
+set forth in his couplets. They sat down and ate and drank and made
+merry awhile, after which they appealed to Abu Nowas to decide which of
+them was handsometh of face and shapliest of form. So he pointed to one
+of them and, having kissed him twice over, recited the following
+verses,
+
+ "I'll ransom that beauty-spot with my soup; *
+
+
+ Where's it and where is a money-dole?[FN#87]
+
+
+ Praise Him who hairless hath made that cheek *
+
+
+ And bid Beauty bide in that mole, that mole!"
+
+
+
+Then he pointed to another and, kissing his lips, repeated these
+couplets,
+
+ "And loveling weareth on his cheek a mole *
+
+
+ Like musk, which virgin camphor ne'er lets off it:
+
+
+ My peepers marvel such a contrast seeing; *
+
+
+ And cried the Mole to me, 'Now bless the
+
+
+ Prophet.'"[FN#88]
+
+
+
+Then he pointed to the third and, after kissing him half a score times
+repeated these couplets,
+
+ "Melted pure gold in silvern bowl to drain *
+
+
+ The youth, whose fingers wore a winey stain:
+
+
+ He with the drawers[FN#89] served one cup of wine, *
+
+
+ And served his wandering eyes the other twain.
+
+
+ A loveling, of the sons of Turks,[FN#90] a fawn *
+
+
+ Whose waist conjoins the double Mounts Honayn.[FN#91]
+
+
+ Could Eve's corrupting daughers[FN#92] tempt my heart *
+
+
+ Content with two-fold lure 'twould bear the bane.
+
+
+ Unto Diyar-I-Bakr ('maid-land '[FN#93] this one lures; *
+
+
+ That lures to two-mosqued cities of the plain."[FN#94]
+
+
+
+Now each of the youths had drunk two cups, and when it came to the turn
+of Abu Nowas, he took the goblet and repeated these couplets,
+
+"Drink not strong wine save at the slender dearling's hand; *
+
+
+ Each like to other in all gifts the spirt grace:
+
+
+For wine can never gladden toper's heart and soul, *
+
+
+ Unless the cup-boy show a bright and sparkling face."
+
+
+
+Then he drank off his cup and the bowl went round, and when it came to
+Abu Nowas again, joyance got the mastery of him and he repeated these
+couplets,
+
+ "For cup-friends cup succeeding cup assign, *
+
+
+ Brimming with grape-juice, brought in endliess line,
+
+
+ By hand of brown-lipped[FN#95] Beauty who is sweet *
+
+
+ At wake as apple or musk finest fine.[FN#96]
+
+
+ Drink not the wine except from hand of fawn *
+
+
+ Whose cheek to kiss is sweeter than the wine."
+
+
+
+Presently the drink got into his noddle, drunkenness mastered him and
+he knew not hand from head, so that he lolled from side to side in joy
+and inclined to the youths one and all, anon kissing them and anon
+embracing them leg overlying leg. And he showed no sense of sin or
+shame, but recited these couplets,
+
+ "None wotteth best joyance but generous youth *
+
+
+ When the pretty ones deign with him company keep:
+
+
+ This sings to him, sings to him that, when he wants *
+
+
+ A pick-me-up[FN#97] lying there all of a heap:
+
+
+ And when of a loveling he needeth a kiss, *
+
+
+ He takes from his lips or a draught or a nip;
+
+
+ Heaven bless them! How sweetly my day with them sped; *
+
+
+ A wonderful harvest of pleasure I reap:
+
+
+ Let us drink our good liquor both watered and pure, *
+
+
+ And agree to swive all who dare slumber and sleep."
+
+
+
+While they were in this deboshed state behold, there came a knocking at
+the door; so they bade him who knocked enter, and behold, it was the
+Commander of the Faithful, Harun al-Rashid. When they saw him, they all
+rose and kissed ground before him; and Abu Nowas threw off the fumes of
+the wine for awe of the Caliph, who said to him, "Holla, Abu Nowas!" He
+replied, "Adsum, at thy service, O Commander of the Faithful, whom
+Allah preserve!" The Caliph asked, "What state is this?" and the poet
+answered, "O Prince of True Believers, my state indubitably dispenseth
+with questions." Quoth the Caliph, "O Abu Nowas, I have sought
+direction of Allah Almighty and have appointed thee Kazi of pimps and
+panders." Asked he, "Dost thou indeed invest me with that high office,
+O Commander of the Faithful?"; and the Caliph answered "I do;"
+whereupon Abu Nowas rejoined, "O Commander of the Faithful, hast thou
+any suit to prefer to me?" Hereat the Caliph was wroth and presently
+turned away and left them, full of rage, and passed the night sore
+an-angered against Abu Nowas, who amid the party he had invited spent
+the merriest of nights and the jolliest and joyousest. And when
+day-break dawned and the star of morn appeared in sheen and shone, he
+broke up the sitting and, dismissing the youths, donned his court-dress
+and leaving his house set out for the palace of the Caliph. Now it was
+the custom of the Commander of the Faithful, when the Divan broke up,
+to withdraw to his sitting-saloon and summon thither his poets and
+cup-companions and musicians, each having his own place, which he might
+not overpass. So it happened that day, he retired to his saloom, and
+the friends and familiars came and seated themselves, each in his rank
+and degree. Presently, in walked Abu Nowas and was about to take his
+usual seat, when the Caliph cried to Masrur, the sworder, and bade him
+strip the poet of his clothes and bind an ass's packsaddle on his back
+and a halter about his head and a crupper under his rump and lead him
+round to all the lodgings of the slave-girls, —And Shahrazad perceived
+the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three hundred and Eighty-third Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Caliph
+commanded Masrur, the sworder, to strip Abu Nowas of his court-suit and
+bind an ass's packsaddle on his back and a halter about his head, and a
+crupper under his rump and lead him round to all the lodgings of the
+slave-girls, and the chambers of the Harim, that the women might make
+mock of him; then cut off his head and bring it to him. "Hearkening and
+obedience," replied Masrur and, doing with Abu Nowas as the Caliph had
+bidden him, led him round all the chambers whose number equalled the
+days of the year; but Abu Nowas was a funny fellow, so he made all the
+girls laugh with his buffooneries and each gave him something whereby
+he returned not save with a pocketful of money. And while this was
+going on behold, Ja'afar the Barmecide, who had been absent on an
+important business for the Commander of the Faithful, entered and
+recognising the poet, albeit in this plight, said to him, "Holla, Abu
+Nowas!" He said, "Here at thy service, O our lord." Ja'afar asked,
+"What offence hast thou committed to bring this punishment on thee?"
+Thereupon he answered, "None whatsoever, except that I made our lord
+the Caliph a present of the best of my poetry and he presented me, in
+return, with the best of his raiment." When the Prince of True
+Believers head this, he laughed, from a heart full of wrath,[FN#98] and
+pardoned Abu Nowas, and also gave him a myriad of money. And they also
+recount the tale of
+
+
+
+
+ABDALLAH BIN MA'AMAR WITH THE MAN OF BASSORAH AND HIS SLAVE-GIRL.
+
+A certain man of Bassorah once bought a slave-girl and reared and
+educated her right well. Moreover, he loved her very dearly and spent
+all his substance in pleasuring and merry-making with her, til he had
+naught left and extreme poverty was sore upon him. So she said to him,
+"O my master, sell me; for thou needest my price and it maketh my heart
+ache to see thy sorry and want-full plight. If thou vend me and make
+use of my value, 'twill be better for thee than keeping me by thee, and
+haply Almighty Allah will ample thee and amend thy fortune." He agreed
+to this for the straitness of his case, and carried her to the bazar,
+where the broker offered her for sale to the Governor of Bassorah, by
+name Abdallah bin Ma'amar al-Taymi, and she pleased him. So he bought
+her, for five hundred dinars and paid the sum to her master; but when
+he book the money and was about to go away, the girl burst into tears
+and repeated these two couplets,
+
+ "May coins though gainest joy in heart instil; *
+
+
+ For me remaineth naught save saddest ill:
+
+
+ I say unto my soul which sorely grieves, *
+
+
+ 'Thy friend departeth an thou will nor nill.'"
+
+
+
+And when her master heard this, he groaned and replied in these
+couplets,
+
+ "Albeit this thy case lack all resource, *
+
+
+ Nor findeth aught but death's doom, pardon still;
+
+
+ Evening and morning, thoughts of thee will dole *
+
+
+ Comfort to heart all woes and griefs full fill:
+
+
+ Peace be upon thee! Meet we now no more *
+
+
+ Nor pair except at Ibn Ma'amar's will."
+
+
+
+Now when Abdullah bin Ma'amar heard these verses and saw their
+affection, he exclaimed, "By Allah, I will not assist fate in
+separating you; for it is evident to me that ye two indeed love each
+other. So take the money and the damsel, O man, and Allah bless thee in
+both; for verily parting be grievous to lovers." So they kissed his
+hand and going away, ceased not to dwell together, till death did them
+part; and glory be to Him whom death over-taketh not! And amonst
+stories is that of
+
+
+
+
+THE LOVERS OF THE BANU[FN#99] OZRAH
+
+There was once, among the Banu Ozrah, a handsome and accomplished man,
+who was never a single day out of love, and it chanced that he became
+enamoured of a beauty of his own tribe and sent her many messages; but
+she ceased not to entreat him with cruelty and disdain; till, for
+stress of love and longing and desire and distraction, he fell sick of
+a sore sickness and took to his pillow and murdered sleep. His malady
+redoubled on him and his torments increased and he was well nigh dead
+when his case became known among the folk and his passion
+notorious;—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say
+her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Eighty-fourth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the man took to
+his pillow and murdered sleep. So his case became known and his passion
+notorious; and his infirmity grew upon him and his pains redoubled
+until he was well nigh dead. His family and hers were urgent 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. As soon as he saw her, his eyes ran over with tears and he
+repeated from a broken heart,
+
+ "An, by thy life, pass thee my funeral train, *
+
+
+ A bier upborne upon the necks of four,
+
+
+ Wilt thou not follow it, and greet the grave *
+
+
+ Where shall my corpse be graved for evermore?"
+
+
+
+Hearing this, she wept with sore weeping and said to him, "By Allah, I
+suspected not that passion had come to such a pass with thee, as to
+cast thee into the arms of death! Had I wist of this, I had been
+favourable to thy wish, and thou shouldst have had thy will." At this
+his tears streamed down even as the clouds rail rain, and he repeated
+this verse,
+
+ "She drew near whenas death was departing us, *
+
+
+ And deigned union grant when twas useless all."
+
+
+
+Then he groaned one groan and died. So she fell on him, kissing him and
+weeping and ceased not weeping until she swooned away; and when she
+came to herself, she charged her people to bury her in his grave and
+with streaming eyes recited these two couplets,
+
+ "We lived on earth a life of fair content; *
+
+
+ And tribe and house and home of us were proud;
+
+
+ But Time in whirling flight departed us, *
+
+
+ To join us now in womb of earth and shroud.[FN#100]"
+
+
+
+Then she fell again to weeping, nor gave over shedding tears and
+lamenting till she fainted away; and she lay three days, senseless.
+Then she died and was buried in his grave. This is one of the strange
+chances of love.[FN#101] And I have heard related a tale of the
+
+
+
+
+WAZIR OF AL-YAMAN AND HIS YOUNG BROTHER
+
+It is said that Badr al-Din, Wazir of Al-Yaman, had a young brother of
+singular beauty and kept strait watch over him; so he applied himself
+to seek a tutor for him and, coming upon a Shaykh of dignified and
+reverend aspect, chaste and religious, lodged him in a house next his
+own. This lasted a long time, and he used to come daily from his
+dwelling to that of Sαhib[FN#102] Badr al-Din and teach the young
+brother. After a while, the old man's heart was taken with love for the
+youth, and longing grew upon him and his vitals were troubled, till one
+day, he bemoaned his case to the boy, who said, "What can I do, seeing
+that I may not leave my brother night or day? and thou thyself seest
+how careful he is over me." Quoth the Shaykh, "My lodging adjoineth
+thine; so there will be no difficulty, when thy brother sleepeth, to
+rise and, entering the privy, feign thyself asleep. Then come to the
+parapet[FN#103] of the terrace-roof and I will receive thee on the
+other side of the wall; so shalt thou sit with me an eye-twinkling and
+return without thy brother's knowledge." "I hear and obey," answered
+the lad; and the tutor began to prepare gifts suitable to his degree.
+Now when a while of the night was past, he entered the water-closet and
+waited until his brother lay down on his bed and took patience till he
+was drowned in sleep, when he rose and going to the parapet of the
+terrace-roof, found standing there to await him the old man, 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 with
+the wine-cup going round, her rays shone upon them, and the governor
+fell to singing. But, whilst they were thus in joy and jollity and
+mirth and merriment, such as confoundeth the wit and the sight and
+defieth description, lo! the Wazir 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, climbed over the parapet to the adjoining
+terrace and saw a light shining from the lodging. He looked in from
+behind the wall, and espied his brother and his tutor sitting at
+carouse; but the Shaykh became aware of him and sang cup in hand, to a
+lively measure these couplets,
+
+ "He made me drain his wine of honeyed lips, *
+
+
+ Toasting with cheeks which rose and myrtle smother:
+
+
+ Then nighted in embrace, cheek to my cheek, *
+
+
+ A loveling midst mankind without another.
+
+
+ When the full moon arose on us and shone *
+
+
+ Pray she traduce us not to the big brother."
+
+
+
+And it proved the perfect politeness of the Wazir Badr al-Din that,
+when he heard this, he said, "By Allah, I will not betray you!" And he
+went away and left them to their diversions. They also tell a tale
+concerning
+
+
+
+
+THE LOVES OF THE BOY AND GIRL AT SCHOOL
+
+A free boy and a slave-girl once learnt together in school, and the boy
+fell passionately in love with the girl.—And Shahrazad perceived the
+dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Eighty-Fifth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the lad fell
+passionately in love with the slave-lass: so one day, when the other
+boys were heedless, he took her tablet[FN#104] and wrote on it these
+two couplets,
+
+ "What sayest thou of him by sickness waste, *
+
+
+ Until he's clean distraught for love of thee?
+
+
+ Who in the transport of his pain complains, *
+
+
+ Nor can bear load of heart in secrecy?"
+
+
+
+Now when the girl took her tablet, she read the verses written thereon
+and understanding them, wept for ruth of him; then she wrote thereunder
+these two couplets,
+
+ "An if we behold a lover love-fordone *
+
+
+ Desiring us, our favours he shall see:
+
+
+ Yea, what he wills of us he shall obtain, *
+
+
+ And so befal us what befalling be."
+
+
+
+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 beneath those already written these
+two couplets addressed to the girl,
+
+ "Console thy lover, fear no consequence; *
+
+
+ He is daft with loving lowe's insanity;
+
+
+ But for the teacher fear not aught from him; *
+
+
+ Love-pain he learned long before learnt ye."
+
+
+
+Presently it so happened that the girl's owner entered the school about
+the same time and, finding the tablet, read the above verses indited by
+the boy, the girl and the schoolmaster; and wrote under them these two
+couplets,
+
+ "May Allah never make you parting dree *
+
+
+ And be your censurer shamed wearily!
+
+
+ But for the teacher ne'er, by Allah, eye *
+
+
+ Of mine beheld a bigger pimp than he!"
+
+
+
+Then he sent for the Kazi and witnesses and married them on the spot.
+Moreover, he made them a wedding-feast and treated them with exceeding
+munificence; and they ceased not abiding together in joy and happiness,
+till there came to them the Destroyer of delights and the Severer of
+societies. And equally pleasant is the story of
+
+
+
+
+AL-MUTALAMMIS AND HIS WIFE UMAYMAH
+
+It is related Al-Mutalammis[FN#105] once fled from Al-Nu'uman bin
+Munzir[FN#106] and was absent so long that folk deemed him dead. Now he
+had a beautiful wife, Umaymah by name, and her family urged her to
+marry again; but she refused, for that she loved her husband
+Al-Mutalammis very dearly. However, they were urgent with her, because
+of the multitude of her suitors, and importuned with her till at last
+she consented, albe reluctantly; and they espoused her to a man of her
+own tribe. Now on the night of the wedding, Al-Mutalammis came back
+and, hearing in the camp a noise of pipes and tabrets and seeing signs
+of a wedding festival, asked some of the children what was the
+merry-making, to which they replied, "They have married Umaymah wife of
+Al-Mutalammis, to such an one, and he goes in to her this night." When
+he heard this, he planned to enter the house amongst the mob of women
+and saw the twain seated on the bridal couch.[FN#107] By and by, the
+bridegroom came up to her, whereupon she sighed heavily and weeping,
+recited this couplet,
+
+"Would Heaven I knew (but many are the shifts of joy and woe) *
+
+
+ In what far distant land thou art, my Mutalammis, oh!"
+
+
+
+Now Al-Mutalammis was a renowned poet; so he answered her saying;
+
+"Right near at hand, Umaymah mine! when'er the caravan *
+
+
+ Halted, I never ceased for thee to pine, I would thou know."
+
+
+
+When the bridegroom heard this, he guess how the case stood and went
+forth from them in hast improvising,
+
+"I was in bestest luck, but now my luck goes contrary: *
+
+
+ A hospitable house and room contain your loves, you two!"
+
+
+
+And he returned not but left the twain to their privacy. So Al-
+Mutalammis and his wife abode together in all comfort and solace of
+life and in all its joys and jollities till death parted them. And
+glory be to Him at whose command the earth and the heavens shall arise!
+And among other tales is that of
+
+
+
+
+THE CALIPH HARUM AL-RASHID AND QUEEN ZUBAYDAH IN THE BATH
+
+The Caliph Harun al-Rashid loved the Lady Zubaydah with exceeding love
+and laid out for her a pleasaunce, wherein he made a great tank and set
+thereabouts a screen of trees and led thither water from all sides;
+hence the trees grew and interlaced over the basin so densely, that one
+could go in and wash, without being seen of any, for the thickness of
+the leafage. It chanced, one day, that Queen Zubaydah entered the
+garden and, coming to the swimming-bath,—And Shahrazad perceived the
+dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Eighty-sixth Night
+
+She said, It hath reached me, "O auspicious King, that Queen Zubaydah
+entered the garden one day and, coming to the swimming- bath, gazed
+upon its goodliness; and the sheen of the water and the overshading of
+the trees pleased her. Now it was a day of exceeding heat; so she
+doffed her clothes and, entering the tank, which was not deep enough to
+cover the whole person, fell to pouring the water over herself from an
+ewer of silver. It also happened that the Caliph heard she was in the
+pool; so he left his palace and came down to spy upon her through the
+screen of the foliage. He stood behind the trees and espied her mother-
+nude, showing everything that is kept hidden. 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 parts, but the
+Mount of Venus escaped from between them, by reason of its greatness
+and plumpness; and the Caliph at once turned and went away, wondering
+and reciting this couplet,
+
+ "I looked on her with loving eyne *
+
+
+ And grew anew my old repine:"
+
+
+
+But he knew not what to say next; so he sent for Abu Nowas and said to
+him, "Make me a piece of verse commencing with this line." "I hear and
+obey," replied the poet and in an eye- twinkling extemporised these
+couplets,
+
+ "I looked on her with longing eyne *
+
+
+ And grew anew my old repine
+
+
+ For the gazelle, who captured me *
+
+
+ Where the two lotus-trees incline:
+
+
+ There was the water poured on it *
+
+
+ From ewer of the silvern mine;
+
+
+ And seen me she had hidden it *
+
+
+ But twas too plump for fingers fine.
+
+
+ Would Heaven that I were on it, *
+
+
+ An hour, or better two hours, li'en."[FN#108]
+
+
+
+Thereupon the Commander of the Faithful smiled and made him a handsome
+present and he went away rejoicing. And I have heard another story of
+
+
+
+
+HARUN AL-RASHID AND THE THREE POETS
+
+The Prince of True Believers, Caliph Harun al-Rashid, was exceeding
+restless one night; so he rose and walked about his palace, till he
+happened upon a handmaid overcome with wine. Now he was prodigiously
+enamoured of this damsel; so he played with her and pulled her to him,
+whereupon her zone fell down and her petticoat-trousers were loosed and
+he besought her of amorous favour. 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. But, when the
+morrow showed its light and the sun shone bright, he sent a page to her
+saying, "The Commander of the Faithful is about to visit thine
+apartment;" but she replied, "Day doth away with the promise of night."
+So he said to his courtiers, "Make me somewhat of verse, introducing
+these words, The Promise of Night is effaced by Day.'" Answered they,
+"We hear and obey," and Al- Rakαshi[FN#109] came forward and recited
+the following couplets,
+
+ "By Allah, couldst thou but feel my pain, *
+
+
+ Thy rest had turned and had fled away.
+
+
+ Hath left me in sorrow and love distraught, *
+
+
+ Unseen and unseeing, that fairest may:
+
+
+ She promised me grace, then jilted and said, *
+
+
+ The promise of night is effaced by day!'"
+
+
+
+Then Abu Mus'ab came forward and recited these couplets,
+
+ "When wilt thou be wise and love-heat allay *
+
+
+ That from food and sleeping so leads astray?
+
+
+ Suffices thee not ever weeping eye, *
+
+
+ And vitals on fire when thy name they say?
+
+
+ He must smile and laugh and in pride must cry *
+
+
+ The promise of Night is effaced by Day.'"
+
+
+
+Last came Abu Nowas and recited the following couplets,
+
+ "As love waxt longer less met we tway *
+
+
+ And fell out, but ended the useless fray;
+
+
+ One night in the palace I found her fou'; *
+
+
+ Yet of modesty still there was some display:
+
+
+ The veil from her shoulders had slipt; and showed *
+
+
+ Her loosened trousers Love's seat and stay:
+
+
+ And rattled the breezes her huge hind cheeks *
+
+
+ And the branch where two little pomegranates lay:
+
+
+ Quoth I, Give me tryst;' whereto quoth she *
+
+
+ To-morrow the fane shall wear best array:'
+
+
+ Next day I asked her, Thy word?' Said she *
+
+
+ The promise of Night is effaced by Day.'"
+
+
+
+The Caliph bade give a myriad of money each to Al-Rakashi and Abu
+Mus'ab, but bade strike off the head of Abu Nowas, saying, "Thou wast
+with us yesternight in the palace." Said he, "By Allah, 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 verse; and indeed quoth Almighty Allah (and He is
+the truest of all speakers): As for poets (devils pursue them!) dost
+thou not see that they rove as bereft of their senses through every
+valley and that they say that which they do not?'"[FN#110] So the
+Caliph forgave him and gave him two myriads of money. And another tale
+is that of
+
+
+
+
+MUS'AB BIN AL-ZUBAYR AND AYISHAH HIS WIFE
+
+It is told of Mus'ab bin al-Zubayr[FN#111] that he met in Al- Medinah
+Izzah, who was one of the shrewdest of women, and said to her, "I have
+a mind to marry Ayishah[FN#112] daughter of Talhah, and I should like
+thee to go herwards and spy out for me how she is made." So she went
+away and returning to Mus'ab, said, "I have seen her, and her face is
+fairer than health; she hath large and well-opened eyes and under them
+a nose straight and smooth as a cane; oval cheeks and a mouth like a
+cleft pomegranate, a neck as a silver ewer and below it a bosom with
+two breasts like twin- pomegranates and further down a slim waist and a
+slender stomach with a navel therein as it were a casket of ivory, and
+back parts like a hummock of sand; and plumply rounded thighs and
+calves like columns of alabaster; but I saw her feet to be large, and
+thou wilt fall short with her in time of need." Upon this report he
+married her,—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying
+her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Eighty-seventh Day
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when Izzah this
+wise reported of Ayishah bint Talhah, Mus'ab married her and went in to
+her. And presently Izzah invited Ayishah and the women of the tribe
+Kuraysh to her house, when Ayishah sang these two couplets with Mus'ab
+standing by,
+
+ "And the lips of girls, that are perfume sweet; *
+
+
+ So nice to kiss when with smiles they greet:
+
+
+ Yet ne'er tasted I them, but in thought of him; *
+
+
+ And by thought the Ruler rules worldly seat."
+
+
+
+The night of Mus'ab's going in unto her, he departed not from her, till
+after seven bouts; and on the morrow, a freewoman of his met him and
+said to him, "May I be thy sacrifice! Thou art perfect, even in this."
+And a certain woman said, "I was with Ayishah, when her husband came in
+to her, and she lusted for him; so he fell upon her and she snarked and
+snorted and made use of all wonder of movements and marvellous new
+inventions, and I the while within hearing. So, when he came out from
+her, I said to her, How canst thou do thus with thy rank and nobility
+and condition, and I in thy house?' Quoth she, Verily a woman should
+bring her husband all of which she is mistress, by way of excitement
+and rare buckings and wrigglings and motitations.[FN#113] What
+dislikest thou of this?' And I answered I would have this by nights.'
+Rejoined she, Thus is it by day and by night I do more than this; for
+when he seeth me, desire stirreth him up and he falleth in heat; so he
+putteth it out to me and I obey him, and it is as thou seest.'" And
+there also hath reached me an account of
+
+
+
+
+ABU AL-ASWAD AND HIS SLAVE-GIRL
+
+Abu al-Aswad bought a native-born slave-girl, who was blind of an eye,
+and she pleased him; but his people decried her to him; whereat he
+wondered and, turning the palms of his hands upwards,[FN#114] recited
+these two couplets,
+
+ "They find me fault with her where I default ne'er find, *
+
+
+ Save haply that a speck in either eye may show:
+
+
+ But if her eyes have fault, of fault her form hath none, *
+
+
+ Slim-built above the waist and heavily made below."
+
+
+
+And this is also told of
+
+
+
+
+HARUN AL-RASHID AND THE TWO SLAVE-GIRLS
+
+The Caliph Harun al-Rashid lay one night between two slave-girls, one
+from Al-Medinah and the other from Cufa and the Cufite rubbed his
+hands, whilst the Medinite rubbed his feet and made his concern[FN#115]
+stand up. Quoth the Cufite, "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 Mαlik, on the authority of Hishαm ibn
+Orwah,[FN#116] who had it of his (grand) father, that the Prophet said,
+Whoso quickeneth the dead, the dead belongeth to him and is his.' But
+the Cufite took her unawares and, pushing her away, seized it all in
+her own hand and said, "Al-A'amash telleth us, on the authority of
+Khaysamah, who had it of Abdallah bin Mas'ud, that the Prophet
+declared, Game belongeth to him who taketh it, not to him who raiseth
+it.'" And this is also related of
+
+
+
+
+THE CALIPH HARUN AL-RASHID AND THE THREE SLAVE-GIRLS
+
+The Caliph Harun al-Rashid once slept with three slave-girls, a Meccan,
+a Medinite and an Irakite. The Medinah 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? A
+tradition was related to me by Mαlik[FN#117] after Al-Zuhri, after
+Abdallah ibn Sαlim, after Sa'νd bin Zayd, that the Apostle of Allah
+(whom Allah bless and keep!) said: Whoso enquickeneth a dead land, it
+is his.' And the Meccan answered, "It is related to us by Sufyαn, from
+Abu Zanαd, from Al-A'araj, from Abu Horayrah, that the Apostle of Allah
+said: The quarry is his who catcheth it, not his who starteth it.'" But
+the Irak girl pushed them both away and taking it to herself, said,
+"This is mine, till your contention be decided." And they tell a tale
+of
+
+
+
+
+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, while she hated him because she was
+sweet upon a neighbour, who misliked her 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 round in the mill, and thou shalt find a hoard."
+When he awoke, he told his wife the vision and bade her keep the
+secret; but she told her neighbour,—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of
+day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three hundred and Eighty-eighth Night
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the miller's wife
+told the secret to the neighbour whom she loved, thinking to win his
+favour; and he agreed 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 he
+asked her, "How shall we do with this?" and she answered; "We will
+divide it into two halves and will share it equally between us, 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 conjoined, we will join the two
+halves of the treasure one to other, and all will be in our hands."
+Quoth he, "I fear lest Satan seduce thee and thou take some other man
+other than myself; for gold in the house is like the sun in the world.
+I reck, therefore, it were right that the money be all in my hands, so
+thou give thy whole mind to getting free of thy husband and coming to
+me." Quoth she, "I fear even as thou fearest, nor will I yield up my
+part to thee; for it was I directed thee to it." When he heard this,
+greed of gain prompted him to kill her; so he slew her and threw her
+body into the empty hoard-hole; but day overtook him and hindered him
+from covering it up; he therefore took the money and went his way. Now
+after a while 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 bashed it, the more it drew back; for it was affrighted at the
+dead woman and could not go forward. Thereupon the Miller, unknowing
+what hindered the donkey, 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. But when the sun rose, he saw his donkey lying
+dead and likewise his wife in the place of the treasure, and great was
+his rage and sore his wrath for the loss of his hoard 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.[FN#118] And I have heard this
+tale of
+
+
+
+
+THE SIMPLETON AND THE SHARPER
+
+A certain simpleton was once walking along, haling his ass after him by
+the halter, when a pair of sharpers saw him and one said to his fellow,
+"I will take that ass from yonder wight." Asked the other, "How wilt
+thou do that?" "Follow me and I will show thee how," answered the
+first. So the cony-catcher went up to the ass and, loosing it from the
+halter, gave the beast to his fellow; then he haltered his own head and
+followed Tom Fool till he knew the other had got clean off with the
+ass, when he stood still. The oaf haled at the halter, but the rascal
+stirred not; so he turned and seeing the halter on a man's neck, said
+to him, "What art thou?" Quoth the sharper, "I am thine ass and my
+story is a wonderous one and tis this. Know that I have a pious old
+mother and come in to her one day, drunk; and she said to me: O my son,
+repent to the Almighty of these thy transgressions.' But I took my
+staff and beat her, whereupon she cursed me and Allah changed me into
+an ass and caused me fall into thy hands, where I have remained till
+this moment. However, to-day, my mother called me to mind and her heart
+yearned towards me; so she prayed for me and the Lord restored me to my
+former shape amongst the sons of Adam." Cried the silly one, "There is
+no Majesty and there is no Might save in Allah, the Glorious, the
+Great! Allah upon thee, O my brother, acquit me of what I have done
+with thee in the way of riding and so forth." Then he let the
+cony-catcher go and returned home, drunken with chagrin and concern as
+with wine. His wife asked him, "What aileth thee and where is the
+donkey?"; and he answered, "Thou knowest not what was this ass; but I
+will tell thee." So he told her the story, and she exclaimed, "Alack
+and alas for the punishment we shall receive from Almighty Allah! How
+could we have used a man as a beast of burden, all this while? And she
+gave alms by way of atonement and prayed pardon of Heaven.[FN#119] Then
+the man abode awhile at home, idle and feckless, till she said to him,
+"How long wilt thou sit at home doing naught? Go to the market and buy
+us an ass and ply thy work with it." Accordingly, he went to the market
+and stopped by the ass-stand, where behold, he saw his own ass for
+sale. So he went up to it and clapping his mouth to its ear, said to
+it, "Woe to thee, thou ne'er-do-well! Doubtless thou hast been getting
+drunk again and beating thy mother! But, by Allah, I will never buy
+thee more."[FN#120] and he left it and went away. And they tell a tale
+concerning
+
+
+
+
+THE KAZI ABU YUSUF WITH HARUN AL-RASHID AND QUEEN ZUBAYDAH
+
+The Caliph Harun al-Rashid went up one noon-tide to his couch, to lie
+down; and mounting, found upon the bed-clothes semen freshly emitted;
+whereat he was startled and troubled with sore trouble. So he called
+the Lady Zubaydah 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."
+Quoth he, "Tell me truly what this meaneth or I will lay violent hands
+on thee forthright." Quoth she, "By Allah, O Commander of the Faithful,
+indeed I know not how it came there and I am guiltless of that whereof
+you suspectest me." So he sent for the Kazi Abϊ Yϊsuf and acquainted
+him of the case. The Judge raised his eyes to the ceiling and, seeing a
+crack therein, said to the Caliph, "O Commander of the Faithful, in
+very sooth the bat hath seed like that of a man,[FN#121] and this is
+bat's semen." Then he called for a spear and thrust it into the
+crevice, whereupon down fell the bat. In this manner the Caliph's
+suspicions were dispelled,—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and
+ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three hundred and Eighty-ninth Night
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the Kazi Abu
+Yusuf took the spear and thrust it into the crevice, down fell the bat,
+and thus the Caliph's suspicions were dispelled and the innocence of
+Zubaydah was made manifest; whereat she gave loud and liberal vent to
+her joy and promised Abu Yusuf a magnificent reward. Now there were
+with her certain delicious fruits, out of their season, and she knew of
+others in the garden; so she asked Abu Yusuf, "O Imam of the Faith,
+which wouldst thou rather have of the two kinds of fruits, those that
+are here or those that are not here?" And he answered, "Our code
+forbiddeth us to pronounce judgement on the absent; whenas they are
+present, we will give our decision." So she let bring the two kinds of
+fruits before him; and he ate of both. Quoth she, "What is the
+difference between them?" and quoth he, "As often as I think to praise
+one kind, the adversary putteth in its claim." The Caliph laughed at
+his answer[FN#122] and made him a rich present; and Zubaydah also gave
+him what she had promised him, and he went away, rejoicing. See, then
+the virtues of this Imαm and how his hands were manifest the truth and
+the innocence of the Lady Zubaydah. And amongst other stories is that
+of
+
+
+
+
+THE CALIPH AL-HAKIM[FN#123] AND THE MERCHANT
+
+The Caliph Al-Hαkim bi-Amri'llah was riding out in state procession one
+day, when he passed along a garden, wherein he saw a man, surrounded by
+negro-slaves and eunuchs. He asked him for a draught of water, and the
+man gave him to drink, saying, "Belike, the Commander of the Faithful
+will honour me by alighting in this my garden." So the Caliph
+dismounted and with his suite entered the garden; whereupon the said
+man brought out to them an hundred rugs and an hundred leather mats and
+an hundred cushions; and set before them an hundred dishes of fruits,
+an hundred bowls of sweetmeats and an hundred jars of sugared sherbets;
+at which the Caliph marvelled with much amaze and said to his host, "O
+man, verily this thy case is wondrous: didst thou know of our coming
+and make this preparation for us?" He replied, "No by Allah, O
+Commander of the Faithful, I knew not of thy coming and I am a merchant
+of the rest of thy subjects; but I have an 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 her morning-meal in the garden. So
+they sent me each of her furniture and the surplus of her meat and
+drink: and every day each sendeth me a dish of meat and another of
+cooling marinades, also a platter of fruits and a bowl of sweetmeats
+and a jar of sherbet. This is my noon-day dinner, nor have I added
+aught thereto for thee." Then the Commander of the Faithful, Al-Hakim
+bi-Amri'llah prostrated himself in thanksgiving to the Almighty
+(extolled and exalted be His name!) and said, "Praise be Allah, who
+hath been so bountiful to one of our lieges, that he entertaineth the
+Caliph and his host, without making ready for them; nay, he feedeth
+them with the surplusage of his day's provision!" Then he sent for all
+the dirhams in the treasury, that had been struck that year (and they
+were in number three thousand and seven hundred thousand); nor did he
+mount until the money came, when he gave it to the merchant, saying,
+"Use this as thy state may require; and thy generosity deserveth more
+than this." Then he took horse and rode away. And I have heard a story
+concerning
+
+
+
+
+KING KISRA ANUSHIRWAN[FN#124] AND THE VILLAGE DAMSEL
+
+The Just King, Kisrα Anϊshirwαn, one day rode forth to the chase and,
+in pursuit of a deer, became separated from his suite. Presently, he
+caught sight of a hamlet near hand and being sore athirst, he made for
+it and presenting himself at the door of a house that lay by the
+wayside, asked for a draught of water. So a damsel came out and looked
+at him; then, going back into the house, pressed the juice from a
+single sugar-cane into a bowl and mixed it with water; after which she
+strewed on the top some scented stuff, as it were dust, and carried it
+tot he King. Thereupon he seeing in it what resembled dust, drank it,
+little by little, till he came to the end; when said he to her, "O
+damsel, the drink is good, and how sweet it had been but for this dust
+in it that troubleth it." Answered she, "O guest, I put in that powder
+for a purpose;" and he asked, "And why didst thou thus?"; so she
+replied, "I saw thee exceedingly thirsty and feared that thou wouldst
+drain the whole at one draught and that this would thee mischief; and
+but for this dust that troubled the drink so hadst thou done." The Just
+King wondered at her words, knowing that they came of her wit and good
+sense, and said to her, "From how many sugar canes didst thou express
+this draught?" "One," answered she; whereat Anushirwan marvelled and,
+calling for the register of the village taxes, saw that its assessment
+was but little and bethought him to increase it, on his return to his
+palace, saying in himself, "A village where they get this much juice
+out of one sugar-cane, why is it so lightly taxed?" He then left the
+village and pursued his chase; and, 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 at a look, went in
+to fetch him water. It was some time before she returned and Anushirwan
+wondered thereat and said to her, "Why hast thou tarried?"—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Three hundred and Ninetieth Night
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when Anushirwan
+hurried the damsel and asked her, "Why hast thou tarried?" she
+answered, "Because a single sugar-cane gave not enough for thy need; so
+I pressed three; but they yielded not to much as one did before."
+Rejoined he, "What is the cause of that?"; and she replied, "The cause
+of it is that when the Sultan's[FN#125] mind is changed against a folk,
+their prosperity ceaseth and their good waxeth less." So Anushirwan
+laughed and dismissed from his mind that which he had purposed against
+the villagers. Moreover, he took the damsel to wife then and there,
+being pleased with her much wit and acuteness and the excellence of her
+speech. And they tell another tale of the
+
+
+
+
+WATER-CARRIER[FN#126] 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 this thirty years.
+Now that goldsmith had a wife of exceeding beauty and loveliness,
+brilliancy and perfect grace; and she was withal renowned for piety,
+chastity and modesty. One day the water- carrier came, as of custom,
+and poured the water into the cisterns. Now the woman was standing in
+the midst of the court; so he went close 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 bazar, she said to him, "I would have thee
+tell me what thing thou hast done in the market this day, to anger
+Almighty Allah." Quoth he, "I have done nothing to offend the Lord."
+"Nay," rejoined she, "but, by Allah, thou hast indeed done something to
+anger Him; and unless thou tell me the whole truth, I will not abide in
+thy house, and thou shalt not see me, nor will I see thee." So he
+confessed, "I will tell thee the truth of what I did this day. It so
+chanced that, as I was sitting in my shop, as of wont, a woman came up
+to me and bade me make her a bracelet of gold. Then she went away and I
+wrought her a bracelet and laid it aside. But when she returned and I
+brought her out the bracelet, she put forth 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, which would captivate any beholder; and I
+recalled what the poet saith,
+
+ Her fore-arms, dight with their bangles, show *
+
+
+ Like fire ablaze on the waves a-flow;
+
+
+ As by purest gold were the water girt, *
+
+
+ And belted around by a living lowe.'
+
+
+
+So I took her hand and pressed it and squeezed it." Said the woman,
+"Great God! Why didst thou this ill thing? Know that the water-carrier,
+who hath come to our house these thirty years, nor sawst thou ever any
+treason in him took my hand this day and pressed and squeezed it." Said
+her husband, "O woman, let us crave pardon of Allah! Verily, I repent
+of what I did, and do thou ask forgiveness of the Lord for me." She
+cried, "Allah pardon me and thee, and receive us into his holy
+keeping."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three hundred and Ninety-first Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the goldsmith's
+wife cried out, "Allah pardon me and thee, and receive us into his holy
+keeping!" And on the 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." She answered, "Go thy ways, the sin was not in thee, but in my
+husband, for that he did what he did in his shop, and Allah hath
+retaliated upon him in this world." And it related that the goldsmith,
+when his wife told him how the water-carrier had used her, said, "Tit
+for tat, and blow for blow!; had I done more the water-carrier had done
+more";—which became a current byword among the folk. Therefore 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 Ayishah the Truthful and Fatimah the virgin
+mother (Allah Almighty accept of them the twain!), that she may be of
+the company of the righteous ancestry.[FN#127] And I have heard the
+following tale of
+
+
+
+
+KHUSRAU AND SHIRIN AND THE FISHERMAN
+
+King Khusrau[FN#128] Shahinshah of Persia loved fish; and one day, as
+he sat in his saloon, he and Shirin his wife, there came a fisherman,
+with a great fish, and he laid it before the King, who was pleased and
+ordered the man four thousand dirhams.[FN#129] Thereupon Shirin said to
+the King, "Thou hast done ill." Asked he, "And why?", and she answered,
+"Because if, after this, though 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, the same will say, He
+despiseth me and giveth me less than he gave the fisherman.'" Rejoined
+Khusrau, "Thou art right, but it would dishonour a king to go back on
+his gift; and the thing is done." Quoth Shirin, "If thou wilt, I will
+contrive thee a means to get it back from him." Quoth he, "How so?";
+and she said, "Call back, if thou so please, 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 the King
+sent for the fisherman, who was a man of wit and astuteness, and said
+to him, "Is this fish male or female?" whereupon the fisherman kissed
+the ground and answered, "This fish is an hermaphrodite,[FN#130]
+neither male nor female." Khusrau laughed at his clever reply and
+ordered him other four thousand dirhams. So the fisherman went to the
+treasurer and, taking his eight thousand dirhams, put them in a sack he
+had with him. Then, throwing it over his shoulder, he was going away,
+when he dropped a dirham; 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
+Queen said, "O King, didst thou note the meanness of the man, in that
+he must needs stoop down to pick up the one dirham, and could not bring
+himself to leave it for any of the King's servants?" When the King
+heard these words, he was exceeding wroth with the fisherman and said,
+"Thou art right, O Shirin!" So he called the man back and said to him,
+"Thou low-minded carle! Thou art no man! How couldst thou put the bag
+with all this money off thy back and bend thee groundwards to pick up
+the one dirham and grudge to leave it where it fell?" Thereupon the
+fisherman kissed the earth before him and answered, "May Allah prolong
+the King's life! Indeed, I did not pick up the dirham off the ground
+because of its value in my eyes; but I raised it off the earth 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 foot upon it, thus
+dishonouring the name and presentment of the King, and I be blamed for
+this offence." The King wondered at his words and approved of his wit
+and shrewdness, and ordered him yet another four thousand dirhams.
+Moreover, he bade cry abroad in his kingdom, saying, "It behoveth none
+to be guided by women's counsel; for whoso followeth their advice,
+loseth, with his one dirham, other twain."[FN#131] And here is the tale
+they tell of
+
+
+
+
+YAHYA BIN KHALID THE BARMECIDE AND THE POOR MAN
+
+Yahya bin Khαlid the Barmecide was returning home, one day, from the
+Caliph's palace, when he saw, at the gate of his mansion, a man who
+rose as he drew near and saluted him, saying, "O Yahya, I am in sore
+need of that which is in they hand, and I make Allah my intermediary
+with thee." So Yahya caused a place to be set aside for him in his
+house and bade his treasurer carry him a thousand dirhams every day and
+ordered that his diet be of the choicest of his own meat. The man abode
+in this case a whole month, at the end of which time, having received
+in all thirty thousand dirhams and fearing lest Yahya should take the
+money from him, because of the greatness of the sum, he departed by
+stealth.—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Ninety-second Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the man, taking
+with him the money, departed by stealth. But when they told Yahya of
+this, he said, "By Allah, though he had tarried with me to the end of
+his days, yet had I not stinted 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 committed to
+description, especially those of Yahya bin Khalid, for he was an
+ocean[FN#132] of noble qualities, even as saith the poet of him,
+
+ "I asked of Bounty, Art thou free?' Quoth she, *
+
+
+ No, I am slave to Yahyα Khαlid-son!'
+
+
+ Boughten?' asked I. Allah forfend,' quoth she, *
+
+
+ By heirship, sire to sire's transmission!'"
+
+
+
+And the following is related of
+
+
+
+
+MOHAMMED AL-AMIN AND THE SLAVE-GIRL
+
+Ja'afar bin Musα al-Hαdi[FN#133] once had a slave-girl, a lutist,
+called Al-Badr al-Kabνr, than whom there was not in her time a fairer
+of face nor shapelier of shape nor a more elegant of manners nor a more
+accomplished in the art of singing and striking the strings; she was
+indeed perfect in beauty and extreme in every charm. Now Mohammed
+al-Amνn,[FN#134] son of Zubaydah, heard of her and was urgent with
+Ja'afar to sell her to him; but he replied, "Thou knowest it beseemeth
+not one of my rank to sell slave-girls nor set prices on concubines;
+but were she not a rearling I would send her to thee, as a gift, not
+grudge her to thee." And Mohammed al-Amin, some days after this went to
+Ja'afar's house, to make merry; and the host set before him that which
+it behoveth to set before true friends and bade the damsel Al-Badr
+al-Kabir sing to him and gladden him. So she tuned the lute and sang
+with a ravishing melody; whilst Mohammed al-Amin fell to drinking and
+jollity and bade the cupbearers ply Ja'afar with much wine, till they
+made him drunken, when he took the damsel and carried her to his own
+house, but laid not a finger on her. And when the morrow dawned he bade
+invite Ja'afar; and when he came, he set wine before him and made the
+girl sing to him, from behind the curtain. Ja'afar knew her voice and
+was angered at this, but, of the nobleness of his nature and the
+magnanimity of his mind he showed no change. Now when the carousal was
+at an end, Al-Amin commanded one of his servants to fill the boat,
+wherein Ja'afar had come, with dirhams and dinars and all manner of
+jewels and jacinths and rich raiment and goods galore. So he laid
+therein a thousand myriads of money and a thousand fine pearls, each
+worth twenty thousand dirhams; nor did he give over loading the barge
+with all manner of things precious and rare, till the boatmen cried out
+for help, saying, "The boat can't hold any more;" whereupon he bade
+them carry all this to Ja'afar's palace. Such are the exploits of the
+magnanimous, Allah have mercy on them! And a tale is related of
+
+
+
+
+THE SONS OF YAHYA BIN KHALID AND SA'ID BIN SALIM AL-BAHILI
+
+Quoth Sa'νd bin Sαlim al'Bαhilν,[FN#135] I was once in very narrow
+case, during the days of Harun al-Rashid, and debts accumulated upon
+me, burdening my back, and these I had no means of discharging. I was
+at my wits' end what to do, for my doors were blocking up with
+creditors and I was without cease importuned for payment by claimants,
+who dunned me in crowds till at last I was sore perplexed and troubled.
+So I betook myself to Abdallah bin Mαlik al-Khuza'ν[FN#136] and
+besought him to extend the hand of aid with his judgement and direct me
+of his good counsel to the door of relief; and he said, None can save
+thee from this thy strait and sorrowful state save the Barmecides.'
+Quoth I, Who can brook their pride and put up patiently with their
+arrogant pretensions?' and quoth he, Thou wilt put up with all this for
+the bettering of thy case.'"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day
+and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Ninety-third Night
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Abdallah ibn
+Malik al-Khuza'i said to Sa'id bin Salim, "Thou wilt put up with all
+this for the bettering of thy case." "So I left him suddenly (continued
+Sa'id) and went straight to Al-Fazl and Ja'afar, sons of Yahyα bin
+Khαlid, to whom I related my circumstances; whereto they replied, Allah
+give thee His aid, and render thee by His bounties independent of His
+creatures and vouchsafe thee abundant weal and bestow on thee what
+shall suffice thee, without the need of any but Himself; for whatso He
+willeth that He can, and He is gracious with His servants and knoweth
+their wants.' So I went out from the twain and returned to Abdallah,
+with straitened breast and mind perplexed and heavy of heart, and
+repeated to him what they had said. Quoth he, Thou wouldst do well to
+abide with us this day, that we may see what Allah Almighty will
+decree.' So I sat with him awhile, when 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 Al-Fazl and Ja'afar bin Yahya.'
+Quoth Abdallah, I trust that relief is come to thee: rise up and go see
+what is the matter.' So I left him and, hastening to my house, found at
+the door a man who gave me a note wherein was written the following:
+After thou hadst been with us and we heard thy case, we betook
+ourselves to the Caliph and informed him that ill condition had reduced
+thee to the humiliation of begging; where upon he ordered us to supply
+thee with a thousand thousand dirhams from the Treasury. We represented
+to him: The debtor will spend this money in paying off creditors and
+wiping off debt; whence then shall he provide for his subsistence? So
+he ordered thee other three hundred thousand, and each of us hath also
+sent thee, of his proper wealth, a thousand thousand dirhams: so that
+thou hast now three thousand thousand and three hundred thousand
+dirhams wherewithal to order and amend thine estate.'" See, then, the
+munificence of these magnificos: Almighty Allah have mercy on them! And
+a tale is told of
+
+
+
+
+THE WOMAN'S TRICK AGAINST HER HUSBAND
+
+A man brought his wife a fish one Friday and, bidding her to cook it
+against the end of the congregational prayers, went out to his craft
+and business. Meanwhile in came her friend 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 till the Friday
+following;[FN#137] whilst her husband sought her from house to house
+and enquired after her; but none could give him any tidings of her. Now
+on the next Friday she came home and he fell foul of her; but she
+brought out to him the fish alive from the jar and assembled the folk
+against him and told them her tale.—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of
+day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Ninety-fourth Night
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the woman brought
+out the fish alive from the water-jar and assembled the folk against
+her husband, and told them her tale. He also told his; but they
+credited him not and said, "It cannot be that the fish should have
+remained alive all this while." So they proved him mad and imprisoned
+him and mocked at him, where upon he shed tears in floods and recited
+these two couplets,
+
+ "Old hag, of high degree in filthy life, *
+
+
+ Whose face her monstrous lewdness witnesses.
+
+
+ When menstuous she bawds; when clean she whores; *
+
+
+ And all her time bawd or adulteress is."
+
+
+
+And a tale is related of the
+
+
+
+
+THE DEVOUT WOMAN AND THE TWO WICKED ELDERS[FN#138]
+
+There was in times of yore and in ages long gone before, 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 minor ablution. Now there
+were in this garden two old men, its keepers, and both Shaykhs fell in
+love with her and sought her favours; but she refused, whereupon said
+they, "Unless thou yield thy body to us, we will bear witness against
+thee of fornication." Quoth she, "Allah will preserve me from your
+frowardness!" Then they opened the garden-gate and cried out, and the
+folk came to them from all places, saying "What aileth 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 wont
+of the people in those days to expose adulterer and adulteress to
+public reproach for three days, and after stone them. So they cried her
+name in the public streets for three days, while the two elders came up
+to her daily and, laying their hands on her head, said, "Praised be
+Allah who hath sent down on thee His righteous indignation!" Now on the
+fourth day, when they bore her away to stone her, they were followed by
+a lad named Daniel, who was then only twelve years old, and this was to
+be the first of his miracles (upon our Prophet and upon him the
+blessing and peace!). And he ceased not following them to the place of
+execution, till he came up with them 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 summoned the old men separately. (Now he was the first
+ever separated witnesses.) Then said he to the first, "What sawest
+thou?"[FN#139] So he repeated to him his story, and Daniel asked, "In
+what part of the garden did this befal?" and he answered, "On the
+eastern side, 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 raised heavenwards, imploring the Lord for
+deliverance. Then Allah Almighty sent down His blasting leven-fire upon
+the elders and consumed them, and on this wise the Lord made manifest
+the innocence of the damsel. Such was the first of the miracles of the
+Prophet Daniel, on whom be blessing and peace! And they relate a tale
+of
+
+
+
+
+JA'AFAR THE BARMECIDE AND THE OLD BADAWL
+
+The Commander of the Faithful, Harun al-Rashid, went out one day, with
+Abu Ya'Kϊb the cup-companion[FN#140] and Ja'afar the Barmecide and Abu
+Nowas, into the desert, where they fell in with an old man, propt
+against his ass. The Caliph bade Ja'afar learn of him whence he came;
+so he asked him, "Whence comest thou?" and he answered, "From
+Bassorah."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say
+her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Ninety-fifth Night,
+
+She said, it hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when Ja'afar
+asked the man, "Whence comest thou?"; he answered "From Bassorah."
+Quoth Ja'afar, "And whither goest thou?" Quoth the other, "To Baghdad."
+Then Ja'afar enquired "And what wilt thou do there?" and the old man
+replied, "I go to seek medicine for my eye." Said the Caliph, "O
+Ja'afar, make thou sport with him," and answered Ja'afar, "I shall hear
+what I shall exceedingly mislike."[FN#141] But Al-Rashid rejoined, "I
+charge thee on my authority, jest with him." Thereupon Ja'afar said to
+the Badawi, "If I prescribe thee a medicine that shall profit thee,
+what wilt thou give me in return?" Quoth the other, "Allah Almighty
+will requite the kindness with what is better for thee than any
+requital of mine." Continued Ja'afar, "Now lend me an ear and I will
+give thee a prescription, which I have given to none but thee." "What
+is that?" asked the Badawi; and Ja'afar answered, "Take three ounces of
+wind-breaths and the like of sunbeams and the same of moonshine and as
+much of lamp-light; mix them well together and let them lie in the wind
+three months. Then place them three months in a mortar without a bottom
+and pound them to a fine powder and after trituration set them in a
+cleft platter, and let it stand in the wind other three months; after
+which use of this medicine three drachms every night in thy sleep, and,
+Inshallah! thou shalt be healed and whole." Now when the Badawi heard
+this, he stretched himself out to full length on the donkey's back and
+let fly a terrible loud fart[FN#142] and said to Ja'afar, "Take this
+fart in payment of thy prescription. When I have followed it, if Allah
+grant me recovery, I will give thee a slave-girl, who shall serve thee
+in they lifetime a service, wherewith Allah shall cut short thy term;
+and when thou diest and the Lord hurrieth thy soul to hell-fire, she
+shall blacken thy face with her skite, of her mourning for thee, and
+shall keen and beat her face, saying O frosty-beard, what a fool thou
+wast?'"[FN#143] thereupon Harun al-Rashid laughed till he fell
+backward, and ordered the Badawi three thousand silver pieces. And a
+tale is told of
+
+
+
+
+THE CALIPH OMAR BIN AL-KHATTAB AND THE YOUNG BADAWI
+
+The Sharif Husayn bin Rayyαn relateth that the Caliph Omar bin
+Al-Khattαb was sitting one day judging the folk and doing justice
+between his subjects, attended by the best and wisest of his
+counsellors, when there came up to him a youth comely and cleanly
+attired, upon whom two very handsome youths had laid hold and were
+haling by the collar till they set him in the presence. Whereupon the
+Commander of the Faithful, Omar, looked at him and them and bade them
+loose him; then, calling him near to himself, asked the twain, "What is
+your case with him?" They answered, "O Prince of True Believers, we are
+two brothers by one mother and as followers of verity known are we. We
+had a father, a very old man of good counsel, honoured by the tribes,
+sound of baseness renowned for goodliness, who reared us tenderly in
+childhood, and loaded us with favours in manhood;"—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Ninety-sixth Night
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the two youths
+said to the Commander of the Faithful, Omar son of Al- Khattab, "Our
+father was a man honoured by the tribes, sound of baseness and renowned
+for goodliness, who reared us delicately in childhood and loaded us
+with favours in manhood; in fine, a sea of noble and illustrious
+qualities, worthy of the poet's praise,
+
+ Is Aub's-Sakr of Shaybαn[FN#144]?' they asked; *
+
+
+ Quoth I, Nay, by my life, of him's Shaybαn:
+
+
+ How many a sire rose high by a noble son, *
+
+
+ As Allah's prophet glorified Adnan!'[FN#145]
+
+
+
+Now he went forth this day to his garden, to refresh himself amongst
+its trees and pluck the ripe fruits, when this young man slew him
+wrongously and swerved from the road of righteousness; wherefore we
+demand of thee the retribution of his crime and call upon thee to pass
+judgement upon him, according to the commandment of Allah." Then Omar
+cast a terrible look at the accused youth and said to him, "Verily thou
+hearest the complaint these two young men prefer; what hast thou in
+reply to aver?" But he was brave of heart and bold of speech, having
+doffed the robe of pusillanimity and put off the garb of cowardry; so
+he smiled and spake in the most eloquent and elegant words; and, after
+paying the usual ceremonial compliments to the Caliph, said, ""By
+Allah, O Commander of the Faithful, I have indeed given ear to their
+complaint, and they have told the truth in that which they tell, so far
+as they have set out what befel; and the commandment of Allah is a
+decreed decree.[FN#146] but I will forthright state my case between
+they hands, and it is for thee to give commands. Know then, O Prince of
+the Faithful, that I am a very Arab of the Arabies,[FN#147] the noblest
+of those that are beneath the skies. I grew up in the dwellings of the
+wold and fell, till evil times my tribe befel, when I came to the
+outskirts of this town, with my family and whatso goods I own: and, as
+I went along one of the paths leading to its gardens, orchards and
+garths, with my she-camels highly esteemed and by me most precious
+deemed, and midst them a stallion of noble blood and shape right good,
+a plenteous getter of brood, by whom the females abundantly bore and
+who walked among them as though a kingly crown he wore, one of the
+she-camels broke away; and, running to the garden of these young men's
+father, where the trees showed above the wall, put forth her lips and
+began to feed as in stall. I ran to her, to drive her away, when
+behold, there appeared, at a breach of the wall, an old man and grey,
+whose eyes sparkled with angry ray, holding in his right a stone to
+throw and swaying to and fro, with a swing like a lion ready for a
+spring. He cast the stone at my stallion, and it killed him for it
+struck a vital part. When I saw the stallion drop dead beside me, I
+felt live coals of anger kindled in my heart; so I took up the very
+same stone and throwing it at the old man, it was the cause of his bane
+and ban: thus his own wrongful act returned to him anew, and the man
+was slain of that wherewith he slew. When the stone struck him, he
+cried out with a great cry and shrieked out a terrible shriek,
+whereupon I hastened from the spot; but these two young men hurried
+after me and laid hands on me and before thee carried me." Quoth Omar
+(Almighty Allah accept of him!), "Thou hast confessed what thou
+committedest, and of acquittal there is no possible occasion; for
+urgent is the law of retaliation and they cried for mercy but it was
+not a time to escape."[FN#148] the youth answered, "I hear and obey the
+judgement of the Imam, and I consent to all required by the law of
+Al-Islam; but I have a young brother, whose old father, before his
+decease, appointed to him wealth in great store and gold galore, and
+committed his affair to me before Allah, saying: I give this into thy
+hand for thy brother; keep it for him with all thy might.' So I took
+the money and buried it; nor doth any know of it but I. Now, if thou
+adjudge me to be justiced forthright, the money will lost and thou
+shalt be the cause of its loss; wherefore the child will sue thee for
+his due on the day when the Creator shall judge between His creatures.
+But, if thou wilt grant me three days' delay, I will appoint some
+guardian to administer the affairs of the boy and return to answer my
+debt; and I have one who will be my surety for the fulfillment of this
+my promise." So the Commander of the Faithful bowed his head awhile,
+then raised it and looking round upon those present, said, "Who will
+stand surety by me for his return to this place?" And the youth looked
+at the faces of those who were in company and pointing to Abu
+Zarr,[FN#149] in preference to all present, said, "This man shall
+answer for me and be my bail."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day
+and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Ninety-seventh Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the youth
+pointed to Abu Zarr and said, "This man shall answer for me and be my
+bail," Omar (Allah accept of him!) said, O Abu Zarr, dost thou hear
+these words and wilt thou be surety to me for the return of this
+youth?" He answered, "Yes, O Commander of the Faithful, I will be
+surety for him for three days." So the Caliph accepted his guarantee
+and let the young man go. Now when the appointed time passed and the
+days of grace were nearly or quite at end yet the youth came not, the
+Caliph took seat in his council, with the Companions surrounding him,
+like the constellations about the moon, Abu Zarr and the plaintiffs
+being also present; and the avengers said, "Where is the defendant, O
+Abu Zarr, and how shall he return, having once fled? But we will not
+stir from our places till thou bring him to us, that we may take of him
+our blood revenge." Replied Abu Zarr, "By the truth of the All-Wise
+King, if the three days of grace expire and the young man returneth
+not, I will fulfill my warranty and surrender my person to the Imam;"
+and added Omar (whom Allah accept!), "By the Lord, if the young man
+appear not, I will assuredly execute on Abu Zarr that which is
+prescribed by the law of Al-Islam!"[FN#150] thereupon the eyes of the
+bystanders ran over with tears; those who looked on groaned aloud and
+great was the clamour. Then the chiefs of the Companions urged the
+plaintiffs to accept the blood-wit and deserve the thanks of the folk;
+but they both refused and would accept nothing save the talion.
+However, as the folk were swaying to and fro like waves and loudly
+bemoaning Abu Zarr, behold, up came the young Badawi; and, standing
+before the Imam, saluted him right courteously (with sweat-beaded face
+and shining with the crescent's grace) and said to him, "I have given
+the lad in charge to his mother's brothers and have made them
+acquainted with all that pertaineth to his affairs and let them into
+the secrets of his monies; after which I braved the heats of noon and
+have kept my word as a free- born man." Thereupon the folk marvelled,
+seeing his good faith and loyalty and his offering himself to death
+with so stout a heart; and one said to him, "How noble a youth art thou
+and how loyal to thy word of honour and thy devoir!" Rejoined he, "Are
+ye not convinced that when death presenteth itself, none can escape
+from it? And indeed, I have kept my word, that it be not said, Good
+faith is gone from among mankind.' " Said Abu Zarr, "By Allah, O
+Commander of the Faithful, 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 who were present and singled me out,
+saying, This man shall answer for me and be my bail,' I thought it not
+right to refuse him, and generosity forbade to disappoint his desire,
+there being no harm in compliance therewith, that it be not bruited
+abroad, Benevolence is gone from among mankind." Then said the two
+young men, "O Commander of the Faithful, we forgive this youth our
+father's blood, seeing that he hath changed desolation into
+cheerfulness; that it be not said, Humanity is gone from among
+mankind." So the Caliph rejoiced in the acquittance of the youth and
+his truth and good faith; moreover, he magnified the generosity of Abu
+Zarr, extolling it over all his companions, and approved the resolve of
+the two young men for its benevolence, giving them praise with thanks
+and applying to their case the saying of the poet,
+
+ "Who doth kindness to men shall be paid again; *
+
+
+ Ne'er is kindness lost betwixt God and men."
+
+
+
+Then he offered to pay them, from the Treasury, the blood-wit for their
+father; but they refused, saying, "We forgave him only of our desire
+unto Allah,[FN#151] the Bountiful, the Exalted; and he who is thus
+intentioned followeth not his benefits with reproach or with
+mischief."[FN#152] and amongst the tales they relate is that of
+
+
+
+
+THE CALIPH AL-MAAMUN AND THE PYRAMIDS[FN#153] OF EGYPT
+
+It is told that the Caliph Al-Maamun, son of Harun al-Rashid, 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 succeed, albeit his best was done. He expended
+a mint of money in the attempt,—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day
+and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred Ninety-eighth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Al-Maamun
+attempting to pull down the Pyramids, expended his mint of money, but
+succeeded only in opening up a small tunnel in one of them, where in it
+is said he found treasure to the exact amount of the monies he had
+spent in the works, neither more nor less; whereat he marvelled and
+taking what he found there, desisted from his determination. Now the
+Pyramids are three, and they are one of the Wonders of the World; nor
+is there on the face of earth aught like them for height and fashion
+and mysteries[FN#154]; for they are built of huge rocks, and the
+builders proceeded by piercing one block of stone and setting therein
+upright rods of iron[FN#155]; after which they pierced a second block
+of stone and lowered it upon the first. Then they poured melted lead
+upon the clamps and set the blocks in geometrical order, till the
+building was complete. Now the height of each pyramid was an hundred
+cubits, of the normal measure of the day, and it had four faces, each
+three hundred cubits long from the base and thence battering upwards to
+a point. The ancients say that, in the western Pyramid, are thirty
+chambers of parti-coloured syenite, full of precious gems and treasures
+galore and rare images and utensils and costly weapons which are
+anointed with egromantic unguents, so that they may not rust until the
+day of Resurrection.[FN#156] Therein, also, are vessels of glass which
+bend and break not, containing various kinds of compound drugs and
+sympathetic waters. In the second Pyramid are the records of the
+priests, written on tablets of syenite, to each priest his tablet,
+whereon are engraved the wonders of his craft and his feats; and on the
+walls are the human figures like idols, working with their hands at all
+manner of mechanism and seated on stepped thrones. Moreover, to each
+Pyramid there is a guardian treasurer who keepeth watch over it and
+wardeth it, to all eternity, against the ravages of time and the shifts
+of events; and indeed the marvels of these Pyramids astound all who
+have sight and insight. Many are the poems that describe them, thou
+shalt thereby profit no small matter, and among the rest, quoth one of
+them,
+
+ "If Kings would see their high emprize preserved, *
+
+
+ Twill be by tongues of monuments they laid:
+
+
+ Seest not the Pyramids? These two endure *
+
+
+ Despite what change Time and Change have made."
+
+
+
+And quoth another,
+
+ "Look on the Pyramids, and hear the twain *
+
+
+ Recount their annals of the long-gone Past:
+
+
+ Could they but speak, high marvels had they told *
+
+
+ Of what Time did to man from first to last."
+
+
+
+And quoth a third,
+
+ "My friend I prithee tell me, 'neath the sky *
+
+
+ Is aught with Egypt's Pyramids can compare?
+
+
+ Buildings which frighten Time, albe what dwells *
+
+
+ On back of earth in fear of Time must fare:
+
+
+ If on their marvels rest my sight no more, *
+
+
+ Yet these I ever shall in memory bear."
+
+
+
+And quoth a fourth,
+
+ "Where is the man who built the Pyramids? *
+
+
+ What was his tribe, what day and where his tomb?
+
+
+ The monuments survive the men who built *
+
+
+ Awhile, till overthrown by touch of Doom."
+
+
+
+And men also tell a tale of
+
+
+
+
+THE THIEF AND THE MERCHANT
+
+There was once a thief who repented to Almighty Allah with sincere
+penitence; so he opened himself a shop for the sale of stuffs, where he
+continued to trade awhile. It so chanced one day that he locked his
+shop and went home, and in the night there came to the bazar an artful
+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
+wax-candle." The watchman took the taper and went to light it,—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Three Hundred and Ninety-ninth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the watchman took
+the taper and went to light it, whilst the thief opened the shop and
+lit another candle he had by him. When the watchman came back, he found
+him seated in the shop, account- books inhand, and reckoning with his
+fingers; nor did he cease 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[FN#157] of stuffs and gave them to the cameleer, who loaded them
+on his beast. Then he gave the watchman two dirhams and went away after
+the camel-driver, leaving the watchman believing him to be the owner of
+the shop. Now when the morning dawned and day broke the merchant came
+and the watchman began greeting him with blessings, because of the two
+dirhams; but the shop-keeper wondered at his words as one not knowing
+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 has passed in the night and what had been said to the
+cameleer, whereupon the merchant bade him fetch the man and asked him,
+"Whither didst thou carry the stuffs this morning?" Answered the
+driver, "To such a landing-place, and I stowed them on board such a
+vessel." Said the merchant, "Come with me thither;" so the camel-driver
+carried him to the landing-place and said to him, "This be the barque
+and this be her owner." Quoth the merchant to the seaman, "Whither
+didst thou carry the merchant and the stuff?" Answered the boat-master,
+"To such a place, where he fetched a camel-driver and, setting the
+bales on the camel, went his ways I know not whither." "Fetch me the
+cameleer who carried the goods," said the merchant; so he fetched him
+and the merchant said to him, "Whither didst thou carry the bales of
+goods from the ship?" "To such a Khan," answered he; and the merchant
+rejoined, "Come thither with me and show it to me." So the camel-man
+went with him to a place far distant from the shore and showed him the
+Khan where he had set down the stuffs, and at the same time the false
+merchant's magazine, which he opened and found therein his four bales
+bound up as they had been packed. The thief had laid his cloak over
+them; so the merchant took the cloak as well as the bales and delivered
+them to the camel- driver, who laid them on his camel; after which he
+locked the magazine and went away with the cameleer. On the way, he was
+confronted with the thief who followed him, till he had shipped the
+bales, when he said to him, "O my brother (Allah have thee in His holy
+keeping!), thou hast indeed recovered thy goods and naught of them is
+lost; so give me back my cloak." The merchant laughed and, giving him
+back his cloak, let him go unhindered; whereupon both went their ways.
+And they tell a tale of
+
+
+
+
+MASRUR THE EUNUCH AND IBN AL-KARIBI
+
+The Commander of the Faithful, Harun al-Rashid, was exceedingly
+restless one night; so he said to his Wazir Ja'afar, "I am sleepless
+to-night and my breast is straitened and I know not what to do." Now
+his castrato Masrϊr was standing before him, and he laughed: whereupon
+the Caliph said "At whom laughest thou? Is it to make mock of me or
+hath madness seized thee?" Answered Masrur, "Nay, by Allah, O Commander
+of the Faithful,"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to
+say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundredth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Harun al- Rashid
+said to Masrur the Sworder, "Dost thou laugh to make mock of me or hath
+madness seized thee?" Answered Masrur, "Nay, by Allah, O Commander of
+the Faithful, I swear by thy kinship to the Prince of Apostles, I did
+it not of my free will; but I went out yesterday to walk within sight
+of the palace and, coming to the bank of the Tigris, saw there the folk
+collected; so I stopped and found a man, Ibn al-Kαribν hight, who was
+making them laugh; but just now I recalled what he said, and laughter
+got the better of me; and I crave pardon of thee, O Commander of the
+Faithful!" Quoth the Caliph, "Bring him to me forthright;" so Masrur
+repaired in all haste to Ibn al-Karibi and said to him, "Answer the
+summons of the Commander of the Faithful," whereto he replied, "I hear
+and obey." "But on condition," added Masrur, "that, if he give thee
+aught, thou shalt have a quarter and the rest shall be mine." Replied
+the droll, "Nay, thou shalt have half and I half." Rejoined Masrur,
+"Not so, I will have three- quarters." Lastly said Ibn al-Karibi, "Thou
+shalt have two- thirds and I the other third;" to which Masrur agreed,
+after much higgling and haggling, and they returned to the palace
+together. Now when Ibn al-Karibi came into the Caliph's presence he
+saluted him as men greet the Caliphate, and stood before him; whereupon
+said Al-Rashid to him, "If thou do not make me laugh, I will give thee
+three blows with this bag." Quoth Ibn al-Karibi in his mind, "And a
+small matter were blows with that bag, seeing that beating with whips
+hurteth me not;" for he thought the bag was empty. Then he began to
+deal out his drolleries, such as would make the dismallest jemmy
+guffaw, and gave vent to all manner of buffooneries; but the Caliph
+laughed not neither smiled, whereat Ibn al-Karibi marvelled and was
+chagrined and affrighted. Then said the Commander of the Faithful, "Now
+hast thou earned the beating," and gave him a blow with the bag,
+wherein were four pebbles each two rotols in weight. The blow fell on
+his neck and he gave a great cry, then calling to mind his compact with
+Masrur, said, "Pardon, O Commander of the Faithful! Hear two words from
+me." Quoth the Caliph, "Say on," and quoth Ibn al- Karibi, "Masrur made
+it a condition with me and I a covenant with him, that whatsoever
+largesse 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 higgling and
+haggling. I have had my share and here standeth he, ready to receive
+his portion; so pay him the two other blows." Now when the Caliph heard
+this, he laughed until he fell on his back; then calling Masrur, he
+gave him a blow, whereat he cried out and said, "O Commander of the
+Faithful, the one-third sufficeth me: give him the two-thirds."— And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and First Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Masrur cried out,
+"O Commander of the Faithful! The one-third sufficeth me; give him the
+two-thirds." So the Caliph laughed at them and ordered them a thousand
+dinars each, and they went away, rejoicing at the largesse. And of the
+tales they tell is one of
+
+
+
+
+THE DEVOTEE PRINCE
+
+The Commander of the Faithful, Harun al-Rashid, had a son who, from the
+time he attained the age of sixteen, renounced the world and walked in
+the way[FN#158] of ascetics and devotees. He was wont to go out to the
+graveyards and say, "Ye once ruled the world, but that saved you not
+from death, and now are ye come to your sepulchres! Would Heaven I knew
+what ye said and what is said to you!"[FN#159] and he wept as one
+weepeth who is troubled with fear and apprehension, and repeated the
+worlds of the poet,
+
+ "Affright me funerals at every time; *
+
+
+ And wailing women grieve me to the soul!"
+
+
+
+Now it chanced one day, as he sat among the tombs, according to his
+custom, his father passed by in all his state, surrounded by his Wazirs
+and Lords of the realm and the Officers of his household, who seeing
+the Caliph's son with a gown of woollen stuff on his body and a twist
+of wool on his head by way of turband, said to one another, "Verily
+this youth dishonoureth the Commander of the Faithful among Kings: but,
+if he reproved him, he would leave his present way of life." The Caliph
+heard these words; so quoth he to his son, "O my dear child, of a truth
+thou disgracest me by thy present way of life." The young man looked at
+him and made no reply: then he beckoned to a bird perched on the
+battlements of the palace, and said to it, "O thou bird, I conjure thee
+by Him who created thee, alight upon my hand." Whereupon straightway it
+swooped down and perched on his finger. Then quoth he, "Return to thy
+place;" and it did so. Presently he said, "Alight on the hand of the
+Commander of the Faithful;" but it refused there to perch, and he cried
+to his father, "It is thou that disgracest me amongst the Holy[FN#160]
+Ones, by the love of the world; and now I am resolved to part from
+thee, never to return to thee, save in the world to come." Then he went
+down to Bassorah, where he took to working with those which wrought in
+clay,[FN#161] receiving, as his day's hire, but a dirham and a
+danik;[FN#162] and with the danik he fed himself and gave alms of the
+dirham. (Quoth Abϊ Amir of Bassorah) "There fell down a wall in my
+house; so I went forth to the station of the artisans to find a man who
+should repair it for me, and my eyes fell on a handsome youth of a
+radiant countenance. So I saluted him and asked him, O my friend, dost
+thou seek work?' Yes,' answered he; and I said, Come with me and build
+a wall.' He replied, On certain conditions I will make with thee.'
+Quoth I What are they, O my friend?'; and quoth he, My wage must be a
+dirham and a danik, and again when the Mu'ezzin calleth to prayer, thou
+shalt let me go pray with the congregation.' It is well,' answered I
+and carried him to my lace, where he fell to work, such work as I never
+saw the like of. Presented I named to him the morning-meal; but he
+said, No;' and I knew that he was fasting.[FN#163] 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 lesser
+ablution, made it after a fashion than which I never saw a
+fairer;[FN#164] then he went to the mosque and prayed with the
+congregation and returned to his work. He did the same upon the call to
+mid- afternoon prayer, and when I saw him fall to work again
+thereafterward, I said to him, O my friend, verily the hours of labour
+are over; a workman's day is but till the time of afternoon-prayer.'
+But he replied, Praise to the Lord, my service is till the night.' And
+he ceased not to work till nightfall, when I gave him two dirhams;
+whereupon he asked What is this!'; and I answered, By Allah, this is
+but part of thy wage, because of thy diligence in my service.' But he
+threw them back to me saying, I will have no more than was agreed upon
+between us twain.' I urged him to take them, but could not prevail upon
+him; so I gave him the dirham and the danik, and he went away. And when
+morning dawned, I went to the station but found him not; so I enquired
+for him and was told, He cometh thither only on Sabbaths.' Accordingly,
+when Saturday came, I betook me to the market and finding him there,
+said to him, Bismillah, do me the favour to come and work for me.' Said
+he, Upon the conditions thou wottest;' and I answered Yes!' Then
+carrying him to my house I stood to watch him where he could not see
+me; and he took a handful of puddled clay and laid it on the wall,
+when, behold, the stones ranged themselves one upon other; and I said,
+On this wise are Allah's holy ones.' 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 walked away. Now when the third Saturday came round, I went
+to the place of standing, but found him not; so I asked after him and
+they told me, He is sick and lying in the shanty of such a woman.' Now
+this was an old wife, renowned for piety, who had a hovel of reeds in
+the burial- ground. So I fared thither and found him stretched on the
+floor which was bare, with a brick for a pillow and his face beaming
+like the new moon with light. I saluted him and he returned my salam;
+and I sat down at his head weeping over his fair young years and
+absence from home 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 to-morrow 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-pocket, which keep with thee. Then, when
+thou hast prayed over me and laid me in the dust, go to Baghdad and
+watch for the Caliph Harun al-Rashid, till he come forth, when do thou
+give him what thou shalt find in the breast of my gown and bear him my
+salutation.' Then he ejaculated the profession of the Faith and
+glorified his God in the most eloquent of words, reciting these
+couplets,
+
+ Carry the trust of him whom death awaits *
+
+
+ To Al-Rashid and God reward thy care!
+
+
+ And say An exile who desired thy sight *
+
+
+ Long loving, from afar sends greeting fair.
+
+
+ Nor hate nor irk (No!) him from thee withdrew, *
+
+
+ Kissing thy right to Heaven brought him near.[FN#165]
+
+
+ But what estranged his soul, O sire, from thee *
+
+
+ Is that thy worldly joys it would not share!'
+
+
+
+Then he betook himself to prayer, asking pardon of Allah'—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Second Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the youth then
+betook himself to asking pardon of Allah and to invoking prayer and
+praise upon the Apostle and the Lord of the Just and repeating verses
+of the Koran; after which he recited these couplets,
+
+ "O sire, be not deceived by worldly joys; *
+
+
+ For life must pass, and joy must learn to mourn;
+
+
+ When thou art told of folk in evil plight, *
+
+
+ Think thou must answer for all hearts forlorn;
+
+
+ And when thou bear thy dead towards the tombs, *
+
+
+ Know thou wilt likewise on that way be bourne."
+
+
+
+Continued Abu the Basri, "Now when the youth had ended his charge and
+his verses I left him and went home. On the morrow, I returned, at the
+appointed hour, and found him indeed dead, the mercy of Allah be upon
+him! So I washed him and, unsewing his gown, found in the bosom a ruby
+worth thousands of gold pieces and said to myself, By Allah, this youth
+was indeed weaned from worldly things!' After I had buried him, I made
+my way to Baghdad and, going to the Caliph's palace, waited till he
+came forth, when I addressed him in one of the streets and gave him the
+ruby, which when he saw, he knew and fell down in a fainting- fit. His
+attendants laid hands on me, but he revived and said to them, Release
+him and bring him courteously to the palace.' They did his bidding, and
+when he returned, he sent for me and carrying me into his chamber said
+to me, How doth the owner of this ruby?' Quoth I, Verily, he is dead;'
+and told him what had passed; whereupon he fell a-weeping and said, The
+son hath gained; but the sire hath lost.' Then he called out, saying,
+Ho, such an one!'; and behold there came out to him a lady who, when
+she saw me, would have withdrawn; but he cried to her, Come, and mind
+him not.' So she entered and saluted, and he threw her the ruby, which
+when she saw and she knew, she shrieked 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 Allah done with my son?'; and he said to me, Do
+thou tell her his case' (as he could not speak for weeping).
+Accordingly, I repeated the story to her, and she began to shed tears
+and say in a faint and wailing voice, How I have longed for thy sight,
+O solace of mine eyes![FN#166] Would I might have given thee to drink,
+when thou hadst none to slake thy thirst! Would I might have cheered
+thee, whenas thou foundest never a cheerer!' And she poured forth tears
+and recited these couplets,
+
+ I weep for one whose lot a lonely death befel; *
+
+
+ Without a friend to whom he might complain and moan:
+
+
+ And after glory and glad union with his friends, *
+
+
+ He woke to desolation, friendless, lorn and lone;
+
+
+ What Fortune hides a while she soon to all men shall show; *
+
+
+ Death never spared a man; no, not a single one:
+
+
+ O absent one, my Lord decreed thee strangerhood, *
+
+
+ Far from thy nearest friends and to long exile gone:
+
+
+ Though Death forbid my hope of meeting here again, *
+
+
+ On Doom-day's morrow we shall meet again, my
+
+
+son![FN#167]
+
+
+
+Quoth I, O Commander of the Faithful, was he indeed thy son?' Quoth he,
+Yes, and indeed, before I succeeded to this office, he was wont to
+visit the learned and company with the devout; but, when I became
+Caliph, he grew estranged from me and withdrew himself apart.[FN#168]
+Then said I to his mother, Verily this thy son hath cut the world and
+devoted his life to Almighty Allah, and it may be that hard times shall
+befal him and he be smitten with trial of evil chance; wherefore do
+thou given him this ruby, which he may find useful in hour of need.' So
+she gave it him, conjuring him to take it, and he obeyed her bidding.
+Then he left to us the things of our world and removed himself from us;
+nor did he cease to be absent from us, till he went to the presence of
+Allah (to whom be Honour and Glory!), pious and pure.' Then said he,
+Come, show me his grave.' So, I travelled with him to Bassorah and
+showed him his son's grave; and when he saw it, he wept and lamented,
+till he fell down in a swoon; after which he recovered and asked pardon
+of the Lord, saying, We are Allah's and unto Him we are returning!';
+and involved blessings on the dead. Then he asked me to become his
+companion, but I said to him, "O Commander of the Faithful, verily, in
+thy son's case is for me the most momentous of admonitions!' And I
+recited these couplets,
+
+ "Tis I am the stranger, visited by none; *
+
+
+ I am the stranger though in town my own:
+
+
+ Tis I am the stranger! Lacking kith and son, *
+
+
+ And friend to whom I mote for aidance run.
+
+
+ I house in mosques which are my only home; *
+
+
+ My heart there wones and shall for ever wone:
+
+
+ Then laud ye Allah, Lord of Worlds, as long *
+
+
+ As soul and body dwell in union!'"
+
+
+
+And a famous tale is told of
+
+
+
+
+THE UNWISE SCHOOLMASTER WHO FELL IN LOVE BY REPORT
+
+Quoth one of the learned, "I passed once by a school, wherein a
+schoolmaster was teaching children; so I entered, finding him a
+good-looking man and a well-dressed; when he rose to me and made me sit
+with him. Then I examined him in the Koran and in syntax and prosody
+and lexicography; and behold, he was perfect in all required of him, so
+I said to him, Allah strengthen thy purpose! Thou art indeed versed in
+all that is requisite,' thereafter I frequented him a while,
+discovering daily some new excellence in him, and quoth I to myself,
+This is indeed a wonder in any dominie; for the wise are agreed upon a
+lack of wit in children's teachers.' Then I separated myself from him
+and sought him and visited him only every few days, till coming to see
+him one day as of wont, I found the school shut and made enquiry of his
+neighbors, who replied, Some one is dead in his house.' So I said in my
+mind, It behoveth me to pay him a visit of condolence,' and going to
+his house, knocked at the door, when a slave-girl came out to me and
+asked, What dost thou want?' and I answered, I want thy master.' She
+replied, He is sitting alone, mourning;' and I rejoined, Tell him that
+his friend so and so seeketh to console 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 mourning fillets. So I said to
+him, Allah requite thee amply! this is a path all must perforce tread,
+and it behoveth thee to take patience;' adding, But who is dead unto
+thee?' He answered, One who was dearest of the folk to me, and best
+beloved.' Perhaps thy father?' No!' Thy brother?' "No!' "One of thy
+kindred?' No!' Then asked I, What relation was the dead to thee?'; and
+he answered, My lover.' Quoth I to myself, This is the first proof to
+swear by his lack of wit.' So I said to him, Assuredly there be others
+than she and fairer;' and he made answer, I never saw her, that I might
+judge whether or no there be others fairer than she.' Quoth I to
+myself, This is another proof positive.' Then I said to him, And how
+couldst thou fall in love with one thou hast never seen?' He replied
+Know that I was sitting one day at the window, when lo! there passed by
+a man, singing the following distich,
+
+ Umm Amr',[FN#169] thy boons Allah repay! *
+
+
+ Give back my heart be't where it may!'"
+
+
+
+And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Third Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the schoolmaster
+continued, " When I heard the man humming these words as he passed
+along the street, I said to myself Except this Umm Amru were without
+equal in the world, the poets had not celebrated her in ode and
+canzon.' So I fell in love with her; but, two days after, the same man
+passed, singing the following couplet,
+
+ Ass and Umm Amr' went their way; *
+
+
+ Nor she, nor ass returned for aye.'
+
+
+
+Thereupon I knew she was dead and mourned for her. This was three days
+ago, and I have been mourning ever since. So I left him, (concluded the
+learned one) and fared forth, having assured myself of the weakness of
+the gerund-grinder's wit." And they tell another and a similar tale of
+
+
+
+
+THE FOOLISH DOMINIE[FN#170]
+
+Once upon a time, a schoolmaster was visited by a man of letters who
+entered a school and, sitting down by the host's side, entered into
+discourse with him and found him an accomplished theologian, poet
+grammarian, philologist and poet; intelligent, well bred and pleasant
+spoken; whereat he wondered, saying in himself, "It cannot be that a
+man who teacheth children in a school, should have a perfect wit." Now
+when he was about to go away, the pedant said to him, "Thou are my
+guest to-night;" and he consented to receive hospitality 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 Harim. The stranger lay down and addressed himself to sleep, when,
+behold, there arose a great clamour in the women's rooms. He asked what
+was the matter and they said, "A terrible thing hath befallen the
+Shaykh and he is at the last gasp." Said he, "Take me up to him"; so
+they took him up to the pedagogue whom he found lying insensible, with
+his blood streaming down. He sprinkled water on his face and when he
+revived, he asked him, "What hath betided thee? When thou leftest me,
+thou wast in all good cheer and whole of body," and he answered, "O my
+brother, after I left thee, I sat meditating on the creative works of
+Almighty Allah, and said to myself: In every thing the Lord hath
+created for man, there is an use; for He (to Whom be glory!) made the
+hands to seize, the feet to walk, the eyes to see, the ears to hear and
+the penis to increase and multiply; and so on with all the members of
+the body, except these two ballocks; there is no use in them.' So I
+took a razor I had by me and cut them off; and there befel me what thou
+seest." So the guest left him and went away, saying, "He was in the
+right who said, Verily no schoolmaster who teacheth children can have a
+perfect wit, though he know all the sciences.'" And they tell a
+pleasant tale of the
+
+
+
+
+ILLITERATE WHO SET UP FOR A SCHOOLMASTER
+
+There was once, among the menials[FN#171] of a certain mosque, a man
+who knew not how to write or even to read and who gained his bread by
+gulling folk. One day, it occurred to him to open a school and teach
+children; so he got together writing-tablets and written papers and
+hung them up in a high place. Then he greatened his turband[FN#172] and
+sat down at the door of the school; and when the people, who passed by,
+saw his huge head- gear and tablets and scrolls, they thought he must
+be a very learned pedagogue; so they brought him their children; and he
+would say to this, "Write," and to that "Read"; and thus the little
+ones taught each other. Now one day, as he sat as of wont, at the door
+of the school, behold, up came a woman letter in hand, and he said in
+his mind, "This woman doubtless seeketh me, that I may read her the
+missive she hath 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 noon-prayer and return." Quoth
+she, "Noon is yet distant, so read me this letter." He took the letter
+and turning it upside down, fell to looking at it, now shaking his head
+till his turband quivered, then dancing his eyebrows and anon showing
+anger and concern. Now the letter came from the woman's husband, who
+was absent; and when she saw the dominie do on this wise, she said to
+herself, "Doubtless my husband is dead, and this learned doctor of law
+and religion 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 rend my raiment?" "Rend!" replied he. "Shall I beat
+my face?" asked she; and he answered, "Beat!" So she took the letter
+from his hand and returned home fell a-weeping, she and her children.
+Presently, one of her neighbours heard her sobbing and asking what
+aileth her, was answered, "Of a truth she hath gotten a letter, telling
+her that her husband is dead." Quoth the man, "This is a falsehood; for
+I had a letter from him but yesterday, advising me that he is whole and
+in good health and will be with her after ten days." So he rose
+forthright and going in to her, said, "Where is the letter which came
+to thee?" She brought it to him, and he took it and read it; and lo! it
+ran as follows, "After the usual salutations, I am well and in good
+health and whole and will be with you all after ten days. Meanwhile, I
+send you a quilt and an extinguisher."[FN#173] So she took the letter
+and, returning to the schoolmaster, said to him, "What induced 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. Answered he, "Thou art in the right, O good woman; for
+I was, at the time"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased
+to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Fourth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the pedagogue
+replied, "Verily I was at that time fashed and absent- minded and,
+seeing the extinguisher wrapped up in the quilt, I 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 her ways.[FN#174]
+And they relate a story of
+
+
+
+
+THE KING AND THE VIRTUOUS WIFE.
+
+A certain King once went forth in disguise, to look into the affairs of
+his lieges. Presently, he came to a great village which he entered
+unattended and being athirst, stopped at the door of a house and asked
+for water. There came out to him a fair woman with a gugglet, which she
+gave him, and he drank. When he looked at her, he was ravished with her
+and besought her favours. Now she knew him; so she led him into the
+house and, making him sit down, brought out a book and said to him,
+"Look therein whilst I order my affair and return to thee." So he
+looked into the book, and behold, it treated of the Divine prohibition
+against advoutry and of the punishments which Allah hath prepared for
+those who commit adulterous sin. When he read this, his flesh quaked
+and his hair bristled and he repented to Almighty Allah: 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 and know her
+carnally after this. When some time had past, the wife told her
+kinsfolk of her husband's conduct, and they complained of him to the
+King, saying, "Allah advance the King! This man hired of us a piece of
+land for tillage, and tilled it awhile; then left it fallow and neither
+tilled it nor 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
+such land as that if it be not sown, spoileth." Quoth the King to the
+man, "What hindereth thee from sowing thy land?" Answered he, "Allah
+advance the King! It reached me that the lion entered the field
+wherefore I stood in awe of him and dared not draw near it, since
+knowing that I cannot cope with the lion, I stand in fear of him." The
+King understood the parable and rejoined, saying, "O man, the lion trod
+and trampled not thy land, and it is good for seed so do thou till it
+and Allah 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.[FN#175] And amongst the stories is that of
+
+
+
+
+ABD AL-RAHMAN THE MAGHRIBI'S STORY OF THE RUKH.[FN#176]
+
+There was once a man of the people of West Africa who had journeyed far
+and wide and traversed many a desert and a tide. 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 a wing feather of a young
+Rukh, whilst yet in egg and unhatched; and this quill was big enough to
+hold a goat skin of water, for it is said that the length of the Rukh
+chick's wing, when he cometh forth of the egg, is a thousand fathoms.
+The folk marvelled at this quill, when they saw it, and the man who was
+called Abd al-Rahman the Moor (and he was known, to boot, as the
+Chinaman, for his long sojourn in Cathay), related to them the
+following adventure, one of many of his traveller's tales of marvel. He
+was on a voyage in the China seas—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of
+day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Fifth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Abd al- Rahman,
+the Moorman, the Chinaman, was wont to tell wondrous tales amongst
+which was the following. He was on a voyage in the China seas with a
+company of merchants, when they sighted an island from afar; so they
+steered for it and, making fast thereto, saw that it was large and
+spacious. The ship's crew went ashore to get wood and water, taking
+with them hatchets and ropes and water skies (the travellers
+accompanying them), and presently espied a great dome, white and
+gleaming, an hundred cubits long. So they made towards it and drawing
+near, found that it was an egg of the Rukh and fell on it with axes and
+stones and sticks till they uncovered the young bird and found the
+chick as it were a firm set hill. So they plucked out one of the wing
+feathers, but could not do so, save by helping one another, for all the
+quills 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 vane,
+returned to the ship. Then they set sail and putting out to sea,
+voyaged with a fair wind all that night, till the sun rose; and while
+everything went well, they saw the Rukh come flying after them, as he
+were a vast cloud, with a rock in his talons, like a great heap bigger
+than the ship. As soon as he poised himself in air over the vessel, he
+let fall the rock upon it; but the craft, having great way on her,
+outwent the rock, which fell into the sea with a loud crash and a
+horrible. So Allah decreed their deliverance and saved them from doom;
+and they cooked the young bird's flesh and ate it. Now there were
+amongst them old white 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 Rukh grow gray ever after. Some said the cause of
+the return of youth to them and the ceasing of hoariness from them was
+that they had heated the pot with arrow wood, whilst others would have
+it that it came of eating the Rukh chick's flesh; and this is indeed a
+wonder of wonders.[FN#177] And a story is related of
+
+
+
+
+ADI BIN ZAYD AND THE PRINCESS HIND.
+
+Al-Nu'uman Bin Al-Munzir, King of the Arabs of Irak, had a daughter
+named Hind, who went out one Pasch, which is a feast day of the
+Nazarenes, to the White Church, to take the sacrament; she was eleven
+years old and was the loveliest woman of her age and time; and it so
+chanced that on the same day came to Hirah[FN#178] a young man called
+'Adν bin Zayd[FN#179] with presents from the Chosroλ to Al-Nu'uman, and
+he also went to the White Church, to communicate. He was tall of
+stature and fair of favour, with handsome eyes and smooth cheeks, and
+had with him a company of his people. Now there was with Hind bint
+al-Nu'uman a slave girl named Mαriyah, who was enamoured of Adi, but
+had not been able to foregather with 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!" Hind asked, "And who is he?" and
+Mariyah answered, "Adi bin Zayd." Quoth Al-Nu'uman's daughter, "I fear
+lest he know me, if I draw nearer to look on him." Quoth Mariyah, "How
+should he know thee when he hath never seen thee?" So she drew near him
+and found him jesting with the youths his companions; and indeed he
+surpassed them all, not only in his personal charms but in the
+excellence of his speech, the eloquence of his tongue and the richness
+of his raiment. When the Princess saw him, she was ravished with him,
+her reason was confounded and her colour changed; and Mariyah, seeing
+her inclination to him, said to her, "Speak him." So she spoke to him
+and went away. Now when he looked upon her and heard her speech, he was
+captivated by her and his wit was dazed; his heart fluttered, and his
+colour changed so that his companions suspected him, and he whispered
+one of them to follow her and find out who she was. The young man went
+after her and returning informed him that she was princess Hind,
+daughter of Al-Nu'uman. So Adi left the church, knowing not whither he
+went, for excess of love, and reciting these two couplets,
+
+ "O friends of me, one favour more I pray: *
+
+
+ Unto the convents[FN#180] find more your way:
+
+
+ Turn me that so I face the land of Hind; *
+
+
+ Then go, and fairest greetings for me say."
+
+
+
+Then he went to his lodging and lay that night, restless and without
+appetite for the food of sleep.—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day
+and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Sixth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when Adi ended
+his verses he went to his lodging and lay that night restless and
+without appetite for the food of sleep. Now on the morrow Mariyah
+accosted him and he received her kindly, though before he would not
+incline to her, and said to her, "What is thy will?" Quoth she, "I have
+a want of thee;" and quoth he, "Name it, for by Allah, thou shalt not
+ask me aught, but I will give it thee!" So she told him that she loved
+him, and her want of 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 devise some device to bring them together. Then he took
+her into a vintner's tavern in one of the by streets of Hirah, and lay
+with her; after which she returned to Hind and asked her, "Dost thou
+not long to see Adi?" She answered, "How can this be? Indeed my longing
+for him makes me restless, and no repose is left me since yesterday."
+Quoth Mariyah, "I will appoint him to be in such a place, where thou
+canst look on him from the palace." Quoth Hind, "Do what thou wilt,"
+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 topple down
+from the palace top and said, "O Mariyah, except thou bring him in to
+me this night, I shall die." So saying, she fell to the ground in a
+fainting fit, and her serving women lifted her up and bore her into the
+palace; whilst Mariyah hastened to Al-Nu'uman and discovered the whole
+matter to him with perfect truth, telling him that indeed she was mad
+for the love of Adi; and except he marry her to him she must be put to
+shame and die of love for him, which would disgrace her father among
+the Arabs, adding at the end, "There is no cure for this but wedlock."
+The King bowed his head awhile in thought and exclaimed again and
+again, "Verily, we are Allah's and unto Him we are returning!" Then
+said he "Woe to thee! How shall the marriage be brought about, seeing I
+mislike to open the matter?" And she said, "He is yet more ardently in
+love and yet more desireful of her than she is of him; and I will so
+order the affair that he shall be unaware of his case being known to
+thee; but do not betray thyself, O King." Then she went to Adi and,
+after acquainting him with everything said, "Make a feast and bid the
+King thereto; and, when the wine hath gotten the better of him, ask of
+him 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
+quoth she, "I came not to thee, till I had settled the whole affair
+with him." Then she returned to Al- Nu'uman and said to him, "Seek of
+Adi that he entertain thee in his house." Replied the King, "There is
+no harm in that;" and after three days, besought Adi to give him and
+his lords the morning meal in his house. He consented and the King went
+to him; and when the wine had taken effect on Al-Nu'uman, Adi rose and
+sought of him his daughter in wedlock. He consented and married them
+and brought her to him after three days; and they abode at Al-Nu'uman's
+court, in all solace of life and its delight—And Shahrazad perceived
+the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Seventh Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Adi abode with
+Hind bint Al-Nu'uman bin Munzir three years in all solace of life and
+its delight, after which time the King was wroth with Adi and slew him.
+Hind mourned for him with grievous mourning and built her an hermitage
+outside the city, whither she retired and became a religious, weeping
+and bewailing her husband till she died. And her hermitage is seen to
+this day in the suburbs of Hirah. They also tell a tale of
+
+
+
+
+DI'IBIL AL-KHUZA'I WITH THE LADY AND MUSLIM BIN AL-WALID.
+
+Quoth Di'ibil al Khuzα'i[FN#181], "I was sitting one day at the gate of
+Al Karkh,[FN#182] when a damsel came past. Never saw I a fairer faced
+or better formed than she, walking with a voluptuous swaying gait and
+ravishing all beholders with her lithe and undulating pace. Now as my
+eyes fell on her, I was captivated by her and my vitals trembled and
+meseemed my heart flew forth of my breast; so I stood before her and I
+accosted her with this verse,
+
+ 'The tears of these eyes find easy release; *
+
+
+ But sleep flies these eyelids without surcease.'
+
+
+
+Whereon she turned her face and looking at me, straightway made answer
+with this distich,
+
+ 'A trifle this an his eyes be sore, *
+
+
+ When her eyes say 'yes' to his love's caprice!'
+
+
+
+I was astounded at the readiness of her reply and the fluency of her
+speech and rejoined with this verse,
+
+ 'Say, cloth heart of my fair incline to him *
+
+
+ Whose tears like a swelling stream increase?'
+
+
+
+And she answered me without hesitation, thus,
+
+ 'If thou crave our love, know that love's a loan; *
+
+
+ And a debt to be paid by us twain a piece.'
+
+
+
+Never entered my ears aught sweeter than her speech nor ever saw I
+brighter than her face: so I changed rhyme and rhythm to try her, in my
+wonder at her words, and repeated this couplet,
+
+ 'Will Fate with joy of union ever bless our sight, *
+
+
+ And one desireful one with other one unite.'
+
+
+
+She smiled at this (never saw I fairer than her mouth nor sweeter than
+her lips), and answered me, without stay or delay, in the following
+distich,
+
+ "Pray, tell me what hath Fate to do betwixt us twain? *
+
+
+ Thou'rt Elate: so bless our eyne with union and
+
+
+ delight.'
+
+
+
+At this, I sprang up and fell to kissing her hands and cried, 'I had
+not thought that Fortune would vouchsafe me such occasion. Do thou
+follow me, not of bidding or against thy will, but of the grace of thee
+and thy favour to me.' Then I went on and she after me. Now at that
+time I had no lodging I deemed fit for the like of her; but Muslim bin
+al-Walνd[FN#183] 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, 'Tis for time like this that friends are
+treasured up'; and he replied, 'With love and gladness! Come in you
+twain.' So we entered but found money scarce with him: however, he gave
+me a kerchief, saying, 'Carry it to the bazar and sell it and buy food
+and what else thou needest.' I took the handkerchief, and hastening to
+the market, sold it and bought what we required of victuals and other
+matters; but when I returned, I found that Muslim had retired, with her
+to an underground chamber.[FN#184] When he heard my step he hurried out
+and said to me, 'Allah requite thee the kindness thou hast done me, O
+Abu Ali and reward thee in time to come and reckon it of thy good deeds
+on the Day of Doom!' So saying, he took from me the food 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 Abu Ali, tell who
+it was composed this couplet?,
+
+ 'I lay in her arms all night, leaving him *
+
+
+ To sleep foul-hearted but clean of staff.'
+
+
+
+At this my rage redoubled, and I replied, 'He who wrote this other
+couplet',
+
+ 'One, I wish him in belt a thousand horns, *
+
+
+ Exceeding in mighty height Manaf.'[FN#185]
+
+
+
+Then I began to abuse him and reproach him with the foulness of his
+action and his lack of honour; and he was silent, never uttering a
+word. But, when I had finished, he smiled and said, 'Out on thee, O
+fool! Thou hast entered my house and sold my kerchief and spent my
+silver: so, with whom art thou wroth, O pimp?'[FN#186] Then he left me
+and went away to her, whilst I said, 'By Allah, thou art right to twit
+me as nincompoop and pander!' Then I left his door and went away in
+sore concern, and I feel its trace in my heart to this very day; for I
+never had my will of her nor, indeed, ever heard of her more." And
+amongst other tales is that about
+
+
+
+
+ISAAC OF MOSUL AND THE MERCHANT.
+
+Quoth Ishak bin Ibrahim al Mausili, "It so chanced that, one day
+feeling weary of being on duty at the Palace and in attendance upon the
+Caliph, I mounted horse and went forth, at break of dawn, having a mind
+to ride out in the open country and take my pleasure. So I said to my
+servants, 'If there come a messenger from the Caliph or another, say
+that I set out at day break, upon a pressing business, and that ye know
+not whither I am gone.' Then I fared forth alone and went round about
+the city, till the sun waxed hot, when I halted in a great thoroughfare
+known as Al Haram,"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased
+to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Eighth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Ishak bin Ibrahim
+the Mausili continued: "When the sun waxed hot I halted in a great
+thoroughfare known as Al-Haram, to take shelter in the shade and found
+it in a spacious wing of a house which projected over the street. And I
+stood there but a little while before there came up a black slave,
+leading an ass bestridden by a damsel; and under her were housings set
+with gems and pearls and upon her were the richest of clothes, richness
+can go no farther; and I saw that she was elegant of make with
+languorous look and graceful mien. I asked one of the passers by who
+she was, and he said, 'She is a singer,' so I fell in love with her at
+first sight: hardly could I keep my seat on horseback. She entered the
+house at whose gate I stood; and, as I was planning a device to gain
+access to her, there came up two men young and comely who asked
+admission and the housemaster gave them leave to enter. So they
+alighted and I also and they 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 obey a call of nature. Thereupon the host questioned the two
+others of me, and they replied that they knew me not; whereupon quoth
+he, 'This is a parasite[FN#187]; but he is a pleasant fellow, so treat
+him courteously.' Then I came back and sat down in my place, whilst the
+damsel sang to a pleasing air these two couplets,
+
+ 'Say to the she gazelle, who's no gazelle, *
+
+
+ And Kohl'd ariel who's no ariel.[FN#188]
+
+
+ Who lies with male, and yet no female is, *
+
+
+ Whose gait is female most unlike the male.'
+
+
+
+She sang it right well, and the company drank and her song pleased
+them. Then she carolled various pieces to rare measures, and amongst
+the rest one of mine, which consisted of this distich,
+
+ 'Bare hills and campground desolate *
+
+
+ And friends who all have ganged their gait.
+
+
+ How severance after union leaves *
+
+
+ Me and their homes in saddest state!'
+
+
+
+Her singing this time was even better than the first; then she chanted
+other rare pieces, old and new, and amongst them, another of mine with
+the following two couplets,
+
+ 'Say to angry lover who turns away, *
+
+
+ And shows thee his side whatso thou
+
+
+ 'Thou wroughtest all that by thee was wrought, *
+
+
+ Albe 'twas haply thy sport and play.'
+
+
+
+I prayed her to repeat the song, that I might correct it for her;
+whereupon one of the two men accosted me and said, 'Never saw we a more
+impudent lick platter than thou. Art thou not content with sponging,
+but thou must eke meddle and muddle? Of very sooth, in thee is the
+saying made true, Parasite and pushing wight.' So I hung down my head
+for shame and made him no answer, whilst his companion would have
+withheld him from me, but he would not be restrained. Presently, they
+rose to pray, but I lagged behind a little and, taking the lute,
+screwed up the sides and brought it into perfect tune. Then I stood up
+in my place to pray with the rest; and when we had ended praying, the
+same man fell again to blaming me and reviling me and persisted in his
+rudeness, whilst I held my peace. Thereupon the damsel took the lute
+and touching it, knew that it had been altered, and said, 'Who hath
+touched my lute?' Quoth they, 'None of us hath touched it.' Quoth she,
+'Nay, by Allah, some one hath touched it, and he is an artist, a past
+master in the craft; for he hath arranged the strings and tuned them
+like one who is a perfect performer.' Said I, 'It was I tuned it;' and
+said she, 'Then, Allah upon thee, take it and play on it!' So I took
+it; and, playing a piece so difficult and so rare, that it went nigh to
+deaden the quick and quicken the dead, I sang thereto these couplets,
+
+ 'I had a heart, and with it lived my life: *
+
+
+ 'Twas seared with fire and burnt with loving-lowe:
+
+
+ I never won the blessing of her love; *
+
+
+ God would not on His slave such boon bestow:
+
+
+ If what I've tasted be the food of Love, *
+
+
+ Must taste it all men who love food would know.'"
+
+
+
+—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Ninth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Ishak of Mosul
+thus continued: "Now when I had finished my verse, there was not one of
+the company but sprang from his place and sat down like schoolboys
+before me, saying, 'Allah upon thee, O our lord, sing us another song.'
+'With pleasure,' said I, and playing another measure in masterly
+fashion, sang thereto these couplets,
+
+'Ho thou whose heart is melted down by force of Amor's fire, *
+
+
+ And griefs from every side against thy happiness conspire:
+
+
+Unlawful is that he who pierced my vitals with his shaft, * My
+
+
+ blood between my midriff and my breast bone[FN#189] he
+
+
+ desire,
+
+
+'Twas plain, upon our severance day, that he had set his mind *
+
+
+ On an eternal parting, moved by tongue of envious liar:
+
+
+He sheds my blood he ne'er had shed except by wound of love, *
+
+
+ Will none demand my blood of him, my wreck of him require?'
+
+
+
+When I had made an end of this song, there was not one of them but rose
+to his feet and threw himself upon the ground for excess of delight.
+Then I cast the lute from my hand, but they said, 'Allah upon thee, do
+not on this wise, but let us hear another song, so Allah Almighty
+increase thee of His bounty!' Replied I, 'O folk, I will sing you
+another song and another and another and will tell you who I am. I am
+Ishak bin Ibrahim al Mausili, and by Allah, I bear myself proudly to
+the Caliph when he seeketh me. Ye have today made me hear abuse from an
+unmannerly carle 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 fellow's companion to him, 'This is what I warned
+thee against, fearing for thy good name.' So they hent him by the hand
+and thrust him out; and I took the lute and sang over again the songs
+of my own composing which the damsel had sung. Then I whispered the
+host that she had taken my heart and that I had no patience to abstain
+from her. Quoth he 'She is thine on one condition.' I asked, 'What is
+that?' and he answered, 'It is that thou abide with me a month, when
+the damsel and all belonging to her of raiment and jewellery shall be
+thine.' I rejoined, 'It is well, I will do this.' So I tarried with him
+a whole month, whilst none knew where I was and the Caliph 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 upon her.
+So I brought all that to my lodging, feeling as I were lord of the
+whole world, for exceeding delight in her; then I rode forthright to
+Al-Maamun. And when I stood in the presence, he said, 'Woe to thee, O
+Ishak, where hast thou been?' So I acquainted him with the story and he
+said, 'Bring me that man at once.' Thereupon I told him where he lived
+and he sent and fetched him and questioned him of the case; when he
+repeated the story and the Caliph said to him, 'Thou art a man of right
+generous mind, and it is only fitting that thou be aided in thy
+generosity.' Then he ordered him an hundred thousand dirhams and said
+to me, 'O Ishak, bring the damsel before me.' So I brought her to him,
+and she sang and delighted him; and being greatly gladdened by her he
+said to me, 'I appoint her turn of service every Thursday, when she
+must come and sing to me from behind the curtain.' And he ordered her
+fifty thousand dirhams, so by Allah, I profited both myself and others
+by my ride." And amongst the tales they tell is one of
+
+
+
+
+THE THREE UNFORTUNATE LOVERS.
+
+Quoth Al-'Utbν[FN#190], "I was sitting one day with a company of
+educated men, telling stories of the folk, when the talk turned upon
+legends of lovers and each of us said his say thereanent. Now there was
+in our company an old man, who remained silent, till all had spoken and
+had no more to say, when quoth he, 'Shall I tell you a thing, the like
+of which you never heard; no, never?' 'Yes,' quoth we; and he said,
+'Know, then, that I had a daughter, who loved a youth, but we knew it
+not; while the youth loved a singing girl, who in her turn loved my
+daughter. One day, I was present at an assembly, wherein were also the
+youth'"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Tenth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Shaykh
+continued: 'One day, I was present at an assembly wherein were also the
+youth and the singing girl and she chanted to us these couplets,
+
+ 'Prove how Love bringeth low * Lover those tears that run
+
+
+ Lowering him still the more * When pity finds he none.'
+
+
+
+Cried the youth, 'By Allah, thou hast said well, O my mistress.' Dost
+thou incite me to die?' Answered the girl from behind the curtain,
+'Yes, if thou be a true lover.' So he laid his head on a cushion and
+closed his eyes; and when the cup came round to him, we shook him and
+behold, he was dead.[FN#191] Therewith we all flocked to him, and our
+pleasure was troubled and we grieved and broke up at once. When I came
+home, my people took in bad part my returning before the appointed
+time, and I told them what had befallen the youth, thinking that
+thereby I should greatly surprise them. My daughter heard my words and
+rising, went from the sitting chamber into another, whither I followed
+her and found her lying with her head on a cushion, even as I had told
+of the young man. So I shook her and lo! she was dead. Then we laid her
+out and set forth next morning to bury her, whilst the friends of the
+young man set forth in like guise to bury him. As we were on the way to
+the burial place, we met a third funeral and asking 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 did and was dead. So we buried them all
+three on one day, and this is the rarest tale that ever was heard of
+lovers." And they also tell a tale of
+
+
+
+
+HOW ABU HASAN BRAKE WIND.
+
+They recount that in the City Kaukabαn of Al-Yaman there was a man of
+the Fazlν tribe who had left Badawi life, and become a townsman for
+many years and was a merchant of the most opulent merchants. His wife
+had deceased when both were young; and his friends were instant with
+him to marry again, ever quoting to him the words of the poet,
+
+ "Go, gossip! re-wed thee, for Prime draweth near:
+
+
+ A wife is an almanac—good for the year."
+
+
+
+So being weary of contention, Abu Hasan entered into negotiations with
+the old women who procure matches, and married a maid like Canopus when
+he hangeth over the seas of Al-Hind. He made high festival therefor,
+bidding to the wedding banquet kith and kin, Olema and Fakirs; friends
+and foes and all his acquaintances of that countryside. The whole house
+was thrown open to feasting: there were rices of five several colours,
+and sherbets of as many more; and kids stuffed with walnuts and almonds
+and pistachios and a camel colt[FN#192] roasted whole. So they ate and
+drank and made mirth and merriment; and the bride was displayed in her
+seven dresses and one more, to the women, who could not take their eyes
+off her. At last, the bridegroom was summoned to the chamber where she
+sat enthroned; and he rose slowly and with dignity from his divan; but
+in so doing, for that he was over full of meat and drink, lo and
+behold! he let fly a fart, great and terrible. Thereupon each guest
+turned to his neighbour and talked aloud and made as though he had
+heard nothing, fearing for his life. But a consuming fire was lit in
+Abu Hasan's heart; so he pretended a call of nature; and, in lieu of
+seeking the bride chamber, he went down to the house court and saddled
+his mare and rode off, weeping bitterly, through the shadow of the
+night. In time he reached Lαhej where he found a ship ready to sail for
+India; so he shipped on board and made Calicut of Malabar. Here he met
+with many Arabs, especially Hazramνs[FN#193], who recommended him to
+the King; and this King (who was a Kafir) trusted him and advanced him
+to the captainship of his body guard. He remained ten years in all
+solace and delight of life; at the end of which time he was seized with
+home sickness; and the longing to behold his native land was that of a
+lover pining for his beloved; and he came near to die of yearning
+desire. But his appointed day had not dawned; so, after taking the
+first bath of health, he left the King without leave, and in due course
+landed at Makallα of Hazramaut. Here he donned the rags of a religious;
+and, keeping his name and case secret, fared for Kaukaban afoot;
+enduring a thousand hardships of hunger, thirst and fatigue; and
+braving a thousand dangers from the lion, the snake and the Ghul. But
+when he drew near his old home, he looked down upon it from the hills
+with brimming eyes, and said in himself, "Haply they might know thee;
+so I will wander about the outskirts, and hearken to the folk. Allah
+grant that my case be not remembered by them!" He listened carefully
+for seven nights and seven days, till it so chanced that, as he was
+sitting at the door of a hut, he heard the voice of a young girl
+saying, "O my mother, tell me the day when I was born; for such an one
+of my companions is about to take an omen[FN#194] for me." And the
+mother answered, "Thou was born, O my daughter, on the very night when
+Abu Hasan farted." Now the listener no sooner heard these words than he
+rose up from the bench, and fled away saying to himself, "Verily thy
+fart hath become a date, which shall last for ever and ever; even as
+the poet said,
+
+ 'As long as palms shall shift the flower; *
+
+
+ As long as palms shall sift the flour.'[FN#195]
+
+
+
+And he ceased not travelling and voyaging and returned to India; and
+there abode in self exile till he died; and the mercy of Allah be upon
+him![FN#196] And they tell another story of
+
+
+
+
+THE LOVERS OF THE BANU TAYY.
+
+Kαsim, son of Adi, was wont to relate that a man of the Banϊ Tamνm
+spake as follows: "I went out one day in search of an estray and,
+coming to the waters of the Banu Tayy, saw two companies of people near
+one another, and behold, those of one company were disputing among
+themselves even as the other. So I watched them and observed, in one of
+the companies, a youth wasted with sickness, as he were a worn-out
+dried-up waterskin. And as I looked on him, lo! he repeated these
+couplets,
+
+ 'What ails the Beauty she returneth not? *
+
+
+ Is't Beauty's irk or grudging to my lot?
+
+
+ I sickened and my friends all came to call; *
+
+
+ What stayed thee calling with the friendly knot?
+
+
+ Hadst thou been sick, I had come running fast *
+
+
+ To thee, nor threats had kept me from the spot:
+
+
+ Mid them I miss thee, and I lie alone; *
+
+
+ Sweetheart, to lose thy love sad loss I wot!'
+
+
+
+His words were heard by a damsel in the other company who hastened
+towards him, and when her people followed her, she fought them off.
+Then the youth caught sight of her and sprang up and ran towards her,
+whilst the people of his party ran after him and laid hold of him.
+However he haled and freed himself from them, and she in like manner
+loosed herself; and, when they were free, each ran to other and meeting
+between the two parties, embraced and fell dead upon the ground."—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred ante Eleventh Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "the young man
+and the maid met between the two parties and embraced and both fell
+dead upon the ground; whereat came there out an old man from one of the
+tents and stood over them exclaiming, 'Verily, we are Allah's and unto
+Him we are returning!' Then weeping sore he said, 'Allah have ruth on
+you both! by the Almighty, though you were not united in your lives, I
+will at least unite you after your deaths.' And he bade lay them out:
+so they washed them and shrouded them in one shroud and dug for them
+one grave and prayed one prayer over them both and buried them in one
+tomb; nor was there man or woman in the two parties but I saw weeping
+over them and buffeting their faces. Then I questioned the Shaykh of
+them, and he said, 'She was my daughter and he my brother's son; and
+love brought them to the pass thou seest.' I exclaimed, 'Allah amend
+thee! but why didst thou not marry them to each other?' Quoth he, 'I
+feared shame[FN#197] and dishonour; and now I am fallen into both.' "
+And they tell a tale of
+
+
+
+
+THE MAD LOVER.
+
+Quoth Abu 'l-Abbαs al-Mubarrad,[FN#198] "I set out one day with a
+company to Al-Bαrid on an occasion and, coming to the monastery of
+Hirakl,[FN#199] we alighted in its shade. Presently a man came out to
+us and said, 'There are madmen in the monastery,[FN#200] 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 skin mat in one of the cells, with bare head and eyes
+intently fixed upon the wall. We saluted him, and he returned our
+salaam, without looking at us, and one said to us, 'Repeat some verses
+to him; for, when he heareth verse, he speaketh.' So I repeated these
+two couplets,
+
+ 'O best of race to whom gave Hawwa[FN#201] boon of birth, *
+
+
+ Except for thee the world were neither sweet nor fair!
+
+
+ Thou'rt he, whose face, by Allah shown to man, *
+
+
+ Doth ward off death, decay and hoary hair.'
+
+
+
+When he heard from me this praise of the Apostle he turned towards us
+and repeated these lines,
+
+ 'Well Allah wotteth I am sorely plagued: *
+
+
+ Nor can I show my pain to human sight.
+
+
+ Two souls have I, one soul is here contained, *
+
+
+ While other woneth in another site.
+
+
+ Meseems the absent soul's like present soul, *
+
+
+ And that she suffers what to me is dight.'
+
+
+
+Then he asked us. 'Have I said well or said ill? And we answered, 'Thou
+hast said the clean contrary of ill, well and right well.' Then he put
+out his hand to a stone, that was by him and took it up; whereupon
+thinking he would throw it at us we fled from him; but he fell to
+beating upon his breast therewith violent blows 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 these couplets,
+
+'When they made their camels yellow white kneel down at dawning
+
+
+ grey * They mounted her on crupper and the camel went his
+
+
+ way,
+
+
+Mine eye balls through the prison wall beheld them, and I cried *
+
+
+ With streaming eyelids and a heart that burnt in dire dismay
+
+
+O camel driver turn thy beast that I farewell my love! * In
+
+
+ parting and farewelling her I see my doomed day
+
+
+I'm faithful to my vows of love which I have never broke, * Would
+
+
+ Heaven I kenned what they have done with vows that vowed
+
+
+ they!'
+
+
+
+Then he looked at me and said, 'Say me, dost thou know what they
+did?'[FN#202] Answered I, 'Yes, they are dead; Almighty Allah have
+mercy on them!' At this his face changed and he sprang to his feet and
+cried out, 'How knowest thou they be dead?;' and I replied, 'Were they
+alive they had not left thee thus.' Quoth he, 'By Allah, thou art
+right, and I care not to live after them.' Then his side muscles
+quivered and he fell on his face; and we ran up to him and shook him
+and found him dead, the mercy of the Almighty be on him! At this we
+marvelled and mourned for him and, sore mourning, laid him out and
+buried him".—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say
+her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Twelfth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that al-Mubarrad thus
+continued: "When the man fell we mourned over him with sore mourning
+and laid him out and buried him. And when I returned to Baghdad and
+went in to the Caliph al-Mutawakkil, 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 cried, 'What moved thee to deal thus with
+him?[FN#203] By Allah, if I thought thou didst not repent it and regret
+him I would punish thee therefor!' And he mourned for him the rest of
+the day." And amongst the tales they tell is one of
+
+
+
+
+THE PRIOR WHO BECAME A MOSLEM.
+
+Quoth Abu Bakr Mohammed ibn Al-Anbαri[FN#204]: "I once left Anbαr on a
+journey to 'Amϊrνyah,[FN#205] where there came out to me the prior of
+the monastery and superior of the monkery, Abd al-Masνh hight, and
+brought me into the building. There I found forty religious, who
+entertained me that night with fair guest rite, and I left them after
+seeing among them such diligence in adoration and devotion as I never
+beheld the like of in any others. Next day I farewelled them and fared
+forth and, after doing my business at 'Amuriyah, I returned to my home
+at Anbar. And next year I made pilgrimage to Meccah and as I was
+circumambulating the Holy House I saw Abd al-Masih the monk also
+compassing the Ka'abah, and with him five of his fellows, the
+shavelings. Now when I was sure that it was indeed he, I accosted him,
+saying, 'Art thou not Abd al-Masih, the Religious?' and he replied,
+'Nay, I am Abdallah, the Desirous.'[FN#206] Therewith I fell to kissing
+his grey hairs and shedding tears; then, taking him by the hand, I led
+him aside into a corner of the Temple and said to him, 'Tell me the
+cause of thy conversion to al-Islam;' and he made reply, 'Verily, 'twas
+a wonder of wonders, and befell thus. A company of Moslem devotees came
+to the village wherein is our convent, 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 he was struck at first sight with such
+love of her, that his senses failed him and he fell on his face in a
+fainting fit. When he revived, he returned to his companions and told
+them what had befallen him, saying, 'Go ye about your business; I may
+not go with you.' They chided him and exhorted him, but he paid no heed
+to them; so they left him whilst he entered the village and seated
+himself at the door of the woman's booth.[FN#207] 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, keeping his eyes fixed on her face. Now whenas she saw that he
+departed not from her, she went to her people and acquainted them with
+his case, and they set on him the village boys, who stoned him and
+bruised his ribs and broke his head; but, for all this, he would not
+budge. Then the villagers took counsel together to slay him; but a man
+of them came to me and told me of his case, 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, and dressed his wounds; and there
+he abode with me fourteen days. But as soon as he could walk, he left
+the monastery"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased
+saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Thirteenth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Abdallah the
+Religious continued: "So I carried him to the convent and dressed his
+wounds, and he abode with me fourteen days. But as soon as he could
+walk, he left the monastery and returned to the door of the woman 's
+booth, 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! wilt thou enter
+my faith that I may marry thee?' He cried, 'Allah forbid that I should
+put off the faith of Unity and enter that of Plurality!'[FN#208] Quoth
+she, 'Come in with me to my house and take thy will of me and wend thy
+ways in peace.' Quoth he, 'Not so, I will not waste the worship of
+twelve years for the lust of an eye-twinkle.' Said she, 'Then depart
+from me forthwith;' and he said, 'My heart will not suffer me to do
+that;' whereupon she turned her countenance from him. Presently the
+boys found him out and began to pelt him with stones; and he fell on
+his face, saying, 'Verily, Allah is my protector, who sent down the
+Book of the Koran; and He protecteth the Righteous![FN#209] At this I
+sallied forth and driving away the boys, lifted his head from the
+ground and heard him say, 'Allah mine, unite me with her in Paradise!'
+Then I carried him to the monastery, but he died, before I could reach
+it, and I bore him without the village and I dug for him a grave and
+buried him. And next night when half of it was spent, the damsel cried
+with a great cry (and she in her bed); so the villagers flocked to her
+and questioned her of her case. Quoth she, 'As I slept, behold the
+Moslem man came in to me and taking me by the hand, carried me to the
+gate of Paradise; but the Guardian denied me entrance, saying, 'Tis
+forbidden to unbelievers.' So I embraced Al Islam at his hands and,
+entering with him, beheld therein pavilions and trees, such as I cannot
+describe to you. Moreover, he brought me to a pavilion of jewels and
+said to me, 'Of a truth this is my pavilion and thine, nor will I enter
+it save with thee; but, after five nights thou shalt be with me
+therein, if it be the will of Allah Almighty.' Then he put forth his
+hand to a tree which grew at the door of the pavilion and plucked there
+from 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.' "—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and
+ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Fourteenth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the woman
+continued: "'So he plucked 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. Then he took my hand and fared
+forth 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 in the darkness of the night it shone as it
+were a sparkling star. So they carried her (and the apple with her) to
+the monastery, where she repeated her vision and showed it to us; never
+saw we its like among all the fruits of the world. Then I took a knife
+and cut the apple into pieces according as we were folk in company; and
+never knew we aught more delicious than its savour nor more delightsome
+than its scent; but we said, 'Haply this was a devil that appeared unto
+her to seduce her from her faith.' Thereupon her people took her and
+went away; but she abstained from eating and drinking and on the fifth
+night she rose from her bed, and going forth the village to the grave
+of her Moslem lover threw herself upon it and died, her family not
+knowing what was come of her. But, on the morrow, there came to the
+village two Moslem 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
+Saint, a Waliyah of the friends of Allah, who died a Moslemah; and we
+will take charge of her in lieu of you.' So the villagers sought her
+and found her dead on the Moslem's grave; and they said, 'This was one
+of us and she died in our faith; so we will take charge of her.'
+Rejoined the two old men, 'Nay, she died a Moslemah and we claim her.'
+And the dispute waxed to a quarrel between them, till one of the
+Shaykhs said, 'Be this the test of her faith: the forty monks of the
+monastery shall come and try 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 be lifted by him, she died a Moslemah.' The
+villagers agreed to this and fetched the forty monks, who heartened one
+another, and came to her to lift her, but could not. Then we tied a
+great rope round her middle and haled at it; but the rope broke in
+sunder, and she stirred not; and the villagers came and did the like,
+but could not move her from her place.[FN#210] At last, when all means
+failed, we said to one of the two Shaykhs, 'Come thou and lift her.' So
+he went up to the grave and, covering her with his mantle, said, 'In
+the name of Allah the Compassionating, the Compassionate, and of the
+Faith of the Apostle of Allah, on whom be prayers and peace!' 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 her Moslem
+lover's grave and prayed over her and buried her by his side and went
+their ways. Now we were eye witnesses of all this; and, when we were
+alone with one another, we said, 'In sooth, the truth is most worthy to
+be followed;'[FN#211] and indeed the verity hath been made manifest to
+us, nor is there a proof more patent of the truth of al-Islam than that
+we have seen this day with our eyes.' So I and all the monks became
+Moslems and on like wise did the villagers; and we sent to the people
+of Mesopotamia for a doctor of the law, to instruct us in the
+ordinances of al-Islam and the canons of the Faith. They sent us a
+learned man and a pious, who taught us the rites of prayer and the
+tenets of the faith; and we are now in ease abounding; so to Allah be
+the praise and the thanks!" And they also tell a tale of
+
+
+
+
+THE LOVES OF ABU ISA AND KURRAT AL-AYN.
+
+Quoth Amrϊ bin Masa'dah:[FN#212] "Abϊ Isα, son of al-Rashνd and brother
+to al-Maamun, was enamoured of one Kurrat al-Ayn, a slave girl
+belonging to Ali bin Hishαm,[FN#213] and she also loved him; but he
+concealed his passion, complaining of it to none neither discovering
+his secret to anyone, of his pride and magnanimity; for he had used his
+utmost endeavour to purchase her of her master, but he had failed. At
+last when his patience was at an end and his passion was sore on him
+and he was helpless in the matter, he went in to al-Maamun, one day of
+state after the folk had retired, and said to him, 'O Commander of the
+Faithful, if thou wilt this day make trial of thine Alcaydes by taking
+them unawares, thou wilt know the generous from the mean and note each
+one's place, after the quality of his mind.' But, in saying this he
+purposed only to sit with Kurrat al-Ayn in her lord's house. Quoth
+al-Maamun, 'Right is thy recking,' and bade make ready a barge, called
+'the Flyer,' wherein he embarked with Abu Isa and a party of his chief
+officers. The first mansion he visited unexpectedly was that of Hamνd
+al-Tawil of Tϊs, whom he found seated"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn
+of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Fifteenth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that al-Maamun
+embarked with his chief officers and fared on till they reached the
+mansion of Hamνd al-Tawil of Tϊs; and, unexpectedly entering they found
+him seated on a mat and before him singers and players with lutes and
+flageolets and other instruments of music in their hands. So Al Maamun
+sat with him awhile and presently he set before him dishes of nothing
+but flesh meat, with no birds among them. The Caliph would not taste
+thereof and Abu 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 which is prepared for thee and
+fitted for thee." Thereupon the Caliph arose and betook himself with
+his brother Abu Isa and his suite, to the abode of Ali son of Hisham
+who, on hearing of their approach, came out and received them with the
+goodliest of reception, and kissed the earth before the King. Then he
+brought them into his mansion and opened to them a saloon than which
+seer never saw a goodlier. Its floors, pillars and walls were of many
+coloured marbles, adorned with Greek paintings: and it was spread with
+matting of Sind[FN#214] whereon were carpets and tapestry of Bassorah
+make, fitted to the length and breadth of the room. So the Caliph sat
+awhile, examining the house and its ceilings and walls, then said,
+"Give us somewhat to eat." So they brought him forthwith nearly an
+hundred dishes of poultry besides other birds and brewises, fritters
+and cooling marinades. When he had eaten, he said, "Give us some thing
+to drink, O Ali;" and the host set before him, in vessels of gold and
+silver and crystal, raisin wine boiled down to one third with fruits
+and spices; and the cupbearers were pages like moons, clad in garments
+of Alexandrian stuff interwoven with gold and bearing on their breasts
+beakers of crystal, full of rose water mingled with musk. So al-Maamun
+marvelled with exceeding marvel at all he saw and said, "Ho thou, Abu
+al-Hasan!" Whereupon Ali sprang to the Caliph's carpet and kissing it,
+said, "At thy service, O Commander of the Faithful!" and stood before
+him. Quoth al-Maamun, "Let us hear some pleasant and merry song."
+Replied Ali, "I hear and obey, O Commander of the Faithful," and said
+to one of his eunuchs, "Fetch the singing women." So the slave went out
+and presently returned, followed by ten castratos, bearing ten stools
+of gold, which they set down in due order; and after these came ten
+damsels, concubines of the master, as they were shining full moons or
+gardens full of bloom, clad in black brocade, with crowns of gold on
+their heads; and they passed along the room till they sat down on the
+stools, when sang they sundry songs. Al-Maamun looked at one of them;
+and, being captivated by her elegance and fair favour, asked her, "What
+is thy name, O damsel?"; and she answered, "My name is Sajαhν,[FN#215]
+O Commander of the Faithful," and he said, "Sing to us, O Sajahi!" So
+she played a lively measure and sang these couplets,
+
+ "I walk, for fear of interview, the weakling's walk *
+
+
+ Who sees two lion whelps the fount draw nigh:
+
+
+ My cloak acts sword, my heart's perplex'd with fright, *
+
+
+ Lest jealous hostile eyes th' approach descry:
+
+
+ Till sudden hapt I on a delicate maid *
+
+
+ Like desert-doe that fails her fawns to espy."
+
+
+
+Quoth the Caliph, "Thou hast done well, O damsel! whose are these
+lines?" She answered, "Written by Amru bin Ma'di Karib al
+-Zubaydi,[FN#216] and the air is Ma'abid's."[FN#217] Then the Caliph
+and Abu Isa and Ali drank and the damsels went away and were succeeded
+by other ten, all clad in flowered silk of Al-Yaman, brocaded with
+gold, who sat down on the chairs and sang various songs. The Caliph
+looked at one of the concubines, who was like a wild heifer of the
+waste, and said to her, "What is thy name, O damsel?" She replied, "My
+name is Zabiyah,[FN#218] 0 Commander of the Faithful;" and he, "Sing to
+us Zabiyah;" so she warbled like a bird with many a trill and sang
+these two couplets,
+
+ "Houris, and highborn Dames who feel no fear of men, *
+
+
+ Like Meccan game forbidden man to slam:[FN#219]
+
+
+ Their soft sweet voices make you deem them whores, *
+
+
+ But bars them from all whoring Al-Islam."
+
+
+
+When she had finished, al-Maamun cried, "favoured of Allah art
+thou!"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Sixteenth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the slave
+girl finished her song, al-Maamun cried, "Favoured of Allah art thou!
+Whose is this verse?" and she answered, "Jarνr's[FN#220] and the air is
+By Ibn Surayj." Then the Caliph and his company drank, whilst the girls
+went away and there came forth yet other ten, as they were rubies,
+robed in red brocade inwoven with gold and purfled with pearls and
+jewels whilst all their heads were bare. They sat down on the stools
+and sang various airs; so the Caliph looked at one of them, who was
+like the sun of the day, and asked her, "What is thy name, O damsel?";
+and she answered, "O Commander of the Faithful, my name is Fαtin."
+"Sing to us, O Fatin," quoth he; whereat she played a lively measure
+and sang these couplets,
+
+ "Deign grant thy favours; since 'tis time I were engraced; *
+
+
+ Tnough of severance hath it been my lot to taste.
+
+
+ Thou'rt he whose face cloth every gift and charm unite, *
+
+
+ Yet is my patience spent for that 'twas sore misplaced:
+
+
+ I've wasted life in loving thee; and would high Heaven *
+
+
+ Grant me one meeting hour for all this wilful waste."
+
+
+
+"Well sung, O Fatin!'' exclaimed the Caliph; "whose verse is this?" And
+she answered, "Adi bin Zayd's, and the air is antique." Then all three
+drank, whilst the damsels retired and were succeeded by other ten
+maidens, as they were sparkling stars, clad in flowered silk
+embroidered with red gold and girt with jewelled zones. They sat down
+and sang various motives; and the Caliph asked one of them, who was
+like a wand of willow, "What is thy name, O damsel?"; and she answered,
+"My name is Rashaa,[FN#221] 0 Commander of the Faithful." "Sing to us,
+O Rashaa," quoth he; so she played a lively measure and sang these
+couplets,
+
+ "And wand-like Houri, who can passion heal *
+
+
+ Like young gazelle that paceth o'er the plain:
+
+
+ I drain this wine cup on the toast, her cheek, *
+
+
+ Each cup disputing till she bends in twain
+
+
+ Then sleeps the night with me, the while I cry *
+
+
+ 'This is the only gain my Soul would gain!' "
+
+
+
+Said the Caliph, "Well done, O damsel! Sing us something more." So she
+rose and kissing the ground before him, sang the following distich,
+
+ "She came out to gaze on the bridal at ease *
+
+
+ In a shift that reeked of ambergris."
+
+
+
+The Caliph was highly pleased with this couplet and, when the slave
+girl saw how much it delighted him, she repeated it several times. Then
+said al-Maamun, "Bring up 'the Flyer,'" being minded to embark and
+depart: but Ali bin Hisham said to him, "O Commander of the Faithful, I
+have a slave girl, whom I bought for ten thousand diners; she hath
+taken my heart in whole and part, and I would fain display 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." Said the
+Caliph, "Bring her to me;" and forth came a damsel, as she were a
+branchlet of willow, with seducing eyes and eyebrows set like twin
+bows; and on her head she wore a crown of red gold crusted with pearls
+and jewelled, under which was a fillet bearing this couplet wrought in
+letters of chrysolite,
+
+ "A Jinniyah this, with her Jinn, to show *
+
+
+ How to pierce man's heart with a stringless bow!"
+
+
+
+The handmaiden walked, with the gait of a gazelle in flight and fit to
+damn a devotee, till she came to a chair, whereon she seated
+herself.—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Seventeenth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the hand maiden
+walked with the gait of a gazelle in flight, fit to damn a devotee,
+till she came to a chair whereon she seated herself. And Al-Maamun
+marvelled at her beauty and loveliness; but, when Abu Isa saw her, his
+heart throbbed with pain, his colour changed to pale and wan and he was
+in evil case. Asked the Caliph, "O Abu Isa, what aileth thee to change
+thus?"; and he answered, "O Commander of the Faithful, it is because of
+a twitch that seizeth me betimes." Quoth the Caliph, "Hast thou known
+yonder damsel before to day?" Quoth he, "Yes, O Commander of the
+Faithful, can the moon be concealed?" Then said al-Maamun to her, "What
+is thy name, O damsel?"; and she replied, "My name is Kurrat al-Ayn. O
+Commander of the Faithful," and he rejoined, "Sing to us, O Kurrat
+al-Ayn." So she sang these two couplets,
+
+ "The loved ones left thee in middle night, *
+
+
+ And fared with the pilgrims when dawn shone bright:
+
+
+ The tents of pride round the domes they pitched, *
+
+
+ And with broidered curtains were veiled fro' sight."
+
+
+
+Quoth the Caliph, "Favoured of Heaven art thou, O Kurrat al-Ayn! Whose
+song is that?"; whereto she answered "The words are by Di'ibil
+al-Khuza'i, and the air by Zurzϊr al-Saghνr." Abu Isa looked at her and
+his tears choked him; so that the company marvelled at him. Then she
+turned to al-Maamun and said to him, "O Commander of the Faithful, wilt
+thou give me leave to change the words?" Said he, "Sing what thou
+wilt;" so she played a merry measure and carolled these couplets,
+
+ "If thou should please a friend who pleaseth thee *
+
+
+ Frankly, in public practise secrecy.
+
+
+ And spurn the slanderer's tale, who seldom[FN#222] *
+
+
+ seeks Except the severance of true love to see.
+
+
+ They say, when lover's near, he tires of love, *
+
+
+ And absence is for love best remedy:
+
+
+ Both cures we tried and yet we are not cured, *
+
+
+ Withal we judge that nearness easier be:
+
+
+ Yet nearness is of no avail when he *
+
+
+ Thou lovest lends thee love unwillingly."
+
+
+
+But when she had finished, Abu Isa said, "O Commander of the Faithful,"
+—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Eighteenth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when Kurrat
+al-Ayn had finished her verse, Abu Isa said, "O Commander of the
+Faithful, though we endure disgrace, we shall be at ease.[FN#223] Dost
+thou give me leave to reply to her?" Quoth the Caliph, "Yes, say what
+thou wilt to her." So he swallowed his tears and sang these two
+distichs,
+
+ "Silent I woned and never owned my love; *
+
+
+ But from my heart I hid love's blissful boon;
+
+
+ Yet, if my eyes should manifest my love, *
+
+
+ 'Tis for my nearness to the shining moon."
+
+
+
+Then Kurrat al-Ayn took the lute and played a lively tune and rejoined
+with these couplets,
+
+ "An what thou claimest were the real truth, *
+
+
+ With only Hope content thou hadst not been
+
+
+ Nor couldest patient live without the girl *
+
+
+ So rare of inner grace and outward mien.
+
+
+ But there is nothing in the claim of thee *
+
+
+ At all, save tongue and talk that little mean."
+
+
+
+When Abu Isa heard this he fell to weeping and wailing and evidencing
+his trouble and anguish. Then he raised his eyes to her and sighing,
+repeated these couplets,
+
+ "Under my raiment a waste body lies, *
+
+
+ And in my spirit all comprising prize.
+
+
+ I have a heart, whose pain shall aye endure, *
+
+
+ And tears like torrents pour these woeful eyes.
+
+
+ Whene'er a wise man spies me, straight he chides *
+
+
+ Love, that misleads me thus in ways unwise:
+
+
+ O Lord, I lack the power this dole to bear: *
+
+
+ Come sudden Death or joy in bestest guise!"
+
+
+
+When he had ended, Ali bin Hisham sprang up and kissing his feet, said,
+"O my lord, Allah hearing thy secret hath answered thy prayer and
+consenteth to thy taking her with all she hath of things rare and fair,
+so the Commander of the Faithful have no mind to her." Quoth Al Maamun,
+"Had we a mind to her, we would prefer Abu Isa before ourselves and
+help him to his desire." So saying, he rose and embarking, went away,
+whilst Abu Isa tarried for Kurrat al-Ayn, whom he took and carried to
+his own house, his breast swelling with joy. See then the generosity of
+Ali son of Hisham! And they tell a tale of
+
+
+
+
+AL-AMIN SON OF AL-RASHID AND HIS UNCLE IBRAHIM BIN AL-MAHDI.
+
+Al-Amin,[FN#224] brother of al-Maamun, once entered the house of his
+uncle Ibrahim bin al-Mahdi, where he saw a slave girl playing upon the
+lute; and, she being one of the fairest of women, his heart inclined to
+her. Ibrahim, seeing how it was with him, sent the girl to him, with
+rich raiment and precious ornaments. 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 that, and accepting what came with her sent her back to
+Ibrahim. His uncle learnt the cause of this from one of al-Amin's
+eunuchs; so he took a shift of watered silk and worked upon its skirt,
+in letters of gold, these two couplets,
+
+ "No! I declare by Him to whom all bow, *
+
+
+ Of nothing 'neath her petticoat I trow:
+
+
+ Nor meddle with her mouth; nor aught did I *
+
+
+ But see and hear her, and it was enow!"
+
+
+
+Then he clad her in the shift and, giving her a lute, sent her back
+again to his nephew. When she came into al-Amin's presence, she kissed
+ground before him and tuning the lute, sang thereto these two couplets,
+
+ "Thy breast thou baredst sending back the gift; *
+
+
+ Showing unlove for me withouten shift:
+
+
+ An thou bear spite of Past, the Past forgive, *
+
+
+ And for the Caliphate cast the Past adrift."
+
+
+
+When she had made an end of her verse, Al-Amin looked at her and,
+seeing what was upon her skirt, could no longer control him self, And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Nineteenth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when Al-Amin
+looked at the damsel and saw what was upon her skirt, he could no
+longer 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 Rayy. And a
+tale is told of
+
+
+
+
+AL-FATH BIN KHAKAN AND THE CALIPH AL-MUTAWAKKIL.
+
+Al-Mutawakkil[FN#225] was once taking medicine, and folk sent him by
+way of solace all sorts of presents and rarities and things costly and
+precious. Amongst others, al-Fath bin Khαkαn[FN#226] sent him a virgin
+slave, high breasted, of the fairest among women of her time, and with
+her a vase of crystal, containing ruddy wine, and a goblet of red gold,
+whereon were graven in black these couplets,
+
+ "Since our Imam came forth from medicine, *
+
+
+ Which made him health and heartiness rewin,
+
+
+ There is no healing draught more sovereign *
+
+
+ Than well boiled wine this golden goblet in:
+
+
+ Then let him break the seal for him secured; *
+
+
+ 'Tis best prescription after medicine[FN#227]
+
+
+
+Now when the damsel entered, the physician Yohannα[FN#228] was with the
+Caliph, and as he read the couplets, he smiled and said, "By Allah, O
+Commander of the Faithful, Fath is better versed than I in the art of
+healing: so let not the Prince of True Believers gainsay his
+prescription." Accordingly, the Caliph followed the recipe contained in
+the poetry and was made whole by the blessing of Allah and won his
+every wish. And among tales they tell is one of
+
+
+
+
+THE MAN'S DISPUTE WITH THE LEARNED WOMAN CONCERNING THE RELATIVE
+EXCELLENCE OF MALE AND FEMALE.
+
+Quoth a certain man of learning, "I never saw amongst woman kind one
+wittier, and wiser, better read and by nature more generously bred; and
+in manners and morals more perfected than a preacher of the people of
+Baghdad, by name Sitt al-Mashα'ikh.[FN#229] It chanced that she came to
+Hamah city in the year of the Flight five hundred and sixty and
+one[FN#230]; and there delivered salutary exhortations to the folk from
+the professorial chair. Now there used to visit her house a number of
+students of divinity and persons of learning and polite letters, who
+would discuss with her questions of theology and dispute with her on
+controversial points. I went to her one day, with a friend of mine, a
+man of years and 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 brother, a handsome youth, who stood behind us, to serve us. And
+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, the Founders of the Four Schools. She proceeded to
+speak in answer, whilst I listened; but all the while my friend fell to
+looking upon her brother's face and admiring his beauties without
+paying any heed to what she discoursed. Now as she was watching him
+from behind the curtain; when she had made an end of her speech, she
+turned to him and said, 'Methinks thou be of those who give men the
+preference over women!' He replied, 'Assuredly,' and she asked, 'And
+why so?'; whereto he answered, 'For that Allah hath made the masculine
+worthier than the feminine,'" —And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day
+and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Twentieth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Shaykh
+replied, " 'For that Allah hath made the masculine worthier than the
+feminine; and I like the excelling and mislike the excelled.' She
+laughed and presently said, 'Wilt thou deal fairly with me in debate,
+if I battle the matter with thee?' and he rejoined, 'Yes.' Then quoth
+she, 'What is the evidence of the superiority of the male to the
+female?' Quoth he, 'It is of two kinds, traditional and reasonable. The
+authoritative part deriveth from the Koran and the Traditions of the
+Apostle. As for the first we have the very words of Almighty Allah,
+'Men shall have the pre-eminence above women because of those
+advantages wherein Allah hath caused the one of them to excel the
+other;[FN#231] and again, 'If there be not two men, let there be one
+man and two women;'[FN#232] and again, when treating of inheritance,
+'If there be brothers and sisters let a male have as much as the
+portion of two females.'[FN#233] Thus Allah (extolled and exalted be
+He!) hath in these places preferred the male over the female and
+teacheth that a woman is as the half of a man, for that he is worthier
+than she. As for the Sunnah traditions, is it not reported of the
+Prophet (whom Allah save and assain!) that he appointed the blood money
+for a woman to be half that of a man. And as for the evidence of
+reason, the male is the agent and active and the female the patient and
+passive.'[FN#234] Rejoined she, 'Thou hast said well, O my lord, but,
+by Allah, thou hast proved my contention with thine own lips and hast
+advanced evidence which telleth against thee, and not for thee. And
+thus it is: Allah (extolled and exalted be He!) preferred the male
+above the female solely because of the inherent condition and essential
+quality of masculinity; and in this there is no dispute between us. Now
+this quality of male-hood is common to the child, the boy, the youth,
+the adult and the old man; nor is there any distinction between them in
+this. If, then, the superior excellence of male masculant belong to him
+solely by virtue of manhood, it behoveth that thy heart incline and thy
+sole delight in the graybeard, equally with the boy; seeing that there
+is no distinction between them, in point of male-hood. But the
+difference between thee and me turneth upon the accident of qualities
+that are sought as constituting the pleasure of intercourse and its
+enjoyment; and thou hast adduced no proof of the superiority of the
+youth over the young girl in this matter of non-essentials.' He made
+answer, 'O reverend lady, knowest thou not that which is peculiar to
+the youth of limber shape and rosy cheeks and pleasant smile and
+sweetness of speech? Youths are, in these respects superior to women;
+and the proof of this is what they traditionally report of the Prophet
+(whom Allah bless and preserve!) that he said, 'Stay not thy gaze upon
+the beardless, for in them is a momentary eye glance at the black eyed
+girls of Paradise.' Nor indeed is the superiority of the lad over the
+lass hidden to any of mankind, and how well saith Abu Nowas,[FN#235]
+
+ 'The least of him is the being free *
+
+
+ From monthly courses and pregnancy.'
+
+
+
+And the saying of another poet,
+
+ 'Quoth our Imam, Abu Nowas, who was *
+
+
+ For mad debauch and waggishness renowned:
+
+
+ 'O tribe that loves the cheeks of boys, take fill *
+
+
+ Of joys in Paradise shall ne'er be found!'
+
+
+
+So if any one enlarge in praise of a slave girl and wish to enhance her
+value by the mention of her beauties, he likeneth her to a youth,'"
+—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Twenty-first Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Shaykh
+continued, "'So if any one enlarge in praise of a slave girl and wish
+to enhance her value by the mention of her beauties, he likeneth her to
+a youth, because of the illustrious qualities that belong to the male,
+even as saith the poet,
+
+ 'Boy like of backside, in the deed of kind, *
+
+
+ She sways, as sways the wand like boughs a-wind.'
+
+
+
+An youths, then, were not better and fairer than girls, why should
+these be likened to them? And know also (Almighty Allah preserve thee!)
+that a youth is easy to be led, adapting himself to every rede,
+pleasant of converse and manners, inclining to assent rather than
+dissent, especially when his side face is newly down'd and his upper
+lip is first embrowned, and the purple lights of youth on his cheeks
+abound, so that he is like the full moon sound; and how goodly is the
+saying of Abu Tammαm[FN#236],
+
+ 'The slanderers said 'There's hair upon his cheeks'; *
+
+
+ Quoth I, 'Exceed not, that's no blemish there.'
+
+
+ When he could bear that haling of his hips *
+
+
+ And pearl-beads shaded by mustachio hair;[FN#237]
+
+
+ And Rose swore solemn, holiest oath that is, *
+
+
+ From that fair cheek she nevermore would fare
+
+
+ I spoke with eyelids without need of speech, *
+
+
+ And they who answered me his eyebrows were.
+
+
+ He's even fairer than thou knewest him, *
+
+
+ And cheek down guards from all would overdare.
+
+
+ Brighter and sweeter now are grown his charms, *
+
+
+ Since down robes lip and cheek before were bare.
+
+
+ And those who blame me for my love of him, *
+
+
+ When him they mention say of him, 'Thy Fair'!'
+
+
+
+And quoth al-Hariri[FN#238] and quoth excellently well,
+
+ 'My censors say, 'What means this pine for him? *
+
+
+ Seest not the flowing hair on cheeks a flowing?'
+
+
+ I say, 'By Allah, an ye deem I dote, *
+
+
+ Look at the truth in those fine eyes a-showing!
+
+
+ But for the down that veils his cheek and chin, *
+
+
+ His brow had dazed all eyes no sight allowing:
+
+
+ And whoso sojourns in a growthless land, *
+
+
+ How shall he move from land fair growths a-growing?'
+
+
+
+And quoth another,
+
+ 'My blamers say of me, 'He is consoled,' And lie! *
+
+
+ No consolation comes to those who pine and sigh.
+
+
+ I had no solace when Rose bloomed alone on cheek, *
+
+
+ Now Basil blooms thereon and now consoled am I.'
+
+
+
+And again,
+
+ 'Slim waisted one, whose looks with down of cheek *
+
+
+ In slaughtering mankind each other hurtle
+
+
+ With the Narcissus blade he sheddeth blood, *
+
+
+ The baldrick of whose sheath is freshest
+
+
+ myrtle.'[FN#239]
+
+
+
+And again,
+
+ 'Not with his must I'm drunk, but verily *
+
+
+ Those curls turn manly heads like newest wine[FN#240]
+
+
+ Each of his beauties envies each, and all *
+
+
+ Would be the silky down on side face li'en.'
+
+
+
+Such are the excellencies of the youth which women do not own, and they
+more than suffice to give those the preference over these.' She
+replied, 'Allah give thee health! verily, thou hast imposed the debate
+upon thyself; and thou hast spoken and hast not stinted and hast
+brought proofs to support every assertion. But, 'Now is the truth
+become manifest;'[FN#241] so swerve thou not from the path thereof;
+and, if thou be not content with a summary of evidence, I will set it
+before thee in fullest detail. Allah upon thee, where is the youth
+beside the girl and who shall compare kid and wild cow? The girl is
+soft of speech, fair of form, like a branchlet of basil, with teeth
+like chamomile-petals and hair like halters wherefrom to hang hearts.
+Her cheeks are like blood-red anemones and her face like a pippin: she
+hath lips like wine and breasts like pomegranates twain and a shape
+supple as a rattan-cane. Her body is well formed and with sloping
+shoulders dight; she hath a nose like the edge of a sword shining
+bright and a forehead brilliant white and eyebrows which unite and eyes
+stained by Nature's hand black as night. If she speak, fresh young
+pearls are scattered from her mouth forthright and all hearts are
+ravished by the daintiness of her sprite; when she smileth thou wouldst
+ween the moon shone out her lips between and when she eyes thee, sword
+blades flash from the babes of her eyes. In her all beauties to
+conclusion come, and she is the centre of attraction to traveller and
+stay-at-home. She hath two lips of cramoisy, than cream smoother and of
+taste than honey sweeter,'" —And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day
+and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Twenty-second Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the preacher
+woman thus pursued her theme in the praise of fair maids, "'She hath
+two lips of cramoisy, than cream smoother and than honey sweeter;'
+adding, 'And she hath a bosom, as it were a way two hills between which
+are a pair of breasts like globes of ivory sheen; likewise, a stomach
+right smooth, flanks soft as the palm-spathe and creased with folds and
+dimples which overlap one another, and liberal thighs, which like
+columns of pearl arise, and back parts which billow and beat together
+like seas of glass or mountains of glance, and two feet and hands of
+gracious mould like unto ingots of virgin gold. So, O miserable! where
+are mortal men beside the Jinn? Knowest thou not that puissant princes
+and potent Kings before women ever humbly bend and on them for delight
+depend? Verily, they may say, 'We rule over necks and rob hearts.'
+These women! how many a rich man have they not paupered, how many a
+powerful man have they not prostrated and how many a superior man have
+they not enslaved! Indeed, they seduce the sage and send the saint to
+shame and bring the wealthy to want and plunge the fortune favoured
+into penury. Yet for all this, the wise but redouble in affection of
+them and honour; nor do they count this oppression or dishonour. How
+many a man for them hath offended his Maker and called down on him self
+the wrath of his father and mother! And all this because of the
+conquest of their love over hearts. Knowest thou not, O wretched one,
+that for them are built pavilions, and slave girls are for
+sale;[FN#242] that for them tear floods rail and for them are collected
+jewels of price and ambergris and musk odoriferous; and armies are
+arrayed and pleasaunces made and wealth heaped up and smitten off is
+many a head? And indeed he spoke sooth in the words, 'Whoso saith the
+world meaneth woman.' Now as for thy citation from the Holy Traditions,
+it is an argument against thee and not for thee in that the Prophet
+(whom Allah bless and preserve!) compareth the beardless with the black
+eyed girls of Paradise. Now, doubtless, the subject of comparison is
+worthier than the object there with compared; so, unless 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, the case is
+not so, but the contrary: boys are likened to girls; for folk say,
+Yonder boy is like a girl. As for what proof thou quotest from the
+poets, the verses were the product of a complexion unnatural in this
+respect; and as for the habitual sodomites and catamites, offenders
+against religion, Almighty Allah hath condemned them in His Holy
+Book,[FN#243] herein He denounceth their filthy practices, saying, 'Do
+ye approach unto the males among mankind[FN#244] and leave your wives
+which your Lord hath created for you? Surely ye are a people who
+transgress!' These it is that liken girls to boys, of their exceeding
+profligacy and ungraciousness and inclination to follow the fiend and
+own lusts, so that they say, 'She is apt for two tricks,'[FN#245] and
+these are all wanderers from the way of right and the righteous. Quoth
+their chief Abu Nowas,
+
+ 'Slim waist and boyish wits delight *
+
+
+ Wencher, as well as Sodomite,'[FN#246]
+
+
+
+As for what thou sayest of a youth's first hair on cheek and lips and
+how they add to his beauty and loveliness, by Allah, thou strayest from
+the straight path of sooth and sayest that which is other than the
+truth; for whiskers change the charms of the comely into ugliness
+(quoting these couplets),
+
+ 'That sprouting hair upon his face took wreak *
+
+
+ For lovers' vengeance, all did vainly seek.
+
+
+ I see not on his face a sign fuli- *
+
+
+ genous, except his curls are hue of reek.
+
+
+ If so his paper[FN#247] mostly be begrimed *
+
+
+ Where deemest thou the reed shall draw a streak?
+
+
+ If any raise him other fairs above, *
+
+
+ This only proves the judge of wits is weak.'
+
+
+
+And when she ended her verse she resumed, 'Laud be to Allah Almighty,'"
+—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Twenty-third Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the preacher
+woman ended her verse she resumed, addressing the man, " 'Laud to Allah
+Almighty! how can it be hid from thee that the perfect pleasure is in
+women and that abiding blessings are not to be found but with them,
+seeing that Allah (extolled and exalted be He!) hath promised His
+prophets and saints black eyed damsels in Paradise and hath appointed
+these for a recompense of their godly works. And had the Almighty known
+that the joy supreme was in the possession of other than women, He had
+rewarded them therewith and promised it to them. And quoth he (whom
+Allah bless and preserve!), 'The things I hold dearest of the things of
+your world are three: women and perfume and the solace of my eyes in
+prayer.' Verily Allah hath appointed boys to serve his prophets and
+saints in Paradise, because Paradise is the abode of joy and delight,
+which could not be complete without the service of youths; but, as to
+the use of them for aught but service, it is Hell's putridity[FN#248]
+and corruption and turpitude. How well saith the poet,
+
+ 'Men's turning unto bums of boys is bumptious; *
+
+
+ Whoso love noble women show their own noblesse.
+
+
+ How many goodly wights have slept the night, enjoying *
+
+
+ Buttocks of boys, and woke at morn in foulest mess
+
+
+ Their garments stained by safflower, which is yellow merde; *
+
+
+ Their shame proclaiming, showing colour of distress.
+
+
+ Who can deny the charge, when so bewrayed are they *
+
+
+ That e'en by day light shows the dung upon their dress?
+
+
+ What contrast wi' the man, who slept a gladsome night *
+
+
+ By Houri maid for glance a mere enchanteress,
+
+
+ He rises off her borrowing wholesome bonny scent; *
+
+
+ That fills the house with whiffs of perfumed
+
+
+ goodliness.
+
+
+ No boy deserved place by side of her to hold; *
+
+
+ Canst even aloes wood with what fills pool of
+
+
+ cess!'[FN#249]
+
+
+
+Then said she, 'O folk ye have made me to break the bounds of modesty
+and the circle of free born women and indulge in idle talk of
+chambering and wantonness, which beseemeth not people of learning. But
+the breasts of free-borns are the sepulchres of secrets' and such
+conversations are in confidence. Moreover, actions are according to
+intentions,[FN#250] and I crave pardon of Allah for myself and you and
+all Moslems, seeing that He is the Pardoner and the Compassionate.'
+Then she held her peace and thereafter would answer us of naught; so we
+went our way, rejoicing in that we had profited by her contention and
+yet sorrowing to part from her." And among the tales they tell is one
+of
+
+
+
+
+ABU SUWAYD AND THE PRETTY OLD WOMAN.
+
+Quoth Abu Suwayd, "I and a company of my friends, entered a garden one
+day to buy somewhat of fruit; and we saw in a corner an old woman, who
+was bright of face, but her head-hair was white, and she was combing it
+with an ivory comb. We stopped before her, yet she paid no heed to us
+neither veiled her face: so I said to her, 'O old woman,[FN#251] wert
+thou to dye thy hair black, thou wouldst be handsomer than a girl: what
+hindereth thee from this?' She raised her head towards me"—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Twenty-fourth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Abu Suwayd
+continued: "When I spake these words to the ancient dame she raised her
+head towards me and, opening wide her eyes, recited these two couplets,
+
+ 'I dyed what years have dyed, but this my staining *
+
+
+ Lasts not, while that of days is aye remaining:
+
+
+ Days when beclad in gear of youth I fared, *
+
+
+ Raked fore and aft by men with joy unfeigning.'
+
+
+
+I cried, 'By Allah, favoured art thou for an old woman! How sincere art
+thou in thine after-pine for forbidden pleasures and how false is thy
+pretence of repentance from frowardness!'" And another tale is that of
+
+
+
+
+THE EMIR ALI BIN TAHIR AND THE GIRL MUUNIS.
+
+Once on a time was displayed for sale to Ali bin Mohammed bin Abdallah
+bin Tαhir[FN#252] a slave-girl called Muunis who was superior to her
+fellows in beauty and breeding, and to boot an accomplished poetess;
+and he asked her of her name. Replied she, "Allah advance the Emir, my
+name is Muunis."[FN#253] Now he knew this before; so he bowed his head
+awhile, then raising his eyes to her, recited this verse,
+
+ "What sayest of one by a sickness caught *
+
+
+ For the love of thy love till he waxed distraught?"
+
+
+
+Answered she, "Allah exalt the Emir!" and recited this verse in reply,
+
+ "If we saw a lover who pains as he ought, *
+
+
+ Wi' love we would grant him all favours he sought."
+
+
+
+She pleased him: so he bought her for seventy thousand dirhams and
+begat on her Obayd' Allah bin Mohammed, afterwards minister of
+Police.[FN#254] And we are told by Abu al-Aynα[FN#255] a tale of
+
+
+
+
+THE WOMAN WHO HAD A BOY AND THE OTHER WHO HAD A MAN TO LOVER.
+
+Quoth Abu al-Aynα, "There were in our street two women, one of whom had
+for lover a man and the other a beardless youth, and they foregathered
+one night on the terrace-roof of a house adjoining mine, knowing not
+that I was near. Quoth the boy's lover to the other, 'O my sister, how
+canst thou bear with patience the harshness of thy lover's beard as it
+falleth on thy breast, when he busseth thee and his mustachios rub thy
+cheek and lips?' Replied the other, 'Silly that thou art, what decketh
+the tree save its leaves and the cucumber but its warts?[FN#256] Didst
+ever see in the world aught uglier than a scald-head bald of his beard?
+Knowest thou not that the beard is to men as the sidelocks to women;
+and what is the difference between chin and cheek?[FN#257] Knowest thou
+not that Allah (extolled and exalted be He!) hath created an angel in
+Heaven, who saith: 'Glory be to Him who ornamenteth men with beards and
+women with long hair?' So, were not the beard even as the tresses in
+comeliness, it had not been coupled with them, O silly! How shall I
+spread-eagle myself under a boy, who will emit long before I can go off
+and forestall me in limpness of penis and clitoris; and leave a man
+who, when he taketh breath clippeth close and when he entereth goeth
+leisurely, and when he hath done, repeateth, and when he pusheth poketh
+hard, and as often as he withdraweth, returneth?' The boy's leman was
+edified by her speech and said, 'I forswear my lover by the lord of the
+Ka'abah!'" And amongst tales is one of
+
+
+
+
+ALI THE CAIRENE AND THE HAUNTED HOUSE IN BAGHDAD.
+
+There lived once, in the city of Cairo, a merchant who had great store
+of monies and bullion, gems and jewels, and lands and houses beyond
+count, and his name was Hasan the Jeweller, the Baghdad man.
+Furthermore Allah had blessed him with a son of perfect beauty and
+brilliancy; rosy-cheeked, fair of face and well-figured, whom he named
+Ali of Cairo, and had taught the Koran and science and elocution and
+the other branches of polite education, till he became proficient in
+all manner of knowledge. He was under his father's hand in trade but,
+after a while, Hasan fell sick and his sickness grew upon him, till he
+made sure of death; so he called his son to him,—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Twenty-fifth Night,
+
+She said, it hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the
+Jeweller, the Baghdadi, fell sick and made sure of death, he called to
+him his son, named Ali of Cairo, and said, "O my son, verily this world
+passeth away; but the next world endureth for aye. Every soul shall
+taste of death;[FN#258] and now, O my son, my decease is at hand and I
+desire to charge thee with a charge, which if thou observe, thou shalt
+abide in safety and prosperity, till thou meet Almighty Allah; but if
+thou follow it not, there shall befal thee much weariness and thou wilt
+repent of having transgressed mine injunctions." Replied Ali, "O my
+father, how shall I do other than hearken to thy words and act
+according to thy charge, seeing that I am bounden by the law of the
+Faith to obey thee and give ear to thy command?" Rejoined his father,
+"O my son, I leave thee lands and houses and goods and wealth past
+count; so that wert thou each day to spend thereof five hundred dinars,
+thou wouldst miss naught of it. But, O my son, look that thou live in
+the fear of Allah and follow His Chosen One, Mustafa, (whom may He
+bless and preserve!) in whatso he is reported to have bidden and
+forbidden in his traditional law.[FN#259] Be thou constant in
+alms-deeds 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 conversation of
+the wicked or those of suspicious character. Look thou kindly upon thy
+servants and family, and also upon thy wife, for she is of the
+daughters of the great and is big with child by thee; haply Allah will
+vouchsafe thee virtuous issue by her." And he ceased not to exhort him
+thus, weeping and saying, "O my son, I beseech Allah the Bountiful, the
+Lord of the glorious Empyrean[FN#260] to deliver thee from all straits
+that may encompass thee and grant thee His ready relief!" Thereupon his
+son wept with sore weeping and said, "O my father, I am melted by thy
+words, for these are as the words of one that saith farewell." Replied
+the merchant, "Yes, O my son, I am aware of my condition: forget thou
+not my charge." Then he fell to repeating the two professions of the
+Faith and to 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 Almighty Allah.[FN#261] Therewith great grief fell
+upon Ali; the clamour of keening arose in his house and his father's
+friends flocked to him. Then he betook himself to preparing the body
+for burial and made him a splendid funeral. They bore his bier to the
+place of prayer and prayed over him, then to the cemetery, where they
+buried him and recited over him what suited of the sublime Koran; after
+which they returned to the house and condoled with the dead man's son
+and wended each his own way. Moreover, Ali prayed the Friday prayer for
+his father and had perlections of the Koran every day for the normal
+forty, 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.
+So he ceased not from his praying and reciting for some time, until his
+fellows of the sons of the merchants came in to him one day and
+saluting him, said, "How long this thy mourning and neglecting thy
+business and the company of thy friends? Verily, this is a fashion
+which will bring thee weariness, and thy body will suffer for it
+exceedingly." Now when they came in to him, Iblis the Accursed was with
+them, prompting them; and they went on to recommend him to accompany
+them to the bazar, whilst Iblis tempted him to consent to them, till he
+yielded,—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Twenty-sixth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the sons of
+the merchants went in to Ali the Cairene, son of Hasan the Jeweller,
+they recommended him to accompany them to the bazar, till he yielded,
+that the will of Allah (extolled and exalted be He!) might be
+fulfilled; and he left the house of mourning with them. Presently they
+said, "Mount thy she-mule and ride with us to such a garden, that we
+may solace us there and that thy grief and despondency may depart from
+thee." So he mounted and taking his slave, went with them to the garden
+in question; and when they entered one of them went and making ready
+the morning-meal, brought it to them there. So they ate and were merry
+and sat in talk, till the end of the day, when they mounted and
+returned each to his own lodging, where they passed the night. As soon
+as the morrow dawned, they again visited Ali and said, "Come with us."
+Asked he, "Whither?"; and they answered, "To such a garden; for it is
+finer than the first and more pleasurable." 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 heady wine; and after eating,
+they brought out the wine, when quoth Ali, "What is this? and quoth
+they, "This is what dispelleth sadness and brighteneth gladness. And
+they ceased not 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. But as for Ali, the Cairene, he
+was giddy with wine and in this plight went in to his wife, who said to
+him, "What aileth thee that thou art so changed?" He said, "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." And
+she replied, "O my lord, say me, hast thou forgotten thy father's
+injunction and done that from which he forbade thee, in consorting with
+doubtful folk?" Answered he, "These be of the sons of the merchants;
+they are no suspicious 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 with them and drinking, till they said
+to him, "Our turns are ended, and now it is thy turn." "Well come, and
+welcome and fair cheer!" cried he; so on the morrow, he made ready all
+that the case called for of meat and drink, two-fold what they had
+provided, and taking cooks and tent-pitchers and coffee-makers,[FN#262]
+repaired with the others to Al-Rauzah[FN#263] 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 Iblis the Accursed deluded him and said to him,
+"Though thou shouldst spend every day a like sum yet wouldst thou not
+miss aught of it." So he took no account of money expenses and
+continued this way of life for three years, whilst his wife
+remonstrated with him and reminded him of his father's charge; but he
+hearkened not to her words, till he had spent all the ready monies he
+had, when he fell to selling his jewels and spending their price, until
+they also were all gone. Then he sold his houses, fields, farms and
+gardens, one after other, till they likewise were all gone and he had
+nothing left but the tenement wherein 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 all this also, when he took thought with himself and,
+finding that he had nothing left to expend, sold the house itself and
+spent the purchase-money. After that, the man who had bought the house
+came to him and said "Seek out for thyself a lodging, as I have need of
+my house." So he bethought himself and, finding that he had no want of
+a house, except for his wife, who had borne him a son and daughter (he
+had not a servant left), he hired a large room in one of the mean
+courts[FN#264] and there took up his abode, after having lived in
+honour and luxury, with many eunuchs and much wealth; and he soon came
+to want one day's bread. Quoth his wife, "Of this I warned thee and
+exhorted thee to obey thy father's charge, and thou wouldst not hearken
+to me; but there is no Majesty and there is no Might, save in Allah,
+the Glorious, the Great! Whence shall the little ones eat? Arise then,
+go round to thy friends, the sons of the merchants: belike they will
+give thee somewhat on which we may live this day." So he arose and went
+to his friends one by one; but they all hid their faces from him and
+gave him injurious words revolting to hear, but naught else; and he
+returned to his wife and said to her, "They have given me nothing."
+Thereupon she went forth to beg of her neighbours the wherewithal to
+keep themselves alive,—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and
+ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Twenty-seventh Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the wife of Ali
+the Cairene, seeing her husband return empty-handed, went forth to beg
+of her neighbours the wherewithal to keep themselves alive and repaired
+to a woman, whom she had known in former days. When she came in to her
+and she saw her case, she rose and receiving her kindly, wept and said,
+"What hath befallen you?" So she told her all that her husband had
+done, and the other replied, "Well come and welcome and fair cheer!;
+whatever thou needest, Seek it of me, without price." Quoth she, "Allah
+requite thee abundantly!"[FN#265] Then her friend gave her as much
+provision 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 asked, "Whence hadst thou that?"; and she answered, "I got it
+of such a woman; for, when I told her what had befallen us, she failed
+me not in aught, but said, 'Seek of me all thou needest.'" Whereupon
+her husband rejoined, "Since thou hast this much I will betake myself
+to a place I have in my mind; peradventure Allah Almighty will bring us
+relief."[FN#266] With these words he took leave of her and kissed his
+children and went out, not knowing whither he should go, and he
+continued walking on till he came to Bulαk, where he saw a ship about
+to sail for Damietta.[FN#267] Here he met a man, between whom and his
+father there had been friendship, and he saluted him and said to him,
+"Whither now?" Replied Ali, "To Damietta: I have friends there, whom I
+would enquire after and visit them and then return." The man took him
+home and treated him honourably; then, furnishing him with vivers for
+the voyage and giving him some gold pieces, embarked him on board the
+vessel bound for Damietta. When they reached it, Ali landed, not
+knowing whither to go; but as he was walking along, a merchant saw him
+and had pity on him, and carried him to his house. Here he abode
+awhile, after which he said in himself, "How long this sojourning in
+other folk's homes?" Then he left the merchant's place and walked to
+the wharf where, after enquiry, he found a ship ready to sail for
+Syria. His hospitable host provided him with provision and embarked him
+in the ship; and it set sail and Ali reached in due season the Syrian
+shores where he disembarked and journeyed till he entered Damascus. As
+he walked about the great thoroughfare behold, a kindly man saw him and
+took him to his house, where he tarried for a time till, one day, going
+abroad, he saw a caravan about to start for Baghdad and bethought
+himself to journey thither with it. Thereupon he returned to his host
+and taking leave of him, set out with the Cafilah. Now Allah (extolled
+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. Here, however, a company of
+highwaymen fell upon the caravan and took all they had and but few of
+the merchants escaped. These made each for a separate place of refuge;
+but as for Ali the Cairene he fared 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." They admitted him and asked him, "Whence
+come, and whither wending?" and he answered, "I am a man from
+Cairo-city 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 she-mule, there fell upon me a
+company of banditti, who took my mule and gear; nor did I escape from
+them but at my last gasp." The gate-guard entreated him honourably and
+bade him be of good cheer, saying, "Abide with us this night, and in
+the morning we will look thee out a place befitting thee." Then he
+sought in his breast-pocket and, finding a dinar of those given to him
+by the merchant at Bulak, handed 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 gate-guards, and he lay the
+night with them. Now on the morrow, one of the warders carried him to a
+certain of the merchants of Baghdad, to whom he told the same story,
+and he believed him, deeming that he was a merchant and had with him
+loads of merchandise. Then 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 Hammam. "So," quoth Ali
+of Cairo: "I went with him to the bath, and when we came out, he took
+me and brought me to his house, where he set the morning-meal before
+us, and we ate and made merry. Then said he to one of his black slaves,
+'Ho Mas'dd, take this thy lord: show him the two houses standing in
+such a place, and whichever pleaseth him, give him the key of it and
+come back.' So I went with the slave, till we came to a street-road
+where stood three houses side by side, newly built and yet shut up. He
+opened the first and I looked at it; and we did the same to the second;
+after which he said to me 'Of which shall I give thee the key?' 'To
+whom doth the big house belong?' 'To us!' 'Open it, that I may view
+it.' 'Thou hast no business there.' 'Wherefore?' 'Because it is
+haunted, and none nighteth there but in the morning he is a dead man;
+nor do we use to open the door, when removing the corpse, but mount the
+terrace-roof of one of the other two houses and take it up thence. For
+this reason my master hath abandoned the house and saith: 'I will never
+again give it to any one.' 'Open it,' I cried, 'that I may view it;'
+and I said in my mind, '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 my
+case.' 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 its key.' But he rejoined, 'I will not give thee
+this key till I consult my master,'"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn
+of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Twenty-eighth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the negro
+(continued Ali of Cairo) "rejoined, 'I will not give thee its key till
+I consult my master,'" and going to him, reported, "'The Egyptian
+trader saith, 'I will lodge in none but the big house.'" Now when the
+merchant heard this, he rose and coming to Ali, spake thus to him, "O
+my lord, thou hast no need of this house." But he answered, "I will
+lodge in none other than this; for I care naught for this silly
+saying." Quoth the other, "Write me an acknowledgment that, if aught
+happen to thee, I am not responsible." Quoth Ali, "So be it;" whereupon
+the merchant fetched an assessor from the Kazi's court and, taking the
+prescribed acknowledgment, delivered to him the key wherewith he
+entered the house. The merchant sent him bedding by a blackamoor who
+spread it for him on the built bench behind the door[FN#268] and walked
+away. Presently Ali went about and, seeing in the inner court a well
+with a bucket, let this down and drew water, wherewith he made the
+lesser ablution and prayed the obligatory prayers. Then he sat awhile,
+till the 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[FN#269]; after which he left him and returned home. Ali lighted
+the candle, supped at his ease and prayed the night-prayer; and
+presently he said to himself, "Come, take the bedding and go upstairs
+and sleep there; 'twill be better than here." So he took the bed and
+carried it upstairs, where he found a splendid saloon, with gilded
+ceiling and floor and walls cased with coloured marbles. He spread his
+bed there and sitting down, began to recite somewhat of the Sublime
+Koran, when (ere he was ware) he heard one calling to him and asking,
+"O Ali, O son of Hasan, say me, shall I send thee down the gold?" And
+he answered, "Where be the gold thou hast to send?" But hardly had he
+spoken, when gold pieces began to rain down on him, like stones from a
+catapult, nor ceased till the saloon was full. Then, after the golden
+shower, 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
+entrusted to me for thee." Quoth Ali, "I adjure thee, by Allah the
+Almighty, to tell me the cause of this gold-rain." Replied the Voice,
+"This is a treasure that was talisman'd to thee of old time, and to
+every one who entered the house, we used to come and say: 'O Ali, O son
+of Hasan, shall we send thee 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 to us, 'And where be the gold?' we knew
+thee for the owner of it and sent it down. Moreover, there is yet
+another hoard for thee in the land of Al-Yaman and thou wouldst do well
+to journey thither and fetch it. And now I would fain have thee set me
+free, that I may go my way." Said Ali, "By Allah, I will not set thee
+free, till thou bring me hither the treasure from the land of
+Al-Yaman!" Said the Voice, "An I bring it to thee, wilt thou release me
+and eke the servant of the other hoard?" "Yes," replied Ali, and the
+Voice cried, "Swear to me." So he swore to him, and he was about to go
+away, when Ali said to him, "I have one other need to ask of thee;" and
+he, "What is that?" Quoth Ali, "I have a wife and children at Cairo in
+such a place; thou needs must fetch them to me, at their ease and
+without their unease." Quoth he, "I will bring them to thee in a
+mule-litter[FN#270] and much state, with a train of eunuchs and
+servants, together with the treasure from Al-Yaman, Inshallah!"[FN#271]
+Then he took of him leave of absence for three days, when all this
+should be with him, and vanished. As soon as it was morning Ali went
+round about the saloon, seeking a place wherein to store the gold, and
+saw on the edge of the dais a marble slab with a turning-pin; so he
+turned the pin and the slab sank and showed a door which he opened and
+entering, found a great closet, full of bags of coarse stuff carefully
+sewn. So he began taking out the bags and fell to filling them with
+gold and storing them in the closet, till he had transported thither
+all the hoarded gold, whereupon he shut the door and turning the pin,
+the slab returned to its place. Then he went down and seated himself on
+the bench behind the door; and presently there came a knock; so he
+opened and found the merchant's slave who, seeing him comfortably
+sitting, returned in haste to his master,—And Shahrazad perceived the
+dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Twenty-ninth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the
+house-owner's black slave returned and knocked at the door, Ali the
+Cairene, son of the merchant Hasan, opened it to him and the negro,
+seeing him comfortably sitting, returned in haste to his master with
+the good tidings, saying, "O my Lord, the merchant, who is lodged in
+the house inhabited by the Jinn,[FN#272] is alive and well and sitteth
+on the bench behind the door." Then the merchant 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, asking, "How hath Allah
+dealt with thee?"; and Ali answered, "Right well, I slept upstairs in
+the marble saloon." Quoth the merchant, "Did aught come to thee or
+didst thou see any thing?" and quoth Ali "No, I recited some little of
+the Sublime Koran and slept till morning, when I arose and, after
+making the minor ablution and praying, seated myself on the bench
+behind the door." "Praised be Allah for safety!" exclaimed the
+merchant, then left him and presently sent him black slaves and white
+Mamelukes and handmaidens with household gear. They swept the house
+from top to bottom and furnished it with magnificent furniture; after
+which three white slaves and three blacks and four slave-girls remained
+with him, to serve him, while the rest returned to their master's
+house. Now when the merchants heard of him, they sent him presents of
+all manner things of price, even to food and drink and clothes, and
+took him with them to the market, asking, "When will thy baggage
+arrive?" And he answered, "After three days it will surely come." When
+the term had elapsed, the servant of the first hoard, the golden rain,
+came to him and said, "Go forth and meet the treasure I have brought
+thee from Al-Yaman together with thy Harim; for I bring part of the
+wealth in the semblance of costly merchandise; but the eunuchs and
+Mamelukes and the mules and horses and camels are all of the Jann." Now
+the Jinni, when he betook himself to Cairo, found Ali's wife and
+children in sore misery, naked and hungry; so he carried them out of
+the city in a travelling-litter and clad them in sumptuous raiment of
+the stuffs which were in the treasure of Al-Yaman. So when Ali heard
+this, he arose and repairing to the merchants, said to them, "Rise and
+go forth with us from the city, to meet the caravan bringing my
+merchandise, and honour us with the presence of your Harims, to meet my
+Harim." "Hearkening and obedience," answered they and, sending for
+their Harims, went forth all together and took seat in one of the
+city-gardens; and as they sat talking, behold, a dust-cloud arose out
+of the heart of the desert, and they flocked forth to see what it was.
+Presently it lifted and discovered mules and muleteers, tent-pitchers
+and linkmen, who came on, singing and dancing, till they reached the
+garden, when the chief of the muleteers walked up to Ali and kissing
+his hand, said to him, "O my master, we have been long on the way, for
+we purposed entering yesterday; but we were in fear of the bandits, so
+abode in our station four days, till Almighty Allah rid us of them."
+Thereupon the merchants mounted their mules and rode forward with the
+caravan, the Harims waiting behind, till Ali's wife and children
+mounted with them; and they all entered in splendid train. The
+merchants marvelled at the number of mules laden with chests, whilst
+the women of the merchants wondered at the richness of the apparel of
+his wife and the fine raiment of her children; and kept saying each to
+other, "Verily, the King of Baghdad hath no such gear; no, nor any
+other of the kings or lords or merchants!" So they ceased not to fare
+forwards in high great state, the men with Ali of Cairo and the Harims
+with his Harim, till they came to the mansion,—And Shahrazad perceived
+the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Thirtieth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that they ceased not
+to fare forwards in high state, the men with Ali's men and the women
+with his wife, till they came to the mansion, where they alighted and
+brought the mules and their burdens into the midst of the courtyard.
+Then they unloaded them and warehoused the goods 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 midday
+meal, all manner meats and sweetmeats of the very best; and they ate
+and drank costly sherbets and perfumed themselves thereafter with
+rose-water and scented woods. Then they took leave and went home, men
+and women; and, when the merchants returned to their places, they sent
+presents to the husband according to their conditions; and their wives
+likewise sent presents to the wife, so that there came to them great
+store of handmaids and negroes and Mamelukes; and all kinds of goods,
+such as grain, sugar and so forth, in abundance beyond account. As for
+the Baghdad merchant, the landlord of the house, he abode with Ali and
+quitted him not, but said to him, "Let the black slaves and servants
+take the mules and the common 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 and camp outside the city, that they
+might start on their journey at night-come; whereupon, hardly believing
+that they were dismissed, they took leave of him and departing to the
+outliers of the city, flew off through the air to their several abodes.
+So Ali and his house-owner sat together till a third of the night was
+past, when their colloquy ended and the merchant returned to his own
+house and Ali went up to his wife and children and after saluting them,
+said, "What hath befallen you in my absence all this time?" So she told
+him what they had suffered of hunger and nakedness and travail, and he
+said, "Praised be Allah for safety! How did ye come?" Answered she, "O
+my lord, I was asleep with my children yesternight, when suddenly and
+unexpectedly one raised us from the ground and flew with us through the
+firmament without doing us any hurt, nor did he leave flying with us,
+till he set us down in a place as it were an Arab camping-ground, where
+we saw laden mules and a travelling litter borne upon two great mules,
+and around it servants, all boys and men. So I asked them, 'Who are ye
+and what are these loads and where are we?;' and they answered, 'We are
+the servants of the merchant Ali of Cairo, son of the merchant-
+jeweller, who hath sent us to fetch you to him at Baghdad.' Quoth I,
+'Tell me, is it far or near, hence to Baghdad?' They replied, 'Near:
+there lieth between us and the city but the darkness of the night.'
+Then they mounted us in the litter and, when the morrow dawned, we
+found ourselves with thee, without having suffered any hurt whatever."
+Quoth he, "Who gave you these dresses?;" and quoth she, "The chief of
+the caravan opened one of the boxes on the mules and taking out thereof
+these clothes, clad me and thy children each in a suit; after which he
+locked the case and gave me the key, saying, 'Take care of it, till
+thou give it to thy husband.' And here it is safe by me." So saying,
+she gave him the key, and he said, "Dost thou know the chest?" Said
+she, "Yes, I know it." So he took her down to the magazine and showed
+her the boxes, when she cried, "This is the one whence the dresses were
+taken;" upon which he put the key in the lock and opened the chest,
+wherein he found much raiment and the keys of all the other cases. So
+he took them and fell to opening them, one after another, and feasting
+his eyes upon the gems and precious ores they contained, whose like was
+not found with any of the kings; after which he locked them again, took
+the keys, and returned to the saloon, saying to his wife, "This is of
+the bounty of Almighty Allah!" Then bringing her to the secret slab he
+turned the pin and opened the door of the closet, into which he entered
+with her and showed her the gold he had laid up therein. Quoth she,
+"Whence came all this to thee?" "It came to me by the grace of my
+Lord," answered he:—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased
+saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Thirty-first Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when Ali's wife
+had looked upon the gold she said to him, "Whence came all this to
+thee?" "It came to me by the grace of my Lord," answered he: "When I
+left thee in my trouble, I shipped at Bulak for Damietta and met a
+friend there who forwarded me to Damascus": in brief he told her all
+that had befallen him, from first to last. Said she, "O my lord, all
+this cometh by boon of thy father's blessing and orisons when he prayed
+for thee, before his death, saying, 'I beseech Allah to cast thee into
+no straits except He grant thee ready relief!' So praised be Allah
+Almighty for that He hath brought thee deliverance and hath requited
+thee with more than went from thee! But Allah upon thee, O my lord,
+return not to thy practice of associating with doubtful folk; but look
+thou fear Allah (whose name be exalted!) both in private and in
+public." And as she went on to admonish him, he said, "I accept thine
+admonition and beg the Almighty to remove the froward from amongst us
+and stablish us in His obedience and in the observance of the law and
+practice of His Prophet, on whom be blessings and peace!" After that
+Ali and his wife and children were in all solace of life and gladness;
+and he opened him a shop in the merchants' bazar and, stocking it with
+a somewhat of jewels and bullion, sat therein with his children and
+white servants. Presently he became the most considerable of the
+merchants of Baghdad, and his report reached the King of that
+city,[FN#273] who sent a messenger to command his attendance, saying,
+"Answer the summons of the King who requireth thee." He replied, "I
+hear and obey," and straightway prepared his present and 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 presence, kissed the ground between his hands and wished him
+endurance of goods and glory in the finest language he could command.
+Said the King, "O merchant, thou cheerest our city with thy presence!"
+and Ali rejoined, "O King of the age, thy slave hath brought thee a
+gift and hopeth for acceptance thereof from thy favour." Then he laid
+the four trays before the King, who uncovered them and seeing that they
+contained gems, whose fellows he possessed not and whose worth equalled
+treasuries of money, said, "Thy present is accepted, O merchant, and
+Inshallah! we will requite thee with its like." And Ali kissed his
+hands and went away; whereupon the King called his grandees and said to
+them, "How many of the Kings have sought my daughter in marriage?"
+"Many," answered they; and he asked, "Hath any of them given me the
+like of this gift?"; whereto they replied, "Not one, for that none of
+them hath its like;" and he said, "I have consulted Allah Almighty by
+lot as to marrying my daughter to this merchant. What say ye?" "Be it
+as thou reckest," answered they. Then he bade the eunuch carry the four
+trays into his serraglio 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, "From which of
+the Kings hadst thou these?: perchance of one of the royalties that
+seek thy daughter in marriage?" Said he, "Not so, I had them of an
+Egyptian merchant, who is lately come to this our city. Now when I
+heard of his coming I 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 trousseau. He obeyed our summons and
+brought us these four trays, as a present, and I saw him to be a
+handsome youth of dignified aspect and intelligent as elegant, almost
+such as should be the sons of Kings. Wherefore my heart inclined to him
+at sight, and my heart rejoiced in him and I thought good to marry my
+daughter to him. So I showed the gift to my grandees, who agreed with
+me that none of the Kings hath the like of these and I told them my
+project. But what sayst thou?"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day
+and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Thirty-second Night,
+
+She continued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the King of
+Baghdad, after showing the presents to his wife and highly praising
+Ali, the merchant-jeweller, and informing her of the proposed marriage,
+asked, "But what sayst thou?" She replied, "O King of the age, the
+ordering this affair is in Allah's hand, and thine, and whatso Allah
+willeth shall come to pass." Rejoined the King, "If it be His will, I
+will marry her to none other than this young man." He slept on this
+resolve and on the morrow, he went out to his Divan and summoned Ali
+and the rest of the merchants of Baghdad, and when all came bade them
+be seated. Then said he, "Bring me the Kazi of the Divan" and they
+brought him; whereupon the King said to him, "O Kazi, write the
+contract of marriage between my daughter and the merchant Ali the
+Cairene." But Ali said, "Thy pardon, O our lord the Sultan! It
+befitteth not that a trader 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 Wazirate;" and he invested him forthwith in the Wazir's office and
+ministerial robes. Then Ali sat down in the chair of the Wazirate 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 I have to say to thee!"
+He replied, "Say on, and fear not." Quoth Ali, "Since it is thine
+august resolution to marry thy daughter, thou wouldst do better to
+marry her to my son. Quoth the King, "Hast thou then a son?"; and Ali
+replied, "Yes." "Send for him forthwith," said the King. Thereupon
+answered Ali "Hearkening and obedience!", and despatched 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 stature and
+proportion and brightness and perfection, said to him, "What is thy
+name, O my son?" "My name is Hasan, O our lord the Sultan," replied the
+young man, who was then fourteen years old. Then the Sultan said to the
+Kazi, "Write the contract of marriage between my daughter Husn al-Wujdd
+and Hasan, son of the merchant Ali the Cairene." So he wrote the
+marriage-contract between them, and the affair was ended in the
+goodliest fashion; after which all in the Divan went their ways and the
+merchants followed the Wazir Ali, escorting him 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 Wazir's habit, exclaimed, "What is
+this?"; when he told her all that had passed from first to last and she
+joyed therein with exceeding joy. So sped the night and on the morrow,
+he went up to the Divan, where the King received him with especial
+favour and seating him close by his side, said, "O Wazir, we purpose to
+begin the wedding festivities and bring thy son in to our daughter."
+Replied Ali, "O our lord the Sultan, whatso thou deemest good is good."
+So the Sultan gave orders to celebrate the festivities, and they
+decorated the city and held high festival for thirty days, in all joy
+and gladness; at the end of which time, Hasan, son of the Wazir Ali,
+went in to the Princess and enjoyed her beauty and loveliness. 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 for his son-in-law Hasan Ali-son 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 tarry with him some days and
+then go down to her own house. After awhile the Queen said to her
+husband, "O King of the age, Hasan's lady-mother cannot take up her
+abode with her son and leave the Wazir; neither can she tarry with the
+Wazir and leave her son." "Thou sayest sooth," replied the King, and
+bade edify a third palace beside that of Hasan, which being done in a
+few days he caused remove thither the goods of the Wazir, and the
+Minister 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 Wazir by night, he would go to him or send to fetch him;
+and so with Hasan and his father and mother. On this wise they dwelt in
+all solace and in the greatest happiness—And Shahrazad perceived the
+dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Thirty-third Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the King and the
+Wazir and his son ceased not to dwell in all solace and in the greatest
+happiness awhile, till the King fell ill and his sickness grew on him.
+So he summoned the lords of his realm and said to them, "There is come
+upon me a sore malady, peradventure a mortal; 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." They asked, "What is the
+matter of which thou wouldst take counsel with us, O King?"; and he
+answered, "I am old and sickly and I fear for the realm after me from
+its 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 with one voice, "We all approve of thy daughter's husband
+Hasan, son of the Wazir Ali; for we have seen his wit and perfect
+understanding, and he knoweth the place of all, great and small." Asked
+the King, "Are ye indeed agreed upon this?" and they answered, "Yes."
+Rejoined he "Peradventure ye all say this to my face, of respect for
+me; but behind my back ye will say otherwise." However, they all
+replied, "By Allah, our word is one and the same in public and in
+private, and we accept him frankly and with heartiness of heart and
+breadth of breast." Quoth he, "Since the case is thus, bring the Kazi
+of the Holy Law and all the Chamberlains and Viceroys and Officers of
+state before me to-morrow, and we will order the affair after the
+goodliest fashion." "We hear and we obey," answered they and
+withdrawing, notified all the Olema,[FN#274] the doctors of the law and
+the chief personages among the Emirs. So when the morrow dawned, they
+came up to the Divan and, having craved and obtained permission to
+enter, they saluted the King, saying, "Here are we all in thy
+presence." Whereto he made reply, "O Emirs of Baghdad, whom will ye
+have to be King over you after me, that I may inaugurate him during my
+lifetime, before the presence of you all?" Quoth they with one voice,
+"We are agreed upon thy daughter's husband Hasan, son of the Wazir
+Ali." Quoth he, "If it be so, go all of you and bring him before me."
+So they all arose and, repairing to Hasan's palace, said to him, "Rise,
+come with us to the King." "Wherefore?" asked he, and they answered,
+"For a thing that will benefit both us and thee." So he went in with
+them to the King and kissed the ground before his father-in-law who
+said to him, "Be seated, O my son!" He sat down and the King continued,
+"O Hasan, all the Emirs 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 Hasan stood up
+and, kissing the ground once more before the King, said to him, "O our
+lord the King, among the Emirs there be many who are older than I and
+greater of worth; acquit me therefore of this thing." But all the Emirs
+cried out saying, "We consent not but that thou be King over us." Then
+said Hasan, "My father is older than I, and I and he are one thing; and
+it befits not to advance me over him." But Ali said, "I will consent to
+nothing save whatso contenteth 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 Hasan hung his head abashed before the
+King and his father. Then said the King to the Emirs, "Do ye all accept
+of him?" "We do," answered they and recited thereupon seven
+Fαtihahs.[FN#275] So the King said, "O Kazi, draw up a legal instrument
+testifying of these Emirs that they are agreed to make King over them
+my daughter's husband Hasan." The Kazi wrote the act and made it
+binding on all men,[FN#276] after they had sworn in a body the oath of
+fealty to Hasan. Then the King did likewise and bade him take his seat
+on the throne of kingship; whereupon they all arose and kissed King
+Hasan's hands and did homage to him, and swore lealty to him. And the
+new King dispensed justice among the people that day in fashion right
+royal, and invested the grandees of the realm in splendid robes of
+honour. When the Divan broke up, he went in to and kissed the hands of
+his father-in-law who spake thus to him, "O my son, look thou rule the
+lieges in the fear of Allah;"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day
+and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Thirty-fourth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when King Hasan
+was quit of the Divan, he went in to and kissed the hands of his wife's
+father, who spake thus to him, "O my son, look thou rule the lieges in
+the fear of Allah;" whereto he replied, "O my father, through thy
+prayers for me, the grace and guidance of Allah 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, "Be this day blessed!" Next he went in to his
+father and mother, who joyed with exceeding joy in that which Allah had
+vouchsafed him of his advancement to the kingship, and his father
+charged him to fear Allah and to deal mercifully with his subjects. He
+passed the night in glee and gladness, and on the morrow, having prayed
+the obligatory prayers ending with the usual short chapters[FN#277] of
+the Koran, he went up to the Divan, whither came all his officers and
+dignitaries. He passed the day in dispensing justice among the folk,
+bidding to graciousness and forbidding ungraciousness and appointing to
+place and displacing, till day- end, when the Divan broke up, after the
+goodliest fashion, and all the troops withdrew and each went his own
+way. Then he arose and repaired to the palace, where he found his
+father-in-law's sickness grown heavy upon him and said to him, "May no
+ill befal thee!" At this the old King opened his eyes and said, "O
+Hasan!" and he replied, "At thy service, O my lord." Quoth the old King
+"Mine appointed hour is at hand: be thou careful of thy wife and her
+mother, and look thou fear Allah and honour thy parents; and bide in
+awe of the majesty of the Requiting King and bear in mind that He
+commandeth justice and good works." And King Hasan replied, "I hear and
+obey." Now after this the old King lingered three days and then
+departed into the mercy of Almighty Allah. So they laid him out and
+shrouded and buried him and held over him readings and perlections of
+the Koran, to the end of the customary forty days. And King Hasan, son
+of the Wazir, reigned in his stead, and his subjects joyed in him and
+all his days were gladness; moreover, his father ceased not to be his
+chief Wazir on his right hand, and he took to himself another Wazir, to
+be at his left hand. His reign was a prosperous and well ordered, and
+he lived a long life as King of Baghdad; and Allah blessed him, by the
+old King's daughter, with three sons who inherited the kingdom after
+him; and they abode in the solace of life and its pleasures till there
+came to them the Destroyer of delights and the Severer of societies.
+And the glory be to Him who is eternal and in whose hand are annulling
+and confirming. And of the tales they tell is one of
+
+
+
+
+THE PILGRIM MAN AND THE OLD WOMAN.
+
+A man of the pilgrims once slept a long sleep and awaking, found no
+trace of the caravan. So he rose up and walked on, but lost his way and
+presently came to a tent, where he saw an old woman standing at the
+entrance and by her side a dog asleep. He went up to the tent and,
+saluting the old woman, sought of her food, when she replied, "Go to
+yonder Wady and catch thy sufficiency of serpents, that I may broil of
+them for thee and give thee to eat." Rejoined the pilgrim, "I dare not
+catch serpents nor did I ever eat them." Quoth the old woman, "I will
+go with thee and catch some; 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 (saith the
+story teller) but to eat, in fear of hunger and exhaustion; so he ate
+of the serpents.[FN#278] Then he was athirst and asked for water to
+drink; and she answered, "Go to the spring and drink." Accordingly, he
+went to the spring and found the water thereof bitter; yet needs must
+he drink of it despite its bitterness, because of the violence of his
+thirst. Presently he returned to the old woman and said to her, "I
+marvel, O ancient dame, at thy choosing to sojourn in this place"—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Thirty-fifth Night,
+
+She said, it hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the
+palmer-man drank the bitter draught for stress of thirst, he returned
+and said "I marvel, O ancient dame, at thy choosing to sojourn in this
+place and thy putting up with such meat and drink!" She asked, "And how
+is it then in thy country?"; whereto he answered, "In my country are
+houses wide and spacious and fruits ripe and delicious and waters sweet
+and viands savorous and of goodly use and meats fat and full of juice
+and flocks innumerous and all things pleasant and all the goods of
+life, the like whereof are not, save in the Paradise which Allah the
+Omnipotent hath promised to His servants pious." Replied she, "All this
+have I heard: but tell me, have ye a Sultan who ruleth over you and is
+tyrannical in his rule and under whose hand you are; one who, if any of
+you commit an offence, taketh his goods and ruineth him and who, whenas
+he will, turneth you out of house and home and uprooteth you, stock and
+branch?" Replied the man, "Indeed that may be;" and she rejoined, "If
+so, by Allah, these your delicious food and life of daintyhood and
+gifts however good, with tyranny and oppression, are but a searching
+poison, while our coarse meat which in freedom and safety we eat is a
+healthful medicine. Hast thou not heard that the best of boons, after
+Al-Islam, the true Faith, are sanity and security?"[FN#279] "Now such
+boons (quoth he who telleth the tale) may be by the just rule of the
+Sultan, Vice-regent of Allah on His earth, and the goodness of his
+polity. The Sultan of time past needed but little awfulness, for when
+the lieges saw him, they feared him; but the Sultan of these days hath
+need of the most accomplished polity and the utmost majesty, because
+men are not as men of by-gone time and this our age is one of folk
+opprobrious, and is greatly calamitous, noted for folly and hardness of
+heart and inclined to hate and enmity. If, therefore, the Sultan (which
+Almighty Allah forfend!) be weak or wanting in polity and majesty, this
+will be the assured cause of his country's ruin. Quoth the proverb, 'An
+hundred years of the Sultan's tyranny, but not one year of the people's
+tyranny one over other.' When the lieges oppress one another, Allah
+setteth over them a tyrannical Sultan and a terrible King. Thus it is
+told in history that one day there was sent to Al-Hajjαj bin Yϊsuf a
+slip of paper, whereon was written, 'Fear Allah and oppress not His
+servants with all manner of oppression.' When he read this, he mounted
+the pulpit (for he was eloquent and ever ready of speech), and said, 'O
+folk, Allah Almighty hath made me ruler over you, by reason of your
+frowardness;'"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to
+say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Thirty-sixth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when Hajjaj
+Yousuf-son read the paper he mounted the pulpit and said, "O folk,
+Allah Almighty hath made me ruler over you by reason of your
+frowardness; and indeed, though I die yet will ye not be delivered from
+oppression, with these your ill deeds; for the Almighty hath created
+like unto me many an one. If it be not I, 'twill be one more
+mischievous than I and a mightier in oppression and a more merciless in
+his majesty; even as saith the poet:[FN#280]—
+
+ 'For not a deed the hand can try
+
+
+ Save 'neath the hand of God on high,
+
+
+ Nor tyrant harsh work tyranny
+
+
+ Uncrushed by tyrant harsh as he.'
+
+
+
+Tyranny is feared: but justice is the best of all things. We beg
+
+
+Allah to better our case!" And among tales is that of
+
+
+
+
+ABU AL-HUSN AND HIS SLAVE-GIRL TAWADDUD.[FN#281]
+
+There was once in Baghdad a man of consequence and rich in monies and
+immoveables, who was one of the chiefs of the merchants; and Allah 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 issue, male or female. His years
+waxed great; his bones became wasted and his back bent; weakness and
+weariness grew upon 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 his name should be remembered. So he betook himself with
+supplication to Almighty Allah, fasting by day and praying through the
+night. Moreover, he vowed many vows to the Living, the Eternal; and
+visited the pious and was constant in supplication to the Most Highest,
+till He gave ear to him and accepted his prayer and took pity on his
+straining and complaining; so that, before many days were past, he knew
+carnally one of his women and she conceived by him the same night. In
+due time she finished her months and, casting her burden, bore a male
+child as he were a slice of the moon; whereupon the merchant fulfilled
+his vows in his gratitude to Allah, (to whom be honour and glory!) and
+gave alms and clothed the widow and the orphan. On the seventh night
+after the boy's birth, he named him Abu al-Husn,[FN#282] and the
+wet-nurses suckled him and the dry-nurses dandled him and the servants
+and the slaves carried him and handled him, till he shot up and grew
+tall and throve greatly and learnt the Sublime Koran and the ordinances
+of Al-Islam and the Canons of the True Faith; and calligraphy and
+poetry and mathematics and archery. On this wise he became the
+union-pearl of his age and the goodliest of the folk of his time and
+his day; fair of face and of tongue fluent, carrying himself with a
+light and graceful gait and glorying in his stature proportionate and
+amorous graces which were to many a bait: and his cheeks were red and
+flower-white was his forehead and his side face waxed brown with tender
+down, even as saith one, describing him,
+
+"The spring of the down on cheeks right clearly shows: * And how
+
+
+ when the Spring is gone shall last the rose?
+
+
+Dost thou not see that the growth upon his cheek * Is violet-
+
+
+ bloom that from its leaves outgrows."
+
+
+
+He abode awhile in ease and happiness with his father, who 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, "O my son, the appointed
+term draweth near; my hour of death is at hand and it remaineth but to
+meet Allah (to whom belong Majesty and Might!). I leave thee what shall
+suffice thee, even to thy son's son, of monies and mansions, farms and
+gardens; wherefore, fear thou Almighty Allah, O my son, in dealing with
+that which I bequeath to thee and follow none but those who will help
+thee to the Divine favour." Not long after, he sickened and died; so
+his son ordered his funeral,[FN#283] after the goodliest wise, and
+burying him, returned to his house and sat mourning for him many days
+and nights. But behold, certain of his friends came in to him and said
+to him, "Whoso leaveth a son like thee is not dead; indeed, what is
+past is past and fled and mourning beseemeth none but the young maid
+and the wife cloistered." And they ceased not from him till they
+wrought on him to enter the Hammam and break off his mourning.—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Thirty-seventh Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when Abu al-Husn
+was visited by his friends and taken to the Hamman and persuaded to
+break off his mourning, he presently forgot his father's charge, and
+his head was turned by his riches; he thought fortune would always wone
+with him as it was, and that wealth would ever wax and never wane. So
+he ate and drank and made merry and took his pleasure and gave gifts of
+gear and coin and was profuse with gold and addrest himself up to
+eating fowls and breaking the seals of wine-flasks and listening to the
+giggle of the daughter of the vine, as she gurgled from the flagon and
+enjoying the jingle of the singing-girls; nor did he give over this way
+of life, till his wealth was wasted and the case worsened and all his
+goods went from him and he bit his hands[FN#284] in bitter penitence.
+For of a truth he had nothing left, after that which he had squandered,
+but a concubine, a slave-girl whom his father had bequeathed to him
+with the rest of his estate: and she had no equal in beauty and
+loveliness and brightness and liveliness and symmetric stature and
+perfect grace. She was past mistress in every 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#285] for her seductive genius, and outdid the fair both in
+theory and practice, and she was noted for her swimming gait, flexile
+and delicate, albeit she was full five feet in height and by all the
+boons of fortune deckt and dight, with strait arched brows twain, as
+they were the crescent moon of Sha'abαn,[FN#286] and eyes like
+gazelles' eyne; and nose like the edge of scymitar fine and cheeks like
+anemones of blood-red shine; and mouth like Solomon's seal and sign and
+teeth like necklaces of pearls in line; and navel holding an ounce of
+oil of benzoin and waist more slender than his body whom love hath
+wasted and whom concealment hath made sick with pine and hind parts
+heavier than two hills of sand; briefly she was a volume of charms
+after his saying who saith,
+
+"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 no wise 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."[FN#287]
+
+
+
+She seemed a full moon rising and a gazelle browsing, a girl of nine
+plus five[FN#288] shaming the moon and sun, even as saith of her the
+sayer eloquent and ingenious,
+
+"Semblance of full-moon Heaven bore, * When five and five are
+
+
+ conjoined by four;
+
+
+'Tis not my sin if she made of me * Its like when it riseth
+
+
+ horizon o'er."[FN#289]
+
+
+
+Clean of skin, odoriferous of breath, it seemed as if she were of fire
+fashioned and of crystal moulded; rose-red was the cheek of her and
+perfect the shape and form of her; even as one saith of her, describing
+her,
+
+"Scented with sandal[FN#290] 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[FN#291] 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!"[FN#292]
+
+
+
+She captivated all who saw her, with the excellence of her beauty and
+the sweetness of her smile,[FN#293] and shot them down with the shafts
+she launched from her eyes; and withal she was eloquent of speech and
+excellently skilled in verse. Now when Abu al-Husn had squandered all
+his gold, and his ill-plight all could behold, and there remained to
+him naught save this slave-girl, he abode three days without tasting
+meat or taking rest in sleep, and the handmaid said to him, "O my lord,
+carry me to the Commander of the Faithful, Harun al-Rashid,"—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Thirty-eighth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that quoth the
+slave-girl to her master, "O my lord, carry me to Harun al-Rashid,
+fifth of the sons of Abbas, and seek of him to my price ten thousand
+dinars. If he deem me dear, say to him: 'O Prince of True Believers, my
+handmaid is worth more than this: do but prove her, and her value will
+be magnified in thine eyes; for this slave-girl hath not her equal, and
+she were unfit to any but thou.'" And she added, "Beware, O my lord, of
+selling me at less than the sum I have named; indeed 'tis but little
+for the like of me." Now her owner knew not her worth nor that she had
+no equal in her day; but he carried her to the Caliph and set her in
+the presence and repeated what she had bidden him say. The Caliph asked
+her, "What is thy name?"; to which she answered, "My name is
+Tawaddud."[FN#294] He then enquired, "O Tawaddud, in what branches of
+knowledge dost thou excel?"; and she replied, "O my lord, I am versed
+in syntax and poetry and jurisprudence and exegesis and philosophy; and
+I am skilled in music and the knowledge of the Divine ordinances and in
+arithmetic and geodesy and geometry and the fables of the ancients. I
+know the Sublime Koran by heart and have read it according to the
+seven, the ten and the fourteen modes. I know the number of its
+chapters and versets and sections and words; and its halves and fourths
+and eighths and tenths; the number of prostrations which occur in it
+and the sum total of its letters; and I know what there is in it of
+abrogating and abrogated[FN#295]; also what parts of it were revealed
+at Al-Medinah and what at Meccah and the cause of the different
+revelations. I know the Holy Traditions of the Apostle's sayings,
+historical and legendary, the established and those whose ascription is
+doubtful; and I have studied the exact sciences, geometry and
+philosophy and medicine and logic and rhetoric and composition; and I
+have learnt many things by rote and am passionately fond of poetry. I
+can play the lute and know its gamut and notes and notation and the
+crescendo and diminuendo. If I sing and dance, I seduce, and if I dress
+and scent myself, I slay. In fine, I have reached a pitch of perfection
+such as can be estimated only by those of them who are firmly rooted in
+knowledge."[FN#296] Now when the Caliph heard these words spoken by one
+so young, he wondered at her eloquence, and turning to Abu al-Husn,
+said, "I will summon those who shall discuss with her all she claimeth
+to know; if she answer correctly, I will give thee the price thou
+askest for her and more; and if not, thou art fitter to have her than
+I." "With gladness and goodly gree, O Commander of the Faithful,"
+replied Abu al-Husn. So the Caliph wrote to the Viceroy of Bassorah, to
+send him Ibrahim bin Siyyαr the prosodist, 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 learned doctors of the law and
+physicians and astrologers and scientists and mathematicians and
+philosophers; and Ibrahim was more learned than all. In a little while
+they arrived at the palace of the Caliphate, knowing not what was to
+do, and the Caliph sent for them to his sitting-chamber and ordered
+them to be seated. So they sat down and he bade bring the damsel
+Tawaddud who came and unveiling, showed herself, as she were a
+sparkling star.[FN#297] The Caliph set her a stool of gold; and she
+saluted, and speaking with an eloquent tongue, said, "O Commander of
+the Faithful, bid the Olema and the doctors of law and leaches and
+astrologers and scientists and mathematicians and all here 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 stultify
+her argument in all she advanceth;" and they answered, saying, "We hear
+and we obey Allah and thee, O Commander of the Faithful." Upon this
+Tawaddud bowed her head and said, "Which of you is the doctor of the
+law, the scholar, versed in the readings of the Koran and in the
+Traditions?" Quoth one of them, "I am the man thou seekest." Quoth she,
+"Then ask me of what thou wilt." Said the doctor, "Hast thou read the
+precious book of Allah and dost thou know its cancelling and cancelled
+parts and hast thou meditated its versets and its letters?" "Yes,"
+answered she. "Then," said he, "I will proceed to question thee of the
+obligations and the immutable ordinances: so tell me of these, O
+damsel, and who is thy Lord, who thy prophet, who thy Guide, what is
+thy point of fronting in prayer, and who be thy brethren? Also what thy
+spiritual path and what thy highway?" Whereto she replied, "Allah is my
+Lord, and Mohammed (whom Allah save and assain!) my prophet, and the
+Koran is my guide and the Ka'abah my fronting; and the True-believers
+are my brethren. The practice of good is my path and the Sunnah my
+highway." The Caliph again marvelled at her words so eloquently spoken
+by one so young; and the doctor pursued, "O damsel, with what do we
+know Almighty Allah?" Said she, "With the understanding." Said he, "And
+what is the understanding?" Quoth she, "It is of two kinds, natural and
+acquired."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying
+her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Thirty-ninth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the damsel
+continued, "The understanding is of two kinds, natural and acquired.
+The natural is that which Allah (to whom be honour and glory!) created
+for the right direction of His servants after His will; and the
+acquired is that which men accomplish by dint of study and fair
+knowledge." He rejoined, "Thou hast answered well." Q "Where is the
+seat of the understanding?"—"Allah casteth it in the heart whence its
+lustrous beams ascend to the brain and there become fixed." Q "How
+knowest thou the Prophet of Allah?" "By the reading of Allah's Holy
+Book and by signs and proofs and portents and miracles!" Q "What are
+the obligations and the immutable ordinances?" "The obligations are
+five. (1) Testification that there is no ilαh[FN#298] but Allah, no god
+but the God alone and One, which for partner hath none, and that
+Mohammed is His servant and His apostle. (2) The standing in
+prayers.[FN#299] (3) The payment of the poor-rate. (4) Fasting Ramazan.
+(5) The Pilgrimage to Allah's Holy House for all to whom the journey is
+possible. The immutable ordinances are four; to wit, night and day and
+sun and moon, the which build up life and hope; nor any son of Adam
+wotteth if they will be destroyed on the Day of Judgment." Q "What are
+the obligatory observances of the Faith?" "They are five, prayer,
+almsgiving, fasting, pilgrimage, fighting for the Faith and abstinence
+from the forbidden." Q "Why dost thou stand up to pray?" "To express
+the devout intent of the slave acknowledging the Deity." Q "What are
+the obligatory conditions which precede standing in prayer?"
+"Purification, covering the shame, avoidance of soiled clothes,
+standing on a clean place, fronting the Ka'abah, an upright posture,
+the intent[FN#300] and the pronouncing 'Allaho Akbar' of
+prohibition."[FN#301] Q "With what shouldest thou go forth from thy
+house to pray?" "With the intent of worship mentally pronounced." Q
+"With what intent shouldest thou enter the mosque?" "With an intent of
+service." Q "Why do we front the Kiblah[FN#302]?" "In obedience to
+three Divine orders and one Traditional ordinance." Q "What are the
+beginning, the consecration and the end of prayer?" "Purification
+beginneth prayer, saying the Allaho Akbar of prohibition consecrateth,
+and the salutation endeth prayer." Q "What deserveth he who neglecteth
+prayer?" "It is reported, among the authentic Traditions of the
+Prophet, that he said, 'Whoso neglecteth prayer wilfully and purposely
+hath no part in Al-Islam.'"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and
+ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Fortieth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that after the damsel
+had repeated the words of that Holy Tradition the doctor cried, "Thou
+hast replied aright: now say me, what is prayer?" "Prayer is communion
+between the slave and his lord, and in it are ten virtues: (1) it
+illumineth the heart; (2) it maketh the face shine; (3) it pleaseth the
+Compassionate One; (4) it angereth Satan; (5) it conjureth calamity;
+(6) it wardeth off the mischief of enemies; (7) it multiplieth mercy;
+(8) it forfendeth vengeance and punishment; (9) it bringeth the slave
+nigh unto his lord; and (10) it restraineth from lewdness and
+frowardness. Hence it is one of the absolute requisites and obligatory
+ordinances and the pillar of the Faith." Q "What is the key of prayer?"
+"Wuzd or the lesser ablution."[FN#303] Q "What is the key to the lesser
+ablution?" "Intention and naming the Almighty." Q "What is the key of
+naming the Almighty?" "Assured faith." Q "What is the key of faith?"
+"Trust in the Lord." Q "What is the key of trust in the Lord?" "Hope."
+Q "What is the key of hope?" "Obedience." Q "What is the key of
+obedience?" "The confession of the Unity and the acknowledgment of the
+divinity of Allah." Q "What are the Divine ordinances of Wuzu, the
+minor ablution?" "They are six, according to the canon of the Imam
+al-Shαfi'ν Mohammed bin Idris (of whom Allah accept!): (1) intent while
+washing the face; (2) washing the face; (3) washing the hands and
+forearms; (4) wiping part of the head; (5) washing the feet and heels;
+and (6) observing due order.[FN#304] And the traditional statutes are
+ten: (1) nomination; (2) and washing the hands before putting them into
+the water-pot; (3) and mouth-rinsing; (4) and snuffing;[FN#305] (5) and
+wiping the whole head; (6) and wetting the ears within and without with
+fresh water; (7) and separating a thick beard; (8) and separating the
+fingers and toes;[FN#306] (9) and washing the right foot before the
+left and (10) doing each of these thrice and all in unbroken order.
+When the minor ablution is ended, the worshipper should say, I testify
+that there is no god but the God, the One, which for partner hath none,
+and I testify that Mohammed is His servant and His apostle. O my Allah,
+make me of those who repent and in purity are permanent! Glory to Thee,
+O my God, and in Thy praise I bear witness, that there is no god save
+Thou! I crave pardon of Thee and I repent to Thee! For it is reported,
+in the Holy Traditions, that the Prophet (whom Allah bless and
+preserve!) said of this prayer, 'Whoso endeth every ablution with this
+prayer, the eight gates of Paradise are open to him; he shall enter at
+which he pleaseth.'" Q "When a man purposeth ablution, what betideth
+him from the angels and the devils?" "When a man prepareth for
+ablution, the angels come and stand on his right and the devils on his
+left hand.[FN#307] If he name Almighty Allah 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 Allah
+and craving pardon for him, so long as he remaineth silent or calleth
+upon the name of Allah. But if he omit to begin washing with naming
+Allah (to whom belong might and majesty!), neither remain silent, the
+devils take command of him; and the angels depart from him and Satan
+whispereth evil thoughts unto him, till he fall into doubt and come
+short in his ablution. For (quoth he on whom be blessing and peace!),
+'A perfect ablution driveth away Satan and assureth against the tyranny
+of the Sultan'; and again quoth he, 'If calamity befal one who is not
+pure by ablution; verily and assuredly let him blame none but
+himself.'" Q "What should a man do when he awaketh from sleep?" "He
+should wash his hands thrice, before putting them into the water
+vessel." Q "What are the Koranic and traditional orders anent Ghusl,
+the complete ablution[FN#308]?" "The divine ordinances are intent and
+'crowning'[FN#309] the whole body with water, that is, the liquid shall
+come at every part of the hair and skin. Now the traditional ordinances
+are the minor ablution as preliminary; rubbing the body; separating the
+hair and deferring in words[FN#310] the washing of the feet till the
+end of the ablution."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and
+ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Forty-first Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the damsel
+had recounted to the doctor what were the divine and traditional orders
+anent Ghusl or total ablution, quoth he, "Thou hast replied aright: now
+tell me what are the occasions for Tayammum, or making the ablution
+with sand and dust; and what are the ordinances thereof, divine and
+human?" "The reasons are seven, viz.: want of water; fear lest water
+lack; need thereto; going astray on a march; sickness; having broken
+bones in splints and having open wounds.[FN#311] As for its ordinances,
+the divine number four, viz., intent, dust, clapping it to the face and
+clapping it upon the hands; and the human number two, nomination and
+preferring the right before the left hand." Q "What are the conditions,
+the pillars or essentials, and the traditional statutes of prayer?"
+"The conditions are five: (1) purification of the members; (2) covering
+of the privy parts; (3) observing the proper hours, either of certainty
+or to the best of one's belief; (4) fronting the Kiblah; and (5)
+standing on a clean place. The pillars or essentials number twelve: (1)
+intent; (2) the Takbνr or magnification of prohibition; (3) standing
+when able to stand[FN#312]; (4) repeating the Fatihah or opening
+chapter of the Koran and saying, 'In the name of Allah, the
+Compassionating, the Compassionate!' with a verse thereof according to
+the canon of the Imam Al-Shafi'i; (5) bowing the body and keeping it
+bowed; (6) returning to the upright posture and so remaining for the
+time requisite; (7) prostration and permanence therein; (8) sitting
+between two prostrations and permanence therein; (9) repeating the
+latter profession of the Faith and sitting up therefor; (10) invoking
+benediction on the Prophet (whom Allah bless and preserve!) (11) the
+first Salutation,[FN#313] and (12) the intent of making an end of
+prayer expressed in words. But the traditional statutes are the call to
+prayer; the standing posture; raising the hands (to either side of the
+face) whilst pronouncing the prohibition; uttering the magnification
+before reciting the Fatihah; seeking refuge with Allah[FN#314]; saying,
+'Amen'; repeating the chapter of the Koran after the Fatihah, repeating
+the magnifications during change of posture; saying, 'May Allah hear
+him who praiseth Him! and O our Lord, to Thee be the praise!'; praying
+aloud in the proper place[FN#315] and praying under the breath prayers
+so prescribed; the first profession of unity and sitting up thereto;
+blessing the Prophet therein; blessing his family in the latter
+profession and the second Salutation." Q "On what is the Zakαt or
+obligatory poor-rate taxable?" "On gold and silver and camels and oxen
+and sheep and wheat and barley and holcus and millet and beans and
+vetches and rice and raisins and dates." Q "What is the Zakαt or
+poor-rate on gold?" "Below twenty miskals or dinars, nothing; but on
+that amount half a dinar for every score and so on
+proportionally.[FN#316]" Q "On silver?" "Under two hundred dirhams
+nothing, then five dirhams on every two hundred and so forth." Q "On
+camels?" "For every five, an ewe, or for every twenty-five a pregnant
+camel." Q "On sheep?" "An ewe for every forty head," Q "What are the
+ordinances of the Ramazan Fast?" "The Koranic are intent; abstinence
+from eating, drinking and carnal copulation, and the stoppage of
+vomiting. It is incumbent on all who submit to the Law, save women in
+their courses and forty days after childbirth; 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 the intent be
+pronounced at nightfall. The traditional ordinances of fasting are,
+hastening to break the fast at sundown; deferring the fore-dawn
+meal,[FN#317] and abstaining from speech, save for good works and for
+calling on the name of Allah and reciting the Koran." Q "What things
+vitiate not the fast?" "The use of unguents and eye-powders and the
+dust of the road and the undesigned swallowing of saliva and the
+emission of seed in nocturnal pollution or at the sight of a strange
+woman and blooding and cupping; none of these things vitiates the
+fast." Q "What are the prayers of the two great annual Festivals?" "Two
+one-bow prayers, which be a traditional ordinance, without call to
+prayer or standing up to pronounce the call;[FN#318] but let the Moslem
+say, 'Prayer is a collector of all folk!'[FN#319] and pronounce 'Allaho
+Akbar' seven times in the first prayer, besides the Takbir of
+prohibition; and, in the second, five times, besides the magnification
+of rising up (according to the doctrine of the Imam Al-Shafi'i, on whom
+Allah have mercy!) and make the profession of the Faith."—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Forty-second Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the damsel
+had answered the doctor anent the Festival-prayers, quoth he, "Thou
+hast replied aright: now tell me what are the prayers prescribed on the
+occasion of an eclipse of the sun or moon?" "Two one-bow prayers
+without call to prayer or standing thereto by the worshipper, who shall
+make in each two-bow prayer double standing up and double inclinations
+and two-fold prostrations, then sit and testify and salute." Q "What is
+the ritual of prayer for rain?" "Two one-bow prayers without call to
+prayer or standing thereto; then shall the Moslem make the profession
+and salute. Moreover the Imam shall deliver an exhortation and ask
+pardon of Allah, in place of the magnification, as in the two sermons
+of the Festivals and turn his mantle upper edge downwards and pray and
+supplicate." Q "What are the Witr, the additional or occasional
+prayers?" "The least is a one-bow prayer and the most eleven." Q "What
+is the forenoon prayer?" "At least, two one-bow prayers and at most,
+twelve." Q "What hast thou to say of the I'itikαf or retreat[FN#320]?"
+"It is a matter of traditional ordinance." Q "What are its conditions?"
+"(1) 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 the Hajj or Pilgrimage[FN#321]
+obligatory?" "Manhood, and understanding and being a Moslem and
+practicability; in which case it is obligatory on all, once before
+death." Q "What are the Koranic statutes of the Pilgrimage?" "(1) The
+Ihrαm or pilgrim's habit; (2) the standing at Arafat; (3)
+circumambulating the Ka'abah; (4) running between Safα and
+Marwah[FN#322]; and (5) shaving or clipping the hair." Q "What are the
+Koranic statutes of the 'Umrah[FN#323] or lesser pilgrimage?" "Assuming
+the pilgrim's habit and compassing and running." Q "What are the
+Koranic ordinances of the assumption of the pilgrim's habit?"[FN#324]
+"Doffing sewn garments, forswearing perfume and ceasing to shave the
+head or pare the nails, and avoiding the killing of game, and eschewing
+carnal copulation." Q "What are the traditional statutes of the
+pilgrimage?" "(1) The crying out 'Labbay'ka, Adsum, Here am I, O our
+Lord, here am I!'[FN#325]4 (2) the Ka'abah-circuitings[FN#326] of
+arrival and departure; (3) the passing the night at the Mosque of
+Muzdalifah and in the valley of Mina, and (4) the lapidation.[FN#327]"
+Q "What is the Jihαd or Holy War and its essentials?" "Its essentials
+are: (1) the descent of the Infidels upon us; (2) the presence of the
+Imam; (3) a state of preparation; and (4) firmness in meeting the foe.
+Its traditional ordinance is incital to battle, in that the Most High
+hath said, 'O thou my Prophet, incite the faithful to fight!'[FN#328]"
+Q "What are the ordinances of buying and selling?" "The Koranic are:
+(1) offer and acceptance and (2) if the thing sold be a white slave, by
+whom one profiteth, all possible endeavour to convert him to Al-Islam;
+and (3) to abstain from usury; the traditional are: making void[FN#329]
+and option before not after separating, according to his saying (whom
+Allah bless and preserve!), 'The parties to a sale shall have the
+option of cancelling or altering terms whilst they are yet
+unseparated.'", Q "What is it forbidden to sell for what?" "On this
+point I mind me of an authentic tradition, reported by Nαf'i[FN#330] of
+the Apostle of Allah, that he forbade the barter of dried dates for
+fresh and fresh figs for dry and jerked for fresh meat and cream for
+clarified butter; in fine, all eatables of one and the same kind, it is
+unlawful to buy or barter some for other some.[FN#331]" Now when the
+doctor of law heard her words and knew that she was wit-keen,
+penetrative, ingenious and learned in jurisprudence and the Traditions
+and the interpretation of the Koran and what not else, he said in his
+mind, "Needs must I manoeuvre 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 Wuzu?" And she answered,
+"Philologically it signifieth cleanliness and freedom from impurities."
+Q "And of Salαt or prayer?" "An invocation of good" Q "And of Ghusl?"
+"Purification." Q "And of Saum or fasting?" "Abstention." Q "And of
+Zakαt?" "Increase. Q "And of Hajj or pilgrimage?" "Visitation." Q "And
+of Jihαd?" "Repelling." With this the doctor's arguments were cut
+off,—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Forty-third Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the doctor's
+arguments were cut off, he rose to his feet and said, "Bear witness
+against me, O Commander of the Faithful, that this damsel is more
+learned in the Law than I am." Quoth she, "I will ask thee somewhat,
+which do thou answer me speedily, an thou be indeed a learned man."
+Quoth he, "Say on;" and she said, "What are the arrows of the Faith?"
+Answered he, "They number ten: (1) Testification, 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) Bidding to
+beneficence and (8) Forbidding from frowardness, both of which are a
+man's honour; (9) Commune,[FN#332] that is, sociableness of the
+Faithful; and (10) Seeking knowledge, that is, the praiseworthy path."
+She rejoined, "Thou hast replied aright and now remaineth but one
+question, 'What be the roots or fundamentals of Al-Islam?'" He said
+"They are four: sincerity of belief, truth of intent, observance of the
+lawful limit 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 or superstructure of Al-Islam?" But he was silent awhile
+and made no reply: so she cried "Doff thy clothes and I will expound
+them to thee." Quoth the Caliph "Expound them, and I will make him put
+off his clothes for thee." She said, "There are two-and-twenty
+branches: (1) holding fast to the Book of Allah the Most Highest; (2)
+taking example by His Apostle (whom Allah bless and preserve!); (3)
+abstaining from evil doing; (4) eating what is lawful and (5) avoiding
+what is unlawful; (6) restitution of things wrongfully taken; (7)
+repentance; (8) knowledge of the Law; (9) love of the Friend,[FN#333]
+(10) and of the followers of the true Revelation; (11) belief in the
+apostles of Al-Islam; (12) fear of apostacy; (13) preparation for
+departing this life; (14) force of conviction; (15) mercy on all
+possible occasions; (16) strength in time of weakness; (17) patience
+under trials; (18) knowledge of Allah Almighty and (19) of what His
+Prophet hath made known to us; (20) thwarting Iblis the accursed; (21)
+striving earnestly against the lusts of the soul and warring them down,
+and (22) devotion to the one God." Now when the Commander of the
+Faithful heard her words, he bade the professor put off his clothes and
+hooded turband; and so did that doctor and went forth, beaten and
+confounded, from the Caliph's presence. Thereupon another man stood up
+and said to her, "O damsel, hear a few questions from me." Quoth she,
+"Say on;' and he asked, "What are the conditions of purchase by
+advance?" whereto she answered, "That the price be fixed, the kind be
+fixed and the period of delivery be fixed and known." Q "What are the
+Koranic and the traditional canons of eating?" "The confession that
+Allah Almighty provideth the eater and giveth him meat and drink, with
+thanksgiving to Him therefor." Q "What is thanksgiving?" "The use by
+the creature of that which the Creator vouchsafeth to him, according as
+it was created for the creature." Q "What are the traditional canons of
+eating?" "The Bismillah[FN#334] and washing both hands; sitting on the
+left of the hind part; eating with three fingers, and eating of that
+which hath been duly masticated.[FN#335]" Q "What are good manners in
+eating?" "Taking small mouthfuls and looking little at one's
+table-companion."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to
+say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Forty-fourth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the damsel
+had answered concerning good manners in eating, the doctor who was
+trying her, rejoined, "Thou hast replied aright. Now tell me what are
+the stays of the heart and their supports?"[FN#336] "The stays and
+supports both number three: (1) holding fast to the Faith, the support
+whereof is the shunning of infidelity; (2) holding fast to the
+Traditional Law, and its support the shunning of innovation; and (3)
+holding fast to obedience, and its support the shunning of
+disobedience." Q "What are the conditions of Wuzu?" "(1) being a
+Moslem; (2) discernment of good and evil; (3) purity of the water, and
+(4) absence of material or religious impediments." Q "What is belief?"
+"It is divided into nine parts: (1) belief in the One worshipped; (2)
+belief in the condition of slavery of the worshipper; (3) belief in the
+personality of the Deity; (4) belief in the Two Handfuls;[FN#337] (5)
+belief in Providence which allotteth to man his lot; (6) belief in the
+Abrogating and (7) in the Abrogated; (8) belief in Allah, His angels
+and apostles; and (9) in fore-ordained Fate, general and individual,
+its good and ill, its sweet and bitter." Q "What three things do away
+other three?" "It is told of Sufyαn al-Saurν[FN#338] that he said,
+'Three things do away with 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.?" "Quoth Almighty Allah,
+'And the heaven shall be opened and be full of portals;'[FN#339] and
+quoth he whom Allah bless and preserve!, 'None knoweth the number of
+the gates of heavens, save He who created the heavens, and there is no
+son of Adam but hath two gates allotted to him in the heavens, one
+whereby his daily bread descendeth and another wherethrough his works
+ascend. The first gate is not closed, save when his term of life cometh
+to an end, nor the gate of works, good and evil, till his soul ascend
+for judgment.'" Q "Tell me of a thing and a half thing and a no-thing."
+"The thing is the Moslem; the half thing the hypocrite,[FN#340] and the
+no-thing the miscreant." Q "Tell me of various kinds of hearts." "There
+is the whole heart, the sick heart, the contrite heart, the vowed heart
+and the enlightened heart. Now the whole heart is that of Abraham, the
+Friend of Allah; the sick heart is that of the Unbeliever in Al-Islam;
+the contrite heart is that of the pious who fear the Lord; the vowed
+heart is that of our Lord Mohammed (whom Allah bless and keep!) and the
+illuminated heart is that of his followers. Furthermore, the hearts of
+learned Olema are of three kinds, the heart which is in love with this
+world; the heart which loveth the next world, and the heart which
+loveth its Lord; and it is said that hearts are three, the suspended,
+that of the infidel; the non-existent, that of the hypocrite; and the
+constant, that of the True-believer. Moreover, it is said that the firm
+heart is of three kinds, viz., the heart dilated with light and faith,
+the heart wounded with fear of estrangement, and the heart which
+feareth to be forsaken of its Supreme Friend."—And Shahrazad perceived
+the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Forty-fifth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the second
+doctor declared. "Thou hast said well," quoth she to the Caliph, "O
+Commander of the Faithful, he hath questioned me, till he is weary, and
+now I will ask of him two questions. If he answer them both, it is
+well; and if not, I will take his clothes and he shall wend in peace."
+Quoth the doctor, "Ask me what thou wilt," and she said, "What sayest
+thou religion is?" Answered he, "Religion is confession of Faith with
+the tongue and conviction with the heart and correspondent action with
+the members. He (upon whom be blessings and peace!) hath said, 'The
+believer is not perfect in belief, except he perfect himself in five
+qualities, namely: trust in Allah,[FN#341] committal of his affair to
+Allah, submission to the commands of Allah, acquiescence in the decrees
+of Allah; and that all he doth be done for sake of Allah; so is he of
+those who are acceptable to the Deity, and who give to Him and withhold
+for Him; and such man is perfect in belief.'" Then said she, "What is
+the Divine ordinance of ordinances and the ordinance which is the
+initiator 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 the prophetic practice
+whereby the Divine is completed?" But he was silent and made no reply;
+whereupon the Caliph bade her expound and ordered him to doff his
+clothes and give them to her. Said she, "O doctor, the Koranic
+ordinance of ordinances is the knowledge of Allah Almighty; that, which
+is the initiative of all others, is the testifying there is no god but
+the God and Mohammed is the Apostle of God; that, of which all others
+have need, is the Wuzu-ablution; that, which compriseth all others, is
+the Ghusl-ablution from defilement[FN#342]; the Traditional ordinance
+that entereth into the Koranic, is the separation of the fingers and
+the thick beard;[FN#343] and that, wherewith all Koranic ordinances are
+completed, is circumcision."[FN#344] Therewith was made manifest the
+defeat of the doctor, who rose to his feet and said, "I call Allah to
+witness, O Commander of the Faithful, that this damsel is more learned
+than I in theology and what pertaineth to the Law." So saying, he put
+off his clothes and went away ignominiously worsted. Then she turned to
+the rest of the learned men present and said, "O masters, which of you
+is the Koranist, the reader and reciter of the Koran, versed in the
+seven readings and in syntax and in lexicography?" Thereupon a
+professor arose and, seating himself before her, said "Hast thou read
+the Book of Almighty Allah and made thyself thoroughly acquainted with
+its signs, that is its verses, and its abrogating parts and abrogated
+portions, its unequivocal commands and its ambiguous; and the
+difference of its revelations, Meccan and Medinan? Dost thou understand
+its interpretation and hast thou studied it, according to the various
+traditions and origins?" "Yes," answered she; and he said, "What then
+is the number of its chapters, how many are the decades and versets,
+how many words and how many letters and how many acts of prostration
+and how many prophets and how many chapters are Medinan and how many
+are Meccan and how many birds are mentioned in it?" Replied she, "O my
+lord, its chapters are an hundred and fourteen, whereof seventy were
+revealed at Meccah and forty-four at Al-Medinah; and it containeth six
+hundred and twenty-one decades; six thousand three hundred and
+thirty-six versets;[FN#345] 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, are given ten benefits. The acts of prostration it compriseth
+are fourteen."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to
+say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Forty-sixth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the
+professor of Koranic exegesis questioned the damsel, she continued, "As
+regards the Prophets named in the Book there be five-and-twenty, to
+wit, Adam, Noah,[FN#346] Abraham, Ishmael, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Lot,
+Elisha, Jonah, Salih,[FN#347] or Heber, Hϊd,[FN#348] Shua'yb or
+Jethro,[FN#349] David, Solomon, Zϊ'l-kafl or Joshua, Idrνs, Elias,
+Yahyα or John the Baptist, Zacharias, Job, Moses, Aaron, Jesus and
+Mohammed,[FN#350] the peace of Allah and His blessing be on them all!
+Moreover, nine flying things are mentioned in the Koran, namely, the
+gnat, the bee, the fly, the ant, the hoopoe, the crow, the locust, the
+swallow and the bird of Jesus[FN#351] (on whom be peace!), to wit, the
+bat." Q "Which is the most excellent chapter of the Koran?" "That of
+The Cow.[FN#352]" Q "Which is the most magnificent verse?" "That of the
+Throne; it hath fifty words, bearing in each fifty blessings." Q "What
+sign or verse hath in it nine signs or wonders?" "That in which quoth
+Allah Almighty, 'Verily, in the creation of the Heaven and the Earth:
+and in the vicissitude of night, and day; and in the ship which saileth
+through the sea laden with what is profitable for mankind; and in the
+rain-water which God sendeth down from Heaven, quickening thereby the
+dead ground and replenishing the same with all sorts of cattle; and in
+the change of winds and in the clouds that are compelled to do service
+between the Heaven and the Earth;[FN#353]—are signs to people of
+understanding.'" Q "Which verse is the most just?" "That in which Allah
+saith, 'Verily, Allah enjoineth justice and the doing of good, and the
+giving unto kindred what shall be necessary; and He forbiddeth
+wickedness and iniquity and oppression'"[FN#354] Q "Which is the most
+greedy?" "That in which quoth Allah, 'Is it that every man of them
+greedeth to enter the Garden of Delight?'"[FN#355] Q "Which is the most
+hopeful?" "That in which quoth Almighty Allah, 'Say: O my servants who
+have transgressed against your own souls, despair not of the mercy of
+Allah; seeing, that Allah forgiveth all sins; aye Gracious, Merciful is
+He.'"[FN#356] Q "By what school of intonation dost thou read?" "By that
+of the people of Paradise, to wit, the version of Nαf'i." Q "In which
+verse doth Allah make prophets lie?"[FN#357] "In that wherein He saith,
+'They (the brothers of Joseph) brought his inner garment stained with
+false blood.'"[FN#358] Q "In which doth He make unbelievers speak the
+truth?" "In that wherein He saith, 'The Jews say, 'The Christians are
+grounded on nothing,' and the Christians say, 'The Jews are grounded on
+nothing'; and yet they both read the Scriptures;'[FN#359] and, so
+saying, all say sooth." Q "In which doth God speak in his own person?"
+"In that in which he saith, 'I have not created Genii and men for any
+other end than that they should serve me.'"[FN#360] Q "In which verse
+do the angels speak?" "In that which saith, 'But we celebrate Thy
+praise and extol Thy holiness.'"[FN#361] Q "What sayest thou of the
+formula:—I seek refuge with Allah from Satan the Stoned?" "It is
+obligatory by commandment of Allah on all before reading the Koran, as
+appeareth by His saying, 'When thou readest the Koran, seek refuge with
+Allah from Satan the Stoned.'"[FN#362] Q "What signify the words
+'seeking refuge'[FN#363] and what are the variants of the formula?"
+"Some say, 'I take refuge with Allah the All-hearing and All-knowing,'
+and others, 'With Allah the Strong;' but the best is that whereof the
+Sublime Koran speaketh and the Traditions perpetuate. And he (whom
+Allah bless and keep!) was used to ejaculate, 'I seek refuge with Allah
+from Satan the Stoned.' And quoth a Tradition, reported by Naf'i on the
+authority of his adopted father, 'The apostle of Allah, was wont when
+he rose in the night to pray, to say aloud, 'Allaho Akbar'; God is Most
+Great, with all Majesty! Praise be to Allah abundantly! Glory to Allah
+morn and even be!' Then would he say, 'I seek refuge with Allah from
+Satan the Stoned and from the delusions of the Devils and their evil
+suggestions.' And it is told of Ibn Abbas[FN#364] (of whom Allah
+accept!) that he said, 'The first time Gabriel came down to the Prophet
+with revelation he taught him the 'seeking refuge,' saying, 'O
+Mohammed, say, I seek refuge with Allah the All-hearing and
+All-knowing;' then say, 'In the name of Allah the Compassionating, the
+Compassionate!' Read, in the name of thy Lord who created;—created man
+of blood-clots."[FN#365] Now when the Koranist heard her words he
+marvelled at her expressions, her eloquence, her learning, her
+excellence, and said, "O damsel, what sayst thou of the verse 'In the
+name of Allah, the Compassionating, the Compassionate'? Is it one of
+the verses of the Koran?" "Yes; it is a verset of 'The Ant'[FN#366]
+occurring 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."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased
+saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Forty-seventh Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the damsel
+had told the professor concerning the difference of opinion among the
+learned touching the "Basmalah," he said, "Thou hast replied aright:
+now tell me why is not the formula written at the head of the chapter
+of Immunity[FN#367]?"; and she answered, "When this chapter was
+revealed from on high for the dissolution of the alliance between the
+Prophet and the idolaters, He (whom Allah bless and preserve!) sent
+Ali[FN#368] ibn Abν Tαlib (whose face Allah honour!) therewith, and he
+read the chapter to them, but did not read the Basmalah."[FN#369] Q
+"What of the excellence of the formula and its blessing?" "It is told
+of the Prophet that he said, 'Never is the Basmalah pronounced over
+aught, but there is a blessing in it;' and it is reported, on authority
+of Him (whom Allah bless and preserve!) that the Lord of Glory swore by
+His glory that never should the Basmalah be pronounced over a sick
+person, but he should be healed of his sickness. Moreover, it is said
+that, when Allah created the empyrean, it was agitated with an
+exceeding agitation; but He wrote on it, 'Bismillah' and its agitation
+subsided. When the formula first descended from heaven to the Prophet,
+he said, 'I am safe from three things, earthquake and metamorphosis and
+drowning; and indeed its boons are great and its blessings too many to
+enumerate. It is told of Allah's Apostle that he said, 'There will be
+brought 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 cry, 'O my God, Thou hast not dealt justly by me!' Then shall
+Allah (to whom be honour and glory!) say, 'How so?' and the man shall
+answer, O Lord, for that Thou callest Thyself the Compassionating, the
+Compassionate, yet wilt Thou punish me with the Fire!' And Allah
+(magnified be His Majesty!) shall reply, 'I did indeed name myself the
+Compassionating, the Compassionate. Carry My servant to Paradise, of My
+mercy, for I am the most Merciful of the mercifuls!'" Q "What was the
+origin of the use of the Basmalah?" "When Allah sent down from Heaven
+the Koran, they wrote, 'In Thy name, O my God!'; when Allah revealed
+the words, 'Say: Call upon Allah, or call upon the Compassionating,
+what days ye pray, for hath He the most excellent names,'[FN#370] they
+wrote, 'In the name of Allah, the Compassionating, the Compassionate;
+and, when He revealed the words, 'Your God is one God, there is no God
+but He, the Compassionating, the Compassionate,'[FN#371] they wrote,
+'In the name of Allah, the Compassionating, the Compassionate!'" Now
+when the Koranist heard her reply, he hung down his head and said to
+himself, "This be a marvel of marvels! How hath this slave-girl
+expounded the origin of the Basmalah? But, by Allah, needs must I go a
+bout with her and haply defeat her." So he asked, "Did Allah reveal the
+Koran all at once or at times manifold?" She answered, "Gabriel the
+Faithful (on whom be peace!) descended with it from the Lord of the
+Worlds upon His Prophet Mohammed, Prince of the Apostles and Seal of
+the Prophets, by detached versets: bidding and forbidding, covenanting
+and comminating, and containing advices and instances in the course of
+twenty years as occasion called for it." Q "Which chapter was first
+revealed?" "According to Ibn Abbas, that entituled 'Congealed
+Blood':[FN#372] and, according to Jαbir bin Abdillah,[FN#373] that
+called 'The Covered' which preceded all others.[FN#374]" Q "Which
+verset was the last revealed?" "That of 'Usury',[FN#375] and it is also
+said, the verse, 'When there cometh Allah's succour and
+victory.'"[FN#376]—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased
+to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Forty-eighth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the damsel
+told the Koranist which was the last verse he said, "Thou hast replied
+aright; now tell me the names of the Companions who collected the
+Koran, in the lifetime of the Apostle of Allah." And she answered "They
+were four, Ubay ibn Ka'ab, Zayd ibn Sαbit, Abϊ Obaydah 'Aamir bin
+Jarrαh, and Othmαn bin Affαn[FN#377] (Allah accept of them one and
+all!)" Q "Who are the readers, from whom the accepted reading of the
+Koran is taken?" "They number four, Abdallah bin Mas'ϊd, Ubay bin
+Ka'ab, Ma'az bin Jabal and Sαlim bin Abdillah." Q "What sayest thou of
+the words of the Most High, 'That which is sacrificed to
+stones'"?[FN#378] "The stones are idols, which are set up and
+worshipped, instead of Allah the Most High, and from this we seek
+refuge with Allah." Q "What sayest thou of the words of the Most High
+'Thou knowest what is in my soul, and I know not what is in Thy
+soul'"?[FN#379] "They mean, 'Thou knowest the truth of me and what is
+in me, and I know not what is in Thee;' and the proof of this are His
+words,[FN#380] 'Thou art He who wottest the hidden things'; and it is
+said, also, 'Thou knowest my essence, but I know not Thine essence.'" Q
+"What sayst thou of the words of the Most High, 'O true believers,
+forbid not yourselves the good things which Allah hath allowed
+you?'"[FN#381] "My Shaykh (on whom Allah have mercy!) told me that the
+Companion Al-Zahhαk related: 'There was a people of the True-believers
+who said, 'We will dock our members masculine and don sackcloth;'
+whereupon this verse was revealed. But Al-Kutαdah declareth that it was
+revealed on account of sundry Companions of the Apostle of Allah,
+namely, Ali ibn Abν Tαlib and Othmαn bin Musa'ab and others, who said,
+'We will geld ourselves and don hair cloth and make us monks.'" Q "What
+sayest thou of the words of the Most Highest, 'And Allah took Abraham
+for His friend'"?[FN#382] "The friend of Allah is the needy, the poor,
+and (according to another saying) he is the lover, he who is detached
+from the world in the love of Allah Almighty and in whose attachment
+there is no falling away." Now when the Koranist[FN#383] saw her pass
+on in speech with the passage of the clouds and that she stayed not in
+reply, he rose to his feet and said, "I take Allah to witness, O
+Commander of the Faithful, that this damsel is more learned than I in
+Koranic exegesis and what pertaineth 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." Quoth the Commander of the
+Faithful, "Ask on," and she enquired, "Which verset of the Koran hath
+in it three-and-twenty Kαfs, which sixteen Mνms, which an hundred and
+forty 'Ayns[FN#384] and which section[FN#385] lacketh the formula, 'To
+Whom belong glory and glorification and majesty[FN#386]?'" The Koranist
+could not reply, and she said to him, "Put off thy clothes." So he
+doffed them, and she continued, "O Commander of the Faithful, the
+verset of the sixteen Mims is in the chapter Hϊd and is the saying of
+the Most High, 'It was said, O Noah, go down in peace from us, and
+blessing upon thee!'[FN#387] 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 Ayns is in the chapter of Al-A'arαf,[FN#388] where
+the Lord saith, 'And Moses chose seventy men of his tribe to attend our
+appointed time;[FN#389] to each man a pair of eyes.'[FN#390] And the
+lesson, which lacketh the formula, 'To Whom be glory and
+glorification,' is that which comprises the chapters, The Hour draweth
+nigh and the Moon shall be cloven in twain[FN#391]; The Compassionate
+and The Event."[FN#392] Thereupon the professor departed in
+confusion.—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying
+her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Forty-ninth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the damsel
+defeated the Koranist and took off his clothes and sent him away
+confused, then came forward the skilled physician and said to her, "We
+are free of 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 first and chief vein and why Adam was named Adam?"
+She replied, "Adam was called Adam, because of his udmah, that is, the
+wheaten 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 surface-soil.
+His breast was made of the earth of the Ka'abah, his head of earth from
+the East and his legs of earth from the West. There were created for
+him seven doors in his head, viz., the eyes, the ears, the nostrils and
+the mouth, and two passages, before and behind. The eyes were made the
+seat of the sight-sense, the ears the seat of the hearing-sense, the
+nostrils the seat of the smell-sense, the mouth the seat of the
+taste-sense and the tongue to utter what is in the heart of
+man.[FN#393] Now Adam was made of a compound of the four elements,
+which be water, earth, fire and air. The yellow bile is the humour of
+fire, being hot-dry; the black bile that of earth, being cold-dry; the
+phlegm that of water, being cold-moist, and the blood that of air,
+being hot-moist.[FN#394] There were made in man three hundred and sixty
+veins, two hundred and forty-nine bones, and three souls[FN#395] or
+spirits, the animal, the rational and the natural, to each of which is
+allotted its proper function. Moreover, Allah made him a heart and
+spleen and lungs and six intestines and a liver and two kidneys and
+buttocks and brain and bones and skin and five senses; hearing, seeing,
+smell, taste, touch. The heart He set on the left side of the breast
+and made the stomach the guide and governor thereof. He appointed the
+lungs for a fan to the heart and stablished the liver on the right
+side, opposite thereto. Moreover, He made, besides this, the diaphragm
+and the viscera and set up the bones of the breast and latticed them
+with the ribs." Q "How many ventricles are there in a man's head?"
+"Three, which contain five faculties, styled the intrinsic senses, to
+wit, common sense, imagination, the thinking faculty, perception and
+memory." Q "Describe to me the configuration of the bones."—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Fiftieth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the
+physicist said to her, "Describe to me the configuration of the bones,"
+she replied, "Man's frame 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 calvarium and face. The skull is
+constructed of eight bones, and to it are attached the four osselets of
+the ear. The face is furnished with an upper jaw of eleven bones and a
+lower jaw of one; and to these are added the teeth two-and-thirty in
+number, and the os hyoides.[FN#396] The trunk is divided into spinal
+column, breast and basin. The spinal column is made up of
+four-and-twenty bones, called Fikαr or vertebrζ; 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[FN#397] and os
+coccygis. The extremities divided into upper and lower, arms and legs.
+The arms are again divided: firstly into shoulder, comprising shoulder
+blades and collar bone; secondly into the upper arm which is one bone;
+thirdly into fore-arm, composed of two bones, the radius and the ulna;
+and fourthly into the hand, consisting of the wrist, the metacarpus of
+five and the fingers, which number five, of three bones each, called
+the phalanges, except the thumb, which hath but two. The lower
+extremities are divided: firstly into thigh, which is one bone;
+secondly into leg, composed of three bones, the tibia, the fibula and
+the patella; and thirdly into the foot, divided, like the hand, into
+tarsus, metatarsus and toes; and is composed of seven bones, ranged in
+two rows, two in one and five in the other; and the metatarsus is
+composed of five bones and the toes number five, each of three
+phalanges except the big toe which hath only two." Q "Which is the root
+of the veins?" "The aorta, from which they ramify, and they are many,
+none knoweth the tale of them save He who created them; but I repeat,
+it is said that they number three hundred and sixty.[FN#398] Moreover,
+Allah hath appointed the tongue as interpreter 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[FN#399] and the kidneys of craft; the lungs are ventilators,
+the stomach the store-house, and the heart the prop and pillar 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 evidencing disease in the members of the body, both
+external and internal?" "A physician, who is a man of understanding,
+looketh into the state of the body and is guided by the feel of the
+hands,[FN#400] 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 white of the eyes, which denoteth jaundice,
+and bending of the back, which denoteth disease of the lungs." And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Fifty-first Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the damsel
+had described to the doctor the outer signs and symptoms quoth he,
+"Thou hast replied aright! now what are the internal symptoms of
+disease?" "The science of the diagnosis of disease by internal symptoms
+is founded upon six canons: (1) the patient's actions; (2) what is
+evacuated from his body; (3) the nature of the pain; and (4) the site
+thereof; (5) swelling; and (6) the effluvia given off his person." Q
+"How cometh hurt to the head?" "By the ingestion of food upon food,
+before the first be digested, and by fullness upon fullness; this it is
+that wasteth peoples. He who would 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 such depletory measures as cupping and
+blood-letting; and let him 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 befitteth that he appoint six for meat,
+six for drink, and six for breath. 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 the Almighty, 'Walk not proudly on the
+earth.'"[FN#401] Q "What are the symptoms of yellow bile and what is to
+be feared therefrom?" "The symptoms are sallow complexion and bitter
+taste in the mouth with dryness; failure of the appetite, venereal and
+other, and rapid pulse; and the patient hath to fear high fever and
+delirium and eruptions and jaundice and tumour and ulcers of the bowels
+and excessive thirst." Q "What are the symptoms of black bile and what
+hath the patient to fear from it, an it get the mastery of the body?"
+"The symptoms are false appetite and great mental disquiet and cark and
+care; and it behoveth that it be evacuated, else it will generate
+melancholia[FN#402] 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?" "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?" "When the sap runs in the
+wood and the grape thickens in the cluster and the two auspicious
+planets, Jupiter and Venus, are in the ascendant; then setteth in the
+proper season for drinking of drugs and doing away of disease." Q "What
+time is it, when, if a man drink water from a new vessel, the drink is
+sweeter and lighter or more digestible to him than at another time, and
+there ascendeth to him a pleasant fragrance and a penetrating?" "When
+he waiteth awhile after eating, as quoth the poet,
+
+'Drink not upon thy food in haste but wait awhile; * Else thou
+
+
+ with halter shalt thy frame to sickness lead:
+
+
+And patient bear a little thirst from food, then drink; * And
+
+
+ thus, O brother, haply thou shalt win thy need.[FN#403]'"
+
+
+
+Q "What food is it that giveth not rise to ailments?" "That which is
+not eaten but after hunger, and when it is eaten, the ribs are not
+filled with it, even as saith Jαlνnϊs or Galen the physician, 'Whoso
+will take in food, let him go slowly and he shall not go wrongly.' And
+to conclude with His saying (on whom be blessing and peace!), 'The
+stomach is the house of disease, and diet is the head of healing; for
+the origin of all sickness is indigestion, that is to say, corruption
+of the meat'"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say
+her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Fifty-second Night,
+
+She continued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the
+damsel said to the doctor, "'The stomach is the house of disease and
+diet is the head of healing; for the origin of all sickness is
+indigestion, that is to say, corruption of the meat in the stomach;'"
+he rejoined, "Thou hast replied aright! what sayest thou of the
+Hammam?" "Let not the full man enter it. Quoth the Prophet, 'The bath
+is the blessing of the house, for that it cleanseth the body and
+calleth to mind the Fire.'" Q "What Hammams are best for bathing in?"
+"Those whose waters are sweet and whose space is ample and which are
+kept well aired; their atmosphere representing the four seasons—autumn
+and summer and winter and spring." Q "What kind of food is the most
+profitable?" "That which women make and which hath not cost overmuch
+trouble and which is readily digested. The most excellent of food is
+brewis[FN#404] or bread sopped in broth; according to the saying of the
+Prophet, 'Brewis excelleth other food, even as Ayishah excelleth other
+women.'" Q "What kind of kitchen, or seasoning, is most profitable?"
+"'Flesh meat' (quoth the Prophet) 'is the most excellent of kitchen;
+for that it is the delight of this world and the next world.'" Q "What
+kind of meat is the most profitable?" "Mutton; but jerked meat is to be
+avoided, for there is no profit in it." Q "What of fruits?" "Eat them
+in their prime and quit them when their season is past." Q "What sayest
+thou of drinking water?" "Drink it not in large quantities nor swallow
+it by gulps, or it will give thee head-ache and cause divers kinds of
+harm; neither drink it immediately after leaving the Hammam nor after
+carnal copulation or eating (except it be after the lapse of fifteen
+minutes for a young man and forty for an old man), nor after waking
+from sleep." Q "What of drinking fermented liquors?" "Doth not the
+prohibition suffice thee in the Book of Almighty Allah, where He saith,
+'Verily, wine and lots and images, and the divining arrows are an
+abomination, of Satan's work; therefore avoid them, that ye may
+prosper'?[FN#405] And again, 'They will ask thee concerning wine and
+lots': Answer, 'In both there is great sin and also some things of use
+unto men: but their sinfulness is greater than their use.'[FN#406]
+Hence quoth the poet,
+
+'O bibber of liquor, art not ashamed * To drink what Allah
+
+
+ forbade thee drain?
+
+
+Put it far from thee and approach it not; * It holds what Allah
+
+
+ forbade as bane.'
+
+
+
+And quoth another to the same purport,
+
+'I drank the sin till my reason fled: * Ill drink that reason to loss
+misled!'
+
+As for the advantages that be therein, it disperseth stone and gravel
+from the kidneys and strengtheneth the viscera and banisheth care, and
+moveth to generosity and preserveth health and digestion; it conserveth
+the body, expelleth disease from the joints, purifieth the frame of
+corrupt humours, engendereth cheerfulness, gladdeneth the heart of man
+and keepeth up the natural heat: it contracteth the bladder, enforceth
+the liver and removeth obstructions, reddeneth the cheeks, cleareth
+away maggots from the brain and deferreth grey hairs. In short, had not
+Allah (to whom be honour and glory!) forbidden it,[FN#407] there were
+not on the face of the earth aught fit to stand in its stead. As for
+gambling by lots, it is a game of hazard such as diceing, not of
+skill." Q "What wine is best?" "That which is pressed from white grapes
+and kept eighty days or more after fermentation: it resembleth not
+water and indeed there is nothing on the surface of the earth like unto
+it." Q "What sayest thou of cupping?" "It is for him who is over full
+of blood and who hath no defect therein; and whoso would be cupped, let
+it be during the wane of the moon, on a day without cloud, wind or rain
+and on 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 intellect than cupping."—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Fifty-third Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the damsel
+enumerated the benefits of cupping, quoth the doctor, "What is the best
+time for cupping?" "One should be cupped 'on the spittle,' that is, in
+the morning before eating, for this fortifieth the wit and the memory.
+It is reported of the Prophet that, when anyone complained to him of a
+pain in the head or legs, he would bid him be cupped and after cupping
+not eat salt food, fasting, for it engendereth scurvy; neither eat sour
+things as curded milk[FN#408] immediately after cupping." Q "When is
+cupping to be avoided?" "On Sabbaths or Saturdays and Wednesdays; and
+let him who is cupped on these days blame none but himself. Moreover,
+one should not be cupped in very hot weather nor in very cold weather;
+and the best season for cupping is springtide." Quoth the doctor, "Now
+tell me of carnal copulation." Hereupon Tawaddud hung her head, for
+shame and confusion before the Caliph's majesty; 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 edge of my tongue."
+Said the Caliph; "Speak, O damsel," whereupon said she, "Copulation
+hath in it many and exceeding virtues and praiseworthy qualities,
+amongst which are, that it lighteneth a body full of black bile and
+calmeth the heat of love and induceth affection and dilateth the heart
+and dispelleth the sadness of solitude; and the excess of it is more
+harmful in summer and autumn than in spring and winter." Q "What are
+its good effects?" "It banisheth trouble and disquiet, calmeth love and
+wrath and is good for ulcers, especially in a cold and dry humour; on
+the other hand excess of it weakeneth the sight and engendereth pains
+in the legs and head and back: and beware, beware of carnal connection
+with old women, for they are deadly. Quoth the Iman Ali[FN#409] (whose
+face Allah honour!), 'Four things kill and ruin the body: entering the
+Hammam on a full stomach; eating salt food; copulation on a plethora of
+blood and lying with an ailing woman; for she will weaken thy strength
+and infect thy frame 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 hoards than Kαrϊn'"[FN#410] Q "What is the best
+copulation?" "If the woman be tender of years, comely of shape, fair of
+face, swelling of breast and of noble race, she will add to thee
+strength and health of body; and let her be even as saith a certain
+poet describing her,
+
+'Seeing thy looks wots she what thou desir'st, * By inspiration;
+
+
+ wants nor word nor sign;
+
+
+And, when thou dost behold her rarest grace, * The charms of
+
+
+ every garden canst decline.'
+
+
+
+Q "At what time is copulation good?" "If by night, after food digested
+and if by day, after the morning meal." Q "What are the most excellent
+fruits?" "Pomegranate and citron." Q "Which is the most excellent of
+vegetables?" "Endive.[FN#411]" Q "Which of sweet-scented flowers?"
+"Rose and Violet." Q "How is the seed of man secreted?" "There is in
+man a vein which feedeth all the other veins. Now water is collected
+from the three hundred and sixty veins and, in the form of red blood,
+entereth the left testicle, where it is decocted, by the heat of
+temperament inherent in the son of Adam, into a thick, white liquid,
+whose odour is as that of the palm-spathe." Q "What flying thing is it
+that emitteth seed and menstruateth?" "The flitter-mouse,[FN#412] that
+is the bat." Q "What is that which, when confined and shut out from the
+air liveth, and when let out to smell the air dieth?" "The fish." Q
+"What serpent layeth eggs?" "The Su'ban or dragon.[FN#413]" With this
+the physician waxed weary with much questioning, and held his peace,
+when Tawaddud said to the Caliph, "O Commander of the Faithful, he hath
+questioned me till he is tired out and now I will ask him one question,
+which if he answer not, I will take his clothes as lawful prize."—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Fifty-fourth Night,
+
+She continued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the
+damsel said to the Commander of the Faithful, "Verily he hath
+questioned me till he is tired out, and now I will ask him one
+question, which if he answer not I will take his clothes as lawful
+prize," the Caliph cried, "Ask on." So quoth she to the physician,
+"What is that thing which resembleth the earth in roundness, whose
+resting-place and whose spine are hidden from men's eyes; little of
+price and estimation; narrow of chest and shackled as to throat though
+it be nor runaway slave nor pestilent thief; thrust through and
+through, though not in fray, and wounded, though not in fight: time
+eateth its vigour and water wasteth it away; now it is beaten without
+blemish, and then made to serve without stint; united after separation;
+submissive, but not to him who caresseth it; pregnant without child in
+belly; drooping, yet not leaning on its side; becoming dirty yet
+purifying itself; cleaving to its fere, yet changing; copulating
+without a yard, wrestling without arms: resting and taking its ease;
+bitten, yet not crying out: now more complaisant than a cup-companion
+and then more troublesome than summer-heat; leaving its mate by night
+and embracing her by day and having its abode in the corners of the
+mansions of the noble?" The physician was silent awhile in perplexity
+and his colour changed and he bowed his head and made no reply;
+whereupon she said to him, "Ho, sir doctor, speak or doff thy dress."
+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 Caliph to Tawaddud, "Ree us thy riddle," and she
+replied, "O Commander of the Faithful, it is the button and the
+button-loop.[FN#414]"—Then she undertook the astronomers and said, "Let
+him of you who is an astronomer rise and come forward." So the
+astronomer advanced and sat down before her; and, when she saw him, she
+laughed and said, "Art thou the astronomer, the mathematician, the
+scribe?" "Yes," answered he. Quoth she, "Ask of what thou wilt; success
+resteth with Allah." So he said, "Tell me of the sun and its rising and
+setting." And she replied: "Know that the sun riseth from the shadows
+in the Eastern hemisphere and setteth in the shadows of the Western,
+and each hemisphere compriseth one hundred and eighty degrees. Quoth
+Allah Almighty, 'I swear by the Lord of the East and of the
+West.'[FN#415] And again, 'He it is who hath ordained the sun to shine
+by day, and the moon for a light by night; and hath appointed her
+station that ye might know the number of years and the computation of
+time.'[FN#416] The moon is Sultan of the night and the sun Sultan of
+the day, and they vie with each other in their courses and follow
+without overtaking each other. Quoth Almighty Allah, 'It is not
+expedient that the sun overtake the moon in her course; neither doth
+the night outstrip the day, but each of these luminaries moveth in a
+peculiar orbit.'"[FN#417] Q "When the day cometh, what becometh of the
+night; and what of the day, when the night cometh?" "He causeth the
+night to enter in upon the day, and He causeth the day to enter in upon
+the night."[FN#418] Q "Enumerate to me the mansions of the
+moon?"[FN#419] "They number eight-and-twenty, to wit, Sharatαn, Butayn,
+Surayα, Dabarαn, Hak'ah, Han'ah, Zirα'a, Nasrah, Tarf, Jabhah, Zubrah,
+Sarfah, 'Awwα, Simαk, Ghafar, Zubαnν, Iklνl, Kalb, Shaulah, Na'am,
+Baldah, Sa'ad al-Zαbih, Sa'ad al-Bul'a, Sa'ad al-Su'ϊd, Sa'ad
+al-Akhbiyah, Fargh the Former and Fargh the Latter; and Rishαa. They
+are disposed in the order of the letters of the Abjad-hawwaz or older
+alphabet,[FN#420] according to their numerical power, and in them are
+secret virtues which none knoweth save Allah (extolled and exalted be
+He!) and the stablished in science. They are divided among the twelve
+Signs of the Zodiac, two Mansions and a third of a Mansion to each
+Sign. Thus Sharatan, Butayn and one-third of Surαyα, belong to Aries,
+the other two-thirds of Surαyα, Dabaran and two-thirds of Hak'ah to
+Taurus, the other third of Hak'ah, Han'ah and Zira'a to Gemini; Nasrah,
+Tarf and a third of Jabhah to Cancer, the other two-thirds of Jabhah,
+Zubrah and two-thirds of Sarfah to Leo; the other third of Sarfah,
+'Awwα and Simαk to Virgo; Ghafar, Zubαni and one-third of Iklνl to
+Libra; the other two-thirds of Iklil, Kalb and two-thirds of Shaulah to
+Scorpio; the other third of Shaulah, Na'αim and Baldah to Sagittarius;
+Sa'ad al-Zαbih, Sa'ad al-Bul'a and one-third of Sa'ad al-Su'ud to
+Capricorn, the other two-thirds of Sa'ad al-Su'dd, Sa'ad al-Akhbiyah
+and two-thirds of Fargh the Former to Aquarius, the other third of
+Fargh the Former, Fargh the Latter and Rishαa to Pisces."—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Fifty-fifth Night,
+
+She said, it hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the damsel
+enumerated the Mansions and distributed them into their Signs, the
+astronomer said, "Thou hast replied aright; now tell me of the planets
+and their natures, also of their sojourn in the Zodiacal Signs, their
+aspects, auspicious and sinister, their houses, ascendants and
+descendants. She answered, "The sitting is narrow for so large a
+matter, but I will say as much as I can. Now the planets number seven;
+which are, the Sun, the Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn.
+The Sun, hot-dry, sinister in conjunction, favourable in opposition,
+abideth thirty days in each Sign. The Moon, cold-moist and favourable
+of aspect, tarrieth in each Sign two days 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 aspects, and
+abideth in each sign seventeen days and a half day. Venus, temperate
+and favourable, abideth in each sign five-and-twenty days. Mars is
+sinister and woneth in each sign ten months. Jupiter is auspicious and
+abideth in each sign a year. Saturn, cold-dry and sinister, tarrieth in
+each sign thirty months. The house of the Sun is Leo, her ascendant is
+Aries, and her descendant Aquarius. The Moon's house is Cancer, his
+ascendant Taurus, his descendant Scorpio and his sinister aspect
+Capricorn. Saturn's house is Capricorn-Aquarius, his ascendant Libra,
+his descendant Aries and his sinister aspects Cancer and Leo. Jupiter's
+house is Pisces-Sagittarius, his ascendant Cancer, his descendant
+Capricorn and his sinister aspects Gemini and Leo. Venus's house is
+Taurus, her ascendant Pisces, her descendant Libra, and her sinister
+aspects Aries and Scorpio. Mercury's house is Gemini-Virgo, his
+ascendant Virgo, his descendant Pisces, and his sinister aspect Taurus.
+Mars' house is Aries-Scorpio, his ascendant Capricorn, his descendant
+Cancer and his sinister aspect Libra." Now when the astronomer saw her
+acuteness and comprehensive learning and heard her fair answers, he
+bethought him for a sleight to confound her before the Commander of the
+Faithful, and said to her, "O damsel, tell me, will rain fall this
+month?" At this she bowed her head and pondered so long, that the
+Caliph 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." So the Caliph laughed and
+said, "How so?" Cried she "I would have thee give me a sword, that I
+may strike off his head, for he is an Infidel, an Agnostic, an
+Atheist.[FN#421]" At this, loud laughed the Caliph and those about him
+laughed, and she continued "O astronomer, there are five things that
+none knoweth save Allah Almighty;" and she repeated the verset; "'Aye!
+Allah!—with Him is the knowledge of the hour and He causeth the rain to
+descend at His own appointed time —and He knoweth what is in the wombs
+of females—but no soul knoweth what it shall have gotten on the morrow;
+neither wotteth any soul in what land it shall die: Verily Allah is
+knowing, informed of all.'"[FN#422] Quoth the astronomer, "Thou hast
+said well, and I, by Allah, thought only to try thee." Rejoined she,
+"Know that the almanack-makers have certain signs and tokens, referring
+to the planets and constellations relative to the coming in of the
+year; and folk have learned something by experience." Q "What be that?"
+"Each day hath a planet that ruleth it: so if the first day in the year
+fall on First Day (Sunday) that day is the Sun's and this portendeth
+(though Allah alone is All-knowing!) oppression of kings and sultans
+and governors and much miasma and lack of rain; and that people will be
+in great tumult 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 Tϊbah to the end of Barmahαt.[FN#423] And,
+in this year there will be much fighting among kings, and there shall
+be great plenty of good in this year, but Allah is All-knowing!" Q
+"What if the first day fall on Second Day (Monday)?" "That day
+belongeth to the Moon and portendeth righteousness in administrators
+and officials 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 Kiyαhk;[FN#424] also the plague will rage and the sheep and goats
+will die, grapes will be plentiful and honey scarce and cotton cheap;
+and Allah is omniscient!"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and
+ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Fifty-sixth Night,
+
+She said, it hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the damsel
+ended her notice of Second Day the astronomer said to her "Now tell me
+what will occur if New Year's day fall on Third Day (Tuesday)." She
+replied, "That is Mars' day and portendeth death of great men and much
+destruction and deluge of blood and dearness of grain; lack of rain and
+scarcity of fish, which will anon be in excess and anon fail. Lentils
+and honey in this year will be cheap and linseed dear and only barley
+will thrive, to the exception of all other cereals: 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 Fourth Day?" "That
+is Mercury's day and portendeth great tumult among the folk and much
+enmity and, though rains be moderate, rotting of some of the green
+crops; also that there will be sore mortality among cattle and young
+children and much fighting by sea; that wheat will be dear from
+Barmϊdah to Misra[FN#425] and other grains cheap; thunder and lightning
+will abound and honey will be dear, palm- trees will thrive and bear
+abundantly and flax and cotton will be plentiful, while radishes and
+onions will be dear; but Allah is All-knowing!" Q "What if it fall on
+Fifth Day?" "That is Jupiter's day and portendeth equity in Wazirs and
+righteousness in Kazis and Fakirs and the Ministers of religion; and
+that good will be plentiful: rains and fruit and trees and grain will
+abound, and flax, cotton, honey, grapes and fish be cheap; and Allah is
+Omniscient!" Q "What if it fall on Meeting Day or Friday?" "That day
+appertaineth to Venus and portendeth oppression in the chiefs of the
+Jinn and talk of forgery and back-biting; 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: ungraciousness will be rife by land and
+sea; linseed will be dear, also wheat, in Hαtϊr, but cheap in Amshνr;
+honey will be dear and grapes and water-melons will rot; and Allah is
+Omniscient!" Q "What if it fall on the Sabbath (Saturday)?" "That is
+Saturn's day and portendeth the preferment of slaves and Greeks and
+those in whom there is no good, neither in their neighbourhood; there
+will be great drought and dearth; clouds will abound and death will be
+rife among the sons of Adam 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; and Allah is All-knowing!"[FN#426]
+Now with this, the astronomer hung his head very low, and she said to
+him, "O astronomer, I will ask thee one question, which if thou answer
+not, I will take thy clothes." "Ask," replied he. Quoth she, "Where is
+Saturn's dwelling-place?"; and he answered, "In the seventh heaven." Q
+"And that of Jupiter?" "In the sixth heaven." Q "And that of Mars?" "In
+the fifth heaven." Q "And that of the Sun?" "In the fourth heaven." Q
+"And that of Venus?" "In the third heaven." Q "And that of Mercury?"
+"In the second heaven." Q "And that of the Moon?" "In the first
+heaven." Quoth she, "Well answered; but I have one more question to ask
+thee;" and quoth he, "Ask!" Accordingly she said, "Now tell me
+concerning the stars, into how many parts are they divided." But he was
+silent and answered nothing; and she cried to him, "Put off thy
+clothes." So he doffed them and she took them; after which the Caliph
+said to her, "Tell us the answer to thy question." She replied: "O
+Commander of the Faithful, the stars are divided into three parts,
+whereof one-third is hung in the sky of the earth,[FN#427] as it were
+lamps, to give light to the earth, and a part is used to shoot the
+demons withal, when they draw near by stealth to listen to the talk in
+heaven. Quoth Allah Almighty, 'Verily, we have dight the sky of the
+earth with the adornment of the stars; and have appointed them for
+projectiles against every rebellious Satan.'[FN#428] And the third part
+is hung in air to illuminate the seas and give light to what is
+therein." Quoth the astronomer, "I have one more question to ask, which
+if she answer, I will avow myself beaten." "Say on," answered she.—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Fifty-seventh Night,
+
+She continued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the
+astronomer said, "Now tell me what four contraries are based upon other
+four contraries?" Replied she, "The four qualities of Caloric and
+Frigoric, Humidity and Siccity; for of heat Allah created fire, whose
+nature is hot-dry; of dryness, earth, which is cold-dry; of cold, water
+which is cold-wet; of moisture, air, which is hot-wet. 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 the four humours; three fiery, Aries, Leo, and
+Sagittarius; three earthly, Taurus, Virgo, and Capricorn; three airy,
+Gemini, Libra and Aquarius; and three watery, Cancer, Scorpio and
+Pisces." Hereupon the astronomer rose, and saying, "Bear witness
+against me that she is more learned than I," away he went beaten. Then
+quoth the Caliph, "Where is the philosopher[FN#429]?"; at which one
+rose hastily and came forward and said to Tawaddud, "What is Time and
+what be its limits, and its days, and what things bringeth it?" Replied
+she, "Time is a term applied to the hours of the night and day, which
+are but the measures of the courses of the sun and moon in their
+several heavens, even as Allah Almighty telleth us when he saith, 'A
+sign to them also is the Night, from which we strip off the day, and
+lo! they are plunged in darkness, and the Sun runneth to her place of
+rest; this is the ordinance of the Sublime, the All-knowing.'"[FN#430]
+Q "How cometh unbelief to the son of Adam?" "It is reported of the
+Apostle (whom Allah bless and preserve!) that he said, 'Unbelief in a
+man runneth as the blood runneth in his veins, when he revileth the
+world and Time and night and the Hour.' And again, 'Let none of you
+revile Time, for Time is God; neither revile the world, for she saith,
+'May Allah not aid him who revileth me!;' neither revile the hour, for,
+'The Hour is surely coming, there is no doubt thereof';[FN#431] neither
+revile the earth, for it is a portent, according to the saying of the
+Most High, 'Out of the ground have we created you, and into the same
+will we cause you to return, and we will bring you forth yet thence
+another time.'"[FN#432] Q "What are the five that ate and drank, yet
+came not out of loins nor womb?" "Adam and Simeon[FN#433] and Salih's
+she-camel[FN#434] and Ishmael's ram and the bird that Abu Bakr the
+Truth-teller saw in the cave.[FN#435]" Q "Tell me of five that are in
+Paradise and are neither humans, Jinns nor angels?" "Jacob's wolf and
+the Seven Sleepers' dog and Esdras's ass and Salih's camel and Duldul
+the mule of the Prophet (upon whom be blessings and peace!)." Q "What
+man prayed a prayer neither on earth nor in heaven?" "Solomon, when he
+prayed on his carpet, borne by the wind." Q "Ree me this riddle:—A man
+once looked at a handmaid during dawn-prayer, 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 supper
+time she was a third time unlawful, but by daybreak, she became once
+more lawful to him." "This was a man who looked at another's slave-girl
+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 freed
+her, and she became unlawful to him; but at sundown he married her and
+she was again lawful to him. At nightfall 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 went about with him that lay buried therein?" "Jonah's whale, when
+it had swallowed him." Q "What spot of lowland is it, upon which the
+sun shone once, but will never again shine till Judgment-Day?" "The
+bottom of the Red Sea, when Moses smote it with his staff, and the sea
+clave asunder in twelve places, according to the number of the
+tribes;[FN#436] then the sun shone on the bottom and will do so
+nevermore until Judgment-Day." And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day
+and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Fifty-eighth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the philosopher
+then addressed the damsel saying, "What was the first skirt that
+trailed over the face of the earth?" She replied, "That of Hagar, out
+of shame before Sarah; and it became a custom among the Arabs." Q "What
+is that which breatheth without life?" "Quoth Almighty Allah, 'By the
+morning when it breatheth!'"[FN#437] Q "Ree me this riddle:—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?" "Twelve: seven alighted on the tree and
+five beneath; and, if one go up, those above would be eight to four;
+and, if one go down, both would be six and Allah is
+all-knowing."[FN#438] With this the philosopher put off his clothes and
+fled: whereupon the next contest took place, for she turned to the
+Olema present and said, "Which of you is the rhetorician that can
+discourse of all arts and sciences?" There came forward a sage hight
+Ibrahim bin Siyyαr and said to her, "Think me not like the rest." Quoth
+she, "It is the more assured to me that thou wilt be beaten, for that
+thou art a boaster; and Allah will help me to victory over thee, that I
+may strip thee of thy clothes. So, if thou sentest one to fetch thee
+wherewithal to cover thyself, 'twould be well for thee." Cried he, "By
+Allah, I will assuredly conquer thee and make thee a byword among the
+peoples, generation after generation!" Rejoined she, "Do penance in
+advance for thy broken oath." Then he asked, "What five things did
+Allah create before he made man?"; and she answered, "Water and earth
+and light and darkness and the fruits of the earth." Q "What did Allah
+create with the hand of omnipotence?" "The 'Arsh, throne of God or the
+empyreal heaven and the tree Tϊbα[FN#439] and Adam and the garden of
+Eden; these Allah 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 Al-Islam?" "Mohammed, whom Allah bless and preserve!" Q "Who
+was the father in Al-Islam of Mohammed?" "Abraham, the Friend of God."
+Q "What is the Faith of Al-Islam?" "The professing that there is no god
+but the God and that Mohammed is the apostle of God." Q "What is thy
+first and thy last?" "My first is man's seed in the shape of foul water
+and my last filthy carrion: the first of me is dust and the last of me
+is dust. Quoth the poet,
+
+'Of dust was I created, and man did I become, * In question ever
+
+
+ ready and aye fluent in reply,
+
+
+Then, I unto the dust return'd, became of it again, * For that,
+
+
+ in very deed, of dust at first create was I.'"
+
+
+
+He continued, "What thing was it, whose first state was wood and its
+last life?" "Moses' staff,[FN#440] when he cast it on the valley-ground
+and it became, by permission of Allah, a writhing serpent." Q "What is
+the meaning of the word of the Lord, 'And I have other occasion for
+it?'"[FN#441] "He, Moses, was wont to plant his staff in the ground,
+and it would flower and fruit and shade him from the heat and from the
+cold. Moreover, it would carry him when he was weary, and whilst he
+slept, guard his sheep from lions and wild beasts." Q "What woman was
+born of a man alone and what man of a woman alone?" "Eve of Adam and
+Jesus of Mary.[FN#442]" Q "Tell me of the four fires, what fire eateth
+and drinketh; what fire eateth but drinketh not; what fire drinketh but
+eateth not and what other neither eateth nor drinketh?" "The fire of
+the world eateth but drinketh not; the fire which eateth and drinketh
+is Hell-fire; the fire of the sun drinketh but eateth not, and the fire
+of the moon neither eateth nor drinketh." Q "Which is the open door and
+which the shut?" "The Traditional Ordinances are the open door, the
+Koranic the shut door." Q "Of what doth the poet speak, when he saith,
+
+'And dweller in the tomb whose food is at his head, * When he
+
+
+ eateth of that meat, of words he waxeth fain:
+
+
+He riseth and he walketh and he talketh without tongue; * And
+
+
+ returneth to the tomb where his kith and kin are lain.
+
+
+No living wight is he, yet, in honour he abides; * Nor dead yet
+
+
+ he deserveth that Allah him assain.'"
+
+
+
+She replied, "The reed-pen."[FN#443] Quoth he "What doth the poet refer
+to in these verses,
+
+'Two vests in one; blood flowing easiest wise; * Rosy red ears
+
+
+ and mouth wide open lies;
+
+
+It hath a cock-like form, its belly pecks * And, if you price it,
+
+
+ half a dirham buys.'"
+
+
+
+She replied, "The ink-case." Quoth he, "And in these,
+
+'Ho say to men of wisdom, wit and lore * To sapient, reverend,
+
+
+ clever counsellor:
+
+
+Tell me what was't you saw that bird bring forth * When wandering
+
+
+ Arab-land and Ajam o'er?
+
+
+No flesh it beareth and it hath no blood, * Nor down nor any
+
+
+ feathers e'er it wore.
+
+
+'Tis eaten cooked and eke 'tis eaten cold; * 'Tis eaten buried
+
+
+ 'neath the flames that roar:
+
+
+It showeth twofold colours, silver white * And yellow brighter
+
+
+ than pure golden ore:
+
+
+'Tis not seen living or we count it dead: * So ree my riddle rich
+
+
+ in marvel-store!'"
+
+
+
+She replied, "Thou makest longsome the questioning anent an egg worth a
+mite." Q "And this?,
+
+'I waved to and fro and he waved to and fro, * With a motion so
+
+
+ pleasant, now fast and now slow;
+
+
+And at last he sunk down on my bosom of snow; * 'Your lover
+
+
+ friend?'"
+
+
+
+"No friend, my fan;"[FN#444] said she. Q "How many words did Allah
+speak to Moses?" "It is related of the Apostle that he said, 'God spoke
+to Moses fifteen hundred and fifteen words.'" Q "Tell me of fourteen
+things that speak to the Lord of the Worlds?" "The seven heavens and
+the seven earths, when they say, 'We come obedient to Thy
+command.'"[FN#445]—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased
+saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Fifty-ninth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the damsel
+made the answer, the philosopher continued, "Tell me of Adam and how he
+was first created?" and she said, "Allah 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 His Omnipotence according to
+His saying (exalted be His name!), 'His commandment when He willeth
+aught, is but to say, BE,—and IT IS.'"[FN#446] Q "What is meant by the
+poet in these verses,
+
+'And eater lacking mouth and even maw; * Yet trees and beasts to
+
+
+ it are daily bread:
+
+
+Well fed it thrives and shows a lively life, * But give it water
+
+
+ and you do it dead?'"
+
+
+
+"This," quoth she, "is Fire." "And in these;" he asked,
+
+"Two lovers barred from every joy and bliss, * Who through the
+
+
+ livelong night embracing lie:
+
+
+They guard the folk from all calamities, * But with the rising
+
+
+ sun apart they fly?"
+
+
+
+She answered, "The leaves of a door." Quoth he, "Tell me of the gates
+of Gehenna?" Quoth she, "They are seven in number and their names are
+comprised in these two couplets,
+
+'Jahannam, next Lazα, and third Hatνm; * Then count Sa'νr and
+
+
+ Sakar eke, five-fold,
+
+
+Sixth comes Jahνm and Hαwiyah the seventh; * Here are seven Hells
+
+
+ in four lines briefly told.'"
+
+
+
+Quoth he "To what doth the poet refer when he saith,
+
+'She wears a pair of ringlets long let down * Behind her, as she
+
+
+ comes and goes at speed,
+
+
+And eye that never tastes of sleep nor sheds * A tear, for ne'er
+
+
+ a drop it hath at need;
+
+
+That never all its life wore stitch of clothes; * Yet robes
+
+
+ mankind in every-mode of weed?'"
+
+
+
+Quoth she, "A needle." Q "What is the length and what the breadth of
+the bridge Al-Sirαt?" "Its length is three thousand years' journey, a
+thousand in descent and a thousand in ascent and a thousand level: it
+is sharper than a sword and finer than a hair."—And Shahrazad perceived
+the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Sixtieth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the damsel
+had described to him Al-Sirat, the philosopher said, "Inform me how
+many intercessions with Allah hath the Prophet for each soul?"[FN#447]
+"Three." Q "Was Abu Bakr the first who embraced Al-Islam?" "Yes." Q
+"Yet Ali became a Moslem before him?" "Ali came to the Prophet, when he
+was a boy of seven years old, for Allah vouchsafed him knowledge of the
+way of salvation in his tender youth, so that he never prostrated
+himself to idols." Quoth he, "Tell me which is the more excellent, Ali
+or Abbαs?" Now she knew that, in propounding this question, Ibrahim was
+laying a trap for her; for if she said, "Ali is more excellent than
+Abbas," she would lack excuse with the Caliph for undervaluing his
+ancestor; so she bowed her head awhile, now reddening, then paling, and
+lastly said, "Thou askest me of two excellent men, each having his own
+excellence. Let us return to what we were about." When the Caliph Harun
+al-Rashid heard her, he stood up and said, "Thou hast spoken well, by
+the Lord of the Ka'abah, O Tawaddud!" Then quoth Ibrahim the
+rhetorician, "What meaneth the poet when he saith,
+
+'Slim-wasted one, whose taste is sweetest-sweet, * Likest a lance
+
+
+ whereon no head we scan:
+
+
+And all the lieges find it work them weal, * Eaten of afternoon
+
+
+ in Ramazan.'"
+
+
+
+She answered, "The sugar-cane;" and he said, "Tell me of many things."
+Asked she, "What are they?" 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 that debt
+the worst debtor 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 disease that may not be healed; what is the
+shame that may not be wiped off; what is the beast that woneth not in
+cultivated fields, but lodgeth in waste places and hateth the sons of
+Adam and hath in him somewhat of the make of seven strong and violent
+beasts?" Quoth she, "Hear what I shall say in reply; then put off thy
+clothes, that I may explain to thee;" and the Caliph said, "Expound,
+and he shall doff his clothes." So she said, "Now that, which is
+sweeter than honey, is the love of pious children to their two parents;
+that, which is sharper than the sword, is the tongue; that, which is
+swifter than poison, is the Envier's eye; the delight of a moment is
+carnal copulation 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 debtor
+denieth not, is death; the prison of the tomb is a bad son; the joy of
+the heart is a woman obedient to her husband (and it is said also that,
+when fleshmeat descendeth upon the heart, it rejoiceth therein); the
+snare of the soul is a disobedient slave; death-in-life is poverty; the
+disease that may not be healed is an ill-nature, and the shame that may
+not be wiped away is an ill daughter; lastly, the beast that woneth not
+in cultivated fields, but lodgeth in waste places and hateth the sons
+of Adam and hath in him somewhat of the make of seven strong and
+violent beasts, is the locust, whose head is as the head of a 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 belly as the belly of the scorpion and its horns as the
+horns of the gazelle." The Caliph was astounded at her quickness and
+understanding, and said to the rhetorician, "Doff thy clothes." So he
+rose up and cried, "I call all who are present in this assembly to
+witness that she is more learned than I and every other learned man."
+And he put off his clothes and gave them to her, saying, "Take them and
+may Allah not bless them to thee!" So the Caliph ordered him fresh
+clothes and said, "O Tawaddud, there is one thing left of that for
+which thou didst engage, namely, chess." And he sent for experts of
+chess and cards[FN#448] and trictrac. 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,—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn
+of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Sixty-first Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the damsel
+was playing chess with the expert in presence of the Commander of the
+Faithful, Harun al-Rashid, whatever move he made was speedily countered
+by her, till she beat him and he found himself checkmated. Quoth he, "I
+did but lead thee on, that thou mightest think thyself skilful: but set
+up again, and thou shalt see." So they placed the pieces a second time,
+when he said in 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, "Thy King is dead!—Checkmate." When he saw this he
+was confounded at her quickness and understanding; but she laughed and
+said, "O professor, I will make a wager with thee on this third game. I
+will give thee the queen and the right-hand castle and the left-hand
+knight; if thou beat me, take my clothes, and if I beat thee, I will
+take thy clothes." Replied he, "I agree to this;" and they replaced the
+pieces, she removing queen, castle and knight.[FN#449] Then said she,
+"Move, O master." So he moved, saying to himself, "I cannot but beat
+her, with such odds," and planned a combination; but, behold, she moved
+on, little by little, till she made one of her pawns[FN#450] a queen
+and pushing up to him pawns and other pieces, to take off his
+attention, set one in his way and tempted him to take it. Accordingly,
+he took it and she said to him, "The measure is meted and the loads
+equally balanced.[FN#451] Eat till thou are over-full; naught shall be
+thy ruin, O son of Adam, save thy greed. Knowest thou not that I did
+but tempt thee, that I might finesse thee? See: this is check-mate!"
+adding, "So doff off thy clothes." Quoth he, "Leave me my bag-trousers,
+so Allah repay thee;" and he swore by Allah that he would contend with
+none, so long as Tawaddud abode in the realm of Baghdad. Then he
+stripped off his clothes and gave them to her and went away. Thereupon
+came the backgammon-player, and she said to him, "If I beat thee, this
+day, 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 gold pieces; and if I beat thee, I ask nothing but that
+thou write me an acknowledgment of my victory." Quoth she, "To it,
+then, and do thy best." So they played, and he lost and went away,
+chattering in Frankish jargon and saying, "By the bounty of the
+Commander of the Faithful, there is not her like in all the regions of
+the world!" Then the Caliph summoned players on instruments of music
+and asked her, "Dost thou know aught of music?"; when she answered,
+"Even so!" He bade bring a worn lute, polished by use, whose owner
+forlorn and lone was by parting trodden down; and of which quoth one,
+describing it
+
+"Allah watered a land, and upsprang a tree * Struck root deep
+
+
+ down, and raised head a-sky:
+
+
+The birds o'ersang it when green its wood; * And the Fair
+
+
+ o'ersing now the wood is dry."
+
+
+
+So they brought the lute in a bag of red satin, with tassels of
+saffron-coloured silk: and she opened the bag, and took it out and
+behold on it was graven,
+
+"Oft hath a tender bough made lute for maid, * whose swift sweet
+
+
+ lays at feast men's hearts invade:
+
+
+She sings; it follows on her song, as though * The
+
+
+ Bulbuls[FN#452] taught her all the modes she played."
+
+
+
+She laid her lute in her lap and with bosom inclining over it, bent to
+it with the bending of a mother who suckleth her child; then she
+preluded in twelve different modes, till the whole assembly was
+agitated with delight, like a waving sea, and she sang the following,
+
+"Cut short this strangeness, leave unruth of you; * My heart
+
+
+ shall love you aye, by youth of you!
+
+
+Have ruth on one who sighs and weeps and moans, * Pining and
+
+
+ yearning for the troth of you."
+
+
+
+The Caliph was ravished and exclaimed, "Allah bless thee and be
+merciful to him who taught thee!": whereupon she rose and kissed the
+ground before him. Then he sent for money and paid her master Abu
+al-Husn an hundred thousand gold pieces to her price; after which he
+said to her, "O Tawaddud, ask a boon of me!" Replied she, "I ask of
+thee that thou restore me to my lord who sold me." "'Tis well,"
+answered the Caliph and restored her to her master and gave her five
+thousand dinars for herself. Moreover, he appointed Abu al-Husn one of
+his cup-companions for a permanence,—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn
+of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Sixty-second Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Caliph gave
+the damsel five thousand dinars for herself and restored her to her
+master whom he appointed one of his cup-companions for a permanence and
+assigned him a monthly stipend of a thousand dinars so long as he
+should live; and he abode with the damsel Tawaddud in all solace and
+delight of life. Marvel then, O King, at the eloquence of this damsel
+and the hugeness of her learning and understanding and her perfect
+excellence in all branches of art and science; and consider the
+generosity of the Commander of the Faithful, Harun al-Rashid, 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 Caliphs?—May Allah Almighty have mercy upon them, one and all!
+And they tell a tale of
+
+
+
+
+THE ANGEL OF DEATH WITH THE PROUD KING AND THE DEVOUT MAN.
+
+It is related, O auspicious King, that one of the olden monarchs was
+once minded to ride out in state with the Officers of his realm and the
+Grandees of his retinue and display to the folk the marvels of his
+magnificence. So he ordered his Lords and Emirs equip them therefor and
+commanded his keeper of the wardrobe to bring him of the richest of
+raiment, such as befitted the King in his state; and he bade them bring
+his steeds[FN#453] of the finest breeds and pedigrees every man heeds;
+which being done, he chose out of the raiment what rejoiced him most
+and of the horses that which he deemed best; and, donning the clothes,
+together with a collar set with margarites and rubies and all manner
+jewels, mounted and set forth in state, making his destrier prance and
+curvet among his troops and glorying in his pride and despotic power.
+And Iblis came to him and, laying his hand upon his nose, blew into his
+nostrils the breath of hauteur and conceit, so that he magnified and
+glorified himself and said in his heart, "Who among men is like unto
+me?" And he became so puffed up with arrogance and self-sufficiency,
+and so taken up with the thought of his own splendour and magnificence,
+that he would not vouchsafe a glance to any man. Presently, there stood
+before him one clad in tattered clothes and saluted him, but he
+returned not his salam; whereupon the stranger laid hold of his horse's
+bridle. "Lift thy hand," cried the King, "thou knowest not whose
+bridle-rein it is whereof thou takest hold." Quoth the other, I have a
+need of thee." Quoth the King, "Wait till I alight and then name thy
+need." Rejoined the stranger, "It is a secret and I will not tell it
+but in thine ear." So the King bowed his head to him and he said, "I am
+the Angel of Death and I purpose to take thy soul." Replied the King,
+"Have patience with me a little, whilst I return to my house and take
+leave of my people and children and neighbours and wife." "By no means
+so," answered the Angel; "thou shalt never return nor look on them
+again, for the fated term of thy life is past." So saying, he took the
+soul of the King (who fell off his horse's back dead) and departed
+thence. Presently the Death Angel met a devout man, of whom Almighty
+Allah had accepted, and saluted him. He returned the salute, and the
+Angel said to him, "O pious man, I have a need of thee which must be
+kept secret." "Tell it in my ear," quoth the devotee; and quoth the
+other, "I am the Angel of Death." Replied the man, "Welcome to thee!
+and praised be Allah for thy coming! I am aweary of awaiting thine
+arrival; for indeed long hath been thine absence from the lover which
+longeth for thee." Said the Angel, "If thou have any business, make an
+end of it;" but the other answered, saying, "There is nothing so urgent
+to me as the meeting with my Lord, to whom be honour and glory!" And
+the Angel said "How wouldst thou fain have me take thy soul? I am
+bidden to take it as thou willest and choosest." He replied, "Tarry
+till I make the Wuzu-ablution and pray; and, when I prostrate myself,
+then take my soul while my body is on the ground."[FN#454] Quoth the
+Angel, "Verily, my Lord (be He extolled and exalted!) commanded me not
+to take thy soul but with thy consent and as thou shouldst wish; so I
+will do thy will." Then the devout man made the minor ablution[FN#455]
+and prayed: and the Angel of Death took his soul in the act of
+prostration and Almighty Allah transported it to the place of mercy and
+acceptance and forgiveness. And they tell another tale of
+
+
+
+
+THE ANGEL OF DEATH AND THE RICH KING.
+
+A certain King had heaped up coin beyond count and gathered store of
+all precious things, which Allah the Most Highest hath created. So, in
+order that he might take his pleasure whenas he should find leisure to
+enjoy all this abounding wealth he had collected, he built him a palace
+wide and lofty such as befitteth and beseemeth Kings; and set thereto
+strong doors and appointed, for its service and its guard, servants and
+soldiers and doorkeepers to watch and ward. One day, he bade the cooks
+dress him somewhat of the goodliest of food and assembled his household
+and retainers and boon-companions and servants to eat with him, and
+partake of his bounty. Then he sat down upon the sofa of his kingship
+and dominion; and, propping his elbow upon the cushion, addressed
+himself, saying, "O soul, thou hast gathered together all the wealth of
+the world; so now take thy leisure therein and eat of this good at
+thine ease, in long life and prosperity ever rife!"—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Sixty-third Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that hardly had the
+King made an end of saying to himself, "Eat of this weal at thine ease,
+in long life and prosperity ever rife!" when a man clad in tattered
+raiment, with an asker's wallet hanging at his neck, as he were one who
+came to beg food, knocked with the door-ring a knock so loud and
+terrible that the whole palace shook as with quake of earth and the
+King's throne trembled. The servants were affrighted and rushed to the
+door, and when they saw the man who had knocked they cried out at him,
+saying, "Woe to thee! what manner of unmannerly fashion be this? Wait
+till the King eateth and we will then give thee of what is left." Quoth
+he, "Tell your lord to come out and speak with me, for I have of him a
+pressing need and a matter to heed." They cried, "Away, fool! who art
+thou that we should bid our lord come forth to thee?" But he said,
+"Tell him of this." So they went in and told the King, who said, "Did
+ye not rebuke him and draw upon him and threaten him!" Now as he spoke,
+behold, there came another knock at the gate, louder than the first
+knock, whereupon the servants sprang at the stranger with staves and
+weapons, to fall upon him and slay him; but he shouted at them, saying,
+"Bide in your steads, for I am the Angel of Death." Hereat their hearts
+quaked and their wits forsook them; their understandings were in
+confusion, their side-muscles quivered in perturbation and their limbs
+lost the power of motion. Then said the King to them, "Tell him to take
+a substitute[FN#456] in my place and one to relieve me in this case."
+But the Angel answered, saying, "I will take no substitute, and I come
+not but on thine account, to cause separation between thee and the
+goods thou hast gathered together and the riches thou hast heaped up
+and entreasured." When the King heard this, he wept and groaned,
+saying, "Allah curse the treasure which hath deluded and undone me and
+diverted me from the service of my Lord! I deemed it would profit me,
+but to-day it is a regret for me and a calamity to me, and behold, I go
+forth, empty-handed of it, and leave it to my foes." Thereupon Allah
+caused the Treasure to speak out and it said, "Wherefore cursest thou
+me?[FN#457] Curse thyself, for Allah created both me and eke thyself of
+the dust and appointed me to be in thine hand, that thou mightest
+provide thee with me a viaticum for the next world and give alms with
+me to the poor and the needy and the sick; and build mosques and
+hospices and bridges and aqueducts, so might I be an aidance unto thee
+in the world to come. But thou didst garner me and hoard me up and on
+thine own vanities bestowedst me, neither gavest thou thanks for me, as
+was due, but wast ungrateful to me; and now thou must leave me to thy
+foes and thou hast naught save thy regretting and thy repenting. But
+what is my sin, that thou shouldest revile me?" Then the Angel of Death
+took the King's soul as he sat on his throne before he ate of the food,
+and he fell down dead. Quoth Allah Almighty, "While they were rejoicing
+for that which had been given them, we suddenly laid hold on them; and,
+behold, they were seized with despair."[FN#458] And they tell another
+tale of
+
+
+
+
+THE ANGEL OF DEATH AND THE KING OF THE CHILDREN OF ISRAEL.
+
+There was a puissant despot among the Kings of the Banϊ Isrανl, who sat
+one day upon the throne of his kingship, when he saw come in to him, by
+the gate of the hall, a man of forbidding aspect and horrible presence.
+The King was affrighted at his sudden intrusion and his look terrified
+him; so he sprang up before him and said, "Who art thou, O man? Who
+gave thee leave to come in to me and who invited thee to enter my
+house?" Quoth the stranger, "Verily the Lord of the House sent me to
+thee, nor can any doorkeeper exclude me, nor need I leave to come in to
+Kings; for I reck not of a Sultan's majesty neither of the multitude of
+his guards. I am he from whom no tyrant is at rest, nor can any man
+escape from my grasp: I am the Destroyer of delights and the Sunderer
+of societies." Now when the King heard this a palsy crept over
+him[FN#459] and he fell on his face in a swoon; but presently coming to
+himself, he asked, "Art thou then the Angel of Death?"; and the
+stranger answered, "Yes." "I conjure thee, by Allah," quoth the King,
+"grant me one single day's respite, that I may pray pardon of my sins
+and ask absolution of my Lord and restore to their rightful owners the
+monies which are in my treasures, so I may not be burdened with the woe
+of a reckoning nor with the misery of punishment therefor." Replied the
+Angel, "Well-away! well-away! this may be in no way."—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Sixty-fourth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that quoth the
+Death-messenger to the King, "Well-away, well-away! this may be in no
+way. How can I grant thee a reprieve when the days of thy life are
+counted and thy breaths numbered and thy moments fixed and written?"
+"Grant me an hour," asked the King; but the Angel answered saying, "The
+hour was in the account and hath sped, and thou unheeding aught; and
+hath fled, and thou taking no thought: and now thy breathings are
+accomplished, and there remaineth to thee but one breath." Quoth the
+King, "Who will be with me when I am transported to my tomb?" Quoth the
+Angel, "Naught will be with thee but thy works good or evil." "I have
+no works," said the King; and the Angel, "Doubtless thy long home will
+be in hell-fire and thy doom the wrath of the Almighty." Then he seized
+the soul of the King, and he fell off his throne and dropped on the
+earth dead. And there arose a mighty weeping and wailing and clamour of
+keening for him among the people of his court, and had they known that
+to which he went of the wrath of his Lord, their weeping for him had
+been sorer and their wailing louder and more abounding. And a story is
+told of
+
+
+
+
+ISKANDAR ZU AL-KARNAYN[FN#460] AND A CERTAIN TRIBE OF POOR FOLK.
+
+It is related that Iskandar Zu al-Karnayn[FN#461] once came, in his
+journeyings, upon a tribe of small folk, who owned naught of the weals
+of the world and who dug their graves over against the doors of their
+houses and were wont at all times to visit them and sweep the earth
+from them and keep them clean and pray at them and worship Almighty
+Allah at them; and they had no meat save grasses and the growth of the
+ground. So Iskandar sent a man to summon their King, but he refused to
+come, saying, "I have no need of him." Thereupon Iskandar went to him
+and said, "How is it with you and what manner of men are ye?; for I see
+with you forsooth naught of gold or silver, nor find I with you aught
+of the weals of the world." Answered the King, "None hath his fill of
+the weals of the world." Iskandar then asked "Why do you dig your
+graves before your house-doors?"; and the King answered, "That they may
+be the prospective of our eye-glances; so we may look on them and ever
+renew talk and thought of death, neither forget the world to come; and
+on this wise the love of the world be banished from our hearts and we
+be not thereby distracted from the service of our Lord, the Almighty."
+Quoth Iskandar, "Why do ye eat grasses?"; and the other replied,
+"Because we abhor to make our bellies the tombs of animals and because
+the pleasure of eating outstrippeth not the gullet." Then putting forth
+his hand he brought out a skull of a son of Adam and, laying it before
+Iskandar, said, "O Zu al-Karnayn, Lord of the Two Horns, knowest thou
+who owned this skull?" Quoth he, "Nay;" and quoth the other, "He who
+owned this skull was a King of the Kings of the world, who dealt
+tyrannously with his subjects, specially wronging the weak and wasting
+his time in heaping up the rubbish of this world, till Allah took his
+sprite and made the fire his abiding-site; and this is his head." He
+then put forth his hand and produced another skull and, laying it
+before Iskandar, said to him, "Knowest thou this?" "No," answered the
+conqueror; and the other rejoined, "This is the skull of another King,
+who dealt justly by his lieges and was kindly solicitous for the folk
+of his realm and his dominions, till Allah took his soul and lodged him
+in His Garden and made high his degree in Heaven." Then laying his
+hands on Iskandar's head he said, "Would I knew which of these two art
+thou." Whereupon Iskandar wept with sore weeping and straining the King
+to his bosom cried, "If thou be minded to company with me, I will
+commit to thee as Wazir the government of my affairs and share with
+thee my kingdom." Cried the other, "Well-away, well-away! I have no
+mind to this." "And why so?" asked Iskandar, and the King answered,
+"Because all men are thy foes by reason of the wealth and the worlds
+thou hast won: while all men are my true friends, because of my
+contentment and pauperdom, for that I possess nothing, neither covet
+aught of the goods of life; I have no desire to them nor wish for them,
+neither reck I aught save contentment." So Iskandar pressed him to his
+breast and kissed him between the eyes and went his way.[FN#462] And
+among the tales they tell is one concerning
+
+
+
+
+THE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF KING ANUSHIRWAN.[FN#463]
+
+It is told of Anushirwan, the Just King, that once upon a time he
+feigned himself sick, and bade his stewards and intendants go round
+about the provinces of his empire and the quarters of his dominion and
+seek him out a mud-brick thrown away from some ruined village, that he
+might use it as medicine, informing his intimates that the leaches had
+prescribed this to him. So they went the round of the provinces of his
+reign and of all the lands under his sway and said to him on return,
+"In all the realm we have found nor ruined site nor castaway
+mud-brick." At this Anushirwan rejoiced and rendered thanks to the
+Lord, saying, "I was but minded to try my kingdom and prove mine
+empire, that I might know if any place therein remained ruined and
+deserted, so I might rebuild and repeople it; but, since there be no
+place in it but is inhabited, the affairs of the reign are
+best-conditioned and its ordinance is excellent; and its
+populousness[FN#464] hath reached the pitch of perfection."—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Sixty-fifth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the high
+officials returned and reported, "We have found in the empire nor
+ruined site nor rotten brick," the Just King thanked his God and said,
+"Verily the affairs of the realm are best-conditioned and its ordinance
+is excellent and its populousness hath reached the pink of perfection."
+And ken thou, O King, continued Shahrazad, that these olden Kings
+strave not and toiled not for the peopling of their possessions, but
+because they knew that the more populous a country is, the more
+abundant is that which is desired therein; and because they wist the
+saying of the wise and the learned to be true without other view,
+namely, "Religion dependeth on the King, the King on the troops, the
+troops on the treasury, the treasury on the populousness of the country
+and its prosperity on the justice done to the lieges." Wherefore they
+upheld no one in tyranny or oppression; neither suffered their
+dependants and suite to work injustice, knowing that kingdoms are not
+established upon tyranny, but that cities and places fall into ruin
+when oppressors are set as rulers over them, and their inhabitants
+disperse and flee to other governments; whereby ruin falleth upon the
+realm, the imports fail, the treasuries become empty and the pleasant
+lives of the subjects are perturbed; for that they love not a tyrant
+and cease not to offer up successive prayers against him; so that the
+King hath no ease of his kingdom, and the vicissitudes of fortune
+speedily bring him to destruction. And they tell a tale concerning
+
+
+
+
+THE JEWISH KAZI AND HIS PIOUS WIFE.
+
+Among the Children of Israel one of the Kazis had a wife of surpassing
+beauty, constant in fasting and abounding in patience and
+long-suffering; and he, being minded to make the pilgrimage to
+Jerusalem, appointed his own brother Kazi in his stead, during his
+absence, and commended his wife to his charge. Now this brother had
+heard of her beauty and loveliness and had taken a fancy to her. So no
+sooner was his brother gone than he went to her and sought her
+love-favours; but she denied him and held fast to her chastity. The
+more she repelled him, the more he pressed his suit upon her; till,
+despairing of her and fearing lest she should acquaint his brother with
+his misconduct whenas he should return, he suborned false witnesses to
+testify against her of adultery; and cited her and carried her before
+the King of the time who adjudged her to be stoned. So they dug a pit,
+and seating her therein stoned her, till she was covered with stones,
+and the man said, "Be this hole her grave!" But when it was dark a
+passer-by, making for a neighbouring hamlet, heard her groaning in sore
+pain; and, pulling her out of the pit, carried her home to his wife,
+whom he bade dress her wounds. The peasant woman tended her till she
+recovered and presently gave her her child to be nursed; and she used
+to lodge with the child in another house by night. Now a certain thief
+saw her and lusted after her. So he sent to her seeking her
+love-favours, but she denied herself to him; wherefore he resolved to
+slay her and, making his way into her lodging by night (and she
+sleeping), thought to strike at her with a knife; but it smote the
+little one and killed it. Now when he knew his misdeed, fear overtook
+him and he went forth the house and Allah preserved from him her
+chastity. But as she awoke in the morning, she found the child by her
+side with throat cut; and presently the mother came and seeing her boy
+dead, said to the nurse, "Twas thou didst murther him." Therewith she
+beat her a grievous beating and purposed to put her to death; but her
+husband interposed and delivered the woman, saying, "By Allah, thou
+shalt not do on this wise." So the woman, who had somewhat of money
+with her, fled forth for her life, knowing not whither she should wend.
+Presently, she came to a village, where she saw a crowd of people about
+a man crucified to a tree-stump, but still in the chains of life. "What
+hath he done?" she asked, and they answered, "He hath committed a
+crime, which nothing can expiate but death or the payment of such a
+fine by way of alms." So she said to them, "Take the money and let him
+go;" and, when they did so, he repented at her hands and vowed to serve
+her, for the love of Almighty Allah till death should release him. Then
+he built her a cell and lodged her therein; after which he betook
+himself to woodcutting and brought her daily her bread. As for her, she
+was constant in worship, so that there came no sick man or demoniac to
+her, but she prayed for him and he was straightway healed.—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Sixty-sixth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the woman's
+cell was visited by folk (and she constant in worship), it befel by
+decree of the Almighty that He sent down upon her husband's brother
+(the same who had caused her to be stoned), a cancer in the face, and
+smote the villager's wife (the same who had beaten her) with leprosy,
+and afflicted the thief (the same who had murthered the child) with
+palsy. Now when the Kazi returned from his pilgrimage, he asked his
+brother of his wife, and he told him that she was dead, whereat he
+mourned sore and accounted her with her Maker. After awhile, very many
+folk heard of the pious recluse and flocked to her cell from all parts
+of the length and breadth of the earth; whereupon said the Kazi to his
+brother, "O my brother, wilt thou not seek out yonder pious woman?
+Haply Allah shall decree thee healing at her hands!" and he replied, "O
+my brother, carry me to her" Moreover, the husband of the leprous woman
+heard of the pious devotee and carried his wife to her, as did also the
+people of the paralytic thief; and they all met at the door of the
+hermitage. Now she had a place wherefrom she could look out upon those
+who came to her, without their seeing her; and they waited till her
+servant came, when they begged admittance and obtained permission.
+Presently she saw them all and recognized them; so she veiled and
+cloaked face and body and went out and stood in the door, looking at
+her husband and his brother and the thief and the peasant-woman; but
+they could not recognize her. Then said she to them, "Ho folk, ye shall
+not be relieved of what is with you till ye confess your sins; for,
+when the creature confesseth his sins the Creator relenteth towards him
+and granteth him that wherefore he resorteth to him." Quoth the Kazi to
+his brother, "O my brother, repent to Allah and persist not in thy
+frowardness, for it will be more helpful to thy relief." And the tongue
+of the case spake this speech,
+
+"This day oppressor and oppressed meet, * And Allah sheweth
+
+
+ secrets we secrete:
+
+
+This is a place where sinners low are brought; * And Allah
+
+
+ raiseth saint to highest seat.
+
+
+Our Lord and Master shows the truth right clear, * Though sinner
+
+
+ froward be or own defeat:
+
+
+Alas[FN#465] for those who rouse the Lord to wrath, * As though
+
+
+ of Allah's wrath they nothing weet!
+
+
+O whoso seekest honours, know they are * From Allah, and His fear
+
+
+ with love entreat."
+
+
+
+(Saith the relator), Then quoth the brother, "Now I will tell the
+truth: I did thus and thus with thy wife;" and he confessed the whole
+matter, adding, "And this is my offence." Quoth the leprous woman, "As
+for me, I had a woman with me and imputed to her that of which I knew
+her to be guiltless, and beat her grievously; and this is my offence."
+And quoth the paralytic, "And I went in to a woman to kill her, after I
+had tempted her to commit adultery and she had refused; and I slew a
+child that lay by her side; and this is my offence." Then said the
+pious woman, "O my God, even as Thou hast made them feel the misery of
+revolt, so show them now the excellence of submission, for Thou over
+all things art Omnipotent!" And Allah (to whom belong Majesty and
+Might!) made them whole. Then the Kazi fell to looking on her and
+considering her straitly, till she asked him why he looked so hard and
+he said, "I had a wife and were she not dead, I had said thou art she."
+Hereupon, she made herself known to him and both began praising Allah
+(to whom belong Majesty and Might!) for that which He had vouchsafed
+them of the reunion of their loves; but the brother and the thief and
+the villager's wife joined in imploring her forgiveness. So she forgave
+them one and all, and they worshipped Allah in that place and rendered
+her due service, till Death parted them. And one of the Sayyids[FN#466]
+hath related this tale of
+
+
+
+
+THE SHIPWRECKED WOMAN AND HER CHILD.
+
+"I was circuiting the Ka'abah one dark night, when I heard a plaintive
+voice, speaking from a contrite heart and saying, 'O Bountiful One, Thy
+past boon! Indeed, by my heart shall Thy covenant never be undone.'
+Hearing this voice, my heart fluttered so that I was like to die; but I
+followed the sound and behold, it came from a woman, to whom I said,
+'Peace be with thee, O handmaid of Allah;' whereto she replied, 'And
+with thee be peace, and the mercy of Allah and His blessings!' Quoth I,
+'I conjure thee, by Allah the Most Great, tell me what is the covenant
+to which thy heart is constant.' Quoth she, 'But that thou adjurest me
+by the Omnipotent, I would not tell thee my secrets. See what is before
+me.' So I looked and lo! there was a child lying asleep before her and
+breathing heavily in his slumber. Said she, "Know, that I set forth,
+being big with this boy, to make the pilgrimage to this House and took
+passage in a ship; but the waves rose against us and the winds blew
+contrary and the vessel broke up. I saved myself on a plank; and, on
+that bit of wood, I gave birth to this child; and while he lay on my
+bosom and the waves beating upon me,'"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn
+of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Sixty-seventh Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the woman
+continued, "'Now while the boy lay on my bosom and the waves beat upon
+me, there swam up to me one of the sailors, who climbed on the plank
+and said, 'By Allah, I desired thee whilst thou wast yet in the ship,
+and now I have come at thee: so yield thy body to me, or I will throw
+thee into the sea.' Said I, 'Out on thee! hast thou no memory of that
+which thou hast seen and is it no warning to thee?' Quoth he, 'I have
+seen the like of this many a time and come off safe and care not.'
+Quoth I, 'O fellow, we are now in a calamity, whence we hope to be
+delivered by obedience to Allah and not by disobedience.' But he
+persisted with me, and I feared him and thought to put him off; so I
+said to him, 'Wait till this babe shall sleep'; but he took the child
+off my lap and threw him into the sea. Now when I saw this desperate
+deed, my heart sank and sorrow was sore upon me; so I raised my eyes
+heavenwards and said, 'O Thou that interposest between a man and his
+heart, intervene between me and this leonine brute; for Thou over all
+things art Omnipotent!' And by Allah, hardly had I spoken when a beast
+rose out of the sea and snatched him off the plank. When I saw myself
+alone my sorrows redoubled and my grief and longing for my child, and I
+recited,
+
+'My coolth of eyes, the darling child of me * Is lost, and racked
+
+
+ my heart with agony;
+
+
+My body wrecked, and red-hot coals of love * Burning my liver
+
+
+ with sore pangs, I see.
+
+
+In this my sorrow shows no gleam of joy; * Save Thy high grace
+
+
+ and my expectancy:
+
+
+Hast seen, O Lord, what unto me befel; * My son aye lost and
+
+
+ parting pangs I dree:
+
+
+Take ruth on us and make us meet again; * For now my stay and
+
+
+ only hope's in Thee!'
+
+
+
+I abode in this condition a day and a night; and, when morning dawned,
+I caught sight of the sails of a vessel shining afar off, nor did the
+waves cease to drive me and the winds to waft me on, till I reached the
+ship, whose sails I had sighted. The sailors took me up and I looked
+and behold, my babe was amongst them: so I threw myself upon him and
+said, 'O folk, this is my child: how and whence came ye by him?' Quoth
+they, 'Whilst we were sailing along the seas the ship suddenly stood
+still and lo! that which stayed us was a beast, as it were a great
+city, and this babe on its back, sucking his thumbs. So we took him
+up.' Now when I heard this, I told them my tale and all that had
+betided me and returned thanks to my Lord for His goodness, and vowed
+to Him that never, whilst I lived, would I stir from His House nor
+swerve from His service; and since then I have never asked of Him aught
+but He hath given it me.' Now when she had made an end of her story
+(quoth the Sayyid), I put my hand to my alms-pouch and would have given
+to her, but she exclaimed, "Away from me, thou idle man! Have I not
+told thee of His mercies and the graciousness of His dealings and shall
+I take an alms from other than His hand?" And I could not prevail with
+her to accept aught of me: so I left her and went away, reciting these
+couplets
+
+'How many boons conceals the Deity, * Eluding human sight in
+
+
+ mystery:
+
+
+How many graces come on heels of stresses, * And fill the burning
+
+
+ heart with jubilee:
+
+
+How many a sorrow in the morn appears, * And turns at night-tide
+
+
+ into gladdest gree:
+
+
+If things go hard with thee some day, yet trust * Th' Eterne, th'
+
+
+ Almighty God of Unity:
+
+
+And pray the Prophet that he intercede; * Through intercession
+
+
+ every wish shalt see.'
+
+
+
+And she left not the service of her Lord, cleaving unto His House, till
+death came to her." And a tale is also told by Mαlik bin Dνnαr[FN#467]
+(Allah have mercy on him!) of
+
+
+
+
+THE PIOUS BLACK SLAVE.
+
+"We were once afflicted with drought at Bassorah and went forth sundry
+times to pray for rain, but saw no sign of our prayers being accepted.
+So I went, I and 'Itaa al-Salamν and Sαbit al-Banαni and Naja al-Bakαa
+and Mohammed bin Wαsi'a and Ayyϊb al-Sukhtiyαni and Habνb al-Farsi and
+Hassαn bin Abi Sinαn and 'Otbah al-Ghulαm and Sαlih al-Muzani,[FN#468]
+till we reached the oratory,[FN#469] when the boys came out of the
+schools and we prayed for rain, but saw no sign of acceptance. So about
+mid-day the people went away and I and Sabit al-Banani tarried in the
+place of prayer till nightfall, when we saw a black of comely face,
+slender of shank[FN#470] and big of belly, approach us, clad in a pair
+of woollen drawers; if all he wore had been priced, it would not have
+fetched a couple of dirhams. He brought water and made the minor
+ablution, then, going up to the prayer-niche, prayed two inclinations
+deftly, his standing and bowing and prostration being exactly similar
+in both. Then he raised his glance heavenwards, and said, 'O my God and
+my Lord and Master, how long wilt Thou reject Thy servants in that
+which offereth no hurt to Thy sovereignty? Is that which is with Thee
+wasted or are the treasuries of Thy Kingdom annihilated? I conjure
+Thee, by Thy love to me forthwith to pour out upon us Thy rain-clouds
+of grace!' He spake and hardly had he made an end of speaking, when the
+heavens clouded over and there came a rain, as if the mouths of
+waterskins had been opened; and when we left the oratory, we were
+knee-deep in water,"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased
+to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Sixty-eighth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "hardly had he
+spoken when the heavens clouded over and there came a rain, as if the
+mouths of waterskins had been opened. And when we left the oratory we
+were knee-deep in water, and we were lost in wonder at the black. So I
+accosted him and said to him, 'Woe to thee, O black, art thou not
+ashamed of what thou saidst?' He turned to me and asked, 'What said
+I?'; and I, 'Thy saying to Allah, 'By Thy love of me;' and what giveth
+thee to know that He loveth thee?' Replied he, 'Away from me, O thou
+distracted by the world from the care of thine own soul. Where was I,
+when He gave me strength to profess the unity of the Godhead and
+vouchsafed unto me the knowledge of Him? How deemest thou that He aided
+me thus except of His love to me?' adding, 'Verily, His love to me is
+after the measure of my love to Him.' Quoth I, 'Tarry awhile with me,
+so may Allah have mercy on thee!' But he said, 'I am a chattel and the
+Book enjoineth me to obey my lesser master.' So we followed him afar
+off, till we saw him enter the house of a slave-broker. Now the first
+half of the night was past and the last half was longsome upon us, so
+we went away; but next morning, we repaired to the slave-dealer and
+said to him, 'Hast thou a lad to sell us for service?' He answered,
+'Yes, I have an hundred lads or so and they are all for sale.' Then he
+showed us slave after slave; till he had shown us some seventy; but my
+friend was not amongst them, and the dealer said, 'These are all I
+have.' But, as we were going out from him we saw a ruinous hut behind
+his house and going in behold, we found the black standing there. I
+cried, ''Tis he, by the Lord of the Ka'abah!' and turning to the
+dealer, said to him, 'Sell me yonder slave.' Replied he, 'O Abu Yahya,
+this is a pestilent unprofitable fellow, who hath no concern by night
+but weeping and by day but repentance.' I rejoined, 'It is for that I
+want him.' So the dealer called him, and he came out, showing
+drowsiness. Quoth his master, 'Take him at thine own price, so thou
+hold me free of all his faults.' I bought him for twenty dinars and
+asked 'What is his name?' and the dealer answered 'Maymun, the monkey;'
+and I took him by the hand and went out with him, intending to go home;
+but he turned to me and said, 'O my lesser lord, why and wherefore
+didst thou buy me? By Allah, I am not fit for the service of God's
+creatures!' Replied I, 'I bought thee that I might serve thee myself;
+and on my head be it.' Asked he, 'Why so?' and I answered, 'Wast thou
+not in company with us yesterday in the place of prayer?' Quoth he,
+'And didst thou hear me?'; and quoth I, 'It was I accosted thee
+yesterday and spoke with thee.' Thereupon he advanced till we came to a
+mosque, where he entered and prayed a two-bow prayer; after which he
+said, 'O my God and my Lord and Master, the secret that was between me
+and Thee Thou hast discovered unto Thy creatures and hast brought me to
+shame before the worldling. How then shall life be sweet to me, now
+that other than Thou hath happened upon that which is between Thee and
+me? I conjure Thee to take my soul to Thee forthright.[FN#471] So
+saying, he prostrated himself, and I awaited awhile without seeing him
+raise his head; so I shook him and behold, he was indeed dead, the
+mercy of Almighty Allah be upon him! I laid him out stretching his arms
+and legs and looked at him, and lo! he was smiling. Moreover, whiteness
+had got the better of blackness on his brow, and his face was radiant
+with light like a young moon. As we wondered at his case, the door
+opened and a young man came in to us and said, 'Peace be with you! May
+Allah make great our reward and yours for our brother Maymun! Here is
+his shroud: wrap him in it.' So saying, he gave us two robes, never had
+we seen the like of them, and we shrouded him therein. And now his tomb
+is a place whither men resort to pray for rain and ask their
+requirements of Allah (be He extolled and exalted!); and how
+excellently well saith the poet on this theme,
+
+ 'The heart of Gnostic[FN#472] homed in heavenly Garth *
+
+
+ Heaven decks, and Allah's porters aid afford.
+
+
+ Lo! here they drink old wine commingled with *
+
+
+ Tasnνm,[FN#473] the wine of union with the Lord.
+
+
+ Safe is the secret 'twixt the Friend and them; *
+
+
+ Safe from all hearts but from that Heart adored.'"
+
+
+
+And they recount another anecdote of
+
+
+
+
+THE DEVOUT TRAY-MAKER AND HIS WIFE.
+
+There was once, among the Children of Israel, a man of the worthiest,
+who was strenuous in the service of his Lord and abstained from things
+worldly and drave them away from his heart. He had a wife who was a
+helpmate meet for him and who was at all times obedient to him. They
+earned their living by making trays[FN#474] and fans, whereat they
+wrought all through the light hours; and, at nightfall, the man went
+out into the streets and highways seeking a buyer for what they had
+made. They were wont to fast continually by day[FN#475] and one morning
+they arose, fasting, and worked at their craft till the light failed
+them, when the man went forth, according to custom, to find purchasers
+for his wares, and fared on till he came to the door of the house of a
+certain man of wealth, one of the sons of this world, high in rank and
+dignity. Now the tray-maker was fair of face and comely of form, and
+the wife of the master of the house saw him and fell in love with him
+and her heart inclined to him with exceeding inclination; so, her
+husband being absent, she called her handmaid and said to her,
+"Contrive to bring yonder man to us." Accordingly the maid went out to
+him and and called him and stopped him as though she would buy what he
+held in hand.—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying
+her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Sixty-ninth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the maid-servant
+went out to the man and asked him, "Come in; my lady hath a mind to buy
+some of thy wares, after she hath tried them and looked at them." The
+man thought she spoke truly and, seeing no harm in this, entered and
+sat down as she bade him; and she shut the door upon him. Whereupon her
+mistress came out of her room and, taking him by the gaberdine,[FN#476]
+drew him within and said, "How long shall I seek union of thee? Verily
+my patience is at an end on thine account. See now, the place is
+perfumed and provision prepared and the householder is absent this
+night, and I give to thee my person without reserve, I whose favours
+kings and captains and men of fortune have sought this long while, but
+I have regarded none of them." And she went on talking thus to him,
+whilst he raised not his eyes from the ground, for shame before Allah
+Almighty and fear of the pains and penalties of His punishment; even as
+saith the poet,
+
+"'Twixt me and riding many a noble dame, * Was naught but shame
+
+
+ which kept me chaste and pure:
+
+
+My shame was cure to her; but haply were * Shame to depart, she
+
+
+ ne'er had known a cure."
+
+
+
+The man strove to free himself from her, but could not; so he said to
+her, "I want one thing of thee." She asked, "What is that?": and he
+answered, "I wish for pure water that I may carry it to the highest
+place of thy house and do somewhat therewith and cleanse myself of an
+impurity, which I may not disclose to thee." Quoth she, "The house is
+large and hath closets and corners and privies at command." But he
+replied, "I want nothing but to be at a height." So she said to her
+slave-girl, "Carry him up to the belvedere on the house-terrace."
+Accordingly the maid took him up to the very top and, giving him a
+vessel of water, went down and left him. Then he made the ablution and
+prayed a two-bow prayer; after which he looked at the ground, thinking
+to throw himself down, but seeing it afar off, feared to be dashed to
+pieces by the fall.[FN#477] Then he bethought him of his disobedience
+to Allah, and the consequences of his sin; so it became a light matter
+to him to offer up his life and shed his blood; and he said, "O my God
+and my Lord, Thou seest that which is fallen on me; neither is my case
+hidden from Thee. Thou indeed over all things art Omnipotent and the
+tongue of my case reciteth and saith,
+
+'I show my heart and thoughts to Thee, and Thou * Alone my
+
+
+ secret's secrecy canst know.
+
+
+If I address Thee fain I cry aloud; * Or, if I'm mute, my signs
+
+
+ for speech I show.
+
+
+O Thou to whom no second be conjoined! * A wretched lover seeks
+
+
+ Thee in his woe.
+
+
+I have a hope my thoughts as true confirm; * And heart that
+
+
+ fainteth as right well canst trow.
+
+
+To lavish life is hardest thing that be, * Yet easy an Thou bid
+
+
+ me life forego;
+
+
+But, an it be Thy will to save from stowre, * Thou, O my Hope, to
+
+
+ work this work hast power!'"
+
+
+
+Then the man cast himself down from the belvedere; but Allah sent an
+angel who bore him up on his wings and brought him down to the ground,
+whole and without hurt or harm. Now when he found himself safe on the
+ground, he thanked and praised Allah (to whom belong Majesty and
+Might!) for His merciful protection of his person and his chastity; and
+he went straight to his wife who had long expected him, and he
+empty-handed. Then seeing him, she asked him why he had tarried and
+what was come of that he had taken with him and why he returned
+empty-handed; whereupon he told her of the temptation which had
+befallen him, and she said, "Alhamdolillah—praised be God-for
+delivering thee from seduction and intervening between thee and such
+calamity!" Then she added, "O man, the neighbours use to see us light
+our oven every night; and, if they see us fireless this night, they
+will know that we are destitute. Now it behoveth in gratitude to Allah,
+that we hide our destitution and conjoin the fast of this night to that
+of the past and continue it for the sake of Allah Almighty." So she
+rose and, filling the oven with wood, lighted it, to baffle the
+curiosity of her woman-neighbours, reciting these couplets,
+
+"Now I indeed will hide desire and all repine; * And light up
+
+
+ this my fire that neighbours see no sign:
+
+
+Accept I what befals by order of my Lord; * Haply He too accept
+
+
+ this humble act of mine."
+
+
+
+—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Seventieth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that after the
+goodwife had lit the fire to baffle the curiosity of her
+women-neighbours, she and her husband made the Wuzu-ablution and stood
+up to pray, when behold, one of the neighbours' wives came and asked
+leave to take a fire-brand from the oven. "Do what thou wilt with the
+oven," answered they; but, when she came to the fire, she cried out,
+saying, "Ho, such an one (to the tray-maker's wife) take up thy bread
+ere it burn!" Quoth the wife to her husband, "Hearest thou what she
+saith?" Quoth he, "Go and look." So she went up to the oven, and
+behold, it was full of fine bread and white. She took up the scones and
+carried them to her husband, thanking Allah (to whom belong Majesty and
+Might!) for His abounding good and great bounty; and they ate of the
+bread and drank water and praised the Almighty. Then said the woman to
+her husband, "Come let us pray to Allah the Most Highest, so haply He
+may vouchsafe us what shall enable us to dispense with the weariness of
+working for daily bread and devote ourselves wholly to worshipping and
+obeying Him." The man rose in assent and prayed, whilst his wife said,
+"Amen," to his prayer, when the roof clove in sunder and down fell a
+ruby, which lit the house with its light. Hereat, they redoubled in
+praise and thanksgiving to Allah praying what the Almighty
+willed,[FN#478] and rejoiced at the ruby with great joy. And the night
+being far spent, they lay down to sleep and the woman dreamt that she
+entered Paradise and saw therein many chairs ranged and stools set in
+rows. She asked what the seats were and it was answered her, "These are
+the chairs of the prophets and those are the stools of the righteous
+and the pious." Quoth she, "Which is the stool of my husband such an
+one?"; and it was said to her, "It is this." So she looked and seeing a
+hole in its side asked, "What may be this hole?"; and the reply came,
+"It is the place of the ruby that dropped upon you from your
+house-roof." Thereupon she awoke, weeping and bemoaning the defect in
+her husband's stool among the seats of the Righteous; so she told him
+the dream and said to him, "Pray Allah, O man, that this ruby return to
+its place; for endurance of hunger and poverty during our few days here
+were easier than a hole in thy chair among the just in
+Paradise."[FN#479] Accordingly, he prayed to his Lord, and lo! the ruby
+flew up to the roof and away whilst they looked at it. And they ceased
+not from their poverty and their piety, till they went to the presence
+of Allah, to whom be Honour and Glory! And they also tell a tale of
+
+
+
+
+AL-HAJJAJ AND THE PIOUS MAN.
+
+Al-Hajjaj bin Yusuf al-Sakafi had been long in pursuit of a certain man
+of the notables, and when at last he was brought before him, he said,
+"O enemy of Allah, He hath delivered thee over to me;" and cried, "Hale
+him to prison and lay him by the heels in heavy fetters and build a
+closet over him, that he may not come forth of it nor any go into him."
+So they bore him to jail and summoned the blacksmith with the irons;
+and every time the smith gave a stroke with his hammer, the prisoner
+raised his eyes to heaven and said, "Is not the whole Creation and the
+Empire thereof His?"[FN#480] Then the gaolers built the cage[FN#481]
+over him and left him therein, lorn and lone, whereupon longing and
+consternation entered into him and the tongue of his case recited in
+extempore verse,
+
+"O, Wish of wistful men, for Thee I yearn; * My heart seeks grace
+
+
+ of one no heart shall spurn.
+
+
+Unhidden from thy sight is this my case; * And for one glance of
+
+
+ thee I pine and burn.
+
+
+They jailed and tortured me with sorest pains: * Alas for lone
+
+
+ one can no aid discern!
+
+
+But, albe lone, I find Thy name befriends * And cheers, though
+
+
+ sleep to eyes shall ne'er return:
+
+
+An thou accept of me, I care for naught; * And only Thou what's
+
+
+ in my heart canst learn!"
+
+
+
+Now when night fell dark, the gaoler left his watchmen to guard him and
+went to his house; and on the morrow, when he came to the prison, he
+found the fetters lying on the ground and the prisoner gone; whereat he
+was affrighted and made sure of death. So he returned to his place and
+bade his family farewell, after which he took in his sleeve his shroud
+and the sweet herbs for his corpse, and went in to Al-Hajjaj. And as he
+stood before the presence, the Governor smelt the perfumes and asked,
+"What is that?" when the gaoler answered, "O my lord, it is I who have
+brought it." "And what moved thee to that?" enquired the Governor;
+whereupon he told him his case,—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day
+and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Seventy-first Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the gaoler
+told his case to Al-Hajjaj, the Governor cried, "Woe to thee! Didst
+thou hear him say aught?" Answered the gaoler, "Yes! whilst the
+blacksmith was hammering his irons, he ceased not to look up
+heavenwards and say, 'Is not the whole Creation and the Empire thereof
+His?'" Rejoined Al-Hajjaj, "Dost thou not know that He, on whom he
+called in thy presence, delivered him in thine absence?" And the tongue
+of the case recited on this theme,
+
+"O Lord, how many a grief from me hast driven * Nor can I sit or
+
+
+ stand without Thy hold:
+
+
+How many many things I cannot count, * Thou sav'st from many many
+
+
+ and manifold!"
+
+
+
+And they also tell a tale of
+
+
+
+
+THE BLACKSMITH WHO COULD HANDLE FIRE WITHOUT HURT.
+
+It reached the ears of a certain pious man that there abode in such a
+town a blacksmith, who could put his hand into the fire and pull out
+the iron red-hot, without the flames doing him aught of hurt.[FN#482]
+So he set out for the town in question and asked for the blacksmith;
+and, when the man was shown to him, he watched him at work and saw him
+do as had been reported to him. He waited till he had made and end of
+his day's work; then, going up to him, saluted him with the salam and
+said, "I would be thy guest this night." Replied the smith, "With
+gladness and goodly gree!" and carried him to his place, where they
+supped together and lay down to sleep. The guest watched, but saw no
+sign in his host of praying through the night or of special devoutness
+and said in his mind, "Haply he hideth himself from me." So he lodged
+with him a second and a third night, but found that he did not exceed
+the devotions prescribed by the law and custom of the Prophet and rose
+but little in the dark hours to pray. At last he said to him, "O my
+brother, I have heard of the gift with which Allah hath favoured thee
+and have seen the truth of it with mine eyes. Moreover, I have taken
+note of thine assiduity in religious exercises, but find in thee no
+such piety as distinguisheth those who work saintly miracles: whence,
+then, cometh this to thee?" "I will tell thee," answered the smith,
+"Know that I was once passionately enamoured of a slave-girl and
+ofttimes sued her for love-liesse, but could not prevail upon her,
+because she still held fast by her chastity. Presently there came a
+year of drought and hunger and hardship; food failed and there befel a
+sore famine. As I was sitting one day at home, somebody knocked at the
+door; so I went out and behold, she was standing there; and she said to
+me, 'O my brother, I am sorely an-hungered and I lift mine eyes to
+thee, beseeching thee to feed me for Allah's sake!' Quoth I, 'Wottest
+thou not how I love thee and what I have suffered for thy sake? Now I
+will not give thee one bittock of bread except thou yield thy person to
+me.' Quoth she, 'Death, but not disobedience to the Lord!' Then she
+went away and returned after two days with the same prayer for food as
+before. I made her a like answer, and she entered and sat down in my
+house being nigh upon death. I set food before her, whereupon her eyes
+brimmed with tears and she cried, 'Give me meat for the love of Allah,
+to whom belong Honour and Glory!' But I answered, 'Not so, by Allah,
+except thou yield thyself to me.' Quoth she, 'Better is death to me
+than the wrath and wreak of Allah the Most Highest;' and she rose and
+left the food untouched"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and
+ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Seventy-second Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the man set
+food before her, the woman said, "Give me meat for the love of Allah to
+whom be Honour and Glory!' But I answered, 'Not so, by Allah, except
+thou yield to me thy person.' Quoth she, 'Better is death than the
+wrath and wreak of Allah;' and she rose and left the food untouched and
+went away repeating these couplets,
+
+'O Thou, the One, whose grace doth all the world embrace; * Thine
+
+
+ ears have heard, Thine eyes have seen my case!
+
+
+Privation and distress have dealt me heavy blows; * The woes that
+
+
+ weary me no utterance can trace.
+
+
+I am like one athirst who eyes the landscape's eye, * Yet may not
+
+
+ drink a draught of streams that rail and race.
+
+
+My flesh would tempt me by the sight of savoury food * Whose joys
+
+
+ shall pass away and pangs maintain their place.'
+
+
+
+She then disappeared for two days, when she again came and knocked at
+the door; so I went out to her, and lo! hunger had taken away her
+voice; but, after a rest she said, 'O my brother, I am worn out with
+want and know not what to do, for I cannot show my face to any man but
+to thee. Say, wilt thou feed me for the love of Allah Almighty?' But I
+answered, 'Not so, except thou yield to me thy person.' And she entered
+my house and sat down. Now I had no food ready; but, when the meat was
+dressed and I laid it in a saucer, behold, the grace of Almighty Allah
+entered into me and I said to myself, 'Out on thee! This woman, weak of
+wit and faith, hath refrained from food till she can no longer, for
+stress of hunger; and, while she refuseth time after time, thou canst
+not forbear from disobedience to the Lord!' And I said, 'O my God, I
+repent to Thee of that which my flesh purposed!' Then I took the food
+and carrying it to her, said, 'Eat, for no harm shall betide thee: this
+is for the love of Allah, to whom belong Honour and Glory!' Then she
+raised her eyes to heaven and said, 'O my God, if this man say sooth, I
+pray Thee forbid fire to harm him in this world and the next, for Thou
+over all things art Omnipotent and Prevalent in answering the prayer of
+the penitent!' Then I left her and went to put out the fire in the
+brasier.[FN#483] Now the season was winter and the weather cold, and a
+live coal fell on my body: but by the decree of Allah (to whom be
+Honour and Glory!) I felt no pain and it became my conviction that her
+prayer had been answered. So I took the coal in my hand, and it burnt
+me not; and going in to her, I said, 'Be of good cheer, for Allah hath
+granted thy prayer!'"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and
+ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Seventy-third Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the blacksmith
+continued: "So I went in to her and said, 'Be of good cheer, for Allah
+hath granted thy prayer!' Then she dropped the morsel from her hand and
+said, 'O my God, now that Thou hast shown me my desire of him and hast
+granted me my prayer for him, take Thou my soul, for Thou over all
+things art Almighty!' And straightway He took her soul to Him, the
+mercy of Allah be upon her!" And the tongue of the case extemporised
+and spake on this theme,
+
+"She prayed: the Lord of grace her prayer obeyed; * And spared
+
+
+ the sinner, who for sin had prayed:
+
+
+He showed her all she prayed Him to grant; * And Death (as prayed
+
+
+ she) her portion made:
+
+
+Unto his door she came and prayed for food, * And sued his ruth
+
+
+ for what her misery made:
+
+
+He leant to error following his lusts, * And hoped to enjoy her
+
+
+ as her wants persuade;
+
+
+But he knew little of what Allah willed; * Nor was Repentance,
+
+
+ though unsought, denayed.
+
+
+Fate comes to him who flies from Fate, O Lord, * And lot and
+
+
+ daily bread by Thee are weighed."
+
+
+
+And they also tell of
+
+
+
+
+THE DEVOTEE TO WHOM ALLAH GAVE A CLOUD FOR SERVICE AND THE DEVOUT KING.
+
+There was once, among the children of Israel, a man of the devout, for
+piety acclaimed and for continence and asceticism enfamed, whose
+prayers were ever granted and who by supplication obtained whatso he
+wanted; and he was a wanderer in the mountains and was used to pass the
+night in worship. Now Almighty Allah had subjected to him a cloud which
+travelled with him wherever he went, and poured on him its
+water-treasures in abundance that he might make his ablutions and
+drink. After a long time when things were thus, his fervour somewhat
+abated, whereupon Allah took the cloud away from him and ceased to
+answer his prayers. On this account, great was his grief and long was
+his woe, and he ceased not to regret the time of grace and the miracle
+vouchsafed to him and to lament and bewail and bemoan himself, till he
+saw in a dream one who said to him, "An thou wouldest have Allah
+restore to thee thy cloud, seek out a certain King, in such a town, and
+beg him to pray for thee: so will Allah (be He extolled and exalted!)
+give thee back thy cloud and bespread it over thee by virtue of his
+pious prayers." And he began repeating these couplets,
+
+"Wend to that pious prayerful Emir, * Who can with gladness thy
+
+
+ condition cheer;
+
+
+An he pray Allah, thou shalt win thy wish; * And heavy rain shall
+
+
+ drop from welkin clear.
+
+
+He stands all Kings above in potent worth; * Nor to compare with
+
+
+ him doth aught appear:
+
+
+Near him thou soon shalt hap upon thy want, * And see all joy and
+
+
+ gladness draw thee near:
+
+
+Then cut the wolds and wilds unfounted till * The goal thou goest
+
+
+ for anigh shalt speer!"
+
+
+
+So the hermit set out for the town named to him in the dream; and,
+coming thither after long travel, enquired for the King's palace which
+was duly shown to him. And behold, at the gate he found a slave-officer
+sitting on a great chair and clad in gorgeous gear; so he stood to him
+and saluted him; and he returned his salam and asked him, "What is thy
+business?" Answered the devotee, "I am a wronged man, and come to
+submit my case to the King." Quoth the officer, "Thou hast no access to
+him this day; for he hath appointed unto petitioners and enquirers one
+day in every seven" (naming the day), "on which they may go in to him;
+so wend thy ways in welfare till then." The hermit was vexed with the
+King for thus veiling himself from the folk and said in thought, "How
+shall this man be a saint of the saints of Allah (to whom belong
+Majesty and Might!) and he on this wise?" Then he went away and awaited
+the appointed day. "Now" (quoth he)"when it came, I repaired to the
+palace, where I found a great number of folk at the gate, expecting
+admission; and I stood with them, till there came out a Wazir robed in
+gorgeous raiment and attended by guards and slaves, who said, 'Let
+those, who have petitions to present, enter.' So I entered with the
+rest and found the King seated facing his officers and grandees who
+were ranged according to their several ranks and degrees. The Wazir
+took up his post and brought forward the petitioners, one by one, till
+it came to my turn, when the King looked on me and said, 'Welcome to
+the 'Lord of the Cloud'! Sit thee down till I make leisure for thee.' I
+was confounded at his words and confessed his dignity and superiority;
+and, when the King had answered the petitioners and had made an end
+with them, he rose and dismissed his Wazirs and Grandees; then, taking
+my hand he led me to the door of the private palace, where we found a
+black slave, splendidly arrayed, with helm on head, and on his right
+hand and his left, bows and coats of mail. He rose to the King; and,
+hastening to obey his orders and forestall his wishes, opened the door.
+We went in, hand in hand, till we came to a low wicket, which the King
+himself opened and led me into a ruinous place of frightful desolation
+and thence passed into a chamber, wherein was naught but a
+prayer-carpet, an ewer for ablution and some mats of palm-leaves. Here
+the King doffed his royal robes and donned a coarse gown of white wool
+and a conical bonnet of felt. Then he sat down and making me sit,
+called out to his wife, 'Ho, such an one!' and she answered from within
+saying, 'Here am I.' Quoth he, 'Knowest thou who is our guest to-day?'
+Replied she, 'Yes, it is the Lord of the Cloud.' The King said, 'Come
+forth: it mattereth not for him.' And behold, there entered a woman, as
+she were a vision, with a face that beamed like the new moon; and she
+wore a gown and veil of wool."-And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day
+and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Seventy-fourth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that 'when the King
+called to his wife, she came forth from the inner room; and her face
+beamed like the new moon; and she wore a gown and a veil of wool. Then
+said the King, 'O my brother, dost thou desire to hear our story or
+that we should pray for thee and dismiss thee?' Answered the hermit;
+'Nay, I wish to hear the tale of you twain, for that to me were
+preferable.' Said the King, 'My forefathers handed down the throne, one
+to the other, and it descended from great one to great one, in unbroken
+succession, till the last died and it came to me. Now Allah had made
+this hateful to me, for I would fain have gone awandering over earth
+and left the folk to their own affairs; but I feared lest they should
+fall into confusion and anarchy and misgovernment so as to swerve from
+divine law, and the union of the Faith be broken up. Wherefore,
+abandoning my own plans, I took the kingship and appointed to every
+head of them a regular stipend; and donned the royal robes; and posted
+slave-officers at the doors, as a terror to the dishonest and for the
+defence of honest folk and the maintenance of law and limitations. Now
+when free of this, I entered this place and, doffing my royal habit,
+donned these clothes thou seest; and this my cousin, the daughter of my
+father's brother, hath agreed with me to renounce the world and helpeth
+me to serve the Lord. So we are wont to weave these palm-leaves and
+earn, during the day, a wherewithal to break our fast at nightfall; and
+we have lived on this wise nigh upon forty years. Abide thou with us
+(so Allah have mercy on thee!) till we sell our mats; and thou shalt
+sup and sleep with us this night and on the morrow wend thy ways with
+that thou wishest, Inshallah!' So he tarried with them till the end of
+the day, when there came a boy five years old who took the mats they
+had made and carrying them to the market, sold them for a
+carat;[FN#484] and with this bought bread and beans and returned with
+them to the King. The hermit broke his fast and lay down to sleep with
+them; but in the middle of the night they both arose and fell to
+praying and weeping. When daybreak was near, the King said, "O my God,
+this Thy servant beseecheth Thee to return him his cloud; and to do
+this Thou art able; so, O my God, let him see his prayer granted and
+restore him his cloud." The Queen amen'd to his orisons and behold, the
+cloud grew up in the sky; whereupon the King gave the hermit joy and
+the man took leave of them and went away, the cloud companying him as
+of old. And whatsoever he required of Allah after this, in the names of
+the pious King and Queen, He granted it without fail and the man made
+thereon these couplets,
+
+"My Lord hath servants fain of piety; * Hearts in the Wisdom-
+
+
+ garden ranging free:
+
+
+Their bodies' lusts at peace, and motionless * For breasts that
+
+
+ bide in purest secresy.
+
+
+Thou seest all silent, awesome of their Lord, * For hidden things
+
+
+ unseen and seen they see."
+
+
+
+And they tell a tale of
+
+
+
+
+THE MOSLEM CHAMPION AND THE CHRISTIAN DAMSEL.
+
+The Commander of the Faithful, Omar bin al-Khattαb (whom Allah
+accept!), once levied for holy war an army of Moslems, to encounter the
+foe before Damascus, and they laid close siege to one of the
+Christians' strongholds. Now there were amongst the Moslems two men,
+brothers, whom Allah had gifted with fire and bold daring against the
+enemy; so that the commander of the besieged fortress said to his
+chiefs and braves, "Were but yonder two Moslems ta'en or slain, I would
+warrant you against the rest of their strain." Wherefore they left not
+to set for them all manner of toils and snares and ceased not to
+manoeuvre and lie in wait and ambush for them, till they took one of
+them prisoner and slew the other, who died a martyr. They carried the
+captive to the Captain of the fort, who looked at him and said,
+"Verily, to kill this man were indeed a pity; but his return to the
+Moslem would be a calamity."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day
+and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Seventy-fifth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the enemy
+carried their Moslem captive before the Captain of the fort, the
+Christian looked at him and said, "Verily to kill this man were a pity
+indeed; but his return to the Moslem would be a calamity. Oh that he
+might be brought to embrace the Nazarene Faith and be to us an aid and
+an arm!" Quoth one of his Patrician Knights, "O Emir, I will tempt him
+to abjure his faith, and on this wise: we know that the Arabs are much
+addicted to women, and I have a daughter, a perfect beauty, whom when
+he sees, he will be seduced by her." Quoth the Captain, "I give him
+into thy charge." So he carried him to his place and clad his daughter
+in raiment, such as added to her beauty and loveliness. Then he brought
+the Moslem into the room and set before him food and made the fair girl
+stand in his presence, as she were a handmaid obedient to her lord and
+awaiting his orders that she might do his bidding. When the Moslem saw
+the evil sent down upon him, he commended himself to Allah Almighty and
+closing his eyes, applied himself to worship and to reciting the Koran.
+Now he had a pleasant voice and a piercing wit; and the Nazarene damsel
+presently loved him with passionate love and pined for him with extreme
+repine. This lasted seven days, at the end of which she said to
+herself, "Would to Heaven he would admit me into the Faith of
+Al-Islam!" And the tongue of her case recited these couplets,
+
+"Wilt turn thy face from heart that's all thine own, * This heart
+
+
+ thy ransom and this soul thy wone?
+
+
+I'm ready home and kin to quit for aye, * And every Faith for
+
+
+ that of sword[FN#485] disown:
+
+
+I testify that Allah hath no mate: * This proof is stablished and
+
+
+ this truth is known.
+
+
+Haply shall deign He union grant with one * Averse, and hearten
+
+
+ heart love-overthrown;
+
+
+For ofttimes door erst shut, is opened wide, * And after evil
+
+
+ case all good is shown."
+
+
+
+At last her patience failed her and her breast was straitened and she
+threw herself on the ground before him, saying, "I conjure thee by thy
+Faith, that thou give ear to my words!" Asked he, "What are they?" and
+she answered, "Expound unto me Al-Islam." So he expounded to her the
+tenets of the Faith, and she became a Moslemah, after which she was
+circumcised[FN#486] and he taught her to pray. Then said she to him, "O
+my brother, I did but embrace Al-Islam for thy sake and to win thy
+favours." Quoth he, "The law of Al-Islam forbiddeth sexual commerce
+save after a marriage before two legal witnesses, and a dowry and a
+guardian are also requisite. Now I know not where to find witnesses or
+friend or parapherne; but, an thou can contrive to bring us out of this
+place, I may hope to make the land of Al-Islam, and pledge myself to
+thee that none other than thou in all Al-Islam shall be wife to me."
+Answered she, "I will manage that"; and, calling her father and mother,
+said to them, "Indeed this Moslem's heart is softened and he longeth to
+enter the faith, so I will grant him that which he desireth of my
+person; but he saith: 'It befitteth me not to do this in a town where
+my brother was slain. Could I but get outside it my heart would be
+solaced and I would do that which is wanted of me.' Now there is no
+harm in letting me go forth with him to another town, and I will be a
+surety to you both and to the Emir for that which ye wish of him."
+Therefore her father went to their Captain and told him this, whereat
+he joyed with exceeding joy and bade him carry them forth to a village
+that she named. So they went out and made the village where they abode
+the rest of their day, and when night fell, they got ready for the
+march and went their way, even as saith the poet,
+
+"'The time of parting,' cry they, 'draweth nigh': * 'How oft this
+
+
+ parting-threat?' I but reply:
+
+
+I've naught to do but cross the wild and wold * And, mile by
+
+
+ mile, o'er fountless wastes to fly,
+
+
+If the beloved seek another land * Sons of the road, whereso they
+
+
+ wend, wend I.
+
+
+I make desire direct me to their side, * The guide to show me
+
+
+ where the way doth lie."
+
+
+
+And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Seventy-sixth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the prisoner and
+the lady abode in the village the rest of their day and, when night
+fell, made ready for the march and went upon their way; and travelled
+all night without stay or delay. The young Moslem, mounting a swift
+blood-horse and taking up the maiden behind him, ceased not devouring
+the ground till it was bright morning, when he turned aside with her
+from the highway and, alighting, they made the Wuzu-ablution and prayed
+the dawn-prayer. Now as they were thus engaged behold, they heard the
+clank of swords and clink of bridles and men's voices and tramp of
+horse; whereupon he said to her, "Ho, such an one, the Nazarenes are
+after us! What shall we do?: the horse is so jaded and broken down that
+he cannot stir another step." Exclaimed she, "Woe to thee! art thou
+then afraid and affrighted?" "Yes," answered he; and she said, "What
+didst thou tell me of the power of thy Lord and His readiness to
+succour those who succour seek? Come, let us humble ourselves before
+Him and beseech Him: haply He shall grant us His succour and endue us
+with His grace, extolled and exalted be He!" Quoth he, "By Allah, thou
+sayest well!" So they began humbling themselves and supplicating
+Almighty Allah and he recited these couplets,
+
+"Indeed I hourly need thy choicest aid, * And should, though
+
+
+ crown were placed upon my head:
+
+
+Thou art my chiefest want, and if my hand * Won what it wisheth,
+
+
+ all my wants were sped.
+
+
+Thou hast not anything withholdest Thou; * Like pouring rain Thy
+
+
+ grace is showered:
+
+
+I'm shut therefrom by sins of me, yet Thou, * O Clement, deignest
+
+
+ pardon-light to shed.
+
+
+O Care-Dispeller, deign dispel my grief! * None can, save Thou,
+
+
+ dispel a grief so dread."
+
+
+
+Whilst he was praying and she was saying, "Amen," and the thunder of
+horse-tramp nearing them, lo! the brave heard the voice of his dead
+brother, the martyr, speaking and saying, "O my brother, fear not, nor
+grieve! for the host whose approach thou hearest is the host of Allah
+and His Angels, whom He hath sent to serve as witnesses to your
+marriage. Of a truth Allah hath made His Angels glorify you and He
+bestoweth on you the meed of the meritorious and the martyrs; and He
+hath rolled up the earth for you as it were a rug so that, by morning,
+you will be in the mountains of Al-Medinah. And thou, when thou
+foregatherest with Omar bin al-Khattab (of whom Allah accept!) give him
+my salutation and say to him: 'Allah abundantly requite thee for
+Al-Islam, because thou hast counselled faithfully and hast striven
+diligently.'" Thereupon the Angels lifted up their voices in salutation
+to him and his bride, saying, "Verily, Almighty Allah appointed her in
+marriage to thee two thousand years before the creation of your father
+Adam (with whom be peace evermore!)." Then joy and gladness and peace
+and happiness came upon the twain; confidence was confirmed and
+established was the guidance of the pious pair. So when dawn appeared,
+they prayed the accustomed prayer and fared forward. Now it was the
+wont of Omar, son of Al-Khattab (Allah accept him!), to rise for
+morning-prayer in the darkness before dawn and at times he would stand
+in the prayer-niche with two men behind him, and begin reciting the
+Chapter entitled "Cattle"[FN#487] or that entitled "Women,"[FN#488]
+whereupon the sleeper awoke and he who was making his Wuzu-ablution
+accomplished it and he who was afar came to prayer; nor had he made an
+end of the first bow, ere the mosque was full of folk; then he would
+pray his second bow quickly, repeating a short chapter. But, on that
+morning he hurried over both first and second inclinations, repeating
+in each a short chapter; then, after the concluding salutation, turning
+to his companions, he said to them, "Come, let us fare forth to meet
+the bride and bridegroom"; at which they wondered, not understanding
+his words. But he went out and they followed him, till they came to the
+gate of the city, where they met the young Moslem who, when the day
+broke and the standards of Al-Medinah appeared to him, had pushed
+forward for the gate closely followed by his bride. There he was met by
+Omar who bade make a marriage feast; and the Moslems came and ate. Then
+the young Moslem went in unto his bride and Almighty Allah vouchsafed
+him children,—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying
+her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Seventy-seventh Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Omar (on whom be
+peace!) bade make a marriage-feast; and the Moslems came and ate. Then
+the young Moslem went in unto his bride and Almighty Allah vouchsafed
+him children, who fought in the Lord's way and preserved genealogies,
+for they gloried therein. And how excellent is what is said on such
+theme,
+
+"I saw thee weep before the gates and 'plain, * Whilst only
+
+
+ curious wight reply would deign:
+
+
+Hath eye bewitcht thee, or hath evil lot * 'Twixt thee and door
+
+
+ of friend set bar of bane?
+
+
+Wake up this day, O wretch, persist in prayer, * Repent as wont
+
+
+ repent departed men.
+
+
+Haply shall wash thy sins Forgiveness-showers; * And on thine
+
+
+ erring head some ruth shall rain:
+
+
+And prisoner shall escape despite his bonds; * And slave from
+
+
+ thraldom freedom shall attain."
+
+
+
+And they ceased not to be in all solace and delight of life, till there
+came to them the Destroyer of delights and the Sunderer of societies.
+And a tale is told by Sνdi Ibrahim bin Al-Khawwαs[FN#489](on whom be
+the mercy of Allah!) concerning himself and
+
+
+
+
+THE CHRISTIAN KING'S DAUGHTER AND THE MOSLEM.
+
+"My spirit urged me, once upon a time, to go forth into the country of
+the Infidels; and I strove with it and struggled to put away from me
+this inclination; but it would not be rejected. So I fared forth and
+journeyed about the land of the Unbelievers and traversed it in all its
+parts; for divine grace enveloped me and heavenly protection
+encompassed me, so that I met not a single Nazarene but he turned away
+his eyes and drew off from me, till I came to a certain great city at
+whose gate I found a gathering of black slaves, clad in armour and
+bearing iron maces in their hands. When they saw me, they rose to their
+feet and asked me, 'Art thou a leach?'; and I answered, 'Yes.' Quoth
+they, 'Come speak to our King,' and carried me before their ruler, who
+was a handsome personage of majestic presence. When I stood before him,
+he looked at me and said, 'Art a physician, thou?' 'Yes,' quoth I; and
+quoth he to his officers, 'Carry him to her, and acquaint him with the
+condition before he enter.' So they took me out and said to me, 'Know
+that the King hath a daughter, and she is stricken with a sore disease,
+which no doctor hath been able to cure: and no leach goeth in to her
+and treateth, without healing her, but the King putteth him to death.
+So bethink thee what thou seest fitting to do.' I replied, 'The King
+drove me to her; so carry me to her.' Thereupon they brought me to her
+door and knocked; and behold, I heard her cry out from within, saying,
+'Admit to me the physician, lord of the wondrous secret!' And she began
+reciting,
+
+'Open the door! the leach now draweth near; * And in my soul a
+
+
+ wondrous secret speer:
+
+
+How many of the near far distant are![FN#490] * How many distant
+
+
+ far are nearest near!
+
+
+I was in strangerhood amidst you all: * But willed the
+
+
+ Truth[FN#491] my solace should appear.
+
+
+Joined us the potent bonds of Faith and Creed; * We met as
+
+
+ dearest fere greets dearest fere:
+
+
+He sued for interview whenas pursued * The spy, and blamed us
+
+
+ envy's jibe and jeer:
+
+
+Then leave your chiding and from blame desist, * For fie upon
+
+
+ you! not a word I'll hear.
+
+
+I care for naught that disappears and fleets; * My care's for
+
+
+ Things nor fleet nor disappear.'
+
+
+
+And lo! a Shaykh, a very old man, opened the door in haste and said to
+me, 'Enter.' So I entered and found myself in a chamber strewn with
+sweet-scented herbs and with a curtain drawn across one corner, from
+behind which came a sound of groaning and grame, weak as from an
+emaciated frame. I sat down before the curtain and was about to offer
+my salam when I bethought me of his words (whom Allah save and
+assain!), 'Accost not a Jew nor a Christian with the salam
+salutation;[FN#492] and, when ye meet them in the way, constrain them
+to the straitest part thereof.' So I withheld my salutation, but she
+cried out from behind the curtain, saying, 'Where is the salutation of
+Unity and Indivisibility, O Khawwas?' I was astonished at her speech
+and asked, 'How knowest thou me?'; whereto she answered, 'When the
+heart and thoughts are whole, the tongue speaketh eloquently from the
+secret recesses of the soul. I begged Him yesterday to send me one of
+His saints, at whose hands I might have deliverance, and behold, it was
+cried to me from the dark places of my house, 'Grieve not; for we soon
+will send thee Ibrahim the Basket-maker.' Then I asked her, 'What of
+thee?' and she answered, 'It is now four years since there appeared to
+me the Manifest Truth, and He is the Relator and the Ally, and the
+Uniter and the Sitter-by; whereupon my folk looked askance upon me with
+an evil eye and taxed me with insanity and suspected me of depravity,
+and there came not in to me doctor but terrified me, nor visitor but
+confounded me.' Quoth I, 'And who led thee to the knowledge of what
+thou wottest?' Quoth she, 'The manifest signs and visible portents of
+Allah; and, when the path is patent to thee, thou espiest with thine
+own eyes both proof and prover.' Now whilst we were talking, behold, in
+came the old man appointed to guard her and said, 'What doth thy
+doctor?'; and she replied, 'He knoweth the hurt and hath hit upon the
+healing.'"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say
+her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Seventy-eighth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "when the Shaykh,
+her guardian, went in to her he said, 'What doth thy doctor?'; and she
+replied, 'He knoweth the hurt and hath hit upon the healing.' Hereupon
+he manifested joy and gladness and accosted me with a cheerful
+countenance, then went and told the King, who enjoined to treat me with
+all honour and regard. So I visited her daily for seven days, at the
+end of which time she said to me, 'O Abu Ishak, when shall be our
+flight to the land of Al-Islam?' 'How canst thou go forth,' replied I,
+'and who would dare to aid thee?' Rejoined she, 'He who sent thee to
+me, driving thee as it were;' and I observed, 'Thou sayest sooth.' So
+when the morrow dawned, we fared forth by the city-gate and all eyes
+were veiled from us, by commandment of Him who when He desireth aught,
+saith to it, 'Be,' and it becometh;[FN#493] so that I journeyed with
+her in safety to Meccah, where she made a home hard by the Holy House
+of Allah and lived seven years; till the appointed day of her death.
+The earth of Meccah was her tomb, and never saw I any more steadfast in
+prayer and fasting than she; Allah send down upon her His mercies and
+have compassion on him who saith,
+
+'When they to me had brought the leach (and surely showed *
+
+
+ The signs of flowing tears and pining malady),
+
+
+The face-veil he withdrew from me, and 'neath it naught *
+
+
+ Save breath of one unsouled, unbodied, could he see.
+
+
+Quoth he, 'This be a sickness Love alone shall cure; *
+
+
+ Love hath a secret from all guess of man wide free.'
+
+
+Quoth they, 'An folk ignore what here there be with him *
+
+
+ Nature of ill and eke its symptomology,
+
+
+How then shall medicine work a cure?' At this quoth I *
+
+
+ 'Leave me alone; I have no guessing specialty.'"
+
+
+
+And they tell a tale of
+
+
+
+
+THE PROPHET AND THE JUSTICE OF PROVIDENCE.
+
+A certain Prophet[FN#494] made his home for worship on a lofty
+mountain, at whose foot was a spring of running water, and he was wont
+to sit by day on the summit, that no man might see him, calling upon
+the name of Allah the Most Highest and watching those who frequented
+the spring. One day, as he sat looking upon the fountain, behold, he
+espied a horseman who came up and dismounted thereby and taking a bag
+from his neck, set it down beside him, after which he drank of the
+water and rested awhile, then he rode away, leaving behind him the bag
+which contained gold pieces. Presently up came another man to drink of
+the spring, who saw the bag and finding it full of money took it up;
+then, after satisfying his thirst, he made off with it in safety. A
+little after came a woodcutter wight with a heavy load of fuel on his
+back, and sat down by the spring to drink, when lo! back came the first
+horseman in great trouble and asked him, "Where is the bag which was
+here?" and when he answered, "I know nothing of it," the rider drew his
+sword and smote him and slew him. Then he searched his clothes, but
+found naught; so he left him and wended his ways. Now when the Prophet
+saw this, he said, "O Lord, one man hath taken a thousand dinars and
+another man hath been slain unjustly." But Allah answered him, saying,
+"Busy thyself with thy devotions, for the ordinance of the universe is
+none of thine affair. The father of this horseman had violently
+despoiled of a thousand dinars the father of the second horseman; so I
+gave the son possession of his sire's money. As for the woodcutter, he
+had slain the horseman's father, wherefore I enabled the son to obtain
+retribution for himself." Then cried the Prophet, "There is none other
+god than Thou! Glory be to Thee only! Verily, Thou art the Knower of
+Secrets."[FN#495]—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased
+saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Seventy-ninth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the Prophet
+was bidden by inspiration of Allah to busy himself with his devotions
+and learned the truth of the case, he cried, "There is none other god
+but Thou! Glory be to Thee only! Verily, Thou and Thou alone wottest
+hidden things." Furthermore, one of the poets hath made these verses on
+the matter,
+
+"The Prophet saw whatever eyes could see, * And fain of other
+
+
+ things enquired he;
+
+
+And, when his eyes saw things misunderstood, * Quoth he, 'O Lord,
+
+
+ this slain from sin was free.
+
+
+This one hath won him wealth withouten work; * Albe appeared he
+
+
+ garbed in penury.
+
+
+And that in joy of life was slain, although * O man's Creator
+
+
+ free of sin he be.'
+
+
+God answered ''Twas his father's good thou saw'st * Him take; by
+
+
+ heirship not by roguery;
+
+
+Yon woodman too that horseman's sire had slain; * Whose son
+
+
+ avenged him with just victory:
+
+
+Put off, O slave of Me, this thought for I * In men have set
+
+
+ mysterious secrecy!
+
+
+Bow to Our Law and humble thee, and learn * For good and evil
+
+
+ issues Our decree.'"[FN#496]
+
+
+
+And a certain pious man hath told us the tale of
+
+
+
+
+THE FERRYMAN OF THE NILE AND THE HERMIT.
+
+"I was once a ferryman on the Nile and used to ply between the eastern
+and the western banks. Now one day, as I sat in my boat, there came up
+to me an old man of a bright and beaming countenance, who saluted me
+and I returned his greeting; and he said to me, 'Wilt thou ferry me
+over for the love of Allah Almighty?' I answered, 'Yes,' and he
+continued, 'Wilt thou moreover give me food for Allah's sake?'; to
+which again I answered, 'With all my heart.' So he entered the boat and
+I rowed him over to the eastern side, remarking that he was clad in a
+patched gown and carried a gourd-bottle and a staff. When he was about
+to land, he said to me, 'I desire to lay on thee a heavy trust.' Quoth
+I, 'What is it?' Quoth he, 'It hath been revealed to me that my end is
+nearhand and that to-morrow about noon thou wilt come and find me dead
+under yonder tree. Wash me and wrap me in the shroud thou wilt see
+under my head and after thou hast prayed over me, bury me in this sandy
+ground and take my gown and gourd and staff, which do thou deliver to
+one who shall come and demand them of thee.' I marvelled at his words,
+and I slept there. On the morrow I awaited till noon the event he had
+announced, and then I forgot what he had said till near the hour of
+afternoon-prayer, when I remembered it and hastening to the appointed
+place, found him under the tree, dead, with a new shroud under his
+head, exhaling a fragrance of musk. So I washed him and shrouded him
+and prayed over him, then dug a hole in the sand and buried him, after
+I had taken his ragged gown and bottle and staff, with which I crossed
+the Nile to the western side and there nighted. As soon as morning
+dawned and the city gate opened, I sighted a young man known to me as a
+loose fellow, clad in fine clothes and his hands stained with Henna,
+who said to me, 'Art thou not such an one?' 'Yes,' answered I; and he
+said, 'Give me the trust.' Quoth I, 'What is that?' Quoth he, 'The
+gown, the gourd and the staff.' I asked him, 'Who told thee of them?'
+and he answered, 'I know nothing save that I spent yesternight at the
+wedding of one of my friends singing and carousing till daylight, when
+I lay me down to sleep and take my rest; and behold, there stood by me
+a personage who said, 'Verily Allah Almighty hath taken such a saint to
+Himself and hath appointed thee to fill his place; so go thou to a
+certain person (naming the ferryman), and take of him the dead man's
+gown and bottle and staff, for he left them with him for thee.' So I
+brought them out and gave them to him; whereupon he doffed his clothes
+and, donning the gown, went his way and left me.[FN#497] And when the
+glooms closed around me, I fell a-weeping; but, that night, while
+sleeping I saw the Lord of Holiness (glorified and exalted be He!) in a
+dream saying, 'O my servant, is it grievous to thee that I have granted
+to one of My servants to return to Me? Indeed, this is of My bounty,
+that I vouchsafe to whom I will, for I over all things am Almighty.' So
+I repeated these couplets,
+
+'Lover with loved[FN#498] loseth will and aim! * All choice (an
+
+
+ couldst thou know) were sinful shame.
+
+
+Or grant He favour and with union grace, * Or from thee turn
+
+
+ away, He hath no blame.
+
+
+An from such turning thou no joy enjoy * Depart! the place for
+
+
+ thee no place became.
+
+
+Or canst His near discern not from His far? * Then Love's in vain
+
+
+ and thou'rt a-rear and lame.
+
+
+If pine for Thee afflict my sprite, or men * Hale me to death,
+
+
+ the rein Thy hand shall claim!
+
+
+So turn Thee to or fro, to me 'tis one; * What Thou ordainest
+
+
+ none shall dare defame:
+
+
+My love hath naught of aim but Thine approof * And if Thou say we
+
+
+ part I say the same.'"
+
+
+
+And of the tales they tell is one concerning
+
+
+
+
+THE ISLAND KING AND THE PIOUS ISRAELITE.
+
+There was once a notable of the Children of Israel, a man of wealth who
+had a pious and blessed son. When his last hour drew nigh, his son sat
+down at his head and said to him, "O my lord, give me an injunction."
+Quoth the father, "O dear son, I charge thee, swear not by Allah or
+truly or falsely." Then he died and certain lewd fellows of the
+Children of Israel heard of the charge he had laid on his son and began
+coming to the latter and saying, "Thy father had such and such monies
+of mine, and thou knowest it; so give me what was entrusted to him or
+else make oath that there was no trust." The good son would not disobey
+his sire's injunction, so gave them all they claimed; and they ceased
+not to deal thus with him, till his wealth was spent and he fell into
+straitest predicament. Now the young man had a pious and blessed wife,
+who had borne him two little sons; so he said to her, "The folk have
+multiplied their demands on me and, while I had the wherewithal to free
+myself of debt, I rendered it freely; but naught is now left us, and if
+others make demands upon me, we shall be in absolute distress, I and
+thou; our best way were to save ourselves by fleeing to some place,
+where none knoweth us, and earn our bread among the lower of the folk."
+Accordingly, he took ship with her and his two children, knowing not
+whither he should wend; but, "When Allah judgeth, there is none to
+reverse His judgment;"[FN#499] and quoth the tongue of the case,
+
+"O flier from thy home when foes affright! * Whom led to weal and
+
+
+ happiness such flight,
+
+
+Grudge not this exile when he flees abroad * Where he on wealth
+
+
+ and welfare may alight.
+
+
+An pearls for ever did abide in shell, * The kingly crown they
+
+
+ ne'er had deckt and dight."
+
+
+
+The ship was wrecked, yet the man saved himself on a plank and his wife
+and children also saved themselves, but on other planks. The waves
+separated them and the wife was cast up in one country and one of the
+boys in another. The second son was picked up by a ship, and the surges
+threw the father on a desert island, where he landed and made the
+Wuzu-ablution. Then he called the prayer-call,—And Shahrazad perceived
+the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Eightieth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the man
+landed upon the island, he made the Wuzu-ablution to free himself from
+the impurities of the sea and called the call to prayer and stood up to
+his devotions, when, behold, there came forth of the sea, creatures of
+various kinds and prayed with him. When he had finished, he went up to
+a tree and stayed his hunger with its fruits; after which he found a
+spring of water and drank thereof and praised Allah, to whom be honour
+and glory! He abode thus three days and whenever he stood up to pray,
+the sea-creatures came out and prayed in the same manner as he prayed.
+Now after the third day, he heard a voice crying aloud and saying, "O
+thou just man, and pious, who didst so honour thy father and revere the
+decrees of thy Lord, grieve not, for Allah (be He extolled and
+exalted!) shall restore to thee all which left thy hand. In this isle
+are hoards and monies and things of price which the Almighty willeth
+thou shalt inherit, and they are in such a part of this place. So bring
+thou them to light; and verily, we will send ships unto thee; and do
+thou bestow charity on the folk and bid them to thee." So he sought out
+that place, and the Lord discovered to him the treasures in question.
+Then ships began resorting to him, and he gave abundant largesse to the
+crews, saying to them, "Be sure ye direct the folk unto me and I will
+give them such and such a thing and appoint to them this and that."
+Accordingly, there came folk from all parts and places, nor had ten
+years passed over him ere the island was peopled and the man became its
+King.[FN#500] No one came to him but he entreated him with munificence,
+and his name was noised abroad, through the length and breadth of the
+earth. Now his elder son had fallen into the hands of a man who reared
+him and taught him polite accomplishments; and, in like manner, the
+younger was adopted by one who gave him a good education and brought
+him up in the ways of merchants. The wife also happened upon a trader
+who entrusted to her his property and made a covenant with her that he
+would not deal dishonestly by her, but would aid her to obey Allah (to
+whom belong Majesty and Might!); and he used to make her the companion
+of his voyages and his travels. Now the elder son heard the report of
+the King and resolved to visit him, without knowing who he was; so he
+went to him and was well received by the King, who made him his
+secretary. Presently the other son heard of the King's piety and
+justice and was also taken into his service as a steward. Then the
+brothers abode awhile, neither knowing the other, till it chanced that
+the merchant, in whose home was their mother, also hearing of the
+King's righteous and generous dealing with the lieges, freighted a ship
+with rich stuffs and other excellent produce of the land, and taking
+the woman with him, set sail for the island. He made it in due course
+and landing, presented himself with his gift before the King; who
+rejoiced therein with exceeding joy and ordered him a splendid
+return-present. Now, there were, among the gifts, certain aromatic
+roots of which he would have the merchant acquaint him with the names
+and uses; so he said to him, "Abide with us this night."—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Eighty-first Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the King
+said, "Abide with us this night," the merchant replied, "We have in the
+ship one to whom I have promised to entrust the care of her to none
+save myself; and the same is a holy woman whose prayers have brought me
+weal and I have felt the blessing of her counsels." Rejoined the King,
+"I will send her some trusty men, who shall pass the night in the ship
+and guard her and all that is with her." The merchant agreed to this
+and abode with the King, who called his secretary and steward and said
+to them, "Go and pass the night in this man's ship and keep it safe,
+Inshallah!" So they went up into the ship and seating themselves, this
+on the poop and that on the bow, passed a part of the night in
+repeating the names of Allah (to whom belong Majesty and Might!). Then
+quoth one to the other, "Ho, such an one! The King bade us keep watch
+and I fear lest sleep overtake us; so, come, let us discourse of
+stories of fortune and of the good we have seen and the trials of
+life." Quoth the other, "O my brother, as for my trials Fate parted me
+from my mother and a brother of mine, whose name was even as thine; and
+the cause of our parting was this. My father took ship with us from
+such a place, and the winds rose against us and were contrary, so that
+the ship was wrecked and Allah broke our fair companionship." Hearing
+this the first asked, "What was the name of thy mother, O my brother?";
+and the second answered, "So and so." Thereat brother threw himself
+upon brother saying, "By Allah, thou art my very brother!" And each
+fell to telling the other what had befallen him in his youth, whilst
+the mother heard all they said, but held her peace and in patience
+possessed her soul. Now when it was morning, one said to the other,
+"Come, brother, let us go to my lodging and talk there;" and the other
+said, "'Tis well." So they went away and presently, the merchant came
+back and finding the woman in great trouble, said to her, "What hath
+befallen thee and why this concern?" Quoth she, "Thou sentest to me
+yesternight men who tempted me to evil, and I have been in sore annoy
+with them." At this, he was wroth and, repairing to the King, reported
+the conduct of his two trusty wights. The King summoned the twain
+forthwith, as he loved them for their fidelity and piety; and, sending
+for the woman, that he might hear from her own lips what she had to say
+against them, thus bespake her, "O woman, what hath betided thee from
+these two men in whom I trust?" She replied, "O King, I conjure thee by
+the Almighty, the Bountiful One, the Lord of the Empyrean, bid them
+repeat the words they spoke yesternight." So he said to them, "Say what
+ye said and conceal naught thereof." Accordingly, they repeated their
+talk, and lo! the King rising from his throne, gave a great cry and
+threw himself upon them, embracing them and saying, "By Allah, ye are
+my very sons!" Therewith the woman unveiled her face and said, "And by
+Allah, I am their very mother." So they were united and abode in all
+solace of life and its delight till death parted them; and so glory be
+to Him who delivereth His servant when he restoreth to Him, and
+disappointeth not his hope in Him and his trust! And how well saith the
+poet on the subject,
+
+"Each thing of things hath his appointed tide * When 'tis, O
+
+
+ brother, granted or denied.
+
+
+Repine not an affliction hit thee hard; * For woe and welfare aye
+
+
+ conjoint abide:
+
+
+How oft shall woman see all griefs surround * Yet feel a joyance
+
+
+ thrill what lies inside!
+
+
+How many a wretch, on whom the eyes of folk * Look down, shall
+
+
+ grace exalt to pomp and pride!
+
+
+This man is one long suffering grief and woe; * Whom change and
+
+
+ chance of Time hath sorely tried:
+
+
+The World divided from what held he dearest, * After long union
+
+
+ scattered far and wide;
+
+
+But deigned his Lord unite them all again, * And in the Lord is
+
+
+ every good descried.
+
+
+Glory to Him whose Providence rules all * Living, as surest
+
+
+ proofs for us decide.
+
+
+Near is the Near One; but no wisdom clearer * Shows him, nor
+
+
+ distant wayfare brings Him nearer."
+
+
+
+And this tale is told of
+
+
+
+
+ABU AL-HASAN AND ABU JA'AFAR THE LEPER.[FN#501]
+
+"I had been many times to Meccah (Allah increase its honour!) and the
+folk used to follow me for my knowledge of the road and remembrance of
+the water-stations. It happened one year that I was minded to make the
+pilgrimage to the Holy House and visitation of the Tomb of His Prophet
+(on whom be blessing and peace!) and I said in myself, 'I well know the
+way and will fare alone.' So I set out and journeyed till I came to
+Al-Kadisνyah[FN#502] and, entering the mosque there, saw a man
+suffering from black leprosy seated in the prayer-niche. Quoth he on
+seeing me, 'O Abu al-Hasan, I crave thy company to Meccah.' Quoth I to
+myself, 'I fled from all my companions, and how shall I company with
+lepers?' So I said to him, 'I will bear no man company'; and he was
+silent at my words. Next day I walked on alone, till I came to
+Al-Akabah,[FN#503] where I entered the mosque and found the leper
+seated in the prayer-niche. So I said to myself, 'Glory be to Allah!
+how hath this fellow preceded me hither?' But he raised his head to me
+and said with a smile, 'O Abu al-Hasan, He doth for the weak that which
+surpriseth the strong!' I passed that night confounded at what I had
+seen; and, as soon as morning dawned, set out again by myself; but when
+I came to Arafat[FN#504] and entered the mosque, behold, there was the
+leper seated in the niche! So I threw myself upon him and kissing his
+feet said, 'O my lord, I crave thy company.' But he answered, 'This may
+in no way be.' Then I began weeping and wailing at the loss of his
+converse, when he said, 'Spare thy tears which will avail thee
+naught!'"-And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Eighty-second Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Abu al-Hasan
+continued: "Now when I saw the leper-man seated in the prayer-niche, I
+threw myself upon him and said, 'O my lord, I crave thy company;' and
+fell to kissing his feet. But he answered, 'This may in no way be!'
+Then I began weeping and wailing at the loss of his company when he
+said, 'Spare thy tears which will avail thee naught!'; and he recited
+these couplets,
+
+'Why dost thou weep when I depart and thou didst parting claim; *
+
+
+ And cravest union when we ne'er shall reunite the same?
+
+
+Thou lookedest on nothing save my weakness and disease; * And
+
+
+ saidst 'Nor goes nor comes, or night or day, this sickly
+
+
+ frame.
+
+
+Seest not how Allah (glorified His glory ever be!) * Deigneth to
+
+
+ grant His slave's petition wherewithal he came.
+
+
+If I, to eyes of men be that and only that they see, * And this
+
+
+ my body show itself so full of grief and grame,
+
+
+And have I naught of food that shall supply me to the place *
+
+
+ Where crowds unto my Lord resort impelled by single aim,
+
+
+I have a high Creating Lord whose mercies aye are hid; * A Lord
+
+
+ who hath none equal and no fear is known to Him.
+
+
+So fare thee safe and leave me lone in strangerhood to wone * For
+
+
+ He, the only One, consoles my loneliness so lone.'
+
+
+
+Accordingly, I left him; but every station I came to, I found he had
+foregone me, till I reached Al-Medinah, where I lost sight of him and
+could hear no tidings of him. Here I met Abu Yazνd al-Bustαmi and Abu
+Bakr al-Shibli and a number of other Shaykhs and learned men, to whom
+with many complaints, I told my case and they said, 'Heaven forbid that
+thou shouldst gain his company after this! He was Abu Ja'afar the
+leper, in whose name folk at all times pray for rain and by whose
+blessing-prayers their end attain.' When I heard their words, my desire
+for his company redoubled and I implored the Almighty to reunite me
+with him. Whilst I was standing on Arafat,[FN#505] one pulled me from
+behind, so I turned and behold, it was my man. At this sight I cried
+out with a loud cry and fell down in a fainting fit; but, when I came
+to myself he had disappeared from my sight. This increased my yearning
+for him and the ceremonies were tedious to me and I prayed Almighty
+Allah to give me sight of him; nor was it but a few days after, when
+lo! one pulled me from behind, and I turned and it was he again.
+Thereupon he said, 'Come, I conjure thee and ask thy want of me.' So I
+begged him to pray for me three prayers; first, that Allah would make
+me love poverty; secondly, that I might never lie down at night upon
+provision assured to me; and thirdly, that He would vouchsafe me to
+look upon His bountiful Face. So he prayed for me as I wished, and
+departed from me. And indeed Allah hath granted me what the devotee
+asked in prayer: to begin with He hath made me so love poverty that, by
+the Almighty! there is naught in the world dearer to me than it, and
+secondly since such a year, I have never lain down to sleep upon
+assured provision; withal hath He never let me lack aught. As for the
+third prayer, I trust that He will vouchsafe me that also, even as He
+hath granted the two precedent, for right Bountiful and Beneficent is
+His Godhead, and Allah have mercy on him who said:[FN#506]-
+
+Garb of Fakir, renouncement, lowliness;
+
+
+His robe of tatters and of rags his dress;
+
+
+
+And pallor ornamenting brow as though
+
+
+'Twere wanness such as waning crescents show.
+
+
+
+Wasted him prayer a-through the long-lived night,
+
+
+And flooding tears ne'er cease to dim his sight.
+
+
+
+Memory of Him shall cheer his lonely room:
+
+
+Th' Almighty nearest is in nightly gloom.
+
+
+
+The Refuge helpeth such Fakir in need;
+
+
+Help e'en the cattle and the winged breed:
+
+
+
+Allah for sake of him of wrath is fain,
+
+
+And for the grace of him shall fall the rain;
+
+
+
+And if he pray one day for plague to stay,
+
+
+'Twill stay, and 'bate man's wrong and tyrants slay.
+
+
+
+While folk are sad, afflicted one and each,
+
+
+He in his mercy's rich, the generous leach:
+
+
+
+Bright shines his brow; an thou regard his face
+
+
+Thy heart illumined shines by light of grace.
+
+
+
+O thou who shunnest souls of worth innate
+
+
+Departs thee (woe to thee!) of sins the weight.
+
+
+
+Thou thinkest to overtake them, while thou bearest
+
+
+Follies, which slay thee whatso way thou farest.
+
+
+
+Didst wot their worth thou hadst all honour showed,
+
+
+And tears in streamlets from thine eyes had flowed.
+
+
+
+To catarrh-troubled men flowers lack their smell;
+
+
+And brokers ken for how much clothes can sell;
+
+
+
+So haste and with thy Lord reunion sue,
+
+
+And haply Fate shall lend thee aidance due,
+
+
+
+Rest from rejection and estrangement-stress,
+
+
+And Joy thy wish and will shall choicely bless.
+
+
+
+His court wide open for the suer is dight:—
+
+
+One, very God, the Lord, th' Almighty might.'"
+
+
+
+And they also tell a tale of
+
+
+
+
+THE QUEEN OF THE SERPENTS.[FN#507]
+
+There was once, in days of yore and in ages and times long gone before,
+a Grecian sage called Daniel, who had disciples and scholars and the
+wise men of Greece were obedient to his bidding and relied upon his
+learning. Withal had Allah denied him a man child. One night, as he lay
+musing and weeping over the lack of a son who might inherit his lore,
+he bethought him that Allah (extolled and exalted be He!) heareth the
+prayer of those who resort to Him and that there is no doorkeeper at
+the door of His bounties and that He favoureth whom He will without
+compt and sendeth no supplicant empty away; nay He filleth their hands
+with favours and benefits. So he besought the Almighty, the Bountiful,
+to vouchsafe him a son to succeed him, and to endow him abundantly with
+His beneficence. Then he returned home and carnally knew his wife who
+conceived by him the same night.—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of
+day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Eighty-third Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Grecian sage
+returned home and knew his wife who conceived by him the same night. A
+few days after this he took ship for a certain place, but the ship was
+wrecked and he saved himself on one of her planks, while only five
+leaves remained to him of all the books he had. When he returned home,
+he laid the five leaves in a box and locking it, gave the key to his
+wife (who then showed big with child), and said to her, "Know that my
+decease is at hand and that the time draweth nigh for my translation
+from this abode temporal to the home which is eternal. Now thou art
+with child and after my death wilt haply bear a son: if this be so,
+name him Hαsib Karνm al-Dνn[FN#508] and rear him with the best of
+rearing. When the boy shall grow up and shall say to thee, 'What
+inheritance did my father leave me?'' give him these five leaves, which
+when he shall have read and understood, he will be the most learned man
+of his time." Then he farewelled her and heaving one sigh, departed the
+world and all that is therein—the mercy of Allah the Most Highest be
+upon Him! His family and friends wept over him and washed him and bore
+him forth in great state and buried him; after which they wended their
+ways home. But few days passed ere his widow bare a handsome boy and
+named him Hasib Karim al-Din, as her husband charged her; and
+immediately after his birth she summoned the astrologers, who
+calculated his ascendants and drawing his horoscope, said to her,
+"Know, O woman! that this birth will live many a year; but that will be
+after a great peril in the early part of his life, wherefrom can he
+escape, he will be given the knowledge of all the exact sciences." So
+saying they went their ways. She suckled him two years,[FN#509] then
+weaned him, and when he was five years old, she placed him in a school
+to learn his book, but he would read nothing. So she took him from
+school and set him to learn a trade; but he would not master any craft
+and there came no work from his hands. The mother wept over this and
+the folk said to her, "Marry him: haply he will take heart for his wife
+and learn him a trade." So she sought out a girl and married him to
+her; but, despite marriage and the lapse of time, he remained idle as
+before, and would do nothing. One day, some neighbours of hers, who
+were woodcutters, came to her and said, "Buy thy son an ass and cords
+and an axe and let him go with us to the mountain and we will all of us
+cut wood for fuel. The price of the wood shall be his and ours, and he
+shall provide thee and his wife with his share." When she heard this,
+she joyed with exceeding joy and bought her son an ass and cords and
+hatchet; then, carrying him to the woodcutters, delivered him into
+their hands and solemnly committed him to their care. Said they, "Have
+no concern for the boy, our Lord will provide for him: he is the son of
+our Shaykh." So they carried him to the mountain, where they cut
+firewood and loaded their asses therewith; then returned to the city
+and, selling what they had cut, spent the monies on their families.
+This they did on the next day and the third and ceased not for some
+time, till it chanced one day, a violent storm of rain broke over them,
+and they took refuge in a great cave till the downfall should pass
+away. Now Hasib Karim al-Din went apart from the rest into a corner of
+the cavern and sitting down, fell to smiting the floor with his axe.
+Presently he noted that the ground sounded hollow under the hatchet; so
+he dug there awhile and came to a round flagstone with a ring in it.
+When he saw this, he was glad and called his comrades the
+woodcutters,—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say
+her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Eighty-fourth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when Hasib Karim
+al-Din saw the flagstone with the ring, he was glad and called his
+comrades the woodcutters, who came to him and, finding it was fact,
+soon pulled up the stone and discovered under it a trap-door, which,
+being opened, showed a cistern full of bees' honey.[FN#510] Then said
+they to one another, "This is a large store and we have nothing for it
+but to return to the city and fetch vessels wherein to carry away the
+honey, and sell it and divide the price, whilst one of us stands by the
+cistern, to guard it from outsiders." Quoth Hasib, "I will stay and
+keep watch over it till you bring your pots and pans." So they left him
+on guard there and, repairing to the city, fetched vessels, which they
+filled with honey and loading their asses therewith, carried them to
+the streets and sold the contents. They returned on the morrow and thus
+they did several days in succession, sleeping in the town by night and
+drawing off the stuff by day, whilst Hasib abode on guard by it till
+but little remained, when they said one to other, "It was Hasib Karim
+al-Din found the honey, and tomorrow he will come down to the city and
+complain against us and claim the price of it, saying, Twas I found
+it;' nor is there escape for us but that we let him down into the
+cistern, to bale out the rest of the honey, and leave him there; so
+will he die of hunger, and none shall know of him." They all fell in
+with this plot as they were making for the place; and, when they
+reached it, one said to him, "O Hasib, go down into the pit and bale
+out for us the rest of the honey." So he went down and passed up to
+them what remained of the honey, after which he said to them, "Draw me
+up, for there is nothing left." They made him no answer; but, loading
+their asses, went off to the city and left him alone in the cistern.
+Thereupon he fell to weeping and crying, "There is no Majesty and there
+is no Might save in Allah, the Glorious, the Great!" Such was his case;
+but as regards his comrades, when they reached the city and sold the
+honey, they repaired to Hasib's mother, weeping, and said to her, "May
+thy head outlive thy son Hasib!" She asked, "What brought about his
+death?" and they answered, "We were cutting wood on the mountain- top,
+when there fell on us a heavy downfall of rain and we took shelter from
+it in a cavern; and suddenly thy son's ass broke loose and fled into
+the valley, and he ran after it, to turn it back, when there came out
+upon them a great wolf, who tore thy son in pieces and ravined the
+ass." When the mother heard this, she beat her face and strewed dust on
+her head and fell to mourning for her son; and she kept life and soul
+together only by the meat and drink which they brought her every day.
+As for the woodcutters they opened them shops and became merchants and
+spent their lives in eating and drinking and laughing and frolicking.
+Meanwhile Hasib Karim al-Din, who ceased not to weep and call for help,
+sat down upon the cistern edge when behold, a great scorpion fell down
+on him; so he rose and killed it. Then he took thought and said, "The
+cistern was full of honey; how came this scorpion here?" Accordingly he
+got up and examined the well right and left, till he found a crevice
+from which the scorpion had fallen and saw the light of day shining
+through it. So he took out his woodman's knife and enlarged the hole,
+till it was big as a window, then he crept through it and, after
+walking for some time, came to a vast gallery, which led him to a huge
+door of black iron bearing a padlock of silver wherein was a key of
+gold. He stole up to the door and, looking through the chink, saw a
+great light shining within; so he took the key and, opening the door,
+went on for some time, till he came to a large artificial lake, wherein
+he caught sight of something that shimmered like silver. He walked up
+to it and at last he saw, hard by a hillock of green jasper and on the
+hill top, a golden throne studded with all manner gems,—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Eighty-fifth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when Hasib
+reached the hillock he found it of green jasper surmounted by a golden
+throne studded with all manner gems, round which were set many stools,
+some of gold, some of silver and others of leek green emerald. He clomb
+the hillock and, counting the stools, found them twelve thousand in
+number; then he mounted the throne which was set on the centre and,
+seating himself thereon, fell to wondering at the lake and the stools,
+and he marvelled till drowsiness overcame him and he drops asleep.
+Presently, he was aroused by a loud snorting and hissing and rustling,
+so he opened his eyes; and, sitting up, saw each stool occupied by a
+huge serpent, an hundred cubits in length. At this sight, great fear
+get hold of him; his spittle dried up for the excess of his dread and
+he despaired of life, as all their eyes were blazing like live coals.
+Then he turned towards the lake and saw that what he had taken for
+shimmering water was a multitude of small snakes, none knoweth their
+compt save Allah the Most High. After awhile, there came up to him a
+serpent as big as a mule, bearing on its back a tray of gold, wherein
+lay another serpent which shone like crystal and whose face was as that
+of a woman[FN#511] and who spake with human speech. And as soon as she
+was brought up to Hasib, she saluted him and he returned the
+salutation. There upon, one of the serpents seated on the stools came
+up and, lifting her off the tray, set her on one of the seats and she
+cried out to the other serpents in their language, whereupon they all
+fell down from their stools and did her homage. But she signed to them
+to sit and they did so. Then she addressed Hasib, saying, "Have no fear
+of us, O youth; for I am the Queen of the Serpents and their Sultαnah."
+When he heard her speak on this wise, he took heart and she bade the
+serpents bring him somewhat of food.[FN#512] So they brought apples and
+grapes and pomegranates and pistachio-nuts and filberts and walnuts and
+almonds and bananas and set them before him, and the Queen-serpent
+said, "Welcome, O youth! What is thy name?" Answered he, "Hasib Karim
+al-Din;" and she rejoined, "O Hasib, eat of these fruits, for we have
+no other meat and fear thou have nothing from us at all." Hearing this,
+he ate his fill and praised Allah Almighty; and presently they took
+away the trays from before him, and the Queen said, "Tell me, O Hasib,
+whence thou art and how camest thou hither and what hath befallen
+thee." So he told her his story from first to last, the death of his
+father; his birth; his being sent to school where he learnt nothing;
+his becoming a wood cutter; his finding the honey- cistern; his being
+abandoned therein; his killing the scorpion; his widening the crevice;
+his finding the iron door and his coming upon the Queen, and he ended
+his long tale with saying, "These be my adventures from beginning to
+end and only Allah wotteth what will betide me after all this!" Quoth
+the Queen, after listening to his words, "Nothing save good shall
+betide thee:"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say
+her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Eighty-sixth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the
+Serpent-queen had heard his story she said, "Nothing save good shall
+betide thee: but I would have thee, O Hasib, abide with me some time,
+that I may tell thee my history and acquaint thee with the wondrous
+adventures which have happened to me." "I hear and obey thy hest,"
+answered he; and she began to tell in these words,
+
+
+
+
+The Adventures of Bulukiya.
+
+"Know thou, O Hasib, there was once in the city of Cairo a King of the
+Banu Isra'νl, a wise and a pious, who was bent double by poring over
+books of learning, and he had a son named Bulϊkiyα. When he grew old
+and weak and was nigh upon death, his Grandees and Officers of state
+came up to salute him, and he said to them, 'O folk, know that at hand
+is the hour of my march from this world to the next, and I have no
+charge to lay on you, save to commend to your care my son Bulukiya.'
+Then said he, 'I testify that there is no god save the God;' and,
+heaving one sigh, departed the world the mercy of Allah be upon him!
+They laid him out and washed him and buried him with a procession of
+great state. Then they made his son Bulukiya Sultan in his stead; and
+he ruled the kingdom justly and the people had peace in his time. Now
+it befell one day that he entered his father's treasuries, to look
+about him, and coming upon an inner compartment and finding the
+semblance of a door, opened it and passed in. And lo! he found himself
+in a little closet, wherein stood a column of white marble, on the top
+of which was a casket of ebony; he opened this also and saw therein
+another casket of gold, containing a book. He read the book and found
+in it an account of our lord Mohammed (whom Allah bless and preserve!)
+and how he should be sent in the latter days[FN#513] and be the lord of
+the first Prophets and the last. On seeing the personal description
+Bulukiya's heart was taken with love of him, so he at once assembled
+all the notables of the Children of Israel, the Cohens or diviners, the
+scribes and the priests, and acquainted them with the book, reading
+portions of it to them and, adding, 'O folk, needs must I bring my
+father out of his grave and burn him.' The lieges asked, 'Why wilt thou
+burn him?'; and he answered, 'Because he hid this book from me and
+imparted it not to me.' Now the old King had excerpted it from the
+Torah or Pentateuch and the Books of Abraham; and had set it in one of
+his treasuries and concealed it from all living. Rejoined they, 'O
+King, thy father is dead; his body is in the dust and his affair is in
+the hands of his Lord; thou shalt not take him forth of his tomb.' So
+he knew that they would not suffer him to do this thing by his sire and
+leaving them he repaired to his mother, to whom said he, 'O my mother,
+I have found, in one of my father's treasuries, a book containing a
+description of Mohammed (whom Allah bless and keep!), a prophet who
+shall be sent in the latter days; and my heart is captivated with love
+of him. Wherefore am I resolved to wander over the earth, till I
+foregather with him; else I shall die of longing for his love.' Then he
+doffed his clothes and donned an Aba gown of goat's hair and coarse
+sandals, saying, 'O my mother, forget me not in thy prayers.' She wept
+over him and said, 'What will become of us after thee?'; but Bulukiya
+answered, 'I can endure no longer, and I commit my affair and thine to
+Allah who is Almighty.' Then he set out on foot Syria wards without the
+knowledge of any of his folk, and coming to the sea board found a
+vessel whereon he shipped as one of the crew. They sailed till he made
+an island, where Bulukiya landed with the crew, but straying away from
+the rest he sat down under a tree and sleep got the better of him. When
+he awoke, he sought the ship but found that she had set sail without
+him, and in that island he saw serpents as big as camels and palm
+trees, which repeated the names of Allah (be He extolled and exalted!)
+and blessed Mohammed (whom the Lord assain and save!), proclaiming the
+Unity and glorifying the Glorious; whereat he wondered."—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Eighty-seventh Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "when Bulukiya
+saw the serpents glorifying God and proclaiming the Unity, he wondered
+with extreme wonder. When they saw him, they flocked to him and one of
+them said to him, 'Who and whence art thou and whither goest thou. and
+what is thy name?' Quoth he, 'My name is Bulukiya; I am of the Children
+of Israel and, being distracted for love of Mohammed (whom Allah bless
+and keep!), I come in quest of him. But who are ye, O noble creatures?'
+Answered they, 'We are of the dwellers in the Jahannam-hell; and
+Almighty Allah created us for the punishment of Kafirs.' 'And how came
+ye hither?' asked he, and the Serpents answered, 'Know, O Bulukiya,
+that Hell[FN#514] of the greatness of her boiling, breatheth twice a
+year, expiring in the summer and inspiring in the winter, and hence the
+summer heat and winter cold. When she exhaleth, she casteth us forth of
+her maw, and we are drawn in again with her inhaled breath.' Quoth
+Bulukiya, 'Say me, are there greater serpents than you in Hell?'; and
+they said, 'Of a truth we are cast out with the expired breath but by
+reason of our smallness; for in Hell every serpent is so great, that
+were the biggest of us to pass over its nose it would not feel
+us.[FN#515]' Asked Bulukiya, 'Ye sing the praises of Allah and invoke
+blessings on Mohammed, whom the Almighty assain and save! Whence wot ye
+of Mohammed?'; and they answered, 'O Bulukiya, verily his name is
+written on the gates of Paradise; and, but for him, Allah had not
+created the worlds[FN#516] nor Paradise, nor heaven nor hell nor earth,
+for He made all things that be, solely on his account, and hath
+conjoined his name with His own in every place; wherefore we love
+Mohammed, whom Allah bless and preserve!' Now hearing the serpents'
+converse did but inflame Bulukiya's love for Mohammed and yearning for
+his sight; so he took leave of them; and, making his way to the
+sea-shore, found there a ship made fast to the beach; he embarked
+therein as a seaman and sailed nor ceased sailing till he came to
+another island. Here he landed and walking about awhile found serpents
+great and small, none knoweth their number save Almighty Allah, and
+amongst them a white Serpent, clearer than crystal, seated in a golden
+tray borne on the back of another serpent as big as an elephant. Now
+this, O Hasib, was the Serpent-queen, none other than myself." Quoth
+Hasib, "And what answer didst thou make him?" Quoth she, "Know, O
+Hasib, that when I saw Bulukiya, I saluted him with the salam, and he
+returned my salutation, and I said to him, 'Who and what art thou and
+what is thine errand and whence comest thou and whither goest thou?'
+Answered he, 'I am of the Children of Israel; my name is Bulukiya, and
+I am a wanderer for the love of Mohammed, whose description I have read
+in the revealed scriptures, and of whom I go in search. But what art
+thou and what are these serpents about thee?' Quoth I, 'O Bulukiya, I
+am the Queen of the Serpents; and when thou shalt foregather with
+Mohammed (whom Allah assain and save!) bear him my salutation.' Then
+Bulukiya took leave of me and journeyed till he came to the Holy City
+which is Jerusalem. Now there was in that stead a man who was deeply
+versed in all sciences, more especially in geometry and astronomy and
+mathematics, as well as in white magic[FN#517] and Spiritualism; and he
+had studied the Pentateuch and the Evangel and the Psalms and the Books
+of Abraham. His name was Affan; and he had found in certain of his
+books, that whoso should wear the seal ring of our lord Solomon, men
+and Jinn and birds and beasts and all created things would be bound to
+obey him. Moreover, he had discovered that our lord Solomon had been
+buried in a coffin which was miraculously transported beyond the Seven
+Seas to the place of burial;"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day
+and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Eighty-eighth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "Affan had found
+in certain books that none, mortal or spirit, could pluck the seal ring
+from the lord Solomon's finger; and that no navigator could sail his
+ship upon the Seven Seas over which the coffin had been carried.
+Moreover, he had found out by reading that there was a herb of herbs
+and that if one express its juice and anoint therewith his feet, he
+should walk upon the surface of any sea that Allah Almighty had created
+without wetting his soles, but none could obtain this herb, without he
+had with him the Serpent-queen. When Bulukiya arrived at the Holy City,
+he at once sat down to do his devotions and worship the Lord; and,
+whilst he was so doing, Affan came up and saluted him as a True
+Believer. Then seeing him reading the Pentateuch and adoring the
+Almighty, he accosted him saying, 'What is thy name, O man; and whence
+comest thou and whither goest thou?' He answered, 'My name is Bulukiya;
+I am from the city of Cairo and am come forth wandering in quest of
+Mohammed, whom Allah bless and preserve!' Quoth Affan, 'Come with me to
+my lodging that I may entertain thee.' 'To hear is to obey,' replied
+Bulukiya So the devotee took him by the hand and carried him to his
+house where he entreated him with the utmost honour and presentry said
+to him, 'Tell me thy history, O my brother, and how thou camest by the
+knowledge of Mohammed (whom Allah assain and save!) that thy heart hath
+been taken with love of him and compelled thee to fare forth and seek
+him; and lastly tell me who it was directed thee in this road.' So he
+related to him his tale in its entirety; whereupon Affan, who well nigh
+lost his wits for wonder, said to him, 'Make tryst for me with the
+Queen of the Serpents and I will bring thee in company with Mohammed,
+albeit the date of his mission is yet far distant. We have only to
+prevail upon the Queen and carry her in a cage to a certain mountain
+where the herbs grow; and, as long as she is with us, the plants as we
+pass them will parley with human speech and discover their virtues by
+the ordinance of Allah the Most High. For I have found in my books that
+there is a certain herb and all who express its juice and anoint
+therewith their feet shall walk upon whatsoever sea Almighty Allah hath
+made, without wetting sole. When we have found the magical herb, we
+will let her go her way; and then will we anoint our feet with the
+juice and cross the Seven Seas, till we come to the burial place of our
+lord Solomon. Then we will take the ring off his finger and rule even
+as he ruled and win all our wishes; we will enter the Main of
+Murks[FN#518] and drink of the Water of Life, and so the Almighty will
+let us tarry till the End of Time and we shall foregather with
+Mohammed, whom Allah bless and preserve!' Hearing these words Bulukiya
+replied, 'O Affan, I will make tryst for thee with the Serpent-queen
+and at once show thee her abiding place.' So Affan made him a cage of
+iron; and, providing himself with two bowls, one full of wine and the
+other of milk, took ship with Bulukiya and sailed till they came to the
+island, where they landed and walked upon it. Then Affan set up the
+cage, in which he laid a noose and withdrew after placing in it the two
+bowls; when he and Bulukiya concealed themselves afar off. Presently,
+up came the Queen of the Serpents (that is, myself) and examined the
+cage. When she (that is I) smelt the savour of the milk, she came down
+from the back of the snake which bore her tray and, entering the cage,
+drank up the milk. Then she went to the bowl of wine and drank of it,
+whereupon her head became giddy and she slept. When Affan saw this, he
+ran up and locking the cage upon her, set it on his head and made for
+the ship, he and Bulukiya. After awhile she awoke and finding herself
+in a cage of iron on a man's head and seeing Bulukiya walking beside
+the bearer, said to him, 'This is the reward of those who do no hurt to
+the sons of Adam.' Answered he, 'O Queen, have no fear of us, for we
+will do thee no hurt at all. We wish thee only to show us the herb
+which, when pounded and squeezed yieldeth a juice, and this rubbed upon
+the feet conferreth the power of walking dryshod upon what sea soever
+Almighty Allah hath created; and when we have found that, we will
+return thee to thy place and let thee wend thy way.' Then Affan and
+Bulukiya fared on for the hills where grew the herbs; and, as they went
+about with the Queen, each plant they passed began to speak and avouch
+its virtues by permission of Allah the Most High. As they were thus
+doing and the herbs speaking right and left, behold, a plant spoke out
+and said, 'I am the herb ye seek, and all who gather and crush me and
+anoint their feet with my juice, shall fare over what sea soever Allah
+Almighty hath created and yet ne'er wet sole.' When Affan heard this,
+he set down the cage from his head and, gathering what might suffice
+them of the herb, crushed it and filling two vials with the juice kept
+them for future use; and with what was left they anointed their feet.
+Then they took up the Serpent-queen's cage and journeyed days and
+nights, till they reached the island, where they opened the cage and
+let out her that is me. When I found myself at liberty, I asked them
+what use they would make of the juice; and they answered, 'We design to
+anoint our feet and to cross the Seven Seas to the burial place of our
+lord Solomon[FN#519] and take the seal ring from his finger.' Quoth I,
+'Far, far is it from your power to possess yourselves of the ring!'
+They enquired, 'Wherefore?' and I replied, 'Because Almighty Allah
+vouchsafed unto our lord Solomon the gift of this ring and
+distinguished him thereby, for that he said to him, 'O Lord, give me a
+kingdom which may not be obtained after me; for Thou verily art the
+Giver of kingdoms.[FN#520]' 'So that ring is not for you.' And I added,
+'Had ye twain taken the herb, whereof all who eat shall not die until
+the First Blast,[FN#521] it had better availed you than this ye have
+gotten; for ye shall nowise come at your desire thereby.' Now when they
+heard this, they repented them with exceeding penitence and went their
+ways."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Eighty-ninth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "when Bulukiya
+and Affan heard these words, they repented them with exceeding
+penitence and went their ways. Such was their case; but as regards
+myself" (continued the Serpent-queen) "I went in quest of my host and
+found it fallen in piteous case, the stronger of them having grown weak
+in my absence and the weaker having died. When they saw me, they
+rejoiced and flocking about me, asked, 'What hath befallen thee, and
+where hast thou been?' So I told them what had passed, after which I
+gathered my forces to "ether and repaired with them to the mountain
+Kaf, where I was wont to winter, summer-freshing in the place where
+thou now seest me, O Hasib Karim al-Din. This, then, is my story and
+what befell me." Thereupon Hasib marvelled at her words and said to
+her, "I beseech thee, of thy favour, bid one of thy guards bear me
+forth to the surface of the earth, that I may go to my people." She
+replied, "O Hasib, thou shalt not have leave to depart from us till
+winter come, and needs must thou go with us to the Mountain Kaf and
+solace thyself with the sight of the hills and sands and trees and
+birds magnifying the One God, the Victorious; and look upon Marids and
+Ifrits and Jinn, whose number none knoweth save Almighty Allah." When
+Hasib heard this, he was sore chafed and chagrined: then he said to
+her, "Tell me of Affan and Bulukiya; when they departed from thee and
+went their way, did they cross the Seven Seas and reach the
+burial-place of our lord Solomon or not; and if they did had they power
+to take the ring or not?" Answered she, "Know, that when they left me,
+they anointed their feet with the juice; and, walking over the water,
+fared on from sea to sea, diverting themselves with the wonders of the
+deep, nor ceased they faring till they had traversed the Seven Seas and
+came in sight of a mountain, soaring high in air, whose stones were
+emeralds and whose dust was musk; and in it was a stream of running
+water. When they made it they rejoiced, saying each to the other,
+'Verily we have won our wish'; and they entered the passes of the
+mountain and walked on, till they saw from afar a cavern surmounted by
+a great dome, shining with light. So they made for the cavern, and
+entering it beheld therein a throne of gold studded with all manner
+jewels, and about it stools whose number none knoweth save Allah
+Almighty. And they saw lying at full length upon the throne our lord
+Solomon, clad in robes of green silk inwoven with gold and broidered
+with jewels and precious minerals: his right hand was passed over his
+breast and on the middle finger was the seal ring whose lustre outshone
+that of all other gems in the place. Then Affan taught Bulukiya
+adjurations and conjurations galore and said to him, 'Repeat these
+conjurations and cease not repeating until I take the ring.' Then he
+went up to the throne; but, as he drew near unto it lo' c mighty
+serpent came forth from beneath it and cried out at him with so
+terrible a cry that the whole place trembled and sparks flew from its
+mouth, saying, 'Begone, or thou art a dead man' But Affan busied
+himself with his incantations and suffered himself not to be startled
+thereby. Then the serpent blew such a fiery blast at him, that the
+place was like to be set on fire, and said to him, Woe to thee! Except
+thou turn back, I will consume thee' Hearing these words Bulukiya left
+the cave, but Affan, who suffered himself not to be troubled, went up
+to the Prophet: then he put out his hand to the ring and touched it and
+strove to draw it off the lord Solomon's finger; and behold, the
+serpent blew on him once more and he became a heap of ashes. Such was
+his case; but as regards Bulukiya he fell down in a swoon."— And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Ninetieth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Queen
+continued: "When Bulukiya saw Affan burnt up by the fire and become a
+heap of ashes, he fell down in a swoon. Thereupon the Lord (magnified
+be His Majesty!) bade Gabriel descend earthwards and save him ere the
+serpent should blow on him. So Gabriel descended without delay and,
+finding Affan reduced to ashes and Bulukiya in a fit, aroused him from
+his trance and saluting him asked, 'How camest thou hither?' Bulukiya
+related to him his history from first to last, adding, 'Know that I
+came not hither but for the love of Mohammed (whom Allah assain and
+save!), of whom Affan informed me that his mission would take place at
+the End of Time; moreover that none should foregather with him but
+those who endured to the latter days by drinking of the Water of Life
+through means of Solomon's seal. So I companied him hither and there
+befell him what befell; but I escaped the fire and now it is my desire
+that thou inform me where Mohammed is to be found.' Quoth Gabriel, 'O
+Bulukiya, go thy ways, for the time of Mohammed's coming is yet far
+distant.' Then he ascended up to heaven forthright, and Bulukiya wept
+with sore weeping and repented of that which he had done, calling to
+mind my words, whenas I said to them, 'Far is it from man's power to
+possess himself of the ring.' Then he descended from the mountain and
+returned in exceeding confusion to the sea shore and passed the night
+there, marvelling at the mountains and seas and islands around him.
+When morning dawned, he anointed his feet with the herb-juice and
+descending to the water, set out and fared on over the surface of the
+seas days and nights, astonied at the terrors of the main and the
+marvels and wonders of the deep, till he came to an island as it were
+the Garden of Eden. So he landed and, finding himself in a great and
+pleasant island, paced about it and saw with admiration that its dust
+was saffron and its gravel carnelian and precious minerals; its hedges
+were of jessamine, its vegetation was of the goodliest of trees and of
+the brightest of odoriferous shrubs; its brushwood was of Comorin and
+Sumatran aloes-wood and its reeds were sugar-canes. Round about it were
+roses and narcissus and amaranths and gilly-flowers and chamomiles and
+white lilies and violets, and other flowers of all kinds and colours.
+Of a truth the island was the goodliest place, abounding in space, rich
+in grace, a compendium of beauty material and spiritual. The birds
+warbled on the boughs with tones far sweeter than chaunt of Koran and
+their notes would console a lover whom longings unman. And therein the
+gazelle frisked free and fain and wild cattle roamed about the plain.
+Its trees were of tallest height; its streams flowed bright; its
+springs welled with waters sweet and light; and all therein was a
+delight to sight and sprite. Bulukiya marvelled at the charms of the
+island but knew that he had strayed from the way he had first taken in
+company with Affan. He wandered about the place and solaced him with
+various spectacles until nightfall, when he climbed into a tree to
+sleep; but as he sat there, musing over the beauty of the site, behold,
+the sea became troubled and there rose up to the surface a great beast,
+which cried out with a cry so terrible that every living thing upon the
+isle trembled. As Bulukiya gazed upon him from the tree and marvelled
+at the bigness of his bulk, he was presently followed unexpectedly by a
+multitude of other sea beasts in kind manifolds, each holding in his
+fore-paw a jewel which shone like a lamp, so that the whole island
+became as light as day for the lustre of the gems. After awhile, there
+appeared, from the heart of the island, wild beasts of the land, none
+knoweth their number save Allah the Most High; amongst which Bulukiya
+noted lions and panthers and lynxes and other ferals; and these land
+beasts flocked down to the shore; and, foregathering with the sea
+beasts, conversed with them till daybreak, when they separated and each
+went his own way. Thereupon Bulukiya, terrified by what he had seen,
+came down from the tree and, making the sea shore, anointed his feet
+with the magical juice, and set out once more upon the surface of the
+water. He fared on days and nights over the Second Sea, till he came to
+a great mountain skirting which ran a Wady without end, the stones
+whereof were magnetic iron and its beasts, lions and hares and
+panthers. He landed on the mountain foot and wandered from place to
+place till nightfall, when he sat down sheltered by one of the base
+hills on the sea side, to eat of the dried fish thrown up by the sea.
+Presently, he turned from his meal and behold, a huge panther was
+creeping up to rend and ravin him; so he anointed his feet in haste
+with the juice and, descending to the surface of the water, fled
+walking over the Third Sea, in the darkness, for the night was black
+and the wind blew stark. Nor did he stay his course till he reached
+another island, whereon he landed and found there trees bearing fruits
+both fresh and dry.[FN#522] So he took of these fruits and ate and
+praised Allah Almighty; after which he walked for solace; about the
+island till eventide."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and
+ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Ninety-first Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "Bulukiya
+(continued the Queen) walked for solace about the island till eventide,
+when he lay down to sleep. As soon as day brake, he began to explore
+the place and ceased not for ten days, after which he again made the
+shore and anointed his feet and, setting out over the Fourth Sea,
+walked upon it many nights and days, till he came to a third island of
+fine white sand without sign of trees or grass. He walked about it
+awhile but, finding its only inhabitants sakers which nested in the
+sand, he again anointed his feet and trudged over the Fifth Sea,
+walking night and day till he came to a little island, whose soil and
+hills were like crystal. Therein were the veins wherefrom gold is
+worked; and therein also were marvellous trees whose like he had never
+seen in his wanderings, for their blossoms were in hue as gold. He
+landed and walked about for diversion till it was nightfall, when the
+flowers began to shine through the gloom like stars. Seeing this sight,
+he marvelled and said, 'Assuredly, the flowers of this island are of
+those which wither under the sun and fall to the earth, where the winds
+smite them and they gather under the rocks and become the
+Elixir[FN#523] which the folk collect and thereof make gold.' He slept
+there all that night and at sunrise he again anointed his feet and,
+descending to the shore, fared on over the Sixth Sea nights and days,
+till he came to a fifth island. Here he landed and found, after walking
+an hour or so, two mountains covered with a multitude of trees, whose
+fruits were as men's heads hanging by the hair, and others whose fruits
+were green birds hanging by the feet; also a third kind, whose fruits
+were like aloes, if a drop of the juice fell on a man it burnt like
+fire; and others, whose fruits wept and laughed, besides many other
+marvels which he saw there. Then he returned to the sea shore and,
+finding there a tall tree, sat down beneath it till supper time when he
+climbed up into the branches to sleep. As he sat considering the
+wonderful works of Allah behold, the waters became troubled, and there
+rose therefrom the daughters of the sea, each mermaid holding in her
+hand a jewel which shone like the morning. They came ashore and,
+foregathering under the trees, sat down and danced and sported and made
+merry whilst Bulukiya amused himself with watching and wondering at
+their gambols, which were prolonged till the morning, when they
+returned to the sea and disappeared. Then he came down and, anointing
+his feet, set out on the surface of the Seventh Sea, over which he
+journeyed two whole months, without getting sight of highland or island
+or broadland or lowland or shoreland, till he came to the end thereof.
+And so doing he suffered exceeding hunger, so that he was forced to
+snatch up fishes from the surface of the sea and devour them raw, for
+stress of famine. In such case he pushed on till in early forenoon he
+came to the sixth island, with trees a-growing and rills a flowing,
+where he landed and walked about, looking right and left, till he came
+to an apple tree and put forth his hand to pluck of the fruit, when lo!
+one cried out to him from the tree, saying, 'An thou draw near to this
+tree and cut of it aught, I will cut thee in twain.' So he looked and
+saw a giant forty cubits high, being the cubit of the people of that
+day; whereat he feared with sore fear and refrained from that tree.
+Then said he to the giant, 'Why cost thou forbid me to eat of this
+tree?' Replied the other, 'Because thou art a son of Adam and thy
+father Adam forgot the covenant of Allah and sinned against Him and ate
+of the tree.' Quoth Bulukiya, 'What thing art thou and to whom
+belongeth this island, with its trees, and how art thou named?' Quoth
+the tall one, 'My name is Sharαhiyα and trees and island belong to King
+Sakhr;[FN#524] I am one of his guards and in charge of his dominion,'
+presently adding, 'But who art thou and whence comest thou hither?'
+Bulukiya told him his story from beginning to end and Sharahiya said,
+'Be of good cheer,' and brought him to eat. So he ate his fill and,
+taking leave of the giant, set out again and ceased not faring on over
+the mountains and sandy deserts for ten days; at the end of which time
+he saw, in the distance, a dust cloud hanging like a canopy in air;
+and, making towards it, he heard a mighty clamour, cries and blows and
+sounds of mellay. Presently he reached a great Wady, two months'
+journey long; and, looking whence the shouts came, he saw a multitude
+of horse men engaged in fierce fight and the blood running from them
+till it railed like a river. Their voices were thunderous and they were
+armed with lance and sword and iron mace and bow and arrow, and all
+fought with the utmost fury. At this sight he felt sore affright"—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Ninety-second Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Queen
+continued: "When Bulukiya saw the host in fight, he felt sore affright
+and was perplexed about his case; but whilst he hesitated, behold, they
+caught sight of him and held their hands one from other and left
+fighting. Then a troop of them came up to him, wondering at his make,
+and one of the horsemen said to him, 'What art thou and whence camest
+thou hither and whither art wending; and who showed thee the way that
+thou hast come to our country?' Quoth he, 'I am of the sons of Adam and
+am come out, distracted for the love of Mohammed (whom Allah bless and
+preserve!); but I have wandered from my way.' Quoth the horseman,
+'Never saw we a son of Adam till now, nor did any ever come to this
+land.' And all marvelled at him and at his speech. 'But what are ye, O
+creatures?' asked Bulukiya; and the rider replied, 'We are of the
+Jαnn.' So he said, 'O Knight, what is the cause of the fighting amongst
+you and where is your abiding place and what is the name of this valley
+and this land?' He replied, 'Our abiding- place is the White Country;
+and, every year, Allah Almighty commandeth us to come hither and wage
+war upon the unbelieving Jann.' Asked Bulukiya, 'And where is the White
+Country?' and the horseman answered, 'It is behind the mountain Kaf,
+and distant seventy-five years journey from this place which is termed
+the Land of Shaddαd son of 'Αd: we are here for Holy War; and we have
+no other business, when we are not doing battle, than to glorify God
+and hallow him. More over, we have a ruler, King Sakhr highs, and needs
+must thou go with us to him, that he may look upon thee for his
+especial delight.' Then they fared on (and he with them) till they came
+to their abiding place; where he saw a multitude of magnificent tents
+of green silk, none knoweth their number save Allah the Most High, and
+in their midst a pavilion of red satin, some thousand cubits in
+compass, with cords of blue silk and pegs of gold and silver. Bulukiya
+marvelled at the sight and accompanied them as they fared on and
+behold, this was the royal pavilion. So they carried him into the
+presence of King Sakhr, whom he found seated upon a splendid throne of
+red gold, set with pearls and studded with gems; the Kings and Princes
+of the Jann being on his right hand, and on his left his Councillors
+and Emirs and Officers of state, and a multitude of others. The King
+seeing him bade introduce him, which they did; and Bulukiya went up to
+him and saluted him after kissing the ground before him. The King
+returned his salute and said, 'Draw near me, O mortal!' and Bulukiya
+went close up to him. Hereupon the King, commanding a chair to be set
+for him by his royal side, bade him sit down and asked him 'Who art
+thou?'; and Bulukiya answered, 'I am a man, and one of the Children of
+Israel.' 'Tell me thy story,' cried King Sakhr, 'and acquaint me with
+all that hath befallen thee and how thou camest to this my land.' So
+Bulukiya related to him all that had occurred in his wanderings from
+beginning to end."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased
+saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Ninety-third Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Queen
+continued: "When Bulukiya related to Sakhr what befell him in his
+wanderings, he marvelled thereat. Then he bade the servants bring food
+and they spread the tables and set on one thousand and five hundred
+platters of red gold and silver and copper, some containing twenty and
+some fifty boiled camels, and others some fifty head of sheep; at which
+Bulukiya marvelled with exceeding marvel. Then they ate and he ate with
+them, till he was satisfied and returned thanks to Allah Almighty;
+after which they cleared the tables and set on fruits, and they ate
+thereof, glorifying the name of God and invoking blessings on His
+prophet Mohammed (whom Allah bless and preserve!) When Bulukiya heard
+them make mention of Mohammed, he wondered and said to King Sakhr, 'I
+am minded to ask thee some questions.' Rejoined the King, 'Ask what
+thou wilt,' and Bulukiya said, 'O King, what are ye and what is your
+origin and how came ye to know of Mohammed (whom Allah assain and
+save!) that ye draw near to him and love him?' King Sakhr answered, 'O
+Bulukiya, of very sooth Allah created the fire in seven stages, one
+above the other, and each distant a thousand years journey from its
+neighbour. The first stage he named Jahannam[FN#525] and appointed the
+same for the punishment of the transgressors of the True-believers, who
+die unrepentant; the second he named Lazα and appointed for
+Unbelievers: the name of the third is Jahνm and is appointed for Gog
+and Magog.[FN#526] The fourth is called Sa'νr and is appointed for the
+host of Iblis. The fifth is called Sakar and is prepared for those who
+neglect prayer. The sixth is called Hatamah and is appointed for Jews
+and Christians. The seventh is named Hαwiyah and is prepared for
+hypocrites. Such be the seven stages.' Quoth Bulukiya, 'Haply Jahannam
+hath least of torture for that it is the uppermost.' 'Yes,' quoth King
+Sakhr, 'the most endurable of them all is Jahannam; natheless in it are
+a thousand mountains of fire, in each mountain seventy thousand cities
+of fire, in each city seventy thousand castles of fire, in each castle
+seventy thousand houses of fire, in each house seventy thousand couches
+of fire and in each couch seventy thousand manners of torment. As for
+the other hells, O Bulukiya, none knoweth the number of kinds of
+torment that be therein save Allah Most Highest.' When Bulukiya heard
+this, he fell down in a fainting-fit, and when he came to himself, he
+wept and said, 'O King what will be my case?' Quoth Sakhr, 'Fear not,
+and know thou that whoso loveth Mohammed (whom Allah bless and keep!)
+the fire shall not burn him, for he is made free therefrom for his
+sake; and whoso belongeth to his Faith the fire shall fly him. As for
+us, the Almighty Maker created us of the fire for the first that he
+made in Jahannam were two of His host whom he called Khalνt and Malνt.
+Now Khalνt was fashioned in the likeness of a lion, with a tail like a
+tortoise twenty years' journey in length and ending in a member
+masculine; while Malνt was like a pied wolf whose tail was furnished
+with a member feminine. Then Almighty Allah commanded the tails to
+couple and copulate and do the deed of kind, and of them were born
+serpents and scorpions, whose dwelling is in the fire, that Allah may
+there with torment those whom He casteth therein; and these increased
+and multiplied. Then Allah commanded the tails of Khalit and Malit to
+couple and copulate a second time, and the tail of Malit conceived by
+the tail of Khalit and bore fourteen children, seven male and seven
+female, who grew up and intermarried one with the other. All were
+obedient to their sire, save one who disobeyed him and was changed into
+a worm which is Iblis (the curse of Allah be upon him!). Now Iblis was
+one of the Cherubim, for he had served Allah till he was raised to the
+heavens and cherished[FN#527] by the especial favour of the Merciful
+One, who made him chief of the Cherubim.'"—And Shahrazad perceived the
+dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Ninety-fourth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Queen
+continued: "'Iblis served God and became chief of Cherubim. When,
+however, the Lord created Adam (with whom be peace!), He commanded
+Iblis to prostrate himself to him, but he drew back; so Allah Almighty
+expelled him from heaven and cursed him.[FN#528] This Iblis had issue
+and of his lineage are the devils; and as for the other six males, who
+were his elders, they are the ancestors of the true believing Jann, and
+we are their descendants. Such, O Bulukiya is our provenance.[FN#529]'
+Bulukiya marvelled at the King's words and said, 'O King, I pray thee
+bid one of thy guards bear me back to my native land.' 'Naught of this
+may we do,' answered Sakhr, 'save by commandment of Allah Almighty;
+however, an thou desire to leave us and return home, I will mount thee
+on one of my mares and cause her carry thee to the farthest frontiers
+of my dominions, where thou wilt meet with the troops of another King,
+Barαkhiyα highs, who will recognize the mare at sight and take thee off
+her and send her back to us; and this is all we can do for thee, and no
+more.' When Bulukiya heard these words he wept and said, 'Do whatso
+thou wilt.' So King Sakhr caused bring the mare and, setting Bulukiya
+on her back, said to him, 'Beware lest thou alight from her or strike
+her or cry out in her face; for if thou do so she will slay thee; but
+abide quietly riding on her back till she stop with thee; then dismount
+and wend thy ways.' Quoth Bulukiya, 'I hear and I obey;' he then
+mounted and setting out, rode on a long while between the rows of
+tents; and stinted not riding till he came to the royal kitchens where
+he saw the great cauldrons, each holding fifty camels, hung up over the
+fires which blazed fiercely under them. So he stopped there and gazed
+with a marvel ever increasing till King Sakhr thinking him to be
+anhungered, bade bring him two roasted camels; and they carried them to
+him and bound them behind him on the mare's crupper. Then he took leave
+of them and fared on, till he came to the end of King Sakhr's
+dominions, where the mare stood still and Bulukiya dismounted and began
+to shake the dust of the journey from his raiment. And behold, there
+accosted him a party of men who, recognising the mare, carried her and
+Bulukiya before their King Barakhiya. So he saluted him, and the King
+returned his greeting and seated him beside himself in a splendid
+pavilion, in the midst of his troops and champions and vassal Princes
+of the Jann ranged to right and left; after which he called for food
+and they ate their fill and pronounced the Alhamdolillah. Then they set
+on fruits, and when they had eaten thereof, King Barakhiya, whose
+estate was like that of King Sakhr, asked his guest, 'When didst thou
+leave King Sakhr?' And Bulukiya answered, 'Two days ago.' Quoth
+Barakhiya, 'Dost thou know, how many days' journey thou hast come in
+these two days?' Quoth he, 'No,' and the King rejoined, 'Thou hast come
+a journey of threescore and ten months.'"—And Shahrazad perceived the
+dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Ninety-fifth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Queen
+continued: "Barakhiya said to Bulukiya, 'In two days thou hast come a
+journey of threescore and ten months; moreover when thou mountedst the
+mare, she was affrighted at thee, knowing thee for a son of Adam, and
+would have thrown thee; so they bound on her back these two camels by
+way of weight to steady her.' When Bulukiya heard this, he marvelled
+and thanked Allah Almighty for safety. Then said the King, 'Tell me thy
+adventures and what brought thee to this our land.' So he told him his
+story from first to last, and the King marvelled at his words, and kept
+Bulukiya with him two months." Upon this Hasib Karim al-Din after he
+had marvelled at her story, again besought the Serpent-queen saying, "I
+pray thee of thy goodness and graciousness command one of thy subjects
+conduct me to the surface of the earth, that I may return to my
+family;" but she answered, "O Hasib, I know that the first thing thou
+wilt do, after seeing the face of the earth will be to greet thy family
+and then repair to the Hammam bath and bathe; and the moment thou
+endest thine ablutions will see the last of me, for it will be the
+cause of my death." Quoth Hasib, "I swear that I will never again enter
+the Hammam bath so long as I live, but when washing is incumbent on me,
+I will wash at home." Rejoined the Queen, "I would not trust thee
+though thou shouldst swear to me an hundred oaths; for such abstaining
+is not possible, and I know thee to be a son of Adam for whom no oath
+is sacred. Thy father Adam made a covenant with Allah the most High,
+who kneaded the clay whereof He fashioned him forty mornings and made
+His angels prostrate themselves to him; yet after all his promise did
+he forget and his oath violate, disobeying the commandment of his
+Lord." When Hasib heard this, he held his peace and burst into tears;
+nor did he leave weeping for the space of ten days, at the end of which
+time he said to the Queen, "Prithee acquaint me with the rest of
+Bulukiya's adventures." Accordingly, she began again as follows: "Know,
+O Hasib, that Bulukiya, after abiding two months with King Barakhiya,
+farewelled him and fared on over wastes and deserts nights and days'
+till he came to a high mountain which he ascended. On the summit he
+beheld seated a great Angel glorifying the names of God and invoking
+blessings on Mohammed. Before him lay a tablet covered with characters,
+these white and those black,[FN#530] whereon his eyes were fixed, and
+his two wings were outspread to the full, one to the western and the
+other to the eastern horizon. Bulukiya approached and saluted the
+Angel, who returned his salam adding, 'Who art thou and whence comest
+thou and whither wendest thou and what is thy story?' Accordingly, he
+repeated to him his history, from first to last, and the Angel
+marvelled mightily thereat, whereupon Bulukiya said to him, 'I pray
+thee in return acquaint me with the meaning of this tablet and what is
+writ thereon; and what may be thine occupation and thy name.' Replied
+the Angel, 'My name is Michael, and I am charged with the shifts of
+night and day; and this is my occupation till the Day of Doom.'
+Bulukiya wondered at his words and at his aspect and the vastness of
+his stature and, taking leave of him, fared onwards, night and day,
+till he came to a vast meadow over which he walked observing that it
+was traversed by seven streams and abounded in trees. He was struck by
+its beauty and in one corner thereof he saw a great tree and under it
+four Angels. So he drew near to them and found the first in the
+likeness of a man, the second in the likeness of a wild beast, the
+third in the likeness of a bird and the fourth in the likeness of a
+bull, engaged in glorifying Almighty Allah, and saying, 'O my God and
+my Master and my Lord, I conjure Thee, by Thy truth and by the decree
+of Thy Prophet Mohammed (on whom be blessings and peace!) to vouchsafe
+Thy mercy and grant Thy forgiveness to all things created in my
+likeness; for Thou over all things art Almighty!' Bulukiya marvelled at
+what he heard but continued his journey till he came to another
+mountain and ascending it, found there a great Angel seated on the
+summit, glorifying God and hallowing Him and invoking blessings on
+Mohammed (whom Allah assain and save!), and he saw that Angel
+continually opening and shutting his hands and bending and extending
+his fingers. He accosted him and saluted him; whereupon the Angel
+returned his salam and enquired who he was and how he came thither. So
+Bulukiya acquainted him with his adventures including his having lost
+the way; and besought him to tell him, in turn, who he was and what was
+his function and what mountain was that. Quoth the Angel, 'Know, O
+Bulukiya, that this is the mountain Kaf, which encompasseth the world;
+and all the countries the Creator hath made are in my grasp. When the
+Almighty is minded to visit any land with earthquake or famine or
+plenty or slaughter or prosperity, He biddeth me carry out His commands
+and I carry them out without stirring from my place; for know thou that
+my hands lay hold upon the roots of the earth,' "—And Shahrazed
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Ninety-sixth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Queen
+continued: "When the angel said, 'And know thou that my hands lay hold
+upon the roots of the earth,' he asked, 'And hath Allah created other
+worlds than this within the mountain Kaf?' The Angel answered, 'Yes, He
+hath made a world white as silver, whose vastness none knoweth save
+Himself, and hath peopled it with Angels, whose meat and drink are His
+praise and hallowing and continual blessings upon His Prophet Mohammed
+(whom Allah bless and keep!). Every Thursday night[FN#531] they repair
+to this mountain and worship in congregation Allah until the morning,
+and they assign the future recompense of their lauds and litanies to
+the sinners of the Faith of Mohammed (whom Allah assain and save!) and
+to all who make the Ghusl ablution of Friday; and this is their
+function until the Day of Resurrection.' Asked Bulukiya, 'And hath
+Allah created other mountains behind the mountain Kaf?'; whereto he
+answered, 'Yes, behind this mountain is a range of mountains five
+hundred years' journey long, of snow and ice, and this it is that
+wardeth off the heat of Jahannam from the world, which verily would
+else be consumed thereby. Moreover, behind the mountain Kaf are forty
+worlds, each one the bigness of this world forty times told, some of
+gold and some of silver and others of carnelian. Each of these worlds
+hath its own colour, and Allah hath peopled them with angels, that know
+not Eve nor Adam nor night nor day, and have no other business than to
+celebrate His praises and hallow Him and make profession of His Unity
+and proclaim His Omnipotence and supplicate Him on behalf of the
+followers of Mohammed (whom Allah bless and keep!). And know, also, O
+Bulukiya, that the earths were made in seven stages, one upon another,
+and that Allah hath created one of His Angels, whose stature and
+attributes none knoweth but Himself and who beareth the seven stages
+upon his shoulders. Under this Angel Almighty Allah hath created a
+great rock, and under the rock a bull, and under the bull a huge fish,
+and under the fish a mighty ocean.[FN#532] God once told Isa (with whom
+be peace! ) of this fish, and he said, 'O Lord show me the fish, that I
+may look upon it.' So the Almighty commanded an angel to take Isa and
+show him the fish. Accordingly, he took him up and carried him (with
+whom be peace!) to the sea, wherein the fish dwelt, and said, 'Look, O
+Isa, upon the fish.' He looked but at first saw nothing, when,
+suddenly, the fish darted past like lightning. At this sight Isa fell
+down aswoon, and when he came to himself, Allah spake to him by
+inspiration, saying, 'O Isa, hast thou seen the fish and comprehended
+its length and its breadth?' He replied, 'By Thy honour and glory, O
+Lord, I saw no fish; but there passed me by a great bull, whose length
+was three days' journey, and I know not what manner of thing this bull
+is.' Quoth Allah, 'O Isa, this that thou sawest and which was three
+days in passing by thee, was but the head of the fish;[FN#533] and know
+that every day I create forty fishes like unto this.' And Isa hearing
+this marvelled at the power of Allah the Almighty. Asked Bulukiya,
+'What hath Allah made beneath this sea which containeth the fish?'; and
+the Angel answered, 'Under the sea the Lord created a vast abyss of
+air, under the air fire, and under the fire a mighty serpent, by name
+Falak; and were it not for fear of the Most Highest, this serpent would
+assuredly swallow up all that is above it, air and fire and the Angel
+and his burden, without sensing it.'"—And Shahrazed perceived the dawn
+of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Ninety-seventh Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the angel said to
+Bulukiya when describing the serpent, "'And were it not for fear of the
+Most Highest, this serpent would assuredly swallow up all that is above
+it, air and fire, and the Angel and his burden, without sensing it.
+When Allah created this serpent He said to it by inspiration, 'I will
+give thee somewhat to keep for me, so open thy mouth.' The serpent
+replied, 'Do whatso Thou wilt;' and opened his mouth and God placed
+Hell into his maw, saying, 'Keep it until the Day of Resurrection. When
+that time comes, the Almighty will send His angels with chains to bring
+Hell and bind it until the Day when all men shall meet; and the Lord
+will order Hell to go open its gates and there will issue therefrom
+sparks bigger than the mountains.' When Bulukiya heard these things he
+wept with sore weeping and, taking leave of the Angel, fared on
+westwards, till he came in sight of two creatures sitting before a
+great shut gate. As he drew near, he saw that one of the gatekeepers
+had the semblance of a lion and the other that of a bull; so he saluted
+them and they returned his salam and enquired who and whence he was and
+whither he was bound. Quoth he, 'I am of the sons of Adam, a wanderer
+for the love of Mohammed (whom Allah assain and save!) and I have
+strayed from my way.' Then he asked them what they were and what was
+the gate before which they sat, and they answered, 'We are the
+guardians of this gate thou seest and we have no other business than
+the praise and hallowing of Allah and the invocation of blessings on
+Mohammed (whom may He bless and keep!).' Bulukiya wondered and asked
+them, 'What is within the gate?'; and they answered, 'We wot not.' Then
+quoth he, 'I conjure you, by the truth of your glorious Lord, open to
+me the gate, that I may see that which is therein.' Quoth they, 'We
+cannot, and none may open this gate, of all created beings save
+Gabriel, the Faithful One, with whom be peace!' Then Bulukiya lifted up
+his voice in supplication to Allah, saying, 'O Lord, send me thy
+messenger Gabriel, the Faithful One, to open for me this gate that I
+may see what be therein;' and the Almighty gave ear unto his prayer and
+commanded the Archangel to descend to earth and open to him the gate of
+the Meeting-place of the Two Seas. So Gabriel descended and, saluting
+Bulukiya, opened the gate to him, saying, 'Enter this door, for Allah
+commandeth me to open to thee.' So he entered and Gabriel locked the
+gate behind him and flew back to heaven. When Bulukiya found himself
+within the gate, he looked and beheld a vast ocean, half salt and half
+fresh, bounded on every side by mountain ranges of red ruby whereon he
+saw angels singing the praises of the Lord and hallowing Him. So he
+went up to them and saluted them and having received a return of his
+salam, questioned them of the sea and the mountains. Replied they,
+'This place is situate under the Arsh or empyreal heaven; and this
+Ocean causeth the flux and flow of all the seas of the world; and we
+are appointed to distribute them and drive them to the various parts of
+the earth, the salt to the salt and the fresh to the fresh,[FN#534] and
+this is our employ until the Day of Doom. As for the mountain ranges
+they serve to limit and to contain the waters. But thou, whence comest
+thou and whither art thou bound?' So he told them his story and asked
+them of the road. They bade him traverse the surface of the ocean which
+lay before him: so he anointed his feet with the juice of the herb he
+had with him, and taking leave of the angels, set out upon the face of
+the sea and sped on over the water nights and days; and as he was
+faring, behold, he met a handsome youth journeying along like himself,
+whereupon he greeted him and he returned his greeting. After they
+parted he espied four great Angels wayfaring over the face of the sea,
+and their going was like the blinding lightning; so he stationed
+himself in their road, and when they came up to him, he saluted them
+and said to them, 'I ask you by the Almighty, the Glorious, to tell me
+your names and whither are ye bound?' Replied the first Angel, 'My name
+is Gabriel and these my companions are called Isrαfνl and Mνkα'νl and
+Azrα'νl. There hath appeared in the East a mighty dragon, which hath
+laid waste a thousand cities and devoured their inhabitants; wherefore
+Allah Almighty hath commanded us to go to him and seize him and cast
+him into Jahannam.' Bulukiya marvelled at the vastness of their stature
+and fared on, as before, days and nights, till he came to an island
+where he landed and walked about for a while,"—And Shahrazad perceived
+the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Ninety-eighth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "Bulukiya landed
+on the island and walked about for a while, till he saw a comely young
+man with light shining from his visage, sitting weeping and lamenting
+between two built tombs. So he saluted him and he returned his
+salutation, and Bulukiya said to him, 'Who art thou and what are these
+two built tombs between which thou sittest, and wherefore this
+wailing?' He looked at him and wept with sore weeping, till he drenched
+his clothes with his tears; then said, 'Know thou, O my brother, mine
+is a marvellous story and a wondrous; but I would have thee sit by me
+and first tell me thy name and thine adventures and who thou art and
+what brought thee hither; after which I will, in turn, relate to thee
+my history.' So Bulukiya sat down by him and related to him all that
+had befallen him from his father's death,[FN#535] adding, 'Such is my
+history, the whole of it, and Allah alone knoweth what will happen to
+me after this.' When the youth heard his story, he sighed and said, 'O
+thou unhappy! How few things thou hast seen in thy life compared with
+mine. Know, O Bulukiya, that unlike thyself I have looked upon our lord
+Solomon, in his life, and have seen things past count or reckoning.
+Indeed, my story is strange and my case out of range, and I would have
+thee abide with me, till I tell thee my history and acquaint thee how I
+come to be sitting here.'" Hearing this much Hasib again interrupted
+the Queen of the Serpents and said to her, "Allah upon thee, O Queen,
+release me and command one of thy servants carry me forth to the
+surface of the earth, and I will swear an oath to thee that I will
+never enter the Hammam-bath as long as I live." But she said, "This is
+a thing which may not be nor will I believe thee upon thine oath." When
+he heard this, he wept and all the serpents wept on his account and
+took to interceding for him with their Queen, saying, "We beseech thee,
+bid one of us carry him forth to the surface of the earth, and he will
+swear thee an oath never to enter the bath his life long." Now when
+Yamlaykhα (for such was the Queen's name) heard their appeal, she
+turned to Hasib and made him swear to her an oath; after which she bade
+a serpent carry him forth to the surface of the earth. The serpent made
+ready, but as she was about to go away with him, he turned to Queen
+Yamlaykha and said, "I would fain have thee tell me the history of the
+youth whom Bulukiya saw sitting between two tombs." So she said: "Know,
+O Hasib, that when Bulukiya sat down by the youth and told him his
+tale, from first to last, in order that the other might also recount
+his adventures and explain the cause of his sitting between the two
+tombs."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Four Hundred and Ninety-ninth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Queen
+continued: "When Bulukiya ended his recount, the youth said, 'How few
+things of marvel hast thou seen in thy life, O unhappy! Now I have
+looked upon our lord Solomon while he was yet living and I have
+witnessed wonders beyond compt and conception.' And he began to relate
+
+
+
+
+The Story of Janshah.[FN#536]
+
+'Know, O my brother, that my sire was a King called Teghmϊs, who
+reigned over the land of Kabul and the Banu Shahlαn, ten thousand
+warlike chiefs, each ruling over an hundred walled cities and a hundred
+citadels; and he was suzerain also over seven vassal princes, and
+tribute was brought to him from the broad lands between East and West.
+He was just and equitable in his rule and Allah Almighty had given him
+all this and had bestowed on him such mighty empire, yet had He not
+vouchsafed him a son (though this was his dearest wish) to inherit the
+kingdom after his decease. So one day it befell that he summoned the
+Olema and astrologers, the mathematicians and almanac-makers, and said,
+'Draw me my horoscope and look if Allah will grant me a son to succeed
+me.' Accordingly, they consulted their books and calculated his
+dominant star and the aspects thereof; after which they said to him,
+'Know, O King, that thou shalt be blessed with a son, but by none other
+than the daughter of the King of Khorαsαn.' Hearing this Teghmus joyed
+with exceeding joy and, bestowing on the astrologers and wizards
+treasure beyond numbering or reckoning, dismissed them. His chief Wazir
+was a renowned warrior, by name Ayn Zαr, who was equal to a thousand
+cavaliers in battle; so him he summoned and, repeating to him what the
+astrologers had predicted, he said, 'O Wazir, it is my will that thou
+equip thee for a march to Khorasan and demand for me the hand of its
+King Bahrwan's daughter.' Receiving these orders the Wazir at once
+proceeded to get ready for the journey and encamped without the town
+with his troops and braves and retinue, whilst King Teghmus made ready
+as presents for the King of Khorasan fifteen hundred loads of silks and
+precious stones, pearls and rubies and other gems, besides gold and
+silver; and he also prepared a prodigious quantity of all that goeth to
+the equipment of a bride; then, loading them upon camels and mules,
+delivered them to Ayn Zar, with a letter to the following purport.
+'After invoking the blessing of Heaven, King Teghmus to King Bahrwan,
+greeting. Know that we have taken counsel with the astrologers and
+sages and mathematicians, and they tell us that we shall have boon of a
+boy child, and that by none other than thy daughter. Wherefore I have
+despatched unto thee my Wazir Ayn Zar, with great store of bridal gear,
+and I have appointed him to stand in my stead and to enter into the
+marriage-contract in my name. Furthermore I desire that of thy favour
+thou wilt grant him his request without stay or delay; for it is my
+own, and all graciousness thou showest him, I take for myself; but
+beware of crossing me in this, for know, O King Bahrwan, that Allah
+hath bestowed upon me the Kingdom of Kabul, and hath given me dominion
+over the Banu Shahlan and vouchsafed me a mighty empire; and if I marry
+thy daughter, we will be, I and thou, as one thing in kingship; and I
+will send thee every year as much treasure as will suffice thee. And
+this is my desire of thee.' Then King Teghmus sealed the letter with
+his own ring and gave it to the Wazir, who departed with a great
+company and journeyed till he drew near the capital of Khorasan. When
+King Bahrwan heard of his approach, he despatched his principal Emirs
+to meet him,[FN#537] with a convoy of food and drink and other
+requisites, including forage for the steeds. So they fared forth with
+the train till they met the Wazir; then, alighting without the city,
+they exchanged salutations and abode there, eating and drinking, ten
+days; at the end of which time they mounted and rode on into the town,
+where they were met by King Bahrwan, who came out to greet the Wazir of
+King Teghmus and alighting, embraced him and carried him to his
+citadel. Then Ayn Zar brought out the presents and laid them before
+King Bahrwan, together with the letter of King Teghmus, which when the
+King read and understood, he joyed with joy exceeding and welcomed the
+Wazir, saying, 'Rejoice in winning thy wish; and know that if King
+Teghmus sought of me my life, verily I would give it to him.' Then he
+went in forthright to his daughter and her mother and his kinsfolk, and
+acquainting them with the King of Kabul's demand sought counsel of
+them, and they said, 'Do what seemeth good to thee.'—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundredth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "King Bahrwan
+consulted his daughter and her mother and his kinsfolk and they said,
+'Do what seemeth good to thee.' So he returned straightway to the
+Minister Ayn Zar and notified to him that his desire had been
+fulfilled; and the Wazir, abode with him two months, at the end of
+which time he said to him, 'We beseech thee to bestow upon us that
+wherefore we came, so we may depart to our own land.' 'I hear and
+obey,' answered the King. Then he prepared all the gear wanted for the
+wedding; and when this was done he assembled his Wazirs and all his
+Emirs and the Grandees of his realm and the monks and priests who tied
+the knot of marriage between his daughter and King Teghmus by proxy.
+And King Bahrwan bade decorate the city after the goodliest fashion and
+spread the streets with carpets. Then he equipped his daughter for the
+journey and gave her all manner of presents and rarities and precious
+metals, such as none may describe; and Ayn Zar departed with the
+Princess to his own country. When the news of their approach reached
+King Teghmus, he bade celebrate the wedding festivities and adorn the
+city; after which he went in unto the Princess and abated her
+maidenhead; nor was it long before she conceived by him and,
+accomplishing her months, bare a man-child like the moon on the night
+of its full. When King Teghmus knew that his wife had given birth to a
+goodly son, he rejoiced with exceeding joy and, summoning the sages and
+astrologers and mathematicians, said to them, 'I would that ye draw the
+horoscope of the newborn child with his ascendant and its aspects and
+acquaint me what shall befall him in his lifetime.' So they made their
+calculations and found them favourable; but, that he would, in his
+fifteenth year, be exposed to perils and hardships, and that if he
+survived, he would be happy and fortunate and become a greater king
+than his father and a more powerful. The King rejoiced greatly in this
+prediction and named the boy Janshah. Then he delivered him to the
+nurses, wet and dry, who reared him excellently well till he reached
+his fifth year, when his father taught him to read the Evangel and
+instructed him in the art of arms and lunge of lance and sway of sword,
+so that in less than seven years he was wont to ride a-hunting, and
+a-chasing; he became a doughty champion, perfect in all the science of
+the cavalarice and his father was delighted to hear of his knightly
+prowess. It chanced one day that King Teghmus and his son accompanied
+by the troops rode out for sport into the woods and wilds and hunted
+till mid afternoon of the third day, when the Prince started a gazelle
+of a rare colour, which fled before him. So he gave chase to it,
+followed by seven of King Teghmus's white slaves all mounted on swift
+steeds, and rode at speed after the gazelle, which fled before them
+till she brought them to the sea shore. They all ran at her to take her
+as their quarry, but she escaped from them and, throwing herself into
+the waves,"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying
+her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and First Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "when Janshah and
+the Mamelukes ran at the gazelle, to take her as their quarry, she
+escaped from them and, throwing herself into the waves, swam out to a
+fishing bark, that was moored near the shore, and sprang on board.
+Janshah and his followers dismounted and, boarding the boat, made prize
+of the gazelle and were minded to return to shore with her, when the
+Prince espied a great island in the offing and said to his merry men,
+'I have a longing to visit yonder island.' They answered, 'We hear and
+obey,' and sailed on till they came to the island, where they landed
+and amused themselves with exploring the place. Then they again
+embarked and taking with them the gazelle, set out to return homeward,
+but the murk of evening overtook them and they missed their way on the
+main. Moreover a strong wind arose and crave the boat into mid-ocean,
+so that when they awoke in the morning, they found themselves lost at
+sea. Such was their case; but as regards King Teghmus, when he missed
+his son, he commanded his troops to make search for him in separate
+bodies; so they dispersed on all sides and a company of them, coming to
+the sea shore, found there the Prince's white slave whom he had left in
+charge of the horses. They asked him what was become of his master and
+the other six, and he told them what had passed whereupon they took him
+with them and returned to the King and acquainted him with what they
+had learnt. When Teghmus heard their report, he wept with sore weeping
+and cast the crown from his head, biting his hands for vexation. Then
+he rose forthright and wrote letters and despatched them to all the
+islands of the sea. Moreover he got together an hundred ships and
+filling them with troops, sent them to sail about in quest of Janshah,
+while he himself withdrew with his troops to his capital, where he
+abode in sore concern. As for Janshah's mother, when she heard of his
+loss she buffeted her face and began the mourning ceremonies for her
+son making sure that he was dead. Meanwhile, Janshah and his men ceased
+not driving before the wind and those in search of them cruised about
+for ten days till, finding no trace they returned and reported failure
+to the King. But a stiff gale caught the Prince's craft which went
+spooning till they made a second island, where they landed and walked
+about. Presently they came upon a spring of running water in the midst
+of the island and saw from afar a man sitting hard by it. So they went
+up to him and saluted him, and he returned their salam, speaking in a
+voice like the whistle[FN#538] of birds. Whilst Janshah stood
+marvelling at the man's speech he looked right and left and suddenly
+split himself in twain, and each half went a different way.[FN#539]
+Then there came down from the hills a multitude of men of all kinds,
+beyond count and reckoning; and they no sooner reached the spring, than
+each one divided into two halves and rushed on Janshah and his
+Mamelukes to eat them. When the voyagers saw this, they turned and fled
+seawards; but the cannibals pursued them and caught and ate three of
+the slaves, leaving only three slaves who with Janshah reached the boat
+in safety; then launching her made for the water and sailed nights and
+days without knowing whither their ship went. They killed the gazelle,
+and lived on her flesh, till the winds drove them to a third island
+which was full of trees and waters and flower-gardens and orchards
+laden with all fashion of fruits: and streams strayed under the tree
+shade: brief, the place was a Garden of Eden. The island pleased the
+Prince and he said to his companions, 'Which of you will land and
+explore?' Then said one of the slaves, 'That will I do'; but he
+replied, 'This thing may not be; you must all land and explore the
+place while I abide in the boat.' So he set them ashore,"— And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Second Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "the Prince set
+them ashore, and they searched the island, East and West, but found no
+one; then they fared on inland to the heart thereof, till they came to
+a Castle compassed about with ramparts of white marble, within which
+was a palace of the clearest crystal and, set in its centre a garden
+containing all manner fruits beyond description, both fresh and dry,
+and flowers of grateful odour and trees and birds singing upon the
+boughs. Amiddlemost the garden was a vast basin of water, and beside it
+a great open hall with a raised dais whereon stood a number of stools
+surrounding a throne of red gold, studded with all kinds of jewels and
+especially rubies and seeing the beauty of the Castle and of the Garden
+they entered and explored in all directions, but found no one there, so
+after rummaging the Castle they returned to Janshah and told him what
+they had seen. When he heard their report, he cried, 'Needs must I
+solace myself with a sight of it;' so he landed and accompanied them to
+the palace, which he entered marvelling at the goodliness of the place.
+They then visited every part of the gardens and ate of the fruits and
+continued walking till it waxed dark, when they returned to the estrade
+and sat down, Janshah on the throne in the centre and the three others
+on the stools ranged to the right and left. Then the Prince, there
+seated, called to mind his separation from his father's
+throne-city[FN#540] and country and friends and kinsfolk; and fell
+a-weeping and lamenting over their loss whilst his men wept around him.
+And as they were thus sorrowing behold, they heard a mighty clamour,
+that came from seaward and looking in the direction of the clamour saw
+a multitude of apes, as they were swarming locusts. Now the castle and
+the island belonged to these apes, who, finding the strangers' boat
+moored to the strand, had scuttled it and after repaired to the palace,
+where they came upon Janshah and his men seated." Here the Serpent-
+queen again broke off her recital saying, "All this, O Hasib, was told
+to Bulukiya by the young man sitting between the two tombs." Quoth
+Hasib, "And what did Janshah do with the apes?"; so the Queen resumed
+her tale: "He and his men were sore affrighted at the appearance of the
+apes, but a company of them came up to the throne whereon he sat and,
+kissing the earth before him, stood awhile in his presence with their
+paws upon their breasts in posture of respect. Then another troop
+brought to the castle gazelles which they slaughtered and skinned; and
+roasting pieces of the flesh till fit for food they laid them on
+platters of gold and silver and spreading the table, made signs to
+Janshah and his men to eat. The Prince and his followers came down from
+their seats and ate, and the apes ate with them, till they were
+satisfied, when the apes took away the meat and set on fruits of which
+they partook and praised Allah the most Highest. Then Janshah asked the
+apes by signs what they were and to whom the palace belonged, and they
+answered him by signals, 'Know ye that this island belonged of yore to
+our lord Solomon, son of David (on both of whom be peace!), and he used
+to come hither once every year for his solace,'"—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Third Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when Janshah
+asked the apes by signs to whom the palace belonged, they answered him
+by signals, "'Of a truth this place belonged of yore to our lord
+Solomon, son of David (on both of whom be peace!), who used to come
+hither once every year for his solace, and then wend his ways.'
+Presently the apes continued, 'And know, O King, that thou art become
+our Sultan and we are thy servants; so eat and drink, and whatso thou
+ever bid us, that will we do.' So saying, they severally kissed the
+earth between the hands of Janshah and all took their departure. The
+Prince slept that night on the throne and his men on the stools about
+him, and on the morrow, at daybreak, the four Wazirs or Captains of the
+apes presented themselves before him, attended by their troops, who
+ranged themselves about him, rank after rank, until the place was
+crowded. Then the Wazirs approached and exhorted him by signs to do
+justice amongst them and rule them righteously; after which the apes
+cried out to one another and went away, all save a small party which
+remained in presence to serve him. After awhile, there came up a
+company of apes with huge dogs in the semblance of horses, each wearing
+about his head a massive chain; and signed to Janshah and his three
+followers to mount and go with them. So they mounted, marvelling at the
+greatness of the dogs, and rode forth, attended by the four Wazirs and
+a host of apes like swarming locusts, some riding on dogs and others
+afoot till they came to the sea-shore. Janshah looked for the boat
+which brought him and finding it scuttled turned to the Wazirs and
+asked how this had happened to it; whereto they answered, 'Know, O
+King, that, when thou camest to our island, we kenned that thou wouldst
+be Sultan over us and we feared lest ye all flee from us, in our
+absence; and embark in the boat, so we sank it.' When Janshah heard
+this, he turned to his Mamelukes and said to them, 'We have no means of
+escaping from these apes, and we must patiently await the ordinance of
+the Almighty.' Then they fared on inland and ceased not faring till
+they came to the banks of a river, on whose other side rose a high
+mountain, whereon Janshah saw a multitude of Ghuls. So he turned to the
+apes and asked them, 'What are these Ghuls?' and they answered, 'Know,
+O King, that these Ghuls are our mortal foes and we come hither to do
+battle with them.' Janshah marvelled to see them riding horses, and was
+startled at the vastness of their bulk and the strangeness of their
+semblance; for some of them had heads like bulls and others like
+camels. As soon as the Ghuls espied the army of the apes, they charged
+down to the river bank and standing there, fell to pelting them with
+stones as big as maces; and between them there befell a sore fight.
+Presently, Janshah, seeing that the Ghuls were getting the better of
+the apes, cried out to his men, saying, 'Unease your bows and arrows
+and shoot at them your best shafts and keep them off from us.' They did
+so and slew of the Ghuls much people, when there fell upon them sore
+dismay and they turned to flee; but the apes, seeing Janshah's prowess,
+forded the river and headed by their Sultan chased the Ghuls, killing
+many of them in the pursuit, till they reached the high mountain where
+they disappeared. And while exploring the said mountain Janshah found a
+tablet of alabaster, whereon was written, 'O thou who enterest this
+land, know that thou wilt become Sultan over these apes and that from
+them there is no escape for thee, except by the passes that run east
+and west through the mountains. If thou take the eastern pass, thou
+wilt fare through a country swarming with Ghuls and wild beasts, Marids
+and Ifrits, and thou wilt come, after three months' journeying, to the
+ocean which encompasseth the earth; but, if thou travel by the western
+pass, it will bring thee, after four months' journeying, to the head of
+the Wady of Emmets.[FN#541] When thou hast followed the road, that
+leads through this mountain, ten days,' "—And Shahrazad perceived the
+dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Fourth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Janshah read this
+much upon the tablet and found, at the end of the inscription, "'Then
+thou wilt come to a great river, whose current is so swift that it
+blindeth the eyes. Now this river drieth up every Sabbath,[FN#542] and
+on the opposite bank lies a city wholly inhabited by Jews, who the
+faith of Mohammed refuse; there is not a Moslem among the band nor is
+there other than this city in the land. Better therefore lord it over
+the apes, for so long as thou shalt tarry amongst them they will be
+victorious over the Ghuls. And know also that he who wrote this tablet
+was the lord Solomon, son of David (on both be peace!).' When Janshah
+read these words, he wept sore and repeated them to his men. Then they
+mounted again and, surrounded by the army of the apes who were
+rejoicing in their victory, returned to the castle. Here Janshah abode,
+Sultaning over them, for a year and a half. And at the end of this
+time, he one day commanded the ape-army to mount and go forth a hunting
+with him, and they rode out into the woods and wilds, and fared on from
+place to place, till they approached the Wady of Emmets, which Janshah
+knew by the description of it upon the alabaster tablet. Here he bade
+them dismount and they all abode there, eating and drinking a space of
+ten days, after which Janshah took his men apart one night and said, 'I
+purpose we flee through the Valley of Emmets and make for the town of
+the Jews; it may be Allah will deliver us from these apes and we will
+go God's ways.' They replied, 'We hear and we obey:' so he waited till
+some little of the night was spent then, donning his armour and girding
+his sword and dagger and such like weapons, and his men doing likewise,
+they set out and fared on westwards till morning. When the apes awoke
+and missed Janshah and his men, they knew that they had fled. So they
+mounted and pursued them, some taking the eastern pass and others that
+which led to the Wady of Emmets, nor was it long before the apes came
+in sight of the fugitives, as they were about to enter the valley, and
+hastened after them. When Janshah and his men saw them, they fled into
+the Emmet-valley; but the apes soon overtook them and would have slain
+them, when behold, there rose out of the earth a multitude of ants like
+swarming locusts, as big as dogs, and charged home upon the apes. They
+devoured many of their foes, and these also slew many of the ants; but
+help came to the emmets: now an ant would go up to an ape and smite him
+and cut him in twain, whilst ten apes could hardly master one ant and
+bear him away and tear him in sunder. The sore battle lasted till the
+evening but the emmets were victorious. In the gloaming Janshah and his
+men took to flight and fled along the sole of the Wady."—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Fifth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "in the gloaming
+Janshah and his men took to flight and fled along the sole of the Wady
+till the morning. With the break of day, the apes were up and at them,
+which when the Prince saw, he shouted to his men, 'Smite with your
+swords.' So they bared their blades and laid on load right and left,
+till there ran at them an ape, with tusks like an elephant, and smote
+one of the Mamelukes and cut him in sunder. Then the apes redoubled
+upon Janshah and he fled with his followers into the lower levels of
+the valley, where he saw a vast river and by its side a mighty army of
+ants. When the emmets espied Janshah they pushed on and surrounded him,
+and one of the slaves fell to smiting them with his sword and cutting
+them in twain; whereupon the whole host set upon him and slew him. At
+this pass, behold, up came the apes from over the mountain and fell in
+numbers upon Janshah; but he tore off his clothes and, plunging into
+the river, with his remaining servant, struck out for the middle of the
+stream. Presently, he caught sight of a tree on the other bank; so he
+swam up to it and laying hold of one of its branches, hung to it and
+swung himself ashore, but as for the last Mameluke the current carried
+him away and dashed him to pieces against the mountain. Thereupon
+Janshah fell to wringing his clothes and spreading them in the sun to
+dry, what while there befell a fierce fight between the apes and the
+ants, until the apes gave up the pursuit and returned to their own
+land. Meanwhile, Janshah, who abode alone on the river-bank, could do
+naught but shed tears till nightfall, when he took refuge in a cavern
+and there passed the dark hours, in great fear and feeling desolate for
+the loss of his slaves. At daybreak awaking from his sleep he set out
+again and fared on nights and days, eating of the herbs of the earth,
+till he came to the mountain which burnt like fire, and thence he made
+the river which dried up every Sabbath. Now it was a mighty stream and
+on the opposite bank stood a great city, which was the capital of the
+Jews mentioned in the tablet. Here he abode till the next Sabbath, when
+the river dried up and he walked over to the other side and entered the
+Jew city, but saw none in the streets. So he wandered about till he
+came to the door of a homestead, which he opened and entering, espied
+within the people of the house sitting in silence and speaking not a
+syllable. Quoth he, 'I am a stranger and anhungered;' and they signed
+to him, as to say, 'Eat and drink, but speak not.'[FN#543] So he ate
+and drank and slept that night and, when morning dawned, the master of
+the house greeted him and bade him welcome and asked him, 'Whence
+comest thou and whither art thou bound?' At these words Janshah wept
+sore and told him all that had befallen him and how his father was King
+of Kabul; whereat the Jew marvelled and said, 'Never heard we of that
+city, but we have heard from the merchants of the caravans that in that
+direction lieth a land called Al-Yaman.' 'How far is that land from
+this place?' asked Janshah, and the Jew answered, 'The Cafilah
+merchants pretend that it is a two years and three months' march from
+their land hither.' Quoth Janshah, 'And when doth the caravan come?'
+Quoth the Jew, 'Next year 'twill come.' "—And Shahrazed perceived the
+dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Sixth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the Jew was
+questioned anent the coming of the caravan, he replied, "'Next year
+'twill come.' At these words the Prince wept sore and fell a-sorrowing
+for himself and his Mamelukes; and lamenting his separation from his
+mother and father and all which had befallen him in his wanderings.
+Then said the Jew, 'O young man, do not weep, but sojourn with us till
+the caravan shall come, when we will send thee with it to thine own
+country.' So he tarried with the Jew two whole months and every day he
+went out walking in the streets for his solace and diversion. Now it
+chanced one day, whilst he paced about the main thoroughfares, as of
+wont, and was bending his steps right and left, he heard a crier crying
+aloud and saying, 'Who will earn a thousand gold pieces and a slave-
+girl of surpassing beauty and loveliness by working for me between
+morning and noontide?' But no one answered him and Janshah said in his
+mind, 'Were not this work dangerous and difficult, he would not offer a
+thousand diners and a fair girl for half a day's labour.' Then he
+accosted the crier and said, 'I will do the work;' so the man carried
+him to a lofty mansion where they found one who was a Jew and a
+merchant, seated on an ebony chair, to whom quoth the crier, standing
+respectfully before him, 'O merchant, I have cried every day these
+three months, and none hath answered, save this young man.' Hearing his
+speech the Jew welcomed Janshah, led him into a magnificent
+sitting-room and signalled to bring food. So the servants spread the
+table and set thereon all manner meats, of which the merchant and
+Janshah ate, and washed their hands. Then wine was served up and they
+drank; after which the Jew rose and bringing Janshah a purse of a
+thousand diners and a slave-girl of rare beauty, said to him, 'Take
+maid and money to thy hire.' Janshah took them and seated the girl by
+his side when the trader resumed, 'To-morrow to the work!'; and so
+saying he withdrew and Janshah slept with the damsel that night. As
+soon as it was morning, the merchant bade his slaves clothe him in a
+costly suit of silk whenas he came out of the Hammam-Bath. So they did
+as he bade them and brought him back to the house, whereupon the
+merchant called for harp and lute and wine and they drank and played
+and made merry till the half of the night was past, when the Jew
+retired to his Harim and Janshah lay with his slave-girl till the dawn.
+Then he went to the bath and on his return, the merchant came to him
+and said, 'Now I wish thee to do the work for me.' 'I hear and obey,'
+replied Janshah. So the merchant bade his slaves bring two she- mules
+and set Janshah on one, mounting the other himself. Then they rode
+forth from the city and fared on from morn till noon, when they made a
+lofty mountain, to whose height was no limit. Here the Jew dismounted,
+ordering Janshah to do the same; and when he obeyed the merchant gave
+him a knife and a cord, saying, 'I desire that thou slaughter this
+mule.' So Janshah tucked up his sleeves and skirts and going up to the
+mule, bound her legs with the cord, then threw her and cut her throat;
+after which he skinned her and lopped off her head and legs and she
+became a mere heap of flesh. Then said the Jew, 'Slit open the mule's
+belly and enter it and I will sew it up on thee. There must thou abide
+awhile and whatsoever thou seest in her belly, acquaint me therewith.'
+So Janshah slit the mule's belly and crept into it, whereupon the
+merchant sewed it up on him and withdrew to a distance,"—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Seventh Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "the merchant
+sewed up the mule's belly on Janshah and, withdrawing to a distance,
+hid himself in the skirts of the mountain. After a while a huge bird
+swooped down on the dead mule and snatching it up, flew up with it to
+the top of the mountain, where it set down the quarry and would have
+eaten it; but Janshah, feeling the bird begin to feed, slit the mule's
+belly and came forth. When the bird saw him, it took fright at him and
+flew right away; whereupon he stood up and looking right and left, saw
+nothing but the carcasses of dead men, mummied by the sun, and
+exclaimed, 'There is no Majesty and there is no Might save in Allah,
+the Glorious, the Great!' Then he looked down the precipice and espied
+the merchant standing at the mountain-foot, looking for him. As soon as
+the Jew caught sight of him, he called out to him, 'Throw me down of
+the stones which are about thee, that I may direct thee to a way
+whereby thou mayst descend.' So Janshah threw him down some two hundred
+of the stones, which were all rubies,[FN#544] chrysolites and other
+gems of price; after which he called out to him, saying, 'Show me the
+way down and I will throw thee as many more.' But the Jew gathered up
+the stones and, binding them on the back of the mule, went his way
+without answering a word and left Janshah alone on the mountain-top.
+When the Prince found himself deserted, he began to weep and implore
+help of Heaven, and thus he abode three days; after which he rose and
+fared on over the mountainous ground two month's space, feeding upon
+hill-herbs; and he ceased not faring till he came to its skirts and
+espied afar off a Wady full of fruitful trees and birds harmonious,
+singing the praises of Allah, the One, the Victorious. At this sight he
+joyed with great joy and stayed not his steps till, after an hour or
+so, he came to a ravine in the rocks, through which the rain torrents
+fell into the valley. He made his way down the cleft till he reached
+the Wady which he had seen from the mountain-top and walked on therein,
+gazing right and left, nor ceased so doing until he came in sight of a
+great castle, towering high in air. As he drew near the gates he saw an
+old man of comely aspect and face shining with light standing thereat
+with a staff of carnelian in his hand, and going up to him, saluted
+him. The Shaykh returned his salam and bade him welcome, saying, 'Sit
+down, O my son.' So he sat down at the door of the castle and the old
+man said to him, 'How camest thou to this land, untrodden by son of
+Adam before thee, and whither art thou bound?' When Janshah heard his
+words he wept bitterly at the thought of all the hardships he had
+suffered and his tears choked his speech. Quoth the Shaykh, 'O my son,
+leave weeping; for indeed thou makest my heart ache.' So saying, he
+rose and set somewhat of food before him and said to him, 'Eat.' He ate
+and praised Allah Almighty; after which the old man besought him
+saying, 'O my son, I would have thee tell me thy tale and acquaint me
+with thine adventures.' So Janshah related to him all that had befallen
+him, from first to last, whereat the Shaykh marvelled with exceeding
+marvel. Then said the Prince, 'Prithee inform me who is the lord of
+this valley and to whom doth this great castle belong?' Answered the
+old man, 'Know, O my son, this valley and all that is therein and this
+castle with all it containeth belong to the lord Solomon, son of David
+(on both be peace!). As for me, my name is Shaykh Nasr,[FN#545] King of
+the Birds; for thou must know that the lord Solomon committed this
+castle to my charge,'"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and
+ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Eighth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "Shaykh Nasr
+pursued, 'Thou must know that the lord Solomon com misted this castle
+to my charge and taught me the language of birds and made me ruler over
+all the fowls which be in the world; wherefore each and every come
+hither once in the twelvemonth, and I pass them in review: then they
+depart; and this is why I dwell here.' When Janshah heard this, he wept
+sore and said to the Shaykh, 'O my father, how shall I do to get back
+to my native land?' Replied the old man, 'Know, O my son, that thou art
+near to the mountain Kaf, and there is no departing for thee from this
+place till the birds come, when I will give thee in charge to one of
+them, and he will bear thee to thy native country. Meanwhile tarry with
+me here and eat and drink and divert thyself with viewing the
+apartments of this castle.' So Janshah abode with Shaykh Nasr, taking
+his pleasure in the Wady and eating of its fruits and laughing and
+making merry with the old man, and leading a right joyous life till the
+day appointed for the birds to pay their annual visit to the Governor.
+Thereupon the Shaykh said to him, 'O Janshah, take the keys of the
+castle and solace thyself with exploring all its apartments and viewing
+whatever be therein, but as regards such a room, beware and again
+beware of opening its door; and if thou gainsay me and open it and
+enter there, through nevermore shalt thou know fair fortune.' He
+repeated this charge again and again with much instance; then he went
+forth to meet the birds, which came up, kind by kind, and kissed his
+hands. Such was his case; but as regards Janshah, he went round about
+the castle, opening the various doors and viewing the apartments into
+which they led, till he came to the room which Shaykh Nasr had warned
+him not to open or enter. He looked at the door and its fashion pleased
+him, for it had on it a padlock of gold, and he said to himself, 'This
+room must be goodlier than all the others; would Heaven I wist what is
+within it, that Shaykh Nasr should forbid me to open its door! There is
+no help but that I enter and see what is in this apartment; for whatso
+is decreed unto the creature perforce he must fulfil.' So he put out
+his hand and unlocked the door and entering, found himself before a
+great basin; and hard by it stood a little pavilion, builded all of
+gold and silver and crystal, with lattice-windows of jacinth. The floor
+was paved with green beryl and balas rubies and emeralds and other
+jewels, set in the ground-work mosaic-fashion, and in the midmost of
+the pavilion was a jetting fountain in a golden basin, full of water
+and girt about with figures of beasts and birds, cunningly wrought of
+gold and silver and casting water from their mouths. When the zephyr
+blew on them, it entered their ears and therewith the figures sang out
+with birdlike song, each in its own tongue. Beside the fountain was a
+great open saloon with a high dais whereon stood a vast throne of
+carnelian, inlaid with pearls and jewels, over which was spread a tent
+of green silk fifty cubits in width and embroidered with gems fit for
+seal rings and purfled with precious metals. Within this tent was a
+closet containing the carpet of the lord Solomon (on whom be peace!);
+and the pavilion was compassed about with a vast garden full of fruit
+trees and streams; while near the palace were beds of roses and basil
+and eglantine and all manner sweet-smelling herbs and flowers. And the
+trees bore on the same boughs fruits fresh and dry and the branches
+swayed gracefully to the wooing of the wind. All this was in that one
+apartment and Janshah wondered thereat till he was weary of wonderment;
+and he set out to solace himself in the palace and the garden and to
+divert himself with the quaint and curious things they contained. And
+first looking at the basin he saw that the gravels of its bed were gems
+and jewels and noble metals; and many other strange things were in that
+apartment."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying
+her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Ninth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "Janshah saw many
+strange things and admirable in that apartment. Then he entered the
+pavilion and mounting the throne, fell asleep under the tent set up
+thereover. He slept for a time and, presently awaking, walked forth and
+sat down on a stool before the door. As he sat, marvelling at the
+goodliness of that place, there flew up from mid sky three birds, in
+dove-form but big as eagles, and lighted on the brink of the basin,
+where they sported awhile. Then they put off their feathers and became
+three maidens,[FN#546] as they were moons, that had not their like in
+the whole world. They plunged into the basin and swam about and
+disported themselves and laughed, while Janshah marvelled at their
+beauty and loveliness and the grace and symmetry of their shapes.
+Presently, they came up out of the water and began walking about and
+taking their solace in the garden; and Janshah seeing them land was
+like to lose his wits. He rose and followed them, and when he overtook
+them, he saluted them and they returned his salam; after which quoth
+he, 'Who are ye, O illustrious Princesses, and whence come ye?' Replied
+the youngest damsel, 'We are from the invisible world of Almighty Allah
+and we come hither to divert ourselves.' He marvelled at their beauty
+and said to the youngest, 'Have ruth on me and deign kindness to me and
+take pity on my case and on all that hath befallen me in my life.'
+Rejoined she, 'Leave this talk and wend thy ways'; whereat the tears
+streamed from his eyes, and he sighed heavily and repeated these
+couplets,
+
+'She shone out in the garden in garments all of green, * With
+
+
+ open vest and collars and flowing hair beseen:
+
+
+'What is thy name?' I asked her, and she replied, 'I'm she * Who
+
+
+ roasts the hearts of lovers on coals of love and teen.'
+
+
+Of passion and its anguish to her made my moan; * 'Upon a rock,'
+
+
+ she answered, 'thy plaints are wasted clean.'
+
+
+'Even if thy heart,' I told her, 'be rock in very deed, * Yet
+
+
+ hath God made fair water well from the rock, I
+
+
+ ween.'[FN#547]
+
+
+
+When the maidens heard his verses, they laughed and played and sang and
+made merry. Then he brought them somewhat of fruit, and they ate and
+drank and slept with him till the morning, when they donned their
+feather-suits, and resuming dove shape flew off and went their way. But
+as he saw them disappearing from sight, his reason well nigh fled with
+them, and he gave a great cry and fell down in a fainting fit and lay
+a-swooning all that day. While he was in this case Shaykh Nasr returned
+from the Parliament of the Fowls and sought for Janshah, that he might
+send him with them to his native land, but found him not and knew that
+he had entered the forbidden room. Now he had already said to the
+birds, 'With me is a young man, a mere youth, whom destiny brought
+hither from a distant land; and I desire of you that ye take him up and
+carry him to his own country.' And all answered, 'We hear and we obey.'
+So he ceased not searching for Janshah till he came to the forbidden
+door and seeing it open he entered and found the Prince lying a-swoon
+under a tree. He fetched scented waters and sprinkled them on his face,
+whereupon he revived and turned."— And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of
+day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Tenth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "when Shaykh Nasr
+saw Janshah lying a-swoon under the tree he fetched him somewhat of
+scented waters and sprinkled them on his face. Thereupon he revived and
+turned right and left, but seeing none by him save the Shaykh, sighed
+heavily and repeated these couplets,
+
+'Like fullest moon she shines on happiest night, * Soft sided
+
+
+ fair, with slender shape bedight.
+
+
+Her eye-babes charm the world with gramarye; * Her lips remind of
+
+
+ rose and ruby light.
+
+
+Her jetty locks make night upon her hips; * Ware, lovers, ware ye
+
+
+ of that curl's despight!
+
+
+Yea, soft her sides are, but in love her heart * Outhardens
+
+
+ flint, surpasses syenite:
+
+
+And bows of eyebrows shower glancey shafts * Despite the distance
+
+
+ never fail to smite.
+
+
+Then, ah, her beauty! all the fair it passes; * Nor any rival her
+
+
+ who see the light.'
+
+
+
+When Shaykh Nasr heard these verses, he said, 'O my son, did I not warn
+thee not to open that door and enter that room? But now, O my son, tell
+me what thou sawest therein and acquaint me with all that betided
+thee.' So Janshah related to him all that had passed between him and
+the three maidens, and Shaykh Nasr, who sat listening in silence said,
+'Know, O my son, that these three maidens are of the daughters of the
+Jann and come hither every year for a day, to divert themselves and
+make merry until mid afternoon, when they return to their own country.'
+Janshah asked, 'And where is their country?'; and the old man answered,
+'By Allah, O my son, I wot not:' presently adding, 'but now take heart
+and put away this love from thee and come with me, that I may send thee
+to thine own land with the birds.' When Janshah heard this, he gave a
+great cry and fell down in a trance; and presently he came to himself,
+and said, 'O my father indeed I care not to return to my native land:
+all I want is to foregather with these maidens and know, O my father,
+that I will never again name my people, though I die before thee.' Then
+he wept and cried, 'Enough for me that I look upon the face of her I
+love, although it be only once in the year!' And he sighed deeply and
+repeated these couplets,
+
+'Would Heaven the Phantom[FN#548] spared the friend at night *
+
+
+ And would this love for man were ever dight!
+
+
+Were not my heart afire for love of you, * Tears ne'er had
+
+
+ stained my cheeks nor dimmed my sight.
+
+
+By night and day, I bid my heart to bear * Its griefs, while
+
+
+ fires of love my body blight.'
+
+
+
+Then he fell at Shaykh Nasr's feet and kissed them and wept sore,
+crying, 'Have pity on me, so Allah take pity on thee and aid me in my
+strait so Allah aid thee!' Replied the old man, 'By Allah O my son, I
+know nothing of these maidens nor where may be their country; but, O my
+son, if thy heart be indeed set on one of them, tarry with me till this
+time next year for they will assuredly reappear; and, when the day of
+their coming draweth near, hide thyself under a tree in the garden. As
+soon as they have alighted and doffed their feather-robes and plunged
+into the lake and are swimming about at a distance from their clothes,
+seize the vest of her whom thy soul desireth. When they see thee, they
+will come a bank and she, whose coat thou hast taken, will accost thee
+and say to thee with the sweetest of speech and the most witching of
+smiles, 'Give me my dress, O my brother, that I may don it and veil my
+nakedness withal.' But if thou yield to her prayer and give her back
+the vest thou wilt never win thy wish: nay, she will don it and fly
+away to her folk and thou wilt nevermore see her again Now when thou
+hast gained the vest, clap it under thine armpit and hold it fast, till
+I return from the Parliament of the Fowls, when I will make accord
+between thee and her and send thee back to thy native land, and the
+maiden with thee. And this, O my son, is all I can do for thee, nothing
+more.' "—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Eleventh Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "quoth Shaykh
+Nasr to Janshah, 'Hold fast the feather-robe of her thy soul desireth
+and give it not back to her till I return from the Parliament of the
+Fowls. And this, O my son, is all I can do for thee, nothing more.'
+When Janshah heard this, his heart was solaced and he abode with Shaykh
+Nasr yet another year, counting the days as they passed until the day
+of the coming of the birds. And when at last the appointed time arrived
+the old man said to him, 'Do as I enjoined thee and charged thee with
+the maidens in the matter of the feather-dress, for I go to meet the
+birds;' and Janshah replied, 'I hear and I obey, O my father.' Then the
+Shaykh departed whilst the Prince walked into the garden and hid
+himself under a tree, where none could see him. Here he abode a first
+day and a second and a third, but the maidens came not; whereat he was
+sore troubled and wept and sighed from a heart hard tried; and he
+ceased not weeping and wailing till he fainted away. When he came to
+himself, he fell to looking now at the basin and now at the welkin, and
+anon at the earth and anon at the open country, whilst his heart
+grieved for stress of love-longing. As he was in this case, behold, the
+three doves appeared in the firmament, eagle-sized as before, and flew
+till they reached the garden and lighted down beside the basin. They
+turned right and left; but saw no one, man or Jann; so they doffed
+their feather-suits and became three maidens. Then they plunged into
+the basin and swam about, laughing and frolicking; and all were
+mother-naked and fair as bars of virgin silver. Quoth the eldest, 'O my
+sister, I fear lest there be some one lying ambushed for us in the
+pavilion. Answered the second, 'O sister, since the days of King
+Solomon none hath entered the pavilion, be he man or Jann;' and the
+youngest added, laughing, 'By Allah, O my sisters, if there be any
+hidden there, he will assuredly take none but me.' Then they continued
+sporting and laughing and Janshah's heart kept fluttering for stress of
+passion: but he hid behind the tree so that he saw without being seen.
+Presently they swam out to the middle of the basin leaving their
+clothes on the bank. Hereupon he sprang to his feet, and running like
+the darting levee to the basin's brink, snatched up the feather-vest of
+the youngest damsel, her on whom his heart was set and whose name was
+Shamsah the Sun-maiden. At this the girls turned and seeing him, were
+affrighted and veiled their shame from him in the water. Then they swam
+near the shore and looking on his favour saw that he was bright faced
+as the moon on the night of fullness and asked him, 'Who art thou and
+how camest thou hither and why hast thou taken the clothes of the lady
+Shamsah?'; and he answered, 'Come hither to me and I will tell you my
+tale.' Quoth Shamsah, 'What deed is this, and why hast thou taken my
+clothes, rather than those of my sisters?' Quoth he, 'O light of mine
+eyes, come forth of the water, and I will recount thee my case and
+acquaint thee why I chose thee out.' Quoth she, 'O my lord and coolth
+of my eyes and fruit of my heart, give me my clothes, that I may put
+them on and cover my nakedness withal; then will I come forth to thee.'
+But he replied, 'O Princess of beautiful ones, how can I give thee back
+thy clothes and slay myself for love longing? Verily, I will not give
+them to thee, till Shaykh Nasr, the king of the birds, shall return.'
+Quoth she, 'If thou wilt not give me my clothes withdraw a little apart
+from us, that my sisters may land and dress themselves and lend me
+somewhat wherewithal to cover my shame.' 'I hear and obey,' answered
+he, and walked away from them into the pavilion, whereupon the three
+Princesses came out and the two elder, donning their dress, gave
+Shamsah somewhat thereof, not enough to fly withal, and she put it on
+and came forth of the water, and stood before him, as she were the
+rising full moon or a browsing gazelle. Then Shamsah entered the
+pavilion, where Janshah was still sitting on the throne; so she saluted
+him and taking seat near him, said, 'O fair of face, thou hast undone
+thyself and me; but tell us thy adventures that we may ken how it is
+with thee.' At these words he wept till he drenched his dress with his
+tears; and when she saw that he was distracted for love of her, she
+rose and taking him by the hand, made him sit by her side and wiped
+away the drops with her sleeve; and said she, 'O fair of face, leave
+this weeping and tell us thy tale.' So he related to her all that had
+befallen him and described to her all he had seen,"—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Twelfth Night,
+
+She continued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "the lady
+Shamsah said to Janshah, 'Tell us thy tale;' so he related to her all
+that had befallen him; and, after she had lent attentive ear she sighed
+and said, 'O my lord, since thou art so fondly in love with me, give me
+my dress, that I may fly to my folk, I and my sisters, and tell them
+what affection thou hast conceived for me, and after I will come back
+to thee and carry thee to thine own country.' When he heard this, he
+wept sore and replied, 'Is it lawful to thee before Allah to slay me
+wrongfully?' She asked, 'O my lord, why should I do such wrongous
+deed?'; and he answered, 'If I give thee thy gear thou wilt fly away
+from me, and I shall die forthright.' Princess Shamsah laughed at this
+and so did her sisters; then said she to him, 'Be of good cheer and
+keep thine eyes cool and clear, for I must needs marry thee.' So
+saying, she bent down to him and embraced him and pressing him to her
+breast kissed him between the eyes and on his cheeks. They clipped and
+clasped each other awhile, after which they drew apart and sat down on
+the throne. Then the eldest Princess went out into the garden and,
+plucking somewhat of fruits and flowers, brought them into the
+pavilion; and they ate and drank and laughed and sported and made
+merry. Now Janshah was singular in beauty and loveliness and slender
+shape and symmetry and grace, and the Princess Shamsah said to him, 'O
+my beloved, by Allah, I love thee with exceeding love and will never
+leave thee!' When he heard her words, his breast broadened and he
+laughed for joy till he showed his teeth; and they abode thus awhile in
+mirth and gladness and frolic. And when they were at the height of
+their pleasure and joyance, behold, Shaykh Nasr returned from the
+Parliament of the Fowls and came in to them; whereupon they all rose to
+him and saluted him and kissed his hands. He gave them welcome and bade
+them be seated. So they sat down and he said to Princess Shamsah,
+'Verily this youth loveth thee with exceeding love; Allah upon thee,
+deal kindly with him, for he is of the great ones of mankind and of the
+sons of the kings, and his father ruleth over the land of Kabul and his
+reign compasseth a mighty empire.' Quoth she, 'I hear and I obey thy
+behest'; and, kissing the Shaykh's hands stood before him in respect.
+Quoth he, 'If thou say sooth, swear to me by Allah that thou wilt never
+betray him, what while thou abidest in the bonds of life.' So she swore
+a great oath that she would never betray Janshah, but would assuredly
+marry him, and added, 'Know, O Shaykh Nasr, that I never will forsake
+him.' The Shaykh believed in her oath and said to Janshah, 'Thanks be
+to Allah, who hath made you arrive at this understanding!' Hereupon the
+Prince rejoiced with exceeding joy, and he and Shamsah abode three
+months with Shaykh Nasr, feasting and toying and making merry."— And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Thirteenth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that, "Janshah and the
+lady Shamsah abode three months with Shaykh Nasr, feasting and toying
+and making merry. And at the end of that time she said to Janshah, 'I
+wish to go with thee to thy mother land, where thou shalt marry me and
+we will abide there.' 'To hear is to obey,' answered he and took
+counsel with Shaykh Nasr who said to him, 'Go thou home, I commend her
+to thy care.' Then said she, 'O Shaykh Nasr, bid him render me my
+feather-suit.' So the Shaykh bade Janshah give it to her, and he went
+straightways into the pavilion and brought it out for her. There upon
+she donned it and said to him, 'Mount my back and shut thine eyes and
+stop thine ears, so thou mayst not hear the roar of the revolving
+sphere; and keep fast hold of my feathers, lest thou fall off.' He did
+as she bade him and, as she stretched her wings to fly, Shaykh Nasr
+said, 'Wait a while till I describe to thee the land Kabul, lest you
+twain miss your way.' So she delayed till he had said his say and had
+bidden them farewell, commending the Prince to her care. She took leave
+of her sisters and bade them return to her folk and tell them what had
+befallen her with Janshah; then, rising into the air without stay or
+delay she flew off, like the wafts of the wind or the ramping leven.
+Her sisters also took flight and returning home delivered her message
+to their people. And she stayed not her course from the forenoon till
+the hour of mid- afternoon prayer (Janshah being still on her back),
+when she espied afar off a Wady abounding in trees and streams and she
+said to Janshah, 'I am thinking to alight in this valley, that we may
+solace ourselves amongst its trees and herbage and here rest for the
+night.' Quoth he, "Do what seemeth meet to thee!' So she swooped down
+from the lift and alighted in the Wady, when Janshah dismounted and
+kissing her between the eyes,[FN#549] sat with her awhile on the bank
+of a river there; then they rose and wandered about the valley, taking
+their pleasure therein and eating of the fruits of the trees, until
+nightfall, when they lay down under a tree and slept till the morning
+dawned. As soon as it was day, the Princess arose and, bidding Janshah
+mount, flew on with him till noon, when she perceived by the appearance
+of the buildings which Shaykh Nasr had described to her, that they were
+nearing the city Kabul. So she swooped down from the welkin and
+alighted in a wide plain, a blooming champaign, wherein were gazelles
+straying and springs playing and rivers flowing and ripe fruits
+growing. So Janshah dismounted and kissed her between the eyes; and she
+asked him, 'O my beloved and coolth of mine eyes, knowest thou how many
+days' journey we have come since yesterday?'; and he answered, 'No,'
+when she said, 'We have come thirty months' journey.' Quoth he,
+'Praised be Allah for safety!' Then they sat down side by side and ate
+and drank and toyed and laughed. And whilst they were thus pleasantly
+engaged, behold, there came up to them two of the King's Mamelukes of
+those who had been of the Prince's company, one of them was he whom he
+had left with the horses, when he embarked in the fishing-boat and the
+other had been of his escort in the chase. As soon as they saw Janshah,
+both knew him and saluted him; then said they, 'With thy leave, we will
+go to thy sire and bear him the glad tidings of thy coming.' Replied
+the Prince, 'Go ye to my father and acquaint him with my case, and
+fetch us tents, for we will tarry here seven days to rest ourselves
+till he make ready his retinue to meet us, that we may enter in
+stateliest state.'"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased
+to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Fourteenth Night,
+
+She continued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "Janshah
+said to the two Mamelukes, 'Go ye to my sire and acquaint him with my
+case and fetch us tents, for we will abide here seven days to rest
+ourselves, till he make ready his retinue to meet us that we may enter
+in the stateliest state.' So the officers hastened back to King Teghmus
+and said to him, 'Good news, O King of the age!' Asked he, 'What good
+tidings bring ye: is my son Janshah come back?'; and they answered,
+'Yes, thy son Janshah hath returned from his strangerhood and is now
+near at hand in the Kirαnν mead.' Now when the King heard this, he
+joyed with great joy and fell down in a swoon for excess of gladness;
+then, coming to himself, he bade his Wazir give each of the Mamelukes a
+splendid suit of honour and a sum of money. The minister replied, 'I
+hear and obey,' and forthright did his bidding and said to them, 'Take
+this in turn for the good tidings ye bring, whether ye lie or say
+sooth.' They replied, 'Indeed we lie not, for but now we sat with him
+and saluted him and kissed his hands and he bade us fetch him tents,
+for that he would sojourn in the meadow seven days, till such time as
+the Wazirs and Emirs and Grandees should come out to meet him.' Quoth
+the King, 'How is it with my son?' and quoth they, 'He hath with him a
+Houri, as he had brought her out of Paradise.' At this, King Teghmus
+bade beat the kettledrums and sound the trumpets for gladness, and
+despatched messengers to announce the good news to Janshah's mother and
+to the wives of the Emirs and Wazirs and Lords of the realm: so the
+criers spread themselves about the city and acquainted the people with
+the coming of Prince Janshah. Then the King made ready, and, setting
+out for the Kirani meadow with his horsemen and footmen, came upon
+Janshah who was sitting at rest with the lady Shamsah beside him and,
+behold, all suddenly drew in sight. The Prince rose to his feet and
+walked forward to meet them; and the troops knew him and dismounted, to
+salute him and kiss his hands: after which he set out preceded by the
+men in single file till he came to his sire, who, at sight of his son
+threw himself from his horse's back and clasped him to his bosom and
+wept flooding tears of joy. Then they took horse again with the retinue
+riding to the right and left and fared forward till they came to the
+river banks; when the troops alighted and pitched their tents and
+pavilions and standards to the blare of trump and the piping of fife
+and the dub-a-dub of drum and tom-tom. Moreover the King bade the tent
+pitchers set up a pavilion of red silk for the Princess Shamsah, who
+put off her scanty raiment of feathers for fine robes and, entering the
+pavilion, there took seat. And as she sat in her beauty, behold, the
+King and his son Janshah came in to her, and when she saw Teghmus, she
+rose and kissed the ground before him. The King sat down and seating
+Janshah on his right hand and Princess Shamsah on his left, bade her
+welcome and said to his son, 'Tell me all that hath befallen thee in
+this thy long strangerhood.' So Janshah related to him the whole of his
+adventures from first to last, whereat he marvelled with exceeding
+marvel and turning to the Princess, said, 'Laud to Allah for that He
+hath caused thee to reunite me with my son! Verily this is of His
+exceeding bounty!'"[FN#550]—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and
+ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Fifteenth Night,
+
+She pursued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "King Teghmus
+said to the lady Shamsah, 'Laud to Allah for that He hath caused thee
+to reunite me with my son! Verily this is of His exceeding bounty.' And
+now I would have thee ask of me what thou wilt, that I may do it in
+thine honour.' Quoth she, 'I ask of thee that thou build me a palace in
+the midst of a flower garden, with water running under it.' And the
+King answered, 'I hear and obey.' And behold, up came Janshah's mother,
+attended by all the wives of the Wazirs and Emirs and nobles and city
+notables. When her son had sight of her, he rose and leaving the tent,
+went forth to meet her and they embraced a long while, whilst the Queen
+wept for excess of joy and with tears trickling from her eyes repeated
+the following verses,
+
+'Joy so o'ercometh me, for stress of joy * In that which
+
+
+ gladdeneth me I fain shed tears:
+
+
+Tears are become your nature, O my eyes, * Who weep for joyance
+
+
+ as for griefs and fears.'
+
+
+
+And they complained to each other of all their hearts had suffered from
+the long separation. Then the King departed to his pavilion and Janshah
+carried his mother to his own tent, where they sat talking till there
+came up some of the lady Shamsah's attendants who said, The Princess is
+now walking hither in order to salute thee. When the Queen heard this,
+she rose and going to meet Shamsah, saluted her and seated her awhile
+by her side. Presently the Queen and her retinue of noble women, the
+spouses of the Emirs and Grandees, returned with Princess Shamsah to
+the tent occupied by her daughter-in-law and sat there. Meanwhile, King
+Teghmus gave great largesse to his levies and liege and rejoiced in his
+son with exceeding joy, and they tarried there ten days, feasting and
+merry making and living a most joyous life. At the end of this time,
+the King commanded a march and they all returned to the capital, so he
+took horse surrounded by all the troops with the Wazirs and
+Chamberlains to his right and left nor ceased they faring till they
+entered the city, which was decorated after the goodliest fashion; for
+the folk had adorned the houses with precious stuffs and jewellery and
+spread costly bro cedes under the hoofs of the horses. The drums beat
+for glad tidings and the Grandees of the kingdom rejoiced and brought
+rich gifts and the lookers-on were filled with amazement. Furthermore,
+they fed the mendicants and Fakirs and held high festival for the space
+of ten days, and the lady Shamsah joyed with exceeding joy whenas she
+saw this. Then King Teghmus summoned architects and builders and men of
+art and bade them build a palace in that garden. So they straightway
+proceeded to do his bidding; and, when Janshah knew of his sire's
+command he caused the artificers to fetch a block of white marble and
+carve it and hollow it in the semblance of a chest; which being done he
+took the feather- vest of Princess Shamsah wherewith she had flown with
+him through the air: then, sealing the cover with melted lead, he
+ordered them to bury the box in the foundations and build over it the
+arches whereon the palace was to rest. They did as he bade them, nor
+was it long before the palace was finished: then they furnished it and
+it was a magnificent edifice, standing in the midst of the garden, with
+streams flowing under its walls.[FN#551] Upon this the King caused
+Janshah's wedding to be celebrated with the greatest splendour and they
+brought the bride to the castle in state procession and went their
+ways. When the lady Shamsah entered, she smelt the scent of her
+feather-gear."— And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to
+say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Sixteenth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "when the lady
+Shamsah entered the new palace, she smelt the scent of her flying
+feather-gear and knew where it was and determined to take it. So she
+waited till midnight, when Janshah was drowned in sleep; then she rose
+and going straight to the place where the marble coffer was buried
+under the arches she hollowed the ground alongside till she came upon
+it; when she removed the lead where with it was soldered and, taking
+out the feather-suit, put it on. Then she flew high in air and perching
+on the pinnacle of the palace, cried out to those who were therein,
+saying, 'I pray you fetch me Janshah, that I may bid him farewell.' So
+they told him and he came out and, seeing her on the terrace roof of
+the palace, clad in her feather-raiment, asked her, 'Why hast thou done
+this deed?'; and she answered 'O my beloved and coolth of mine eyes and
+fruit of my heart, by Allah, I love thee passing dear and I rejoice
+with exceeding joy in that I have restored thee to thy friends and
+country and thou hast seen thy mother and father. And now, if thou love
+me as I love thee, come to me at Takni, the Castle of Jewels.' So
+saying, she flew away forthright to find her family and friends, and
+Janshah fell down fainting, being well-nigh dead for despair. They
+carried the news to King Teghmus, who mounted at once and riding to the
+palace, found his son lying senseless on the ground; whereat he wept
+knowing that the swoon was caused by the loss of his love, and
+sprinkled rose- water on his face.[FN#552] When the Prince came to
+himself and saw his sire sitting at his head, he wept at the thought of
+losing his wife and the King asked what had befallen him. So he
+replied, 'Know, O my father, that the lady Shamsah is of the daughters
+of the Jann and she hath done such and such' (telling him all that had
+happened); and the King said, 'O my son, be not troubled and thus
+concerned, for I will assemble all the merchants and wayfarers in the
+land and enquire of them anent that castle. If we can find out where it
+is, we will journey thither and demand the Princess Shamsah of her
+people, and we hope in Allah the Almighty that He will give her back to
+thee and thou shalt consummate thy marriage.' Then he went out and,
+calling his four Wazirs without stay or delay, bade them assemble all
+the merchants and voyagers in the city and question them of Takni, the
+Castle of Jewels, adding, 'Whoso knoweth it and can guide us thither, I
+will surely give him fifty thousand gold pieces.' The Wazirs
+accordingly went forth at once and did as the King bade them, but
+neither trader nor traveller could give them news of Takni, the Castle
+of Jewels; so they returned and told the King. Thereupon he bade bring
+beautiful slave-girls and concubines and singers and players upon
+instruments of music, whose like are not found but with the Kings: and
+sent them to Janshah, so haply they might divert him from the love of
+the lady Shamsah. Moreover, he despatched couriers and spies to all the
+lands and islands and climes, to enquire for Takni, the Castle of
+Jewels, and they made quest for it two months long, but none could give
+them news thereof. So they returned and told the King, whereupon he
+wept bitter tears and going in to his son found Janshah sitting amidst
+the concubines and singers and players on harp and zither and so forth,
+not one of whom could console him for the lady Shamsah. Quoth Teghmus,
+O my son, I can find none who knoweth this Castle of Jewels; but I will
+bring thee a fairer one than she.' When Janshah heard this his eyes ran
+over with tears and he recited these two couplets,
+
+'Patience hath fled, but passion fareth not; * And all my frame
+
+
+ with pine is fever-hot:
+
+
+When will the days my lot with Shamsah join? * Lo, all my bones
+
+
+ with passion-lowe go rot!'
+
+
+
+Now there was a deadly feud between King Teghmus and a certain King of
+Hind, by name Kafνd, who had great plenty of troops and warriors and
+champions; and under his hand were a thousand puissant chieftains, each
+ruling over a thousand tribes whereof every one could muster four
+thousand cavaliers. He reigned over a thousand cities each guarded by a
+thousand forts and he had four Wazirs and under him ruled Emirs,
+Princes and Sovereigns; and indeed he was a King of great might and
+prowess whose armies filled the whole earth. Now King Teghmus had made
+war upon him and ravaged his reign and slain his men and of his
+treasures had made gain. But when it came to King Kafid's knowledge
+that King Teghmus was occupied with the love of his son, so that he
+neglected the affairs of the state and his troops were grown few and
+weak by reason of his care and concern for his son's state, he summoned
+his Wazirs and Emirs and said to them, 'Ye all know that whilom King
+Teghmus invaded our dominions and plundered our possessions and slew my
+father and brethren, nor indeed is there one of you, but he hath
+harried his lands and carried off his goods and made prize of his wives
+and slain some kinsmen of his. Now I have heard this day that he is
+absorbed in the love of his son Janshah, and that his troops are grown
+few and weak; and this is the time to take our blood revenge on him. So
+make ready for the march and don ye your harness of battle; and let
+nothing stay or delay you, and we will go to him and fall upon him and
+slay him and his son, and possess ourselves of his reign.'"—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Seventeenth Night,
+
+She continued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "Kafid, King
+of Hind, commanded his troops and armies to mount and make for the
+dominions of King Teghmus, saying, 'Get ye ready for the march and don
+ye your harness of war; and let nothing stay or delay you; so we will
+go to him and fall upon him and slay him and his son and possess
+ourselves of his reign.' They all answered with one voice, saying, 'We
+hear and obey,' and fell at once to equipping themselves and levying
+troops; and they ceased not their preparations for three months and,
+when all was in readiness, they beat the drums and sounded the trumps
+and flew the flags and banners: then King Kafid set out at the head of
+his host and they fared on till they reached the frontiers of the land
+of Kabul, the dominions of King Teghmus, where they began to harry the
+land and do havoc among the folk, slaughtering the old and taking the
+young prisoners. When the news reached King Teghmus, he was wroth with
+exceeding wrath and assembling his Grandees and officers of state, said
+to them 'Know that Kafid hath come to our land and hath entered the
+realm we command and is resolved to fight us hand to hand, and he
+leadeth troops and champions and warriors, whose number none knoweth
+save Allah Almighty; what deme deem ye?' Replied they, 'O King of the
+age, let us go out to him and give him battle and drive him forth of
+our country; and thus deem we.' So he bade them prepare for battle and
+brought forth to them hauberks and cuirasses and helmets and swords and
+all manner of warlike gear, such as lay low warriors and do to death
+the champions of mankind. So the troops and braves and champions
+flocked together and they set up the standards and beat the drums and
+sounded the trumpets and clashed the cymbals and piped on the pipes;
+and King Teghmus marched out at the head of his army, to meet the hosts
+of Hind. And when he drew near the foe, he called a halt, and encamping
+with his host in the Zahrαn Valley,[FN#553] hard by the frontier of
+Kabul despatched to King Kafid by messenger the following letter: 'Know
+that what thou hast done is of the doings of the villain rabble and
+wert thou indeed a King, the son of a King, thou hadst not done thus,
+nor hadst thou invaded my kingdom and slain my subjects and plundered
+their property and wrought upright upon them. Knowest thou not that all
+this is the fashion of a tyrant! Verily, had I known that thou durst
+harry my dominions, I had come to thee before thy coming and had
+prevented thee this long while since. Yet, even now, if thou wilt
+retire and leave mischief between us and thee, well and good; but if
+thou return not, meet me in the listed field and measure thyself with
+me in cut and thrust.' Lastly he sealed his letter and committed to an
+officer of his army and sent with him spies to spy him out news. The
+messenger fared forth with the missive and, drawing near the enemy's
+camp, he descried a multitude of tents of silk and satin, with pennons
+of blue sendal, and amongst them a great pavilion of red satin,
+surrounded by a host of guards. He ceased not to advance till he made
+this tent and found on asking that it was that of King Kafid, whom he
+saw seated on a chair set with jewels, in the midst of his Wazirs and
+Emirs and Grandees. So he brought out the letter and straightway there
+came up to him a company of guards, who took it from him and carried it
+to the King; and Kafid read it and wrote a reply to this purport:
+'After the usual invocations, We let King Teghmus know that we mean to
+take our blood-revenge on thee and wash out our stain and waste thy
+reign and rend the curtain in twain and slay the old men and enslave
+the young men. But to-morrow, come thou forth to combat in the open
+plain, and to show thee thrust and fight will I deign.' Then he sealed
+the letter and delivered it to the messenger, who carried it to King
+Teghmus."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Eighteenth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "King Kafid
+delivered the answering letter to the messenger who carried it to King
+Teghmus and delivered it, after kissing the ground between his hands.
+Then he reported all that he had seen, saying, 'O King of the age, I
+espied warriors and horsemen and footmen beyond count nor can I assist
+thee to the amount.' When Teghmus read the reply and comprehended its
+contents, he was with furious rage enraged and bade his Wazir Ayn Zar
+take horse and fall upon the army of Kafid with a thousand cavaliers,
+in the middle watch of the night when they would easily ride home and
+slay all before them. Ayn Zar replied, 'I hear and I obey,' and at once
+went forth to do his bidding. Now King Kafid had a Wazir,
+Ghatrafαn[FN#554] by name, whom he bade take five thousand horse and
+attack the host of King Teghmus in like manner. So Ghatrafan did his
+bidding and set out on his enterprise marching till midnight. Thus the
+two parties met halfway and the Wazir Ghatrafan fell upon the Wazir,
+Ayn Zar. Then man cried out against man and there befell sore battle
+between them till break of day, when Kafid's men were routed and fled
+back to their King in confusion. As Kafid saw this, he was wroth beyond
+measure and said to the fugitives, 'Woe to you! What hath befallen you,
+that ye have lost your captains?' and they replied, 'O King of the age,
+as the Wazir Ghatrafan rode forth to fall upon King Teghmus, there
+appeared to us halfway and when night was half over, the Wazir, Ayn
+Zar, with cavaliers and champions, and we met on the slopes of Wady
+Zahran; but ere we were where we found ourselves in the enemy's midst,
+eye meeting eye; and we fought a fierce fight with them from midnight
+till morning, many on either side being slain. Then the Wazir and his
+men fell to shouting and smiting the elephants on the face till they
+took fright at their furious blows, and turning tail to flee, trampled
+down the horsemen, whilst none could see other for the clouds of dust.
+The blood ran like a rain torrent and had we not fled, we had all been
+cut off to the last man.' When King Kafid heard this, he exclaimed,
+'May the sun not bless you and may he be wroth with you and sore be his
+wrath!' Meanwhile Ayn Zar, the Wazir, returned to King Teghmus and told
+him what had happened. The King gave him joy of his safety and rejoiced
+greatly and bade beat the drums and sound the trumpets, in honour of
+the victory; after which he called the roll of his troops and behold,
+two hundred of his stoutest champions had fallen. Then King Kafid
+marched his army into the field and drew them out ordered for battle in
+fifteen lines of ten thousand horses each, under the command of three
+hundred captains, mounted on elephants and chosen from amongst the
+doughtiest of his warriors and his champions. So he set up his
+standards and banners and beat the drums and blew the trumpets whilst
+the braves sallied forth, offering battle. As for King Teghmus, he drew
+out his troops line after line and lo! there were ten of ten thousand
+horses each, and with him were an hundred champions, riding on his
+right hand and on his left. Then fared forward to the fight each
+renowned knight, and the hosts clashed together in their might, whilst
+the earth for all its wideness was straitened because of the multitude
+of the cavaliers and ears were deafened by drums and cymbals beating
+and pipes and hautboys sounding and trumpets blaring and by the thunder
+of horse-tramp and the shouting of men. The dust arched in canopy over
+their heads and they fought a sore fight from the first of the day till
+the fall of darkness, when they separated and each army drew off to its
+own camp."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying
+her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Nineteenth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "each army drew
+off to its own camp. Then King Kafid called the roll of his troops and,
+finding that he had lost five thousand men, raged with great rage; and
+King Teghmus mustered his men and seeing that of them were slain three
+thousand riders, the bravest of his braves, was wroth with exceeding
+wrath. On the morrow King Kafid again pushed into the plain and did
+duty as before, while each man strove his best to snatch victory for
+himself; and Kafid cried out to his men, saying, 'Is there any of you
+will sally forth into the field and open us the chapter of fray and
+fight?' And behold came out from the ranks a warrior named Barkayk, a
+mighty man of war who, when he reached the King, alighted from his
+elephant and kissing the earth before him, sought of him leave to
+challenge the foe to combat singular. Then he mounted his elephant and
+driving into mid-field, cried out, 'Who is for duello, who is for
+derring do, who is for knightly devoir?' When King Teghmus heard this,
+he said to his troops, 'Which of you will do single battle with this
+sworder?' And behold, a cavalier came out from the ranks, mounted on a
+charger, mighty of make, and driving up to the King kissed the earth
+before him and craved his permission to engage Barkayk. Then he mounted
+again and charged at Barkayk, who said to him, 'Who art thou and what
+art thou called, that thou makest mock of me by coming out against me
+and challenging me, alone?' 'My name is Ghazanfar[FN#555] son of
+Kamkhνl,' replied the Kabul champion; and the other, 'I have heard tell
+of thee in my own country; so up and do battle between the ranks of the
+braves!' Hearing these words Ghazanfar drew a mace of iron from under
+his thigh and Barkayk took his good sword in hand, and they laid on
+load till Barkayk smote Ghazanfar on the head with his blade, but the
+morion turned the blow and no hurt befell him therefrom; whereupon
+Ghazanfar, in his turn, dealt Barkayk so terrible a stroke on the head
+with his mace, that he levelled him down to his elephant's back and
+slew him. With this out sallied another and crying to Ghazanfar, 'Who
+be thou that thou shouldst slay my brother?'; hurled a javelin at him
+with such force that it pierced his thigh and nailed his coat of mail
+to his flesh. Then Ghazanfar, feeling his hurt, hent his sword in hand
+and smote at Barkayk's brother and cut him in sunder, and he fell to
+the earth, wallowing in his life blood, whilst the challenger of Kabul
+galloped back to King Teghmus. Now when Kafid saw the death of his
+champions, he cried out to his troops, saying, 'Down with you to the
+plain and strike with might and main!' as also did King Teghmus, and
+the two armies fought the fiercest of fights. Horse neighed against
+horse and man cried out upon man and brands were bared, whilst the
+drums beat and the trumpets blared; and horseman charged upon horseman
+and every brave of renown pushed forward, whilst the faint of heart
+fled from the lunge of lance and men heard nought but slogan-cry and
+the clash and clang of armoury. Slain were the warriors that were
+slain[FN#556] and they stayed not from the mellay till the decline of
+the sun in the heavenly dome, when the Kings drew off their armies and
+returned each to its own camp.[FN#557] Then King Teghmus took tally of
+his men and found that he had lost five thousand, and four standards
+had been broken to bits, whereat he was sore an-angered; whilst King
+Kafid in like manner counted his troops and found that he had lost six
+hundred, the bravest of his braves, and nine standards were wanting to
+the full tale. The two armies ceased joining battle and rested on their
+arms three days' space, after which Kafid wrote a letter and sent it by
+messenger to a King called Fakun al-Kalb (with whom he claimed kinship
+by the spindle side): and this kinsman forthwith mustered his men and
+marched to meet the King of Hind."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of
+day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Twentieth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "King Fakun
+mustered his men and marched to meet the King of Hind: and whileas King
+Teghmus was sitting at his pleasance, there came one in to him and
+said, 'I see from afar a cloud of dust spireing high in air and
+overspreading the lift.' So he commanded a company to fare forth and
+learn the meaning of this; and, crying, 'To hear is to obey,' they
+sallied out and presently returned and said to him, 'O King, when we
+drew near the cloud of dust, the wind rent it and it lifted and showed
+seven standards and under each standard three thousand horse, making
+for King Kafid's camp.' Then King Fakun joined himself to the King of
+Hind and saluting him, asked, 'How is it with thee, and what be this
+war in which thou arrest?'; and Kafid answered, 'Knowest thou not that
+King Teghmus is my enemy and the murtherer of my father and brothers?
+Wherefore I am come forth to do battle with him and take my brood wreak
+on him.' Quoth Fakun, 'The blessing of the sun be upon thee!'; and the
+King of Hind carried King Fakun al-Kalb to his tent and rejoiced in him
+with exceeding joy. Such was the case of the two hostile Kings; but as
+regards King Janshah, he abode two months shut up in his palace,
+without seeing his father or allowing one of the damsels in his service
+to come in to him; at the end of which time he grew troubled and
+restless and said to his attendants, 'What aileth my father that he
+cometh not to visit me?' They told him that he had gone forth to do
+battle with King Kafid, whereupon quoth Janshah, 'Bring me my steed,
+that I may go to my sire.' They replied, 'We hear and obey,' and
+brought his horse; but he said in himself, 'I am taken up with the
+thought of myself and my love and I deem well to mount and ride for the
+city of the Jews, where haply Allah shall grant me the boon to meet the
+merchant who hired me for the ruby business and may be he will deal
+with me as he dealt before, for none knoweth whence good cometh.' So he
+took with him a thousand horse and set out, the folk saying, 'At last
+Janshah hath fared forth to join his father in the field, and to fight
+by his side;' and they stinted not pushing on till dusk, when they
+halted for the night in a vast meadow. As soon as he knew that all his
+men were asleep, the Prince rose privily and girding his waist, mounted
+his horse and rode away intending to make Baghdad, because he had heard
+from the Jews that a caravan came thence to their city once in every
+two years and he made up his mind to journey thither with the next
+cafilah. When his men awoke and missed the Prince and his horse, they
+mounted and sought him right and left but, finding no trace of him,
+rejoined his father and told him what his son had done; whereat he was
+wroth beyond measure and cast the crown from his head, whilst the
+sparks were like to fly from his mouth, and he said 'There is no
+Majesty and there is no Might but in Allah! Verily I have lost my son,
+and the enemy is still before me.' But his Wazirs and vassals said to
+him, 'Patience, O King of the age! Patience bringeth weal in wake.'
+Meanwhile Janshah, parted from his lover and pained for his father, was
+in sore sorrow and dismay, with heart seared and eyes tear-bleared and
+unable to sleep night or day. But when his father heard the loss his
+host had endured, he declined battle, and fled before King Kafid, and
+retiring to his city, closed the gates and strengthened the walls.
+Thereupon King Kafid followed him and sat down before the town;
+offering battle seven nights and eight days, after which he withdrew to
+his tents, to tend his wounded while the citizens defended themselves
+as they best could, fortifying the place and setting up mangonels and
+other engines on the walls. Such was the condition of the two Kings,
+and war raged between them for a space of seven years."—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Twenty-first Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "Kings Teghmus
+and Kafid continued in this condition for seven years; but, as regards
+Janshah, he rode through wild and wold and when ever he came to a town
+he asked anent Takni, the Castle of Jewels, but none knew of it and all
+answered, 'Of a truth we never heard of such place, not even by name.'
+At last he happened to enquire concerning the city of the Jews from a
+merchant who told him that it was situated in the extreme Orient,
+adding, 'A caravan will start this very month for the city of Mizrakαn
+in Hind; whither do thou accompany us and we will fare on to Khorasan
+and thence to the city of Shima'ϊn and Khwαrazm, from which latter
+place the City of the Jews is distant a year and three months'
+journey.' So Janshah waited till the departure of the caravan, when he
+joined himself thereto and journeyed, till he reached the city of
+Mizrakan whence, after vainly asking for Takni, the Castle of Jewels,
+he set out and enduring on the way great hardships and perils galore
+and the extreme of hunger and thirst, he arrived at the town of
+Shima'un. Here he made enquiry for the City of the Jews, and they
+directed him to the road thither. So he fared forth and journeyed days
+and nights till he came to the place where he had given the apes the
+slip, and continued his journey thence to the river, on the opposite
+bank of which stood the City of the Jews. He sat down on the shore and
+waited till the Sabbath came round and the river dried up by decree of
+Allah Almighty, when he crossed over to the opposite bank and, entering
+the city, betook himself to the house wherein he had lodged on his
+former journey. The Jew and his family saluted him and rejoiced in his
+return and, setting meat and drink before him, asked, 'Where hast thou
+been during thine absence?'; and he answered, 'In the kingdom of
+Almighty Allah!'[FN#558] He lay with them that night and on the morrow
+he went out to solace himself with a walk about the city and presently
+heard a crier crying aloud and saying, 'O folk, who will earn a
+thousand gold pieces and a fair slave-girl and do half a day's work for
+us?' So Janshah went up to him and said, 'I will do this work.'[FN#559]
+Quoth the crier, 'Follow me,' and carrying him to the house of the Jew
+merchant, where he had been afore time, said, 'This young man will do
+thy need.' The merchant not recognising him gave him welcome and
+carried him into the Harim, where he set meat and drink before him, and
+he ate and drank. Then he brought him the money and formally made over
+to him the handsome slave-girl with whom he lay that night. As soon as
+morning dawned, he took the diners and the damsel and, committing them
+to his Jew host with whom he had lodged afore time, returned to the
+merchant, who mounted and rode out with him, till they came to the foot
+of the tall and towering mountain, where the merchant, bringing out a
+knife and cords, said to Janshah, 'Throw the mare.' So he threw her and
+bound her four legs with the cords and slaughtered her and cut off her
+head and four limbs and slit her belly, as ordered by the Jew;
+whereupon quoth he, 'Enter her belly, till I sew it up on thee; and
+whatsoever thou seest therein, tell me of it, for this is the work
+whose wage thou hast taken.' So Janshah entered the mare's belly and
+the merchant sewed it up on him; then, withdrawing to a fair distance,
+hid himself. And after an hour a great bird swooped down from the lift
+and, snatching up the carcass in his pounces soared high toward the
+sky. Then he perched upon the mountain peak and would have eaten the
+prey, but Janshah sensing his intent took out his knife and slit the
+mare's belly and came forth. The bird was scared at his sight and flew
+away, and Janshah went up to a place whence he could see below, and
+looking down, espied the merchant standing at the foot of the mountain,
+as he were a sparrow. So he cried out to him, 'What is thy will, O
+merchant?' Replied the Jew, 'Throw me down of the stones that lie about
+thee, that I may direct thee in the way down.' Quoth Janshah, 'Thou art
+he who didst with me thus and thus five years ago, and through thee I
+suffered hunger and thirst and sore toil and much trouble; and now thou
+hast brought me hither once more and thinkest to destroy me. By Allah,
+I will not throw thee aught!' So saying, he turned from him and set out
+for where lived Shaykh Nasr, the King of the Birds."—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Twenty-second Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "Janshah took the
+way for where lived Shaykh Nasr, the King of the Birds. And he ceased
+not faring on many days and nights, tearful-eyed and heavy-hearted;
+eating, when he was anhungered, of the growth of the ground and
+drinking, when he thirsted, of its streams, till he came in sight of
+the Castle of the lord Solomon and saw Shaykh Nasr sitting at the gate.
+So he hastened up to him and kissed his hands; and the Shaykh saluted
+him and bade him welcome and said to him, 'O my son, what aileth thee
+that thou returnest to this place, after I sent thee home with the
+Princess Shamsah, cool of eyes and broad of breast?' Janshah wept and
+told him all that had befallen him and how she had flown away from him,
+saying, 'An thou love me, come to me in Takni, the Castle of Jewels;'
+at which the old man marvelled and said, 'By Allah, O my son, I know it
+not, nor, by the virtue of our lord Solomon, have I ever in my life
+heard its name!' Quoth Janshah, 'What shall I do? I am dying of love
+and longing.' Quoth Shaykh Nasr, 'Take patience until the coming of the
+birds, when we will enquire at them of Takni, the Castle of Jewels;
+haply one of them shall wot thereof.' So Janshah's heart was comforted
+and, entering the Palace, he went straight to the chamber which gave
+upon the Lake in which he had seen the three maidens. After this he
+abode with Shaykh Nasr for a while and, one day as he was sitting with
+him, the Shaykh said, 'O my son, rejoice for the time of the birds'
+coming draweth nigh.' Janshah gladdened to hear the news; and after a
+few days the birds began to come and Shaykh Nasr said to him, 'O my
+son, learn these names[FN#560] and address thyself with me to meet the
+birds.' Presently, the fowls came flying up and saluted Shaykh Nasr,
+kind after kind, and he asked them of Takni, the Castle of Jewels, but
+they all made answer, 'Never heard we of such a place.' At these words
+Janshah wept and lamented till he swooned away; whereupon Shaykh Nasr
+called a huge volatile and said to him, 'Carry this youth to the land
+of Kabul,' and described to him the country and the way thither. Then
+he set Janshah on the bird's back, saying, 'Be careful to sit straight
+and beware of leaning to either side, else thou wilt be torn to pieces
+in the air; and stop thine ears from the wind, lest thou be dazed by
+the noise of the revolving sphere and the roaring of the seas.' Janshah
+resolved to do his bidding and the bird took flight high in sky and
+flew with him a day and a night, till he set him down by the King of
+the Beasts, whose name was Shαh Badrν, and said to his rider, 'We have
+gone astray from the way directed by Shaykh Nasr.' And he would have
+taken him up again and flown on with him; but Janshah said, 'Go thy
+ways and leave me here; till I die on this spot or I find Takni, the
+Castle of Jewels, I will not return to my country.' So the fowl left
+him with Shah Badri, King of the Beasts and flew away. The King
+thereupon said to him, 'O my son, who art thou and whence comest thou
+with yonder great bird?' So Janshah told him his story from beginning
+to end, whereat Shah Badri marvelled and said, 'By the virtue of the
+lord Solomon, I know not of this castle; but if any one of the beasts
+my subjects know it, we will reward him bountifully and send thee by
+him thither.' Hereat Janshah wept bitterly but presently he took
+patience and abode with Shah Badri, and after a short time the King of
+the Beasts said to him, 'O my son, take these tablets and commit to
+memory that which is therein; and when the beasts come, we will
+question them of the Castle of Jewels.' "—And Shahrazad perceived the
+dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Twenty-third Night,
+
+She continued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "the King of
+the Beasts said to Janshah, 'Commit to memory what is in these tablets;
+and whenas the beasts come, we will ask them anent that castle.' He did
+as the King bade him, and before long, up came the beasts, kind after
+kind, and saluted Shah Badri who questioned them of Takni, the Castle
+of Jewels, but they all replied, 'We know not this castle, nor ever
+heard we of it.' At this Janshah wept and lamented for that he had not
+gone with the bird that brought him from Shaykh Nasr's castle; but Shah
+Badri said to him, 'Grieve not, O my son, for I have a brother, King
+Shimαkh highs, who is older than I; he was once a prisoner to King
+Solomon, for that he rebelled against him; nor is there among the Jinn
+one elder than he and Shaykh Nasr. Belike he knoweth of this castle; at
+any rate he ruleth over all the Jinn in this country side.' So saying
+he set Janshah on the back of a beast and gave him a letter to his
+brother, commending him to his care. The beast set off with the Prince
+forthwith and fared on days and nights, till it came to King Shimakh's
+abiding place. And when it caught sight of the King it stood still afar
+off, whereupon Janshah alighted and walked on, till he found himself in
+the presence. Then he kissed hands and presented his brother's letter.
+The King read the missive and, having mastered the meaning, welcomed
+the Prince, saying, 'By Allah, O my son, in all my born days I never
+saw nor heard of this castle!' adding (as Janshah burst into tears),
+'but tell me thy story and who and whence thou art and whither thou art
+bound.' So Janshah related to him his history from beginning to end, at
+which Shimakh marvelled and said, 'O my son, I do not believe that even
+the lord Solomon ever saw this castle or heard thereof; but O my
+son,[FN#561] I know a monk in the mountains, who is exceeding old and
+whom all birds and beasts and Jann obey; for he ceased not his
+conjurations against the Kings of the Jann, till they submitted
+themselves to him in their own despite, by reason of the might of his
+oaths and his magic; and now all the birds and the beasts are his
+servants. I myself once rebelled against King Solomon and he sent
+against me this monk, the only being who could overcome me with his
+craft and his conjurations and his gramarye; then he imprisoned me, and
+since that time I have been his vassal. He hath travelled in all
+countries and quarters and knoweth all ways and regions and places and
+castles and cities; nor do I think there is any place hidden from his
+ken. So needs must I send thee to him; haply he may direct thee to the
+Castle of Jewels; and, if he cannot do this, none can; for all things
+obey him, birds and beasts and the very mountains and come at his beck
+and call, by reason of his skill in magic. Moreover, by the might of
+his egromancy he hath made a staff, in three pieces, and this he
+planteth in the earth and conjureth over it; whereupon flesh and blood
+issue from the first piece, sweet milk from the second and wheat and
+barley from the third; then he withdraweth the staff and returneth to
+his place which is highs the Hermitage of Diamonds. And this magical
+monk is a cunning inventor and artificer of all manner strange works;
+and he is a crafty warlock full of guiles and wiles, an arch deceiver
+of wondrous wickedness, who hath mastered every kind of magic and
+witchcraft. His name is Yaghmϊs and to him I must needs send thee on
+the back of a big bird with four wings,'"—And Shahrazad perceived the
+dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Twenty-fourth Night,
+
+She pursued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "Shimakh said
+to Janshah, 'I must needs send thee to the monk Yaghmus on the back of
+a big bird with four wings, each measuring thirty Hαshimi[FN#562]
+cubits in length; and it hath feet like those of an elephant, but it
+flieth only twice a year.' And there was with King Shimakh an officer,
+by name Timshun, who used every day to carry off two Bactrian[FN#563]
+camels from the land of Irak and cut them up for the bird that it might
+eat them. So King Shimakh bade the fowl take up Janshah and bear him to
+the cell of the hermit Yaghmus; and it rose into the air and flew on
+days and nights, till it came to the Mountain of the Citadels and the
+Hermitage of Diamonds where Janshah alighted and going up to the
+hermitage, found Yaghmus the Monk at his devotions. So he entered the
+chapel and, kissing the ground stood respectfully before the hermit.
+When Yaghmus saw him, he said, 'Welcome, O my son, O parted from thy
+home and garred ferforth to roam! Tell me the cause of thy coming
+hither.' So Janshah wept and acquainted him with all that had befallen
+him from beginning to end and that he was in quest of the Castle of
+Jewels. The Monk marvelled greatly at his story and said, 'By Allah, O
+my son, never in my life heard I of this castle, nor ever saw I one who
+had heard of it or had seen it, for all I was alive in the days of
+Noah, Allah's Prophet (on whom be peace!),[FN#564] and I have ruled the
+birds and beasts and Jinn ever since his time; nor do I believe that
+Solomon David son himself knew of it. But wait till the birds and
+beasts and chiefs of the Jann come to do their homage to me and I will
+question them of it; peradventure, some one of them may be able to give
+us news of it and Allah Almighty shall make all things easy to thee.'
+So Janshah homed with the hermit, until the day of the assembly, when
+all the birds and beasts and Jann came to swear fealty; and Yaghmus and
+his guest questioned them anent Takni, the Castle of Jewels; but they
+all replied, 'We never saw or heard of such a place.' At this, Janshah
+fell a weeping and lamenting and humbled himself before the Most High;
+but, as he was thus engaged, behold, there flew down from the heights
+of air another bird, big of bulk and black of blee, which had tarried
+behind the rest, and kissed the hermit's hands. Yaghmus asked it of
+Takni, the Castle of Jewels, and it answered, saying 'O Monk, when I
+and my brothers were small chicks we abode behind the Mountain Kaf on a
+hill of crystal, in the midst of a great desert; and our father and
+mother used to set out for it every morning and in the evening come
+back with our food. They went out early one day, and were absent from
+us a sennight and hunger was sore upon us; but on the eighth day they
+returned, both weeping, and we asked them the reason of their absence.
+Quoth they: 'A Marid swooped down on us and carried us off in his claws
+to Takni, the Castle of Jewels, and brought us before King Shahlan, who
+would have slain us; but we told him that we had left behind us a brood
+of fledgelings; so he spared our lives and let us go. And were my
+parents yet in the bonds of life they would give thee news of the
+castle.' When Janshah heard this, he wept bitter tears and said to the
+hermit, 'Prithee bid the bird carry me to his father and mother's nest
+on the crystal hill, behind the Mountain Kaf.' So the hermit said, 'O
+bird, I desire thee to obey this youth in whatsoever he may command
+thee.' 'I hear and obey thy bidding,' replied the fowl; and, taking
+Janshah on its back, flew with him days and nights without ceasing till
+it set him down on the Hill of Crystal and there alighted. And having
+delayed there a resting while, it again set him on its back and flew
+off and ceased not flying for two whole days till it reached the spot
+where the nest was."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased
+saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Twenty-fifth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "the fowl ceased
+not flying with Janshah two full days; till it reached the spot where
+the nest was, and set him down there and said, 'O Janshah, this is
+where our nest was.' He wept sore and replied, 'I pray thee bear me
+farther on to where thy parents used to forage for food.' The bird
+consented; so it took him up again and flew on with him seven nights
+and eight days, till it set him down on the top of a high hill Karmus
+highs and left him there saying, 'I know of no land behind this hill.'
+Then it flew away and Janshah sat down on the hill-top and fell asleep.
+When he awoke, he saw a something gleaming afar off as it were
+lightning and filling the firmament with its flashings; and he wondered
+what this sheen could be without wotting that it was the Castle he
+sought. So he descended the mountain and made towards the light, which
+came from Takni, the Castle of Jewels, distant two months' journey from
+Karmϊs, the hill whereon he had alit, and its foundations were
+fashioned of red rubies and its buildings of yellow gold. Moreover, it
+had a thousand turrets builded of precious metals, and stones of price
+studded and set in the minerals brought from the Main of Murks, and on
+this account it was named the Castle of Jewels, Takni. It was a vast
+great castle and the name of its king was King Shahlan, the father of
+the lady Shamsah and her sisters. Such was the case with Janshah; but
+as regards Princess Shamsah, when she fled from Janshah, she made
+straight for the Castle of Jewels and told her father and mother all
+that had passed between the Prince and herself; how he had wandered the
+world and seen its marvels and wonders and how fondly he loved her and
+how dearly she loved him. Quoth they, 'Thou hast not dealt righteously
+with him, as Allah would have thee deal.' Moreover King Shahlan
+repeated the story to his guards and officers of the Marids of the Jinn
+and bade them bring him every mortal they should see. For the lady
+Shamsah had said to her parents, 'Janshah loveth me with passionate
+love and forsure he will follow me; for when flying from his father's
+roof I cried to him, 'An thou love me, seek me at Takni, the Castle of
+Jewels!' Now when Janshah beheld that sheen and shine, he made straight
+for it wishing to find out what it might be. And as chance would have
+it, Shamsah had that very day despatched a Marid on an occasion in the
+direction of the hill Karmus, and on his way thither he caught sight of
+a man, a mortal; so he hastened up to him and saluted him. Janshah was
+terrified at his sight, but returned his salam, and the Marid asked,
+'What is thy name?' and he answered, 'My name is Janshah, and I have
+fallen madly in love with a Jinniyah known as Princess Shamsah, who
+captivated me by her beauty and loveliness; but despite my dear love
+she fled from the palace wherein I placed her and behold, I am here in
+quest of her.' Herewith he wept with bitter weeping. The Marid looked
+at him and his heart burned with pity on hearing the sad tale, and he
+said, 'Weep not, for surely thou art come to thy desire. Know that she
+loveth thee fondly and hath told her parents of thy love for her, and
+all in yonder castle love thee for her sake; so be of good cheer and
+keep thine eyes cool of tear.' Then he took him on his shoulders and
+made off with him to the Castle of Jewels, Takni. Thereupon the bearers
+of fair tidings hastened to report his coming and when the news reached
+Shamsah and her father and mother, they all rejoiced with exceeding
+joy, and King Shahlan took horse and rode out, commanding all his
+guards and Ifrits and Marids honourably to meet the Prince."—And
+Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted
+say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Twenty-sixth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "King Shahlan
+commanded all his guards and Ifrits and Marids to meet the Prince; and,
+as soon as he came up with him, he dismounted and embraced him, and
+Janshah kissed his hand. Then Shahlan bade put on him a robe of honour
+of many coloured silk, laced with gold and set with jewels, and a
+coronet such as man never saw, and, mounting him on a splendid mare of
+the steeds of the Kings of the Jinn, took horse himself and, with an
+immense retinue riding on the right hand and the left, brought him in
+great state to the Castle. Janshah marvelled at the splendour of this
+edifice, with its walls builded of rubies and other jewels and its
+pavement of crystal and jasper and emerald, and fell a weeping at the
+memory of his past miseries; but the King and Queen, Shamsah's mother,
+wiped away his tears and said, 'Now no more weeping and be of good
+cheer, for thou hast won to thy will.' Then Shahlan carried him into
+the inner court of the Castle, where he was received by a multitude of
+beautiful damsels and pages and black Jinn-slaves, who seated him in
+the place of honour and stood to do him service, whilst he was lost in
+amazement at the goodliness of the place, and its walls all edified of
+precious metals and jewels of price. Presently King Shahlan repaired to
+his hall of audience, where he sat down on his throne and, bidding the
+slave-girls and the pages introduce the Prince, rose to receive him and
+seated him by his side on the throne. Then he ordered the tables to be
+spread and they ate and drank and washed their hands; after which in
+came the Queen Shamsah's mother, and saluting Janshah, bade him welcome
+in these words, 'Thou hast come to thy desire after weariness and thine
+eyes shall now sleep after watching; so praised be Allah for thy
+safety!' Thus saying, she went away and forthwith returned with the
+Princess Shamsah, who saluted Janshah and kissed his hands, hanging her
+head in shame and confusion before him and her parents, after which as
+many of her sisters as were in the palace came up to him and greeted
+him in like manner. Then quoth the Queen to him, 'Welcome, O my son,
+our daughter Shamsah hath indeed sinned against thee, but do thou
+pardon her misdeed for our sakes.' When Janshah heard this, he cried
+out and fell down fainting, whereat the King marvelled and they
+sprinkled on his face rose water mingled with musk and civet, till he
+came to himself and, looking at Princess Shamsah, said, 'Praised be
+Allah who hath brought me to my desire and hath quenched the fire of my
+heart!' Replied she, 'May He preserve thee from the Fire!, but now tell
+me, O Janshah, what hath befallen thee since our parting and how thou
+madest thy way to this place; seeing that few even of the Jann ever
+heard of Takni, the Castle of Jewels; and we are independent of all the
+Kings nor any wotteth the road hither.' Thereupon he related to her
+every adventure and peril and hardship he had suffered and how he had
+left his father at war with King Kafid, ending with these words, 'And
+all for thy sake, my lady Shamsah!' Quoth the Queen, 'Now hast thou thy
+heart's desire, for the Princess is thy handmaid, and we give her in
+free gift to thee.' Janshah joyed exceedingly at these words and the
+Queen added, 'Next month, if it be the will of Almighty Allah, we will
+have a brave wedding and celebrate the marriage festival and after the
+knot is tied we will send you both back to thy native land, with an
+escort of a thousand Marids of our body-guard, the least of whom, an
+thou bid him slay King Kafid and his folk, would surely destroy them to
+the last man in the twinkling of an eye. Furthermore if it please thee
+we will send thee, year after year, a company of which each and every
+can so do with all thy foes.'"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day
+and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Twenty-seventh Night,
+
+She continued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "the lady
+Shamsah's mother ended with saying, 'And if it so please thee we will
+send thee, year after year, a company of which each and every can
+destroy thy foes to the last man.' Then King Shahlan sat down on his
+throne and, summoning his Grandees and Officers of state, bade them
+make ready for the marriage- festivities and decorate the city seven
+days and nights. 'We hear and we obey,' answered they and busied
+themselves two months in the preparations, after which they celebrated
+the marriage of the Prince and Princess and held a mighty festival,
+never was there its like. Then they brought Janshah in to his bride and
+he abode with her in all solace of life and delight for two years, at
+the end of which time he said to her, 'Thy father promised to send us
+to my native land, that we might pass one year there and the next
+here.' Answered she, I hear and obey,' and going in to King Shahlan at
+nightfall told him what the Prince had said. Quoth he, 'I consent; but
+have patience with me till the first of the month, that I may make
+ready for your departure.' She repeated these words to her husband and
+they waited till the appointed time, when the King bade his Marids
+bring out to them a great litter of red gold, set with pearls and
+jewels and covered with a canopy of green silk, purfled in a profusion
+of colours and embroidered with precious stones, dazzling with its
+goodliness the eyes of every beholder. He chose out four of his Marids
+to carry the litter in whichever of the four quarters the riders might
+choose. Moreover, he gave his daughter three hundred beautiful damsels
+to wait upon her and bestowed on Janshah the like number of white
+slaves of the sons of the Jinn. Then the lady Shamsah took formal leave
+of her mother and sisters and all her kith and kin; and her father
+fared forth with them. So the four Marids took up the litter, each by
+one corner, and rising under it like birds in air, flew onward with it
+between earth and heaven till mid-day, when the King bade them set it
+down and all alighted. Then they took leave of one another and King
+Shahlan commended Shamsah to the Prince's care, and giving them in
+charge to the Marids, returned to the Castle of Jewels, whilst the
+Prince and Princess remounted the litter, and the Marids taking it up,
+flew on for ten whole days, in each of which they accomplished thirty
+months' journey, till they sighted the capital of King Teghmus. Now one
+of them knew the land of Kabul; so when he saw the city, he bade the
+others let down the litter at that populous place which was the
+capital."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Twenty-eighth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "the Marid guards
+let down the litter at the capital of King Teghmus who had been routed
+and had fled from his foes into the city, where he was in sore straits,
+King Kafid having laid close siege to him. He sought to save himself by
+making peace with the King of Hind, but his enemy would give him no
+quarter; so seeing himself without resource or means of relief, he
+determined to strangle himself and to die and be at rest from this
+trouble and misery. Accordingly he bade his Wazirs and Emirs farewell
+and entered his house to take leave of his Harim; and the whole realm
+was full of weeping and wailing and lamentation and woe. And whilst
+this rout and hurly-burly was enacting, behold, the Marids descended
+with the litter upon the palace that was in the citadel, and Janshah
+bade them set it down in the midst of the Divan. They did his bidding
+and he alighted with his company of handmaids and Mamelukes; and,
+seeing all the folk of the city in straits and desolation and sore
+distress, said to the Princess, 'O love of my heart and coolth of mine
+eyes, look in what a piteous plight is my sire!' There upon she bade
+the Marid guard fall upon the beleaguering host and slay them, saying,
+'Kill ye all, even to the last man;' and Janshah commanded one of them,
+by name Karαtash,[FN#565] who was exceeding strong and valiant, to
+bring King Kafid to him in chains. So they set down the litter and
+covered it with the canopy; then, having waited till midnight, they
+attacked the enemy's camp one of them being a match for ten; or at
+least for eight. And while these smote the foes with iron maces, those
+mounted their magical elephants and soared high in the lift, and then
+swooping down and snatching up their opponents, tare them to pieces in
+mid air. But Karatash made straight for Kafid's tent where he found him
+lying in a couch; so he took him up, shrieking for fear, and flew with
+him to Janshah, who bade the four Marids bind him on the litter and
+hang him high in the air over his camp, that he might witness the
+slaughter of his men. They did as the Prince commanded them and left
+Kafid, who had swooned for fear, hanging between earth and air and
+buffeting his face for grief. As for King Teghmus, when he saw his son,
+he well-nigh died for excess of joy and, crying with a loud cry, fell
+down in a swoon. They sprinkled rose-water on his face, till he came to
+himself, when he and his son embraced and wept with sore weeping; for
+he knew not that the Jinn guard were battling with King Kafid's men.
+Then Princess Shamsah accosted the King and kissing his hand, said to
+him, 'Sire, be pleased to go up with me to the palace-roof and witness
+the slaughter of thy foes by my father's Marids.' So he went up to the
+terrace-roof and sitting down there with his daughter-in-law, enjoyed
+watching the Marids do havoc among the besiegers and break a way
+through the length and breadth of them. For one of them smote with his
+iron mace upon the elephants and their riders and pounded them till man
+was not to be distinguished from beast; whilst another shouted in the
+faces of those who fled, so that they fell down dead; and the third
+caught up a score of horsemen, beasts and all; and, towering with them
+high in air, cast them down on earth, so that they were torn in pieces.
+And this was high enjoyment for Janshah and his father and the lady
+Shamsah."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Twenty-ninth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "King Teghmus and
+his son and daughter-in-law went up to the terrace roof and enjoyed a
+prospect of the Jinn-guards battling with the beleaguering host. And
+King Kafid (still hanging between heaven and earth) also saw the
+slaughter of his troops and wept sore and buffeted his face; nor did
+the carnage cease among the army of Hind for two whole days, till they
+were cut off even to the last man. Then Janshah commanded a Marid, by
+name Shimwαl, chain up King Kafid with manacles and fetters, and
+imprison him in a tower called the Black Bulwark. And when his bidding
+was done, King Teghmus bade beat the drums and despatched messengers to
+announce the glad news to Janshah's mother, informing her of his
+approach; whereupon she mounted in great joy and she no sooner espied
+her son than she clasped him in her arms and swooned away for stress of
+gladness. They sprinkled rose-water on her face, till she came to
+herself, when she embraced him again and again wept for excess of joy.
+And when the lady Shamsah knew of her coming, she came to her and
+saluted her; and they embraced each other and after remaining embraced
+for an hour sat down to converse. Then King Teghmus threw open the city
+gates and despatched couriers to all parts of the kingdom, to spread
+the tidings of his happy deliverance; whereupon all his princely
+Vassals and Emirs and the Grandees of the realm flocked to salute him
+and give him joy of his victory and of the safe return of his son; and
+they brought him great store of rich offerings and curious presents.
+The visits and oblations continued for some time, after which the King
+made a second and a more splendid bride-feast for the Princess Shamsah
+and bade decorate the city and held high festival. Lastly they unveiled
+and paraded the bride before Janshah, with apparel and ornaments of the
+utmost magnificence, and when her bridegroom went in to her he
+presented her with an hundred beautiful slave-girls to wait upon her.
+Some days after this, the Princess repaired to the King and interceded
+with him for Kafid, saying, 'Suffer him return to his own land, and if
+henceforward he be minded to do thee a hurt, I will bid one of the
+Jinn-guard snatch him up and bring him to thee.' Replied Teghmus, 'I
+hear and I obey,' and bade Shimwal bring him the prisoner, who came
+manacled and fettered and kissed earth between his hands. Then he
+commanded to strike off his chains and, mounting him on a lame mare,
+said to him, 'Verily Princess Shamsah hath interceded for thee: so
+begone to thy kingdom, but if thou fall again to thine old tricks, she
+will send one of the Marids to seize thee and bring thee hither.'
+Thereupon King Kafid set off home wards, in the sorriest of
+plights,"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Thirtieth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "King Kafid set
+off homewards in the sorriest of plights, whilst Janshah and his wife
+abode in all solace and delight of life, making the most of its joyance
+and happiness. All this recounted the youth sitting between the tombs
+unto Bulukiya, ending with, 'And behold, I am Janshah who witnessed all
+these things, O my brother, O Bulukiya!' Then Bulukiya who was
+wandering the world in his love for Mohammed (whom Allah bless and
+keep!) asked Janshah, 'O my brother, what be these two sepulchres and
+why sittest thou between them and what causeth thy weeping?' He
+answered, 'Know, O Bulukiya, that we abode in all solace and delight of
+life, passing one year at home and the next at Takni, the Castle of
+Jewels, whither we betook not ourselves but in the litter borne by the
+Marids and flying between heaven and earth.' Quoth Bulukiya, 'O my
+brother, O Janshah, what was the distance between the Castle and thy
+home?' Quoth he, 'Every day we accomplished a journey of thirty months
+and the time we took was ten days. We abode on this wise a many of
+years till, one year we set out for the Castle of Jewels, as was our
+wont, and on the way thither alighted from the litter in this island to
+rest and take our pleasure therein. We sat down on the riverbank and
+ate and drank; after which the Lady Shamsah, having a mind to bathe,
+put off her clothes and plunged into the water. Her women did likewise
+and they swam about awhile, whilst I walked on along the bank of the
+stream leaving them to swim about and play with one another. And
+behold, a huge shark of the monsters of the deep seized the Princess by
+the leg, without touching any of the girls; and she cried out and died
+forthright, whilst the damsels fled out of the river to the pavilion,
+to escape from the shark. But after awhile they returned and taking up
+her corpse carried her to the litter. Now when I saw her dead, I fell
+down fainting and they sprinkled water on my face, till I recovered and
+wept over her. Then I despatched the Jinn-guards to her parents and
+family, announcing what had befallen her; and in the shortest time they
+came to the spot and washed her and shrouded her, after which they
+buried her by the river-side and made mourning for her. They would have
+carried me with them to their own country; but I said to King Shahlan,
+'I beseech thee to dig me a grave beside her tomb, that, when I die, I
+may be buried by her side in that grave.' Accordingly, the King
+commanded one of his Marids to do as I wished, after which they
+departed and left me here to weep and mourn for her till I die. And
+this is my story and the cause of my sojourn between these two tombs.'
+And he repeated these two couplets,[FN#566]
+
+'The house, sweet heart, is now no home to me * Since thou art
+
+
+ gone, nor neighbour neighbourly,
+
+
+The friend whilom I took to heart, no more * Is friend, and
+
+
+ brightest lights lose brilliancy.'
+
+
+
+But when Bulukiya heard out Janshah's tale he marvelled,"—And Shahrazad
+perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Thirty-first Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "when Bulukiya
+heard out Janshah's tale he wondered and exclaimed, 'By Allah,
+methought I had indeed wandered over the world and compassed it about;
+but now I forget all I have seen after listening to these adventures of
+thine!' He was silent a while and then resumed, 'I beg thee, of thy
+favour and courtesy, to direct me in the way of safety.' So Janshah
+directed him into the right road, and Bulukiya farewelled him and went
+his ways." All this the Serpent-queen related to Hasib Karim al-Din,
+and he asked her, "But how knowest thou of these things?"; and she
+answered, "O Hasib, thou must ken that I had occasion, some five-
+and-twenty years ago, to send one of my largest serpents to Egypt and
+gave her a letter for Bulukiya, saluting him. So she went there
+willingly for she had a daughter in the land called Bint
+Shumukh[FN#567]; and after asking anent Bulukiya she found him and gave
+him my missive. He read it and replied to the messenger snake, 'Thou
+comest from the Queen of the Serpents whom I am minded to visit for I
+have an occasion to her.' She replied, 'I hear and obey.' Then she bore
+him to her daughter of whom she took leave and said to her companion,
+'Close thine eyes.' So he closed them and opening them again, behold,
+he found himself on the mountain where I now am. Then his guide carried
+him to a great serpent, whom he saluted; whereupon quoth she, 'Didst
+thou deliver the missive to Bulukiya?'; and she replied, 'Even so; and
+he hath accompanied me and here he standeth.' Presently Bulukiya asked
+after me, the Serpent-queen, and the great serpent answered, 'She hath
+gone to the mountain Kaf with all her host, as is her wont in winter;
+but next summer she will come hither again. As often as she goeth
+thither, she appointeth me to reign in her room, during her absence;
+and if thou have any occasion to her, I will accomplish it for thee.'
+Said he, 'I beg thee to bring me the herb, which whoso crusheth and
+drinketh the juice thereof, sickeneth not neither groweth grey nor
+dieth.' 'I will not bring it,' said the serpent, 'till thou tell me
+what befell thee since thou leftest the Queen of the Serpents, to go
+with Affan in quest of King Solomon's tomb.' So he related to her all
+his travels and adventures, together with the history of Janshah, and
+said at last, 'Grant me my request, that I may return to mine own
+country.' Replied the serpent, 'By the virtue of the lord Solomon, I
+know not where is to be found the herb whereof thou speakest.' Then she
+bade the serpent which had brought him thither, carry him back to
+Egypt: so the messenger obeyed her and said to him, 'Shut thine eyes!'
+He did so and, opening them again, found himself on the mountain
+Mukattam.[FN#568] When I returned from the mountain Kaf (added the
+Queen) the serpent, my deputy, informed me of Bulukiya's visit and gave
+me his salutations and repeated to me his story and his meeting with
+Janshah. And this, O Hasib, is how I came to know the adventures of
+Bulukiya and the history of Janshah." Thereupon Hasib said to her, "O
+Queen, deign recount to me what befell Bulukiya as regards his return
+to Egypt." She replied, "Know, O Hasib, that when he parted from
+Janshah he fared on nights and days till he came to a great sea; so he
+anointed his feet with the juice of the magical herb and, walking over
+the face of the waters, sped onwards till he came to an island
+abounding in trees and springs and fruits, as it were the Garden of
+Eden. He landed and walked about, till he saw an immense tree, with
+leaves as big as the sails of a ship. So he went up to the tree and
+found under it a table spread with all manner meats, whilst on a branch
+of the branches sat a great bird, whose body was of pearls and leek-
+green emeralds, its feet of silver, its beak of red carnelian and its
+plumery of precious metals; and it was engaged in singing the praises
+of Allah the Most High and blessing Mohammed (on whom be benediction
+and peace!)"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say
+her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Thirty-second Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "when Bulukiya
+landed and walked about the island he found therein many marvels,
+especially a bird whose body was of pearls and leek green emeralds and
+its plumery of precious metals; and it was engaged in singing the
+praises of Allah the Most High and blessing Mohammed (upon whom be
+benediction and peace!). Seeing this he said, 'Who and what art thou?'
+Quoth the bird, 'I am one of the birds of Eden and followed Adam when
+Allah Almighty cast him out thence. And know, O my brother, that Allah
+also cast out with him four leaves of the trees of the garden to cover
+his nakedness withal, and they fell to the ground after awhile. One of
+them was eaten by a worm, and of it came silk: the gazelles ate the
+second and thence proceeded musk, the third was eaten by bees and gave
+rise to honey, whilst the fourth fell in the land of Hind and from it
+sprang all manner of spices. As for me, I wandered over the face of
+earth till Allah deigned give me this island for a dwelling-place, and
+I took up my abode here. And every Friday from night till morning the
+Saints and Princes[FN#569] of the Faith flock to this place and make
+pious visitation and eat from this table spread by Allah Almighty; and
+after they have eaten, the table is taken up again to Heaven: nor doth
+the food ever waste or corrupt.' So Bulukiya ate his fill of the meats
+and praised the Great Creator. And presently, behold, there came up
+Al-Khizr[FN#570] (with whom be peace!), at sight of whom Bulukiya rose
+and saluting him, was about to withdraw, when the bird said to him,
+'Sit, O Bulukiya, in the presence of Al-Khizr, on whom be peace!' So he
+sat down again, and Al-Khizr said to him, 'Let me know who thou art and
+tell me thy tale.' Thereupon Bulukiya related to him all his adventures
+from beginning to end and asked, 'O my lord, how far is it hence to
+Cairo?' 'Five and ninety years' journey,' replied the Prophet;
+whereupon Bulukiya burst into tears; then, falling at Al-Khizr's feet,
+kissed them and said to him, 'I beseech thee deliver me from this
+strangerhood and thy reward be with Allah, for that I am nigh upon
+death and know not what to do.' Quoth Al-Khizr, 'Pray to Allah Almighty
+that He permit me to carry thee to Cairo, ere thou perish.' So Bulukiya
+wept and humbled himself before Allah who granted his prayer, and by
+inspiration bade Al-Khizr bear him to his people. Then said the
+Prophet, 'Lift thy head, for Allah hath heard thy prayer and hath
+inspired me to do what thou desires; so take fast hold of me with both
+thy hands and shut thine eyes.' The Prince did as he was bidden and
+Al-Khizr stepped a single step forwards, then said to him, 'Open thine
+eyes!' So Bulukiya opened his eyes and found himself at the door of his
+palace at Cairo. He turned, to take leave of Al-Khizr, but found no
+trace of him."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased
+saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Thirty-third Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that "when Bulukiya,
+standing at the gate of his palace, turned to take leave of Al-Khizr,
+he found no trace of him and entered the palace. When his mother saw
+him, she cried with a loud cry and swooned away for excess of joy, and
+they sprinkled water upon her face. After awhile she came to herself
+and embraced her son and wept with sore weeping, whilst Bulukiya wept
+and laughed by turns. Then all his friends and kindred came and gave
+him joy of his safe return, and the news was noised abroad in the land
+and there came to him presents from all parts. Moreover, they beat the
+drums and blew the flutes and rejoiced mightily. Then Bulukiya related
+to them his adventures ending with recounting how Al-Khizr had set him
+down at his palace door, whereat they marvelled exceedingly and wept,
+till all were a-weary of weeping." Hasib wondered at the Queen's tale
+and shed many tears over it; then he again besought her to let him
+return to his family; but she said, "I fear me, O Hasib, that when thou
+gettest back to thy country thou wilt fail of thy promise and prove
+traitor to thine oath and enter the Hammam." But he swore to her
+another solemn oath that he would never again enter the baths as long
+as he lived; whereupon she called a serpent and bade her carry him up
+to the surface of the earth. So the serpent took him and led him from
+place to place, till she brought him out on the platform-edge of an
+abandoned cistern and there left him. Upon this he walked to the city
+and, coming to his house by the last of the day, at the yellowing of
+the sun, knocked at the door. His mother opened it and seeing her son
+screamed out and threw herself upon him and wept for excess of joy. His
+wife heard her mother-in-law weeping; so she came out to her and seeing
+her husband, saluted him and kissed his hands; and each rejoiced in
+other with exceeding joy of all three. Then they entered the house and
+sat down to converse and presently Hasib asked his mother of the
+woodcutters, who had left him to perish in the cistern. Quoth she,
+"They came and told me that a wolf had eaten thee in the Wady. As for
+them, they are become merchants and own houses and shops, and the world
+is grown wide for them. But every day they bring me meat and drink, and
+thus have they done until the present time." Quoth Hasib, "To-morrow do
+thou go to them and say, "My son Hasib Karim al-Din hath returned from
+his travels; so come ye to meet him and salute him." Accordingly, when
+morning dawned, she repaired to the woodcutters' houses and delivered
+to them her son's message, which when they heard, they changed colour,
+and saying, "We hear and obey," gave her each a suit of silk,
+embroidered with gold, adding, "Present this to thy good son[FN#571]
+and tell him that we will be with him to-morrow." She assented and
+returning to Hasib gave him their presents and message. Meanwhile, the
+woodcutters called together a number of merchants and, acquainting them
+with all that had passed between themselves and Hasib, took counsel
+with them what they should do. Quoth the merchants, "It behoveth each
+one of you to give him half his monies and Mamelukes." And they all
+agreed to do this; so on the next day, each of them took half his
+wealth and, going in to Hasib, saluted him and kissed his hands. Then
+they laid before him what they had brought, saying, "This is of thy
+bounties, and we are in thy hands." He accepted their peace- offering
+and said, "What is past is past: that which befell us was decreed of
+Allah, and destiny doeth away with dexterity." Quoth they, "Come, let
+us walk about and take our solace in the city and visit the Hammam."
+Quoth he, "Not so: I have taken an oath never again to enter the baths,
+so long as I live." Rejoined they, at least come to our homes that we
+may entertain thee." He agreed to this, and went to their houses and
+each of them entertained him for a night and a day; nor did they cease
+to do thus for a whole sennight, being seven in number. And now Hasib
+was master of monies and houses and shops, and the merchants of the
+city foregathered with him and he told them all that had befallen him.
+He became one of the chiefs of the guild and abode on this wise awhile,
+till it happened one day, as he was walking about the streets, that he
+passed the door of a Hammam, whose keeper was one of his companions.
+When the bathman, who was standing without, caught his eye he ran up to
+him and saluted him and embraced him, saying, "Favour me by entering
+the bath and there wash and be rubbed that I may show thee
+hospitality." Hasib refused, alleging that he had taken a solemn oath
+never again to enter the Hammam; but the bathman was instant with him,
+saying, "Be my three wives triply divorced, can thou enter not and be
+washed!" When Hasib heard him thus conjure him, he was confounded and
+replied, "O my brother, hast thou a mind to ruin my house and make my
+children orphans and lay a load of sin upon my neck?" But his friend
+threw himself at his feet and kissed them, saying, "My happiness
+dependeth upon thy entering, and be the sin on the neck of me!" Then
+all the servants of the bath set upon Hasib and dragging him in pulled
+off his clothes. But hardly had he sat down against the wall and begun
+to pour water on his head when a score of men accosted him, saying,
+"Rise, O man, and come with us to the Sultan, for thou art his debtor."
+Then they despatched one of them as messenger to the Sultan's Minister,
+who straightway took horse and rode, attended by threescore Mamelukes,
+to the baths, where he alighted and going in to Hasib, saluted him and
+said, "Welcome to thee!" Then he gave the bathman an hundred diners
+and, mounting Hasib on a horse he had brought with him, returned with
+him and all his men to the Sultan's palace. Here he bade them aid Hasib
+to dismount and, after seating him comfortably, set food before him;
+and when they had eaten and drunken and washed their hands, the Wazir
+clad him in two dresses of honour each worth five thousand diners and
+said to him, "Know that Allah hath been merciful to us in sending thee;
+for the Sultan is nigh upon death by leprosy, and the books tell us
+that his life is in thy hands. Then, accompanied by a host of Grandees,
+he took him wondering withal and carried him through the seven doorways
+of the palace, till they came to the King's chamber. Now the name of
+this King was Karazdαn, King of Persia and of the Seven Countries, and
+under his sway were an hundred sovereign princes sitting on chairs of
+red gold, and ten thousand valiant captains, under each one's hand an
+hundred deputies and as many headsmen armed with sword and axe. They
+found the King lying on his bed with his face swathed in a napkin, and
+groaning for excess of pain. When Hasib saw this ordinance, his wit was
+dazed for awe of the King; so he kissed the ground before him, and
+prayed a blessing on him. Then the Grand Wazir, whose name was Shamhϊr,
+rose and welcoming Hasib, seated him on a high chair at the King's
+right hand."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say
+her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Thirty-fourth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Wazir Shamhur
+rose to Hasib and seated him on a chair at the right hand of King
+Karazdan; after which he called for food and the tables were laid. And
+when they had eaten and drunken and washed their hands, Shamhur stood
+up (while all present also stood to do him honour) and, approaching
+Hasib said to him, "We are all thy servants and will give thee
+whatsoever thou askest, even were it one half the kingdom, so thou wilt
+but cure the King." Saying this, he led him by the hand to the royal
+couch, and Hasib, uncovering the King's face, saw that he was at last
+fatal stage of the disease; so he wondered at their hoping for a cure.
+But the Wazir kissed his hand and repeated his offers and ended with
+saying, "All we want of thee is to heal our King:" so he said to the
+Wazir, "True that I am the son of Allah's prophet, Daniel, but I know
+nothing of his art: for they put me thirty days in the school of
+medicine and I learnt nothing of the craft. I would well I knew
+somewhat thereof and might heal the King." Hearing this, the Grand
+Wazir said, "Do not multiply words upon us; for though we should gather
+together to us physicians from the East and from the West, none could
+cure the King save thou." Answered Hasib, "How can I make him whole,
+seeing I know neither his case nor its cure?" Quoth the Minister, "His
+healing is in thy hands," and quoth Hasib, "If I knew the remedy of his
+sickness, I would heal him." Thereupon the Wazir rejoined, "Thou
+keenest a cure right well; the remedy of his sickness is the Queen of
+the Serpents, and thou knowest her abiding-place and hast been with
+her." When Hasib heard this, he knew that all this came of his entering
+the Baths, and repented whenas repentance availed him naught; then said
+he, "What is the Queen of the Serpents? I know her not nor ever in all
+my life heard I of this name." Retorted the Wazir, "Deny not the
+knowledge of her, for I have proof that thou knowest her and hast
+passed two years with her." Repeated Hasib, "Verily, I never saw her
+nor even heard of her till this moment;" upon which Shamhur opened a
+book and, after making sundry calculations, raised his head and spake
+as follows. "The Queen of the Serpents shall foregather with a man who
+shall abide with her two years; then shall he return from her and come
+forth to the surface of the earth, and when he entereth the Hammam bath
+his belly will become black." Then said he, "Look at thy belly." So
+Hasib looked at his own belly and behold, it was black: but he
+persisted in his denial and said, "My belly was black from the day my
+mother bare me." Said the Wazir, "I had stationed three Mamelukes at
+the door of every Hammam, bidding them note all who entered and let me
+know when they found one whose belly was black: so, when thou
+enteredst, they looked at thy belly and, finding it black, sent and
+told me, after we had well-nigh lost hope of coming upon thee. All we
+want of thee is to show us the place whence thou camest out and after
+go thy ways; for we have those with us who will take the Queen of the
+Serpents and fetch her to us." Then all the other Wazirs and Emirs and
+Grandees flocked about Hasib who sorely repented of his misdeed; and
+they conjured him, till they were weary, to show them the abode of the
+Queen; but he ceased not saying, "I never saw nor heard of the matter."
+Then the Grand Wazir called the hangman and bade him strip Hasib and
+beat him a sore beating; and so they did till he saw death face to
+face, for excess of pain, and the Wazir said, "We have proof that thou
+knowest the abiding-place of the Queen of the Serpents: why wilt thou
+persist in denial? Show us the place whence thou camest out and go from
+us; we have with us one who will take her, and no harm shall befall
+thee." Then he raised him and bade give him a dress of honour of cloth
+of red gold, embroidered with jewels, and spoke him fair till Hasib
+yielded and said, "I will show you the place." At this the Wazir
+rejoiced with great joy and took horse with all his many and rode,
+guided by Hasib, and never drew rein till they came to the mountain
+containing the cavern wherein he had found the cistern full of honey.
+There all dismounted and followed him as he entered, sighing and
+weeping, and showed them the well whence he had issued; whereupon the
+Wazir sat down thereby and, sprinkling perfumes upon a chafing-dish,
+began to mutter charms and conjurations; for he was a crafty magician
+and diviner and skilled in spiritual arts. He repeated three several
+formulas of conjuration and between each threw fresh incense upon the
+fire, crying out and saying, "Come forth, O Queen of the Serpents!;"
+when behold, the water of the well sank down and a great door opened in
+the side, from which came a mighty noise of crying like unto thunder,
+so terrible that they thought the well had caved in and all present
+fell down fainting; nay, some even died for fright. Presently, there
+issued from the well a serpent as big as an elephant, casting out
+sparks, like red hot coals, from its eyes and mouth and bearing on its
+back a charger of red gold, set with pearls and jewels, in the midst
+whereof lay a serpent from whose body issued such splendour that the
+place was illumined thereby; and her face was fair and young and she
+spoke with most eloquent tongue. The Serpent-queen turned right and
+left, till her eyes fell upon Hasib, to whom said she "Where is the
+covenant thou madest with me, and the oath thou swearest to me, that
+thou wouldst never again enter the Hammam-bath? But there is no
+fighting against Fate nor hath any ever fled from that which is written
+on his forehead. Allah hath appointed the end of my life for thy hand
+to hend, and it is His will that slain I be and King Karazdan be healed
+of his malady." So saying, she wept with sore weeping and Hasib wept to
+see her weep. As for the abominable Wazir Shamhur; he put out his hand
+to lay hold of her; but she said to him, "Hold thy hand, O accursed, or
+I will blow upon thee and reduce thee to a heap of black ashes." Then
+she cried out to Hasib, saying, "Draw near me and take me in thine hand
+and lay me in the dish that is with you: then set it on thy head, for
+my death was fore-ordained, from Eternity without beginning,[FN#572] to
+be at thy hand, and thou hast no power to avert it." So he took her and
+laid her in the dish, and put it on his head, when the well returned to
+its former state. Then they set out on their return to the city, Hasib
+carrying the dish on his head, and when they were half-way behold, the
+Queen of the Serpents said to him privily, "Hearken, O Hasib, to my
+friendly counsel, for all thou hast broken faith with me and been false
+to thine oath, and hast done this misdeed, but it was fore-ordained
+from all eternity." He replied "To hear is to obey," and she continued,
+"It is this: when thou comest to the Wazir's house, he will bid thee
+behead me and cut me in three; but do thou refuse saying, 'I know not
+how to slaughter[FN#473]' and leave him to do it with his own hand and
+to work his wicked will. When he hath cut my throat and divided my body
+into three pieces there will come a messenger, to bid him to the King,
+so he will lay my flesh in a cauldron of brass and set it upon a
+brasier before going to the presence and he will say to thee, 'Keep up
+the fire under the cauldron till the scum rise; then skim it off and
+pour it into a phial to cool. Wait till it cool and then drink it, so
+shall naught of malady or pain be left in all thy body. When the second
+scum riseth, skim it off and pour it into a phial against my return
+from the King, that I may drink it for an ailment I have in my loins.'
+Then will he give thee the phials and go to the King, and when he is
+gone, do thou light the fire and wait till the first scum rise and set
+it in a phial; keep it by thee but beware of drinking it, or no good
+will befall thee. When the second scum riseth, skim it off and put it
+in a second phial and drink it down as soon as it cools. When the Wazir
+returneth and asketh thee for the second phial, give him the first and
+note what shall befall him;"—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day
+and ceased saying her permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Thirty-fifth Night,
+
+She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Serpent-queen
+charged Hasib not to drink of the first scum and carefully to keep the
+second, saying, "When the Wazir returneth from the King and asketh for
+the second phial, give him the first and note what shall befall him;
+then drink the contents of the second phial and thy heart will become
+the home of wisdom. After this take up the flesh and, laying it in a
+brazen platter, carry it to the King and give him to eat thereof. When
+he hath eaten it and it hath settled in his stomach, veil his face with
+a kerchief and wait by him till noontide, when he will have digested
+the meat. Then give him somewhat of wine to drink and, by the decree of
+Allah Almighty, he will be healed of his unhealth and be made whole as
+he was. And give thou ear to the charge wherewith I charge thee; and
+keep it in thy memory with carefullest keeping." They ceased not faring
+till they came to the Wazir's house, and he said to Hasib, "Come in
+with me!" So he went in and the troops dispersed and fared each his own
+way; whereupon Hasib set down the platter and the Wazir bade him slay
+the Queen of the Serpents; but he said, "I know not how to slaughter
+and never in my born days killed I aught. An thou wilt have her throat
+cut, do it with thine own hand." So the Minister Shamhur took the Queen
+from the platter and slew her, seeing which Hasib wept bitter tears and
+the Wazir laughed at him, saying, "O weak of wits, how canst thou weep
+for the killing of a worm?" Then he cut her in three and, laying the
+pieces in a brass cauldron, set it on the fire and sat down to await
+the cooking of the flesh. And whilst he was sitting, lo! there came a
+slave from the King, who said to him, "The King calls for thee without
+stay or delay," and he answered saying, "I hear and I obey." So he gave
+Hasib two phials and bade him drink the first scum and keep the second
+against his return,[FN#574] even as the Queen of the Serpents had
+foretold; after which he went away with repeated charges and
+injunctions; and Hasib tended the fire under the cauldron till the
+first scum rose, when he skimmed it off and, setting it in one of the
+phials, kept it by him. He then fed the fire till the second scum rose;
+then he skimmed it off and, putting it in the other phial kept it for
+himself. And when the meat was done, he took the cauldron off the fire
+and sat awaiting the Wazir who asked him on return, "What hast thou
+done?" and answered Hasib, "I did thy bidding to the last word." Quoth
+the Wazir, "What hast thou done with the first phial?" "I drank its
+contents but now," replied Hasib, and Shamhur asked, "Thy body feeleth
+it no change?"; whereto Hasib answered, "Verily, I feel as I were on
+fire from front to foot." The villain Wazir made no reply hiding the
+truth but said, "Hand me the second phial, that I may drink what is
+therein, so haply I may be made whole of this ailing in my loins." So
+Hasib brought him the first phial and he drank it off, thinking it
+contained the second scum; but hardly had he done drinking when the
+phial fell from his hand and he swelled up and dropped down dead; and
+thus was exemplified in him the saying; "Whoso for his brother diggeth
+a pit, he shall be the first to fall into it." Now when Hasib saw this,
+he wondered and feared to drink of the second phial; but he remembered
+the Serpent-queen's injunction and bethought him that the Wazir would
+not have reserved the second scum for himself, had there been aught of
+hurt therein. So he said, "I put my trust in Allah,'[FN#575] and drank
+off the contents of the phial. No sooner had he done so, than the Most
+Highest made the waters of wisdom to well up in his heart and opened to
+him the fountains of knowledge, and joy and gladness overcame him. Then
+he took the serpent's flesh from the cauldron and, laying it on a
+platter of brass, went forth from the Wazir's house. On his way to the
+palace he raised his eyes and saw the seven Heavens and all that
+therein is, even to the Lote-tree, beyond which there is no
+passing,[FN#576] and the manner of the revolution of the spheres.
+Moreover, Allah discovered to him the ordinance of the planets and the
+scheme of their movements and the fixed stars; and he saw the contour
+of the land and sea, whereby he became informed with geometry,
+astrology and astronomy and mathematics and all that hangeth thereby;
+and he understood the causes and consequences of eclipses of the sun
+and moon. Then he looked at the earth and saw all minerals and
+vegetables that are therein and thereon; and he learned their
+properties, and their virtues, so that he became in an instant versed
+in medicine and chemistry and natural magic and the art of making gold
+and silver. And he ceased not carrying the flesh till he came to the
+palace, when he went in to King Karazdan, and kissing the ground before
+him, said, "May thy head survive thy Wazir Shamhur!" The King was
+mightily angered at the news of the Grand Wazir's death and wept for
+him, whilst his Emirs and his Grandees and officers also wept. Then
+said Karazdan, "He was with me but now, in all health, and went away to
+fetch me the flesh of the Queen of the Serpents, if it should be
+cooked; what befell him that he is now dead, and what accident hath
+betided him?" So Hasib told him the whole truth how the Minister had
+drunk the contents of the phial and had forthwith swelled out and died.
+The King mourned for his loss with mourning sore and said to Hasib,
+"What shall I do without Shamhur?" and Hasib answered "Grieve not, O
+King of the age; for I will cure thee within three days and leave no
+whit of disease in thy body." At this the King's breast waxed broad and
+he said, "I wish to be made whole of this affliction, though after a
+long term of years." So Hasib set the platter before the King and made
+him eat a slice of the flesh of the Serpent-queen. Then he covered him
+up and, spreading a kerchief over his face, bade him sleep and sat down
+by his side. He slept from noonday till sundown, while his stomach
+digested the piece of flesh, and presently he awoke. Hasib gave him
+somewhat of wine to drink and bade him sleep again; so he slept till
+the morning and when dawn appeared, Hasib repeated the treatment making
+him eat another piece of the flesh; and thus he did with him three days
+following, till he had eaten the whole, when his skin began to shrink
+and scale off and he perspired, so that the sweat ran down from his
+head to his heels. Therewith he became whole and there abode in him no
+trace of the disease, which when Hasib saw, he said, "There is no help
+for it but thou go to the Hammam." So he carried him to the bath and
+washed his body; and when he came forth, it was like a wand of silver
+and he was restored to health, nay, sounder than he was before he fell
+ill. Thereupon he donned his richest robes and, seating himself on his
+throne, deigned make Hasib sit beside him. Then he bade the tables be
+spread and they ate and washed their hands; after which he called for
+the service of wine and both drank their fill. Upon this all his Wazirs
+and Emirs and Captains and the Grandees of his realm and the notables
+of the lieges came in to him and gave him joy of his recovery; and they
+beat the drums and adorned the city in token of rejoicing. Then said
+the King to the assembly, "O Wazirs and Emirs and Grandees, this is
+Hasim Karim al-Din, who hath healed me of my sickness, and know all
+here present that I make him my Chief Wazir in the stead of the Wazir
+Shamhur."—And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her
+permitted say.
+
+When it was the Five Hundred and Thirty-sixth Night,
+
+She continued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that quoth King
+Karazdan to his Ministers and high lords, "He who healed me of my
+sickness is none other than Hasib Karim al-Din here present. Therefore
+I make him my Chief Wazir in the stead of the Wazir Shamhur; and whoso
+loveth him loveth me, and whoso honoureth him honoureth me, and he who
+obeyeth him obeyeth me." "Hearkening and obedience," answered they and
+all rising flocked to kiss Hasib's hand and salute him and give him joy
+of the Wazirate. Then the King bestowed on him a splendid dress of gold
+brocade, set with pearls and gems, the least of which was worth five
+thousand gold pieces. Moreover, he presented to him three hundred male
+white slaves and the like number of concubines, in loveliness like
+moons, and three hundred Abyssinian[FN#577] slave-girls, beside five
+hundred mules laden with treasure and sheep and oxen and buffaloes and
+bulls and other cattle beyond count; and he commanded all his Wazirs
+and Emirs and Grandees and Notables and Mamelukes and his subjects in
+general to bring him gifts. Presently Hasib took horse and rode,
+followed by the Wazirs and Emirs and lords and all the troops, to the
+house which the King had set apart for him, where he sat down on a
+chair; and the Wazirs and Emirs came up to him and kissed hands and
+gave him joy of his Ministership, vying with one another in suit and
+service. When his mother and his household knew what had happened, they
+rejoiced with exceeding joy and congratulated him on his good fortune;
+and his quondam comrades the woodcutters also came and gave him joy.
+Then he mounted again and, riding to the house of the late Wazir
+Shamhur, laid hands on all that was therein and transported it to his
+own abode. On this wise did Hasib, from a dunsical know-nothing,
+unskilled to read writing, become, by the decree of Allah Almighty, an
+adept in every science and versed in all manner of knowledge, so that
+the fame of his learning was blazed abroad over the land and he became
+renowned as an ocean of lore and skill in medicine and astronomy and
+geometry and astrology and alchemy and natural magic and the Cabbala
+and Spiritualism and all other arts and sciences. One day, he said to
+his mother, "My father Daniel was exceeding wise and learned; tell me
+what he left by way of books or what not!" So his mother brought him
+the chest and, taking out the five leaves which had been saved when the
+library was lost, gave them to him saying, "These five scrolls are all
+thy father left thee." So he read them and said to her, "O my mother,
+these leaves are part of a book: where is the rest?" Quoth she, "Thy
+father made a voyage taking with him all his library and, when he was
+shipwrecked, every book was lost save only these five leaves. And when
+he was returned to me by Almighty Allah he found me with child and said
+to me: 'Haply thou wilt bear a boy; so take these scrolls and keep them
+by thee and whenas thy son shall grow up and ask what his father left
+him, give these leaves to him and say, 'Thy father left these as thine
+only heritance. And lo! here they are.' " And Hasib, now the most
+learned of his age, abode in all pleasure and solace, and delight of
+life, till there came to him the Destroyer of delights and the Severer
+of societies.[FN#578] And yet, O King, is not this tale of Bulukiya and
+Janshah more wondrous than the adventures of
+
+End of Volume V.
+
+ Arabian Nights, Volume 5
+
+
+ Footnotes
+
+
+
+[FN#1] This tale (one of those translated by Galland) is best and
+fullest in the Bresl. Edit. iii. 329.
+
+[FN#2] Europe has degraded this autumnal festival, the Sun-fκte Mihrgαn
+(which balanced the vernal Nau-roz) into Michaelmas and its
+goose-massacre. It was so called because it began on the 16th of Mihr,
+the seventh month; and lasted six days, with feasts, festivities and
+great rejoicings in honour of the Sun, who now begins his
+southing-course to gladden the other half of the world.
+
+[FN#3] "Hindν" is an Indian Moslem as opposed to "Hindϊ," a pagan, or
+Gentoo.
+
+[FN#4] The orig. Persian word is "Shαh-pϊr"=King's son: the Greeks (who
+had no sh) (preferred ); the Romans turned it into Sapor and the Arabs
+(who lack the p) into Sαbϊr. See p. x. Hamzζ ispahanensis Annalium
+Libri x.: Gottwaldt, Lipsiζ mdcccxlviii.
+
+[FN#5] The magic horse may have originated with the Hindu tale of a
+wooden Garuda (the bird of Vishnu) built by a youth for the purpose of
+a vehicle. It came with the "Moors" to Spain and appears in "Le Cheval
+de Fust," a French poem of the thirteenth Century. Thence it passed
+over to England as shown by Chaucer's "Half-told tale of Cambuscan
+(Janghνz Khan?) bold," as
+
+ "The wondrous steed of brass
+
+
+ On which the Tartar King did ride;"
+
+
+
+And Leland (Itinerary) derives "Rutlandshire" from "a man named Rutter
+who rode round it on a wooden horse constructed by art magic." Lane
+(ii. 548) quotes the parallel story of Cleomades and Claremond which
+Mr. Keightley (Tales and Popular Fictions, chapt. ii) dates from our
+thirteenth century. See Vol. i., p. 160.
+
+[FN#6] All Moslems, except those of the Mαliki school, hold that the
+maker of an image representing anything of life will be commanded on
+the Judgment Day to animate it, and failing will be duly sent to the
+Fire. This severity arose apparently from the necessity of putting down
+idol-worship and, perhaps, for the same reason the Greek Church admits
+pictures but not statues. Of course the command has been honoured with
+extensive breaching: for instance all the Sultans of Stambul have had
+their portraits drawn and painted.
+
+[FN#7] This description of ugly old age is written with true
+
+
+Arab verve.
+
+
+
+[FN#8] Arab. "Badinjαn": Hind. Bengan: Pers. Bαdingαn or Badiljαn; the
+Mala insana (Solanum pomiferum or S. Melongena) of the Romans, well
+known in Southern Europe. It is of two kinds, the red (Solanum
+lycopersicum) and the black (S. Melongena). The Spaniards know it as
+"berengeria" and when Sancho Panza (Part ii. chapt. 2) says, "The Moors
+are fond of egg-plants" he means more than appears. The vegetable is
+held to be exceedingly heating and thereby to breed melancholia and
+madness; hence one says to a man that has done something eccentric,
+"Thou hast been eating brinjalls."
+
+[FN#9] Again to be understood Hibernice "kilt."
+
+[FN#10] i.e. for fear of the evil eye injuring the palace and, haply,
+himself.
+
+[FN#11] The "Sufrah" before explained acting provision-bag and
+table-cloth.
+
+[FN#12] Eastern women in hot weather, lie mother-nude under a sheet
+here represented by the hair. The Greeks and Romans also slept stripped
+and in mediζval England the most modest women saw nothing indelicate in
+sleeping naked by their naked husbands. The "night-cap" and the
+"night-gown" are comparatively modern inventions.
+
+[FN#13] Hindu fable turns this simile into better poetry, "She was like
+a second and a more wondrous moon made by the Creator."
+
+[FN#14] "Sun of the Day."
+
+[FN#15] Arab. "Shirk"=worshipping more than one God. A theological term
+here most appropriately used.
+
+[FN#16] The Bul. Edit. as usual abridges (vol. i. 534). The Prince
+lands on the palace-roof where he leaves his horse, and finding no one
+in the building goes back to the terrace. Suddenly he sees a beautiful
+girl approaching him with a party of her women, suggesting to him these
+couplets,
+
+ "She came without tryst in the darkest hour, *
+
+
+ Like full moon lighting horizon's night:
+
+
+ Slim-formed, there is not in the world her like *
+
+
+ For grace of form or for gifts of sprite:
+
+
+ 'Praise him who made her from semen-drop,' *
+
+
+ I cried, when her beauty first struck my sight:
+
+
+ I guard her from eyes, seeking refuge with *
+
+
+ The Lord of mankind and of morning-light."
+
+
+
+The two then made acquaintance and "follows what follows."
+
+[FN#17] Arab. "Akαsirah," explained (vol. i., 75) as the plur. of
+Kisrα.
+
+[FN#18] The dearest ambition of a slave is not liberty but to have a
+slave of his own. This was systematised by the servile rulers known in
+history as the Mameluke Beys and to the Egyptians as the Ghuzz. Each
+had his household of servile pages and squires, who looked forward to
+filling the master's place as knight or baron.
+
+[FN#19] The well-known capital of Al-Yaman, a true Arabia Felix, a
+Paradise inhabited by demons in the shape of Turkish soldiery and Arab
+caterans. According to Moslem writers Sana'a was founded by Shem son of
+Noah who, wandering southward with his posterity after his father's
+death, and finding the site delightful, dug a well and founded the
+citadel, Ghamdαn, which afterwards contained a Mason Carrιe rivalling
+(or attempting to rival) the Meccan Ka'abah. The builder was Surahbνl
+who, says M.C. de Perceval coloured its four faces red, white, golden
+and green; the central quadrangle had seven stories (the planets) each
+forty cubits high, and the lowest was a marble hall ceiling'd with a
+single slab. At the four corners stood hollow lions through whose
+mouths the winds roared. This palatial citadel-temple was destroyed by
+order of Caliph Omar. The city's ancient name was Azal or Uzal whom
+some identify with one of the thirteen sons of Joktan (Genesis xi. 27):
+it took its present name from the Ethiopian conquerors (they say) who,
+seeing it for the first time, cried "Hazα Sana'ah!" meaning in their
+tongue, this is commodious, etc. I may note that the word is Kisawahili
+(Zanzibarian) e.g. "Yαmbo sαnα—is the state good?" Sana'a was the
+capital of the Tabαbi'ah or Tobba Kings who judaized; and the
+Abyssinians with their Negush made it Christian while the Persians
+under Anushirwαn converted it to Guebrism. It is now easily visited but
+to little purpose; excursions in the neighborhood being deadly
+dangerous. Moreover the Turkish garrison would probably murder a
+stranger who sympathised with the Arabs, and the Arabs kill one who
+took part with their hated and hateful conquerors. The late Mr. Shapira
+of Jerusalem declared that he had visited it and Jews have great
+advantages in such travel. But his friends doubted him.
+
+[FN#20] The Bresl. Edit. (iii. 347) prints three vile errors in four
+lines.
+
+[FN#21] Alcove is a corruption of the Arab. Al-Kubbah (the dome)
+through Span. and Port.
+
+[FN#22] Easterns as a rule sleep with head and body covered by a sheet
+or in cold weather a blanket. The practice is doubtless hygienic,
+defending the body from draughts when the pores are open; but Europeans
+find it hard to adopt; it seems to stop their breathing. Another
+excellent practice in the East, and indeed amongst barbarians and
+savages generally, is training children to sleep with mouths shut: in
+after life they never snore and in malarious lands they do not require
+Outram's "fever-guard," a swathe of muslin over the mouth. Mr. Catlin
+thought so highly of the "shut mouth" that he made it the subject of a
+book.
+
+[FN#23] Arab. "Hanzal"=coloquintida, an article often mentioned by
+Arabs in verse and prose; the bright coloured little gourd attracts
+every eye by its golden glance when travelling through the brown-yellow
+waste of sand and clay. A favourite purgative (enough for a horse) is
+made by filling the inside with sour milk which is drunks after a
+night's soaking: it is as active as the croton-nut of the Gold Coast.
+
+[FN#24] The Bresl. Edit. iii. 354 sends him to the "land of Sνn"
+
+
+(China).
+
+
+
+[FN#25] Arab. "Yα Kisrawi!"=O subject of the Kisrα or Chosroλ; the
+latter explained in vol.i.,75.[Volume 1, Footnote # 128] "Fars" is the
+origin of "Persia"; and there is a hit at the prodigious lying of the
+modern race, whose forefathers were so famous as truth-tellers. "I am a
+Persian, but I am not lying now," is a phrase familiar to every
+traveller.
+
+[FN#26] There is no such name: perhaps it is a clerical error
+
+
+for "Har jαh"=(a man of) any place. I know an Englishman who in
+
+
+Persian called himself "Mirza Abdullah-i-Hνchmakαni"=Master
+
+
+Abdullah of Nowhere.
+
+
+
+[FN#27] The Bresl. Edit. (loc. cit.) gives a comical description of the
+Prince assuming the dress of an astrologer-doctor, clapping an old book
+under his arm, fumbling a rosary of beads, enlarging his turband,
+lengthening his sleeves and blackening his eyelids with antimony. Here,
+however, it would be out of place. Very comical also is the way in
+which he pretends to cure the maniac by "muttering unknown words,
+blowing in her face, biting her ear," etc.
+
+[FN#28] Arab. "Sar'a"=falling sickness. Here again we have in all its
+simplicity the old nursery idea of "possession" by evil spirits.
+
+[FN#29] Arab. "Nafahαt"=breathings, benefits, the Heb. Neshamah opp. to
+Nephesh (soul) and Ruach (spirit). Healing by the breath is a popular
+idea throughout the East and not unknown to Western Magnetists and
+Mesmerists. The miraculous cures of the Messiah were, according to
+Moslems, mostly performed by aspiration. They hold that in the days of
+Isa, physic had reached its highest development, and thus his miracles
+were mostly miracles of medicine; whereas, in Mohammed's time,
+eloquence had attained its climax and accordingly his miracles were
+those of eloquence, as shown in the Koran and Ahαdνs.
+
+[FN#30] Lit. "The rose in the sleeves or calyces." I take my English
+equivalent from Jeremy Taylor, "So I have seen a rose newly springing
+from the clefts of its hood," etc.
+
+[FN#31] These lines are from the Bresl. Edit. (v. 35). The four
+couplets in the Mac. Edit. are too irrelevant.
+
+[FN#32] Polo, which Lane calls "Goff."
+
+[FN#33] Arab. "Muffawak"=well-notched, as its value depends upon the
+notch. At the end of the third hemistitch Lane's Shaykh very properly
+reads "baghtatan" (suddenly) for "burhatan"=during a long time.
+
+[FN#34] "Uns" (which the vulgar pronounce Anas) "al- Wujud"=Delight of
+existing things, of being, of the world. Uns wa jud is the normal
+pun=love-intimacy and liberality; and the caranomasia (which cannot
+well be rendered in English) re-appears again and again. The story is
+throughout one of love; hence the quantity of verse.
+
+[FN#35] The allusion to a "written N" suggests the elongated not the
+rounded form of the letter as in Night cccxxiv.
+
+[FN#36] The fourteenth Arabic letter in its medial form resembling an
+eye.
+
+[FN#37] This is done by the man passing his fingers over the brow as if
+to wipe off perspiration; the woman acknowledges it by adjusting her
+head-veil with both hands. As a rule in the Moslem East women make the
+first advances; and it is truly absurd to see a great bearded fellow
+blushing at being ogled. During the Crimean war the fair sex of
+Constantinople began by these allurements but found them so readily
+accepted by the Giaours that they were obliged to desist.
+
+[FN#38] The greatest of all explorers and discoverers of the world will
+be he who finds a woman confessing inability to keep a secret.
+
+[FN#39] The original is intensely prosaicand so am I.
+
+[FN#40] Arab. "Sunnat," the practice of the Prophet. For this prayer
+and other silly and superstitious means of discovering the "right
+direction" (which is often very wrongly directed) see Lane, M.E. chapt.
+xi.
+
+[FN#41] Arab. "Bahr (sea or river) al-Kunuz": Lane (ii. 576)
+ingeniously identifies the site with the Upper Nile whose tribes,
+between Assouan (Syene) and Wady al-Subu'a are called the "Kunuz"lit.
+meaning "treasures" or "hoards." Philae is still known as the "Islet of
+Anas (for Uns) al-Wujud;" and the learned and accurate Burckhardt
+(Travels in Nubia p. 5) records the local legend that a mighty King
+called Al-Wujud built the Osirian temples. I can give no information
+concerning Jabal al-Sakla (Thakla), the Mount of the woman bereft of
+children, beyond the legend contained in Night ccclxxix.
+
+[FN#42] A religious mendicant (lit. a pauper), of whom there are two
+great divisions. The Shara'i acts according to the faith: the others
+(La Shara'i, or irreligious) are bound by no such prejudices and are
+pretty specimens of scoundrels. (Pilgrimage i.22.)
+
+[FN#43] Meaning his lips and palate were so swollen by drought.
+
+[FN#44] It is a pious act in time of mortal danger to face the
+
+
+Kiblah or Meccan temple, as if standing in prayer.
+
+
+
+[FN#45] Still the belief of the Badawi who tries to work upon the
+beast's compassion: "O great King I am a poor man, with wife and
+family, so spare me that Allah spare thee!" and so forth. If not
+famished the lion will often stalk off looking behind him as he goes;
+but the man will never return by the same path; "for," says he, "haply
+the Father of Roaring may repent him of a wasted opportunity." These
+lion-tales are very common, witness that of Androcles at Rome and a
+host of others. Una and her lion is another phase. It remained for M.
+Jules Gerard, first the chasseur and then the tueur, du lion, to assail
+the reputation of the lion and the honour of the lioness.
+
+[FN#46] Abu Haris=Father of spoils: one of the lion's hundred titles.
+
+[FN#47] "They" again for "she."
+
+[FN#48] Jaxartes and Oxus. The latter (Jayhun or Amu, Oxus or
+
+
+Bactros) is famous for dividing Iran from Turan, Persia from
+
+
+Tartaria. The lands to its north are known as Ma wara al-Nahr
+
+
+(Mawerannahar) or "What is behind the stream,"=Transoxiana and
+
+
+their capitals were successively Samarcand and Bokhara.
+
+
+
+[FN#49] Arab. "Dani was gharib"=friend and foe. The lines are partly
+from the Mac. Edit. and partly from the Bresl. Edit., v. 55.
+
+[FN#50] Arab. "Wa Rahmata-hu!" a form now used only in books.
+
+[FN#51] Before noted. The relationship, like that of foster- brother,
+has its rights, duties and privileges.
+
+[FN#52] Arab. "Istikharah," before explained as praying for direction
+by omens of the rosary, opening the Koran and reading the first verse
+sighted, etc., etc. At Al-Medinah it is called Khirah and I have
+suggested (Pilgrimage, ii. 287) that it is a relic of the Azlam or
+Kidah (divining arrows) of paganism. But the superstition is not local:
+we have the Sortes Virgilianae (Virgil being a magician) as well as
+Coranicae.
+
+[FN#53] Arab. "Wujud al-Habib," a pun, also meaning, "Wujud my
+beloved."
+
+[FN#54] Arab. "Khilal," as an emblem of attenuation occurring in
+Al-Hariri (Ass. of Alexandria, etc.); also thin as a spindle (Maghzal),
+as a reed, and dry as a pair of shears. In the Ass. of Barka'id the
+toothpick is described as a beautiful girl. The use of this cleanly
+article was enjoined by Mohammed:—"Cleanse your mouths with toothpicks;
+for your mouths are the abode of the guardian angels; whose pens are
+the tongues, and whose ink is the spittle of men; and to whom naught is
+more unbearable than remains of food in the mouth." A mighty apparatus
+for a small matter; but in very hot lands cleanliness must rank before
+godliness.
+
+[FN#55] The sense is ambiguous. Lane renders the verse:—"Thou
+resemblest it (rose) not of my portion" and gives two explanations
+"because HE is of my portion," or, "because HIS cheek cannot be rosy if
+MINE is not." Mr. Payne boldly translates
+
+"If the rose ape his cheek, 'Now God forfend,' I say, 'That of my
+portion aught to pilfer thou shouldst try'."
+
+[FN#56] Arab. "lif" (not "fibres which grow at the top of the trunk,"
+Lane ii. 577); but the fibre of the fronds worked like the cocoa-nut
+fibre which forms the now well-known Indian "coir." This "lif" is also
+called "filfil" or "fulfil" which Dr. Jonathan Scott renders "pepper"
+(Lane i. 8) and it forms a clean succedaneum for one of the uncleanest
+articles of civilisation, the sponge. It is used in every Hammam and is
+(or should be) thrown away after use.
+
+[FN#57] Arab. "Shinf;" a course sack, a "gunny-bag;" a net compared
+with such article.
+
+[FN#58] The eunuch tells him that he is not a "Sandali"=one whose penis
+and testes are removed; and consequently the highest valued. There are
+many ways of making the castrato; in some (as here) only the penis is
+removed, in other the testes are bruised or cut off; but in all cases
+the animal passion remains, for in man, unlike other animals, the fons
+veneris is the brain. The story of Abelard proves this. Juvenal derided
+the idea of married eunuchs and yet almost all of these neutrals have
+wives with whom they practise the manifold plaisirs de la petite oie
+(masturbation, tribadism, irrumation, tete-beche, feuille-de- rose,
+etc.), till they induce the venereal orgasm. Such was the account once
+given to me by a eunuch's wife; and I need hardly say that she, like
+her confrerie, was to be pitied. At the critical moment she held up a
+little pillow for her husband to bite who otherwise would have torn her
+cheeks or breasts.
+
+[FN#59] In real life the eunuch, as a rule, avoids all allusion to his
+misfortune, although the slave will often describe his being sold
+merrily enough.
+
+[FN#60] The visits are in dreamland. The ringdove thanks the
+
+
+Lord for her (his?) suffering in the holy martyrdom of love.
+
+
+
+[FN#61] Arab. "Hazar;" I have explained it as meaning "(the bird of) a
+thousand (songs)."
+
+[FN#62] The "Bulbul" had his day with us but he departed with Tommy
+Moore. We usually English the word by "nightingale;" but it is a kind
+of shrike or butcher-bird (Lanius Boulboul. Lath.).
+
+[FN#63] The "Hamam" is a lieu commun in Arabic poetry. I have noticed
+the world-wide reverence for the pigeon and the incarnation of the
+Third Person of the Hindu Triad (Shiva), as Kapoteshwara
+(Kapota-ishwara)"=pigeon or dove-god (Pilgrimage iii. 218).
+
+[FN#64] Arab. "Hamam al-Ayk." Mr. Payne's rendering is so happy that we
+must either take it from him or do worse.
+
+[FN#65] All primitive peoples translate the songs of birds with human
+language; but, as I have noticed, the versions differ widely. The
+pigeon cries, "Allah! Allah!" the dove "Karim, Tawwa" (Bountiful,
+Pardoner!) the Kata or sand-grouse "Man sakat salam" (who is silent is
+safe) yet always betrays itself by its lay of "Kat-ta" and lastly the
+cock "Uzkuru 'llah ya ghafilun" (Remember, or take the name of Allah,
+ye careless!).
+
+[FN#66] "Nay," the Dervish's reed pipe, symbol of the sighing absent
+lover (i.e. the soul parted from the Creator) so famed by the
+Mullah-i-Rum and Sir William Jones.
+
+[FN#67] Ba'albak=Ba'al (the God)-city (bek in Coptic and ancient
+Egyptian.) Such, at least, is the popular derivation which awaits a
+better. No cloth has been made there since the Kurd tribe of gallant
+robbers known as the "Harfush" (or blackguards) lorded it over old
+"Heliopolis."
+
+[FN#68] Thinking her to be a Jinn or Ghul in the shape of a fair woman.
+This Arab is a strange contrast to the English fisherman, and yet he is
+drawn with truth.
+
+[FN#69] Arab. "Habbaza!" (good this!) or "Habba" (how good!): so
+
+
+"Habba bihi," how dear he is to me.
+
+
+
+[FN#70] Arab. "Zind," and "Zindah" the names of the two sticks, upper
+and lower, hard and soft, by which fire was kindled before flint and
+steel were known. We find it in Al-Hariri (Ass. of Banu Haram) "no one
+sought ire from my fire-stick (i.e. from me as a fire-stick) and
+failed." See Night dccciii.
+
+[FN#71] Arab. "Nazih" i.e. travelled far and wide.
+
+[FN#72] "Rajab," lit.="worshipping:" it is the seventh lunar month and
+still called "Shahr-i-Khuda" (God's month) by the Persians because in
+pre-Islamitic times it formed with Muharram (or in its stead Safar), Zu
+'l-ka'adah and Zu-'l-Hijjah (Nos. 1 or 2; 7,11 and 12) the yearly
+peace, during which a man might not kill his father's murderer. The
+idea must have taken deep root, as Arab history records only six
+"impious (or sacrilegious) wars," waged despite the law. Europeans
+compare it with the Treuga Dei (truce of God) a seven-years peace
+established about A.D. 1032, by a Bishop of Aquitaine; and followed in
+A.D. 1245 by the Pax Regis (Royal Peace) under Louis VIII. of France.
+This compelled the relations of a murdered man to keep the peace for
+forty days after the offence was committed.
+
+[FN#73] His Majesty wrote sad doggrel. He is better at finessing, and
+his message was a trick because Rose-in-Hood had told him that at home
+there were special obstacles to the marriage.
+
+[FN#74] Arab. "Majzub"=drawn, attracted (literally); the popular term
+for one absorbed in the contemplation of the Deity. During this process
+the soul is supposed to quit the body leaving the latter irresponsible
+for its actions. I remember a scandal being caused in a village near
+Tunis by one of these men who suddenly started up from his seat in a
+dusty corner and, in presence of a small crowd of people, had
+connection with a she-donkey. The supporters of the holy man declared
+that the deed was proof positive of his exceptional holiness; but there
+were lewd fellows, Moslems Voltaireans, who had their doubts and held
+that the reverend man had so acted "for the gallery." A similar story
+is told with due reserve by the late Abbe Hamilton in his book on the
+Cyrenaic. There are three grand divisions of the Sufis; (1) Mukiman,
+the stationaries; (2) Salikan, the travellers, or progressives, and (3)
+Wasilan, those who reach the desired end. And No. 2 has two classes:
+the Salik-i-majzub, one progressing in Divine Love; and the other, who
+has made greater progress, is the Majzub-i-Salik (Dabistan iii. 251).
+
+[FN#75] Arab. "Sundus," a kind of brocade (low Lat. brocare to figure
+cloth), silk worked in high relief with gold and silver. The idea is
+figurative meaning it was hung outside and inside with fine stuff, like
+the Ka'abah, the "Bride of Meccah." The "lords" means simply the lost
+girl.
+
+[FN#76] Arab. "Ayn" lit. eye, also a fount, "the eye of the landscape"
+(a noble simile); and here a helper, guard, assistant.
+
+[FN#77] "Lord" for lady, i.e. she.
+
+[FN#78] Arab. "Fi'l-khawafik"=in the four quarters or among the
+flappers (standards) or amid palpitations of heart. The bride alludes
+to a festal reception in a town, with burning incense, drums, flags,
+etc., etc.
+
+[FN#79] In Egypt the shorter "honey-moon" lasts a week; and on the
+seventh day (pop. called Al-Subu'a) bride and bridegroom receive visits
+with all ceremony, of course in separate apartments. The seventh day
+(like the fortieth, the end of six months and the anniversary) is kept
+for births and deaths with Khatmahs (perlections) of the Koran "Saylah"
+family gatherings and so forth. The fortieth day ends the real
+honey-moon. See Night dccxcii.
+
+[FN#80] I have noted the popular practice, amongst men as well as
+women, of hiring the Hammam for private parties and picnicking in it
+during the greater part of the day. In this tale the bath would belong
+to the public and it was a mere freak of the bride to bathe with her
+bridegroom. "Respectable" people do not.
+
+[FN#81] She speaks in the last line as the barber or the bathman.
+
+[FN#82] Here the "Ana" begin; and they mostly date themselves. Of the
+following forty-nine, Lane (vol. Ii. P. 578 et seq.) gives only
+twenty-two and transforms them to notes in chapt. xviii. He could
+hardly translate several of them in a work intended to be popular. Abu
+Nowαs is a person carefully to be avoided; and all but anthropological
+students are advised to "skip" over anecdotes in which his name and
+abominations occur.
+
+[FN#83] Arab. "Ghilmαn," the counter part, I have said, of the
+so-called "Houris."
+
+[FN#84] Mosul boasts of never having been polluted with idolatrous
+worship, an exemption which it owes to being a comparatively modern
+place.
+
+[FN#85] The Aleppines were once noted for debauchery; and the saying is
+still "Halabi Shelebi" (for Chelebi)=the Aleppine is a fellow fine.
+
+[FN#86] Mr. Payne omits the last line. It refers to what Persian boys
+call, in half-Turkish phrase, "Alish Takish," each acting woman after
+he has acted man. The best wine is still made in monasteries and the
+co-called Sinai convent is world-famous for its "Rαki" distilled from
+raisins.
+
+[FN#87] i.e. what a difference there is between them!
+
+[FN#88] Arab. "Salli ala 'l-Nabi," a common phrase; meaning not only
+praise hm to avert the evil eye; but also used when one would impose
+silence upon a babbler. The latter will shuffle off by ejaculating "Al"
+and continue his chatter. (Pilgrimage ii.279.)
+
+[FN#89] Arab. "Sukαt" (plur. of Sαki, cupbearer, our old "skinker"):
+the pure gold (tibr) is the amber-coloured wine, like the Vino d'oro of
+the Libanus.
+
+[FN#90] That is, fair, white and read: Turkish slaves then abounded at
+Baghdad.
+
+[FN#91] A Wady near Meccah where one of Mohammed's battles was fought.
+The line means his waist is a thread connected broad breast and large
+hind quarters.
+
+[FN#92] Arab. "Zaurα" which may mean crooked, alluding to the
+well-known rib.
+
+[FN#93] A pun. Bakr was the name of the eponymus chief and it also
+means virgin, as in Abu Bakr.
+
+[FN#94] Arab. "Jαmi'ayn"=two cathedrals, any large (and consequently
+vicious) city.
+
+[FN#95] Arab. "Almα," before noticed: I cannot translate
+"damask-lipped" to suit European taste.
+
+[FN#96] Sherbet flavoured with musk or apple to cool the mouth of "hot
+coppers."
+
+[FN#97] Arab. "In'αsh" lit. raising from his bier. The whole tone is
+rollicking and slangy.
+
+[FN#98] i.e. In spite of himself: the phrase often occurs.
+
+[FN#99] Europeans usually write "Beni" for "Banu;" the oblique for the
+nominative. I prefer "Odhrah" or "Ozrah" to Udhrah; because the Ayn
+before the Zαl takes in pronunciation the more open sound.
+
+[FN#100] Possibly meaning that they were shrouded together; this would
+be opposed to Moslem sense of decorum in modern days, but the ancient
+were not so squeamish. See Night cccxi.
+
+[FN#101] This phase of passion in the "varium et mutabile" is often
+treated of by Oriental storytellers, and not unoften seen in real
+Eastern life.
+
+[FN#102] As has been said, "Sαhib" (preceding the name not following it
+as in India) is a Wazirial title in mediζval Islam.
+
+[FN#103] This parapet was rendered obligatory by Moses (Deut. xxii. 8)
+on account of the danger of leaving a flat roof without garde-fou.
+Eastern Christians neglect the precaution and often lose their children
+by the neglect.
+
+[FN#104] Arab. "Lauh." A bit of thin board washed white used for
+lessons as slates are amongst us, and as easily cleaned because the
+inks contain no minerals. It is a long parallelogram with triangular
+ears at the short sides; and the shape must date from ages immemorial
+as it is found, throughout Syria and its adjoinings, in the oldest rock
+inscriptions to which the form serves as a frame. Hence the "abacus" or
+counting table derived from the Gr. , a slab (or in Phenician "sand"),
+dust or sand in old days having been strewed on a table or tablet for
+school- boys' writings and mathematical diagrams.
+
+[FN#105] A pre-Islamic bard and friend to Tarafah the poet of the
+Suspended or "Prize Poem." The tale is familiar to all the Moslem East.
+Tarafah's Laura was one Khaulα.
+
+[FN#106] King of Hirah in Chaldζa, a drunken and bloodthirsty tyrant.
+When offended by the lampoons of the two poets he sent them with
+litterζ Bellerophontiζ to the Governor of Al-Bahrayn. Al-Mutalammis
+"smelt a rat" and destroyed his charged, but Tarafah was mutilated and
+buried alive, the victim of a trick which is old as (and older than)
+good King David and Uriah. Of course neither poet could read.
+
+[FN#107] On this occasion, and in presence of the women only, the groom
+first sees or is supposed to see the face of his wife. It is, I have
+said, the fashion for both to be greatly overcome and to appear as if
+about to faint: the groom looks especially ridiculous when so
+attitudinising.
+
+[FN#108] This leisurely operation of the "deed of kind" was sure to be
+noticed; but we do not find in The Nights any allusion to that
+systematic prolongatio veneris which is so much cultivated by Moslems
+under the name Imsαk = retention, withholding i.e. the semen. Yet
+Eastern books on domestic medicine consist mostly of two parts; the
+first of general prescriptions and the second of aphrodisiacs
+especially those qui prolongent le plaisir as did the Gaul by thinking
+of sa pauvre mθre. The Ananga-Ranga, by the Reverend Koka Pandit before
+quoted, gives a host of recipes which are used, either externally or
+internally, to hasten the paroxysm of the woman and delay the orgasm of
+the man (p. 27). Some of these are curious in the extreme. I heard of a
+Hindi who made a candle of frogs' fat and fibre warranted to retain the
+seed till it burned out; it failed notably because, relying upon it, he
+worked too vigorously. The essence of the "retaining art" is to avoid
+over-tension of the muscles and to pre-occupy the brain: hence in
+coition Hindus will drink sherbet, chew betel-nut and even smoke.
+Europeans ignoring the science and practice, are contemptuously
+compared with village-cocks by Hindu women who cannot be satisfied,
+such is their natural coldness, increased doubtless by vegetable diet
+and unuse of stimulants, with less than twenty minutes. Hence too while
+thousands of Europeans have cohabited for years with and have had
+families by "native women," they are never loved by them:—at least I
+never heard of a case.
+
+[FN#109] Abu 'l Abbas al-Rakαshi, a poet of the time. The saying became
+proverbial (Burckhardt's A. Proverbs No. 561) and there are variants,
+e.g. The night's promise is spread with butter that melteth when day
+ariseth.
+
+[FN#110] Koran xxvi. 5,6 or "And those who err (Arab. Al- ghαwϊn)
+follow the footsteps of the poets," etc.
+
+[FN#111] Half-brother of Abdullah bin al-Zubayr, the celebrated
+pretender.
+
+[FN#112] Grand-daughter of the Caliph Abu Bakr and the most beautiful
+woman of her day.
+
+[FN#113] The Calc. Edit. by mistake reads "Izzah." Torrens (notes
+i.-xi.) remarks "The word Ghoonj is applied to this sort of
+blandishment (i.e. an affected gait), and says Burckhardt (Prov. No.
+685), "The women of Cairo flatter themselves that their Ghoonj is
+superior to that of all other females in the Levant." But Torrens did
+not understand and Burckhardt would not explain "Ghunj" except by
+"assumed airs" (see No. 714). It here means the art of moving in
+coition, which is especially affected, even by modest women, throughout
+the East and they have many books teaching the genial art. In China
+there are professors, mostly old women, who instruct young girls in
+this branch of the gymnastic.
+
+[FN#114] When reciting the Fαtihah (opening Koranic chapter), the hands
+are held in this position as if to receive a blessing falling from
+Heaven; after which both palms are passed down the face to distribute
+it over the eyes and other organs of sense.
+
+[FN#115] The word used is "bizα'at" = capital or a share in a
+mercantile business.
+
+[FN#116] This and the following names are those of noted traditionists
+of the eighth century, who derive back to Abdallah bin Mas'ϊd, a
+"Companion of the Apostle." The text shows the recognised formula of
+ascription for quoting a "Hadνs" = saying of Mohammed; and sometimes it
+has to pass through half a dozen mouths.
+
+[FN#117] Traditionists of the seventh and eighth centuries who refer
+back to the "Father of the Kitten" (Abu Horayrah), an uncle of the
+Apostle.
+
+[FN#118] Eastern story-books abound in these instances. Pilpay says in
+"Kalilah was Dimnah," "I am the slave of what I have spoken and the
+lord of what I keep hidden." Sa'adi follows suit, "When thou speakest
+not a word, thou hast thy hand upon it; when it is once spoken it hath
+laid its hand on thee." Caxton, in the "Dyctes, or Sayings of
+Philosophers" (printed in 1477) uses almost the same words.
+
+[FN#119] i.e. for her husband's and her sin in using a man like a
+beast.
+
+[FN#120] See the Second Lady's story (tantτt Kadi, tantτt bandit), pp.
+20-26 by my friend Yacoub Artin Pasha in the Bulletin before quoted,
+series ii. No. 4 of 1883. The sharpers' trick is common in Eastern
+folk-lore, and the idea that underlies is always metempsychosis or
+metamorphosis. So, in the Kalilah wa Dimnah (new Syriac), the three
+rogues persuade the ascetic that he is leading a dog not a sheep.
+
+[FN#121] This is the popular prejudice and it has doubtless saved many
+a reputation. The bat is known to Moslems as the Bird of Jesus, a
+legend derived by the Koran from the Gospel of Infancy (1 chapt. xv.
+Hone's Apocryphal New Testament), in which the boy Jesus amuses herself
+with making birds of clay and commanding them to fly when (according to
+the Moslems) they became bats. These Apocryphal Gospels must be
+carefully read, if the student would understand a number of Moslem
+allusions to the Injνl which no Evangel contains.
+
+[FN#122] Because it quibbled away out of every question, a truly
+diplomatic art.
+
+[FN#123] This Caliph, the orthodox Abbaside of Egypt (A.D. 1261) must
+not be confounded with the Druze-god, the heretical Fatimite (A.D.
+996-1021). D'Herbelot (Hakem") gives details. Mr. S.L. Poole (The
+Academy, April 26, '79) is very severe on the slip of Mr. Payne.
+
+[FN#124] The beautiful name is Persian "Anϊshνn-rawαn" = Sweet of Soul;
+and the glorious title of this contemporary of Mohammed is "Al-Malik
+al-Adil" = the Just King. Kisra, the Chosroλ per excellentiam, is also
+applied to the godly Guebre of whom every Eastern dictionary gives
+details.
+
+[FN#125] "Sultan" is here an anachronism: I have noted that the title
+was first assumed independently by Mohammed of Ghazni after it had been
+conferred by the Caliph upon his father the Amir Al- Umarα (Mayor of
+the Palace), Sabuktagin A.D. 974.
+
+[FN#126] The "Sakkα" or water-carrier race is peculiar in Egypt and
+famed for trickery and intrigue. Opportunity here as elsewhere makes
+the thief.
+
+[FN#127] A famous saying of Mohammed is recorded when an indiscretion
+of his young wife Ayishah was reported to him, "There be no adultress
+without an adulterer (of a husband)." Fatimah the Apostle's daughter is
+supposed to have remained a virgin after bearing many children: this
+coarse symbolism of purity was known to the classics (Pausanias), who
+made Juno recover her virginity by bathing in a certain river every
+year. In the last phrase, "Al-Salaf" (ancestry) refers to Mohammed and
+his family.
+
+[FN#128] Khusrau Parwiz, grandson of Anushirwan, the Guebre King who
+tore his kingdom by tearing Mohammed's letter married the beautiful
+Maria or Irene (in Persian "Shνrνn = the sweet) daughter of the Greek
+Emperor Maurice: their loves were sung by a host of poets; and likewise
+the passion of the sculptor Farhαd for the same Shirin. Mr. Lyall
+writes "Parwκz" and holds "Parwνz" a modern form.
+
+[FN#129] he could afford it according to historians. His throne was
+supported by 40,000 silver pillars; and 1,000 globes, hung in the dome,
+formed an orrery, showing the motion of the heavenly bodies; 30,000
+pieces of embroidered tapestry overhung the walls below were vaults
+full of silver, gold and gems.
+
+[FN#130] Arab. "Khunsα," meaning also a catamite as I have explained.
+Lane (ii. 586) has it; "This fish is of a mixed kind." (!).
+
+[FN#131] So the model lovers became the ordinary married couple.
+
+[FN#132] Arab. "Jamm." Heb. "Yamm." Al-Harνri (Ass. Of Sinjar and
+Sαwah) uses the rare form Yam for sea or ocean.
+
+[FN#133] Al-Hadi, immediate predecessor of Harun al-Rashid, called
+"Al-Atbik": his upper lip was contracted and his father placed a slave
+over him when in childhood, with orders to say, "Musa! atbik!" (draw
+thy lips together) when he opened his mouth.
+
+[FN#134] Immediate successor of Harun al-Rashid. Al-Amin is an imposing
+physical figure, fair, tall, handsome and of immense strength;
+according to Al-Mas'ϊdi, he killed a lion with his own hands; but his
+mind and judgement were weak. He was fond of fishing; and his reply to
+the courtier bringing important news, "Confound thee! leave me! for
+Kausar (an eunuch whom he loved) hath caught two fish and I none,"
+reminds one of royal frivolity in France.
+
+[FN#135] Afterwards governor in Khorasan under Al-Maamun.
+
+[FN#136] Intendant of the palace under Harun al-Rashid.
+
+[FN#137] Moslem women have this advantage over their Western
+sisterhood: they can always leave the house of father or husband and,
+without asking permission, pay a week or ten days' visit to their
+friends. But they are not expected to meet their lovers.
+
+[FN#138] The tale of "Susannah and the Elders" in Moslem form.
+
+
+Dαniyαl is the Arab Daniel, supposed to have been buried at
+
+
+Alexandria. (Pilgrimage, i. 16.)
+
+
+
+[FN#139] According to Moslem law, laid down by Mohammed on a delicate
+occasion and evidently for a purpose, four credible witnesses are
+required to prove fornication, adultery, sodomy and so forth; and they
+must swear that actually saw rem in re, the "Kohl-needle in the
+Kohl-ιtui," as the Arabs have it. This practically prevents conviction
+and the sabre cuts the Gordian knot.
+
+[FN#140] Who, in such case, would represent our equerry.
+
+[FN#141] The Badawi not only always tells the truth, a perfect contrast
+with the townsfolk; he is blunt in speech addressing his Sultan "O
+Sa'νd!" and he has a hard rough humour which we may fairly describe as
+"wut." When you chaff him look out for falls.
+
+[FN#142] The answer is as old as the hills, teste the tale of what
+happened when Amasis (who on horseback) raised his leg, "broke wind and
+bad the messenger carry it back to Apries." Herod. Ii. 162. But for the
+full significance of the Badawi's most insulting reply see the Tale of
+Abu Hasan in Night ccccxi.
+
+[FN#143] Arab. "Yα sαki" al-Dakan" meaning long bearded (foolish) as
+well as frosty bearded.
+
+[FN#144] P. N. of the tribe, often mentioned in The Nights.
+
+[FN#145] Adnan, which whom Arab genealogy begins, is generally supposed
+to be the eighth (Al-Tabari says the fortieth) descendant from Ishmael
+and nine generations are placed between him and Fahr (Fihr) Kuraysh.
+The Prophet cut all disputes short by saying, "Beyond Adnan none save
+Allah wotteth and the genealogists lie." (Pilgrimage ii. 344) M.C. de
+Perceval dates Adnan about B.C. 130.
+
+[FN#146] Koran xxxiii., 38.
+
+[FN#147] Arab. "Arab al-Arabα," as before noticed (vol. i. 12) the pure
+and genuine blood as opposed to the "Musta'aribah," the "Muta'arribah,"
+the "Mosarabians" and other Araboids; the first springing from Khatan
+(Yaktan?) and the others from Adnan. And note that "Arabi" = a man of
+pure Arab race, either of the Desert or of the city, while A'arαbi
+applies only to the Desert man, the Badawi.
+
+[FN#148] Koran xxxviii. 2, speaking of the Unbelievers (i.e.
+non-Moslems) who are full of pride and contention.
+
+[FN#149] One of the Ashαb, or Companions of the Apostle, that is them
+who knew him personally. (Pilgrimage ii. 80, etc.) The Ashαb al-Suffah
+(Companions of the bench or sofa) were certain houseless Believers
+lodged by the Prophet. (Pilgrimage ii. 143).
+
+[FN#150] Hence Omar is entitled "Al-Adil = the Just." Readers will
+remember that by Moslem law and usage murder and homicide are offences
+to be punished by the family, not by society or its delegates. This
+system reappears in civilisation under the denomination of "Lynch Law,"
+a process infinitely distasteful to lawyers (whom it abolishes) and
+most valuable when administered with due discretion.
+
+[FN#151] Lane translates (ii. 592) "from a desire of seeing the face of
+God;" but the general belief of Al-Islam is that the essence of Allah's
+corporeal form is different from man's. The orthodox expect to "see
+their Lord on Doom-day as they see the full moon" (a tradition). But
+the Mu'atazilites deny with the existence of matter the corporiety of
+Alah and hold that he will be seen only with the spiritual eyes, i.e.
+of reason.
+
+[FN#152] See Gesta Romanorum, Tale cviii., "of Constancy in adhering to
+Promises," founded on Damon and Pythias or, perhaps, upon the Arabic.
+
+[FN#153] Arab. "Al-Ahrαm," a word of unknown provenance. It has been
+suggested that the singular form (Haram), preceded by the Coptic
+article "pi" (= the) suggested to the Greeks "Pyramis." But this word
+is still sub judice and every Egyptologist seems to propose his own
+derivation. Brugsch (Egypt i. 72) makes it Greek, the Egyptian being
+"Abumir," while "pir- am-us" = the edge of the pyramid, the corners
+running from base to apex. The Egyptologist proves also what the
+Ancients either ignored or forgot to mention, that each pyramid had its
+own name.
+
+[FN#154] Arab. "Ahkαm," in this matter supporting the
+
+
+"Pyramidologists."
+
+
+
+[FN#155] All imaginative.
+
+[FN#156] It has always been my opinion founded upon considerations too
+long to detail, that the larger Pyramids contain many unopened
+chambers. Dr. Grant Bey of Cairo proposed boring through the blocks as
+Artesian wells are driven. I cannot divine why Lane (ii, 592) chose to
+omit this tale, which is founded on historic facts and interests us by
+suggesting a comparison between Mediζval Moslem superstitions and those
+of our xixth Century, which to our descendants will appear as wild, if
+not as picturesque, as those of The Nights. The "inspired British inch"
+and the building by Melchisedek (the Shaykh of some petty Syrian
+village) will compare not unaptly with the enchanted swords, flexible
+glass and guardian spirits. But the Pyramidennarren is a race which
+will not speedily die out: it is based on Nature, the Pyramids
+themselves.
+
+[FN#157] Arab. "Rizm"; hence, through the Italian Risma our ream (= 20
+quires of paper, etc.), which our dictionaries derive from (!). See
+"frail" in Night dcccxxxviii.
+
+[FN#158] Arab. "Tarνkah" = the path trodden by ascetics and mystics in
+order to attain true knowledge (Ma'rifat in Pers. Dαnish). These are
+extensive subjects: for the present I must refer readers to the
+Dabistan, iii. 35 and iii. 29, 36-7.
+
+[FN#159] Alluding to the Fishαr or "Squeeze of the tomb." This is the
+Jewish Hibbut hakkeber which all must endure, save those who lived in
+the Holy Land or died on the Sabbath-eve (Friday night). Then comes the
+questioning by the Angels Munkar and Nakir (vulgarly called Nαkir and
+Nakνr) for which see Lane (M.E. chapt. xviii.). In Egypt a "Mulakkin"
+(intelligencer) is hired to prompt and instruct the dead. Moslems are
+beginning to question these facts of their faith: a Persian
+acquaintance of mine filled his dead father's mouth with flour and
+finding it in loco on opening the grave, publicly derided the belief.
+But the Mullahs had him on the hip, after the fashion of reverends,
+declaring that the answers were made through the whole body, not only
+by the mouth. At last the Voltairean had to quit Shiraz.
+
+[FN#160] Arab. "Walν" = a saint, Santon (Ital. Form) also a slave. See
+in Richardson (Dissert. iii.), an illustration of the difference
+between Wali and Wαli as exemplified by the Caliph al- Kαdir and Mahmϊd
+of Ghazni.
+
+[FN#161] Arab. "Tνn" = the tenacious clay puddled with chaff which
+serves as mortar for walls built of Adobe or sun dried brick. I made a
+mistake in my Pilgrimage (i.10) translating Ras al-Tνn the old Pharos
+of Alexandria, by "Headland of Figs." It is Headland of Clay, so called
+from the argile there found and which supported an old pottery.
+
+[FN#162] The danik (Pers. Dang) is the sixth of a dirham. Mr. S. L.
+Poole (The Acad. April 26, '79) prefers his uncle's translation "a
+sixth" (what of?) to Mr. Payne's "farthing." The latter at any rate is
+intelligible.
+
+[FN#163] The devotee was "Sαim al-dahr" i.e. he never ate nor drank
+from daylight to dark throughout the year.
+
+[FN#164] The ablution of a common man differs from that of an
+
+
+educated Moslem as much as the eating of a clown and a gentleman.
+
+
+Moreover there are important technical differences between the
+
+
+Wuzu of the Sunni and the Shi'ah.
+
+
+
+[FN#165] i.e., by honouring his father.
+
+[FN#166] This young saint was as selfish and unnatural a sinner as
+Saint Alexius of the Gesta Romanorum (Tale xv.), to whom my friend, the
+late Thomas Wright, administered just and due punishment.
+
+[FN#167] The verses are affecting enough, though by no means high
+poetry.
+
+[FN#168] The good young man cut his father for two reasons: secular
+power (an abomination to good Moslems) and defective title to the
+Caliphate. The latter is a trouble to Turkey in the present day and
+with time will prove worse.
+
+[FN#169] Umm Amrν (written Amrϊ and pronounced Amr') a matronymic,
+"mother of Amru." This story and its terminal verse is a regular Joe
+Miller.
+
+[FN#170] Abuse and derision of schoolmaster are staple subjects in the
+East as in the West, (Quem Dii oderunt pζdagogum fecerunt).
+Anglo-Indians will remember:
+
+ "Miyαn-ji ti-ti!
+
+
+ Bachche-kν gαnd men anguli kν thi!"
+
+
+ ("Schoolmaster hum!
+
+
+ Who fumbled and fingered the little boy's bum?")
+
+
+
+[FN#171] Arab. "Mujawirin" = the lower servants, sweepers, etc. See
+Pilgrimage ii. 161, where it is also applied to certain "settlers" at
+Al-Medinah. Burckhardt (No. 480) notices another meaning "foreigners
+who attend mosque-lectures" and quotes the saying, "A. pilgrimaged:"
+quoth B. "yes! and for his villanies resideth (Mujαwir) at Meccah."
+
+[FN#172] The custom (growing obsolete in Egypt) is preserved in
+Afghanistan where the learned wear turbans equal to the canoe- hats of
+the Spanish cardinals.
+
+[FN#173] Arab. "Makmarah," a metal cover for the usual brasier or pan
+of charcoal which acts as a fire-place. Lane (ii. 600) does not
+translate the word and seems to think it means a belt or girdle, thus
+blunting the point of the dominie's excuse.
+
+[FN#174] This story, a very old Joe Miller, was told to Lane as
+something new and he introduced it into his Modern Egyptians, end of
+chapt. ii.
+
+[FN#175] This tale is a mere abbreviation of "The King and his
+
+
+Wazir's Wife," in the Book of Sindibad or the Malice of Women,
+
+
+Night dcxxviii., {which see for annotations}.
+
+
+
+[FN#176] The older "Roe" which may be written "Rukh" or "Rukhkh."
+Colonel Yule, the learned translator of Marco Polo, has shown that
+"Roc's" feathers were not uncommon curiosities in mediζval ages; and
+holds that they were mostly fronds of the palm Raphia vinifera, which
+has the largest leaf in the vegetable kingdom and which the Moslems of
+Zanzibar call "Satan's date-tree." I need hardly quote "Frate Cipolla
+and the Angel Gabriel's Feather." (Decameron vi. 10.)
+
+[FN#177] The tale is told in a bald, disjointed style and will be
+repeated in Sindbad the Seaman where I shall again notice the "Roc."
+See Night dxxxvii., etc.
+
+[FN#178] Hνrah in Mesopotamia was a Christian city and
+
+
+principality subject to the Persian Monarchs; and a rival to the
+
+
+Roman kingdom of Ghassαn. It has a long history, for which see
+
+
+D'Herbelot.
+
+
+
+[FN#179] A pre-Islamite poet.
+
+[FN#180] Arab. "Bikα'a," alluding to the pilgrimages made to
+monasteries and here equivalent to, "Address ye to the road," etc.
+
+[FN#181] Whose by name was Abu Ali, a poet under the Abbasides (eighth
+and ninth centuries).
+
+[FN#182] A well-known quarter of Baghdad, often mentioned in The
+
+
+Nights.
+
+
+
+[FN#183] Another well-known poet of the time.
+
+[FN#184] Arab. "Sardαb": noticed before.
+
+[FN#185] A gigantic idol in the Ka'abah, destroyed by Mohammed: it gave
+name to a tribe.
+
+[FN#186] Arab. "Ya Kawwαd:" hence the Port. and Span.
+
+
+Alcoviteiro.
+
+
+
+[FN#187] Arab "Tufayli," a term before noticed; the class was as
+well-known in Baghdad and Cairo as in ancient Rome.
+
+[FN#188] Arab. "Jauzar"=a bubalus (Antilope defessa), also called "Aye"
+from the large black eyes. This bovine antelope is again termed Bakar
+al-Wahsh (wild cattle) or "Bos Sylvestris" (incerti generic, Forsk.).
+But Janzar also signifies hart, so I render it by "Ariel" (the
+well-known antelope).
+
+[FN#189] Arab. "Tarαib" plur. of tarνbah. The allusion is to the heart,
+and "the little him's a her."
+
+[FN#190] A well-known poet of the ninth century (A.D.).
+
+[FN#191] These easy deaths for love are a lieu common: See sundry of
+them in the Decameron (iv. 7, etc.); and, in the Heptameron (Nouv.
+Ixx.), the widow who lay down and died of love and sorrow that her
+passion had become known. For the fainting of lovers see Nouvelle xix.
+
+[FN#192] This is a favourite Badawi dish, but too expensive unless some
+accident happen to the animal. Old camel is much like bull-beef, but
+the young meat is excellent, although not relished by Europeans
+because, like strange fish, it has no recognised flavour. I have
+noticed it in my "First Footsteps" (p. 68, etc.). There is an old idea
+in Europe that the maniacal vengeance of the Arab is increased by
+eating this flesh, the beast is certainly vindictive enough; but a
+furious and frantic vengefulness characterises the North American
+Indian who never saw a camel. Mercy and pardon belong to the elect, not
+to the miserables who make up " humanity."
+
+[FN#193] i.e. of the Province Hazramaut, the Biblical Hazarmaveth (Gen.
+x. 26). The people are the Swill of Arabia and noted for thrift and
+hard bargains; hence the saying, If you meet a serpent and a Hazrami,
+slay the Hazrami. To prove how ubiquitous they are it is related that a
+man, flying from their society, reached the uttermost parts of China
+where he thought himself safe. But, as he was about to pass the night
+in some ruin, he heard a voice bard by him exclaim, "O Imαd al-Din!"
+(the name of the patron-saint of Hazramaut). Thereupon he arose and
+fled and he is, they say, flying still.
+
+[FN#194] Arab. "Fαl" alluding to the Sortes Coranicζ and other silly
+practices known to the English servant-girs when curious about her
+future and her futur.
+
+[FN#195] i.e., in Arab-land (where they eat dates) and Ajam, or lands
+non-Arab (where bread is the staff of life); that is, all the world
+over.
+
+[FN#196] This story is curious and ethnologically valuable. The Badawi
+who eructates as a civility, has a mortal hatred to a crepitus ventris;
+and were a by-stander to laugh at its accidental occurrence, he would
+at once be cut down as a "pundonor." The same is the custom amongst the
+Highlanders of Afghanistan, and its artificial nature suggests direct
+derivation, for the two regions are separated by a host of tribes,
+Persians and Baloch, Sindis and Panjαbis who utterly ignore the point
+of honour and behave like Europeans. The raids of the pre-Islamitic
+Arabs over the lands lying to the north-east of them are almost
+forgotten; still there are traces, and this may be one of them.
+
+[FN#197] Arab. "Al-Αr." The Badawi saying is "Al-nαr wa lα l- αr"
+(Hell-)fire, but not shame. The sentiment is noble. Hasan the Prophet's
+grandson, a poor creature demoralised by over- marrying, chose the
+converse, "Shame is better than Hell-fire." An old Arabic poem has,
+
+ "The Fire and not shame be the Lord of thee
+
+
+ And e'en to The Fire from shame go flee."
+
+
+
+Al-Hariri (Ass. of the Badawin) also has,
+
+ "For rather would I die my death than shame,—
+
+
+ On bier be borne than bear a caitiff's name."
+
+
+
+[FN#198] A grammarian and rhetorician of ninth century.
+
+[FN#199] Once existing in Syrian Hamαh (the Biblical Hamath); and so
+called because here died the Emperor Heraclius called by the Arabs
+"Hirakl."
+
+[FN#200] Till lately it was the custom to confine madmen in Syrian
+monasteries, hoping a cure from the patron Saint, and a terrible time
+they had of it. Every guide book relates the healing process as
+formerly pursued at the Maronite Convent Koshaya not far from Bayrut.
+The idiot or maniac was thrust headlong by the monks into a dismal
+cavern with a heavy chain round his neck, and was tied up within a span
+of the wall to await the arrival of Saint Anthony who especially
+affects this holy place. In very few weeks the patient was effectually
+cured or killed by cold, solitude and starvation.
+
+[FN#201] The Moslem Eve, much nearer the Hebrew "Hawah" = the
+"manifester," because (Gen. iii. 20) she was (to be) the mother of all
+that live ("Kull hayy").
+
+[FN#202] The mad lover says "they" for "she," which would be too
+familiar in speaking to strangers.
+
+[FN#203] i.e. falsely to report the death.
+
+[FN#204] A famous grammarian, etc., of the tenth century.
+
+[FN#205] The classical Amorium in Phrygia now Anatolia: Anbαr is
+
+
+a town (before mentioned) on the Euphrates; by the rules of
+
+
+Arabic grammar the word is pronounced (though never written)
+
+
+Ambαr.
+
+
+
+[FN#206] "Art thou not the slave of the Messiah, the Rαhib (monk)?"
+"No! I am the slave of Allah, the Rαghib (desirous of mercy from the
+Almighty). " A fair specimen of the Saj'a or rhymed prose. Abdallah
+(properly "Abdu'llah:") is a kind of neutral name, neither Jewish,
+Moslem nor Christian; hence I adopted it, (Pilgrimage i. 20.)
+
+[FN#207] Arab. "Hanut," prop. a tavern where liquors are sold, a term
+applied contemptuously to shops, inns, etc., kept by Christians.
+
+[FN#208] Arab. "Shirk" = syntheism of the "Mushrik" (one who makes
+other gods partners with God), a word pronounced "Mushrit" by the
+Wahhabis and the Badawin.
+
+[FN#209] Koran vii. 195. The passage declaims against the idols of the
+Arabs, sun, moon. stars, etc.
+
+[FN#210] This minor miracle is commonly reported, and is not, I
+believe, unknown to modern "Spiritualism." The dead Wali or Waliyah
+(Saintess) often impels the bier-bearers to the spot where he would be
+buried: hence in Cairo the tombs scattered about the city. Lane notices
+it, Mod. E. chaps. xxviii.
+
+[FN#211] Koran x. 36, speaking of being turned aside from the true
+worship.
+
+[FN#212] One of the Wazirs of al-Maamun, Kurrat al-Ayn = "coolness
+(i.e. delight) of the eyes" Ali bin Hishαm surnamed Abu'l-Hasan, was
+prefect of Baghdad under the same reign.
+
+[FN#213] The Mac. Edit. (ii. 448) reads for Kawαid (plur. of Kαid =
+Governors, Span. Alcayde) "Fawαid": hence Lane (ii. 606) translates "
+try thy heart."
+
+ [FN#214] The mats of Sind were famous even in my day, but under
+
+
+English rule native industries are killed out by Manchester and
+
+
+Birmingham.
+
+
+
+[FN#215] Sajαh was the name of a famous female impostor, a contemporary
+of "Musaylimah the Liar."
+
+[FN#216] A poet of Mohammed's day.
+
+[FN#217] A singer and composer of the first century (A. H.).
+
+[FN#218] Arab = a roe, a doe; also the Yoni (of women, mares and
+bitches). It is the Heb. Tabitha and the Greek Dorcas.
+
+[FN#219] Within the Hudϊd al-Harem (bounds of the Holy Places), at
+Al-Medinah as well as Meccah, all "Muharramαt" (forbidden sins) are
+doubly unlawful, such as drinking spirits, immoral life, etc. The Imam
+Malik forbids slaying animals without, however, specifying any penalty.
+The felling of trees is a disputed point; and no man can be put to
+death except invaders, infidels and desecraters. (Pilgrimage ii. 167.)
+
+[FN#220] A poet of the first century (A.H.).
+
+[FN#221] In Arab. =a fawn beginning to walk, also the 28th lunar
+mansion or station, usually known as Batn al-Hut or Whale's belly.
+These mansions or houses, the constellations through which the moon
+passes in her course along her orbit, are much used in Moslem astrology
+and meteorology.
+
+[FN#222] Arab. Kalla-mα = it is seldom (rare) that etc. used in books.
+
+[FN#223] Dishonoured by his love being made public. So Hafiz,
+
+
+Petrarch and Camoens.
+
+
+
+[FN#224] Sixth Abbaside, A.D. 809-813.
+
+[FN#225] Ala'llah, tenth Abbaside, A. H. 232-47 (847-61), grandson of
+Al-Rashid who succeeded Al-Wαsik. He was a fanatic Sunni, much opposed
+to the Shi'ahs and he ordered the Christians to wear round their necks
+the Ghull (collar of wood, iron, or leather), to dress in yellow
+head-gear and girdles, use wooden stirrups and place figures of devils
+in front of their dwelling-houses. He also gave distinct dresses to
+their women and slaves. The Ghull, or collar, was also used for a
+punishment and vermin gathered under it when riveted round the neck:
+hence Golius calls it "pediculosum columbar."
+
+[FN#226] Wazir of the above. killed by al-Muntasir Billah A. H. 247 (=
+861).
+
+[FN#227] Easterns during purgation are most careful and deride the want
+of precaution in Europeans. They do not leave the house till all is
+passed off, and avoid baths, wine and women which they afterwards
+resume with double zest. Here "breaking the seal" is taking the girl's
+maidenhead.
+
+[FN#228] Johannes, a Greek favoured by Al-Mutawakkil and other
+
+
+Abbaside Caliphs.
+
+
+
+[FN#229] Lady of Shaykhs, elders in the faith and men of learning
+
+
+[FN#230] = A.D. 1166.
+
+
+[FN#231] Koran iv. 38. I have before noted what the advantages are.
+
+[FN#232] Koran ii. 282, "of those whom ye shall choose for witnesses."
+
+[FN#233] Koran iv. 175, "Whereas if there be two sisters, they inherit
+only two-thirds between them."
+
+[FN#234] The secondary meaning is "Fα'il" = the active sodomite and
+"Mafa'ϊl" = the passive, a catamite: the former is not an insulting
+word, the latter is a most injurious expression. "Novimus et qui te!"
+
+[FN#235] It is an unpleasant fact that almost all the poetry of Hαfiz
+is addressed to youths, as we see by the occasional introduction of
+Arabic (e.g., Afαka'llαh). Persian has no genders properly so called,
+hence the effect is less striking. Sa'di, the "Persian Moralist" begins
+one of the tales, "A certain learned man fell in love with a beautiful
+son of a blacksmith," which Gladwin, translating for the general,
+necessarily changed to "daughter."
+
+[FN#236] The famous author of the Anthology called Al-Hamαsah.
+
+[FN#237] i.e., teeth under the young mustachio.
+
+[FN#238] The "Silk man" and the celebrated author of the Makαmαt,
+assemblies or seances translated (or attempted) into all the languages
+of Europe. We have two in English, the first by Theodore Preston, M.A.
+(London, Madden, 1850); but it contains only twenty of the fifty
+pieces. The second by the late Mr. Chenery (before alluded to) ends
+with the twenty-sixth assembly: one volume in fact, the other never
+having been finished. English readers, therefore, are driven to the
+grand edition of the Makαmαt in folio by Baron Silvestre de Sacy.
+
+[FN#239] The sword of the eye has a Hamαil (baldrick worn over right
+shoulder, Pilgrimage i. 352) to support the "Ghimd" (vulg. Ghamad) or
+scabbard (of wood or leather): and this baldrick is the young whisker.
+
+[FN#240] The conceit of "Sulαfat" (ptisane, grape juice allowed to
+drain on the slabs) and "Sawαlif" (tresses, locks) has been explained.
+The newest wine is the most inebriating, a fact not much known in
+England, but familiar to the drinker of "Vino novo."
+
+[FN#241] Koran xii. 51, this said by the nobleman's (Potiphar's) wife
+who adds, "I selected him to lie with me; and he (Joseph) is one of
+those who speak truth."
+
+[FN#242] Here we have a specimen of the strained Saj'a or balanced
+prose: slave-girls (jawαrν) are massed with flowing tears (dam'u jαri)
+on account of the Kαfiyah or rhyme.
+
+[FN#243] The detected sodomite is punished with death according to
+Moslem law, but again comes the difficulty of proof. At Shiraz I have
+heard of a pious Moslem publicly executing his son.
+
+[FN#244] Koran xxvi. 165 et seq. The Lord speaks to the "people of Lot"
+(Sodomites). Mr. Payne renders "Min al-αlamνma," "from the four corners
+of the world."
+
+[FN#245] Meaning before and behind, a Moslemah "Bet Balmanno."
+
+[FN#246] Arab. " Lϊti," (plur. Lawαtν), much used in Persian as a
+buffoon, a debauchee, a rascal. The orig. sig. is "One of (the people
+of) Lot." The old English was Ingle or Yngle (a bardachio, a catamite,
+a boy kept for sodomy), which Minsheu says is, "Vox hispanica et
+significat Latinθ Inguen" (the groin). Our vulgar modern word like the
+Italian bugiardo is pop. derived from Fr. Bougre, alias Bulgarus, a
+Bulgarian, a heretic: hence Boulgrin (Rabelais i. chaps. ii.) is
+popularly applied to the Albigeois (Albigenses, whose persecution began
+shortly after A.D. 1200) and the Lutherans. I cannot but think that
+"bougre" took its especial modern signification after the French became
+acquainted with the Brazil, where the Huguenots (in A.D. 1555) were
+founding a Nouvelle France, alias Equinoctiale, alias Antarctique, and
+whence the savages were carried as curiosities to Paris. Their generic
+name was "Bugre" (properly a tribe in Southern Brazil, but applied to
+all the redskins) and they were all born Sodomites. More of this in the
+terminal Essay.
+
+[FN#247] His paper is the whiteness of his skin. I have quoted the
+Persian saying of a young beard: "his cheeks don mourning for his
+beauty's death."
+
+[FN#248] Arab. "Khabαl," lit. the pus which flows from the bodies of
+the damned.
+
+[FN#249] Most characteristic of Egypt is all this scene. Her reverence,
+it is true, sits behind a curtain; but her virtue uses language which
+would shame the lowest European prostitute; and which is filthy almost
+as Dean Swift's.
+
+[FN#250] Arab. "Niyat:" the Moslem's idea of intentions quite runs with
+the Christian's. There must be a "Niyat" or purpose of prayer or the
+devotion is valueless. Lane tells a pleasant tale of a thief in the
+Mosque, saying "I purpose (before Prayer) to carry off this nice pair
+of new shoes!"
+
+[FN#251] Arab. "Ya 'l-Ajϊz" (in Cairo "Agooz" pronounced "Ago-o- oz"):
+the address is now insulting and would elicit "The old woman in thine
+eye" (with fingers extended). In Egypt the polite address is "O lady
+(Sitt), O pilgrimess, O bride, and O daughter" (although she be the
+wrong side of fifty). In Arabia you may say "O woman (Imraah)" but in
+Egypt the reply would be "The woman shall see Allah cut out thy heart!"
+So in Southern Italy you address "bella fι" (fair one) and cause a
+quarrel by "vecchiarella."
+
+[FN#252] Governor of Egypt, Khorasan, etc. under Al-Maamun.
+
+[FN#253] i.e., a companion, a solacer: it is also a man's name (vol. i.
+xxiv.).
+
+[FN#254] At Baghdad; evidently written by a Baghdad or Mosul man.
+
+[FN#255] A blind traditionist of Bassorah (ninth century).
+
+[FN#256] Arab. "Zaghab"=the chick's down; the warts on the cucumber
+which sometimes develop into projections.
+
+[FN#257] The Persian saying is, A kiss without moustachio is bread
+without salt.
+
+[FN#258] "And We will prove you with evil, and with good, for a trial
+of you; and unto Us shall ye return." (Koran xxi. 36.) The saying is
+always in the Moslem's mouth.
+
+[FN#259] Arab. "Sunnat," lit.=a law, especially applied to the habit
+and practice of the Apostle in religious and semi-religious matters,
+completing the "Hadis," or his spoken words. Anything unknown is
+entitled "Bida'ah"=innovation. Hence the strict Moslem is a model
+Conservative whose exemplar of life dates from the seventh century.
+This fact may be casuistically explained away; but is not less an
+obstacle to all progress and it will be one of the principal dangers
+threatening Al-Islam. Only fair to say that an "innovation" introduced
+by a perfect follower of the Prophet is held equal theoretically to a
+Sunnat; but vulgarly it is said, "The rabble will not take gold which
+is not coined."
+
+[FN#260] Arab. "Arsh"=the ninth Heaven, the Throne of the Deity, above
+the Seven Heavens of the planets and the Primum Mobile which, in the
+Ptolemaic system, sets them all in motion.
+
+[FN#261] This description of a good Moslem's death is at once concise,
+pathetic and picturesque.
+
+[FN#262] This is the first mention of coffee; apparently
+
+
+introduced by the scribe: the word rendered "coffee-makers" is
+
+
+"Kahwajiyah"; an Arab. plur. of a Turkish termination (-ji) to an
+
+
+Arab. word "Kahwah" (before noticed).
+
+
+
+[FN#263] Picnics are still made to Rauzah (Rodah) island: I have
+enjoyed many a one, but the ground is all private property.
+
+[FN#264] Arab. "Hosh," plur. Hνshαn, the low courts surrounded by mean
+lodgings which in "native" Cairo still contrast so strongly with the
+"gingerbread" of the new buildings.
+
+[FN#265] This is the Moslem equivalent of "thank you." He looks upon
+the donor as the channel through which Allah sends him what he wants
+and prays for more to come. Thus "May your shadow never be less" means,
+May you increase in prosperity so that I may gain thereby! And if a
+beggar is disposed to be insolent (a very common case), he will tell
+you his mind pretty freely on the subject, and make it evident to you
+that all you have is also his and that La propriιtι (when not shared)
+est le vol.
+
+[FN#266] I have noticed in my Pilgrimage (i. 51-53) the kindly care
+with which the stranger is treated by Moslems, a marvellous contrast to
+the ways of "civilization."
+
+[FN#267] Arab. "Dimyat," vulg. pronounced "Dumνyat."
+
+[FN#268] Where the door-keepers sit and receive their friends.
+
+[FN#269] This is a traveller's 'Kit' in the East.
+
+[FN#270] Arab. "Takht-rawαn," from Persian meaning "moveable throne."
+
+[FN#271] The use of the expression proved the speaker to be a
+
+
+Moslem Jinnν.
+
+
+
+[FN#272] The "haunted" house proper, known to the vulgar and to
+spiritualists becomes, I have said, amongst Moslems a place tenanted by
+Jinns.
+
+[FN#273] Needless to say there never was a Sultan or a King of Baghdad
+nor a Duke of Athens. This story would seem not to have been written by
+the author of "the Emir bin Tahir," etc. Night ccccxxiv.
+
+[FN#274] Plur. of Αlim=one learned in the law, a D.D. Mohammed did his
+best to abolish the priest and his craft by making each Moslem
+paterfamilias a pontifex in his own household and he severely condemned
+monkery and celibacy. But human nature was too much for him: even
+before his death ascetic associations began to crop up. Presently the
+Olema in Al-Islam formed themselves into a kind of clergy; with the
+single but highly important difference that they must (or ought to)
+live by some honest secular calling and not by the "cure of souls";
+hence Mahomet IV. of Turkey was solemnly deposed. So far and no farther
+Mohammed was successful and his success has secured for him the lively
+and lasting hatred of the ecclesiastical caste which he so honestly and
+wisely attempted to abate. Even to the present day missionaries have a
+good word for the Guebre and the Buddhist, the Brahmanist and the
+Confucian, but none for the Moslem: Dr. Livingstone, for one instance
+of many, evidently preferred the Fetichist, whom he could convert, to
+the Unitarian Faithful whom he could not.
+
+[FN#275] i.e. they recited seven times (an unusual number), for greater
+solemnity, the opening Chapter of the Koran which does general duty on
+such occasions as making covenants and swearing fealty. This
+proclaiming a King by acclamation suggests the origin of the old and
+venerable Portuguese institution.
+
+[FN#276] By affixing his own seal and that of the King. This in later
+times was supplanted by the "Tughrα," the imperial cypher or
+counter-mark (much like a writing master's flourish), with which Europe
+has now been made familiar through the agency of Turkish tobacco.
+
+[FN#277] Arab. "Wird"=the twenty-five last chapters of the Koran which
+are repeated, one or more at a time, after the end of the "Farz," or
+obligatory prayers and ad libitum with the Sunnat or customary, and the
+Nαfilah or supererogatory.
+
+[FN#278] The sensible creed of Al-Islam freely allows anthropophagy
+when it saves life; a contrast to the sentimentalism of the West which
+brings a "charge of cannibalism" against unfortunate expeditionists. I
+particularly allude to the scandalous pulings of the English Press over
+the gallant and unfortunate Greely voyage. (The Academy, Sept. 25,
+1884.)
+
+[FN#279] The story is mere Ζsopic: the "Two dogs" contains it all. One
+of Mohammed's sensible sayings is recorded and deserves
+repetition:—"Empire endureth with infidelity (idolatry, etc.), but not
+with tyranny."
+
+[FN#280] This couplet occurs in Night xxi. (vol. i. 207); so I give
+Torrens (p.207) by way of variety.
+
+[FN#281] Lane (ii. 636) omits this tale, "as it would not only require
+a volume of commentary but be extremely tiresome to most readers."
+Quite true; but it is valuable to Oriental Students who are beginning
+their studies, as an excellent compendium of doctrine and practice
+according to the Shafi'ν School.
+
+[FN#282] Pronounced Aboo 'l-Husn = Father of Beauty, a fancy name.
+
+[FN#283] As in most hot climates so in Egypt the dead are buried at
+once despite the risk of vivisepulture. This seems an instinct with the
+Semitic (Arabian) race teste Abraham, as with the Gypsy. Hence the
+Moslems have invoked religious aid. The Mishkαt al-Masαbih (i. 387)
+makes Mohammed say, "When any one of you dieth you may not keep him in
+the house but bear him quickly to his grave"; and again, "Be quick in
+raising up the bier: for if the dead have been a good man, it is good
+to bear him gravewards without delay; and if bad, it is frowardness ye
+put from your necks."
+
+[FN#284] This biting of the hand in Al-Harνri expresses bitterness of
+repentance and he uses more than once the Koranic phrase (chapter vii.,
+148) "Sukita fν aydνhim," lit. where it (the biting) was fallen upon
+their hands; i.e. when it repented them; "sukita" being here not a
+passive verb as it appears, but an impersonal form uncommon in Arabic.
+The action is instinctive, a survival of the days when man was a
+snarling and snapping animal (physically) armed only with claws and
+teeth.
+
+[FN#285] Arab. "'Alam," applied to many things, an "old man" of stones
+(Kαkϊr), a signpost with a rag on the top, etc.
+
+[FN#286] The moon of Ramazan was noticed in Night ix. That of Sha'aban
+(eighth month) begins the fighting month after the conclusion of the
+Treuga Dei in Rajab. See Night ccclxxviii.
+
+[FN#287] These lines have occurred in Night cccxix. I give Mr.
+
+
+Payne's version for variety.
+
+
+
+[FN#288] i.e. in her prime, at fourteen to fifteen.
+
+[FN#289] i.e. pale and yellow.
+
+[FN#290] The word means the wood; but it alludes to a preparation made
+by levigating it on a stone called in India "Sandlαsα." The gruel-like
+stuff is applied with the right hand to the right side of the neck,
+drawing the open fingers from behind forwards so as to leave four
+distinct streaks, then down to the left side, and so on to the other
+parts of the body.
+
+[FN#291] Arab. "Haykal" which included the Porch, the Holy and
+
+
+the Holy of Holies. The word is used as in a wider sense by
+
+
+Josephus A. J. v. v. 3. In Moslem writings it is applied to a
+
+
+Christian Church generally, on account of its images.
+
+
+
+[FN#292] These lines having occurred before, I here quote Mr.
+
+
+Payne.
+
+
+
+[FN#293] Arab writers often mention the smile of beauty, but rarely,
+after European fashion, the laugh, which they look upon as undignified.
+A Moslem will say "Don't guffaw (Kahkahah) in that way; leave giggling
+and grinning to monkeys and Christians." The Spaniards, a grave people,
+remark that Christ never laughed. I would draw the reader's attention
+to a theory of mine that the open-hearted laugh has the sound of the
+vowels a and o; while e, i, and u belong to what may be roughly classed
+as the rogue order.
+
+[FN#294] i.e. gaining the love of another, love.
+
+[FN#295] i.e. the abrogated passages and those by which they are
+abrogated. This division is necessary for "inspired volumes," which
+always abound in contradictions. But the charge of "opportunism"
+brought against the Koran is truly absurd; as if "revelation" could
+possibly be aught save opportune.
+
+[FN#296] Koran iv. 160, the chapter "Women."
+
+[FN#297] She unveiled, being a slave-girl and for sale. If a free woman
+show her face to a Moslem, he breaks out into violent abuse, because
+the act is intended to let him know that he is looked upon as a small
+boy or an eunuch or a Chriastian—in fact not a man.
+
+[FN#298] Ilah=Heb. El, a most difficult root, meaning strength,
+interposition, God (Numen) "the" (article) "don't" (do not), etc. etc.
+
+[FN#299] As far as I know Christians are the only worshippers who kneel
+as if their lower legs were cut off and who "join hands" like the
+captive offering his wrists to be bound (dare manus). The posture,
+however, is not so ignoble as that of the Moslem "Sijdah" (prostration)
+which made certain North African tribes reject Al-Islam saying, "These
+men show their hind parts to heaven."
+
+[FN#300] i.e. saying "I intend (purpose) to pray (for instance) the
+two-bow prayer (ruka'tayn) of the day-break," etc.
+
+[FN#301] So called because it prohibits speaking with others till the
+prayer is ended.
+
+[FN#302] Lit. "any thing opposite;" here used for the Ka'abah towards
+which men turn in prayer; as Guebres face the sun or fire and idolators
+their images. "Al-Kiblatayn" (= the two Kiblahs) means Meccah and
+Jerusalem, which was faced by Moslems as well as Jews and Christians
+till Mohammed changed the direction. For the occasion of the change see
+my Pilgrimage, ii. 320.
+
+[FN#303] Which includes Tayammum or washing with sand. This is a very
+cleanly practice in a hot, dry land and was adopted long before
+Mohammed. Cedrenus tells of baptism with sand being administered to a
+dying traveller in the African desert.
+
+[FN#304] The Koranic order for Wuzϊ is concise and as usual obscure,
+giving rise to a host of disputes and casuistical questions. Its text
+runs (chapt. v.), "O true believers, when you prepare to pray, wash
+(Ghusl) your faces, and your hands unto the elbows; and rub (Mas-h)
+your hands and your feet unto the ankles; and if ye be unclean by
+having lain with a woman, wash (Ghusl) yourselves all over." The
+purifications and ceremonious ablutions of the Jews originated this
+command; and the early Christians did very unwisely in not making the
+bath obligatory. St. Paul (Heb. xi. 22) says, "Let us draw near with a
+true heart…having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience and our
+bodies washed with clean (or pure) water." But this did not suffice.
+Hence the Eastern Christian, in hot climates where cleanliness should
+rank before godliness, is distinguished by his dirt which as a holy or
+reverend man he makes still dirtier, and he offers an ugly comparison
+with the Moslem and especially the Hindu. The neglect of commands to
+wash and prohibitions to drink strong waters are the two grand physical
+objections of the Christian code of morality.
+
+[FN#305] Arab. "Istinshαk"=snuffing up water from the palm of the right
+hand so as to clean thoroughly the nostrils. This "function" is
+unreasonably neglected in Europe, to the detriment of the mucous
+membrane and the olfactory nerves.
+
+[FN#306] So as to wash between them. The thick beard is combed out with
+the fingers.
+
+[FN#307] Poor human nature! How sad to compare ita pretensions with its
+actualities.
+
+[FN#308] Complete ablution is rendered necessary chiefly by the
+emission of semen either in copulation or in nocturnal pollution. The
+water must be pure and not less than a certain quantity, and it must
+touch every part of the skin beginning with the right half of the
+person and ending with the left. Hence a plunge-bath is generally
+preferred.
+
+[FN#309] Arab. "Ta'mνm," lit. crowning with turband, or tiara,
+here=covering, i.e. wetting.
+
+[FN#310] This practice (saying "I purpose to defer the washing of the
+feet," etc.) is now somewhat obsolete.
+
+[FN#311] Arabs have a prejudice against the hydropathic treatment of
+wounds, holding that water poisons them: and, as the native produce
+usually contains salt, soda and magnesia, they are justified by many
+cases. I once tried water-bandages in Arabia and failed dismally.
+
+[FN#312] The sick man says his prayers lying in bed, etc., and as he
+best can.
+
+[FN#313] i.e. saying, "And peace be on us and on the worshippers of
+Allah which be pious."
+
+[FN#314] i.e. saying, " I seek refuge with Allah from Satan the
+
+
+Stoned."
+
+
+
+[FN#315] Certain parts should be recited aloud (jahr) and others sotto
+voce (with mussitation=Khafi). No mistake must be made in this matter
+where a Moslem cannot err.
+
+[FN#316] Hence an interest of two-and-a-half percent is not held to be
+"Ribα" or unlawful gain of money by money, usury.
+
+[FN#317] The meal must be finished before the faster can plainly
+distinguish the white thread from the black thread (Koran ii. 183);
+some understand this literally, others apply it to the dark and silvery
+streak of zodiacal light which appears over the Eastern horizon an hour
+or so before sunrise. The fast then begins and ends with the
+disappearance of the sun. I have noticed its pains and penalties in my
+Pilgrimage, i. 110, etc.
+
+[FN#318] For the "Azαn" or call to prayer see Lane, M. E., chapt.
+xviii. The chant, however, differs in every country, and a practical
+ear will know the land by its call.
+
+[FN#319] Arab. "Hadνs" or saying of the Apostle.
+
+[FN#320] "Al-I'itikaf" resembles the Christian "retreat;" but the
+worshipper generally retires to a mosque, especially in Meccah. The
+Apostle practised it on Jabal Hira and other places.
+
+[FN#321] The word is the Heb. "Hagg" whose primary meaning is
+circularity of form or movement. Hence it applied to religious
+festivals in which dancing round the idol played a prime part; and
+Lucian of "saltation" says, dancing was from the beginning and coeval
+with the ancient god, Love. But man danced with joy before he
+worshipped, and, when he invented a systematic saltation, he made it
+represent two things, and only two things, love and war, in most
+primitive form, courtship and fighting.
+
+[FN#322] Two adjoining ground-waves in Meccah. For these and for the
+places subsequently mentioned the curious will consult my Pilgrimage,
+iii. 226, etc.
+
+[FN#323] The 'Umrah or lesser Pilgrimage, I have noted, is the ceremony
+performed in Meccah at any time out of the pilgrim-season proper, i.e.
+between the eighth and tenth days of the twelfth lunar month Zu
+'l-Hijjah. It does not entitle the Moslem to be called Hαjj (pilgrim)
+or Hαjν as Persians and Indians corrupt the word.
+
+[FN#324] I need hardly note that Mohammed borrowed his
+pilgrimage-practices from the pagan Arabs who, centuries before his
+day, danced around the Meccan Ka'abah. Nor can he be blamed for having
+perpetuated a Gentile rite, if indeed it be true that the Ka'abah
+contained relics of Abraham and Ishmael.
+
+[FN#325] On first sighting Meccah. See Night xci.
+
+[FN#326] Arab. "Tawαf:" the place is called Matαf and the guide
+Mutawwif. (Pilgrimage, iii. 193, 205.) The seven courses are termed
+Ashwαt.
+
+[FN#327] Stoning the Devil at Mina. (Pilgrimage, iii. 282.) Hence
+
+
+Satan's title "the Stoned" (lapidated not castrated).
+
+
+
+[FN#328] Koran viii. 66; in the chapter entided "Spoil," and relating
+mainly to the "day of Al-Bedr.
+
+[FN#329] Arab. "AI-Ikαlah"= cancelling: Mr. Payne uses the technical
+term "resiliation."
+
+[FN#330] Freedman of Abdallah, son of the Caliph Omar and noted as a
+traditionist.
+
+[FN#331] i.e. at a profit: the exchange must be equal—an ordinance
+intended to protect the poor. Arabs have strange prejudices in these
+matters; for instance it disgraces a Badawi to take money for milk.
+
+[FN#332] Arab. "Jamα'ah," which in theology means the Greek , our
+"Church," the congregation of the Faithful under a lawful head. Hence
+the Sunnis call themselves "People of the Sunnat and Jamα'at." In the
+text it is explained as "Ulfat" or intimacy.
+
+[FN#333] Arab. "Al-Khalνl," i.e. of Allah=Abraham. Mohammed, following
+Jewish tradition, made Abraham rank second amongst the Prophets,
+inferior only to himself and superior to Hazrat Isa=Jesus. I have noted
+that Ishmael the elder son succeeded his father. He married Da'alah
+bint Muzαz bin Omar, a Jurhamite, and his progeny abandoning Hebrew
+began to speak Arabic (ta'arraba); hence called Muta'arribah or
+Arabised Arabs. (Pilgrimage iii. 190.) He died at Meccah and was buried
+with his mother in the space North of the Ka'abah called Al-Hijr which
+our writers continue to confuse with the city Al-Hijr. (Ibid. 165-66.)
+
+[FN#334] This ejaculation, "In the name of Allah" is, I have noted,
+equivalent to "saying grace." If neglected it is a sin and entails a
+curse.
+
+[FN#335] The ceremonious posture is sitting upon the shin-bones, not
+tailor-fashion; and "bolting food" is a sign of boorishness.
+
+[FN#336] Arab. "Zidd," the word is a fair specimen of Arabic ambiguity
+meaning primarily opposite or contrary (as virtue to vice), secondarily
+an enemy or a friend (as being opposite to an enemy).
+
+[FN#337] "The whole earth (shall be) but His handful on the
+Resurrection day and in His right hand shall the Heaven be rolled up
+(or folded together)."-Koran xxxix. 67.
+
+[FN#338] See Night lxxxi.
+
+[FN#339] Koran lxxviii. 19.
+
+[FN#340] Arab. "Al-Munαfik," technically meaning one who outwardly
+professes Al-Islam while inwardly hating it. Thus the word is by no
+means synonymous with our "hypocrite," hypocrisy being the homage vice
+pays to virtue; a homage, I may observe, nowhere rendered more
+fulsomely than among the so-called Anglo-Saxon race.
+
+[FN#341] Arab. "Tawakkul alα 'llah": in the imperative the phrase is
+vulgarly used="Be off!"
+
+[FN#342] i.e. ceremonial impurity which is sui generis, a very
+different thing from general dirtiness.
+
+[FN#343] A thick beard is one which does not show the skin; otherwise
+the wearer is a "Kausaj;" in Pers. "Kϊseh." See vol. iii., 246.
+
+[FN#344] Arab. "Al-Khutnah." Nowhere commanded in the Koran and being
+only a practice of the Prophet, the rite is not indispensable for
+converts, especially the aged and the sick. Our ideas upon the subject
+are very hazy, for modern "niceness" allows a "Feast of the
+Circumcision," but no discussion thereon. Moses (alias Osarsiph)
+borrowed the rite from the Egyptian hierophants who were all thus
+"purified"; the object being to counteract the over-sensibility of the
+"sixth sense" and to harden the glans against abrasions and infection
+by exposure to air and friction against the dress. Almost all African
+tribes practise it but the modes vary and some are exceedingly curious:
+I shall notice a peculiarly barbarous fashion called Al-Salkh (the
+flaying) still practised in the Arabian province Al-Asνr. (Pilgrimage
+iii. 80.) There is a difference too between the Hebrew and the Moslem
+rite. The Jewish operator, after snipping off the foreskin, rips up the
+prepuce with his sharp thumb-nails so that the external cutis does not
+retract far from the internal; and the wound, when healed, shows a
+narrow ring of cicatrice. This ripping is not done by Moslems. They use
+a stick as a probe passed round between glans and prepuce to ascertain
+the extent of the frenum and that there is no abnormal adhesion. The
+foreskin is then drawn forward and fixed by the forceps, a fork of two
+bamboo splints, five or six inches long by a quarter thick, or in some
+cases an iron like our compasses. This is tied tightly over the
+foreskin so as to exclude about an inch and a half of the prepuce above
+and three quarters below. A single stroke of the razor drawn directly
+downwards removes the skin. The slight bleeding is stopped by burnt
+rags or ashes and healed with cerates, pledgets and fumigations. Thus
+Moslem circumcision does not prevent the skin retracting.
+
+[FN#345] Of these 6336 versets only some 200 treat on law, civil and
+ceremonial, fiscal and political, devotional and ceremonial, canonical
+and ecclesiastical.
+
+[FN#346] The learned young woman omitted Ukhnϊkh=Enoch, because not in
+Koran; and if she denoted him by "Idrνs," the latter is much out of
+place.
+
+[FN#347] Some say grandson of Shem. (Koran vii. 71.)
+
+[FN#348] Koran vii. 63, etc.
+
+[FN#349] Father-in-law of Moses. (Koran vii. 83.)
+
+[FN#350] Who is the last and greatest of the twenty-five.
+
+[FN#351] See Night ccccxxxviii.
+
+[FN#352] Koran ii., whose 256th Ayah is the far-famed and sublime
+Throne-verse which begins "Allah! there is no god but He, the Living,
+the Eternal One, whom nor slumber nor sleep seizeth on!" The trivial
+name is taken from the last line, "His throne overstretcheth Heaven and
+Earth and to Him their preservation is no burden for He is the most
+Highest, the Supreme." The lines are often repeated in prayers and
+engraved on agates, etc., as portable talismans.
+
+[FN#353] Koran ii. 159.
+
+[FN#354] Koran xvi. 92. The verset ends with, "He warneth you, so haply
+ye may be mindful."
+
+[FN#355] Koran lxx. 38.
+
+[FN#356] Koran xxxix. 54.
+
+[FN#357] The Sunnis hold that the "Anbiyα" (=prophets, or rather
+announcers of Allah's judgments) were not sinless. But this dogma is
+branded as most irreverent and sinful by the Shi'ahs or Persian
+"followers of Ali," who make capital out of this blasphemy and declare
+that if any prophet sinned he sinned only against himself.
+
+[FN#358] Koran xii. 18.
+
+[FN#359] Koran ii. 107.
+
+[FN#360] Koran ii. 57. He (Allah) does not use the plurale majestatis.
+
+[FN#361] Koran ii. 28.
+
+[FN#362] Koran xvi. 100. Satan is stoned in the Minα or Munα basin
+(Night ccccxlii.) because he tempted Abraham to disobey the command of
+Allah by refusing to sacrifice Ishmael. (Pilgrimage iii. 248.)
+
+[FN#363] It may also mean "have recourse to God."
+
+[FN#364] Abdallah ibn Abbas, before noticed, first cousin of
+
+
+Mohammed and the most learned of the Companions. See D'Herbelot.
+
+
+
+[FN#365] Koran xcvi., "Blood-clots," 1 and 2. "Read" may mean "peruse
+the revelation" (it was the first Koranic chapter communicated to
+Mohammed), or "recite, preach."
+
+[FN#366] Koran xxvii. 30. Mr. Rodwell (p.1) holds to the old idea that
+the "Basmalah" is of Jewish origin, taught to the Kuraysh by Omayyah,
+of Taif, the poet and Hanνf (convert).
+
+[FN#367] Koran ix.: this was the last chapter revealed and the only one
+revealed entire except verse 110.
+
+[FN#368] Ali was despatched from Al-Medinah to Meccah by the Prophet on
+his own slit-eared camel to promulgate this chapter; and meeting the
+assembly at Al-'Akabah he also acquainted them with four things; (1) No
+Infidel may approach the Meccah temple; (2) naked men must no longer
+circut the Ka'abah; (3) only Moslems enter Paradise, and (4) public
+faith must be kept.
+
+[FN#369] Dictionaries give the word "Basmalah" (=saying
+
+
+Bismillah); but the common pronunciation is "Bismalah."
+
+
+
+[FN#370] Koran xvii. 110, a passage revealed because the Infidels,
+hearing Mohammed calling upon The Compassionate, imagined that
+Al-Rahmαn was other deity but Allah. The "names" have two grand
+divisions, Asmα Jalαlν, the fiery or terrible attributes, and the Asmα
+Jamαlν (airy, watery, earthy or) amiable. Together they form the Asmα
+al-Husna or glorious attributes, and do not include the Ism al-A'azam,
+the ineffable name which is known only to a few.
+
+[FN#371] Koran ii. 158.
+
+[FN#372] Koran xcvi. before noticed.
+
+[FN#373] A man of Al-Medinah, one of the first of Mohammed's disciples.
+
+[FN#374] Koran lxxiv. 1, etc., supposed to have been addressed by
+Gabriel to Mohammed when in the cave of Hira or Jabal Nϊr. He returned
+to his wife Khadijah in sore terror at the vision of one sitting on a
+throne between heaven and earth, and bade her cover him up. Whereupon
+the Archangel descended with this text, supposed to be the first
+revealed. Mr. Rodwell (p. 3) renders it, "O thou enwrapped in thy
+mantle!" and makes it No. ii. after a Fatrah or silent interval of six
+months to three years.
+
+[FN#375] There are several versets on this subject (chapts. ii. and
+xxx.)
+
+[FN#376] Koran cx. 1.
+
+[FN#377] The third Caliph; the "Writer of the Koran."
+
+[FN#378] Koran, v. 4. Sale translates "idols." Mr. Rodwell, "On the
+blocks (or shafts) of Stone," rude altars set by the pagan Arabs before
+their dwellings.
+
+[FN#379] Koran, v. 116. The words are put into the mouth of
+
+
+Jesus.
+
+
+
+[FN#380] The end of the same verse.
+
+[FN#381] Koran, v. 89. Supposed to have been revealed when certain
+Moslems purposed to practise Christian asceticism, fasting, watching,
+abstaining from women and sleeping on hard beds. I have said Mohammed
+would have "no monkery in Al-Islam," but human nature willed otherwise.
+Mr. Rodwell prefers "Interdict the healthful viands."
+
+[FN#382] Koran, iv. 124.
+
+[FN#383] Arab. "Mukri." "Kαri" is one who reads the Koran to pupils;
+the Mukri corrects them. "With the passage of the clouds" = without a
+moment's hesitation.
+
+[FN#384] The twenty-first, twenty-fourth and eighteenth Arabic letters.
+
+[FN#385] Arab. "Hizb." The Koran is divided into sixty portions,
+answering to "Lessons" for convenience of public worship.
+
+[FN#386] Arab. "Jalαlah,"=saying Jalla Jalαlu-hu=magnified be His
+
+
+Majesty!, or glorified be His Glory.
+
+
+
+[FN#387] Koran, xi. 50.
+
+[FN#388] The partition-wall between Heaven and Hell which others call
+Al-'Urf (in the sing. from the verb meaning he separated or parted).
+The Jews borrowed from the Guebres the idea of a partition between
+Heaven and Hell and made it so thin that the blessed and damned can
+speak together. There is much dispute about the population of
+Al-A'arαf, the general idea being that they are men who do not deserve
+reward in Heaven or punishment in Hell. But it is not a "Purgatory" or
+place of expiating sins.
+
+[FN#389] Koran, vii. 154.
+
+[FN#390] A play on the word ayn, which means "eye" or the eighteenth
+letter which in olden times had the form of a circle.
+
+[FN#391] From misreading these words comes the absurd popular belief of
+the moon passing up and down Mohammed's sleeves. George B. Airy (The
+Athenζum, Nov.29, 1884) justly objects to Sale's translation "The hour
+of judgment approacheth" and translates "The moon hath been
+dichotomised" a well-known astronomical term when the light portion of
+the moon is defined in a strait line: in other words when it is really
+a half-moon at the first and third quarters of each lunation. Others
+understand, The moon shall be split on the Last Day, the preterite for
+the future in prophetic style. "Koran Moslems" of course understand it
+literally.
+
+[FN#392] Chapters liv., lv. and lvi.
+
+[FN#393] We should say, not to utter, etc.
+
+[FN#394] These well-known "humours of Hippocrates," which reappear in
+the form of temperaments of European phrenology, are still the base of
+Eastern therapeutics.
+
+[FN#395] The doctrine of the three souls will be intelligible to
+
+
+Spiritualists.
+
+
+
+[FN#396] Arab. "Al-lαmi"=the l-shaped, curved, forked.
+
+[FN#397] Arab. "Usus," our os sacrum because, being incorruptible, the
+body will be built up thereon for Resurrection-time. Hence Hudibras
+sings (iii. 2),
+
+ "The learned Rabbis of the Jews
+
+
+ Write there's a bone which they call leuz,
+
+
+ I' the rump of man, etc."
+
+
+
+It is the Heb. "Uz," whence older scholars derived os. Sale (sect. iv.)
+called it "El Ajb, os coccygis or rump-bone."
+
+[FN#398] Arab physiologists had difficulties in procuring "subjects";
+and usually practised dissection on the simiads. Their illustrated
+books are droll; the figures have been copied and recopied till they
+have lost all resemblance to the originals.
+
+[FN#399] The liver and spleen are held to be congealed blood.
+
+
+Hence the couplet,
+
+
+
+ "We are allowed two carrions (i.e. with throats uncut) and
+
+
+ two bloods,
+
+
+ The fish and the locust, the liver and the spleen."
+
+
+(Pilgrimage iii. 92.)
+
+
+
+[FN#400] This is perfectly true and yet little known to the general.
+
+[FN#401] Koran xvii. 39.
+
+[FN#402] Arab. "Al-malikhulνya," proving that the Greeks then
+pronounced the penultimate vowel according to the acute accentνa; not
+as we slur it over. In old Hebrew we have the transliteration of four
+Greek words; in the languages of Hindostan many scores including names
+of places; and in Latin and Arabic as many hundreds. By a scholar-like
+comparison of these remains we should find little difficulty in
+establishing the true Greek pronunciation since the days of Alexander
+the Great; and we shall prove that it was pronounced according to
+accent and emphatically not quantity. In the next century I presume
+English boys will be taught to pronounce Greek as the Greeks do.
+
+[FN#403] Educated Arabs can quote many a verse bearing upon domestic
+medicine and reminding us of the lines bequeathed to Europe by the
+School of Salerno. Such e.g. are;
+
+ "After the noon-meal, sleep, although for moments twain;
+
+
+ After the night-meal, walk, though but two steps be ta'en;
+
+
+ And after swiving stale, though but two drops thou drain."
+
+
+
+[FN#404] Arab. "Sarνdah" (Tharνdah), also called "ghaut"=crumbled bread
+and hashed meat in broth; or bread, milk and meat. The Sarνdah of
+Ghassαn, cooked with eggs and marrow, was held a dainty dish: hence the
+Prophet's dictum.
+
+[FN#405] Koran v. 92. "Lots"=games of chance and "images"=statues.
+
+[FN#406] Koran ii. 216. The word "Maysar" which I have rendered
+"gambling" or gaming (for such is the modern application of the word),
+originally meant what St. Jerome calls and explains thereby the verse
+(Ezek. xxi. 22), "The King held in his hand the lot of Jerusalem" i.e.
+the arrow whereon the city-name was written. The Arabs use it for
+casting lots with ten azlam or headless arrows (for dice) three being
+blanks and the rest notched from one to seven. They were thrown by a
+"Zαrib" or punter and the stake was generally a camel. Amongst so
+excitable a people as the Arabs, this game caused quarrels and
+bloodshed, hence its prohibition: and the theologians, who everywhere
+and at all times delight in burdening human nature, have extended the
+command, which is rather admonitory than prohibitive, to all games of
+chance. Tarafah is supposed to allude to this practice in his
+Mu'allakah.
+
+[FN#407] Liberal Moslems observe that the Koranic prohibition is not
+absolute, with threat of Hell for infraction. Yet Mohammed doubtless
+forbade all inebriatives and the occasion of his so doing is well
+known. (Pilgrimage ii. 322.)
+
+[FN#408] I have noticed this soured milk in Pilgrimage i. 362.
+
+[FN#409] He does not say the "Caliph" or successor of his uncle
+
+
+Mohammed.
+
+
+
+[FN#410] The Jewish Korah (Numbers xvi.) fabled by the Koran (xxviii.
+76), following a Talmudic tradition, to have been a man of immense
+wealth. The notion that lying with an old woman, after the menses have
+ceased, is unwholesome, dates from great antiquity; and the benefits of
+the reverse process were well known to good King David. The faces of
+children who sleep with their grandparents (a bad practice now waxing
+obsolete in England), of a young wife married to an old man and of a
+young man married to an old woman, show a peculiar wizened appearance,
+a look of age overlaying youth which cannot be mistaken.
+
+[FN#411] Arab. "Hindibα"(=endubium): the modern term is
+
+
+Shakurνyah=chicorιe. I believe it to be very hurtful to the eyes.
+
+
+
+[FN#412] Arab. "Khuffαsh" and "Watwαt": in Egypt a woman is called
+"Watwαtνyah" when the hair of her privities has been removed by
+applying bats' blood. I have often heard of this; but cannot understand
+how such an application can act depilatory.
+
+[FN#413] Dictionaries render the word by "dragon, cockatrice." The
+Badawin apply it to a variety of serpents mostly large and all
+considered venomous.
+
+[FN#414] Arab. "Zarr wa 'urwah," 1it.=handle. The button-hole, I have
+said, is a modern invention; Urwah is also applied to the loopshaped
+handle of the water-skin, for attachment of the Allαkah or suspensory
+thong.
+
+[FN#415] Koran lxx. 40; see also the chapter following, v. 16.
+
+[FN#416] Koran x. 5; the "her" refers to the sun.
+
+[FN#417] Koran xxxvi. 40.
+
+[FN#418] Koran xxii. 60.
+
+[FN#419] Arab. "Manαzil:" these are the Hindu "Nakshatra"; extensively
+used in meteorology even by Europeans unconsciously: thus they will
+speak of the Elephantina-storm without knowing anything of the lunar
+mansion so called. The names in the text are successively Sharatαn=two
+horns of the Ram; (2) the Ram's belly; (3) the Pleiades; (4) Aldebaran;
+(5) three stars in Orion's head; (6) ditto in Orion's shoulder; (7) two
+stars above the Twins; (8) Lion's nose and first summer station; (9)
+Lion's eye; (1O) Lion's forehead; (11) Lion's mane; (12) Lion's heart;
+(13) the Dog, two stars in Virgo; (14) Spica Virginis; (15) foot of
+Virgo; (16) horns of Scorpio; (17) the Crown; (18) heart of Scorpio;
+(19) tail of Scorpio; (2O) stars in Pegasus; (21) where no
+constellation appears; (22) the Slaughterer's luck; (23) Glutton's
+luck; (24) Luck of Lucks, stars in Aquarius; (25) Luck of Tents, stars
+in Aquarius; (26) the fore-lip or spout of Urn; (27) hind lip of Urn;
+and (28) in navel of Fish's belly (Batn al-Hϊt); of these 28, to each
+of the four seasons 7 are allotted.
+
+[FN#420] The Hebrew absey, still used by Moslems in chronograms. For
+mnemonic purposes the 28 letters are distributed into eight words of
+which the first and second are Abjad and Hawwaz. The last six letters
+in two words (Thakhiz and Zuzigh) are Arabian, unknown to the Jews and
+not found in Syriac.
+
+[FN#421] Arab. "Zindνk;" properly, one who believes in two gods (the
+old Persian dualism); in books an atheist, i.e. one who does not
+believe in a god or gods; and, popularly, a free-thinker who denies the
+existence of a Supreme Being, rejects revelation for the laws of Nature
+imprinted on the heart of man and for humanity in its widest sense.
+Hence he is accused of permitting incestuous marriages and other
+abominations. We should now call him (for want of something better) an
+Agnostic.
+
+[FN#422] Koran xxxi. 34. The words may still be applied to
+meteorologists especially of the scientific school. Even the
+experienced (as the followers of the late Mathieu de la Drτme) reckon
+far more failures than successes. The Koranic passage enumerates five
+things known only to Allah; Judgment-day; rain; sex of child in womb;
+what shall happen to-morrow and where a man shall die.
+
+[FN#423] The fifth and seventh months (January and March) of the Coptic
+year which, being solar, is still used by Arab and Egyptian
+meteorologists. Much information thereon will be found in the "Egyptian
+Calendar" by Mr. Mitchell, Alexandria, 1876. It bears the appropriate
+motto "Anni certus modus apud solos semper Egyptios fuit." (Macrobius.)
+See also Lane M.E., chapt. ix.
+
+[FN#424] Vulg. Kiyαk; the fourth month, beginning 9th—1Oth
+
+
+December. The first month is Tϊt, commencing 1Oth—11th
+
+
+September.
+
+
+
+[FN#425] The 8th and 12th months partly corresponding with April and
+August: Hαtϊr is the 3rd (November) and AmshRr the 6th (February).
+
+[FN#426] Moslems have been compelled to adopt infidel names for the
+months because Mohammed's Koranic rejection of Nasy or intercalation
+makes their lunar months describe the whole circle of the seasons in a
+cycle of about thirty-three and a half years. Yet they have retained
+the terms which contain the original motive of the denomination. The
+first month is Muharram, the "Holy," because war was forbidden; it was
+also known as Safar No. 1. The second Safar="Emptiness," because during
+the heats citizens left the towns and retired to Tαif and other cool
+sites. Rabν'a (first and second) alluded to the spring-pasturages;
+Jumαdα (first and second) to the "hardening" of the dry ground and,
+according to some, to the solidification, freezing, of the water in the
+highlands. Rajab (No.7)="worshipping," especially by sacrifice, is also
+known as Al-Asamm the deaf; because being sacred, the rattle of arms
+was unheard. Sha'abαn="collecting," dispersing, ruining, because the
+tribal wars recommenced: Ramazan (intensely hot) has been explained and
+Shawwαl (No. 10) derives from Shaul (elevating) when the he-camels
+raise their tails in rut. Zϊ'l-Ka'adah, the sedentary, is the rest time
+of the year, when fighting is forbidden and Zu'l-Hijjah explains itself
+as the pilgrimage-month.
+
+[FN#427] The lowest of the seven.
+
+[FN#428] Koran xxxvii. 5.
+
+[FN#429] Arab. "Faylasϊf," an evident corruption from the Greek.
+Amongst the vulgar it denotes a sceptic, an atheist; much the same a
+"Frammαsϊn" or Freemason. The curious reader will consult the Dabistan,
+vol. iii. chapt. xi. p. 138 et seq. "On the Religion of the Wise"
+(philosophi), and, Beaconsfield's theft from Shaftesbury.
+
+[FN#430] Koran xxxvi. 37-38.
+
+[FN#431] Koran xxii. 7. The Hour i.e. of Judgment.
+
+[FN#432] Koran xx. 58. The Midrasch Tanchumah on Exod. vii. gives a
+similar dialogue between Pharaoh and Moses. (Rodwell, in loco.)
+
+[FN#433] Arab. "Sham'ϊn" or "Shim'ϊn," usually applied to Simon
+
+
+Peter (as in Acts xv. 14). But the text alludes to Saint Simeon
+
+
+(Luke ii. 25-35). See Gospel of Infancy (ii. 8) and especially
+
+
+the Gospel of Nicodemus (xii. 3) which makes him a High-Priest.
+
+
+
+[FN#434] Sαlih the Patriarch's she-camel, miraculously produced from
+the rock in order to convert the Thamϊd-tribe. (Koran vii.)
+
+[FN#435] When Abu Bakr was hiding with Mohammed in a cave on the Hill
+Al-Saur (Thaur or Thϊr, Pilgrimage ii. 131) South of Meccah, which must
+not be confounded with the cave on Jabal Hirα now called Jabal Nϊr on
+the way to Arafat (Pilgrimage iii. 246), the fugitives were protected
+by a bird which built her nest at the entrance (according to another
+legend it was curtained by a spider's web), whilst another bird (the
+crow of whom I shall presently speak) tried to betray them. The first
+bird is popularly supposed to have been a pigeon, and is referred to by
+Hudibras,
+
+ "Th' apostles of this fierce religion
+
+
+ Like Mahomet, were ass and widgeon."
+
+
+
+The ass I presume alludes to the marvellous beast Al-Burαk which the
+Greeks called from (Euthymius in Pocock, Spec. A.H. p.144) and which
+Indian Moslems picture with human face, ass's ears, equine body and
+peacock's wings and tail. The "widgeon" I presume to be a mistake or a
+misprint for pigeon.
+
+[FN#436] The Arabs are not satisfied with the comparative moderation of
+the Hebrew miracle, and have added all manner of absurdities.
+(Pilgrimage ii. 288.)
+
+[FN#437] Koran lxxxi. 18. Sale translates "by the morning when it
+appeareth;" and the word (tanaffus) will bear this meaning. Mr. Rodwell
+prefers, "By the dawn when it clears away the darkness by its breath."
+
+[FN#438] As a rule Moslems are absurdly ignorant of arithmetic and
+apparently cannot master it. Hence in Egypt they used Copts for
+calculating-machines and further East Hindds. The mildest numerical
+puzzle, like the above, is sure of success.
+
+[FN#439] The paradiseal tree which supplied every want. Mohammed
+borrowed it from the Christians (Rev. xxi. 10-21 and xxii. 1-2) who
+placed in their paradise the Tree of Life which bears twelve sorts of
+fruits and leaves of healing virtue. (See also the 3rd book of Hermas,
+his Similitudes.) The Hebrews borrowed it from the Persians. Amongst
+the Hindus it appears as "Kalpavriksha;" amongst the Scandinavians as
+Yggdrasil. The curious reader will consult Mr. James Fergusson's
+learned work, "Tree and Serpent Worship," etc. London, 1873.
+
+[FN#440] Aaron's Rod becomes amongst Moslems (Koran vii. 110) Moses'
+Staff; the size being that of a top-mast. (Pilgrimage i. 300, 301.) In
+Koran xx. 18, 19, we find a notice of its uses; and during the Middle
+Ages it reappeared in the Staff of Wamba the Goth (A.D.672-680) the
+witch's broomstick was its latest development.
+
+[FN#441] Christ, say the Eutychians, had only one nature, the divine;
+so he was crucified in effigy.
+
+[FN#442] Jesus is compared with Adam in the Koran (chapt. iii.): his
+titles are Kalαmu 'llah (word of God) because engendered without a
+father, and Rϊhu 'llah (breath of God) because conceived by Gabriel in
+the shape of a beautifui youth breathing into the Virgin's vulva. Hence
+Moslems believe in a "miraculous conception" and consequently determine
+that one so conceived was, like Elias and Khizr, not subject to death;
+they also hold him born free from "original sin" (a most sinful
+superstition), a veil being placed before the Virgin and Child against
+the Evil One who could not touch them. He spoke when a babe in cradle;
+he performed miracles of physic; he was taken up to Heaven; he will
+appear as the forerunner of Mohammed on the White Tower of Damascus,
+and finally he will be buried at Al-Medinah. The Jews on the other hand
+speak of him as "that man:" they hold that he was begotten by Joseph
+during the menstrual period and therefore a born magician. Moreover he
+learned the Sham ha-maphrash or Nomen tetragrammaton, wrote it on
+parchment and placed it in an incision in his thigh, which closed up on
+the Name being mentioned (Buxtorf, Lex Talmud, 25-41). Other details
+are given in the Toldoth Jesu (Historia Joshuζ Nazareni). This note
+should be read by the eminent English littιrateur who discovered a
+fact, well known to Locke and Carlyle, that "Mohammedans are
+Christians." So they are and something more.
+
+[FN#443] In the Kalamdαn, or pen-case, is a little inkstand of metal
+occupying the top of the long, narrow box.
+
+[FN#444] A fair specimen of the riddle known as the "surprise."
+
+[FN#445] Koran xli. 10.
+
+[FN#446] Koran xxxvi. 82.
+
+[FN#447] Here we enter upon a series of disputed points. The Wahhαbis
+deny the intercession of the Apostle (Pilgrimage ii. 76-77). The
+Shi'ahs place Ali next in dignity to Mohammed and there is a sect
+(Ali-Ilαhi) which believes him to be an Avatar or incarnation of the
+Deity. For the latter the curious reader will consult the "Dabistan,"
+ii. 451. The Koran by its many contradictions seems to show that
+Mohammed never could make up his own mind on the subject, thinking
+himself at times an intercessor and then sharply denying all
+intercession.
+
+[FN#448] Arab. "Kanjifah"=a pack of cards; corrupted from the Persian
+"Ganjνfah." We know little concerning the date or origin of this game
+in the East, where the packs are quite unlike ours.
+
+[FN#449] It is interesting to compare this account with the pseudo Ovid
+and with Tale clxvi. in Gesta "Of the game of Schaci." Its Schacarium
+is the chess-board. Rochus (roccus, etc.) is not from the Germ. Rock (a
+coat) but from Rukh (Pers. a hero, a knight-errant) Alphinus (Ital.
+Alfino) is Al-Firzαn (Pers. science, wise).
+
+[FN#450] Arab, "Baydak" or "Bayzak"; a corruption of the Persian
+"Piyαdah"=a footman, peon, pawn; and proving whence the Arabs derived
+the game. The Persians are the readiest backgammon-players known to me,
+better even than the Greeks; they throw the dice from the hand and
+continue foully abusing the fathers and mothers of the "bones" whilst
+the game lasts. It is often played in the intervals of dinner by the
+higher classes in Persia.
+
+[FN#451] Metaphor from loading camels and mules. To "eat" a piece is to
+take it.
+
+[FN#452] Arab. "Bilαbil"; a plural of "Bulbul" with a double entendre
+balαbil (plur. of ballalah)=heart's troubles, and "balα, bul"=a
+calamity, nay, etc.
+
+[FN#453] The popular English idea of the Arab horse is founded upon
+utter unfact. Book after book tells us, "There are three distinct
+breeds of Arabians -the Attechi, a very superior breed; the Kadishi,
+mixed with these and of little value; and the Kochlani, highly prized
+and very difficult to procure." "Attechi" may be At-Tαzi (the Arab
+horse, or hound) or some confusion with "At" (Turk.) a horse. "Kadish"
+(Gadish or Kidish) is a nag; a gelding, a hackney, a "pacer" (generally
+called "Rahwαn"). "Kochlani" is evidently "Kohlαni," the Kohl-eyed,
+because the skin round the orbits is dark as if powdered. This is the
+true blue blood; and the bluest of all is "Kohlαni al-Ajϊz" (of the old
+woman) a name thus accounted for. An Arab mare dropped a filly when in
+flight; her rider perforce galloped on and presently saw the foal
+appear in camp, when it was given to an old woman for nursing and grew
+up to be famous. The home of the Arab horse is the vast plateau of
+Al-Najd: the Tahαmah or lower maritime regions of Arabia, like Malabar,
+will not breed good beasts. The pure blood all descends from five
+collateral lines called Al-Khamsah (the Cinque). Literary and pedantic
+Arabs derive them from the mares of Mohammed, a native of the dry and
+rocky region, Al-Hijaz, whither horses are all imported. Others go back
+(with the Koran, chapt. xxviii.) to Solomon, possibly Salmαn, a
+patriarch fourth in descent from Ishmael and some 600 years older than
+the Hebrew King. The Badawi derive the five from Rabν'at al-Faras (R.
+of the mare) fourth in descent from Adnαn, the fount of Arab genealogy.
+But they differ about the names: those generally given are Kahilan
+(Kohaylat), Saklαwi (which the Badawin pronounce Saglαwi), Abayαn, and
+Hamdαni; others substitute Manαkhi (the long-maned), Tanνs and Jalfϊn.
+These require no certificate amongst Arabs; for strangers a simple
+statement is considered enough. The Badawin despise all half-breeds
+(Arab sires and country mares), Syrian, Turkish, Kurdish and Egyptian.
+They call these (first mentioned in the reign of Ahmes, B.C. 1600) the
+"sons of horses"; as opposed to "sons of mares," or thorough-breds. Nor
+do they believe in city-bred animals. I have great doubts concerning
+our old English sires, such as the Darley Arabian which looks like a
+Kurdish half-bred, the descendant of those Cappadocians so much prized
+by the Romans: in Syria I rode a "Harfϊshν" (Kurd) the very image of
+it. There is no difficulty in buying Arab stallions except the price.
+Of course the tribe does not like to part with what may benefit the
+members generally; but offers of £500 to £1,000 would overcome men's
+scruples. It is different with mares, which are almost always the joint
+property of several owners. The people too dislike to see a hat on a
+thorough-bred mare: "What hast thou done that thou art ridden by that
+ill-omened Kafir?" the Badawin used to mutter when they saw a highly
+respectable missionary at Damascus mounting a fine Ruwalα mare. The
+feeling easily explains the many wars about horses occurring in Arab
+annals, e.g. about Dαhis and Ghabrα. (C. de Perceval, Essas, vol.ii.)
+
+[FN#454] The stricter kind of Eastern Jew prefers to die on the floor,
+not in bed, as was the case with the late Mr. Emmanuel Deutsch, who in
+his well-known article on the Talmud had the courage to speak of "Our
+Saviour." But as a rule the Israelite, though he mostly appears as a
+Deist, a Unitarian, has a fund of fanatical feelings which crop up in
+old age and near death. The "converts" in Syria and elsewhere, whose
+Judaism is intensified by "conversion," when offers are made to them by
+the missionaries repair to the Khαkhαm (scribe) and, after abundant
+wrangling determine upon a modus vivendi. They are to pay a proportion
+of their wages, to keep careful watch in the cause of Israel and to die
+orthodox. In Istria there is a legend of a Jew Prior in a convent who
+was not discovered till he announced himself most unpleasantly on his
+death-bed. For a contrary reason to Jewish humility, the Roman Emperors
+preferred to die standing.
+
+[FN#455] He wished to die in a state of ceremonial purity; as has
+before been mentioned.
+
+[FN#456] Arab. "Badal": in Sind (not to speak of other places) it was
+customary to hire a pauper "badal" to be hanged in stead of a rich man.
+Sir Charles Napier signed many a death-warrant before he ever heard of
+the practice.
+
+[FN#457] Arab. "La'an" = curse. The word is in every mouth though
+strongly forbidden by religion. Even of the enemies of Al-Islam the
+learned say, "Ila'an Yezνd wa lα tazνd" = curse Yezid but do not exceed
+(i.e. refrain from cursing the others). This, however, is in the
+Shafi'ν school and the Hanafνs do not allow it (Pilgrimage i. 198).
+Hence the Moslem when scrupulous uses na'al (shoe) for la'an (curse) as
+Ina'al abϊk (for Ila'an abu'-k) or, drat (instead of damn) your father.
+Men must hold Supreme Intelligence to be of feeble kind if put off by
+such miserable pretences.
+
+[FN#458] Koran vi. 44, speaking of the Infidels. It is a most unamiable
+chapter, with such assertions as "Allah leadeth into error whom He
+pleaseth," etc.
+
+[FN#459] Alluding to the "formication" which accompanies a stroke of
+paralysis.
+
+[FN#460] Pronounce Zool Karnayn.
+
+[FN#461] i.e. the Koranic and our mediζval Alexander, Lord of the two
+Horns (East and West) much "Matagrobolized" and very different from him
+of Macedon. The title is variously explained, from two protuberances on
+his head or helm, from two long locks and, possibly, from the ram-horns
+of Jupiter Ammon. The anecdote in the text seems suggested by the
+famous interview (probably a canard) with Diogenes: see in the Gesta,
+Tale cxlvi., "The answer of Diomedes the Pirate to Alexander." Iskandar
+was originally called Marzbαn (Lord of the Marches), son of Marzabah;
+and, though descended from Yunαn, son of Japhet, the eponymus of the
+Greeks, was born obscure, the son of an old woman. According to the
+Persians he was the son of the Elder Dαrαb (Darius Codomannus of the
+Kayanian or Second dynasty), by a daughter of Philip of Macedon; and
+was brought up by his grandfather. When Abraham and Isaac had rebuilt
+the Ka'abah they foregathered with him and Allah sent him forth against
+the four quarters of the earth to convert men to the faith of the
+Friend or to cut their throats; thus he became one of the four
+world-conquerors with Nimrod, Solomon, Bukht al-Nasr (Nabochodonosor);
+and he lived down two generations of men. His Wazir was Aristϊ (the
+Greek Aristotle) and he carried a couple of flags, white and black,
+which made day and night for him and facilitated his conquests. At the
+end of Persia, where he was invited by the people, on account of the
+cruelty of his half brother Darab II., he came upon two huge mountains
+on the same line, behind which dwelt a host of abominable pygmies, two
+spans high, with curious eyes, ears which served as mattresses and
+coverlets, huge fanged mouths, lions' claws and hairy hind quarters.
+They ate men, destroyed everything, copulated in public and had swarms
+of children. These were Yαjϊj and Mαjϊj (Gog and Magog) descendants of
+Japhet. Sikandar built against them the famous wall with stones
+cemented and riveted by iron and copper. The "Great Wall" of China, the
+famous bulwark against the Tartars, dates from B.C. 320 (Alexander of
+Macedon died B.C. 324); and as the Arabs knew Canton well before
+Mohammed's day, they may have built their romance upon it. The Guebres
+consigned Sikandar to hell for burning the Nusks or sections of the
+Zendavesta.
+
+[FN#462] These terrific preachments to Eastern despots (who utterly
+ignore them) are a staple produce of Oriental tale-literature and form
+the chiaro-oscuro, as it were, of a picture whose lights are brilliant
+touches of profanity and indelicate humour. It certainly has the charm
+of contrast. Much of the above is taken from the Sikandar-nameh
+(Alexander Book) of the great Persian poet, Nizαmi, who flourished A.H.
+515-597, between the days of Firdausi (ob. A.D.1021) and Sa'adi (ob.
+A.D. 1291). In that romance Sikandar builds, "where the sun goes down,"
+a castle of glittering stone which kills men by causing excessive
+laughter and surrounds it with yellow earth like gold. Hence the City
+of Brass. He also converts, instead of being converted by, the savages
+of the text. He finds a stone of special excellence which he calls
+Almαs (diamond); and he obtains it from the Valley of Serpents by
+throwing down flesh to the eagles. Lastly he is accompanied by
+"Bilνnas" or "Bilνnus," who is apparently Apollonius of Tyana.
+
+[FN#463] I have explained the beautiful name in Night cclxxxix:
+
+
+He is stil famous for having introduced into Persia the fables of
+
+
+Pilpay (Bidyapati, the lord of lore) and a game which the genius
+
+
+of Persia developed into chess.
+
+
+
+[FN#464] Here we find an eternal truth, of which Malthusians ever want
+reminding; that the power of a nation simply consists in its numbers of
+fighting men and in their brute bodily force. The conquering race is
+that which raises most foot-pounds: hence the North conquers the South
+in the Northern hemisphere and visa versa.
+
+[FN#465] Arab. "Wayha," not so strong as "Woe to," etc. Al-Hariri often
+uses it as a formula of affectionate remonstrance.
+
+[FN#466] As a rule (much disputed) the Sayyid is a descendant from
+Mohammed through his grandchild Hasan, and is a man of the pen; whereas
+the Sharif derives from Husayn and is a man of the sword. The Najνb
+al-taraf is the son of a common Moslemah by a Sayyid, as opposed to the
+"Najib al-tarafayn," when both parents are of Apostolic blood. The
+distinction is not noticed in Lane's "Modern Egyptians". The Sharif is
+a fanatic and often dangerous, as I have instanced in Pilgrimage iii.
+132.
+
+[FN#467] A theologian of Bassorah (eighth century): surnamed Abϊ Yahyα.
+The prayer for mercy denotes that he was dead when the tale was
+written.
+
+[FN#468] A theologian of Bassorah (eighth century).
+
+[FN#469] Arab. "Musallα"; lit. a place of prayer; an oratory, a chapel,
+opp. to "Jαmi'" = a (cathedral) mosque.
+
+[FN#470] According to all races familiar with the negro, a calf like a
+shut fist planted close under the ham is, like the "cucumber shin" and
+"lark heel", a good sign in a slave. Shapely calves and well-made legs
+denote the idle and the ne'er-do-well. I have often found this true
+although the rule is utterly empirical. Possibly it was suggested by
+the contrast of the nervous and lymphatic temperaments.
+
+[FN#471] These devotees address Allah as a lover would his beloved. The
+curious reader will consult for instances the Dabistan on Tasawwuf (ii.
+221; i.,iii. end, and passim).
+
+[FN#472] Arab. "Ma'rifat," Pers. Dαnish; the knowledge of the Truth.
+The seven steps are (1) Sharν'at, external law like night; (2) Tarνkat,
+religious rule like the stars; (3) Hakνkat, reality, truth like the
+moon; (4) Ma'arifat like the sun; (5) Kurbat, proximity to Allah; (6)
+Wasνlat, union with Allah, and (7) Suknat, dwelling in Allah. (Dabistan
+iii.29.)
+
+[FN#473] Name of a fountain of Paradise: See Night xlix., vol. ii.,
+p.100.
+
+[FN#474] Arab. "Atbαk"; these trays are made of rushes, and the fans of
+palm-leaves or tail-feathers.
+
+[FN#475] Except on the two great Festivals when fasting is forbidden.
+The only religion which has shown common sense in this matter is that
+of the Guebres or Parsis: they consider fasting neither meritorious nor
+lawful; and they honour Hormuzd by good living "because it keeps the
+soul stronger." Yet even they have their food superstitions, e.g. in
+Gate No. xxiv.: "Beware of sin specially on the day thou eatest flesh,
+for flesh is the diet of Ahriman." And in India the Guebres have copied
+the Hindus in not slaughtering horned cattle for the table.
+
+[FN#476] Arab. "Jallαbiyah," a large-sleeved robe of coarse stuff worn
+by the poor.
+
+[FN#477] His fear was that his body might be mutilated by the fall.
+
+[FN#478] The phrase means "offering up many and many a prayer."
+
+[FN#479] A saying of Mohammed is recorded "Al-fakru fakhrν" (poverty is
+my pride!), intelligible in a man who never wanted for anything. Here
+he is diametrically opposed to Ali who honestly abused poverty; and the
+Prophet seems to have borrowed from Christendom, whose "Lazarus and
+Dives" shows a man sent to Hell because he enjoyed a very modified
+Heaven in this life and which suggested that one of the man's greatest
+miseries is an ecclesiastical virtue—"Holy Poverty"—represented in the
+Church as a bride young and lovely. If a "rich man can hardly enter the
+kingdom" what must it be with a poor man whose conditions are far more
+unfavourable? Going to the other extreme we may say that Poverty is the
+root of all evil and the more so as it curtails man's power of
+benefiting others. Practically I observe that those who preach and
+praise it the most, practise it the least willingly: the ecclesiastic
+has always some special reasons, a church or a school is wanted; but
+not the less he wishes for more money. In Syria this Holy Poverty leads
+to strange abuses. At Bayrut I recognised in most impudent beggers
+well-to-do peasants from the Kasrawαn district, and presently found out
+that whilst their fields were under snow they came down to the coast,
+enjoyed a genial climate and lived on alms. When I asked them if they
+were not ashamed to beg, they asked me if I was ashamed of following in
+the footsteps of the Saviour and Apostles. How much wiser was Zoroaster
+who found in the Supreme Paradise (Minuwαn-minu) "many persons, rich in
+gold and silver who had worshipped the Lord and had been grateful to
+Him." (Dabistan i. 265.)
+
+[FN#480] Koran vii. 52.
+
+[FN#481] Arab. "Al-bayt" = the house. The Arabs had probably learned
+this pleasant mode of confinement from the Chinese whose Kea or Cangue
+is well known. The Arabian form of it is "Ghull," or portable pillory,
+which reprobates will wear on Judgment Day.
+
+[FN#482] This commonest conjuring trick in the West becomes a miracle
+in the credulous East.
+
+[FN#483] Arab. "Kαnϊn"; the usual term is Mankal (pron. Mangal) a pan
+of copper or brass. Some of these "chafing-dishes" stand four feet high
+and are works of art. Lane (M.E. chapt. iv) gives an illustration of
+the simpler kind, together with the "Azikν," a smaller pan for heating
+coffee. See Night dxxxviii.
+
+[FN#484] See vol. iii., p.239. The system is that of the Roman As and
+Unciae. Here it would be the twenty-fourth part of a dinar or miskal;
+something under 5d. I have already noted that all Moslem rulers are
+religiously bound to some handicraft, if it be only making toothpicks.
+Mohammed abolished kingship proper as well as priestcraft.
+
+[FN#485] Al-Islam, where salvation is found under the shade of the
+swords.
+
+[FN#486] Moslems like the Classics (Aristotle and others) hold the
+clitoris (Zambϊr) to be the sedes et scaturigo veneris which, says
+Sonnini, is mere profanity. In the babe it protrudes beyond the labiζ
+and snipping off the head forms female circumcision. This rite is
+supposed by Moslems to have been invented by Sarah who so mutilated
+Hagar for jealousy and was afterwards ordered by Allah to have herself
+circumcised at the same time as Abraham. It is now (or should be)
+universal in Al-Islam and no Arab would marry a girl "unpurified" by
+it. Son of an "uncircumcised" mother (Ibn al-bazrα) is a sore insult.
+As regards the popular idea that Jewish women were circumcised till the
+days of Rabbi Gershom (A.D.1000) who denounced it as a scandal to the
+Gentiles, the learned Prof. H. Graetz informs me, with some
+indignation, that the rite was never practised and that the great Rabbi
+contended only against polygamy. Female circumcision, however, is I
+believe the rule amongst some outlying tribes of Jews. The rite is the
+proper complement of male circumcision, evening the sensitiveness of
+the genitories by reducing it equally in both sexes: an uncircumcised
+woman has the venereal orgasm much sooner and oftener than a
+circumcised man, and frequent coitus would injure her health; hence I
+believe, despite the learned historian, that it is practised by some
+Eastern Jews. "Excision" is universal amongst the negroids of the Upper
+Nile (Werne), the Somαl and other adjacent tribes. The operator, an old
+woman, takes up the instrument, a knife or razor-blade fixed into a
+wooden handle, and with three sweeps cuts off the labia and the head of
+the clitoris. The parts are then sewn up with a packneedle and a thread
+of sheepskin; and in Dar-For a tin tube is inserted for the passage of
+urine. Before marriage the bridegroom trains himself for a month on
+beef, honey and milk; and, if he can open his bride with the natural
+weapon, he is a sworder to whom no woman in the tribe can deny herself.
+If he fails, he tries penetration with his fingers and by way of last
+resort whips out his whittle and cuts the parts open. The sufferings of
+the first few nights must be severe. The few Somαli prostitutes who
+practised at Aden always had the labiζ and clitoris excised and the
+skin showing the scars of coarse sewing. The moral effect of female
+circumcision is peculiar. While it diminishes the heat of passion it
+increases licentiousness, and breeds a debauchery of mind far worse
+than bodily unchastity, because accompanied by a peculiar cold cruelty
+and a taste for artificial stimulants to "luxury." It is the
+sexlessness of a spayed canine imitated by the suggestive brain of
+humanity.
+
+[FN#487] Koran vi. So called because certain superstitions about
+
+
+Cattle are therein mentioned.
+
+
+
+[FN#488] Koran iv. So called because it treats of marriages, divorces,
+etc.
+
+[FN#489] Sνdi (contracted from Sayyidν = my lord) is a title still
+applied to holy men in Marocco and the Maghrib; on the East African
+coast it is assumed by negro and negroid Moslems, e.g. Sidi Mubαrak
+Bombay; and "Seedy boy" is the Anglo-Indian term for a Zanzibar-man.
+"Khawwαs" is one who weaves palm-leaves (Khos) into baskets, mats,
+etc.: here, however, it may be an inherited name.
+
+[FN#490] i.e. in spirit; the "strangers yet" of poor dear Richard
+
+
+Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton.
+
+
+
+[FN#491] Al-Hakk = the Truth, one of the ninety-nine names of
+
+
+Allah.
+
+
+
+[FN#492] The Moslem is still unwilling to address Salαm (Peace be with
+you) to the Christian, as it is obligatory (Farz) to a Moslem (Koran,
+chapt. iv. and lxviii.). He usually evades the difficulty by saluting
+the nearest Moslem or by a change of words Allah Yahdν-k (Allah direct
+thee to the right way) or "Peace be upon us and the righteous
+worshipers of Allah" (not you) or Al-Samm (for Salam) alayka = poison
+to thee. The idea is old: Alexander of Alexandria in his circular
+letter describes the Arian heretics as "men whom it is not lawful to
+salute or to bid God-speed."
+
+[FN#493] Koran xxxvi. 82. I have before noted that this famous phrase
+was borrowed from the Hebrews, who borrowed it from the Egyptians.
+
+[FN#494] The story of Moses and Khizr has been noticed before. See
+Koran chapt. xviii. 64 et seq. It is also related, says Lane (ii. 642),
+by Al-Kazwνni in the Ajαib al-Makhlϊkαt. This must be "The Angel and
+the Hermit" in the Gesta Romanorum, Tale lxxx. which possibly gave rise
+to Parnell's Hermit; and Tale cxxvii. "Of Justice and Equity." The
+Editor says it "contains a beautiful lesson:" I can find only excellent
+excuses for "doing evil that good may come of it."
+
+[FN#495] Koran chapt. v.108.
+
+[FN#496] The doggrel is phenomenal.
+
+[FN#497] He went in wonder and softened heart to see the miracle of
+saintly affection.
+
+[FN#498] In Sufistical parlance, the creature is the lover and the
+Creator the Beloved: worldly existence is Disunion, parting, severance;
+and the life to come is Reunion. The basis of the idea is the human
+soul being a divinζ particula aurζ, a disjoined molecule from the Great
+Spirit, imprisoned in a jail of flesh; and it is so far valuable that
+it has produced a grand and pathetic poetry; but Common Sense asks,
+Where is the proof? And Reason wants to know, What does it all mean?
+
+[FN#499] Koran xiii. 41.
+
+[FN#500] Robinson Crusoe, with a touch of Arab prayerfulness.
+
+
+Also the story of the Knight Placidus in the Gesta (cx.),
+
+
+Boccaccio, etc.
+
+
+
+[FN#501] Arabs note two kinds of leprosy, "Bahak" or "Baras" the common
+or white, and "Juzam" the black leprosy; the leprosy of the joints, mal
+rouge. Both are attributed to undue diet as eating fish and drinking
+milk; and both are treated with tonics, especially arsenic. Leprosy is
+regarded by Moslems as a Scriptural malady on account of its prevalence
+amongst the Israelites who, as Manetho tells us, were expelled from
+Egypt because they infected and polluted the population. In mediζval
+Christendom an idea prevailed that the Saviour was a leper; hence the
+term "morbus sacer"; the honours paid to the sufferers by certain
+Saints and the Papal address (Clement III. A.D.1189) dilectis filiis
+leprosis. (Farrar's Life of Christ, i.149.) For the "disgusting and
+impetuous lust" caused by leprosy, see Sonnini (p.560) who visited the
+lepers at Canea in Candia. He is one of many who describes this
+symptom; but in the Brazil, where the foul malady still prevails, I
+never heard of it.
+
+[FN#502] A city in Irak; famous for the three days' battle which caused
+the death of Yezdegird, last Sassanian king.
+
+[FN#503] A mountain pass near Meccah famous for the "First Fealty of
+the Steep" (Pilgrimage ii. 126). The mosque was built to commemorate
+the event.
+
+[FN#504] To my surprise I read in Mr. Redhouse's "Mesnevi" (Trubner,
+1881), "Arafat, the mount where the victims are slaughtered by the
+pilgrims." (p.60). This ignorance is phenomenal. Did Mr. Redhouse never
+read Burckhardt or Burton?
+
+[FN#505] i.e. listening to the sermon.
+
+[FN#506] It is sad doggrel.
+
+[FN#507] This long story, containing sundry episodes and occupying
+fifty-three Nights, is wholly omitted by Lane (ii. 643) because "it is
+a compound of the most extravagant absurdities." He should have enabled
+his readers to form their own judgment.
+
+[FN#508] Called Jamasp (brother and minister of the ancient Persian
+King Gushtasp) in the translations of Trebutien and others from Von
+Hammer.
+
+[FN#509] The usual term of lactation in the East, prolonged to two
+years and a-half, which is considered the rule laid down by the Shara'
+or precepts of the Prophet. But it is not unusual to see children of
+three and even four years hanging to their mothers' breasts. During
+this period the mother does not cohabit with her husband; the
+separation beginning with her pregnancy. Such is the habit, not only of
+the "lower animals," but of all ancient peoples, the Egyptians (from
+whom the Hebrews borrowed it), the Assyrians and the Chinese. I have
+discussed its bearing upon pregnancy in my "City of the Saints": the
+Mormons insist upon this law of purity being observed; and the beauty,
+strength and good health of the younger generation are proofs of their
+wisdom.
+
+[FN#510] Thus distinguishing it from "Asal-kasab," cane honey or sugar.
+See vol. i., 271.
+
+[FN#511] The student of Hinduism will remember the Nαga-Kings and
+
+
+Queens (Melusines and Echidnζ) who guard the earth-treasures in
+
+
+Naga-land. The first appearance of the snake in literature is in
+
+
+Egyptian hieroglyphs, where he forms the letters f and t, and
+
+
+acts as a determinative in the shape of a Cobra di Capello
+
+
+(Coluber Naja) with expanded hood.
+
+
+
+[FN#512] In token that he was safe.
+
+[FN#513] "Akhir al-Zamαn." As old men praise past times, so prophets
+prefer to represent themselves as the last. The early Christians caused
+much scandal amongst the orderly law-loving Romans by their wild and
+mistaken predictions of the end of the world being at hand. The
+catastrophe is a fact for each man under the form of death; but the
+world has endured for untold ages and there is no apparent cause why it
+should not endure as many more. The "latter days," as the religious
+dicta of most "revelations" assure us, will be richer in sinners than
+in sanctity: hence "End of Time" is a facetious Arab title for a
+villain of superior quality. My Somali escort applied it to one thus
+distinguished: in 1875, I heard at Aden that he ended life by the spear
+as we had all predicted.
+
+[FN#514] Jahannam and the other six Hells are personified as feminine;
+and (woman-like) they are somewhat addicted to prolix speechification.
+
+[FN#515] These puerile exaggerations are fondly intended to act as
+nurses frighten naughty children.
+
+[FN#516] Alluding to an oft-quoted saying "Lau lα-ka, etc. Without thee
+(O Mohammed) We (Allah) had not created the spheres," which may have
+been suggested by "Before Abraham was, I am" (John viii. 58); and by
+Gate xci. of Zoroastrianism "O Zardusht for thy sake I have created the
+world" (Dabistan i. 344). The sentiment is by no means "Shi'ah," as my
+learned friend Prof. Aloys Springer supposes. In his Mohammed (p. 220)
+we find an extract from a sectarian poet, "For thee we dispread the
+earth; for thee we caused the waters to flow; for thee we vaulted the
+heavens." As Baron Alfred von Kremer, another learned and experienced
+Orientalist, reminds me, the "Shi'ahs" have always shown a decided
+tendency to this kind of apotheosis and have deified or quasi-deified
+Ali and the Imams. But the formula is first found in the highly
+orthodox Burdah poem of Al-Busiri:—
+
+"But for him (Lau lα-hu) the world had never come out of nothingness."
+
+Hence it has been widely diffused. See Les Aventures de Kamrup (pp.
+146-7) and Les uvres de Wali (pp. 51-52), by M. Garcin de Tassy and the
+Dabistan (vol. i. pp. 2-3).
+
+[FN#517] Arab. "Sνmiyα" from the Pers., a word apparently built on the
+model of "Kαmiyα" = alchemy, and applied, I have said, to fascination,
+minor miracles and white magic generally like the Hindu "Indrajal." The
+common term for Alchemy is Ilm al-Kαf (the K-science) because it is not
+safe to speak of it openly as Alchemy.
+
+[FN#518] Mare Tenebrarum = Sea of Darknesses; usually applied to the
+"mournful and misty Atlantic."
+
+[FN#519] Some Moslems hold that Solomon and David were buried in
+Jerusalem, others on the shore of Lake Tiberias. Mohammed, according to
+the history of Al-Tabari (p. 56 vol. i. Duleux's "Chronique de Tabari")
+declares that the Jinni bore Solomon's corpse to a palace hewn in the
+rock upon an island surrounded by a branch of the "Great Sea" and set
+him on a throne, with his ring still on his finger, under a guard of
+twelve Jinns. "None hath looked upon the tomb save only two, Affan who
+took Bulukiya as his companion: with extreme pains they arrived at the
+spot, and Affan was about to carry off the ring when a thunderbolt
+consumed him. So Bulukiya returned."
+
+[FN#520] Koran xxxviii. 34, or, "art the liberal giver."
+
+[FN#521] i.e. of the last trumpet blown by the Archangel Israfil: an
+idea borrowed from the Christians. Hence the title of certain
+churches—ad Tubam.
+
+[FN#522] This may mean that the fruits were fresh and dried like dates
+or tamarinds (a notable wonder), or soft and hard of skin like grapes
+and pomegranates.
+
+[FN#523] Arab. "Ai-lksνr" meaning lit. an essence; also the
+philosopher's stone.
+
+[FN#524] Name of the Jinni whom Solomon imprisoned in Lake
+
+
+Tiberias (See vol. i., 41).
+
+
+
+[FN#525] Vulgarly pronounced "Jahannum." The second hell is usually
+assigned to Christians. As there are seven Heavens (the planetary
+orbits) so, to satisfy Moslem love of symmetry, there must be as many
+earths and hells under the earth. The Egyptians invented these grim
+abodes, and the marvellous Persian fancy worked them into poem.
+
+[FN#526] Arab. "Yαjϊj and Majuj," first named in Gen. x. 2, which gives
+the ethnology of Asia Minor, circ. B.C. 800. "Gomer" is the Gimri or
+Cymmerians; "Magog" the original Magi, a division of the Medes, "Javan"
+the Ionian Greeks, "Meshesh" the Moschi; and "Tires" the Turusha, or
+primitive Cymmerians. In subsequent times, "Magog" was applied to the
+Scythians, and modern Moslems determine from the Koran (chaps. xviii.
+and xxi.) that Yajuj and Majuj are the Russians, whom they call Moska
+or Moskoff from the Moskwa River,
+
+[FN#527] I attempt to preserve the original pun; "Mukarrabin" (those
+near Allah) being the Cherubim, and the Creator causing Iblis to draw
+near Him (karraba).
+
+[FN#528] A vulgar version of the Koran (chaps. vii.), which seems to
+have borrowed from the Gospel of Barnabas. Hence Adam becomes a manner
+of God-man.
+
+[FN#529] These wild fables are caricatures of Rabbinical legends which
+began with "Lilith," the Spirit-wife of Adam: Nature and her
+counterpart, Physis and Antiphysis, supply a solid basis for folk-lore.
+Amongst the Hindus we have Brahma (the Creator) and Viswakarmα, the
+anti-Creator: the former makes a horse and a bull and the latter
+caricatures them with an ass and a buffalo, and so forth.
+
+[FN#530] This is the "Lauh al-Mahfϊz," the Preserved Tablet, upon which
+are written all Allah's decrees and the actions of mankind good (white)
+and evil (black). This is the "perspicuous Book" of the Koran, chaps.
+vi. 59. The idea again is Guebre.
+
+[FN#531] i.e. the night before Friday which in Moslem parlance would be
+Friday night.
+
+[FN#532] Again Persian "Gαw-i-Zamνn" = the Bull of the Earth.
+
+
+"The cosmogony of the world," etc., as we read in the Vicar of
+
+
+Wakefield.
+
+
+
+[FN#533] The Calc. Edit. ii. 614. here reads by a clerical error
+"bull."
+
+[FN#534] i.e. Lakes and rivers.
+
+[FN#535] Here some abridgement is necessary, for we have another
+recital of what has been told more than once.
+
+[FN#536] This name, "King of Life," is Persian: "Tegh" or "Tigh" means
+a scimitar and "Bahrwαn," is, I conceive, a mistake for "Bihrϊn," the
+Persian name of Alexander the Great.
+
+[FN#537] Arab. "Mulαkαt" or meeting the guest which, I have said, is an
+essential part of Eastern ceremony, the distance from the divan, room,
+house or town being proportioned to his rank or consideration.
+
+[FN#538] Arab. "Sifr": whistling is held by the Badawi to be the speech
+of devils; and the excellent explorer Burckhardt got a bad name by the
+ugly habit.
+
+[FN#539] The Arabs call "Shikk" (split man) and the Persians
+"Nνmchahrah" (half-face) a kind of demon like a man divided
+longitudinally: this gruesome creature runs with amazing speed and is
+very cruel and dangerous. For the celebrated soothsayers "Shikk" and
+"Sαtih" see Chenery's Al-Hariri, p. 371.
+
+[FN#540] Arab. "Takht" (Persian) = a throne or a capital.
+
+[FN#541] Arab. "Wady al-Naml"; a reminiscence of the Koranic Wady
+(chaps. xxvii.), which some place in Syria and others in Tαif.
+
+[FN#542] This is the old, old fable of the River Sabbation which
+
+
+Pliny ((xxx). 18) reports as "drying up every Sabbath-day"
+
+
+(Saturday): and which Josephus reports as breaking the Sabbath by
+
+
+flowing only on the Day of Rest.
+
+
+
+[FN#543] They were keeping the Sabbath. When lodging with my Israelite
+friends at Tiberias and Safet, I made a point of never speaking to them
+(after the morning salutation) till the Saturday was over.
+
+[FN#544] Arab. "La'al" and "Yαkϊt," the latter also applied to the
+garnet and to a variety of inferior stones. The ruby is supposed by
+Moslems to be a common mineral thoroughly "cooked" by the sun, and
+produced only on the summits of mountains inaccessible even to
+Alpinists. The idea may have originated from exaggerated legends of the
+Badakhshαn country (supposed to be the home of the ruby) and its
+terrors of break-neck foot-paths, jagged peaks and horrid ravines:
+hence our "balas-ruby" through the Spanish corruption "Balaxe."
+Epiphanius, archbishop of Salamis in Cyprus, who died A.D. 403, gives,
+m a little treatise (De duodecim gemmis rationalis summi sacerdotis
+Hebrζorum Liber, opera Fogginii, Romae, 1743, p. 30), a precisely
+similar description of the mode of finding jacinths in Scythia. "In a
+wilderness in the interior of Great Scythia," he writes, "there is a
+valley begirt with stony mountains as with walls. It is inaccessible to
+man, and so excessively deep that the bottom of the valley is invisible
+from the top of the surrounding mountains. So great is the darkness
+that it has the effect of a kind of chaos. To this place certain
+criminals are condemned, whose task it is to throw down into the valley
+slaughtered lambs, from which the skin has been first taken off. The
+little stones adhere to these pieces of flesh. Thereupon the eagles,
+which live on the summits of the mountains, fly down following the
+scent of the flesh, and carry away the lambs with the stones adhering
+to them. They, then, who are condemned to this place watch until the
+eagles have finished their meal, and run and take away the stones."
+Epiphanius, who wrote this, is spoken of in terms of great respect by
+many ecclesiastical writers, and St. Jerome styles the treatise here
+quoted, "Egregium volumen, quod si legere volueris, plenissimam
+scientiam consequeris ," and, indeed, it is by no means improbable that
+it was from the account of Epiphanius that this story was first
+translated into Arabic. A similar account is given by Marco Polo and by
+Nicolς de Conti, as of a usage which they had heard was practiced in
+India, and the position ascribed to the mountain by Conti, namely,
+fifteen days' journey north of Vijanagar, renders it highly probable
+that Golconda was alluded to. He calls the mountain Albenigaras, and
+says that it was infested with serpents. Marco Polo also speaks of
+these serpents, and while his account agrees with that of Sindbad,
+inasmuch as the serpents, which are the prey of Sindbad's Rukh, are
+devoured by the Venetian's eagles, that of Conti makes the vultures and
+eagles fly away with the meat to places where they may be safe from the
+serpents. (Introd. p. xiii., India in the Fifteenth Century, etc., R.
+H. Major, London, Hakluyt Soc. MDCCCLVII.)
+
+[FN#545] Elder Victory: "Nasr" is a favourite name with Moslems.
+
+[FN#546] These are the "Swan-maidens" of whom Europe in late years has
+heard more than enough. It appears to me that we go much too far for an
+explanation of the legend; a high-bred girl is so like a swan in many
+points that the idea readily suggests itself. And it is also aided by
+the old Egyptian (and Platonic) belief in pre-existence and by the
+Rabbinic and Buddhistic doctrine of ante-natal sin, to say nothing of
+metempsychosis. (Joseph Ant. xvii.. 153.)
+
+[FN#547] The lines have occurred before. I quote Mr. Payne for variety.
+
+[FN#548] Arab. "Al-Khayαl": it is a synonym of "al-Tayf' and the
+nearest approach to our "ghost," as has been explained. In poetry it is
+the figure of the beloved seen when dreaming.
+
+[FN#549] He does not kiss her mouth because he intends to marry her.
+
+[FN#550] It should be "manifest" excellence. (Koran xxvii. 16.)
+
+[FN#551] The phrase is Koranic used to describe Paradise, and Damascus
+is a familiar specimen of a city under which a river, the Baradah,
+passes, distributed into a multitude of canals.
+
+[FN#552] It may be noted that rose-water is sprinkled on the faces of
+the "nobility and gentry, " common water being good enough for the
+commonalty. I have had to drink tea made in compliment with rose-water
+and did not enjoy it.
+
+[FN#553] The "Valley Flowery:" Zahrαn is the name of a place near
+
+
+Al-Medinah.
+
+
+
+[FN#554] The Proud or Petulant.
+
+[FN#555] i.e. Lion, Son of ( ?).
+
+[FN#556] i.e. Many were slain.
+
+[FN#557] I venture to draw attention to this battle-picture which is at
+once simple and highly effective.
+
+[FN#558] Anglicθ a quibble, evidently evasive.
+
+[FN#559] In text "Anα A'amil," etc., a true Egypto-Syrian vulgarism.
+
+[FN#560] i.e. magical formulζ. The context is purposely left vague.
+
+[FN#561] The repetition is a condescension, a token of kindness.
+
+[FN#562] This is the common cubic of 18 inches: the modern vary from 22
+to 26.
+
+[FN#563] I have noticed the two-humped Bactrian camel which the Syrians
+and Egyptians compare with an elephant. See p. 221 (the neo-Syrian)
+Book of Kalilah and Dimnah.
+
+[FN#564] The Noachian dispensation revived the Islam or true religion
+first revealed to Adam and was itself revived and reformed by Moses.
+
+[FN#565] Probably a corruption of the Turkish "Kara Tαsh" = black
+stone, in Arab. "Hαjar Jahannam" (hell-stone), lava, basalt.
+
+[FN#566] A variant of lines in Night xx., vol. i., 211.
+
+[FN#567] i.e. Daughter of Pride: the proud.
+
+[FN#568] In the Calc. Edit. by misprint "Maktab." Jabal Mukattam is the
+old sea-cliff where the Mediterranean once beat and upon whose
+North-Western slopes Cairo is built.
+
+[FN#569] Arab. "Kutb"; lie. an axle, a pole; next a prince; a high
+order or doyen in Sainthood especially amongst the Sufi-gnostics.
+
+[FN#570] Lit. "The Green" (Prophet), a mysterious personage confounded
+with Elijah, St. George and others. He was a Moslem, i.e. a ewe
+believer in the Islam of his day and Wazir to Kaykobad, founder of the
+Kayanian dynasty, sixth century B.C. We have before seen him as a
+contemporary of Moses. My learned friend Ch. Clermone-Ganneau traces
+him back, with a multitude of his similars (Proteus, Perseus, etc.), to
+the son of Osiris (p. 45, Horus et Saint Georges).
+
+[FN#571] Arab. "Waled," more ceremonious than "ibn." It is, by the by,
+the origin of our "valet" in its sense of boy or servant who is
+popularly addressed Yα waled. Hence I have seen in a French book of
+travels "un petit Iavelet."
+
+[FN#572] Arab. "Azal" = Eternity (without beginning); "Abad" =
+
+
+Infinity (eternity without end).
+
+
+
+[FN#573] The Moslem ritual for slaughtering (by cutting the throat) is
+not so strict as that of the Jews; but it requires some practice; and
+any failure in the conditions renders the meat impure, mere carrion
+(fatνs).
+
+[FN#574] The Wazir repeats all the words spoken by the Queen—but "in
+iteration there is no recreation."
+
+[FN#575] A phrase always in the Moslem's mouth: the slang meaning of
+"we put our trust in Allah" is "let's cut our stick."
+
+[FN#576] Koran liii. 14. This "Sidrat al-Muntahα" (Zizyphus lotus)
+stands m the seventh heaven on the right hand of Allah's throne: and
+even the angels may not pass beyond it.
+
+[FN#577] Arab. "Habash" the word means more than "Abyssinia" as it
+includes the Dankali Country and the sea-board, a fact unknown to the
+late Lord Stratford de Redcliffe when he disputed with the Porte. I
+ventured to set him right and suffered accordingly.
+
+[FN#578] Here ends vol. ii. of the Mac. Edit.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night, Volume 5, by Richard F. Burton
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