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+Project Gutenberg's Khaled, A Tale of Arabia, by F. Marion Crawford
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
+
+
+Title: Khaled, A Tale of Arabia
+
+Author: F. Marion Crawford
+
+Release Date: January 14, 2011 [EBook #34959]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KHALED, A TALE OF ARABIA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Christine Aldridge and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+(This file was produced from images generously made
+available by The Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Passages in italics are surrounded by _underscores_.
+Passages in bold are surrounded by =equal signs=.
+Passages in gothic fonts are surrounded by +plus signs+.
+
+Other transcription notes appear at the end of this e-text.
+
+
+
+
+KHALED: A TALE OF ARABIA
+
+
+[Illustration: M. M. & Co.]
+
+
+
+
+ KHALED
+
+ A Tale of Arabia
+
+ BY F. MARION CRAWFORD
+
+
+ +London+
+ MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
+ NEW YORK: THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ 1901
+
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT
+ 1891
+ BY
+ F. MARION CRAWFORD
+
+_First Edition (2 Vols. Globe 8vo) May 1891.
+Second Edition (1 Vol. Crown 8vo) November
+ 1891, 1892 Re-issue 1901_
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER I 1
+ CHAPTER II 22
+ CHAPTER III 43
+ CHAPTER IV 64
+ CHAPTER V 86
+ CHAPTER VI 107
+ CHAPTER VII 128
+CHAPTER VIII 150
+ CHAPTER IX 171
+ CHAPTER X 192
+ CHAPTER XI 213
+ CHAPTER XII 235
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+Khaled stood in the third heaven, which is the heaven of precious
+stones, and of Asrael, the angel of Death. In the midst of the light
+shed by the fruit of the trees Asrael himself is sitting, and will sit
+until the day of the resurrection from the dead, writing in his book the
+names of those who are to be born, and blotting out the names of those
+who have lived their years and must die. Each of the trees has seventy
+thousand branches, each branch bears seventy thousand fruits, each fruit
+is composed of seventy thousand diamonds, rubies, emeralds, carbuncles,
+jacinths, and other precious stones. The stature and proportions of
+Asrael are so great that his eyes are seventy thousand days' journey
+apart, the one from the other.
+
+Khaled stood motionless during ten months and thirteen days, waiting
+until Asrael should rest from his writing and look towards him. Then
+came the holy night called Al Kadr, the night of peace in which the
+Koran came down from heaven. Asrael paused, and raising his eyes from
+the scroll saw Khaled standing before him.
+
+Asrael knew Khaled, who was one of the genii converted to the faith on
+hearing Mohammed read the Koran by night in the valley Al Nakhlah. He
+wondered, however, when he saw him standing in his presence; for the
+genii are not allowed to pass even the gate of the first heaven, in
+which the stars hang by chains of gold, each star being inhabited by an
+angel who guards the entrance against the approach of devils.
+
+Asrael looked at Khaled in displeasure, therefore, supposing that he had
+eluded the heavenly sentinels and concealed an evil purpose. But Khaled
+inclined himself respectfully.
+
+'There is no Allah but Allah. Mohammed is the prophet of Allah,' he
+said, thus declaring himself to be of the Moslem genii, who are upright
+and are true believers.
+
+'How camest thou hither?' asked Asrael.
+
+'By the will of Allah, who sent his angel with me to the gate,' Khaled
+answered. 'I am come hither that thou mayest write down my name in the
+book of life and death, that I may be a man on earth, and after an
+appointed time thou shalt blot it out again and I shall die.'
+
+Asrael gazed at him and knew that this was the will of Allah, for the
+angels are thus immediately made conscious of the divine commands. He
+took up his pen to write, but before he had traced the first letter he
+paused.
+
+'This is the night Al Kadr,' he said. 'If thou wilt, tell me therefore
+thy story, for I am now at leisure to hear it.'
+
+'Thou knowest that I am of the upright genii,' Khaled answered, 'and I
+am well disposed towards men. In the city of Riad, in Arabia, there
+rules a powerful king, the Sultan of the kingdom of Nejed, blessed in
+all things save that he has no son to inherit his vast dominions. One
+daughter only has been born to him in his old age, of such marvellous
+beauty that even the Black Eyed Virgins enclosed in the fruit of the
+tree Sedrat, who wait for the coming of the faithful, would seem but
+mortal women beside her. Her eyes are as the deep water in the wells of
+Zobeideh when it is night and the stars are reflected therein. Her hair
+is finer than silk, red with henna, and abundant as the foliage of the
+young cypress tree. Her face is as fair as the kernels of young almonds,
+and her mouth is sweeter than the mellow date and more fragrant than
+'Ood mingled with ambergris. She possesses moreover all the virtues
+which become women, for she is as modest as she is beautiful and as
+charitable as she is modest. From all parts of Arabia and Egypt, and
+from Syria and from Persia, and even from Samarkand, from Afghanistan,
+and from India princes and kings' sons continually come to ask her in
+marriage, for the fame of her beauty and of her virtues is as wide as
+the world. But her father, desiring only her happiness, leaves the
+choice of a husband to herself, and for a long time she refused all her
+suitors. For there is in the palace at Riad a certain secret chamber
+from which she can observe all those who come and hear their
+conversation and see the gifts which they bring with them.
+
+'At last there came as a suitor an unbeliever, a prince of an island by
+the shores of India, beautiful as the moon, whose speech was honey, and
+who surpassed all the suitors in riches and in the magnificence of the
+presents he brought. For he came bearing with him a hundred pounds'
+weight of pure gold, and five hundred ounces of ambergris, and a great
+weight of musk and aloes and sandal wood, and rich garments without
+number, and many woven shawls of Kashmir, of which the least splendid
+was valued at a thousand sherifs of gold. An innumerable retinue
+accompanied him, and twenty elephants, and horses without number,
+besides camels.
+
+'The Sultan's daughter beheld this beautiful prince from her secret
+hiding-place, and all that he had brought with him. The Sultan received
+him with kindness and hospitality, but assured him that unless he would
+renounce idolatry and embrace the true faith he could not hope to
+succeed in his purpose. Thereupon he was much cast down, and soon
+afterwards, having received magnificent gifts in his turn, he would have
+departed on his way, disappointed and heavy at heart. But Zehowah sent
+for her father and entreated him to bid the young prince remain. "For it
+is not impossible," she said, "that he may yet be converted to the true
+faith. And have I the right to refuse to sacrifice my freedom when the
+sacrifice may be the means of converting an idolater to the right way?
+And if I marry him and go with him to his kingdom, shall we not make
+true believers of all his subjects, so that I shall deserve to be called
+the mother of the faithful like Ayesha, beloved by the Prophet, upon
+whom be peace?" The Sultan found it hard to oppose this argument which
+was founded upon virtue and edified in righteousness. He therefore
+entreated the Indian prince to remain and to profess Islam, promising
+the hand of Zehowah when he should be converted.
+
+'Then I heard the prince taking secret counsel with a certain old man
+who was with him, who shaved his face and wore white clothing and ate
+food which he prepared for himself alone. The prince told all, and then
+the old man counselled him in this way. "Speak whatsoever words they
+require of thee," he said, "for words are but garments wherewith to make
+the nakedness of truth modest and agreeable. And take the woman, and by
+and by, when we are returned to our own land, if she consent to worship
+thy gods, it is good; and if not, it is yet good, for thou shalt possess
+her as thy wife, and her unbelief shall be of consequence only to her
+own soul, but thy soul shall not be retarded in its progress." And the
+young prince was pleased, and promised to do as his counsellor advised
+him.
+
+'So I saw that he was false and that Zehowah's righteousness would be
+but the means to her sorrow if she were allowed to persist. Therefore in
+the night, when all were asleep in the palace, I entered into the room
+where the prince was lying, and I took him in my arms and flew with him
+to the midst of the Red Desert, and there I slew him and buried him in
+the sand, for I saw that he was a liar and had determined to be a
+hypocrite.
+
+'But Allah immediately sent an angel to destroy me because I had put to
+death a man who was about to become a believer, thereby killing his soul
+also, since he had not yet made profession of the faith. But I stood up
+and defended myself, saying that I had slain a hypocrite who had planned
+in his heart to carry away the daughter of a Moslem. Then the angel
+asked the truth of the prince's soul, which was sitting upon the red
+sand that covered the body. The soul answered, weeping, and said: "These
+are true words, and I am fuel for hell." "Have I then deserved death?"
+I asked. "I have killed an unbeliever." The angel answered that I had
+deserved life; and he would have left me and returned to paradise, but I
+would not let him go, and I besought him to entreat Allah that I might
+be allowed to live the life of a mortal man upon earth. "For," I said,
+"thou sayest that I deserve life. But even if thou destroy me not now I
+am only one of the genii, who shall all die at the first blast of the
+trumpet before the resurrection of the dead. Obtain for me therefore
+that I may have a soul and live a few years, and if I do good I shall
+then be with the faithful in paradise; and if not, I shall be bound with
+red-hot chains and burn everlastingly like a sinful man." The angel
+promised to intercede for me and departed. So I sat down upon the mound
+of red sand beside the soul of the Indian prince, to wait for the
+angel's coming again.
+
+'Then the soul reproached me angrily. "But for thee," it said, "I should
+have married Zehowah and returned to my own people, and although I
+purposed to be a hypocrite, yet in time Zehowah might have convinced me
+and I should have believed in my heart. For I now see that there is no
+Allah but Allah, and that Mohammed is the prophet of Allah. And I should
+perhaps have died full of years, a good Moslem, and should have entered
+paradise. Therefore I pray Allah that this may be remembered in thy
+condemnation." At these words I was very angry and reviled the soul,
+scoffing at it. "No doubt Allah will hear thy prayer," I answered, "and
+will hear also at the same time thy lies. And as for Zehowah, thinkest
+thou that she would have loved thee, even if she had married thee? I
+tell thee that her soul rejoices only in the light of the faith, and
+that although she might have married thee, she would have done so in the
+hope of turning thy people from the worship of false gods and not for
+love of thee. For she will never love any man." When I had said this the
+soul groaned aloud and then remained silent.
+
+'In a little while the angel came back, and I saw that his face was no
+longer clouded with anger. "Hear the judgment of Allah," he said.
+"Inasmuch as thou tookest the law upon thyself, which belonged to Allah
+alone, thou deservest to die. But in so far as thou hast indeed slain a
+hypocrite and an unbeliever thou hast earned life. Allah is just,
+merciful and forgiving. It is not meet that in thy lot there should be
+nothing but reward or nothing but punishment. Therefore thou shalt not
+yet receive a soul. Go hence to the third heaven and when the angel
+Asrael shall be at leisure he will write thy name in the book of the
+living. Then thou shalt return hither and go into the city of Riad
+bearing gifts. And Zehowah will accept thee in marriage, though she love
+thee not, for Allah commands that it be so. But if in the course of
+time this virtuous woman be moved to love, and say to thee, 'Khaled, I
+love thee,' then at that moment thou shalt receive an immortal soul, and
+if thy deeds be good thy soul shall enter paradise with the believers,
+but if not, thou shalt burn. Thus saith Allah. Thus art thou rewarded,
+indeed, but wisely and temperately, since thou hast not obtained life
+directly, but only the hope of life." Then the angel departed again,
+leading the way.
+
+'But the soul mocked me. "Thou that sayest of Zehowah that she will
+never love any man, thou art fallen into thine own trap," it cried. "For
+now, if she love thee not thou must perish. Truly, Allah heard my
+prayer." But I was filled with thankfulness and departed after the
+angel, leaving the soul sitting alone upon the red sand.
+
+'Thus have I told thee my history, O Asrael. And now I pray thee to
+write my name in the book of the living that I may fulfil the command of
+Allah and go my way to the city of Riad.'
+
+Then Asrael again took up his pen to write in the book.
+
+'Now thou art become a living man, though thou hast as yet no soul,' he
+said. 'And thou art subject to death by the sword and by sickness and by
+all those evils which spring up in the path of the living. And the day
+of thy death is already known to Allah who knows all things. But he is
+merciful and will doubtless grant thee a term of years in which to make
+thy trial. Nevertheless be swift in thy journey and speedy in all thou
+doest, for though mortal man may live for ever hereafter in glory, his
+years on earth are but as the breath which springs up in the desert
+towards evening and is gone before the stars appear.'
+
+Khaled made a salutation before Asrael and went out of the third heaven,
+and passed through the second which is of burnished steel, and through
+the first in which the stars hang by golden chains, where Adam waits for
+the day of the resurrection, and at the gate he found the angel who had
+led him, and who now lifted him in his arms and bore him back to the Red
+Desert; for as he was now a mortal man he could no longer move through
+the air like the genii between the outer gate of heaven and the earth.
+Nor could he any longer see the soul of the Indian prince sitting upon
+the sand, though it was still there. But the angel was visible to him.
+So they stood together, and the angel spoke to him.
+
+'Thou art now a mortal man,' he said, 'and subject to time as to death.
+To thee it seems but a moment since we went up together to the gate, and
+yet thou wast standing ten months and thirteen days before Asrael, and
+of the body of the man whom thou slewest only the bones remain.'
+
+So saying the angel blew upon the red sand and Khaled saw the white
+bones of the prince in the place where he had laid his body. So he was
+first made conscious of time.
+
+'Nearly a year has passed, and though Allah be very merciful to thee,
+yet he will assuredly not suffer thee to live beyond the time of other
+men. Make haste therefore and depart upon thine errand. Yet because thou
+art come into the world a grown man, having neither father nor mother
+nor inheritance, I will give thee what is most necessary for thy
+journey.'
+
+Then the angel took a handful of leaves from a ghada bush close by and
+gave them to Khaled, and as he gave them they were changed into a rich
+garment, and into linen, and into a shawl with which to make a turban,
+and shoes of red leather.
+
+'Clothe thyself with these,' said the angel.
+
+He broke a twig from the bush and placed it in Khaled's hand.
+Immediately it became a sabre of Damascus steel, in a sheath of leather
+with a belt.
+
+'Take this sword, which is of such fine temper that it will cleave
+through an iron headpiece and a shirt of mail. But remember that it is
+not a sword made by magic. Let thy magic reside in thy arm, wield it for
+the faith, and put thy trust in Allah.'
+
+Afterwards the angel took up a locust that was asleep on the sand
+waiting for the warmth of the morning sun. The angel held the locust up
+before Khaled, and then let it fall. But as it fell it became at once a
+beautiful bay mare with round black eyes wide apart and an arching tail
+which swept down to the sand like a river of silk.
+
+'Take this mare,' said the angel; 'she is of the pure breed of Nejed and
+as swift as the wind, but mortal like thyself.'
+
+'But how shall I ride her without saddle or bridle?' asked Khaled.
+
+'That is true,' answered the angel.
+
+He laid leaves of the ghada upon the mare's back and they became a
+saddle, and placed a twig in her mouth and it turned into a bit and
+bridle.
+
+Khaled thanked the angel and mounted.
+
+'Farewell and prosper, and put thy trust in Allah, and forget not the
+day of judgment,' the angel said, and immediately returned to paradise.
+
+So Khaled was left alone in the Red Desert, a living man obliged to
+shift for himself, liable to suffer hunger and thirst or to be slain by
+robbers, with no worldly possessions but his sword, his bay mare, and
+the clothes on his back. He knew moreover that he was more than two
+hundred miles from the city of Riad, and he knew that he could not
+accomplish this journey in less than four days. For when he was one of
+the genii he had often watched men toiling through desert on foot, and
+on camels and on horses, and had laughed with his companions at the slow
+progress they made. But now it was no laughing matter, for he had
+forgotten to ask the angel for dates and water, or even for a few
+handfuls of barley meal.
+
+He turned the mare's head westward of the Goat, in which is the polar
+star, for he remembered that when he had carried away the Indian prince
+he had flown toward the south-east, and as he began to gallop over the
+dark sand he laughed to himself.
+
+'What poor things are men and their horses,' he said. 'To destroy me,
+this mare need only stumble and lame herself, and we shall both die of
+hunger and thirst in the desert.'
+
+This reflection made him at first urge the mare to her greatest speed,
+for he thought that the sooner he should be out of the desert and among
+the villages beyond, the present danger would be passed. But presently
+he bethought him that the mare would be more likely to stumble and hurt
+herself in the dark if she were galloping than if she were moving at a
+moderate pace. He therefore drew bridle and patted her neck and made her
+walk slowly and cautiously forward.
+
+But this did not please him either, after a time, for he remembered that
+if he rode too slowly he must die of hunger before reaching the end of
+his journey.
+
+'Truly,' he said, 'one must learn what it is to be a man, in order to
+understand the uses of moderation. Gallop not lest thy horse fall and
+thou perish! Nor delay walking slowly by the road, lest thou die of
+thirst and hunger! Yet thou art not safe, for Al Walid died from
+treading upon an arrow, and Oda ibn Kais perished by perpetual sneezing.
+Allah is just and merciful! I will let the mare go at her own pace, for
+the end of all things is known.'
+
+The mare, being left to herself, began to canter and carried Khaled
+onward all night without changing her gait.
+
+'Nevertheless,' thought Khaled, 'if we are not soon out of the desert we
+shall suffer thirst during the day as well as hunger.'
+
+When there was enough daylight to distinguish a black thread from a
+white, Khaled looked before him and saw that there was nothing but red
+sand in hillocks and ridges, with ghada bushes here and there. But still
+the mare cantered on and did not seem tired. Soon the sun rose and it
+grew very hot, for the air was quite still and it was summer time.
+
+Khaled looked always before him and at last he saw a white patch in the
+distance and he knew that there must be water near it. For the water of
+the Red Desert whitens the sand. He therefore rode on cheerfully, for he
+was now thirsty, and the mare quickened her pace, for she also knew
+that she was near a drinking-place. But as they came close to the spot
+Khaled remembered that the preceding night had been Al Kadr, which falls
+between the seventh and eighth latter days of the month Ramadhan, during
+which the true believers neither eat nor drink so long as there is light
+enough to distinguish a white thread from a black one. So, when they
+reached the well, he let his mare drink her fill, and he took off the
+saddle and bridle and let her loose, after which he sat down with his
+head in the shade of a ghada bush to rest himself.
+
+'Allah is merciful,' he said; 'the night will come, and then I will
+drink.' For he dared not ride farther, for fear of not finding water
+again.
+
+Then again he was disturbed, for he had nothing to eat, and he thought
+that if he waited until night he would be hungry as well as thirsty. But
+presently he saw the mare trying to catch the locusts that flew about.
+She could only catch one or two, because it was now hot and they were
+able to fly quickly.
+
+'When the night comes,' he said, 'the locusts will lie on the ground and
+cling to the bushes, being stiff with the cold, and then I will eat my
+fill, and drink also.'
+
+Soon afterwards he fell asleep, being weary, and when he awoke it was
+night again and the stars were shining overhead. Khaled rose hastily and
+drank at the well and made ablutions and prayed, prostrating himself
+towards the Kebla. He remembered that he had slept a long time, and that
+he had not performed his devotions for a day and a night, so that he
+repeated them five times, to atone for the omission.
+
+The mare was eating the locusts that now lay in great black patches on
+the sand unable to move and save themselves. Khaled threw his cloak over
+a great number of them and gathered them together. Then he kindled a
+fire of ghada by striking sparks from the blade of his sword, and when
+he had made a bed of coals he roasted the locusts after pulling off
+their legs, and ate his fill. While he was doing this he was much
+disturbed in mind.
+
+'I have only just begun to live as a man,' he thought. 'Did I not stand
+ten months and thirteen days in the third heaven, unconscious of the
+passing of time? Who shall tell me whether I have not slept another ten
+months or more under this bush, like the companions of Al Rakim?'
+
+So, when he had done eating and had drunk again from the well, and had
+made the mare drink, he saddled her quickly and mounted, and cantered on
+through the night, guiding his course by the stars. On the following day
+he again found a well, but much later than before, and he suffered much
+from thirst as he watched his mare dip her black lips into the pool.
+Nevertheless he would not break his fast, for he was resolved to be a
+true believer in practice as well as in belief. So he fell asleep and
+awoke when it was night again, and ate and drank. In this way he
+journeyed several days until he began to see the hill country which
+borders the desert towards Riad, and he understood that he had been much
+farther away than he had imagined. But he reflected that Allah had
+doubtless intended to try his constancy by imposing upon him the journey
+through the desert during the days of fasting. But at last, he awoke one
+day just at sunset, instead of sleeping until the night. He had been
+travelling up the first slopes where the ground, though barren, is
+harder than in the desert, and had lain down in a hollow by an abundant
+spring. He rose now and made ablutions and prayed, as usual, towards
+Mecca; that is to say, being where he was, he turned his face to the
+west as the sun was setting. When he had finished he stood some minutes
+watching the red light over the desert below him, and then he was
+suddenly aware that the new moon was hanging just above the diminishing
+fire of the evening, and he knew that the fast of Ramadhan was over and
+that the feast of Bairam had begun. Thereat he was glad, and determined
+to take an unusual number of locusts for his evening meal.
+
+But when he looked about he saw that there were no locusts in the place,
+though there was grass, which his mare was eating. Then he looked
+everywhere near the well to see whether some traveller had not perhaps
+dropped a few dates or a little barley by accident, but there was
+nothing.
+
+'Doubtless,' he said, 'Allah wishes to show me that greediness is a sin
+even on the day of feasting.'
+
+He drank as much of the water as he could in order to stay his hunger as
+well as assuage his thirst, and then he saddled the mare and rode up out
+of the hollow towards the hill country. Towards the middle of the night
+he came to a small village where all the people were celebrating the
+feast, having killed a young camel and several sheep. Seeing that he was
+a traveller they bade him be welcome, and he sat down among them and ate
+his fill of meat, praising Allah. And corn was given to his mare, so
+that the dumb animal also kept the feast.
+
+'Truly,' said the people, 'thy mare is a daughter of Al Borak, the
+heavenly steed called "the Lightning," upon which the nocturnal journey
+was accomplished by the Prophet, upon whom be peace.'
+
+They said this not because they divined that the mare had been given to
+Khaled by an angel, but because they saw by her beauty that she must be
+swift as the wind. For she had a large head, with bony cheeks, and a
+full forehead and round black eyes wide apart, with smooth black skin
+about them, and a pointed nose, and the under lip was like that of a
+camel, projecting a little. And she was neither too long nor too short,
+having straight legs like steel, and small feet and round hoofs, neither
+overgrown in idleness nor overworn with much work. And her tail lay flat
+and long and smooth when she was standing still but arched like the
+plume of an ostrich when she moved. Her coat was bright bay, glossy and
+smooth and without any white markings. By all these signs, which belong
+to the purest blood, the people of the village knew that she was of the
+fleetest reared in Arabia. And Khaled was glad that the people admired
+her, since she was the chief of his few possessions, which indeed were
+not many.
+
+He did not know beforehand what he should do, nor what he should say
+when in the presence of the Sultan of Nejed, still less how he could
+venture to ask Zehowah in marriage, having no gifts to offer and not
+being himself a prince. Before he had become a man it would have been
+easy for him to find treasures in the earth such as men had never seen,
+for, like all the genii, he had been acquainted with the most deeply
+hidden mines and with all places where men had hidden wealth in old
+times. But this knowledge does not belong to the intelligence becoming
+mortals, but rather to the faculty of seeing through solid substance
+which is exercised by the spirits of the air, and in his present state
+it was taken from him, together with all possibility of communicating
+with his former companions. He had nothing but his mare and his sword
+and the garments he wore, and though the mare was indeed a gift for a
+king he did not know whether he was meant to offer it to any one, seeing
+that it had been given him by an angel.
+
+Nevertheless he did not lose heart, for the celestial messenger had told
+him that by the will of Allah he should marry Zehowah, and Allah was
+certainly able to give him a king's daughter in marriage without the aid
+of gifts, of gold, of musk, of 'Ood, of aloes or of pearls.
+
+He rose, therefore, when he had eaten enough and had rested himself and
+his mare, and after thanking the people of the village for their
+entertainment he rode on his way. He passed through a hill country,
+sometimes fertile and sometimes stony and deserted, but he found water
+by the way and such food as he needed; and accomplished the remainder of
+the journey without hindrance.
+
+On the morning of the second day he came to a halting-place from which
+he could see the city of Riad, and he was astonished at the size and
+magnificence of the Sultan's palace, which was visible above the walls
+of the fortification. Yet he was aware that he had seen all this before
+as in a dream not altogether forgotten when a man wakes at dawn after a
+long and restless night.
+
+He gazed awhile, after he had made his ablutions, and then calling to
+his mare to come to him, he mounted and rode through the southern gate
+into the heart of the city.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+When Khaled reached the palace he dismounted from his mare, and leading
+her by the bridle entered the gateway. Here he met many persons, guards,
+and slaves both black and white, and porters bearing provisions, and a
+few women, all hurrying hither and thither; and many noticed him, but a
+few gazed curiously into his face, and two or three grooms followed him
+a little way, pointing out to each other the beauties of his mare.
+
+'Truly,' they said, 'if we did not know the mares of the stud better
+than the faces of our mothers, we should swear by Allah that this beast
+had been stolen from the Sultan's stables by a thief in the night, for
+she is of the best blood in Nejed.'
+
+These being curious they saluted Khaled and asked him whence he came and
+whither he was going, seeing that it is not courteous to ask a stranger
+any other questions.
+
+'I come from the Red Desert,' Khaled answered, 'and I am going into the
+palace as you see.'
+
+The grooms saw that there was a rebuke in the last part of his answer
+and hung back and presently went their way.
+
+'Are such mares bred in the Red Desert?' they exclaimed. 'The stranger
+is doubtless the sheikh of some powerful tribe. But if this be true,
+where are the men that came with him? And why is he dressed like a man
+of the city?'
+
+So they hastened out of the gateway to find the Bedouins who, they
+supposed, must have accompanied Khaled on his journey.
+
+But Khaled went forward and came to a great court in which were stone
+seats by the walls. Here a number of people were waiting. So he sat down
+upon one of the seats and his mare laid her nose upon his shoulder as
+though inquiring what he would do.
+
+'Allah knows,' Khaled said, as though answering her. So he waited
+patiently.
+
+At last a man came out into the courtyard who was richly dressed, and
+whom all the people saluted as he passed. But he came straight towards
+Khaled, who rose from his seat.
+
+'Whence come you, my friend?' he inquired after they had exchanged the
+salutation.
+
+'From the Red Desert, and I desire permission to speak with the Sultan
+when it shall please his majesty to see me.'
+
+'And what do you desire of his majesty? I ask that I may inform him
+beforehand. So you will have a better reception.'
+
+'Tell the Sultan,' said Khaled, 'that a man is here who has neither
+father nor mother nor any possessions beyond a swift mare, a keen sword
+and a strong hand, but who is come nevertheless to ask in marriage
+Zehowah, the Sultan's daughter.'
+
+The minister smiled and gazed at Khaled in silence for a moment, but
+when he had looked keenly at his face, he became grave.
+
+'It may be,' he thought, 'that this is some great prince who comes thus
+simply as in a disguise, and it were best not to anger him.'
+
+'I will deliver your message,' he answered aloud, 'though it is a
+strange one. It is customary for those who come to ask for a maiden in
+marriage to bring gifts--and to receive others in return,' he added.
+
+'I neither bring gifts nor ask any,' said Khaled. 'Allah is great and
+will provide me with what I need.'
+
+'I fear that he will not provide you with the Sultan's daughter for a
+wife,' said the minister as he went away, but Khaled did not hear the
+words, though he would have cared little if he had.
+
+Now it chanced that Zehowah was sitting in a balcony surrounded with
+lattice, over the courtyard, on that morning and she had seen Khaled
+enter, leading his mare by the bridle. But though she watched the
+stranger and his beast idly for some time she thought as little of the
+one as of the other, for her heart was not turned to love, and she knew
+nothing of horses. But her women thought differently and spoke loudly,
+praising the beauty of both.
+
+'There is indeed a warrior able to fight in the front of our armies,'
+they said. 'Truly such a man must have been Khaled ibn Walad, the Sword
+of the Lord, in the days of the Prophet--upon whom peace.'
+
+By and by there was a cry that the Sultan was coming into the room, and
+the women rose and retired. The Sultan sat down upon the carpet by his
+daughter, in the balcony.
+
+'Do you see that stranger, holding a beautiful mare by the bridle?' he
+asked.
+
+'Yes, I see him,' answered Zehowah indifferently.
+
+'He is come to ask you in marriage.'
+
+'Another!' she exclaimed with a careless laugh. 'If it is the will of
+Allah I will marry him. If not, he will go away like the rest.'
+
+'This man is not like the rest, my daughter. He is either a madman or
+some powerful prince in disguise.'
+
+'Or both, perhaps,' laughed Zehowah. She laughed often, for although she
+was not inclined to love, she was of a gentle and merry temper.
+
+'His message was a strange one,' said the Sultan. 'He says that he
+neither brings gifts nor asks them, that he has neither father nor
+mother, nor any possessions excepting a swift mare, a keen sword and a
+strong hand.'
+
+'I see the mare, the sword and the hand,' answered Zehowah. 'But the
+hand is like any other hand--how can I tell whether it be strong? The
+sword is in its sheath, and I cannot see its edge, and though the mare
+is pretty enough, I have seen many of your own I liked as well. The
+elephants of the Indian prince were more amusing, and the prince himself
+was more beautiful than this stranger with his black beard and his
+solemn face.'
+
+'That is true,' said the Sultan with a sigh.
+
+'Do you wish me to marry this man?' Zehowah asked.
+
+'My daughter, I wish you to choose of your own free will. Nevertheless I
+trust that you will choose before long, that I may see my child's
+children before I die.'
+
+For the Sultan was old and white-bearded, and was already somewhat bowed
+with advancing years and with burden of many cares and the fatigues of
+many wars. Yet his eye was bright and his heart fearless still, though
+his judgment was often weak and vacillating.
+
+'Do you wish me to marry this man?' Zehowah asked again. 'He will be a
+strange husband, for he is a strange suitor, coming without gifts and
+having neither father nor mother. But I will do as you command. If you
+leave it to me I shall never marry.'
+
+'I did not say that I desired you to take this one especially,'
+protested the Sultan, 'though for the matter of gifts I care little,
+since heaven has sent me wealth in abundance. But my remaining years are
+few, and the years of life are like stones slipping from a mountain
+which move slowly at first, and then faster until they outrun the
+lightning and leap into the dark valley below. And what is required of a
+husband is that he be a true believer, young and whole in every part,
+and of a charitable disposition.'
+
+'Truly,' laughed Zehowah, 'if he have no possessions, charity will avail
+him little, since he has nothing to give.'
+
+'There is other charity besides the giving of alms, my daughter, since
+it is charity even to think charitably of others, as you know. But I
+have not said that you should marry this man, for you are free. And
+indeed I have not yet talked with him. But I have sent for him and you
+shall hear him speak. See--they are just now conducting him to the hall
+of audiences. But indeed I think he is no husband for you, after all.'
+
+The Sultan rose and went to receive Khaled, and Zehowah went to the
+secret window above her father's raised seat in the hall.
+
+Khaled made the customary salutation with the greatest respect, and the
+Sultan made him sit down at his right hand as though he had been a
+prince, and asked him whence he had come. Then a refreshment was
+brought, and Khaled ate and drank a little, after which the Sultan
+inquired his business.
+
+'I come,' said Khaled boldly, 'to ask your daughter Zehowah in marriage.
+I bring no gifts, for I have none to offer, nor have I any inheritance.
+My mare is my fortune, my sword is my argument and my wit is in my arm.'
+
+'You are a strange suitor,' said the Sultan; but he kept a pleasant
+countenance, since Khaled was his guest. 'You are no doubt the sheikh of
+a tribe of the Red Desert, though I was not aware that any tribes dwelt
+there.'
+
+'So far as being the sheikh of my tribe,' said Khaled with a smile,
+'your majesty may call me so, for my tribe consists of myself alone,
+seeing that I have neither father nor mother nor any relations.'
+
+'Truly, I have never talked with such a suitor before,' answered the
+Sultan. 'At least I presume that you are a son of some prince, and that
+you have chosen to disguise yourself as a rich traveller and to hide
+your history under an allegory.'
+
+The Sultan would certainly not have allowed himself to overstep the
+bounds of courtesy so far, but for his astonishment at Khaled's daring
+manner. He was too keen, however, not to see that this man was
+something above the ordinary and that, whatever else he might be, he was
+not a common impostor. Such a fellow would have found means to rob a
+caravan of valuable goods, to offer as gifts, would have brought himself
+a train of camels and slaves and would have given himself out as a
+prince of some distant country from which it would not be possible to
+obtain information.
+
+'Istaghfir Allah! I am no prince,' Khaled answered. 'I ask for the hand
+of your daughter. The will of Allah will be accomplished.'
+
+He knew that Zehowah was watching and listening behind the lattice in
+her place of concealment, for the memory of such things had not been
+taken from him when he had lost the supernatural vision of the genii and
+had become an ordinary man. He was determined therefore to be truthful
+and to say nothing which he might afterwards be called upon to explain.
+For he never doubted but that Zehowah would be his wife, since the angel
+had told him that it should be so.
+
+'And what if I refuse even to consider your proposal?' inquired the
+Sultan, to see what he would say.
+
+'If it is the will of Allah that I marry your daughter, your refusal
+would be useless, but if it is not his will, your refusal would be
+altogether unnecessary.'
+
+The Sultan was much struck by this argument which showed a ready wit in
+the stranger and which he could only have opposed by asserting that his
+own will was superior to that of heaven itself.
+
+'But,' said he, defending himself, 'any of the previous suitors might
+have said the same.'
+
+'Undoubtedly,' replied Khaled, unabashed. 'But they did not say it. Your
+majesty will certainly now consider the matter.'
+
+'In the meanwhile,' the Sultan answered, very graciously, 'you are my
+guest, and you have come in time to take part in the third day of the
+feast, to which you are welcome in the name of Allah, the merciful.'
+
+Thereupon the Sultan rose and Khaled was conducted to the apartments set
+apart for the guests. But the Sultan returned to the harem in a very
+thoughtful mood, and before long he found Zehowah who had returned to
+her seat in the balcony.
+
+'This is a very strange suitor,' he said, shaking his head and looking
+into his daughter's face.
+
+'He is at least bold and outspoken,' she answered. 'He makes no secret
+of his poverty nor of his wishes. Whatever he be, he is in earnest and
+speaks truth. I would like well to know the only secret which he wishes
+to keep--who he really is.'
+
+'It may be,' said the Sultan thoughtfully, 'that if I threaten to cut
+off his head he will tell us. But on the other hand, he is a guest.'
+
+'He is not of those who are easily terrified, I think. Tell me, my
+father, do you wish me to marry him?'
+
+'How could you marry a man who has no family and no inheritance? Would
+such a marriage befit the daughter of kings?'
+
+'Why not?' asked Zehowah with much calmness.
+
+The Sultan stared at her in astonishment.
+
+'Has this stranger enchanted your imagination?' he inquired by way of
+answer.
+
+'No,' replied Zehowah scornfully. 'I have seen the noblest, the most
+beautiful and the richest of the earth, ready to take me to wife, and I
+have not loved. Shall I love an outcast?'
+
+'Then how can you ask my wishes?'
+
+'Because there are good reasons why I should marry this man.'
+
+'Good reasons? In the name of Allah let me hear them, if there are any.'
+
+'You are old, my father,' said Zehowah, 'and it has not pleased heaven
+to send you a son, nor to leave you any living relation to sit upon the
+throne when your years are accomplished. You must needs think of your
+successor.'
+
+'The better reason for choosing some powerful prince, whose territory
+shall increase the kingdom he inherits from me, and whose alliance shall
+strengthen the empire I leave behind me.'
+
+'Istaghfir Allah! The worse reason. For such a prince would be attached
+to his own country, and would take me thither with him and would neglect
+the kingdom of Nejed, regarding it as a land of strangers whom he may
+oppress with taxes to increase his own splendour. And this is not
+unreasonable, since no king can wisely govern two kingdoms separated
+from each other by more than three days' journey. No man can have other
+than the one of two reasons for asking me in marriage. Either he has
+heard of me and desires to possess me, or he wishes to increase his
+dominions by the inheritance which will be mine.'
+
+'Doubtless, this is the truth,' said the Sultan. 'But so much the more
+does this stranger in all probability covet my kingdom, since he has
+nothing of his own.'
+
+'This is what I mean. For, having no other possessions to distract his
+attention, he will remain always here, and will govern your kingdom for
+its own advantage in order that it may profit himself.'
+
+'This is a subtle argument, my daughter, and one requiring
+consideration.'
+
+'The more so because the man seems otherwise well fitted to be my
+husband, since he is a true believer, and young, and fearless and
+outspoken.'
+
+'But if this is all,' objected the Sultan, 'there are in Nejed several
+young men, sons of my chief courtiers, who possess the same
+qualifications. Choose one of them.'
+
+'On the contrary, to choose one of them would arouse the jealousy of all
+the rest, with their families and slaves and freedmen, whereby the
+kingdom would easily be exposed to civil war. But if I take a stranger
+it is more probable that all will be for him, since you are beloved, and
+there is no reason why one party should oppose him and another support
+him, since none of them know anything of him.'
+
+'But he will not be beloved by the people unless he is liberal, and he
+has nothing wherewith to be generous.'
+
+'And where are the treasures of Riad?' laughed Zehowah. 'Is it not easy
+for you to go secretly to his chamber and to give him as much gold as he
+needs?'
+
+'That is also true. I see that you have set your heart upon him.'
+
+'Not my heart, my father, but my head. For I have infinitely more head
+than heart, and I see that the welfare of the kingdom will be better
+secured with such a ruler, than it would have been under a foreign
+prince whose right hand would be perpetually thrust out to take in Nejed
+that which his left hand would throw to courtiers in his own country. Do
+I speak wisdom or folly?'
+
+'It is neither all folly nor all wisdom.'
+
+'I have seen this man, I have heard him speak,' said Zehowah. 'He is as
+well as another since I must marry sooner or later. Moreover I have
+another argument.'
+
+'What is that?'
+
+'Either he is a man strong enough to rule me, or he is not,' Zehowah
+answered with a laugh. 'If he can govern me, he can govern the kingdom
+of Nejed. But if not I will govern it for him, and rule him also.'
+
+The Sultan looked up to heaven and slightly raised his hands from his
+knees.
+
+'Allah is merciful and forgiving!' he exclaimed. 'Is this the spirit
+befitting a wife?'
+
+'Is it charity to cause happiness?'
+
+'Undoubtedly it is charity.'
+
+'And which is greater, the happiness of many or the happiness of one?'
+
+'The happiness of many is greater,' answered the Sultan. 'What then?' he
+asked after a time, seeing that she said nothing more.
+
+'I have spoken,' she replied. 'It is best that I should marry him.'
+
+Then there was silence for a long time, during which the Sultan sat
+quite motionless in his place, watching his daughter, while she looked
+idly through the lattice at the people who came and went in the court
+below. She seemed to feel no emotion.
+
+The Sultan did not know how to oppose Zehowah's will any more than he
+could answer her arguments, although his worldly wisdom was altogether
+at variance with her decision. For she was the beloved child of his old
+age and he could refuse her nothing. Moreover, in what she had said,
+there was much which recommended itself to his judgment, though by no
+means enough to persuade him. At last he rose from the carpet and
+embraced her.
+
+'If it is your will, let it be so,' he said.
+
+'It is the will of Allah,' answered Zehowah. 'Let it be accomplished
+immediately.'
+
+With a sigh the Sultan withdrew and sent a messenger to Khaled
+requesting him to come to another and more secluded chamber, where they
+could be alone and talk freely.
+
+Khaled showed no surprise on hearing that his suit was accepted, but he
+thought it fitting to express much gratitude for the favourable
+decision. Then the Sultan, who did not wish to seem too readily
+yielding, began to explain to Khaled Zehowah's reasons for accepting a
+poor stranger, presenting them as though they were his own.
+
+'For,' he said, 'whatever you may in reality be, you have chosen to
+present yourself to us in such a manner as would not have failed to
+bring about a refusal under any other circumstances. But I have
+considered that as it will be your destiny, if heaven grants you life,
+to rule my kingdom after me, you will in all likelihood rule it more
+wisely and carefully, for having no other cares in a distant country to
+distract your attention; and because you have no relations you are the
+less liable to the attacks of open or secret jealousy.'
+
+The Sultan then gave him a large sum of money in gold pieces, which
+Khaled gladly accepted, since he had not even wherewithal to buy himself
+a garment for the wedding feast, still less to distribute gifts to the
+courtiers and to the multitude. The Sultan also presented him with a
+black slave to attend to his personal wants.
+
+Khaled then sent for merchants from the bazar, and they brought him all
+manner of rich stuffs, such as he needed. There came also two tailors,
+who sat down upon a matting in his apartment and immediately began to
+make him clothes, while the black slave sat beside them and watched
+them, lest they should steal any of the gold of the embroideries.
+
+When it was known in the palace that the Sultan's only daughter was to
+be married at once, there were great rejoicings, and many camels were
+slaughtered and a great number of sheep, to supply food for so great a
+feast. A number of cooks were hired also to help those who belonged to
+the palace, for although the Sultan fed daily more than three hundred
+persons, guests, travellers, and poor, besides all the members of the
+household, yet this was as nothing compared with the multitude to be
+provided for on the present occasion.
+
+Then it was that Hadji Mohammed, the chief of the cooks, sat down upon
+the floor in the midst of the main kitchen and beat his breast and wept.
+For the confusion was great so that the voice of one man could not be
+heard for the diabolical screaming of the many, and the cooks smote the
+young lads who helped them, and these, running to escape from the blows,
+fell against the porters who came in from outside bearing sacks of
+sugar, and great baskets of fruit and quarters of meat and skins of
+water, and bushels of meal and a hundred other things equally necessary
+to the cooking; and the porters, staggering under their burdens, fell
+between the legs of the mules loaded with firewood, that had been
+brought to the gate, and the dumb beasts kicked violently in all
+directions, while the slaves who drove them struck them with their
+staves, and the mules began to run among the camels, and the camels,
+being terrified, rose from the ground and began to plunge and skip like
+young foals, while more porters and more mules and more slaves came on
+in multitudes to the door of the kitchen. And it was very hot, for it
+was noontide, and in summer, and there were flies without number, and
+the dogs that had been sleeping in the shade sprang up and barked loudly
+and bit whomsoever they could reach, and all the men bellowed together,
+so that the confusion was extreme.
+
+'Verily,' cried Hadji Mohammed, 'this is not a kitchen but Yemamah, and
+I am not the chief of the cooks, but the chief of sinners and fuel for
+hell.' So he wept bitterly and beat his breast.
+
+But at last matters mended, for there were many who were willing to do
+well, so that when the time came Hadji Mohammed was able to serve an
+honourable feast to all, though the number of the guests was not less
+than two thousand.
+
+But Khaled, having visited the bath, arrayed himself magnificently and
+rode upon his bay mare to the mosque, surrounded by the courtiers and
+the chief officers of the state, and by a great throng of slaves from
+the palace. As he rode, he scattered gold pieces among the people from
+the bags which he carried, and all praised his liberality and swore by
+Allah that Zehowah was taking a very goodly husband. And as none knew
+whence he came, all were equally pleased, but most of all the Bedouins
+from the desert, of whom there were many at that time in Riad, who had
+come to keep the feast Bairam, for Khaled's own words had been repeated,
+and they had heard that he came from the desert like themselves. And
+when he had finished his prayers, he rode back to the palace.
+
+When the time for the feast came the Sultan led Khaled into the great
+hall and made him sit at his right hand. The Sultan himself was
+magnificently dressed and covered with priceless jewels, so that he
+shone like the sun among all the rest. Then he presented Khaled to the
+assembly.
+
+'This,' said he, 'is Khaled, my beloved son-in-law, the husband of my
+only daughter, whom it has pleased Allah to send me, as the stay of my
+old age and as the successor to my kingdom. He will be terrible in war
+as Khaled ibn Walid, his namesake, the Sword of the Lord, and gentle and
+just in peace as Abu Bakr of blessed memory. He is as brave as the lion,
+as strong as the camel, as swift as the ostrich, as sagacious as the fox
+and as generous as the pelican, who feeds her young with the blood of
+her own breast. Love him therefore, as you have loved me, for he is
+extremely worthy of affection, and hate his enemies and be faithful to
+him in the time of danger. By the blessing of Allah he shall rear up
+children to me in my old age, to be with you when he is gone.'
+
+Thereupon Khaled turned and answered, speaking modestly but with much
+dignity in his manner.
+
+'Ye men of Nejed, this is my marriage feast and I invite you all to be
+merry with me. Whether it shall please Allah to give me a long life, or
+whether it shall please him to take me this night I know not. We are in
+the hand of Allah. But this I do know. I will love you as my own people,
+seeing that I have no people of my own. I will fight for you as a man
+fights for his own soul, for his wife and for his children, and I will
+divide justly the spoils in war, and give in peace whatsoever I am able,
+to all those who are in need. I swear by Allah! You are all witnesses.'
+
+The courtiers and all the guests were much pleased with this short
+speech, for they saw that Khaled was a man of few words and not proud or
+overbearing, and none could look into his face and doubt his promise.
+For the present moment at least Zehowah's prediction had been verified,
+for no one was jealous of him, and there was but one party among them
+all and that was for him. So they all feasted together in harmony until
+the sun was low.
+
+In the meantime Zehowah remained in the harem, surrounded by her women,
+and a separate meal was brought to them. They all sat upon the rich
+carpets leaning on cushions set against the walls, and small low tables
+were brought in, covered with dishes and bowls containing delicately
+prepared rice and mutton in great abundance and fresh blanket bread, hot
+from the stones, and olives brought from Syria. Afterwards came
+sweetmeats without number, such as Hadji Mohammed knew how to prepare,
+and gold and silver goblets filled with a drink made from large sweet
+lemons and water, which is called 'treng.' Zehowah indeed ate sparingly,
+for she was accustomed to such dainties every day, but her women were
+delighted with the abundance and left nothing to be taken away.
+
+While they were eating six of the women played upon musical instruments
+by turns, while others danced slow and graceful measures, singing as
+they moved, and describing the unspeakable happiness which awaited their
+princess in marriage. Afterwards when the tables had been taken away and
+they had washed their hands with rose water from Ajjem, Zehowah
+commanded the singing and the dancing to cease, and the women brought
+her one by one the dresses which she was to wear before Khaled. They
+were very magnificent, for it had needed many years to prepare them, and
+a great weight of gold and silver threads had been weighed out to the
+tailors and embroiderers who had worked in the preparation of them ever
+since Zehowah had been two years old. For the piece of material is
+weighed first, and then the gold, and afterwards, when the work is
+finished, the whole is weighed together, lest the tailors should steal
+anything.
+
+But Zehowah looked coldly at the garments, one after the other, as they
+were brought and taken away, and the women fancied that she was to be
+married to the stranger against her will, and that she remembered the
+Indian prince.
+
+'It is a pity,' one of them ventured to say, 'that the bridegroom has
+not brought any elephants with him, for we would have watched them from
+the balconies, since they are diverting beasts.'
+
+'And it is a pity,' said Zehowah scornfully, 'that my husband has not a
+round, soft face, like the moon in May, and the eyes of a gazelle and
+the heart of a hare. Truly, such a one would have made you a good king,
+seeing that he was also an unbeliever!'
+
+'Nay,' said the woman humbly, 'Allah forbid that I should make a
+comparison, or bring an ill omen on the day by speaking of that which
+chanced a year ago. Truly, I only spoke of elephants, and not of men.
+For, surely, we all said when we saw him in the court that he looked a
+brave warrior and a goodly man.'
+
+Then a messenger came from the Sultan saying that it was time to make
+ready. So they went to another apartment, where the nuptial chamber had
+been prepared. The Sultan came, then, leading Khaled, and followed by
+the Kadi, and all the women veiled themselves while the latter read the
+declaration of marriage. After that they all withdrew and Khaled took
+his seat upon the high couch in the middle of the room. Presently all
+the women returned, unveiled, with loud singing and playing of
+instruments, leading Zehowah dressed in the first of the dresses which
+she was to put on, and which, though it was very splendid, was of course
+the least magnificent of all those which had been prepared. But Khaled
+sat in his place looking on quietly, for he was acquainted with the
+custom, and he cared little for the rich garments, but looked always
+into Zehowah's face.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+Khaled sat with his sword upon his feet, and when Zehowah was not in the
+room he played with the hilt and thought of all that was happening.
+
+'Truly,' he said to himself, 'Allah is great. Was I not, but a few days
+since, one of the genii condemned to perish at the day of the
+resurrection? And am I not now a man, married to the most beautiful
+woman in the whole world, and the wisest and the best, needing only to
+be loved by her in order to obtain an undying soul? And why should this
+woman not love me? Truly, we shall see before long, when this mummery is
+finished.'
+
+So he sat on the couch while Zehowah was led before him again and again
+each time in clothing more splendid than before, and each time with new
+songs and new music. But at the last time the attendants left her
+standing before him and went away, and only a very old woman remained at
+the door, screaming out in a cracked voice the customary exhortations.
+Then she, too, went away and the door was shut and Khaled and Zehowah
+were alone.
+
+It was now near the middle of the night. The chamber was large and high,
+lighted by a number of hanging lamps such as are made in Bagdad, of
+brass perforated with beautiful designs and filled with coloured
+glasses, in each of which a little wick floats upon oil. Upon the walls
+rich carpets were hung, both Arabian and Persian, some taken in war as
+booty, and some brought by merchants in time of peace. A brass chafing
+dish stood at some distance from the couch, and upon the coals the women
+had thrown powdered myrrh and benzoin before they went away. But Khaled
+cared little for these things, since he had seen all the treasures of
+the earth in their most secret depositories.
+
+Zehowah had watched him narrowly during the ceremony of the dresses and
+had seen that he felt no surprise at anything which was brought before
+him.
+
+'His own country must be full of great wealth and magnificence,' she
+thought, 'since so much treasure does not astonish him.' And she was
+disappointed.
+
+Now that they were alone, he still sat in silence, gazing at her as she
+stood beside him, and not even thinking of any speech, for he was
+overcome and struck dumb by her eyes.
+
+'You are not pleased with what I have shown you,' Zehowah said at last
+in a tone of displeasure and disappointment. 'And yet you have seen the
+wealth of my father's palace.'
+
+'I have seen neither wealth nor treasure, neither rich garments, nor
+precious stones nor chains of gold nor embroideries of pearls,' Khaled
+answered slowly.
+
+But Zehowah frowned and tapped the carpet impatiently with her foot
+where she stood, for she was annoyed, having expected him to praise the
+beauty of her many dresses.
+
+'They who have eyes can see,' she said. 'But if you are not pleased, my
+father will give me a hundred dresses more beautiful than these, and
+pearls and jewels without end.'
+
+'I should not see them,' Khaled replied. 'I have seen two jewels which
+have dazzled me so that I can see nothing else.'
+
+Zehowah gazed at him with a look of inquiry.
+
+'I have seen the eyes of Zehowah,' he continued, 'which are as the stars
+Sirius and Aldebaran, when they are over the desert in the nights of
+winter. What jewels can you show me like these?'
+
+Then Zehowah laughed softly and sat down beside her husband on the edge
+of the couch.
+
+'Nevertheless,' she said, 'the dresses are very rich. You might admire
+them also.'
+
+'I will look at them when you are not near me, for then my sight will be
+restored for other things.'
+
+Khaled took her hand in his and held it.
+
+'Tell me, Zehowah, will you love me?' he asked in a soft voice.
+
+'You are my lord and my master,' she answered, looking modestly
+downward, and her hand lay quite still.
+
+She was so very beautiful that as Khaled sat beside her and looked at
+her downcast face, and knew that she was his, he could not easily
+believe that she was cold and indifferent to him.
+
+'By Allah!' he thought, 'can it be so hard to get a woman's love? Truly,
+I think she begins to love me already.'
+
+Zehowah looked up and smiled carelessly as though answering his
+question, but Khaled was obliged to admit in his heart that the answer
+lacked clearness, for he found it no easier to interpret a woman's smile
+than men had found it before him, and have found it since, even to this
+day.
+
+'You have had many suitors,' he said at last, 'and it is said that your
+father has given you your own free choice, allowing you to see them and
+hear them speak while he was receiving them. Tell me why you have chosen
+me rather than the rest, unless it is because you love me? For I came
+with empty hands, and without servants or slaves, or retinue of any
+kind, riding alone out of the Red Desert. It was therefore for myself
+that you took me.'
+
+'You are right. It was for yourself that I took you.'
+
+'Then it was for love of me, was it not?'
+
+'There were and still are many and good reasons,' answered Zehowah
+calmly, and at the same time withdrawing her hand from his and smoothing
+back the black hair from her forehead. 'I told them all to my father,
+and he was convinced.'
+
+'Tell them to me also,' said Khaled.
+
+So she explained all to him in detail, making him see everything as she
+saw it herself. And the explanation was so very clear, that Khaled felt
+a cold chill in his heart as he understood that she had chosen him
+rather for politic reasons, than because she wished him for her husband.
+
+'And yet,' she added at the end, 'it was the will of Allah, for
+otherwise I would not have chosen you.'
+
+'But surely,' he said, somewhat encouraged by these last words, 'there
+was some love in the choice, too.'
+
+'How can I tell!' she exclaimed, with a little laugh. 'What is love?'
+
+Finding himself confronted by such an amazing question, Khaled was
+silent, and took her hand again. For though many have asked what love
+is, no one has ever been able to find an answer in words to satisfy the
+questioner, seeing that the answer can have no more to do with words
+than love itself, a matter sufficiently explained by a certain wise man,
+who understood the heart of man. If, said he, a man who loves a woman,
+or a woman who loves a man could give in words the precise reason why
+he or she loves, then love itself could be defined in language; but as
+no man or woman has ever succeeded in doing this, I infer that they who
+love best do not themselves know in what love consists--still less
+therefore can any one else know, wherefore the definition is impossible,
+and no one need waste time in trying to find it.
+
+A certain wit has also said that although it be impossible for any man
+to explain the nature of love to many persons at the same time, he
+generally finds it easy to make his explanations to one person only. But
+this is a mere quibbling jest and not deserving of any attention.
+
+Zehowah expected an answer to her question, and Khaled was silent, not
+because he was as yet too little acquainted with the feelings of a man
+to give them expression, but because he already felt so much that it was
+hard for him to speak at all.
+
+Zehowah laughed and shook her head, for she was not of a timid temper.
+
+'How can you expect me to say that I love you, when you yourself are
+unable to answer such a simple question?' she asked. 'And besides, are
+you not my lord and my master? What is it then to you, whether I love
+you or not?'
+
+But again Khaled was silent, debating whether he should tell her the
+truth, how the angel had promised in Allah's name that if she loved him
+he should obtain an undying soul, and how the task of obtaining her love
+had been laid upon him as a sort of atonement for having slain the
+Indian prince. But as he reflected he understood that this would
+probably estrange her all the more from him.
+
+'Yet I can answer your question,' he said at last. 'What is love? It is
+that which is in me for you only.'
+
+'But how am I to know what that is?' asked Zehowah, drawing up the
+smooth gold bracelets upon her arm and letting them fall down to her
+wrist, so that they jangled like a camel's bell.
+
+'If you love me you will know,' Khaled answered, 'for then, perhaps, you
+will feel a tenth part of what I feel.'
+
+'And why not all that you feel?' she asked, looking at him, but still
+playing with the bracelets.
+
+'Because it is impossible for any woman to love as much as I love you,
+Zehowah.'
+
+'You mean, perhaps, that a woman is too weak to love so well,' she
+suggested. 'And you think, perhaps, that we are weak because we sit all
+our lives upon the carpets in the harem eating sweetmeats, and listening
+to singing girls and to old women who tell us tales of long ago. Yet
+there have been strong women too--as strong as men. Kenda, who tore out
+the heart of Kamsa--was she weak?'
+
+'Women are stronger to hate than to love,' said Khaled.
+
+'But a man can forget his hatred in the love of a woman, and his
+strength also,' laughed Zehowah. 'I would rather that you should not
+love me at all, than that you should forget to be strong in the day of
+battle. For I have married you that you may lead my people to war and
+bring home the spoil.'
+
+'And if I destroy all your enemies and the enemies of your people, will
+you love me then, Zehowah?'
+
+'Why should I love you then, more than now? What has war to do with
+love? Again, I ask, what is it to you whether I love you or not? Am I
+not your wife, and are you not my master? What is this love of which you
+talk? Is it a rich garment that you can wear? A precious stone that you
+can fasten in your turban? A rich carpet to spread in your house? A
+treasure of gold, a mountain of ambergris, a bushel of pearls from Oman?
+Why do you covet it? Am I not beautiful enough? Then is love henna to
+make my hair bright, or kohl to darken my eyes, or a boiled egg with
+almonds to smooth my face? I have all these things, and ointments from
+Egypt, and perfumes from Syria, and if I am not beautiful enough to
+please you, it is the will of Allah, and love will not make me fairer.'
+
+'Yet love is beauty,' Khaled answered. 'For Kadijah was lovely in the
+eyes of the Prophet, upon whom be peace, because she loved him, though
+she was a widow and old.'
+
+'Am I a widow? Am I old?' asked Zehowah with some indignation. 'Do I
+need the imaginary cosmetic you call love to smooth my wrinkles, to
+lighten my eyes, or to make my teeth white?'
+
+'No. You need nothing to make you beautiful.'
+
+'And for the matter of that, I can say it of you. You tell me that you
+love me. Is it love that makes your body tall and straight, your beard
+black, your forehead smooth, your hand strong? Would not any woman see
+what I see, whether you loved her or not? See! Is your hand whiter than
+mine because you love and I do not?'
+
+She laughed again as she held her hand beside his.
+
+'Truly,' thought Khaled, 'it is less easy than I supposed. For the heart
+of a woman who does not love is like the desert, when the wind blows
+over it, and there are neither tracks nor landmarks. And I am wandering
+in this desert like a man seeking lost camels.'
+
+But he said nothing, for he was not yet skilled in the arguments of
+love. Thereupon Zehowah smiled, and resting her cheek upon her hand,
+looked into his face, as though saying scornfully, 'Is it not all vanity
+and folly?'
+
+Khaled sighed, for he was disappointed, as a thirsty man who, coming to
+drink of a clear spring, finds the water bitter, while his thirst
+increases and grows unbearable.
+
+'Why do you sigh?' Zehowah asked, after a little silence. 'Are you
+weary? Are you tired with the feasting? Are you full of bitterness,
+because I do not love you? Command me and I will obey. Are you not my
+lord to whom I am subject?'
+
+He did not speak, but she drew him to her, so that his head rested upon
+her bosom, and she began to sing to him in a low voice.
+
+For a long time Khaled kept his eyes shut, listening to her voice. Then,
+on a sudden, he looked up, and without speaking so much as a word, he
+clasped her in his arms and kissed her.
+
+Before it was day there was a great tumult in the streets of Riad, of
+which the noise came up even to the chamber where Khaled and Zehowah
+were sleeping. Zehowah awoke and listened, wondering what had happened
+and trying to understand the cries of the distant multitude. Then she
+laid her hand upon Khaled's forehead and waked him.
+
+'What is it?' he asked.
+
+'It is war,' she answered. 'The enemy have surprised the city in the
+night of the feast. Arise and take arms and go out to the people.'
+
+Khaled sprang up and in a moment he was clothed and had girt on his
+sword. Then he took Zehowah in his arms.
+
+'While I live, you are safe,' he said.
+
+'Am I afraid? Go quickly,' she answered.
+
+At that time the Sultan of Nejed was at war with the northern tribes of
+Shammar, and the enemy had taken advantage of the month of Ramadhan, in
+which few persons travel, to advance in great numbers to Riad. During
+the three days' feast of Bairam they had moved on every night, slaying
+the inhabitants of the villages so that not one had escaped to bring the
+news, and in the daytime they had hidden themselves wherever they could
+find shelter. But in the night in which Khaled and Zehowah were married
+they reached the very walls of the city, and waiting until all the
+people were asleep, a party of them had climbed up upon the ramparts and
+had opened one of the gates to their companions after killing the
+guards.
+
+Khaled found his mare and mounted her without saddle or bridle in his
+haste, then drawing his sabre he rode swiftly out of the palace into the
+confusion. The enemy with their long spears were driving the
+panicstricken guards and the shrieking people before them towards the
+palace, slaughtering all whom they overtook, so that the gutters of the
+streets were already flowing with blood, and the horses of the enemy
+stumbled over the bodies of the defenders. The whole multitude of the
+pursued and the pursuers were just breaking out of the principal street
+into the open space before the palace when Khaled met them, a single man
+facing ten thousand.
+
+'I shall certainly perish in this fight,' he said to himself, 'and yet I
+shall not receive the reward of the faithful, since Allah has not given
+me a soul. Nevertheless certain of these dogs shall eat dirt before the
+rest get into the palace.'
+
+So he pressed his legs to the bare sides of his mare and lifted up his
+sword and rode at the foe, having neither buckler, nor helmet, nor shirt
+of mail to protect him, but only his clothes and his turban. But his arm
+was strong, and it has been said by the wise that it is better to fall
+upon an old lion with a reed than to stand armed in the way of a man who
+seeks death.
+
+'Yallah! The Sword of the Lord!' shouted Khaled, in such a terrible
+voice that the assailants ceased to kill for a moment, and the terrified
+guards turned to see whence so great a voice could proceed; and some who
+had seen Khaled recognised him and ran to meet him, and the others
+followed.
+
+When the enemy saw a single man riding towards them across the great
+square before the palace, they sent up a shout of derision, and turned
+again to the slaughter of such of the inhabitants as could not extricate
+themselves.
+
+'Shall one man stop an army?' they said. 'Shall a fox turn back a herd
+of hyænas?'
+
+But when Khaled was among them they found less matter for laughter. For
+the sword was keen, the mare was swift to double and turn, and Khaled's
+hand was strong. In the twinkling of an eye two of the enemy lay dead,
+the one cloven to the chin, the other headless.
+
+Then a strange fever seized Khaled, such as he had not heard of, and all
+things turned to scarlet before his eyes, both the walls of the houses,
+and the faces and the garments of his foes. Men who saw him say that his
+face was white and shining in the dawn, and that the flashing of the
+sword was like a storm of lightning about his head, and after each flash
+there was a great rain of blood, and a crashing like thunder as the
+horses and men of the enemy fell to the earth.
+
+In the meantime, too, the soldiers of the city and the Bedouins of the
+desert who were within the walls for the feast, took courage, and
+turning fiercely began to drive the assailants back by the way they had
+come, towards the market-place in the bazar. But those behind still kept
+pressing forward, while those in front were driven back, and the press
+became so great that the Shammars could no longer wield their weapons.
+The enemy were crowded together like sheep in a fold, and Khaled, with
+his men, began to cut a broad road through the very midst of them,
+hewing them down in ranks and throwing them aside, as corn is harvested
+in Egypt.
+
+But after some time Khaled saw that he was alone, with a few followers,
+surrounded by a great throng of the enemy, for some of his men had been
+slain after slaying many of their foes, and some had not been able to
+follow, being hindered at first by the heaps of dead and afterwards by
+the multitude of their opponents who closed in again over the bloody way
+through which Khaled had passed.
+
+And now the Shammars saw that Khaled could not escape them, and they
+pressed him on every side, but the archers dared not shoot at him for
+fear of hitting their own friends, if their arrows chanced to go by the
+mark. Otherwise he would undoubtedly have perished, since he had no
+armour, and not even a buckler with which to ward off the darts. But
+they thrust at him with spears and struck at him with their swords, and
+wounded him more than once, though he was not conscious of pain or loss
+of blood, being hot with the fever of the fight. He was hard pressed
+therefore, and while he smote without ceasing he began to know that
+unless a speedy rescue came to him, his hour was at hand. From the
+borders of the market-place, the men of Riad could still see his sword
+flashing and striking, and they still heard his fierce cry.
+
+He looked about him as he fought, and he saw that he was now almost
+alone. One after another, the few who had penetrated so far forward with
+him into the press, were overwhelmed by numbers and fell bleeding from a
+hundred wounds till only a score were left, and Khaled saw that unless
+he could now cut his way free, he must inevitably perish. But the press
+was stubborn and a man might as well hope to make his way through a herd
+of camels crowded together in a narrow street. Then Khaled bethought him
+of a stratagem. He alone was on horseback, for the enemy's riders had
+ridden before, and he had met them in the street leading to the palace,
+when he had himself slain many, and where the rest were even now falling
+under the swords of the men of Riad. And the few men who were with him
+were also all on foot. Therefore looking across the market-place he made
+as though he saw a great force coming to his assistance, and he shouted
+with all his breath, while his arm never rested.
+
+'Smite, men of Nejed!' he cried. 'For I see the Sultan himself coming to
+meet us with five hundred horsemen! Smite! Yallah! It is the Sword of
+the Lord!'
+
+Hearing these words, his men were encouraged, and of the enemy many
+turned their heads to see the new danger. But being on foot they were
+hindered from seeing by the throng. Yet so much the more Khaled shouted
+that the Sultan was coming, and many of the heads that turned to look
+were not turned back again, but rolled down to the feet of those to
+whom they had belonged. The brave men who were with Khaled took heart
+and hewed with all their might, taking up the cry of their leader when
+they saw that it disconcerted their foes, so that the last took fright,
+and the panic ran through the whole multitude.
+
+'We shall be slain like sheep, and taken like locusts under a mantle,
+for we cannot move!' they cried, and they began to press away out of the
+market-place, forcing their comrades before them into the narrow
+streets.
+
+But here many perished. For while every man in Riad had taken his sword
+and had gone out of his house to fight, the women had dragged up
+cauldrons of boiling water, and also hand-mill stones, to the roofs, and
+they scalded and crushed their retreating foes. Then too, as the
+market-place was cleared, the soldiers came on from the side of the
+palace, having slain all that stood in their way and taken most of their
+horses alive, which alone was a great booty, for there are not many
+horses in Nejed besides those of the Sultan, though these are the very
+best and fleetest in all Arabia. But the Shammars of the north are great
+horse-breeders. So the soldiers mounted and joined Khaled in the
+pursuit, and a great slaughter followed in the streets, though some of
+the enemy were able to escape to the gates, and warn those of their
+fellows who were outside to flee to the hills for safety, leaving much
+booty behind.
+
+At the time of the second call to prayer Khaled dismounted from his mare
+in the market-place, and there was not one of the enemy left alive
+within the walls. Those who remember that day say that there were five
+thousand dead in the streets in Riad.
+
+Khaled made such ablution as he could, and having prayed and given
+thanks to Allah, he went back on foot to the palace, his bay mare
+following him, and thrusting her nose into his hand as he walked. For
+she was little hurt, and the blood that covered her shoulders and her
+flanks was not her own. But Khaled had many wounds on him, so that his
+companions wondered how he was able to walk.
+
+In the court of the palace the Sultan came to meet him, and fell upon
+his neck and embraced him, for many messengers had come, from time to
+time, telling how the fight went, and of the great slaughter. And Khaled
+smiled, for he thought that he should now win the love of Zehowah.
+
+'Said I not truly that he is as brave as the lion, and as strong as the
+camel?' cried the Sultan, addressing those who stood in the court. 'Has
+he not scattered our enemies as the wind scatters the sand? Surely he is
+well called by the name Khaled.'
+
+'Forget not your own men,' Khaled answered, 'for they have shared in the
+danger and have slain more than I, and deserve the spoil. There was a
+score of stout fellows with me at the last in the market-place, whose
+faces I should know again on a cloudy night. They fought as well as I,
+and it was the will of Allah that their enemies should broil
+everlastingly and drink boiling water. Let them be rewarded.'
+
+'They shall every one have a rich garment and a sum of money, besides
+their share of the spoil. But as for you, my beloved son, go in and
+rest, and bind up your wounds, and afterwards there shall be feasting
+and merriment until the night.'
+
+'The enemy is not destroyed yet,' answered Khaled. 'Command rather that
+the army make ready for the pursuit, and when I have washed I will arm
+myself and we will ride out and pursue the dogs until not one of them is
+left alive, and by the help of Allah we will take all Shammar and lay it
+under tribute and bring back the women captive. After that we shall
+feast more safely, and sleep without fear of being waked by a herd of
+hyænas in our streets.'
+
+'Nay, but you must rest before going upon this expedition,' objected the
+Sultan.
+
+'The true believer will find rest in the grave, and feasting in
+paradise,' answered Khaled.
+
+'This is true. But even the camel must eat and drink on the journey, or
+both he and his master will perish.'
+
+'Let us then eat and drink quickly, that we may the sooner go.'
+
+'As you will, let it be,' said the Sultan, with a sigh, for he loved
+feasting and music, being now too old to go out and fight himself as he
+had formerly done.
+
+Thereupon Khaled went into the harem and returned to Zehowah's
+apartment. As he went the women gathered round him with cries of
+gladness and songs of triumph, staunching the blood that flowed from his
+wounds with their veils and garments as he walked. And others ran before
+to prepare the bath and to tell Zehowah of his coming.
+
+When she saw him she ran forward and took him by the hands and led him
+in, and herself she bathed his wounds and bound them up with precious
+balsams of great healing power, not suffering any of the women to help
+her nor to touch him, but sending them away so that she might be alone
+with Khaled.
+
+'I have slain certain of your enemies, Zehowah,' he said, at last, 'and
+I have driven out the rest from the city.' As yet neither of them had
+spoken.
+
+'Do you think that I have not heard what you have done?' Zehowah asked.
+'You have saved us all from death and captivity. You are our father and
+our mother. And now I will bring you food and drink and afterwards you
+shall sleep.'
+
+'So you are well pleased with the doings of the husband you have
+married,' he said.
+
+He was displeased, for he had supposed that she would love him for his
+deeds and for his wounds and that she would speak differently. But
+though she tended him and bound his wounds, and bathed his brow with
+perfumed waters, and laid pillows under his head and fanned him, as a
+slave might have done, he saw that there was no warmth in her cheek, and
+that the depths of her eyes were empty, and that her hands were neither
+hot nor cold. By all these signs he knew that she felt no love for him,
+so he spoke coldly to her.
+
+'Is it for me to be pleased or displeased with the deeds of my lord and
+master?' she asked. 'Nevertheless, thousands are even now blessing your
+name and returning thanks to Allah for having sent them a preserver in
+the hour of danger. I am but one of them.'
+
+'I would rather see a faint light in your eyes, as of a star rising in
+the desert than hear the blessings of all the men of Nejed. I would
+rather that your hand were cold when it touches mine, and your cheek hot
+when I kiss it, than that your father should bestow upon me all the
+treasures of Riad.'
+
+'Is that love?' asked Zehowah with a laugh. 'A cold hand, a hot cheek, a
+bright eye?'
+
+Khaled was silent, for he saw that she understood his words but not his
+meaning. It was now noon and it was very hot, even in the inner shade of
+the harem, and Khaled was glad to rest after the hard fighting, for his
+many slight wounds smarted with the healing balsam, and his heart was
+heavy and discontented.
+
+Then Zehowah called a slave woman to fan him with a palm leaf, and
+presently she brought him meat and rice and dates to eat, and cool drink
+in a golden cup, and she sat at his feet while he refreshed himself.
+
+'How many did you slay with your own hand?' she asked at last, taking up
+the good sword which lay beside him on the carpet.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+Khaled pondered deeply, being uncertain what to do, and trying to find
+out some action which could win for him what he wanted. Zehowah received
+no answer to her question as to the number of enemies he had slain and
+she did not ask again, for she thought that he was weary and wished to
+rest in silence.
+
+'What do you like best in the whole world?' he asked after a long time,
+to see what she would say.
+
+'I like you best,' she answered, smiling, while she still played with
+his sword.
+
+'That is very strange,' Khaled answered, musing. But the colour rose
+darkly in his cheeks above his beard, for he was pleased now as he had
+been displeased before.
+
+'Why is it strange?' asked Zehowah. 'Are you not the palm tree in my
+plain, and a tower of refuge for my people?'
+
+'And will you dry up the well from which the tree draws life, and take
+away the corner-stone of the tower's foundation?'
+
+'You speak in fables,' said Zehowah, laughing.
+
+'Yet you imagined the fable yourself, when you likened me to a palm and
+to a tower. But I am no lover of allegories. The sword is my argument,
+and my wit is in my arm. The wall by the tree is the wall of love, and
+the chief foundation of the tower is the love of Zehowah. If you destroy
+that, the tree will wither and the tower will fall.'
+
+'Surely there was never such a man as you,' Zehowah answered, half
+jesting but half in earnest. 'You are as one who has bought a white
+mare; and though she is fleet, and good to look at, and obedient to his
+voice and knee, yet he is discontented because she cannot speak to him,
+and he would fain have her black instead of white, and if possible would
+teach her to sing like a Persian nightingale.'
+
+'Is it then not natural in a woman to love man? Have you heard no tales
+of love from the story-tellers of the harem?'
+
+'I have heard many such tales, but none of them were told of me,'
+Zehowah replied. 'Will you drink again? Is the drink too sweet, or is it
+not cool?'
+
+She had risen from her seat and held the golden cup, bending down to
+him, so that her face was near his. He laid his hand upon her shoulder.
+
+'Hear me, Zehowah,' he said. 'I want but one thing in the world, and it
+was for that I came out of the Red Desert to be your husband. And that
+thing I will have, though the price be greater than rubies, or than
+blood, or than life itself.'
+
+'If it is mine, I freely give it to you. If it is not mine, take it by
+force, or I will help you to take it by a stratagem, if I can. Am I not
+your wife?'
+
+She spoke thus, supposing from his face that he meant some treasure that
+could be taken by strength or by wile, for she could not believe a man
+could speak so seriously of a mere thought such as love.
+
+'Neither my right hand nor your wit can give me this, but only your
+heart, Zehowah,' he answered, still holding her and looking at her.
+
+But now she did not laugh, for she saw that he was greatly in earnest.
+
+'You are still talking of love,' she said. 'And you are not jesting. I
+do not know what to answer you. Gladly will I say, I love you. Is that
+all? What is it else? Are those the words?'
+
+'I care little for the words. But I will have the reality, though it
+cost your life and mine.'
+
+'My life? Will you take my life, for the sake of a thought?'
+
+'A thought!' he exclaimed. 'Do you call love a thought? I had not
+believed a woman could be so cold as that.'
+
+'If not a thought, what then? I have spoken the truth. If it were a
+treasure, or anything that can be taken, you could take it, and I could
+help you. But if the possibility of possessing it lie not in deeds, it
+lies in thoughts, and is itself a thought. If you can teach me, I will
+think what you will; but if you cannot teach me, who shall? And how will
+it profit you to take my life or your own?'
+
+'Is it possible that love is only a thought?' asked Khaled, speaking
+rather to himself than to her.
+
+'It must be,' she answered. 'The body is what it is in the eyes of
+others, but the soul is what it thinks itself to be, happy or unhappy,
+loving or not loving.'
+
+'You are too subtle for me, Zehowah,' Khaled said. 'Yet I know that this
+is not all true.'
+
+For he knew that he possessed no soul, and yet he loved her. Moreover he
+could think himself happy or unhappy.
+
+'You are too subtle,' he repeated. 'I will take my sword again and I
+will go out and fight, and pursue the enemy and waste their country, for
+it is not so hard to cut through steel as to touch the heart of a woman
+who does not love, and it is easier to tear down towers and strongholds
+of stone with the naked hands than to build a temple upon the moving
+sand of an empty heart.'
+
+Khaled would have risen at once, but Zehowah took his hand and entreated
+him to stay with her.
+
+'Will you go out in the heat of the day, wounded and wearied?' she
+asked. 'Surely you will take a fever and die before you have followed
+the Shammars so far as two days' journey.'
+
+'My wounds are slight, and I am not weary,' Khaled answered. 'When the
+smith has heated the iron in the forge, does he wait until it is cold
+before striking?'
+
+'But think also of the soldiers, who have striven hard, and cannot thus
+go out upon a great expedition without preparation as well as rest.'
+
+'I will take those whom I can find. And if they will go with me, it is
+well. But if not, I will go alone, and they and the rest will follow
+after.'
+
+'It is summer, too,' said Zehowah, keeping him back. 'Is this a time to
+go out into the northern desert? Both men and beasts will perish by the
+way.'
+
+'Has not Allah bound every man's fate about his neck? And can a man cast
+it from him?'
+
+'I know not otherwise, but if heat and hunger and thirst do not kill the
+men, they will certainly destroy the beasts, whose names are not
+recorded by Asrael, and who have no destiny of their own.'
+
+'You hinder me,' said Khaled. 'And yet you do not know how many of the
+Shammar may be yet lurking within a day's march of the city, slaying
+your people, burning their houses and destroying their harvest. Let me
+go. Will you love me better if I stay?'
+
+'You will be the better able to get the victory.'
+
+'Will you love me better if I stay?'
+
+'If you go now, you may fail in your purpose and perish as well. How
+could I love you at all then?'
+
+'It is the victory you love then--not me?'
+
+'Could I love defeat? Nay, do not be angry with me. Stay here at least
+until the evening. Think of the burning sun and the raging thirst and
+the smarting of your wounds which have only been dressed this first
+time. Think of the soldiers, too----'
+
+'They can bear what I can bear. Was it not summer-time when the Prophet
+went out against the Romans?'
+
+'I do not know. Stay with me, Khaled.'
+
+'I will come back when I have destroyed the Shammars.'
+
+'And if the soldiers will not go with you, will you indeed go out
+alone?'
+
+'Yes. I will go alone. When they see that they will follow me. They are
+not foxes. They are brave men.'
+
+Khaled rose and girt his sword about him. Zehowah helped him, seeing
+that she could not persuade him to stay.
+
+'Farewell,' he said, shortly, and without so much as touching her hand
+he turned and went out. She followed him to the door of the room and
+stood watching as he went away.
+
+'One of us two was to rule,' she said to herself, 'and it is he, for I
+cannot move him. But what is this talk of love? Does he need love, who
+is himself the master?'
+
+She sighed and went back to the carpet on which they had been sitting.
+Then she called in her women and bid them tell her all they had heard
+about the fight in the morning; and they, thinking to please her,
+extolled the deeds of Khaled and of the tens he had slain they made
+hundreds, and of the thousands of the enemy's army, they made tens of
+thousands, till the walls of Riad could not have contained the hosts of
+which they spoke, and the dry sand of the desert could not have drunk
+all the blood which had been shed.
+
+Meanwhile Khaled went into the outer court of the palace, where many
+soldiers were congregated together in the shade of the high wall, eating
+camel's meat and blanket bread and drinking the water from the well.
+They were all able-bodied and unhurt, for those who had been wounded
+were at their houses, tended by their wives.
+
+'Men of Riad!' cried Khaled, standing before them. 'We have fought a
+good fight this morning and the power of our foes is broken. But all are
+not yet destroyed, and it may be that there are many thousands still
+lurking within a day's march of the city, slaying the people, burning
+their houses and destroying their harvests. Let us go out and kill them
+all before they are able to go back to their own country. Afterwards we
+will pursue those who are already escaping, and we will lay all the
+tribes of Shammar under tribute and bring back the women captive.'
+
+Thereupon a division arose among the soldiers. Some were for going at
+once with Khaled, but others said it was the hot season and no time for
+war.
+
+'It is indeed summer,' said Khaled. 'But if the Shammars were able to
+come to Riad in the heat, the men of Riad are able to go to them. And I
+at least will go at once, and those who wish to share the spoil will go
+with me, but those who are satisfied to sit in the shade and eat camel's
+meat will stay behind. In an hour's time I will ride out of the northern
+gate.'
+
+So saying, Khaled rode slowly down into the city towards the
+market-place. The people were carrying away their own dead, and dragging
+off the bodies of their enemies, with camels, by fours and fives tied
+together to bury them in a great ditch without the walls. When Khaled
+appeared, many of the men gathered round him, with cries of joy, for
+they had supposed that some of his wounds were dangerous and that they
+should not see him for many days.
+
+'Wallah! He is with us again!' they shouted, jostling each other to get
+near, and standing on tiptoe to see the good mare that had carried him
+so well in the fight.
+
+'Masallah! I am with you,' answered Khaled, 'and if you will go with me
+we will send many more of the Shammars to eat thorns and thistles, as
+many as dwell in Kasim and Tabal Shammar as far as Haïl; and by the help
+of Allah we will take the city of Haïl itself and divide the spoil and
+bring away the women captive; and when we have taken all that there is
+we will lay the land under tribute and make it subject to Nejed. So let
+those who will go with me arm themselves and take every man his horse or
+his camel, and dates and barley and water-skins, and in an hour's time
+we will ride out. For Allah will certainly give us the victory.'
+
+'Let us bury the dead to-day and to-morrow we will go,' said many of
+those nearest to him.
+
+'Are there no old men and boys in Riad to bind the sheaves you have
+mown?' asked Khaled. 'And are there no women to mourn over the dead of
+your kindred who have fallen in a good fight? And as for to-morrow, it
+is yet in Allah's hand. But to-day we have already with us. However, if
+you will not go with me, I will go alone.'
+
+The men were pleased with Khaled's speech, and indeed the greater part
+of the dead were buried by this time, for all the people had made haste
+to the work, fearing lest the bodies should bring a pestilence among
+them, since it was summer-time and very hot. Then all those who were
+unhurt and could bear arms, went and washed themselves, and took their
+weapons and food, as Khaled had directed them. Before the call to
+afternoon prayers the whole host went out of the northern gate.
+
+Then Khaled accomplished all that he had spoken of, and much more, for
+he drove the scattered force of the enemy before him, overtaking all at
+last and slaying all whom he overtook as far as Zulfah which is by the
+narrow end of the Nefud. Here he rested a short time, and then quickly
+crossing the sand, he entered the country called Kasim which is subject
+to the Shammars. Here he was told by a woman who had been taken that the
+Shammars were coming with a new army against him out of Haïl. He
+therefore hid his host in a pass of the hills just above the plain, and
+sent down a few Bedouins to encamp at the foot of the mountains, bidding
+them call themselves Shammars and make a show of being friendly to the
+enemy. So when the army of the Shammars reached the foot of the hills,
+they saw the tents and only one or two camels, and Khaled's Bedouins
+came out and welcomed them, and told them that Khaled was still crossing
+the Nefud, and that if they made haste through the hills they might come
+upon him unawares and at an advantage as he began to ascend. Thereupon
+the enemy rejoiced and entered the pass in haste, after filling their
+water-skins.
+
+When they were in the midst of the hills, Khaled and his army sprang up
+from the ambush and fell upon them, and utterly destroyed them, taking
+all their horses and camels and arms; after which he went down into the
+plain and laid waste the country about Haïl. He took the city as the
+Shammars had taken Riad. For he himself got upon the wall at night, with
+the strongest and the bravest of his followers, and slew the guards and
+opened the gate just before the dawn. But there was no Khaled in Haïl to
+rally the soldiers and give them heart to turn and make a stand in the
+streets.
+
+Khaled then entered the palace and took the Sultan of Shammar alive, not
+suffering him to be hurt, for he wished to bring him to Riad. This
+Sultan was a man of middle age, having only one eye, and also otherwise
+ill-favoured, besides being cowardly and fat. So Khaled ordered that he
+should be put into a litter, and the litter into a cage, and the cage
+slung between two camels. But he commanded that the women of the harem
+should be well treated and brought before him, that he might see them,
+intending to bring back the most beautiful of them as presents to his
+father-in-law.
+
+'Surely,' said the men who were with him, 'you will keep the fairest for
+yourself.'
+
+But Khaled turned angrily upon them.
+
+'Have I not lately married the most beautiful woman in the world?' he
+asked. 'I tell you it is for her sake that I have destroyed the
+Shammars. But the Sultan shall have the best of these women, and
+afterwards the rest of them will be divided amongst you by lot.'
+
+When the women heard that they were to be distributed among the men of
+Nejed they at first made a pretence of howling and beating their
+breasts, but they rejoiced secretly and soon began to laugh and talk
+among themselves, pointing out to each other the strongest and most
+richly dressed of Khaled's followers, as though choosing husbands among
+them. But one of them neither wept nor spoke to her companions, but
+stood silently watching Khaled, and when he sat down upon a carpet in
+the chief kahwah of the house, she brought him drink in a goblet set
+with pearls from Katar, and sat down at his feet as though she had been
+his wife. But he took little heed of her at first, for he was busy with
+grave matters.
+
+The other women, seeing what she did, thought that she was acting wisely
+in the hope of gaining Khaled's favour, seeing that he was the chief of
+their enemies, so they, too, came near, and brought water for his hands,
+and perfumes, and sweetmeats, thinking to outdo her. But she pushed them
+away, taking what they brought for him, and offering it herself.
+
+'Are you better than we?' the women said angrily. 'Has our lord chosen
+you for himself, that you will not let us come near him?'
+
+Then Khaled noticed her and began to wonder at her attention and zeal.
+
+'What is your name?' he asked. But she did not speak. 'Who is she?' he
+inquired of the other women.
+
+'She is an unbeliever,' they answered contemptuously. 'And she is proud,
+for she trusts in her white skin and her blue eyes, and her hair which
+is red without henna. She thinks she is better than we. Command us to
+uncover our faces, that you may see and judge between us.'
+
+'Let it be so. Let us see who is the fairest,' said Khaled, and he
+laughed.
+
+Then the woman who sat at his feet threw aside her veil, and all the
+others did the same. Khaled saw that the one was certainly more
+beautiful than the rest, for her skin was as white as milk, and her eyes
+like the sea of Oman when it is blue in winter. She had also long hair,
+plaited in three tresses which came down to her feet, red as the locusts
+when the sun shines upon them at evening, and not dyed.
+
+'There is a bay mare in a stable of black ones,' Khaled said. 'What is
+the name of the bay mare?'
+
+'Her name is Aziz, and she is a Christian,' said one of the women.
+
+'Not Aziz--Almasta,' said the beautiful woman in an accent which showed
+that she could not speak Arabic fluently. 'Almasta, a Christian.'
+
+'She was lately sent as a present to our master by the Emir of Basrah,'
+said one of the others.
+
+'He paid a thousand and five hundred sequins for her, for she was
+brought from Georgia,' said another. 'But I am a free woman, and myself
+the daughter of an emir.'
+
+Then all the others began to scream.
+
+'It is a lie,' they cried. 'Your father was a white slave from Syria.'
+
+'You are fools,' retorted the woman who had spoken. 'You should have
+said that you were also free women and the daughters of emirs. So our
+lord would have treated you with more consideration.'
+
+The others saw their folly and were silent and drew back, but Khaled
+only smiled.
+
+'As good mares are bred in the stable as in the desert,' he said, and
+the women laughed with him at the jest, for they saw that it pleased
+him.
+
+But Almasta was silent and sat at his feet, looking into his face.
+
+'You must learn to talk in Arabic,' he said, 'and then you will be able
+to tell stories of your native country to the Sultan, for he loves tales
+of travel.'
+
+Almasta smiled and bent her head a little, but she did not understand
+all he said, being but lately come into Arabia.
+
+'I will go with you,' she answered.
+
+'Yes. You will go with me to Riad to the Sultan, and perhaps he will
+make you his wife, for he has none at present.'
+
+'I will go with you,' she repeated, looking at him.
+
+'She does not understand you,' said the women, laughing at her ignorance
+of their own tongue.
+
+'It is no matter,' said Khaled. 'She will learn in due time. Perhaps it
+has pleased Allah to send my lord the Sultan a wife without a tongue for
+a blessing in his old age.'
+
+'I will go with you,' Almasta said again.
+
+'She can say nothing else,' jeered the women.
+
+One of them pulled her by her upper garment, so that she looked round.
+
+'Can you say this, "My father was a dog and the son of dogs"?' asked the
+woman.
+
+But Almasta pushed her angrily away, for she half understood. Then the
+woman grew angry too, and shook her fist in Almasta's face.
+
+'If you fight, you shall eat sticks,' said Khaled, and then they were
+all quiet.
+
+Thus he took possession of the city of Haïl and remaining there some
+time he reduced all the country to submission, so that it remained a
+part of the kingdom of Nejed for many years after that. For the power of
+the Shammars was broken, and they could nowhere have mustered a thousand
+men able to bear arms. Khaled set a governor in the place of the Sultan
+and ordered all the laws of the country in the same manner as those of
+Nejed, and after he had been absent from Riad nearly two months, he set
+aside a part of his force to remain behind and keep the peace in case
+there should be an outbreak, and with the rest he began to journey
+homeward, taking a great spoil and many captives with him.
+
+During the march most of the women captives rode on camels, but a few of
+the most beautiful were taken in litters lest the fatigues of riding
+should injure their appearance and thus diminish their value. Almasta
+was one of these, and the Sultan of Haïl was taken in a cage as has been
+said, though he was not otherwise ill-treated, and received his portion
+of camel's meat and bread, equal to that of the soldiers.
+
+Khaled sent messengers on fleet mares to Riad to give warning of his
+coming, but he could not himself proceed very quickly, because his army
+was burdened with so much spoil; and as there was now no haste to
+overtake an enemy he journeyed chiefly at night, resting during the day
+wherever there was water, for although the summer was far advanced it
+was still hot. He thought continually of Zehowah, by day in his tent and
+by night on the march, for he supposed that she would be glad when she
+heard of the victory and that she would now love him, because he had
+avenged her people, and taken Haïl, and brought back gold and captives,
+besides other treasures.
+
+'She was already pleased with my deeds, before we left Riad,' he
+thought, 'for she asked me how many of the Shammars I had slain with my
+own hand, and at the last she wished me to stay with her, most probably
+that I might tell her more about the fight. How much the more will she
+be glad now, since I have killed so many more and have brought back
+treasure, and made a whole country subject to her father. Shall not
+blood and gold buy the love of a woman?'
+
+It chanced once during this journey that Khaled was sitting at the door
+of his tent after the sun had gone down and before the night march had
+begun. Upon the one side, at a little distance, was the tent of the
+women captives who had been taken from the palace in Haïl, and upon the
+other the soldiers had set down the cage in which the Sultan of Shammar
+was carried. The men had laid a carpet over the cage to keep the sun
+from the prisoner during the heat of the day, lest he should not reach
+Riad alive as Khaled desired. For the Sultan was fat and of a choleric
+temper. Now the soldiers had given him food but had forgotten to bring
+him water, and it was hot under the carpet now that the evening had
+come. But he could lift it up a little on one side, and having done so,
+he began to cry out, cursing Khaled and railing at him, not knowing that
+he was so near at hand.
+
+'Oh you whose portion it shall be to broil everlastingly, and to eat
+thistles and thorns, and to lie bound in red-hot chains as I lie in this
+cage! Have you brought me out into the desert to die of thirst like a
+lame camel? Surely your entertainment on the day of judgment shall be
+boiling water and the fruit of Al Zakkam, and whenever you try to get
+out of hell you shall be dragged back again and beaten with iron clubs,
+and your skin shall dissolve, and the boiling water shall be poured upon
+your head!'
+
+In this way the captive cried out, for he was very thirsty. But when
+Khaled saw that no one gave him water he called in the darkness to the
+women who sat by their tent.
+
+'Fetch water and give the man to drink,' he said.
+
+One of the women rose quickly and filled a jar at the well close by, and
+took it to the cage. But then the railing and cursing broke out afresh,
+so that Khaled wondered what had happened.
+
+'Who has sent me this unbelieving woman to torture me with thirst?'
+cried the prisoner. 'Are you not Aziz whom I was about to take for my
+fourth wife on account of your red hair? But your hair shall be a
+perpetual flame hereafter, burning the bones of your head, and your
+flesh shall be white with heat as iron in a forge. If I were still in my
+kingdom you should eat many sticks! If Allah delivers me from my enemies
+I will cause your skin to be embroidered with gold for a trapping to my
+horse!'
+
+The moon rose at this time, being a little past the full, and Khaled
+looked towards the cage and saw that the woman was standing two paces
+away from the Sultan's outstretched hand. She dabbled in the cool water
+with her fingers so that a plashing sound was heard, and then drank
+herself, and scattered afterwards a few drops in the face of the thirsty
+captive.
+
+'It is good water,' she said. 'It is cold.'
+
+Khaled knew from her broken speech that it was Almasta, and he
+understood that she was torturing the prisoner with the sound and sight
+of the water, and with her words. So he rose from his place and went to
+the cage.
+
+'Did I not tell you to give him drink?' he asked, standing before the
+woman.
+
+'Oh my lord, be merciful,' cried the captive, when he saw that Khaled
+himself was there. 'Be merciful and let me drink, for your heart is
+easily moved to pity, and by an act of charity you shall hereafter sit
+in the shade of the tree Sedrat and drink for ever of the wine of
+paradise.'
+
+'I do not desire wine,' said Khaled. 'But you shall certainly not
+thirst. Give him the jar,' he said to Almasta. But she shook her head.
+
+'He is bad and ugly,' she said. 'If he does not drink, he will die.'
+
+Then Khaled put out his hand to take the jar of water, but Almasta threw
+it violently to the ground, and it broke to pieces. Thereupon the
+captive began again to rail and curse at Almasta and to implore Khaled
+with many blessings.
+
+'You shall drink, for I will bring water myself,' said Khaled. He went
+back to his tent and took his own jar to the well, and filled it
+carefully.
+
+When he turned he saw that Almasta was running from his tent towards the
+cage, with a drawn sword in her hand. He then ran also, and being very
+swift of foot, he overtook her just as she thrust at the Sultan through
+the bars. But the sword caught in the folds of the soft carpet, and
+Khaled took it from her hand, and thrust her down so that she fell upon
+her knees. Then he gave the prisoner the jar with the water that
+remained in it, for some had been spilt as he ran.
+
+'Who has given you the right to kill my captives?' he asked of Almasta.
+
+'Kill me, then!' she cried.
+
+'Indeed, if you were not so valuable, I would cut off your head,' Khaled
+answered. 'Why do you wish me to kill you?'
+
+'I hate him,' she said, pointing to the captive who was drinking like a
+thirsty camel.
+
+'That is no reason why I should kill you. Go back to the tents.'
+
+But Almasta laid her hand on the sword he held and tried to bring it to
+her own throat.
+
+'This is a strange woman,' said Khaled. 'Why do you wish to die? You
+shall go to Riad and be the Sultan's wife.'
+
+'No, no!' she cried. 'Kill me! Not him, not him!'
+
+'Of whom do you speak?'
+
+'Him!' she answered, again pointing to the prisoner. 'Is he not the
+Sultan?'
+
+Khaled laughed aloud, for he saw that she had supposed she was to be
+taken to Riad to be made the wife of the Sultan of Shammar. Indeed, the
+other women had told her so, to anger her.
+
+'Not this man,' he said, endeavouring to make her understand. 'There is
+another Sultan at Riad. The Sultan of Shammar is one, the Sultan of
+Nejed another.'
+
+'You?' she asked, suddenly springing up. 'With you?'
+
+The moon was bright and Khaled saw that her eyes gleamed like stars and
+her face grew warm, and when she took his hands her own were cold.
+
+'No, not I,' he answered. 'I am not the Sultan.'
+
+But her face became grey in the moonlight, and she covered her head with
+her veil and went slowly back to her tent.
+
+'This woman loves me,' Khaled thought. 'And as I have not talked much
+with her, it must be because I am strong and have conquered the people
+among whom she was captive. How much the more then, will Zehowah love
+me, for the same reason.'
+
+So he was light of heart, and soon afterwards he commanded everything to
+be made ready and mounted his bay mare for the night march.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+When Khaled was within half a day's march of Riad, the Sultan came out
+to meet him with a great train of attendants and courtiers, with cooks
+bringing food and sweetmeats, and a number of musicians. And they all
+encamped together for a short time in the shade of the trees, for there
+were gardens in the place. The Sultan embraced Khaled and put upon him a
+very magnificent garment, after which they sat down together in a large
+tent which the Sultan had brought with him. When they had eaten and
+refreshed themselves they began to talk, and Khaled told his
+father-in-law all that he had done, and gave him an account of the
+spoils which he had brought back, commanding the most valuable objects
+to be brought into the tent. After this the Sultan desired to see the
+women captives.
+
+'There is one especially whom it may please you to take for yourself,'
+said Khaled, and he ordered Almasta to be brought in.
+
+When the male slaves had left the tent, Almasta drew aside her veil. The
+Sultan looked at her and smiled, stroking his beard, for he was much
+pleased.
+
+'Her face is like a pearl and her hair is a setting of red gold,' he
+said. 'Truly she is like the sunrise on a fair morning when there are
+red clouds in the east.'
+
+Almasta looked attentively at him, and afterwards she glanced at Khaled,
+who could not avoid looking at her on account of her beauty. Her face
+was grave and indifferent. Then Khaled told the Sultan how she had hated
+the Sultan of Shammar and had tried to kill him on the journey.
+
+'This is a dangerous woman, my son,' said the old man. But he laughed as
+he said it, for although he was old, he was no coward. 'She is
+dangerous, indeed. Will you love me, pearl of my soul's treasures?' he
+inquired of her, still smiling.
+
+'You are my lord and my master,' she answered, looking down.
+
+When Khaled heard this he wondered whether his father-in-law would get
+any affection from her. Zehowah had answered in the same words.
+
+'By Allah, I will give you such gifts as will make you love me,' said
+the Sultan. 'What shall I give you?'
+
+'His head,' answered Almasta, raising her eyes quickly.
+
+'The head of the Sultan of Shammar?'
+
+Almasta nodded, and Khaled could see that her lips trembled.
+
+'A dead man has no companions,' said the Sultan, looking at Khaled to
+see what he would do. But Khaled cared little, and said nothing.
+
+So the Sultan called a slave and ordered the captive's head to be struck
+off immediately. Then Almasta threw herself upon the carpet on the floor
+of the tent and embraced his feet.
+
+'See how easily the love of a woman is got,' Khaled thought, 'even by an
+old man whose beard is grey and his limbs heavy.'
+
+When Almasta rose again, she looked at Khaled triumphantly, as though to
+remind him of the night on the journey when he had hindered her from
+killing the captive in his cage. But though he understood her, he held
+his peace, for he had cared nothing whether the prisoner lived or died
+after he had delivered him over to his father-in-law, and he was
+considering whether he might not please Zehowah in some similar manner.
+This was not easy, however, for he was not aware that Zehowah had any
+private enemy, whose head he might offer her.
+
+After the Sultan had seen the other women and the best of the spoils,
+Khaled begged that he might be allowed to ride on into Riad alone, for
+he saw that the Sultan intended to spend the night in feasting where he
+had encamped. The Sultan was so much pleased with Almasta and so
+greatly diverted in examining the rich stuffs and the gold and silver
+vessels and jewels, that he let Khaled go, almost without trying to
+detain him, though he made him many speeches praising his conduct of the
+war, and would have loaded him with gifts. But Khaled would take nothing
+with him, saying that he would only receive his just share with the
+rest; and the fame of his generosity immediately went abroad among the
+soldiers and the Bedouins throughout all the camp.
+
+'For,' said Khaled, 'there is not a fleeter mare than mine among all
+those we have taken; my sword proves to be a good one, for I have tried
+it well; as for women, I am satisfied with one wife; and besides a wife,
+a sword and a horse, there are no treasures in the world which I covet.'
+
+So Khaled rode away alone into Riad, for he desired no company, being
+busy with his own thoughts. He reached the gates at nightfall and went
+immediately to the palace and entered Zehowah's apartments. He found her
+sitting among her women in her accustomed place, listening to the tales
+of an old woman who sat in the midst of the circle. As soon as Zehowah
+saw her husband she sprang up gladly to meet him, as a friend would have
+done.
+
+'Though it is summer-time, I have pursued the enemy,' said Khaled. 'And
+though the sun was hot, I have got the victory and brought home the
+spoil.'
+
+He said this remembering how she had tried to hinder him from going.
+Then he gave her his sword and he sat down with her, while the women
+brought food and drink, for he was weary, and hungry and thirsty. The
+women also brought their musical instruments and began to sing songs in
+praise of Khaled's deeds; but after a time he sent them all away and
+remained alone with Zehowah.
+
+'O Zehowah,' he said, 'you are my law and my rule. You are my speech and
+my occupation. You are my Kebla to which I turn in prayer. For the love
+of you I have got the victory over many foes. And yet I see that your
+cheek is cold and the light of your eyes is undisturbed. Have you no
+other enemies for me to destroy, or have you no secret foe whose head
+would be a pleasant gift?'
+
+Zehowah laughed, as she fanned him with a palm leaf.
+
+'Do you still thirst for war, Khaled?' she asked. 'Truly you have
+swallowed up all our enemies as the dry sand swallows up water. Where
+shall I find enemies enough for you to slay? You went out in pride and
+you have returned in glory. Are you not yet satisfied? And as for any
+secret foe, if I have any I do not know him. Rest, therefore; eat and
+drink and spend your days in peace.'
+
+'I care little for either food or drink,' Khaled answered, 'and I need
+little rest.'
+
+'Will nothing but war please you? Must you overcome Egypt and make Syria
+pay tribute as far as Damascus before you will rest?'
+
+'I will conquer the whole world for you, if you wish it,' said Khaled.
+
+'What should I do with the world?' asked Zehowah. 'Have I not treasures
+and garments enough and to spare, besides the spoil you have now brought
+home? And besides, if you would conquer the world you must needs make
+war upon true believers, amongst whom we do not count the people of
+Shammar. Be satisfied therefore and rest in peace.'
+
+'How shall I be satisfied until I have kindled the light in Zehowah's
+eyes at my coming, and until I feel that her hand is cold and trembles
+when I take it in mine?'
+
+'Do I say to my eyes, "be dull"--or to my hand, "do not tremble"?'
+Zehowah asked. 'Is this, which you ask of me, something I can command at
+will, as I can a smile or a word? If it is, teach me and I will learn.
+But if not, why do you expect of me what I cannot do? Can a camel gallop
+like a horse, or a horse trot like a camel, or bear great burdens
+through the desert? Have you come back from a great war only to talk of
+this something which you call love, which is yours and not mine, which
+you feel and I cannot feel, which you cannot explain nor describe, and
+which, after all, is but a whim of the fancy, as one man loves sour
+drink and another sweet?'
+
+'Do you think that love is nothing but a whim of the fancy?' asked
+Khaled bitterly.
+
+'What else can it be? Would you love me if you were blind?'
+
+'Yes.'
+
+'And if you were deaf?'
+
+'Yes.'
+
+'And if you could not touch my face with your hands, nor kiss me with
+your lips?'
+
+'Yes.'
+
+Zehowah laughed.
+
+'Then love is indeed a fancy. For if you could not see me, nor touch me,
+nor hear me, what would remain to you but an empty thought?'
+
+'Have I seen you, or touched you, or heard your voice for these two
+months and a half?' asked Khaled. 'Yet I have loved you as much during
+all that time.'
+
+'You mean that you have thought of me, as I have thought of you, by the
+memory of what was not fancy, but reality. Would you dispute with me,
+Khaled? You will find me subtle.'
+
+'There is more wit in my arm than in my head,' Khaled answered, 'and it
+is not easy for a man to persuade a woman.'
+
+'It is very easy, provided that the man have reason on his side. But
+where are the treasures you have brought back, the slaves and the rich
+spoils? I would gladly see some of them, for the messengers you sent
+told great tales of the riches of Haïl.'
+
+'To-morrow they will be brought into the city. Your father has remained
+feasting in the gardens towards Dereyiyah, and the whole army with him.
+I rode hither alone.'
+
+'Why did you not remain too?'
+
+'Because that whim of the fancy which I call love brought me back,'
+Khaled answered.
+
+'Then I am glad you love me,' said Zehowah. 'For I am glad you came
+quickly.'
+
+'Are you truly glad?'
+
+'I was very tired of my women,' she answered. 'I am sorry you have
+brought nothing with you. Are there any among the captives who are
+beautiful?'
+
+'There is one, a present sent lately to the Sultan of Shammar. She is
+very beautiful, and unlike all the rest. Your father is much pleased
+with her, and will perhaps marry her.'
+
+'Of what kind is her beauty?' asked Zehowah.
+
+'She is as white as milk, her eyes are twin sapphires, her mouth is a
+rose, her hair is like gold reddened in fire.'
+
+Zehowah was silent for a while, and twisted a string of musk-beads round
+her fingers.
+
+'The others are all Arabian women,' Khaled said at last.
+
+'Why did you not keep the beautiful one for yourself?' asked Zehowah,
+suddenly throwing aside her beads and looking at him curiously. 'Surely
+you, who have borne the brunt of the war, might have chosen for yourself
+what pleased you best.'
+
+Khaled looked at her in great astonishment.
+
+'Have I not married Zehowah? Would you have me take another wife?'
+
+'Why not? Is it not lawful for a man to take four wives at one time? And
+this woman might have loved you, as you desire to be loved.'
+
+'Would it be nothing to you, if I took her?'
+
+'Nothing. I am the King's daughter. I shall always be first in the
+house. I say, she might love you. Then you would be satisfied.'
+
+'Zehowah, Zehowah!' cried Khaled. 'Is love a piece of gold, that it
+matters not whence it be, so long as a man has it in his own possession?
+Or is it wood of the 'Ood tree that one may buy it and bring it home and
+make the whole house fragrant with it? Is a man's heart like his belly,
+which is alike satisfied with different kinds of food?'
+
+'He who eats, knows by the taste whether he eats Persian mutton, or
+barley bread, or only broiled locusts. But a man who believes that he is
+loved, knows that he is loved, so far as knowing is possible, and must
+be satisfied, if to be loved is what he desires.'
+
+'That may be true. But he who desires bread is not satisfied with
+locusts. It is your love which I would have. Not the love of another.'
+
+'You are like a man who hopes to get by argument a sum of money from one
+who has nothing,' said Zehowah, smiling at him. 'Can you make gold grow
+in the purse of a beggar? Or can you cause a ghada bush to bear dates by
+reasoning with it? Your heart is a palm tree, but mine is a ghada bush.'
+
+'Yet an angel may touch the ghada and it will bear fruit,' answered
+Khaled, for he remembered how the angel had turned dry leaves into rich
+garments for him to wear.
+
+'Doubtless, Allah can do all things. But where is the angel? Hear me,
+Khaled, for I speak very reasonably, as a wife should speak to her
+husband, who is her lord and master. My lord is not satisfied with me
+and desires something of me which is not mine to give. Let him take
+another wife beside me. I have given my lord a kingdom and great riches
+and power. Let him take another wife now, who will give him this fancy
+of his thoughts for which he yearns, though she have no other
+possessions. In this way my lord will be satisfied.'
+
+Khaled listened sadly to what Zehowah said, and he began to despair,
+for he was not subtle in argument nor eloquent in speech. The reason of
+this was plain. In the days when he had been one of the genii he had
+wandered over the whole earth and had heard the eloquence of all nations
+and the arguments of all philosophers, learning therefrom that deeds are
+no part of words, and that they who would be believed must speak little
+and do much. But the genii possess no insight into the hearts of women.
+
+Khaled reflected also that the length of life granted him was uncertain,
+and that he had already spent two months and a half at a distance from
+Zehowah in accomplishing the conquest whereby he had hoped to win her
+love. But since this had utterly failed, he cast about in his mind for
+some new deed to do, which could be done without leaving her even for a
+short time. But he was troubled by her indifference, and most of all by
+her proposing that he should take another wife. As he thought of this,
+he was filled with horror, and he understood that he loved Zehowah more
+than he had supposed, since he could not bear to think of setting
+another woman beside her.
+
+Then his face became very dark and his eyes were like camp fires far off
+in the desert, and he took Zehowah's wrist in his hand, holding it
+tightly as though he would not let it go. As his heart grew hot in his
+breast, words came to his lips unawares like the speech of a man in a
+dream, and he heard his own voice as it were from a distance.
+
+'I will not take another,' he said. 'What is the love of any other woman
+to me? It is as dust in the throat of a man thirsting for water. Show me
+a woman who loves me. Her face shall be but a cold mirror in which the
+image of a fire is reflected without warmth, her soft words shall be to
+me as the screaming of a parrot, her touch a thorn and her lips ashes.
+What is it to me if all the women of the world love me? Kindle a fire
+and burn them before me, for I care not. Let them perish all together,
+for I shall not know that they are gone. I love you and not another.
+Shall it profit a man to fill his mouth with dust, though it be the dust
+of gold mingled with precious stones, when he desires water? Or shall he
+be warmed in winter by the reflection of a fire in a mirror? By Allah! I
+want neither the wealth of Haïl, nor a wife with red hair. Let them take
+gold who do not ask for love. I want but one thing, and Zehowah alone
+can give it to me. Wallah! My heart burns. But I would give it to be
+burned for ever in hell if I might get your love now. This I ask. This
+only I desire. For this I will suffer and for this I am ready to die
+before my time.'
+
+Zehowah was silent, looking at him with wonder, and yet not altogether
+pleased. She saw that she could not understand him, though she did as
+well as she could.
+
+'Has he not all that the heart of man can desire?' she thought. 'Am I
+not young and beautiful, and possessed of many jewels and treasures?
+Have I not given him wealth and power, and has he not with his own hand
+got the victory over his enemies and mine? And yet he is not satisfied.
+Surely, he is too hard to please.'
+
+But he, reading her thoughts from her face, continued in his speech.
+
+'What is all the happiness of the world without love?' he asked. 'It is
+like a banquet in which many rich viands are served, but the guests
+cannot eat them because there is no salt in any of them. And what is a
+beautiful woman without love? She is like a garden in which there are
+all kinds of rare flowers, and much grass, and deep shade, but in which
+a man cannot live, because nothing grows there which he can eat when he
+is hungry.'
+
+'Truly,' said Zehowah, 'that is what you will make of your life. For
+there is a garden called Irem, planted in a secret place of the deserts
+about Aden, by Sheddad the son of Ad, who desired to outdo the gardens
+of paradise, and was destroyed for his impiety with all his people, by
+the hand of Allah. But a certain man named Abdullah ibn Kelabah was
+searching in the desert for a lost camel, and came unawares upon this
+place. There were fruits and water there and all that a man could wish
+for, and Abdullah dwelt in peace and plenty, praising Allah. Then on a
+certain day he desired to eat an onion, and finding none anywhere, he
+went out, intending to obtain one, and having eaten it, to return
+immediately. But though he searched the desert many months he was never
+able to find the garden again. Wherefore it is said that Abdullah ibn
+Kelabah lost the earthly paradise of Irem for a mouthful of onion.'
+
+'How can you understand me if you do not love me?' asked Khaled. 'Love
+has its own language, and when two love they understand each the other's
+words. But when the one loves and the other loves not, they are
+strangers, though they be man and wife; or they are like Persians and
+Arabians not understanding either the other's speech, or that if the
+wife cries "father," her husband will bring her a cup of water supposing
+her to be thirsty. For those who would speak one language must be of one
+heart, and they who would be of one heart must love each other.'
+
+Then Zehowah sighed and leaned against the cushions by the wall and drew
+her hand away from Khaled.
+
+'What is it?' she asked in a low voice. 'What is it you would have?' But
+though she had already asked the question many times she found no
+answer, and none that he was able to give could enlighten her darkness.
+
+'It is the spark that kindles the flame,' Khaled said, and he pointed
+to the lights that hung in the room. 'Your beauty is like that of a
+cunningly designed lamp, inlaid with gold and silver and covered with
+rich ornament, which is seen by day. But there is no light within, and
+it is cold, though it be full of oil and the wick be ready.'
+
+Zehowah turned towards him somewhat impatiently.
+
+'And you are as one who would kindle the flame with words, having no
+torch,' she answered.
+
+'Have I not done deeds also?' asked Khaled. 'Or have I spoken much, that
+you should reproach me? Surely I have slain more of your enemies than I
+have spoken words to you to-night.'
+
+'But have I asked for an offering of blood, or a marriage dower of dead
+bodies?'
+
+Khaled was silent, for he was bitterly disappointed, and as his eyes
+fell upon the sword which hung on the wall, he felt that he could almost
+have taken it and made an end of Zehowah for very anger that she would
+not love him. Had he not gone out for her into the raging heat of
+summer, and borne the burden of a great war, and destroyed a nation and
+taken a city? Moreover, if neither words nor deeds could gain her love,
+what means remained to him to try?
+
+All through the night Khaled pondered, calling up all that he had seen
+in the world in former times, until he fell asleep at last, wearied in
+heart.
+
+Very early in the morning one of Zehowah's women came and stood by his
+bed and waked him. He could see that her face was pale in the dawn, her
+limbs trembled and her voice was uncertain.
+
+'Arise, my lord!' she said. 'A messenger has come from the army with
+evil news, and stands waiting in the court.'
+
+Khaled sprang up, and Zehowah awoke also.
+
+'What is this message?' he asked hastily.
+
+But the woman threw herself upon the floor and covered her face, as
+though begging forgiveness because she brought evil tidings.
+
+'Speak!' said Zehowah. 'What is it?'
+
+'Our lord the Sultan is dead!' cried the woman, and she broke out into
+weeping and crying and would say nothing more.
+
+But when Zehowah heard that her father was dead, she sat down upon the
+floor and beat her breast and tore her hair, and wailed and wept, while
+all the women of the harem came and gathered round her and joined in her
+mourning, so that the whole palace was filled with the noise of their
+lamentations.
+
+Khaled went out into the court and questioned the messenger, who told
+him that the Sultan had held a great feast in the evening in the gardens
+of Dereyiyah, having with him the woman Almasta and the other captive
+women, and being served by black slaves. But, suddenly, in the night,
+when most of the soldiers were already asleep, there had been a great
+cry, and the slaves and women had come running from the tent, crying
+that the Sultan was dead. This was true, and the Jewish physician who
+had gone out with his master declared that he had died from an access of
+humours to the head, brought on by a surfeit of sweetmeats, there being
+at the time an evil conjunction of Zoharah and Al Marech in square
+aspect to the moon and in the house of death.
+
+Khaled therefore mounted his bay mare and rode quickly out to Dereyiyah,
+where he found that the news was true, and the women were already
+preparing the Sultan's body for burial. Having ordered the mourning, and
+commanded the army to prepare for the return to the city, Khaled set out
+with the funeral procession; and when he reached the walls of Riad he
+turned to the left and passed round to the north-east side of the city
+where the burial-ground is situated. Here he laid the body of his
+father-in-law in the tomb which the latter had prepared for himself
+during his lifetime, and afterwards, dismissing the mourners, he went
+back into the city to the palace.
+
+After the days of mourning were accomplished, the will of the Sultan was
+made known, though indeed the people were well acquainted with it
+already. By his will Khaled succeeded to the sovereignty of the kingdom
+of Nejed and to all the riches and treasures which the Sultan had
+accumulated during his lifetime. But the people received the
+announcement with acclamations and much joy, followed by a great
+feasting, for which innumerable camels were slain. Khaled also called
+all the chief officers and courtiers to a banquet and addressed them in
+a few words, according to his manner.
+
+'Men of Nejed,' he said, 'it has pleased Allah to remove to the
+companionship of the faithful our master the Sultan, my revered
+father-in-law, upon whom be peace, and to set me up among you as King in
+his stead, being the husband of his only daughter, which you all know.
+As for the past, you know me; but if I have wronged any man let him
+declare it and I will make reparation. And if not, let none complain
+hereafter. But as for the future I will be a just ruler so long as I
+live, and will lead the men of Nejed to war, when there is war, and will
+divide the spoil fairly; and in peace I will not oppress the people with
+taxes nor change the just and good laws of the kingdom. And now the
+feast is prepared. Sit down cheerfully, and may Allah give us both the
+appetite to enjoy and the strength to digest all the good things which
+shall be set before us.'
+
+But Khaled himself ate sparingly, for his heart was heavy, and when they
+had feasted and drunk treng juice and heard music, he retired to the
+harem, where he found Zehowah sitting with Almasta, the Georgian woman,
+there being no other women present in the room. He was surprised when he
+saw Almasta, though he knew that the captive women had been lodged in
+the palace, the distribution of the spoil from the war having been put
+off by the mourning for the Sultan.
+
+When Almasta heard him enter, she looked up quickly and a bright colour
+rose in her face, as when the juice of a pomegranate is poured into
+milk, and disappeared again as the false dawn before morning, leaving no
+trace. Khaled sat down.
+
+'Is not this the woman of whom you spoke?' Zehowah asked. 'I knew her
+from the rest by her red hair.'
+
+'This is the woman. Your father would have taken her for his wife. But
+Allah has disposed otherwise.'
+
+'She is beautiful. She is worthy to be a king's wife,' said Zehowah.
+
+'The Sultan?' asked Almasta, for she hardly understood. Her face turned
+as white as bone bleached by the sun, and her fingers trembled, while
+her eyes were cast down.
+
+Zehowah looked at Khaled and laughed.
+
+'See how she trembles and turns pale before you,' she said. 'And a
+little while ago her face was red. You have found a torch wherewith to
+kindle this lamp, and a breath that can extinguish it.'
+
+'I do not know,' Khaled answered. But he looked attentively at Almasta
+and remained silent for some time. 'It is now necessary to divide the
+spoils of the war,' he said at last, 'and to bestow such of these women
+as you do not wish to keep upon the most deserving of the officers.'
+
+'My lord will surely take the fairest for himself, since she loves him,'
+said Zehowah, again laughing, but somewhat bitterly.
+
+'May my tongue be cloven and my eyes be put out, may my hands wither at
+the wrists and my feet fall from my ankles, if I ever take any wife but
+you,' said Khaled. 'Yallah! So be it.'
+
+When Zehowah heard him say this, even while Almasta's face was unveiled
+before him, she understood that he was greatly in earnest.
+
+'Let me keep her for my handmaid,' she said at last.
+
+'Is she mine that you need ask me? But it will be wiser to give her to
+Abdul Kerim, the sheikh of the horsemen. I have promised that the spoil
+should be fairly divided, and though few have seen this woman many have
+heard of her beauty. And besides, she would weary you, for she cannot
+talk in Arabian, nor does she seem quick to learn. Abdul Kerim has the
+first right, since Allah has removed your father, upon whom be peace.'
+
+'Your words are my laws,' answered Zehowah obediently. 'And, indeed, it
+may be that you are right, for I believe she can neither dance nor sing,
+nor play upon any musical instrument. She would certainly weary me after
+a time, as you say. Give her therefore to Abdul Kerim for his share.'
+
+They then made Almasta understand that she was to be given to the sheikh
+of the horsemen; but when she had understood she shook her head and
+smiled, though at first she said nothing, so that Khaled and Zehowah
+wondered whether she had comprehended what they had told her.
+
+'Do you understand what we have told you?' asked Zehowah, who was
+diverted by her ignorance of the Arabic language.
+
+'I understand.'
+
+'And are you not pleased that you are to be the wife of Abdul Kerim, who
+is a rich man and still young?'
+
+'I was to be the Sultan's wife,' said Almasta, with difficulty, looking
+at Khaled. 'You told me so.'
+
+'The Sultan is dead,' Khaled answered.
+
+'Who is the Sultan now?' she asked.
+
+'Khaled is the Sultan,' said Zehowah.
+
+'You said that I should be the Sultan's wife,' Almasta repeated.
+
+'Doubtless, I said so,' Khaled replied. 'But Allah has ordered it
+otherwise.'
+
+Almasta again smiled and shook her head.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+On the following day Khaled made a division of the spoils, and gave
+Almasta to Abdul Kerim, enjoining upon him to marry her, since he had
+but two wives and could do so lawfully. The sheikh of the horsemen was
+glad, for he had heard much of Almasta's beauty, and he loved fair
+women, being of a fierce temper and not more than forty years old. So he
+called his friends to the marriage feast that same day, and Zehowah sent
+Almasta in a litter to his harem, giving her also numerous rich garments
+by way of a dower, but which in fact were due to Abdul Kerim as his
+share of the booty. So the men feasted, with music, until the evening,
+when the bridegroom retired to the harem and the Kadi came and read the
+contract; after which Abdul Kerim sat down while Almasta was brought
+before him in various dresses, one after the other, as is customary.
+
+When the women were all gone away, Abdul Kerim began to talk to his
+wife, but she only laughed and said the few words she knew, not knowing
+what he said, and presently she began to sing to him in a low voice, in
+her own language. Her voice was very clear and quite different from that
+of the Arabian women whom Abdul had heard, and the tones vibrated with
+great passion and sweetness, so that he was enchanted and listened, as
+in a dream, while his head rested against Almasta's knee. She continued
+to sing in such a manner that his soul was transported with delight; and
+at last, as the sound soothed him, he fell into a gentle sleep.
+
+Almasta, still singing softly, loosened his vest, touching him so gently
+that he did not wake. She then drew out of one of the three tresses of
+her hair a fine steel needle, extremely long and sharp, having at one
+end a small wooden ball for a handle, and while she sang, she thrust it
+very quickly into his breast to its full length, so that it pierced his
+heart and he died instantly. But she continued to sing, lest any of the
+women should be listening from a distance. Presently she withdrew the
+needle so slowly that not a drop of blood followed it, and having made
+it pass thrice through the carpet she restored it to her hair, after
+which she fastened the dead man's vest again, so that nothing was
+disarranged. She sang on, after this for some time, and then after a
+short silence she sprang up from the couch, uttering loud screams and
+lamentations and beating her breast violently.
+
+The women of the harem came in quickly, and when they saw that their
+master was dead, they sat down with Almasta and wept with her, for as he
+lay dead there was no mark of any violence nor any sign whereby it could
+be told that he had not died naturally.
+
+When Khaled heard that Abdul Kerim was dead, he was much grieved at
+heart, for the man had been brave and had been often at his right hand
+in battle. But the news being brought to him at dawn when he awoke, he
+immediately sent the Jewish physician of the court to ascertain if
+possible the cause of the sudden death. The physician made careful
+examination of the body, and having purified himself returned to Khaled
+to give an account.
+
+'I have executed my lord's orders with scrupulous exactness,' he said,
+'and I find that without doubt the sheikh of the horsemen died suddenly
+by an access of humours to the heart, the sun being at that time in the
+Nadir, for he died about midnight, and being moreover in evil
+conjunction with the Dragon's Tail in the Heart of the Lion, and not yet
+far from the square aspect of Al Marech which caused the death of his
+majesty the late Sultan, upon whom be peace.'
+
+But Khaled was thoughtful, for he reflected that this was the second
+time that a man had died suddenly when he was about to be Almasta's
+husband, and he remembered, how she had attempted to kill the Sultan of
+Haïl, and had ultimately brought about his death.
+
+'Have you examined the dead man as minutely as you have observed the
+stars?' he inquired. 'Is there no mark of violence upon him, nor of
+poison, nor of strangling?'
+
+'There is no mark. By Allah! I speak truth. My lord may see for himself,
+for the man is not yet buried.'
+
+'Am I a jackal, that I should sniff at dead bodies?' asked Khaled. 'Go
+in peace.'
+
+The physician withdrew, for he saw that Khaled was displeased, and he
+was himself as much surprised as any one by the death of Abdul Kerim, a
+man lean and strong, not given to surfeiting and in the prime of health.
+
+'Min Allah!' he said as he departed. 'We are in the hand of the Lord,
+who knoweth our rising up and our lying down. It is possible that if I
+had seen this man at the moment of death, or a little before, I might
+have discovered the nature of his disease, for I could have talked with
+him and questioned him.'
+
+But Khaled went in and talked with Zehowah. She was greatly astonished
+when she heard that Almasta's husband was dead, but she was satisfied
+with the answer of the Jewish physician, who enjoyed great reputation
+and was believed to be at that time the wisest man in Arabia.
+
+'Give her back to me, to be one of my women,' said she. 'It is not
+written that she should marry a man of Nejed, unless you will take her
+yourself.'
+
+But Khaled bent his brow angrily and his eyes glowed like the coals of a
+camp fire which is almost extinguished, when the night wind blows
+suddenly over the ashes.
+
+'I have spoken,' he said.
+
+'And I have heard,' she answered. 'Let there be an end. But give me this
+woman to divert me with her broken speech.'
+
+'I fear she will do you an injury of which you may not live,' said
+Khaled.
+
+'What injury can she do me?' asked Zehowah in astonishment, not
+understanding him.
+
+'She asked of your father the head of the Sultan of Haïl, whom she
+hated. And your father gave it to her.'
+
+'Peace be upon him!' exclaimed Zehowah piously.
+
+'Upon him peace. And when he would have married her, he died suddenly at
+the feasting. And now this Abdul Kerim, who was to have been her
+husband, is dead also, without sign, in the night, as a man stung by a
+serpent in his sleep. These are strange doings.'
+
+'If you think she has done evil, let her be put to death,' said Zehowah.
+'But the physician found no mark upon Abdul Kerim. By the hand of Allah
+he was taken.'
+
+'Doubtless his fate was about his neck. But it is strange.'
+
+Zehowah looked at Khaled in silence, but presently she smiled and laid
+her hand upon his.
+
+'This woman loves you with her whole soul,' she said. 'You think that
+she has slain Abdul Kerim by secret arts, in the hope that she may marry
+you.'
+
+'And your father also.'
+
+Then they were both silent, and Zehowah covered her face, since she
+could not prevent tears from falling when she thought of her father,
+whom she had loved.
+
+'If this be so,' she said after a long time, 'let the woman die
+immediately.'
+
+'It is necessary to be just,' Khaled answered. 'I will put no one to
+death without witnesses, not even a captive woman, who is certainly an
+unbeliever at heart. Has any one seen her do these deeds, or does any
+one know by what means a man may be slain in his sleep, or at a feast,
+so that no mark is left upon his body? At Dereyiyah your father was
+alone with her in the inner part of the tent, and she was singing to him
+that he might sleep. For I have made inquiry. And when Abdul Kerim died
+he was also alone with her. I cannot understand these things. But you
+are a woman and subtle. It may be that you can see what is too dark for
+me.'
+
+'It may be. Therefore give her back to me, and I will lay a trap for
+her, so that she will betray herself if she has really done evil. And
+when we have convicted her by her own words she shall die.'
+
+'Are you not afraid, Zehowah?'
+
+'Can I change my destiny? If my hour is come, I shall die of a fever, or
+of a cold, whether she be with me or not. But if my years are not full,
+she cannot hurt me.'
+
+'This is undoubtedly true,' answered Khaled, who could find nothing to
+say. 'But I will first question the woman myself.'
+
+So he sent slaves with a litter to bring Almasta from the house of
+mourning to the palace, and when she was come he sent out all the other
+women and remained alone with her and Zehowah, making her sit down
+before him so that he could see her face. Her cheeks were pale, for she
+had not slept, having been occupied in weeping and lamentation during
+the whole night, and her eyes moved restlessly as those of a person
+distracted with grief.
+
+Khaled then drew his sword and laid it across his feet as he sat and
+looked fixedly at Almasta.
+
+'If you do not speak the truth,' he said, 'I will cut off your head with
+my own hand. Allah is witness.'
+
+When Almasta saw the drawn sword, her face grew whiter than before, and
+for some moments she seemed not able to breathe. But suddenly she began
+to beat her breast, and broke out into loud wailings, rocking herself to
+and fro as she sat on the carpet.
+
+'My husband is dead!' she cried. 'He was young; he was beautiful! He is
+dead! Wah! Wah! my husband is dead! Kill me too!'
+
+Khaled looked at Zehowah, but she said nothing, though she watched
+Almasta attentively. Then Khaled spoke to the woman again.
+
+'Make an end of lamenting for the present,' he said. 'It has pleased
+Allah to take your husband to the fellowship of the faithful. Peace be
+upon him. Tell us in what manner he died, and what words he spoke when
+he felt his end approaching, for he was my good friend and I wish to
+know all.'
+
+Almasta either did not understand or made a pretence of not
+understanding, but when she heard Khaled's words she ceased from wailing
+and sobbed silently, beating her breast from time to time.
+
+'How did he die?' Khaled asked in a stern voice.
+
+'He was asleep. He died,' replied Almasta in broken tones.
+
+'You will get no other answer,' said Zehowah. 'She cannot speak our
+tongue.'
+
+'Is there no woman among them all who can talk this woman's language?'
+asked Khaled with impatience, for he saw how useless it was to question
+her.
+
+'There is no one. I have inquired. Leave her with me, and if there is
+anything to be known, I will try to find it out.'
+
+So Khaled went away and Zehowah endeavoured to soothe Almasta and make
+her talk in her broken words. But the woman made as though she would not
+be comforted, and went and sat apart upon the stone floor where there
+was no carpet, rocking to and fro, and wailing in a low voice. Zehowah
+understood that whatever the truth might be Almasta was determined to
+express her sorrow in the customary way, and that it would be better to
+leave her alone.
+
+For seven days she sat thus apart, covering her head and mourning, and
+refusing to speak with any one, so that all the women supposed her to be
+indeed distracted with grief at the death of Abdul Kerim. And each day
+Khaled inquired of his wife whether she had yet learned anything, and
+received the same answer. But in the meantime he was occupied with his
+own thoughts, as well as with the affairs of the kingdom, though the
+latter were as nothing in his mind compared with the workings of his
+heart when he thought of Zehowah.
+
+It chanced one evening that Khaled was riding among the gardens without
+the city, attended only by a few horsemen, for he was simple in all his
+ways and liked little to have a great throng of attendants about him. So
+he rode alone, while the horsemen followed at a distance.
+
+'Was ever a man, or an angel, so placed in the world as I am placed?' he
+thought. 'How much better would it have been had I never seen Zehowah,
+and if I had never slain the Indian prince. For I should still have
+been with my fellows, the genii, from whom I am now cut off, and at
+least I should have lived until the day of the resurrection. But now my
+horse may stumble and fall, and my neck may be broken, and there is no
+hereafter. Or I may die in my sleep, or be killed in my sleep, and there
+will be no resurrection for me, nor any more life, anywhere in earth or
+heaven. For Zehowah will never love me. Was ever a man so placed? And I
+am ashamed to complain to her any more, for she is a good wife, obedient
+and careful of my wants, and beautiful as the moon at the full, rising
+amidst palm trees, besides being very wise and subtle. How can I
+complain? Has she not given me herself, whom I desired, and a great
+kingdom which, indeed, I did not desire, but which no man can despise as
+a gift? Yet I am burned up within, and my heart is melting as a piece of
+frankincense laid upon coals in an empty chamber, when no man cares for
+its sweet savour. Surely, I am the most wretched of mankind. Oh, that
+the angel who made garments for me of a ghada bush, and a bay mare of a
+locust, would come down and lay his hand upon Zehowah's breast and make
+a living heart of the stone which Allah has set in its place!'
+
+So he rode slowly on, reasoning as he had often reasoned before, and
+reaching the same conclusion in all his argument, which availed him
+nothing. But suddenly, as the sun went down, a new thought entered his
+mind and gave him a little hope.
+
+'The sun is gone down,' he said to himself. 'But Allah has not destroyed
+the sun. It will rise in the east to-morrow when the white cock crows in
+the first heaven. Many things have being, which the sight of man cannot
+see. It may be that although I see no signs of love in the heaven of
+Zehowah's eyes, yet love is already there and will before long rise as
+the sun and illuminate my darkness. For I am not subtle as the evil
+genii are, but I must see very clearly before I am able to distinguish.'
+
+He rode back into the city, planning how he might surprise Zehowah and
+obtain from her unawares some proof that she indeed loved him. To this
+end he entered the palace by a secret gate, covering his garments with
+his aba, and his head with the kefiyeh he wore, in order to disguise
+himself from the slaves and the soldiers whom he met on his way to the
+harem. He passed on towards Zehowah's apartment by an unlighted passage
+not generally used, and hid himself in a niche of the wall close to the
+open door, from which he could see all that happened, and hear what was
+said.
+
+Zehowah was seated in her accustomed place and Almasta was beside her.
+Khaled could watch their faces by the light of the hanging lamps, as the
+two women talked together.
+
+'You must put aside all mourning now,' Zehowah was saying. 'For I will
+find another husband for you.'
+
+'Another husband?' Almasta smiled and shook her head.
+
+'Yes, there are other goodly men in Riad, though Abdul Kerim was of the
+goodliest, as all say who knew him. He was the Sultan's friend, but he
+was more soldier than courtier. He deserved a better death.'
+
+'Abdul Kerim died in peace. He was asleep.' Almasta smiled still, but
+more sadly, and her eyes were cast down.
+
+'He died in peace,' Zehowah repeated, watching her narrowly. 'But it is
+better to die in battle by the enemy's hand. Such a man, falling in the
+front of the fight for the true faith, enters immediately into paradise,
+to dwell for ever under the perpetual shade of the tree Sedrat, and
+neither blackness nor shame shall cover his face. There the rivers flow
+with milk and with clarified honey, and he shall rest on a couch covered
+with thick silk embroidered with gold, and shall possess seventy
+beautiful virgins whose eyes are blacker than mine and their skin whiter
+than yours, having colour like rubies and pearls, and their voices like
+the song of nightingales in Ajjem, of which travellers tell. These are
+the rewards of the true believer as set forth in Al Koran by our
+prophet, upon whom peace. A man slain in battle for the faith enters
+directly into the possession of all this, but unbelievers shall be
+taken by the forelock and the heels and cast into hell, to drink boiling
+molten brass, as a thirsty camel drinks clear water.'
+
+Almasta understood very little of what Zehowah said, but she smiled,
+nevertheless, catching the meaning of some of the words.
+
+'The Sultan Khaled loves black eyes,' she said. 'He will go to
+paradise.'
+
+'Doubtless, he will quench his thirst in the incorruptible milk of
+heavenly rivers,' Zehowah replied. 'He is the chief of the brave, the
+light of the faith and the burning torch of righteousness. Otherwise
+Allah would not have chosen him to rule. But I spoke of Abdul Kerim.'
+
+'He died in peace,' said Almasta the second time, and again looking
+down.
+
+'I do not know how he died,' Zehowah answered, looking steadily at the
+woman's face. 'It was a great misfortune for you. Do you understand? I
+am very sorry for you. You would have been happy with Abdul Kerim.'
+
+'I mourn for him,' Almasta said, not raising her eyes.
+
+'It is natural and right. Doubtless you loved him as soon as you saw
+him.'
+
+Almasta glanced quickly at Zehowah, as though suspecting a hidden
+meaning in the words, and for a moment each of the women looked into
+the other's eyes, but Zehowah saw nothing. For a wise man has truly said
+that one may see into the depths of black eyes as into a deep well, but
+that blue eyes are like the sea of Oman in winter, sparkling in the sun
+as a plain of blue sand, but underneath more unfathomable than the
+desert.
+
+Almasta was too wise and deceitful to let the silence last. So when she
+had looked at Zehowah and understood, she smiled somewhat sorrowfully
+and spoke.
+
+'I could have loved him,' she said. 'I desire no husband now.'
+
+'That is not true,' Zehowah answered quickly. 'You wish to marry Khaled,
+and that is the reason why you killed Abdul Kerim.'
+
+Almasta started as a camel struck by a flight of locusts.
+
+'What is this lie?' she cried out with indignation. 'Who has told you
+this lie?' But her face was as grey as a stone, and her lips trembled.
+
+'You probably killed him by magic arts learned in your own country,'
+said Zehowah quietly. 'Do not be afraid. We are alone, and no one can
+hear us. Tell me how you killed him. Truly it was very skilful of you,
+since the physician, who is the wisest man in Arabia, could not tell how
+it was done.'
+
+But Almasta began to beat her breast and to make oaths and
+asseverations in her own language, which Zehowah could not understand.
+
+'If you will tell me how you did it, I will give you a rich gift,'
+Zehowah continued.
+
+But so much the more Almasta cried out, stretching her hands upwards and
+speaking incomprehensible words. So Zehowah waited until she became
+quiet again.
+
+'It may be that Khaled will marry you, if you will tell me your secret,'
+Zehowah said, after a time.
+
+Then Almasta's cheek burned and she bent down her eyes.
+
+'Will you tell me how to kill a man and leave no trace?' asked Zehowah,
+still pressing her. 'Look at this pearl. Is it not beautiful? See how
+well it looks upon your hair. It is as the leaf of a white rose upon a
+river of red gold. And on your neck--you cannot see it yourself--it is
+like the full moon hanging upon a milky cloud. Khaled would give you
+many pearls like this, if he married you. Will you not tell me?'
+
+'Whom do you wish to kill?' Almasta asked, very suddenly. But Zehowah
+was unmoved.
+
+'It may be that I have a private enemy,' she said. 'Perhaps there is one
+who disturbs me, against whom I plot in the night, but can find no way
+of ridding myself of him. A woman might give much to destroy such a
+one.'
+
+'Khaled will kill your enemies. He loves you. He will kill all whom you
+hate.'
+
+'You make progress. You speak our language better,' said Zehowah,
+laughing a little. 'You will soon be able to tell the Sultan that you
+love him, as well as I could myself.'
+
+'But you do not love him,' Almasta answered boldly.
+
+Zehowah bent her brows so that they met between her eyes as the grip of
+a bow. Then Khaled's heart leaped in his breast, for he saw that she was
+angry with the woman, and he supposed it was because she secretly loved
+him. But he held his breath lest even his breathing should betray him.
+
+'The portion of fools is fire,' said Zehowah, not deigning to give any
+other answer. For she was a king's daughter and Almasta a bought slave,
+though Khaled had taken her in war.
+
+'Be merciful!' exclaimed Almasta, in humble tones. 'I am your handmaid,
+and I speak Arabic badly.'
+
+'You speak with exceeding clearness when it pleases you.'
+
+'Indeed I cannot talk in your language, for it is not long since I came
+into Arabia.'
+
+'We will have you taught, for we will give you a husband who will teach
+you with sticks. There is a certain hunchback, having one eye and marked
+with the smallpox, whose fists are as the feet of an old camel. He will
+be a good husband for you and will teach you the Arabic language, and
+your skin shall be dissolved but your mind will be enlightened thereby.'
+
+'Be merciful! I desire no husband.'
+
+'It is good that a woman should marry, even though the bridegroom be a
+hunchback. But if you will tell me your secret I will give you a better
+husband and forgive you.'
+
+'There is no secret! I have killed no one!' cried Almasta. 'Who has told
+you the lie?'
+
+'And moreover,' continued Zehowah, not regarding her protestations,
+'there are other ways of learning secrets, besides by kindness; such,
+for instance, as sticks, and hot irons, and hunger and thirst in a
+prison where there are reptiles and poisonous spiders, besides many
+other things with which I have no doubt the slaves of the palace are
+acquainted. It is better that you should tell your secret and be happy.'
+
+'There is no secret,' Almasta repeated, and she would say nothing else,
+for she did not trust Zehowah and feared a cruel death if she told the
+truth.
+
+But Zehowah wearied of the contest at last, being by no means sure that
+the woman had really done any evil, and having no intention of using any
+violent means such as she had suggested. For she was as just as she was
+wise and would have no one suffer wrongly. Khaled, indeed, cared little
+for the pain of others, having seen much blood shed in war, and would
+have caused Almasta to be tortured if Zehowah had desired it. But she
+did not, preferring to wait and see whether she could not entrap the
+slave into a confession.
+
+Khaled now came out of his hiding-place into the room and advanced
+towards Zehowah, who remained sitting upon the carpet, while Almasta
+rose and made a respectful salutation. But neither of the women knew
+that he had been hidden in the niche. Zehowah did not seem surprised,
+but Almasta's face was white and her eyes were cast down, though indeed
+Khaled wished that it had been otherwise. He was encouraged, however, by
+what he had seen, for Zehowah had certainly been angry with Almasta on
+his account, and he dismissed the latter that he might be alone with his
+wife.
+
+'You are wise, Zehowah,' he said, 'and gifted with much insight, but you
+will learn nothing from this woman, though you talk with her a whole
+year. For she suspects you and is guarded in her speech and manner. I
+was standing by the doorway a long time. You did not see me, but I heard
+all that you said.'
+
+'Why did you hide yourself?' Zehowah asked, looking at him curiously.
+
+'In order to listen,' he answered. 'And I heard something and saw
+something which pleased me. For when she said that you did not love me,
+you were angry.'
+
+'Did that please you? You are more easily pleased than I had thought.
+Shall I bear such things from a slave? How is it her business whether I
+love or not?'
+
+'But you were angry,' Khaled repeated, vainly hoping that she would say
+more, yet not wishing to press her too far, lest she should say again
+that she did not love him.
+
+She, however, said nothing in reply, but busied herself in taking his
+kefiyeh from his head and his sword from his side that he might be at
+ease. He rested against the cushions and drank of the cool drink she
+offered him.
+
+'This woman, Almasta, is exceedingly beautiful,' he said at last. 'It
+would indeed be a pity that a slave of such value should go into the
+possession of another so that we could see her no more. It is best that
+you should keep her with you.'
+
+Zehowah laughed a little, as she sat down beside him and began to play
+with her beads.
+
+'This is what I have always said,' she answered. 'I will keep her with
+me.'
+
+'It is better so,' said Khaled.
+
+Then he remained silent in deep thought, having devised a new plan for
+gaining what he most desired. It seemed to him possible that Zehowah
+might be moved by jealousy, if by nothing else; for although he had
+sworn to her, and angrily, that he would never take Almasta for his
+wife, and though nothing could really have prevailed upon him to make
+him do so, yet it would be easy for him to talk to the woman and speak
+to her of her beauty, and appear to take delight in her singing, which
+was more melodious than that of a Persian nightingale. Since she would
+be now permanently established in his harem, nothing would be easier
+than for him to spend many hours in the woman's society. Being a
+simple-minded man the plan seemed to him subtle, and he determined to
+put it into execution without delay. He knew also that Almasta had loved
+him since the first day when she had been brought before him in the
+palace at Haïl, and this would make it still more easy to rouse
+Zehowah's jealousy.
+
+Though she had herself advised him to marry Almasta, he did not believe
+that she was greatly in earnest, and he felt assured that if the
+possibility were presented before her, in such a way as to appear
+imminent, she would be deceived by the appearance.
+
+'It is better that she should remain here,' he said after a long time.
+'For we cannot put her to death without evidence of her guilt, and if we
+are obstinate in wishing to give her a husband, we do not know how many
+husbands she may destroy before she is satisfied. She is beautiful, and
+will be an ornament in your kahwah. Indeed I do not know why I sent her
+away just now, when I came in. Let us call her back, that she may sing
+to us some of her own songs.'
+
+Zehowah clapped her hands and Almasta immediately returned, for she had
+indeed been waiting outside the door, endeavouring to hear what was
+said, since she suspected that Khaled would speak of her and ask
+questions. She understood well enough, and often much better than she
+was willing to show, though she could as yet speak but few words of the
+Arabic language.
+
+'Sit at my feet,' said Khaled, 'and sing to me the songs of your own
+people.'
+
+Almasta took a musical instrument from the wall and sat down to sing.
+Her voice, indeed, was of enchanting sweetness, but as for the words of
+her songs, the seven wise men themselves could not have understood a
+syllable of them, seeing that they were neither Arabic nor Persian, nor
+even Greek. Nevertheless, Khaled made a pretence of being much pleased,
+resting his head against the cushions and closing his eyes as though the
+sound soothed him. As for Zehowah, she watched the woman with great
+curiosity, wondering whether it were possible that a creature so fair as
+Almasta could have done the evil deeds of which she was suspected, and
+planning how she might surprise her into a confession of guilt.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+Not many days passed after this, before the women of the harem began to
+whisper among themselves in the passages and outer chambers.
+
+'See,' they said, 'how our master favours this foreign woman, who is in
+all probability a devil from the Persian mountains. Every day he will
+have her to sing to him, and to bring him drink, and to sit at his feet.
+And he has given her several bracelets of gold and a large ruby. Surely
+it will be better for us to flatter her and show her reverence, for if
+not she will before long give us sticks to eat, and we shall mourn our
+folly.'
+
+So they began to exhibit great respect for Almasta, giving her always
+the best seat amongst them and setting aside for her the best portions
+of the mutton, and the whitest of the rice, and the largest of the
+sweetmeats and the mellowest of the old sugar dates, so that Almasta
+fared sumptuously. But though she understood the reason why the women
+treated her so much more kindly than before, she was careful always to
+appear thankful and to speak softly to them, for she feared Zehowah, to
+whom they might speak of her, and who was very powerful with the Sultan.
+She was indeed secretly transported with joy, for she loved Khaled and
+she began to think that before long he would marry her. This was her
+only motive, also, for she was not otherwise ambitious, and though she
+afterwards did many evil deeds, she did them all out of love for him.
+
+Though Khaled was by no means soft-hearted, he could not but pity her
+sometimes, seeing how she was deceived by his kindness, while he was
+only making a pretence of preferring her in order to gain Zehowah's
+love. Often he sat long with closed eyes while she sang to him or played
+softly upon the barbat, and he tried to fancy that the voice and the
+presence were Zehowah's. But her strange language disturbed him, for
+there were sounds in it like the hissing of serpents and like choking,
+which caused him to start suddenly just when her voice was sweetest. For
+the Georgian tongue is barbarous and not like any human speech under the
+sun, resembling by turns the inarticulate warbling of birds, and the
+croaking of ravens, and the noises made by an angry cat. Nevertheless,
+Khaled always made a pretence of being pleased, though he enjoined upon
+Almasta to learn to sing in Arabic.
+
+'For Arabic,' he said to her, 'is the language of paradise, and is
+spoken by all beings among the blessed, from Adam, our father, who waits
+for the resurrection in the first heaven, to the birds that fly among
+the branches of the tree Sedrat, near the throne of Allah, singing
+perpetually the verses of Al Koran. The black-eyed virgins reserved for
+the faithful, also speak only in Arabic.'
+
+'Shall I be of the Hur al Oyun of whom you speak?' Almasta inquired.
+
+'How is it possible that you should be of the black-eyed ones, when your
+eyes are blue?' Khaled asked, laughing. 'And besides, are you not an
+unbeliever?'
+
+'I believe what you believe, and am learning your language. There is no
+Allah beside Allah.'
+
+'And Mohammed is Allah's prophet.'
+
+'And Mohammed is Allah's prophet,' Almasta repeated devoutly.
+
+'Good. And the six articles of belief are also necessary.'
+
+'Teach me,' said Almasta, laying the barbat upon the carpet and folding
+her hands.
+
+'You must believe first in Allah, and secondly in all the angels.
+Thirdly you must believe in Al Koran, fourthly in the prophets of Allah,
+fifthly in the resurrection of the dead and the last judgment, and
+lastly that your destiny is about your neck so that you cannot escape
+it.'
+
+'I believe in everything,' said Almasta, who understood nothing of these
+sacred matters. 'Shall I now be one of the Hur al Oyun?'
+
+'But you have blue eyes.'
+
+'When I know that I am dying, I will paint them black,' said Almasta,
+laughing sweetly.
+
+'The angels Monkar and Nakir will discover your deception,' said Khaled.
+'When you are dead and buried, these two angels, who are black, will
+enter your tomb. They are of extremely terrible appearance. Then they
+will make you sit upright in the grave and will examine you first as to
+your belief and then as to your deeds. You will then not be able to tell
+lies. If you truly believe and have done good, your soul will then be
+breathed out of your lips and will float in a state of rest over your
+grave until the last judgment. But if not, the black angels will beat
+your head with iron maces, and tear your soul from your body with a
+torment greater than that caused by tearing the flesh from the bones.'
+
+'I believe in everything,' Almasta said again, supposing that her assent
+would please him.
+
+'You find it an easy matter to believe what I tell you,' he said, for he
+could see that she would have received any other faith as readily. 'But
+it is not easy for a woman to enter paradise, and since it is your
+destiny to have blue eyes, they will not become black. The Hur al Oyun,
+however, are not mortal women and no mortal woman can ever be one of
+them, since they are especially prepared for the faithful. But a man's
+wives may enter paradise with him, in a glorified beauty which may not
+be inferior to that of the black-eyed ones. If, for instance, Abdul
+Kerim had lived and been your husband, you might, by faith and good
+works, have entered heaven with him as one of his wives.'
+
+Almasta looked long at Khaled, trying to see whether he still suspected
+her, and indeed he found it very hard to do so, for her look was clear
+and innocent as that of a young dove that is fed by a familiar hand.
+
+'I would like to enter paradise with you,' said Almasta, with an
+appearance of timidity. 'Is it not possible?'
+
+'It may be possible. But I doubt it,' Khaled answered, with gravity.
+
+In those days, while Khaled thus spent many hours with Almasta, Zehowah
+often remained for a long time in another part of the harem, either
+surrounded by her women, or sitting alone upon the balcony over the
+court, absorbed in watching the people who came and went. The slaves
+were surprised to see that Khaled seemed to prefer the society of the
+Georgian to that of his wife, but they dared say nothing to Zehowah and
+contented themselves with watching her face and endeavouring to find out
+whether she were displeased at what was happening, or really indifferent
+as she appeared to be.
+
+Almasta herself was distrustful, supposing that Khaled and Zehowah were
+in league together to entrap her into a self-accusation, and though her
+heart was transported with happiness while she was with Khaled, yet she
+did not forget to be cautious whenever any reference was made to Abdul
+Kerim's death. She also took the long needle out of her hair and hid it
+carefully in a corner, in a crevice between the pavement and the wall,
+lest it should at any time fall from its place and bring suspicion upon
+her.
+
+Khaled watched Zehowah as narrowly as the women did, to see whether any
+signs of jealousy showed themselves in her face, and sometimes they
+talked together of Almasta.
+
+'It is strange,' said Khaled, 'that Allah, being all powerful, should
+have provided matter for dissension on earth by creating one woman more
+beautiful than another, the one with blue eyes, the other with black,
+the one with red hair and the other with hair needing henna to brighten
+it. Are not all women the children of one mother?'
+
+'And are not all men her sons also?' asked Zehowah. 'It is strange that
+Allah, being all powerful, should have provided matter for sorrow by
+creating one man with a spirit easily satisfied, and the other with a
+soul tormented by discontent.'
+
+Khaled looked fixedly at his wife, and bent his brows. But in secret he
+was glad, for he supposed that she was beginning to be jealous. However,
+he made a pretence of being displeased.
+
+'Is man a rock that he should never change?' he asked. 'Or has he but
+one eye with which to see but one kind of beauty? Have I not two hands,
+two feet, two ears, two nostrils and two eyes?'
+
+'That is true,' Zehowah answered. 'But a man has only one heart with
+which to love, one voice with which to speak kind words, and one mouth
+with which to kiss the woman he has chosen. And if a man had two souls,
+they would rend him so that he would be mad.'
+
+At this Khaled laughed a little and would gladly have shown Zehowah that
+she was right. But he feared to be treated with indifference, if he
+yielded to her argument so soon, and he held his peace.
+
+'Nevertheless,' Zehowah continued, after a time, 'you are right and so
+am I. You said, indeed, not many days ago that your two hands should
+wither at the wrists if you took another wife, yet I advised you to do
+so; and now it is clear from what you say that you wish to marry
+Almasta. I am your handmaiden. Take her, therefore, and be contented,
+for she loves you.'
+
+But now Khaled was much disturbed as to what he should answer, for he
+had hoped that Zehowah would break out into jealous anger. He could not
+accept her advice, because of his oath and still more because of his
+love for her; yet he could not send away Almasta, since by so doing he
+would be giving over his last hope of obtaining Zehowah's love by
+rousing her jealousy.
+
+'Take her,' Zehowah repeated. 'The palace is wide and spacious. There is
+room for us both, and for two others also, if need be, according to
+divine law. Take her, and let there be contentment. Have you not said
+that she is more beautiful than I?'
+
+'No,' answered Khaled, 'I have not said so.'
+
+'You have thought it, which is much the same, for you said that her hair
+was red but that mine needed henna to brighten it. Marry her therefore,
+this very day. Send for the Kadi, and order a feast, and let it be done
+quickly.'
+
+'Is it nothing to you, whether I take her or not?' Khaled asked, seeking
+desperately for something to say.
+
+'Is it for me to set myself up against the holy law? Or did any one
+exact from you a promise that you would not take another wife? And if
+you rashly promised anything of your own free will, the promise is not
+binding seeing that there is no authority for it in Al Koran, and that
+no one desires you to keep it--neither I, nor Almasta.'
+
+Zehowah laughed at her own speech, and Khaled was too much disturbed to
+notice that the laugh was rather of scorn than of mirth.
+
+'How shall I take a woman who is perhaps a murderess?' he asked. 'Shall
+I take her who was perhaps the cause of your revered father's death? May
+Allah give him peace! Surely, the very thought is terrible to me, and I
+will not do it.'
+
+'Will you convict her without witnesses? And where is your witness? Did
+not the physician explain the reason of the death, and did he suspect
+that there was anything unnatural about it? But if you still think that
+she destroyed my father and Abdul Kerim--peace on them both--why do you
+make her sit all day long at your feet and sing to you in her barbarous
+language, which resembles the barking of jackals? And why do you command
+her to bring you drink and fan you when it is hot, and you sleep in the
+afternoon? This shows a forgiving and trustful disposition.'
+
+'This is an unanswerable argument,' thought Khaled, being very much
+perplexed. 'Can I answer that I do all this in order to see whether
+Zehowah is jealous? She would certainly laugh to herself and say in her
+heart that she has married a fool.'
+
+So he said nothing, but bent his brows again, and endeavoured to seem
+angry. But Zehowah took no notice of his face and continued to urge him
+to marry Almasta.
+
+'Have you ever seen such a woman?' she asked. 'Have you ever seen such
+eyes? Are they not like twin heavens of a deep blue, each having a
+shining sun in the midst? Is not her hair like seventy thousand pieces
+of gold poured out upon the carpet from a height? Her nose is a straight
+piece of pure ivory. Her lips are redder than pomegranates when they are
+ripe, and her cheeks are as smooth as silk. Moreover she is as white as
+milk, freshly taken from the camel, whereas my hands are of the colour
+of blanket-bread before it is baked.'
+
+'Your hands are much smaller than hers,' said Khaled, who could not
+suffer Zehowah to discredit her own beauty.
+
+'I do not know,' she answered, looking at her fingers. 'But they are
+less white. And Almasta is far more beautiful than I. You yourself said
+so.'
+
+'I never said so,' Khaled replied, more and more perplexed. 'There are
+two kinds of beauty. That is what I said. Allah has willed it. Almasta
+is a slave, and her hands are large. It is a pity, for she is like a
+mare that has many good points, but whose hoofs are overgrown through
+too much idleness in the stable. I say that there are two kinds of
+beauty. Yours is that of the free woman of a pure and beautiful race;
+hers is that of the slave accidentally born beautiful.'
+
+Zehowah gathered up her three long black tresses and laid them across
+her knees as she sat. Then she shook off her golden bracelets, one after
+the other, to the number of a score and heaped them upon the hair.
+
+'Which do you like best?' she asked. 'The black or the gold? The day or
+the night? Here you see them together and can judge fairly between
+them.'
+
+Khaled sought for a crafty answer and made a pretence of pondering the
+matter deeply.
+
+'After the night,' he said at last, 'the day is very bright and
+glorious. But when we have looked on it long, only the night can bring
+rest and peace.'
+
+He was pleased with himself when he had made this answer, supposing that
+Zehowah would find nothing to say. But he had only laid a new trap for
+himself.
+
+'That is quite true,' she answered, laughing. 'That is also the reason
+why Allah made the day and the night to follow each other in succession,
+lest men should grow weary of eternal light or eternal darkness. For the
+same reason also, since you have a wife whose hair is black, I counsel
+you to take a red-haired one. In this way you will obtain that variety
+which the taste of man craves.'
+
+'If I follow your advice, you will regret it,' said Khaled.
+
+'You think I shall be jealous, but you are mistaken. I am what I am. Can
+another woman make me more or less beautiful? Moreover, I shall always
+be first in the palace, though you take three other wives. The others
+will rise up when you come in, but I shall remain sitting. I shall
+always be the first wife.'
+
+'Undoubtedly, that is your right,' Khaled replied. 'Do you suppose that
+I wish to put any woman in your place?'
+
+Then Zehowah laughed, and laid her hand upon Khaled's arm.
+
+'How foolish men are!' she exclaimed. 'Do you think you can deceive me?
+Do you imagine, because I have answered you and talked with you to-day,
+and listened to your arguments, that I do not understand your heart? Oh,
+Khaled, this is true which you often say of yourself, that your wit is
+in your arm. If I were a warrior and stood before you with a sword in my
+hand, you could argue better, for you would cut off my head, and the
+argument would end suddenly. But Allah has not made you subtle, and
+words in your mouth are of no more avail than a sword would be in mine,
+for you entangle yourself in your own language, as I should wound myself
+if I tried to handle a weapon.'
+
+At this Khaled was much disconcerted, and he stroked his beard
+thoughtfully, looking away so as not to meet her eyes.
+
+'I do not know what you mean,' he said, at last. 'You certainly imagine
+something which has no existence.'
+
+'I imagine nothing, for I have seen the truth, ever since the first day
+when you desired to be alone with Almasta. You are only foolishly trying
+to make me jealous of her, in order that I may love you better.'
+
+When Khaled saw that she understood him, he was without any defence, for
+he had built a wall of sand for himself, like a child playing in the
+desert, which the first breath of wind causes to crumble, and the second
+blast leaves no trace of it behind.
+
+'And am I foolish, because I have done this thing?' he cried, not
+attempting to deny the truth. 'Am I a fool because I desire your love?
+But it is folly to speak of it, for you will reproach me and say that I
+am discontented, and will offer me another woman for my wife. Go. Leave
+me alone. If you do not love me, the sight of you is as vinegar poured
+into a fresh wound, and as salt rubbed into eyes that are sore with the
+sand. Go. Why do you stay? Do you not believe me? Do you wish me to kill
+you that I may have peace from you? It is a pity that you did not marry
+one of the hundred suitors who came before me, for you certainly loved
+one of them, since you cannot love me. You doubtless loved the Indian
+prince. Would you have him back? I can give you his bones, for I slew
+him with my own hands and buried him in the Red Desert, where his soul
+is sitting upon a heap of sand, waiting for the day of resurrection.'
+
+Then Zehowah was greatly astonished, for neither she nor any one else
+had ever known what had been the end of that suitor, and after waiting a
+long time, his people who had been with him had departed sorrowing to
+their own country, and she had heard no more of them.
+
+'What is this?' she asked in amazement. 'Why did you kill him? And how
+could you have done this thing unseen, since he was guarded by many
+attendants?'
+
+'I took him out of the palace in the night, when all were asleep, and
+then I killed him,' said Khaled, and Zehowah could get no other answer,
+for he would not confess that he had been one of the genii, lest she
+should not believe the truth, or else, believing, should be afraid of
+him in the future.
+
+'I will give you his bones,' he said, 'if you desire them, for I know
+where they are, and you certainly loved him, and are still mourning for
+him. If he could be alive, I would kill him again.'
+
+'I never loved him,' Zehowah answered, at last. 'How was it possible?
+But I would perhaps have married him, hoping to convert all his people
+to the true faith.'
+
+'As you have married me in the hope, or the assurance, of giving your
+people a just king.'
+
+'You are angry, Khaled. And, indeed, I could be angry, too, but with
+myself and not with you, as you are with me, though it be for the same
+reason. For I begin to see and understand why you are discontented, and
+indeed I will do what I can to satisfy you.'
+
+'You must love me, as I love you, if you would save me from
+destruction,' said Khaled.
+
+Though Zehowah could not comprehend the meaning of the words, she saw by
+his face that he was terribly moved, and she herself began to be more
+sorry for him.
+
+'Indeed, Khaled,' she said, 'I will try to love you from this hour. But
+it is a hard thing, because you cannot explain it, and it is not easy to
+learn what cannot be explained. Do you think that all women love their
+husbands in this way you mean? Am I unlike all the rest?'
+
+Khaled took her hand and held it, and looked into her eyes.
+
+'Love is the first mystery of the world,' he said. 'Death is the second.
+Between the two there is nothing but a weariness darkened with shadows
+and thick with mists. What is gold? A cinder that glows in the darkness
+for a moment and falls away to a cold ash in our hand when we have taken
+it. But love is a treasure which remains. What is renown? A cry uttered
+in the bazar by men whose minds are subject to change as their bodies
+are to death. But the voice of love is heard in paradise, singing beside
+the fountains Tasnim and Salsahil. What is power? A net with which to
+draw wealth and fame from the waters of life? To what end? We must die.
+Or is power a sword to kill our enemies? If their time is come they will
+die without the sword. Or is it a stick to purify the hides of fools?
+The fool will die also, like his master, and both will be forgotten. But
+they who love shall enter the seventh heaven together, according to the
+promise of Allah. Death is stronger than man or woman, but love is
+stronger than death, and all else is but a vision seen in the desert,
+having no reality.'
+
+'I will try to understand it, for I see that you are very unhappy,' said
+Zehowah.
+
+She was silent after this, for Khaled's words were earnest and sank into
+her soul. Yet the more she tried to imagine what the passion in him
+could be like, the less she was able to understand it, for some of
+Khaled's actions had been foolish, but she supposed that there must
+have been some wisdom in them, having its foundation in the nature of
+love.
+
+'What he says is true,' she thought. 'I married him in order to give my
+people a just and brave king, and he is both brave and just. And I am
+certainly a good wife, for I should be dissolved in shame if another man
+were to see my face, and moreover I am careful of his wants, and I take
+his kefiyeh from his head with my own hands, and smooth the cushions for
+him and bring him food and drink when he desires it. Or have I withheld
+from him any of the treasures of the palace, or stood in the way of his
+taking another wife? Until to-day, I thought indeed that this talk of
+love meant but little, and that he spoke of it because he desired an
+excuse for marrying Almasta who loves him. But when I said at a venture
+that he wished to make me jealous, he confessed the truth. Now all the
+tales of love told by the old women are of young persons who have seen
+each other from a distance, but are hindered from marrying. And we are
+already married. Surely, it is very hard to understand.'
+
+After this Khaled never called Almasta to sit at his feet and sing to
+him, as he had done before, and Zehowah was constantly with him in her
+stead. At first Almasta supposed that Khaled only made a pretence of
+disregarding her, out of respect for his wife, but she soon perceived
+that he was indifferent and no longer noticed her. She then grew fierce
+and jealous, and her voice was not heard singing in the harem; but she
+went and took her needle again from the crevice in the pavement and hid
+it in her hair, and though Zehowah often called her, when Khaled was not
+in the house, she made as though she understood even less of the Arabic
+language than before and sat stupidly on the carpet, gazing at her
+hands. Zehowah wearied of her silence, for she understood the reason of
+it well enough.
+
+'I am tired of this woman,' she said to Khaled. 'Do you think I am
+jealous of her now?'
+
+Khaled smiled a little, but said nothing, only shaking his head.
+
+'I am tired of her,' Zehowah repeated. 'She sits before me like a sack
+of barley in a grainseller's shop, neither moving nor speaking.'
+
+'She is yours,' Khaled answered. 'Send her away. Or we will give her in
+marriage to one of the sheikhs who will take her away to the desert. In
+this way she will not be able even to visit you except when her husband
+comes into the city.'
+
+But they decided nothing at that time. Some days later Khaled was
+sitting alone upon a balcony, Zehowah having gone to the bath, when
+Almasta came suddenly before him and threw herself at his feet, beating
+her forehead and tearing her hair, though not indeed in a way to injure
+it.
+
+'What have I done?' she cried. 'Why is my lord displeased?'
+
+Khaled looked at her in surprise, but answered nothing at first.
+
+'Why are my lord's eyes like frozen pools by the Kura, and why is his
+forehead like Kasbek in a mist?'
+
+Khaled laughed a little at her words.
+
+'Kasbek is far from Riad,' he answered, 'and the waters of the Kura do
+not irrigate the Red Desert. I am not displeased. On the contrary, I
+will give you a husband and a sufficient dowry. Go in peace.'
+
+But Almasta remained where she was, weeping and beating her forehead.
+
+'Let me stay!' she cried. 'Let me stay, for I love you. I will eat the
+dust under your feet. Only let me stay.'
+
+'I think not,' Khaled answered. 'You weary Zehowah with your silence and
+your sullenness.'
+
+'Let me stay!' she repeated, over and over again.
+
+She was not making any pretence of grief, for the tears ran down
+abundantly and stained the red leather of Khaled's shoes. Though he was
+hard-hearted he was not altogether cruel, for a man who loves one woman
+greatly is somewhat softened towards all such as do not stand
+immediately in his way.
+
+'It is true,' he thought, 'that I have given this woman some occasion of
+hope, for I have treated her kindly during many days, and she has
+probably supposed that I would marry her. For she is less keen-sighted
+than Zehowah, and moreover she loves me.'
+
+'Do not drive me out!' cried Almasta. 'For I shall die if I cannot see
+your face. What have I done?'
+
+'You have indeed done nothing worthy of death, for I cannot prove that
+you killed Abdul Kerim. I will therefore give you a good husband and you
+shall be happy.'
+
+But Almasta would not go away, and embracing his knees she looked up
+into his face, imploring him to let her remain. Khaled could not but see
+that she was beautiful, for the mid-day light fell upon her white face
+and her red lips, and made shadows in her hair of the colour of mellow
+dates, and reflections as bright as gold when the burnisher is still in
+the goldsmith's hand. Though he cared nothing for Almasta and little for
+her sorrow, his eye was pleased and he smiled.
+
+Then he looked up and saw Zehowah standing before him, just as she had
+come from the bath, wrapped in loose garments of silk and gold. He gazed
+at her attentively for there was a distant gleam of light in her eyes
+and her cheeks were warm, though she stood in the shadow, so that he
+thought she had never been more beautiful, and he did not care to look
+at Almasta's face again.
+
+'Why is Almasta lamenting in this way?' Zehowah asked.
+
+'She desires to stay in the palace,' Khaled answered; 'but I have told
+her that she shall be married, and yet she wishes to stay.'
+
+'Let her be married quickly, then. Is she a free woman, that she should
+resist, or is she rich that she should refuse alms? Let her be married.'
+
+'There is a certain young man, cousin to Abdul Kerim, a Bedouin of pure
+descent. Let him take her, if he will, and let the marriage be
+celebrated to-morrow.'
+
+But Almasta shook her head, and her tears never ceased from flowing.
+
+'You will marry him,' said Khaled. 'And if any harm comes to him, I will
+cause you to be put to death before the second call to prayer on the
+following morning.'
+
+When Almasta heard this, her tears were suddenly dried and her lips
+closed tightly. She rose from the floor and retired to a distance within
+the room.
+
+On that day Khaled sent for the young man of whom he had spoken, whose
+name was Abdullah ibn Mohammed el Herir, and offered him Almasta for a
+wife. And he accepted her joyfully, for he had heard of her wonderful
+beauty, and was moreover much gratified by being given a woman whom the
+former Sultan would probably have married if he had lived. Khaled also
+gave him a grey mare as a wedding gift, and a handsome garment.
+
+The marriage was therefore celebrated in the customary manner, and no
+harm came to Abdullah. But as the autumn had now set in, he soon
+afterwards left the city, taking Almasta with him, to live in tents,
+after the manner of the Bedouins.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+Abdullah ibn Mohammed, though a young man, was now the sheikh of a
+considerable tribe which had frequently done good service to the late
+Sultan, Zehowah's father, and which had also borne a prominent part in
+the recent war. Abdul Kerim, whom Almasta had murdered, had been the
+sheikh during his lifetime, and if the claims of birth had been justly
+considered, his son, though a mere boy, should have succeeded him. But
+Abdullah had found it easy to usurp the chief place, and in the council
+which was held after Abdul Kerim's death he was chosen by acclamation.
+It chanced, too, that he was not married at the time when he took
+Almasta, for of two wives the one had died of a fever during the summer,
+and he had divorced the other on account of her unbearable temper,
+having been deceived in respect of this by her parents, who had assured
+him that she was as gentle as a dove and as submissive as a lamb. But
+she had turned out to be as quarrelsome as a wasp and as unmanageable as
+an untrained hawk, so he divorced her, and the more readily because she
+was not beautiful and her dower had been insignificant. Almasta
+therefore found that she was her husband's only wife.
+
+She would certainly have killed him, as she had killed Abdul Kerim, and,
+indeed, the late Sultan, in the hope of being taken back into the
+palace, but she was prevented by the fear of death, for she had seen
+that Khaled's threat was not empty and would be executed if harm came to
+Abdullah after his marriage. She accordingly set herself to please him,
+and first of all she learned to speak the Arabic language, in order that
+she might sing to him in his own tongue and tell him tales of distant
+countries, which she had learned in her own home.
+
+Abdullah passed the months of autumn and the early winter in the desert,
+moving about from place to place, as is the custom of the Bedouins, it
+being his intention to reach a northerly point of Ajman in the spring,
+in order to fall upon the Persian pilgrims and extort a ransom before
+they entered the territory of Nejed. For it would not be lawful to
+attack them after that, since there was a treaty with the Emir of
+Basrah, allowing the pilgrims a safe and free passage towards Mecca, for
+which the Emir paid yearly a sum of money to the Sultan of Nejed.
+
+But Almasta knew nothing of this, for she was wholly ignorant of the
+desert; and moreover Abdullah was a cautious man, who held that
+whatsoever is to be kept secret must not be uttered aloud, though there
+be no one within three days' journey to hear it.
+
+Abdullah treated her with great consideration, not obliging her to weary
+herself overmuch with cooking and other work of the tents. For he
+rejoiced in her beauty and in the sweetness of her voice, and his chief
+delight was to sit in the door of the tent at night, chewing
+frankincense, while Almasta sat within, close behind him, and told him
+tales of her own country, or of the life in the palace of Riad. The
+latter indeed was as strange to him as the former, and much more
+interesting.
+
+Now one evening they were alone together in this manner, and it was not
+yet very cold. But the stars shone brightly as though there would be a
+frost before morning, and the other tents were all closed and no one was
+near the coals which remained from the fire after baking the
+blanket-bread. One might hear the chewing of the camels in the dark and
+the tramping of a mare that moved slowly about, her hind feet being
+chained together.
+
+'Tell me more of the palace at Riad,' said Abdullah. 'For your Kura, and
+your snow-covered Kasbek, and your Tiflis with its warm springs and
+gardens, I shall never see. But I have seen the courts of the palace
+from my youth, and the Sultan's kahwah, and the latticed windows of the
+harem, from which you say that you saw me and loved me in the last days
+of summer.'
+
+Almasta had said this to please him, though it was not true. For she
+knew that men easily believe what flatters them, as women believe that
+what they desire must come to pass.
+
+'The palace is a wonderful palace,' said Almasta, 'and I will tell you
+of the treasures which are in it.'
+
+'That is what I wish to hear,' answered Abdullah, putting a piece of
+frankincense into his mouth and beginning to chew it. 'Tell me of the
+treasures, for it is said that they are great and of extraordinary
+value.'
+
+'The value of them cannot be calculated, O Abdullah, for if you had
+seventy thousand hands and on each hand seventy thousand fingers you
+could not count upon your fingers in a whole lifetime the gold sherifs
+and sequins and tomans which are hidden away there in bags. Beneath the
+court of strangers there is a great chamber built of stone in which the
+sacks of gold are kept, and they are piled up to the roof of the vault
+on all sides and in the middle, leaving only narrow passages between.'
+
+'If it is all gold, what is the use of the passages?' asked Abdullah.
+
+'I do not know, but they are there, and there is another room filled
+with silver in the same manner. There are also secret places underground
+in which jewels are kept in chests, rubies and pearls and Indian
+diamonds and emeralds, in such quantities that they would suffice to
+make necklaces of a thousand rows each for each of the mountains in my
+country. And we have many mountains, great ones, not such as the little
+hills you have seen, but several days' journey in height. For we say
+that when the Lord made the earth it was at first unsteady, and He set
+our mountains upon it, in the middle, to make it firm, and it has never
+moved since.'
+
+'I do not believe this,' said Abdullah. 'Tell me more about the jewels
+in Riad.'
+
+'There is no end of them. They are like the grains of sand in the
+desert, and no one of them is worth less than a thousand gold sherifs. I
+do not even know the names of the different kinds, but there are
+turquoises without number, of the Maidan, and all good, so that you may
+write upon them with a piece of gold as with a pen; and there are red
+stones as large as a dove's egg, red and fiery as the wine of Kachetia,
+and others, blue as the sky in winter, and yellow ones, and some with
+leaves of gold in them, like morsels of treng floating in the juice. But
+besides the gold and silver and precious stones there are thousands of
+rich garments which are kept in chests of fragrant wood, in upper
+chambers, abas woven of gold and silk and linen, and vests embroidered
+with pearls, and shoes of which even the soles appear to be of gold. And
+there are great pieces of stuff, Indian silk, and Persian velvet, and
+even satin from Stamboul, woven by unbelievers with the help of devils.
+Then too, in the palace of Riad, there are stored great quantities of
+precious weapons, most of them made in Syria, with many swords of Sham,
+which you say are the best, though I do not understand the matter, each
+having an inscription in letters of gold upon the blade, and the hilt
+most cunningly chiselled in the same metal, or carved out of ivory.'
+
+'I saw the treasure of Haïl when we took it away after the war, and most
+of it was distributed among us, but there was nothing like this,' said
+Abdullah.
+
+'The treasure of Haïl is to the treasure of Riad, as a small black fly
+walking upon the face of the sun,' answered Almasta. 'And yet there was
+wealth there also, and there was much which you never saw. For that
+Khaled, who is now Sultan, is crafty and avaricious, and he loaded many
+camels secretly by night, being helped by black slaves, all of whom he
+slew afterwards with his own hand lest they should tell the tale, and he
+then called camel-drivers and sent them away with the beasts to Riad.
+And he said to them: "These are certain loads of fine wheat and of
+mellow dates, for the Sultan's table, such as cannot be found in Riad."
+But he sent a letter to his father-in-law, who caused all the packs to
+be taken immediately to one of the secret chambers, where he and his
+daughter Zehowah took out the jewels and stored them with their own. And
+as for me, I believe that Khaled made an end of the Sultan himself by
+means of poison in Dereyiyah, for he rode away suddenly after they had
+met, as though his conscience smote him.'
+
+'What is this evil tale which you are telling me?' cried Abdullah.
+'Surely, it is a lie, for Khaled is a brave man who gives every one his
+due and deceives no one. And he is by no means subtle, for I have heard
+him in council, and he generally said only, "Smite," but sometimes he
+said "Strike," and that was all his eloquence. But whether he said the
+one or the other, he was generally the first to follow his own advice
+which, indeed, by the merciful dispensation of Allah, procured us the
+victory. But what is this tale which you have invented?'
+
+'And who is this Khaled whom you praise?' asked Almasta. 'And how can
+you know his craftiness as I know it, who have lived in the palace and
+braided his wife's hair, and brought him drink when he was thirsty? Is
+he a man of your tribe whose descent you can count upon your fingers,
+from him to his grandfather and to Ishmael and Abraham? Or is he a man
+of a tribe known to you, and whose generations you also know? Has any
+man called him Khaled ibn Mohammed, or Khaled ibn Abdullah? Or has he
+ever spoken of his father, who is probably now drinking boiling water,
+and the black angels are pounding his head with iron maces. Yet he says
+that he came from the desert. Then you, who are of the desert, do not
+know the desert, for you do not know whence he is. But there are those
+who do know, and he fears them, lest they should tell the truth and
+destroy him.'
+
+'These are idle tales,' said Abdullah. 'Is it probable that the Sultan
+would have bestowed his daughter and all the treasures you have
+described upon such a man without having made inquiries concerning his
+family? And if the Sultan said nothing to us about it, and if Khaled
+holds his peace, they have doubtless their reasons. For it may be that
+there is a blood feud between the people of Khaled and some great person
+in Riad, so that he would be in danger of his life if he revealed his
+father's name. Allah knows. It is not our business.'
+
+'O Abdullah, you are simple, and you believe all things!' cried Almasta.
+'But I heard of him in Basrah.'
+
+'What did you hear in Basrah? And how could you have heard of him
+there?'
+
+'I was in the Emir's harem, being kept there to rest from the journey
+after they had brought me from the north. And there I heard of Khaled,
+for the women talked of him, having been told tales about him by a
+merchant who was admitted to the palace.'
+
+'Now this is great folly,' answered Abdullah. 'For Khaled came suddenly
+to Riad, and was married immediately to Zehowah, and on the next day he
+went out with us against Haïl, which we took from the Shammar in three
+weeks' time from the day of our marching. Moreover we found you there in
+the palace. How then could news of Khaled have reached Basrah before you
+left that place?'
+
+'I had come to Haïl but the day before you attacked the city,' said
+Almasta. 'But did I say that I had heard of him as already married to
+Zehowah?'
+
+For she saw that she had run the risk of being found out in a lie, and
+she made haste to defend herself.
+
+'What did you hear of him?' asked Abdullah.
+
+'He was a notable fellow and a robber,' answered Almasta. 'For he is a
+Persian, and a Shiyah, who offers prayers to Ali in secret. But because
+he had done many outrageous deeds, a great price was set upon his head
+throughout Persia, so he fled into Arabia and by his boldness and craft
+he married Zehowah. And now he has made a secret covenant to deliver
+over the kingdom of Nejed to the Persians.'
+
+Then Abdullah laughed aloud.
+
+'Who shall deliver over the Bedouin to a white-faced people, who live on
+boiled chestnuts and ride astride of a camel? And when a man has got a
+kingdom, why should he give it up to any one, except under force?'
+
+'There is a reason for this, too,' Almasta answered unabashed. 'For the
+King of the Persians, whom they call the Padeshah, has an only daughter,
+of great beauty, and Khaled is to receive her in marriage as the price
+of Nejed. Then he will by treachery destroy the Padeshah's sons and will
+inherit Persia also, as he has inherited Nejed; and after that he will
+make war upon the Romans in Stamboul and will become the master of the
+whole world.'
+
+'This is a strange tale, and seems full of madness,' said Abdullah. 'I
+do not believe it. Tell me rather a story of your own country, and
+afterwards we will sleep, for to-morrow we will leave this place.'
+
+'I will tell you a wonderful history, which is quite true,' answered
+Almasta. 'Take this fresh piece of frankincense which I have prepared
+for you, and put it into your mouth, for you will then not interrupt me
+with questions while I am speaking.'
+
+So Abdullah took the savoury gum and chewed it, and Almasta told him the
+tale which here follows.
+
+'There is in the north, beyond Persia, a great and prosperous kingdom,
+lying between two seas, and resembling paradise for its wonderful
+beauty. All the hills are covered with trees of every description in
+which innumerable birds make their nests, all of a beautiful plumage and
+good for man to eat. And in these forests there are also great herds of
+animals, whose name I do not know in Arabic, having branching horns and
+kindred to the little beast which you call the cow of the desert, but
+far better to eat and as large as full-grown camels. A man who is hungry
+need only shoot an arrow at a venture, for the birds and animals are so
+numerous that he will certainly hit something. This kingdom is watered
+everywhere by rivers and streams abounding in fish, all good to eat and
+easily caught, and all the valleys are filled with vineyards of black
+and white grapes. But the people of this country are chiefly Christians.
+May Allah send them enlightenment! Now the King was an old man, who
+delighted in feasting and cared little for the affairs of the nation,
+preferring a lute to a sword, and a wine-cup to a shield, and the feet
+of dancing girls to the hoofs of war horses. He had no son to go out to
+war for him, but only one beautiful daughter.'
+
+'Like the Sultan of our country who died,' said Abdullah.
+
+'Very much. There were also other points of resemblance. Now there was a
+certain Tartar in the kingdom of Samarkand, called Ismaïl, who was a
+robber and had destroyed many caravans on the march, and had broken into
+many houses both in Samarkand and Tashkent, a notable evildoer. But
+having one day stolen a fleet mare from the Sultan's stables, the
+soldiers pursued him, and in order to escape impalement he fled. No one
+could catch him because the mare he had stolen was the fleetest in Great
+Tartary. So he rode westward through many countries, and by the shores
+of the inland sea, until he came to the kingdom which I have described.
+There he hid himself in the forest for some time and waylaid travellers,
+making them tell him all that they knew of the kingdom, and afterwards
+killing them. But when he had obtained all that he wanted, both rich
+garments and splendid weapons, and the necessary information, he left
+the forest and rode into the capital city. Then he went to the King and
+desired of him a private audience, which was granted. He said that he
+was the son of a powerful Christian prince, and had been taken captive
+by the Tartars, but had escaped, and he offered to make all Tartary
+subject to the King, if only he might marry his daughter. And whether by
+magic, or by eloquence, he succeeded, for the King was old and
+feeble-minded. But soon after the wedding, he poisoned his father-in-law
+and became king in his place, though there were many in the land who
+had a better right, being closely connected with the royal blood.'
+
+'This is the story of Khaled,' said Abdullah. 'I know the truth. Why do
+you weary me, trying to deceive me, and calling him a robber? But it is
+true that in Nejed there are men of good descent who have a better right
+to sit on the throne.'
+
+'Hear what followed,' answered Almasta. 'This man Ismaïl afterwards took
+captive a woman of the Tartars, who knew who he was, though he supposed
+her ignorant. And he gave her in marriage to the youngest and bravest of
+his captains, a man to whom Allah had vouchsafed the tongue of
+eloquence, and the teeth of strength, and the lips of discretion to
+close together and hide both at the proper season. The woman told her
+husband who Ismaïl was, and instructed him concerning the palace, its
+passages and secret places, and the treasures that were hidden there.
+And she told him also that Ismaïl had made a covenant with the Sultan of
+his own country, which would bring destruction upon the nation he now
+ruled. For she loved her husband on account of his youth and beauty, and
+she had embraced his faith and was ready to die for him.'
+
+'The husband's name was Abdullah,' said Abdullah. 'And he also loved his
+wife, who surpassed other women in beauty, as a bay mare surpasses
+pigs.'
+
+'He afterwards loved her still better,' answered Almasta, 'for though he
+was only chief over four hundred tents, she gave him a kingdom. Hear
+what followed. But I will call him Abdullah if you please, though his
+name was Mskhet.'
+
+'Allah is merciful! There are no such names in Arabia. This one is like
+the breaking of earthen vessels upon stones. Call him Abdullah.'
+
+'Abdullah therefore went to the wisest and most discreet of his kindred,
+and spoke to them of the great treasures which were hidden in the
+palace, and he pointed out to their obscured sight that all this wealth
+had been got by them and their fathers in war, and had been taken in
+tithes from the people, and was now in the possession of Ismaïl. And
+they talked among themselves and saw that this was indeed true. And at
+another time, he told them that Ismaïl was not really of their religion,
+but a hypocrite. And again a third time he told them the whole truth, so
+that their hearts burned when they knew that their King was but a robber
+who had been condemned to death. Though they were discreet men, the
+story was in some way told abroad among the soldiers, doubtless by the
+intervention of angels, so that all the people knew it, and were angry
+against Ismaïl and ready to break out against him so soon as a man could
+be found to lead them.'
+
+'But,' said Abdullah, 'this Ismaïl doubtless had a strong guard of
+soldiers about him, and had given gifts to his captains, and shown
+honour to them, so that they were attached to him.'
+
+'Undoubtedly,' replied Almasta, 'and but for his wife, Abdullah could
+not have succeeded. She advised him to go to his discreet kindred and
+friends and say to them, "See, if you will afterwards support me, I will
+go alone into the palace and will get the better of this Ismaïl, when he
+is asleep, and I will so do that the soldiers shall not oppose me. And
+afterwards, you will all enter together and the treasure shall be
+divided. But we will throw some of it to the people, lest they be
+disappointed." And so he did. For his wife knew the secret entrances to
+the palace and took him in with her by night, disguised as a woman. And
+they went together silently into the harem, and slew Ismaïl and bound
+his wife, and took the keys of the treasure chambers from under the
+pillow. After this they took from the gold as many bags as there were
+soldiers, and waked each man, giving him a sack of sherifs, and bidding
+him take as much more as he could find, for the King was dead. Then
+Abdullah's friends were admitted and they divided the treasure, and went
+abroad before it was day, calling upon the people that Ismaïl was dead
+and that a man of their own nation was King in his place, and scattering
+handfuls of gold into every house as they passed. And, behold, before
+the second call to prayer, Abdullah was King, and all the people came
+and did homage to him. And Abdullah himself was astonished when he saw
+how easy it had been, and loved his wife even better than before.'
+
+So Almasta finished her tale and there was silence for a time, while
+Abdullah sat still and gazed at the closed tents in the starlight, and
+listened to the distant chewing of the camels.
+
+'Give me some water,' he said at last. 'I am very thirsty.'
+
+She brought him drink from the skin, and soon afterwards he lay down to
+rest. But they said nothing more to each other that night of the story
+which Almasta had told.
+
+On the following day they journeyed fully eleven hours, to a place where
+there was much water, and in the evening, when the camels were chewing,
+and all the Bedouins had eaten and were resting in their tents, Abdullah
+sat again in his accustomed place.
+
+'Almasta, light of my darkness,' he said, 'I would gladly hear again
+something of the tale you told me last night, for I have not remembered
+it well, being overburdened with the cares of my people and the
+direction of the march. Surely you said that when the woman and her
+husband had killed Ismaïl they took the keys of the treasure chambers
+from under his pillow. Is it not so?'
+
+'They did so, Abdullah,'
+
+'And they immediately went and took the gold and gave it to the guards?
+But I have forgotten, for it is a matter of little importance, being but
+a tale.'
+
+'That is what they did,' answered Almasta.
+
+'But surely this is a fable. How could the woman know the way to the
+treasure chambers and find it in the dark? For you said also that these
+secret places were underground and therefore a great way from the
+harem.'
+
+'I did not say that, Abdullah, for the secret places underground are
+those in Riad, which I described to you before I began the other story.'
+
+'This may be true, for I am very forgetful. But I daresay that the
+treasures in the city you described were also hidden in similar places.'
+
+'Since you speak of this, I remember that it was so. The glorious light
+of your intelligence penetrates the darkness of my memory and makes it
+clear. The places were exactly similar.'
+
+'How then could the woman, who only knew the harem, find her way in the
+dark, and lead her husband, to a part of the palace which she had never
+visited? This is a hard thing.'
+
+'It was not hard for her. She had seen Ismaïl open with his key a door
+in his sleeping chamber, and he had gone in and after some time had
+returned bearing sacks of gold pieces. Was this a hard thing? Or does a
+wise man make two doors to his treasure-house, the one for himself and
+the other for thieves? The one leading to his own chamber, for his own
+use, and the other opening upon the highway for the convenience of
+robbers? It is possible, but I think not. Ismaïl had but one door. He
+was not an Egyptian jackass.'
+
+'This is reasonable,' said Abdullah. 'And I am now satisfied. But my
+imagination was not at rest, for the story is a good one and deserves to
+be well told.'
+
+After this Abdullah wandered for a long time with the Bedouins who
+accompanied him, often changing his direction, so that they wondered
+whither he was leading them, and began to question him. But he answered
+that he had heard secretly of a great spoil to be taken, and that they
+should all have a share of it, and whenever they came upon Arabs of
+another tribe Abdullah invited the sheikh and the most notable men to
+his tent and entertained them sumptuously with camel's meat, afterwards
+talking long with them in private. Before many weeks had passed, the
+skilful men of the tribe, who knew the signs, were aware that many other
+Bedouins were travelling in the same direction as themselves, though
+they could not be seen.
+
+But neither Abdullah's men, nor Almasta herself, could know that in
+three months the sheikhs of all the tribes from Hasa to Harb, and from
+Ajman to El Kora, had heard that Khaled the Sultan was a Persian robber,
+and a Shiyah at heart, venerating Ali and execrating the true Sonna, a
+man who in all probability drank wine in secret, and who was certainly
+plotting to deliver up all Nejed to the power of the Ajjem. Some of them
+believed the tale readily enough, for all had asked whence Khaled was
+and none had got an answer. Could a man be of the desert, they asked,
+and yet not be known by name in any of the tribes, nor his father before
+him? Surely, there was a secret, they said, and he who will not tell the
+name of his father has a reason for changing his own. And as for his
+being brave and having fought well in the war with the Shammar, how
+could a man have been a robber if he were not brave, and why should he
+not fight manfully, since he had everything to gain and nothing to lose?
+As for the spoils, too, he had made a pretence of dividing them justly,
+but it was now well known that he had laden camels by stealth at Haïl
+and had sent them secretly to Riad, slaughtering with his own hand all
+those who had helped him.
+
+Little by little, too, the story came to Riad and was told in a low
+voice by merchants in the bazar, and repeated by their wives among their
+acquaintance, and by the slaves in the market and among the beggars who
+begged by the doors of the great mosque but were fed daily from the
+palace. And though many persons of the better sort thought that the
+story might be true, and wagged their heads when Khaled's name was
+spoken, yet the beggars with one accord declared that it was a lie. For
+Khaled was generous in almsgiving, and they said, 'If Khaled is
+overthrown and another Sultan set up in his place, how do we know
+whether there will be boiled camel's meat from time to time as well as
+blanket-bread and a small measure of barley meal? And will the next
+Sultan scatter gold in the streets as Khaled did on the first day when
+he rode to the mosque? Truly these chatterers of Bedouins talk much of
+the treasure in the palace which will be divided, but they who talk most
+of gold, are they who most desire it, and we shall get none. Therefore
+we say it is a lie, and Khaled is a true man, and a Sonna like
+ourselves, not a swiller of wine nor a devourer of pigs. Allah show him
+mercy now and at the day of resurrection! The cock-sparrow is pluming
+his breast while the hunter is pulling the string of the snare.'
+
+Thus the beggars talked among themselves all day, reasoning after the
+manner of their kind. But they suffered other people to talk as they
+pleased, for one who desires alms must not exhibit a contradictory
+disposition, lest the rich man be offended and eat the melon together
+with the melon peels, and exclaim that the dirt-scraper has become a
+preacher. For the rich man's anger is at the edge of his nostrils and
+always ready.
+
+As the winter passed away and the spring began, the tribes of the desert
+drew nearer and nearer to the city, as is their wont at that season. For
+many of the sheikhs had houses in the city, in which they spent the hot
+months of the year, while their people were encamped in the low hill
+country not far off, where the heat is less fierce than in the plains
+and the deserts. And now also the season of the Haj was approaching, for
+Ramadhan was not far off, and the beggars congregated at the gates
+waiting for the first pilgrims, and expecting plentiful alms, which in
+due time they received, for in that year Abdullah did not molest the
+Persian pilgrimage, his mind being occupied with other matters.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+The story which was thus repeated from mouth to mouth in Riad reached
+the palace at the last, and the guards told it to each other as they sat
+together under the shadow of the great wall, the cooks related it among
+themselves in the kitchen, and the black slaves gossiped about it in the
+corners of the courtyard, and the women slaves stood and listened while
+they talked and carried the tale into the harem. But the people of the
+palace were more slow to believe than the people of the city, for they
+shared in a measure in Khaled's right of possession, and desired no
+change of master, so that for a long time neither Zehowah nor Khaled
+heard anything of what was commonly reported. Yet at last the old woman
+who had been Zehowah's nurse told her the substance of the story, with
+many protestations of unbelief, and of anger against those who had
+invented the lie.
+
+'It is right that my lady and mistress should know these things,' she
+said, 'and when our lord the Sultan has been informed of them, he will
+doubtless cause his soldiers to go forth with sticks and purify the
+hides of the chief evil-speakers in the bazar. There is one especially,
+a merchant whose shop is opposite the door of the little mosque, who is
+continually bold in falsehood, being the same who sold me this garment
+for linen; but it afterwards turned out to be cotton and the gold
+threads are brass and have turned black. I pray Allah to be just as well
+as merciful.'
+
+At first Zehowah laughed, but soon afterwards her face became grave, and
+she bent her brows, for though the story was but a lie she saw how
+easily it would find credence. She therefore sent the old woman away
+with a gift and she herself went to Khaled, and sat down beside him and
+took his hand.
+
+'You have secret enemies,' she said, 'who are plotting against your
+life, and who have already begun to attack you by filling the air of the
+city with falsehoods which fly from house to house like flies in summer
+entering at the window and going out by the door. You must sift this
+matter, for it is worthy of attention.'
+
+'And what are these lies of which you speak?'
+
+'It is said openly in the city that you are a Shiyah and a Persian,
+having been a robber before you came here, and that you are plotting to
+deliver over Nejed to the Persians. Look to this, Khaled, for they say
+that you are no Bedouin since no one knows your descent nor the name of
+your father.'
+
+'Do you believe this of me, Zehowah?' Khaled asked.
+
+'Do I believe that the sun is black and the night as white as the sun?
+But it is true that I do not know your father's name.'
+
+Then Khaled was troubled, for he saw that it would be a hard matter to
+explain, and that without explanation his safety might be endangered.
+Zehowah sat still beside him, holding his hand and looking into his
+face, as though expecting an answer.
+
+'Have I done wisely in telling you?' she asked at last. 'You are
+troubled. I should have said nothing.'
+
+'You have done wisely,' he answered. 'For I will go and speak to them,
+and if they believe me, the matter is finished, but if not I have lost
+nothing.'
+
+'It will be well to give the chief men presents, and to distribute
+something among the people, for gifts are great persuaders of unbelief.'
+
+'Shall I give them presents because they have believed evil of me?'
+asked Khaled, laughing. 'Rather would I give you the treasures of the
+whole earth because you have not believed it.'
+
+'If I had the wealth of the whole world I would give it to them rather
+than that they should hurt a hair of your head,' Zehowah answered.
+
+'Am I more dear to you than so much gold, Zehowah?'
+
+'What is gold that it should be weighed in the balance with the life of
+a man? You are dearer to me than gold.'
+
+'Is this love, Zehowah?' Khaled asked, in a low voice.
+
+'I do not know whether it be love or not.'
+
+'The wing of night is lifted for a moment, and the false dawn is seen,
+and afterwards it is night again. But the true dawn will come by and by,
+when night folds her wings before the day.'
+
+'You speak in a riddle, Khaled.'
+
+'It is no matter. I will neither make a speech to the people, nor give
+them gifts. What is it to me? Let them chatter from the first call to
+prayer until the lights are put out in the evening. My fate is about my
+neck, and I cannot change it, any more than I can make you love me.
+Allah is great. I will wait and see what happens.'
+
+'Everything is undoubtedly in Allah's hand,' said Zehowah. 'But if a
+man, having meat set before him, will not raise his right hand to thrust
+it into the dish, he will die of hunger.'
+
+'And do you think that Allah does not know before whether the man will
+stretch out his hand or not?'
+
+'Undoubtedly Allah knows. And he also knows that if you will not sift
+this matter and stop the mouths of the liars, I will, though I am but a
+woman, for otherwise we may both perish.'
+
+'If they destroy me, yet they cannot take the kingdom from you, nor hurt
+you,' said Khaled. 'How then are you in danger? If I am slain you will
+then choose a husband, whose father's name is known to them. They will
+be satisfied and you will be no worse off than before and possibly
+better. This is truth. I will therefore wait for the end.'
+
+'Who has put these words into your mouth, Khaled? For the thought is not
+in your heart. Moreover, if the tribes should rise up and overthrow you,
+they would not spare me, for I would fight against them with my hands
+and they would kill me.'
+
+'Why should you fight for me, since you do not love me? But this is
+folly. No one ever heard of a woman taking arms and fighting.'
+
+'I have heard of such deeds. And if I had not heard of them, others
+should through me, for I would be the first to do them.'
+
+'I think that so long as Khaled lives, Zehowah need not bear arms,' said
+Khaled. 'I will therefore go and call the chief men together and speak
+to them.'
+
+And so he did. When the principal officers who had remained in the city
+during the winter season were assembled in the kahwah, and had hung up
+their swords on the pegs and partaken of a refreshment, Khaled sent the
+slaves away, and spoke in a few words as was his manner.
+
+'Men of Riad, Aared and all Nejed,' he said, 'I regret that more of you
+are not present here, but a great number of sheikhs are still in the
+desert, and it cannot be helped. I desire to tell you that I have heard
+of a tale concerning me which is circulated from mouth to ear throughout
+Riad and the whole kingdom. This tale is untrue, a lie such as no honest
+man repeats even to his own wife at home in the harem. For it is said
+that I am not called Khaled, but perhaps Ali Hassan, or perhaps Ali
+Hussein, that I am a Shiyah, a wine-bibber and an idolatrous one who
+prays for the intercession of Ali, besides being a Persian and a robber.
+It is also said that I plot to deliver over the kingdom of Nejed to the
+Persians, though how this could be done I do not know, seeing that the
+Persians are a meal-faced people of white jackals who do not know how to
+ride a camel. These are all lies. I swear by Allah.'
+
+When the men heard these words, they looked stealthily one at another,
+to see who would answer Khaled, for they had all heard the story and
+most of them were inclined to believe it. Peace is the mother of
+evil-speaking, as garbage breeds flies in a corner, which afterwards fly
+into clean houses and men ask whence they come. But none of the chief
+men found anything to say at first, so that Khaled sat in silence a long
+time, waiting for some one to speak. He therefore turned to the one
+nearest to him, and addressed him.
+
+'Have you heard this tale?' he inquired. 'And if you have heard it do
+you believe it?'
+
+'I think, indeed, that I have heard something of the kind,' answered the
+man. 'But it was as the chattering of an uncertain vision in a dream,
+which rings in the ears for a moment while it is yet dark in the
+morning, but is forgotten when the sun rises. By the instrumentality of
+a just mind Allah caused that which entered at one ear to run out from
+the other as the rinsing of a water-skin.'
+
+'Good,' answered Khaled. 'Yet it is not well to rinse the brains with
+falsehoods. And you?' he inquired, turning to the next. 'Have you heard
+it also?'
+
+'Just lord, I have heard,' replied this one. 'But if I have believed,
+may my head be shaved with a red-hot razor having a jagged edge.'
+
+'This is well,' Khaled said, and he questioned a third.
+
+'O Khaled!' cried the man. 'Is the milk sour, because the slave has
+imagined a lie saying, "I will say it is bad and then it will be given
+to me to drink"? Or is honey bitter because the cook has put salt in
+the sweetmeats? Or is it night because the woman has shut the door and
+the window, to keep out the sun?'
+
+The next also found an answer, having collected his thoughts while the
+others were speaking.
+
+'A certain man,' said he, 'kept sheep in Tabal Shammar, and the dog was
+with the sheep in the fold. Then two foxes came to the fold in the
+evening and one of them said to the man: "All dogs are wolves, for we
+have seen their like in the mountains, and your dog is also a wolf and
+will eat up your sheep. Make haste to kill him therefore and cast out
+his carcass." And to the sheep the other fox said: "How many sheep hang
+by the heels at the butcher's! And how many dogs live in sheepfolds!
+This is an evil world for innocent people." And the sheep were at first
+persuaded, but presently the dog ran out and caught one of the foxes and
+broke his neck, and the man threw a stone at the other and hit him, so
+that he also died. Then the sheep said one to another: "The foxes have
+suffered justly, for they were liars and robbers and the dog and our
+master have protected us against them, which they would not have done
+had they desired our destruction." And so are the people, O Khaled. For
+if you let the liars go unhurt the people will believe them, but if you
+destroy them the faith of the multitude will be turned again to you.'
+
+'This is a fable,' said Khaled, 'and it is not without truth. I am the
+sheep-dog and the people are the sheep. But in the name of Allah, which
+are the foxes?'
+
+Then he turned to another, an old man who was the Kadi, celebrated for
+his wisdom and for his religious teaching in the chief mosque.
+
+'I ask you last of all,' said Khaled, 'because you are the wisest, and
+when the wisest words are heard last they are most easily remembered.
+For we first put water into the lamp, and then oil to float upon the
+surface, and next the wick, and last of all we take a torch and light
+the lamp and the darkness disappears. Light our lamp, therefore, O Kadi,
+and let us see clearly.'
+
+'O Khaled,' replied the Kadi, 'I am old and have seen the world. You
+cannot destroy the tree by cutting off one or two of its branches. It is
+necessary to strike at the root. Now the root of this tree of lies which
+has grown up is this. Neither we nor the people know whence you are, nor
+what was your father's name, and though I for my part do not impiously
+ask whence Allah takes the good gifts which he gives to men, there are
+many who are not satisfied, and who will go about in jealousy to make
+trouble until their questioning is answered. If you ask counsel of me, I
+say, tell us here present of what tribe you are, for we believe you a
+pure Bedouin like the best of us, and tell us your father's name, and
+peace be upon him. We are men in authority and will speak to the people,
+and I will address them from the pulpit of the great mosque, and they
+will believe us. Then all will be ended, and the lies will be
+extinguished as the coals of an evening fire go out when the night frost
+descends upon the camp in winter. But if you will not tell us, yet I,
+for one, do not believe ill of you; and moreover you are lord, and we
+are vassals, so long as you are King and hold good and evil in your
+hand.'
+
+'So long as I am King,' Khaled repeated. 'And you think that if I do not
+tell my father's name, I shall not be where I am for a long time.'
+
+'Allah is wise, and knows,' answered the Kadi, but he would say nothing
+more.
+
+'This is plain speaking,' said Khaled, 'such as I like. But I might
+plainly take advantage of it. You desire to know my father's name and
+whence I come. Then is it not easy for me to say that I come from a
+distant part of the Great Dahna? Is there a man in Nejed who has crossed
+the Red Desert? And if I say that my father was Mohammed ibn Abd el
+Hamid ibn Abd el Latif, and so on to our father Ismaïl, upon whom be
+peace, shall any one deny that I speak truth? This is a very easy
+matter.'
+
+'So much the more will it be easy for us to satisfy the people,'
+answered the Kadi.
+
+'No doubt. I will think of what you have said. And now, I pray you,
+partake of another refreshment and go in peace.'
+
+At this all the chief men looked one at the other again, for they saw
+that Khaled would not tell them what they wished to know. And those of
+them who had doubted the story before now began to believe it. But they
+held their peace, and presently made their salutation and took their
+swords from the wall and departed.
+
+Khaled then left the kahwah and returned to Zehowah in the harem.
+
+'I have told them that these tales are lies,' he said, 'but they do not
+believe me.'
+
+He repeated to Zehowah all that had been said, and she listened
+attentively, for she began to understand that there was danger not far
+off.
+
+'And I told them,' he said at last, 'that it would be as easy for me to
+invent names, as for them to hear them. Then they looked sideways each
+at the other and kept silent.'
+
+'This is a foolish thing which you have done,' answered Zehowah. 'They
+will now all believe that your father was an evildoer and that you
+yourself are no better. Otherwise, they will say, why should he wish to
+conceal anything? You should have told them the truth, whatever it is.'
+
+'You also wish to know it, I see,' said Khaled, looking at Zehowah
+curiously. 'But if I were to tell you, you would not believe me, I
+think, any more than they would.'
+
+Then Zehowah looked at him in her turn, but he could not understand the
+language of her eyes.
+
+'What is this secret of yours?' she asked. 'I would indeed like to hear
+it, and if you swear to me that it is true, by Allah, I will believe
+you. For you are a very truthful man, and not subtle.'
+
+But Khaled was troubled at this. For he knew that she would find it hard
+to believe; and that if she did believe it, she would be terrified to
+think that she had married one of the genii, and if not, she would
+suspect him of a hidden purpose in telling her an empty fable, and he
+would then be further from her love than before. He held his peace,
+therefore, for some time, while she watched him, playing with her beads.
+In reality she was very curious to know the truth, though she had always
+been unwilling to ask it of him, seeing that she had married him as a
+stranger, of her own will and choice, without inquiry.
+
+'Is it just,' she asked at last, 'that the people should accuse you of
+evil deeds and fill the air of the city with falsehoods concerning you,
+so that the very slaves hear the guards repeating the lies to each
+other in the courtyard, and that I, who am your wife, should not know
+the truth? What have I done that you should not trust me? Or what have I
+said that you should regard me no more than a slave who sprinkles the
+floor and makes the fire, and while she is present in the room you hold
+your peace lest she should know your thoughts and betray them? Am I not
+your wife, and faithful? Have I not given you a kingdom and treasure
+beyond counting? Surely there were times when you talked more freely
+with that barbarian slave-woman, whose hair was red, than you ever talk
+with me.'
+
+'This is not true,' said Khaled. 'And if I talked familiarly with
+Almasta, you know the reason, for you yourself found it out, and called
+me simple for trying to deceive you. And now she is gone to the desert
+with her husband and there is no more question of her, or her red hair.
+But all the rest is true, and you have indeed given me a kingdom, which
+I am likely to lose and wealth which I do not desire, though you have
+not given me that which I covet more than gold or kingdoms, for I desire
+it indeed, and that is your love. Moreover if you have given me the
+rest, I have done something in return, for I have fought for your
+people, and shed my blood freely, and given you a nation captive,
+besides loving you and refusing to take another wife into my house. And
+this last is a matter of which some women would think more highly than
+you.'
+
+But Zehowah's curiosity was burning within her like a thirst, for
+although she had at first cared little to know of Khaled's former life,
+she was astonished at his persistency in keeping the secret now, seeing
+that the whole country was full of false rumours about him.
+
+'How can a man expect that a woman should love him, if he will not put
+his trust in her?' she asked.
+
+Then Khaled did not hesitate any longer, for he was never slow to do
+anything by which there seemed to be any hope of gaining her love. He
+therefore took her hand in his, and it trembled a little so that he was
+pleased, though indeed the unsteadiness came more from her anxiety to
+know the story he was about to tell, than from any love she felt at that
+moment.
+
+'You have sworn that you will believe me, Zehowah,' he said. 'But I
+forewarn you that there are hard things to understand. For the reason
+why I will not tell my father's name, nor the name of my tribe is a
+plain one, seeing that I was not born like other men, and have no father
+at all, and my brethren are not men but genii of the air, created from
+the beginning and destined to die at the second blast of the trumpet
+before the resurrection of the dead.'
+
+At this Zehowah started suddenly in fright and looked into his face,
+expecting to see that he had coals of fire for eyes and an appalling
+countenance. But when she saw that he was not changed and had the face
+of a man and the eyes of a man, she laughed.
+
+'What is this idle tale of Afrits?' she exclaimed. 'Frighten children
+with it.'
+
+'This is what I foresaw in you,' said Khaled. 'You cannot believe me. Of
+what use is it then to tell you my story?'
+
+Zehowah answered nothing, for she was angry, supposing that Khaled was
+attempting to put her off with a foolish tale. She had heard, indeed, of
+Genii and Afrits and she was sure that they had existence, since they
+were expressly mentioned in the Koran, but she had never heard that any
+of them had taken the shape and manner of a man. She remembered also how
+Khaled had always fought with his hands in war, like other men and been
+wounded, and she was sure that if his story were true he would have
+summoned whole legions of his fellows through the air to destroy the
+enemy.
+
+'You do not believe me,' he repeated somewhat bitterly. 'And if you do
+not believe me, how shall others do so?'
+
+'You ask me to believe too much. If you ask for my faith, you must offer
+me truths and not fables. It is true that I am curious, which is foolish
+and womanly. But if you do not wish to tell me your secret, I cannot
+force you to do so, nor have I any right to expect confidence. Let us
+therefore talk of other things, or else not talk at all, for though you
+will not satisfy me you cannot deceive me in this way.'
+
+'So you also believe that I am a Persian and a robber,' said Khaled. 'Is
+it not so?'
+
+'How can I tell what you are, if you will not tell me? Is your name
+written in your face that I may know it is indeed Khaled and not Ali
+Hassan as the people say? Or is the record of your deeds inscribed upon
+your forehead for me to read? You may be a Persian. I cannot tell.'
+
+Then Khaled bent his brows and turned his eyes away from her, for he was
+angry and disappointed, though indeed she knew in her heart that he was
+no Persian. But she let him suppose that she thought so, hoping perhaps
+to goad him into satisfying her curiosity.
+
+If Khaled had been a man like other men, as Zehowah supposed him to be,
+he would doubtless have invented a well-framed history such as she would
+have believed, at least for the present. But to him such a falsehood
+appeared useless, for he had seen the world during many ages and had
+observed that a lie is never really successful except by chance, seeing
+that no intelligence is profound enough to foresee the manner in which
+it will be some day examined, whereas the truth, being always coincident
+with the reality, can never be wholly refuted.
+
+Khaled therefore hesitated as to whether he should tell his story from
+the beginning, or hold his peace; but in the end he decided to speak,
+because it was intolerable to him to be thought an evildoer by her.
+
+'You make haste to disbelieve, before you have heard all,' he said at
+last. 'Hear me to the end. I have told you that I slew the Indian
+prince. That was before I became a man. You yourself could not
+understand how I was able to enter the palace and carry him away without
+being observed. But as I was at that time able to fly and to make both
+myself and him invisible, this need not surprise you. If you do not
+believe that I did it, let us order a litter to be brought for you, and
+I will take my mare and a sufficient number of attendants, and let us
+ride southwards into the Red Desert. There I will show you the man's
+bones. You will probably recognise them by the gold chain which he wore
+about his neck and by his ring. After that, when I had buried him, the
+messenger of Allah came to me, and because the man was an unbeliever,
+and had intended to embrace the faith outwardly, having evil in his
+heart, Allah did not destroy me immediately, but commanded that the
+angel Asrael should write my name in the book of life, that I might
+become a man. But Allah gave me no soul, promising only that if I could
+win your love, whose suitor I had killed, I should receive an immortal
+spirit, which should then be judged according to my deeds. This is
+truth. I swear it in the name of Allah, the merciful, the compassionate.
+Then an angel gave me garments such as men wear, and a sword, and a good
+mare, and I travelled hither to Riad, eating locusts for food. And
+though no man knew me, you married me at once, for it was the will of
+Allah, whose will shall also be done to the end. The rest you know. If,
+therefore, you will love me before I die, I shall receive a soul and it
+may be that I shall inherit paradise, for I am a true believer and have
+shed blood for the faith. But if you do not love me, when I die I shall
+perish as the flame of a lamp that is blown out at dawn. This is the
+truth.'
+
+He ceased from speaking and looked again at Zehowah. At first he
+supposed from her face that she believed him, and his heart was
+comforted, but presently she smiled, and he understood that she was not
+convinced. For the story had interested her greatly and she had almost
+forgotten not to believe it, but when she no longer heard his voice, it
+seemed too hard for her.
+
+'This is a strange tale,' she said, 'and it will probably not satisfy
+the people.'
+
+'I do not care whether they are satisfied or not,' Khaled answered. 'All
+I desire is to be believed by you, for I cannot bear that you should
+think me what I am not.'
+
+'What can I do? I cannot say to my intelligence, take this and reject
+that, any more than I can say to my heart, love or love not. It would
+indeed have been easier if you had said, "I am a certain Persian, a
+fugitive, protect me, for my enemies are upon me." I could perhaps give
+you protection if you require it, as you may. But you come to me with a
+monstrous tale, and you ask me to love, not a man, but a Jinn or an
+Afrit, or whatever it pleases you to call yourself. Assuredly this is
+too hard for me.'
+
+And again Zehowah smiled scornfully, for she was really beginning to
+think that he might be a Persian disguised as the people said.
+
+'I need no protection from man or woman,' said Khaled, 'for I fear
+neither the one nor the other. For I am strong, and if I am able to give
+out of charity I am also able to take by force. My fate is ever with me.
+I cannot escape it. But neither can others escape theirs. I will fight
+alone if need be, for if you will not love me I care little how I may
+end. Moreover, in battle, it is not good to stand in the way of a man
+who seeks death.'
+
+But Zehowah thought this might be the speech of a desperate man such as
+Ali Hassan, the robber, as well as of Khaled, the Jinn, and she was not
+convinced, though she no longer smiled. For she knew little of
+supernatural beings, and a devil might easily call himself a good
+spirit, so that she was convinced that she was married either to a demon
+or to a dangerous robber, and she could not even decide which of the two
+she would have preferred, for either was bad enough, and as for love
+there could no longer be any question of that.
+
+Khaled understood well enough and rose from his seat and went away,
+desiring to be alone. He knew that he was now surrounded by danger on
+every side and that he could not even look to his wife for comfort,
+since she also believed him to be an impostor.
+
+'Truly,' he said to himself, 'this is a task beyond accomplishment,
+which Allah has laid upon me. It is harder to get a woman's love than to
+win kingdoms, and it is easier to destroy a whole army with one stroke
+of a sword than to make a woman believe that which she does not desire.
+And now the end is at hand. For she will never love me and I shall
+certainly perish in this fight, being alone against so many. Allah
+assuredly did not intend me to run away, and moreover there is no reason
+left for remaining alive.'
+
+On that day Khaled again called the chief men together in his kahwah,
+and addressed them briefly.
+
+'Men of Riad,' he said, 'I am aware that there is a conspiracy to
+overthrow and destroy me, and I daresay that you yourselves are among
+the plotters. I will not tell you who I am, but I swear by Allah that I
+am neither a Persian nor a robber, nor yet a Shiyah. You will doubtless
+attack me unawares, but you will not find me sleeping. I will kill as
+many of you as I can, and afterwards I also shall undoubtedly be killed,
+for I am alone and you have many thousands on your side. Min Allah--it
+is in Allah's hands. Go in peace.'
+
+So they departed, shaking their heads, but saying nothing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+The Sheikh of the beggars was an old man, blind from his childhood, but
+otherwise strong and full of health, delighting in quarrels and swift to
+handle his staff. He had at first become a beggar, being still a young
+man, for his father and mother had died without making provision for
+him, and he had no brothers. As he boasted that he was of the pure blood
+of the desert on both sides, the other beggars jeered at him in the
+beginning, calling him Ibn el Sheikh in derision and sometimes stealing
+his food from him. But he beat them mightily, the just and the unjust
+together, since he could not see, and acquired great consideration
+amongst them, after which he behaved generously, giving his share with
+the rest for the common good, and something more. His companions learned
+also that his story was true and that his blood was as good as any from
+Ajman to El Kara, for a Bedouin of the same tribe as Abdullah, the
+husband of Almasta, came to see him not less than once every year, and
+called him brother and filled his sack with barley. This Bedouin was a
+person of consideration, also, as the beggars saw from his having a mare
+of his own, provided with a good saddle, and from his weapons. In the
+course of time therefore the blind man grew great in the eyes of his
+fellows, until they called him Sheikh respectfully, and waited on him
+when he performed his ablutions, and he obtained over them a supremacy
+as great as was Khaled's over the kingdom he governed. He was very wise
+also, acquainted with the interpretation of dreams, and able to recite
+various chapters of the Koran. It was even said that he was able to
+distinguish a good man from a bad by the sound of his tread, though some
+thought that he only heard the jingling of coins in the girdle, and
+judged by this, having a finer hearing than other men. At all events he
+was often aware that a person able to give alms was approaching, while
+his companions were talking among themselves and noticed nothing, though
+they had eyes to see, being mostly only cripples and lepers.
+
+On a certain day in the spring, when the sun was beginning to be hot and
+not long after Khaled had told Zehowah his story, many of the beggars
+were sitting in the eastern gate, by which the great road issues out of
+the city towards Hasa. They expected the coming of the first pilgrims
+every day, for the season was advancing. And now they sat talking
+together of the good prospects before them, and rejoicing that the
+winter was over so that they would not suffer any more from the cold.
+
+'There is a horseman on the road,' said the Sheikh of the beggars,
+interrupting the conversation. 'O you to whom Allah has preserved the
+light of day, look forth and tell me who the rider is.'
+
+'It is undoubtedly a pilgrim,' answered a young beggar, who was a
+stranger but had found his way to Riad without legs, no man knew how.
+
+'Ass of Egypt,' replied the Sheikh reprovingly, 'do pilgrims ride at a
+full gallop upon steeds of pure blood? But though your eyes are open
+your ears are deaf with the sleep of stupidity from which there is no
+awakening. That is a good horse, ridden by a light rider. Truly a man
+must itch to be called Haji who gallops thus on the road to Mecca.'
+
+Then the others looked, and at last one of them spoke, a hunchback
+having but one eye, but that one was keen.
+
+'O Sheikh,' he said, 'rejoice and praise Allah, for I think it is he
+whom you call your brother, who comes in from the desert to visit you.'
+
+'If that is the case, I will indeed give thanks,' answered the blind
+man, 'for there is little in my barley-sack, less in my wallet and
+nothing at all in my stomach. Allah is gracious and compassionate!'
+
+The hunchback's eye had not deceived him, and before long the Bedouin
+dismounted at the gate and looked about until he saw the Sheikh of the
+beggars, who indeed had already risen to welcome him. When they had
+embraced the Bedouin led the blind man along in the shadow of the
+eastern wall until they were so far from the rest that they might freely
+talk without being overheard. Then they sat down together, and the mare
+stood waiting before them.
+
+'O my brother,' the Bedouin began, 'was not my mother the adopted
+daughter of your uncle, upon whom be peace? And have I not called you
+brother and filled your barley-sack from time to time these many years?'
+
+'This is true,' answered the Sheikh of the beggars. 'Allah will requite
+you with seventy thousand days of unspeakable bliss for every grain of
+barley you have caused to pass my teeth. "Be constant in prayer and in
+giving alms," says the holy book, "and you shall find with Allah all the
+good which you have sent before you, for your souls." And it is also
+said, "Give alms to your kindred, and to the poor and to orphans." I am
+also grateful for all you have done, and my gratitude grows as a palm
+tree in the garden of my soul which is irrigated by your charity.'
+
+'It is well, my brother, it is well. I know the uprightness of your
+heart, and I have not ridden hither from the desert to count the
+treasure which may be in store for me in paradise. Allah knows the
+good, as well as the evil. I have come for another purpose. But tell me
+first, what is the news in the city? Are there no strange rumours afloat
+of late concerning Khaled the Sultan?'
+
+'In each man's soul there are two wells,' said the blind man. 'The one
+is the spring of truth, the other is the fountain of lies.'
+
+'You are wise and full of years,' said the Bedouin, 'and I understand
+your caution, for I also am not very young. But here we must speak
+plainly, for the time is short in which to act. A sand-storm has
+darkened the eyes of the men of the desert and they are saying that
+Khaled is a Shiyah, a Persian and a robber, and that he must be
+overthrown and a man of our own people made king in his stead.'
+
+'I have indeed heard such a rumour.'
+
+'It is more than a rumour. The tribes are even now assembling towards
+Riad, and before many days are past the end will come. Abdullah is the
+chief mover in this. But with your help, my brother, we will make his
+plotting empty and his scheming fruitless as a twig of ghada stuck into
+the sand, which will neither strike root nor bear leaves.'
+
+When the Sheikh of the beggars heard that he was expected to give help
+in frustrating Abdullah's plans he was troubled and much astonished.
+
+'Shall the blind sheep go out and fight the lion?' he inquired
+tremulously.
+
+'Even so,' replied the Bedouin unmoved, 'and, moreover, without danger
+to himself. Hear me first. Abdullah and his tribe will encamp in the low
+hills, in a few days, as usual, but somewhat earlier than in other
+years, and a great number of other Bedouins will be in the neighbouring
+valleys at the same time. Then Abdullah will come into the city openly
+and go to his house with his wife and slaves, and during several days he
+will receive the visits of his friends and return them, and go to the
+palace and salute Khaled, as though nothing were about to happen. But in
+the meantime he will make everything ready, for it is his intention to
+go into the palace at night, disguised in a woman's garment, with his
+wife, and they will slay Khaled in his sleep, and bind Zehowah, and
+distribute much treasure among the guards and slaves, and before morning
+the city will be full of Bedouins all ready to proclaim Abdullah Sultan.
+And you alone can prevent all this.'
+
+But the blind man laughed in his beard.
+
+'This is a good jest!' he cried. 'You have sought out a valiant warrior
+to stand between the Sultan and death! I am blind and old, and a beggar,
+and you would have me stand in the path of Abdullah and a thousand armed
+men. They would certainly laugh, as I do. Let me take with me a few
+lepers and the Egyptian jackass without legs, who has flown among us
+lately like a locust out of the clear air. Verily, their strength shall
+avail against the lances of the desert.'
+
+'This is no jest, my brother,' answered the Bedouin, gravely. 'Neither
+I, nor a hundred armed horsemen with me could do what you will do
+unhurt. But I will save Khaled. For in the battle of the pass before we
+came to Haïl last summer when I had an arrow in my right arm and a spear
+thrust in my side, certain dogs of Shammars encompassed me, and darkness
+was already descending upon my eyes when Khaled rode in like a whirlwind
+of scythes, and sent four of them to hell, where they are now drinking
+molten brass like thirsty camels. Then I swore by Allah that I would
+defend him in the hour of need.'
+
+'Why do you not then lie in wait for Abdullah yourself and slay him as
+he passes you in the dark?'
+
+'Is he not the sheikh of my tribe? How then can I lay a hand on him? But
+I have thought of this during many nights in my tent, and you alone can
+do what is needed.'
+
+'Surely this is folly,' said the Sheikh of the beggars. 'You have met a
+hot wind in the desert and your mind is unsettled by it. I pray you come
+with me into the city to my dwelling, and take some refreshment, or at
+least let me send to the well for a drink of water.'
+
+'My head is cool and I am not thirsty, nor is the hot wind blowing at
+this time of year. Hear me. I will tell you how to save Khaled from
+destruction, and you shall receive more gold than you have dreamed of,
+and a house, and rich garments, and a young wife of a good family to
+comfort your old age. For the deed is easy and safe, but the reward will
+be great, and you alone can do the one and earn the other.'
+
+'I perceive,' said the blind man, 'that you are indeed in earnest, but I
+cannot understand what I can do. We know that Khaled is forewarned, for
+it is not many days since he summoned the chief men in Riad, with the
+Kadi, to the palace, and refused to tell them the name of his father,
+but said that if they attacked him he would kill as many of them as he
+could.'
+
+'I did not know this,' answered the Bedouin. 'But the knowledge does not
+change my plan. Now hear me. You are the Sheikh of all the beggars in
+Riad--may Allah send you long life and much gain--they are an army and
+you are a captain. Moreover the beggars are doubtless attached to Khaled
+by his generosity, and all of you say in your hearts that under Abdullah
+there may be more sticks and less barley for you.'
+
+'This is true. But then, my brother, it is otherwise with you, for you
+are of Abdullah's tribe and will have honour and riches if he is made
+Sultan. How then is my advantage also yours?'
+
+'And did not this Abdullah in the first place divorce with ignominy his
+second wife, who is my kinswoman, being the daughter of my father's
+sister? And has he restored the dowry as the law commands? Truly his new
+wife is even now sitting upon my cousin's carpet. And secondly Abdullah
+made himself sheikh unjustly, for our sheikh should be Abdul Kerim's
+son.'
+
+'Yet you accepted Abdullah and promised him allegiance.'
+
+'Does the camel say to his driver: "I do not like to carry a load of
+barley, I would rather bear a basket of dates"? "Eat what you please in
+your tent, but dress as other men," says the proverb. Hear me, for I
+speak wisdom. Abdullah will come into the city and go to his house,
+intending to prepare the way for evil. And he will walk about the
+streets as usual, without attendants, both because he knows that the
+people are mostly with him, and also in order not to attract notice. Now
+Abdullah is the spring from which all this wickedness flows, he is the
+chief camel whom the others follow, the coal in the ashes by which the
+fire is kept alive, the head without which the body cannot live. Dry up
+the spring, therefore, let the chief camel fall into a pit suddenly,
+extinguish the coal, strike off the head. Let them ask in the morning:
+"Where is he?" And let him not be found anywhere. Then the people will
+be amazed and will not know what to do, having no leader. This is for
+you to do, and it can easily be done.'
+
+'What folly is this?' asked the blind man, shaking his head. 'And how
+can I do what you wish?'
+
+'It is very easy, for I know that you and your companions are as one
+man, living together for the common good. Go to the beggars therefore
+and tell them what I have told you, and be not afraid, for they will not
+betray you. And when Abdullah walks about the city alone lie in wait for
+him, for you will easily catch him in a narrow street, and two or three
+score of you can run after him begging for alms, until he is surrounded
+on all sides. Then fall upon him, and bind him, and take him secretly to
+one of your dwellings and keep him there, so that none find him, until
+the storm is past. In this way you will save Khaled and the kingdom, and
+when all is quiet you can deliver him up to be a laughing-stock at the
+palace and to all who believed in him. For there is nothing to fear, and
+I, for my part, am sure that Abdul Kerim's son will immediately be made
+sheikh of our tribe so that Abdullah will not return to us.'
+
+'You are subtle, my brother,' said the Sheikh of the beggars, smiling
+and stroking his beard. 'This is a good plan, being very simple, and
+Khaled will be grateful to us, and honour us beggars exceedingly. Said I
+not well that the jest was good? Surely it is better than I had thought,
+and more profitable.'
+
+'I have thought of it long in the nights of winter, both by the camp
+fire and in my tent and on the march. But I have told no one, nor will
+tell any one until all is done. But so soon as you have taken Abdullah
+and hidden him, let me know of it. To this end, when we are encamped
+outside the city I will come every evening to prayers in the great
+mosque and afterwards will wait for you near the door. As soon as I know
+that Abdullah is out of finding I will spread the report that he is
+lost, and before long all our tribe will give up the search, being
+indeed glad to get rid of him. And the rest is in the hand of Allah. I
+have done what I can, you must now do your share.'
+
+'By Allah! You shall not complain of me,' answered the blind man, 'nor
+of my people, for the jest is surpassingly good, and shall be well
+carried out.'
+
+'I will therefore go into the city, where I have business,' said the
+Bedouin. 'For I gave a reason for coming alone to Riad, and must needs
+show myself there to those who know me.'
+
+So the Bedouin filled the blind beggar's sack with barley and dates from
+his own supply and embraced him and went into the city, but the Sheikh
+of the beggars remained sitting in the same place for some time, at a
+distance from the rest, in an attitude of inward contemplation, though
+he was in reality listening to what the hunchback was telling the new
+cripple from Egypt. The Sheikh's ears were sharper than those of other
+men and he heard very clearly what was said.
+
+'This Bedouin,' said the hunchback, 'is a near relation of our Sheikh,
+and holds him in great veneration, coming frequently to see him even
+from a considerable distance, and always bringing him a present of food.
+And you may see by his mare and by his weapons that he is a person of
+consideration in his tribe. For our Sheikh is not a negro, nor the son
+of a Syrian camel-driver, but an Arab of the best blood in the desert,
+and wise enough to sit in the council in the Sultan's palace. You, who
+are but lately arrived, being transported into our midst by the mercy of
+Allah, must learn all these things, and you will also find out that our
+Sheikh has eyes in his ears, and in his fingers and in his staff, though
+he is counted blind, and you cannot deceive him easily as you might
+suppose.'
+
+The Sheikh of the beggars was pleased when he heard this and listened
+attentively to hear the answer made by the Egyptian, whom he did not yet
+trust because he was a newcomer and a stranger.
+
+'Truly,' replied the cripple, 'Allah has been merciful and
+compassionate to me, for he has brought me into the society of the wise
+and the good, which is better than much feasting in the company of the
+ignorant and the ill-mannered. And as for the Sheikh, he is evidently a
+very holy man, to whom eyes are not in any way necessary, his inward
+sight being constantly fixed upon heavenly things.'
+
+This answer did not altogether please the blind man, for it savoured
+somewhat of flattery. But the other beggars approved of the speech,
+deeming that it showed a submissive spirit, and readiness to obey and
+respect their chief.
+
+'O you of Egypt!' cried the Sheikh, calling to him. 'Come here and sit
+beside me, for I have heard what you said and desire your company.'
+
+The cripple immediately began to crawl along by the wall, dragging
+himself upon his hands and body, for he had no legs.
+
+'He is obedient,' thought the blind man, 'though it costs him much
+labour to move.'
+
+When the man was beside him, the Sheikh took an onion and a date from
+his wallet and set them down upon the ground.
+
+'Eat,' he said, 'and give thanks.'
+
+The cripple thanked him and taking the food, began to eat the onion.
+
+'You have taken the onion in your right hand and the date in your
+left,' said the Sheikh. 'And you are eating the onion first.'
+
+'This is true,' answered the Egyptian. 'I see that my lord has indeed
+eyes in his fingers.'
+
+'I have,' said the Sheikh. 'But that is not all, for this is an
+allegory. All men like to eat the onion first and the date afterwards,
+for though the onion be ever so sweet and tender, its taste is bitter
+when a man has eaten sugar-dates before it. But you have begun by giving
+us the mellow fruit of flattery, and when you give us the wholesome
+vegetable of truth it will be too sharp for our palates. Ponder this in
+your heart, chew it as the camel does her cud, and the well-digested
+food of wisdom shall nourish your understanding.'
+
+The cripple listened in astonishment at the depth of the Sheikh's
+thought, and he would have spoken out his admiration, but it is not
+possible to eat an onion and to be eloquent at the same time. The blind
+man knew this and continued to give him instruction.
+
+'The onion has saved you,' he said, 'for your mouth being full you could
+say nothing flattering, and now you will think before you speak.
+Consider how I have treated you. Have I at once rendered thanks to Allah
+for sending into our midst a young man whose gifts of eloquence are at
+least equal to those of the Kadi himself? I have said nothing so
+foolish. I have called you an ass of Egypt and otherwise rebuked you,
+for the good of your understanding, though I begin to think that you are
+indeed a very estimable young man, and it is possible that your wit may
+ripen in our society. But now I perceive by my hearing that you are
+eating the date. I pray you now, eat another onion after it.'
+
+'I cannot,' answered the cripple, 'for my lips are puckered at the
+thought of it.'
+
+'Neither is truth sweet after flattery,' said the Sheikh, who then began
+to eat the other onion himself.
+
+'I will endeavour to profit by your precepts, my lord,' replied the
+Egyptian.
+
+'Allah will then certainly enlighten you, my son. Remember also another
+thing. We are ourselves here a community, distinct from the citizens of
+Riad, and what we do, we do for the common good. Remember therefore to
+share what you receive with the rest, as they will share what they have
+with you, and take part with them in whatsoever is done by common
+consent. In this way it will be well with you and you shall grow fat;
+but if you are against us you will find evil in every man's hand, for
+since it has pleased Allah to give you no legs, you cannot possibly run
+away.'
+
+Having said this much the Sheikh of the beggars was silent. But
+afterwards on the same day he gathered about him the strongest of his
+companions, being mostly men who had the use of both arms and both
+legs, though some of them were lepers and some had but one eye, and some
+were deaf and dumb, according to the affliction which it had pleased
+Allah to send upon each. These were the most trusty and faithful of his
+people, and to them he communicated openly what the Bedouin had proposed
+to him in secret. All of them approved the plan, for they greatly feared
+the overthrow of Khaled.
+
+'But,' said one, 'we cannot keep this Abdullah for ever, and we can
+surely not kill him, for we should bring upon ourselves a grievous
+punishment.'
+
+'Allah forbid that we should shed blood,' replied the Sheikh. 'But when
+Abdul Kerim's son is made Sheikh of the tribe, Abdullah will probably
+not wish to go back to his people. Moreover it shall be for Khaled to
+judge what shall be done to the man, and he will probably cut off his
+head. But in the meantime it is necessary to choose amongst us spies,
+two for each gate of the city, to the number of twenty-two men, to watch
+for Abdullah. For we do not know when he will come, and of the two spies
+who see him enter, both must follow him and see whither he goes, and
+then the one will immediately inform all the rest while the other waits
+for him. From the time he enters the city he will not be able to go
+anywhere without our knowledge, and we shall certainly catch him one day
+towards dusk in some narrow street of the city.'
+
+The beggars saw that this plan was wise and safe for themselves, and
+they did as the Sheikh advised, posting men at all the gates to wait for
+Abdullah. He was, indeed, not far distant, and before many days he rode
+into the city towards evening, attended by a few slaves and two
+Bedouins, his wife Almasta riding in the midst of them upon a camel. His
+face was not hidden and the two beggars who were watching recognised him
+immediately. They both followed him, until he entered his own house, and
+then the one sat down in the street to watch until he should come out,
+asking alms of those who accompanied him, until they also went in, with
+the beasts. But the other made haste to find the Sheikh and to inform
+him that Abdullah had come and was now in his own dwelling.
+
+'It is well,' said the blind man. 'The cat is now asleep, and dreams of
+mice, but he shall wake in the midst of dogs. Abdullah will not leave
+his house to-night, for it is late, and though he is not afraid in the
+daytime, he will not go out much at night, lest a secret messenger from
+Khaled, bearing evil in his hand, should meet him by the way. But
+to-morrow before dawn, some of us will wait in the neighbourhood of his
+house, and two or three score of others feigning to be all blind, as I
+am, must always be near at hand, watching us. We will then begin to
+importune him for alms, flattering him with fine language, as though we
+knew his plans. And this we will do continually, when he is abroad,
+until one day to escape from us he will turn quickly into a narrow
+street, supposing that we cannot see him. For he will not wish to be
+pursued by our cries in the bazar lest he be obliged for shame to give
+something to each. Then those who can see will open their eyes and we
+will catch him in the lane, and bind rags over his head so that he
+cannot cry out, and lead him away to my dwelling by the Yemamah gate.
+And if any meet us by the way and inquire whom we are taking with us, we
+will say that he is one of ourselves, who is an epileptic and has fallen
+down in a fit, and that we are taking him to the farrier's by the gate,
+to be burned with red-hot irons for his recovery, as the physicians
+recommend in such cases. Surely we have now foreseen most things, but if
+we have forgotten anything, Allah will doubtless provide.'
+
+All the beggars in council approved this plan, for they saw that it
+could be easily carried out, if they could only catch Abdullah in a
+lonely street at the hour of prayer when few persons are passing.
+
+But Abdullah himself was ignorant of the evil in store for him, and
+feared nothing, having been secretly informed that most of the better
+sort of people were ready to support him if he would strike the blow;
+for they suspected Khaled of being a traitor, especially since he had
+last addressed the chief men and refused to tell the name of his father.
+Abdullah therefore came and went openly in the city.
+
+In the meantime, however, Khaled was informed of his presence and was
+warned of the danger. The aged Kadi came secretly by night to the palace
+and desired to be received by the Sultan in order to communicate to him
+news of great importance, as he said. Khaled immediately received him,
+and the Kadi proceeded to give a full account of Abdullah's designs; but
+the Sultan expressed no astonishment.
+
+'Let him do what he will,' he answered, 'for I care little and, after
+all, what must be will be.'
+
+'But I beseech you to consider,' said the Kadi, 'that by acting promptly
+you could easily quell this revolution, in which I, by Allah, have no
+part and will have none. For though many persons may just now desire
+your overthrow, because they expect to get a share of the treasure in
+the confusion, yet few are disposed to accept such a man as Abdullah ibn
+Mohammed el Herir in your place. Even his own tribe are not all faithful
+to him, and I am credibly informed that many look upon him as an
+intruder, and would prefer the son of Abdul Kerim for sheikh, as would
+be just, if the rights of birth were considered. And it would be an easy
+matter to remove this Abdullah. I implore you to think of the matter.'
+
+'Would this not be a murder?' asked Khaled, looking curiously at the
+venerable preacher.
+
+'Allah is merciful and forgiving,' replied the old man, looking down and
+stroking his beard. 'And moreover, if you suffer Abdullah to go about a
+few days longer he will certainly destroy you, whereas it is an easy
+matter to give him a cup of such good drink as will save him from thirst
+ever afterwards, and you would obtain quiet and the kingdom would be at
+peace.'
+
+'They shall not find me sleeping,' said Khaled, 'and so that I may only
+slay a score of them first, I care not how soon I perish.'
+
+'This is indeed a new kind of madness!' exclaimed the Kadi. 'I cannot
+understand it. But I have done what I could, and I can do nothing more.'
+
+'Nor is there anything more to be done,' said Khaled. 'But I thank you,
+for it is clear that you have spoken from a good intention.'
+
+So the Kadi went away again, and Khaled returned to Zehowah, caring not
+at all whether he lived or died. But Zehowah began to watch him
+narrowly.
+
+'If this man were a Persian, an enemy and a traitor,' she thought, 'he
+would now begin to take measures for his own safety, seeing that he is
+threatened on every side. Yet he does not lift a hand to defend himself.
+This can proceed only from one of two causes. Either he is a Jinn, as
+he has told me, and they cannot kill him, and so he does not fear them;
+or else he desires death, out of a sort of madness which has grown up in
+him through this love of which he is always speaking.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+In these days many of the Bedouin tribes came near the city and encamped
+in great numbers within half a day's journey and less. Abdullah was
+exceedingly busy with his preparations, and spent much time in talking
+with other sheikhs, hardly making any concealment of his movements or
+plans. For by this time it seemed clear to him that the greater part of
+the people were with him, and every one spoke of the coming overthrow of
+Khaled as an open matter. Khaled himself, too, was reported to be in
+fear of his life, and he was no longer seen in the streets as formerly,
+nor in the courts of the palace, nor even every day in the hall, but
+remained shut up in the harem, and none saw him except the women and a
+few slaves. Men said aloud that he was in great fear and distress, and
+as this story gained credence, so Abdullah's importance increased, since
+it was he who had brought such terror upon Khaled. All this was open
+talk in the bazar, but Abdullah was himself somewhat suspicious,
+supposing that Khaled must have a plan in reserve for defending his
+possession of the throne. Abdullah, however, kept secret the manner in
+which he intended to enter the palace, though he promised his adherents
+to open to them the gates of the castle, and the doors of the treasure
+chambers on a certain day, which he named, at the time of the first call
+to prayer in the morning, warning all those who were with him to come
+together in the great square before that hour in order to be ready to
+help him, if necessary, and to overwhelm the guards of the palace if
+they should make any resistance. But he did not know that the man of his
+tribe who was kinsman to the chief of the beggars had overheard his talk
+with his wife.
+
+Meanwhile the beggars seemed to be multiplied exceedingly in Riad, for
+whenever Abdullah went out of his house they came upon him, sometimes by
+twos and threes and sometimes in scores, pressing close to him and
+begging alms. They also cried out a great deal, praising his generosity
+and praying for blessings upon him.
+
+'Behold the sheikh of sheikhs!' they exclaimed. 'He bears gold in his
+right hand and silver in his left. Yallah! Send him a long life and
+prosperity, for he loves the poor and his name is the Alms-giver. He is
+not El Herir but Er Rahman and his heart over-flows with mercy as his
+purse does with small coins. Come, O brothers, and taste of his
+charity, which is a perpetual spring of good water beside a palm tree
+full of sugar-dates! Ya Abdullah, Servant of Allah, we love you! You are
+our father and mother. Your kefiyeh is the banner which goes before our
+pilgrimage. Come, O brothers, and taste of his charity.'
+
+Abdullah was not dissatisfied with these words, and the beggars said
+much more to the same effect, which he regarded as signs of his
+popularity, so that he opened his purse from time to time and threw
+handfuls of money into the crowd, not counting the cost since he
+expected to be master of all the treasure in Riad within a few days. But
+the beggars were disappointed, for they had hoped that he would turn out
+to be avaricious, and endeavour to elude them by walking through narrow
+and lonely streets, where they might catch him. So they pressed more and
+more upon him every day, trying to exhaust his patience and his charity.
+In this however they failed, not understanding that the vanity of such a
+man is inexhaustible and knows no price. Abdullah, too, chose rather to
+be abroad during the daytime than in the evening or the early morning,
+for he desired to be seen by the multitude and spoken of as he went
+through the market-place. Yet on the last evening of all he fell into
+the hands of the Sheikh of the beggars, and evil befell him.
+
+The hour of prayer was passed and it was almost the time when lights are
+extinguished. Then Abdullah took his sword under his aba, and also a
+good knife, which he had proved in battle, and which in his hand would
+pierce a coat of mail as though it were silk. Almasta, his wife, also
+made a bundle of woman's clothing and carried it in her arms. For they
+intended to go to a lonely place by the city wall, that Abdullah might
+there put on female garments, before entering the palace. He feared,
+indeed, lest if it were afterwards known by what disguise he had
+accomplished his purpose, he might receive some name in derision, from
+which he should never escape so long as he lived. Yet he had no choice
+but to dress as a woman, since he could not otherwise by any means have
+gone into the harem.
+
+As he came out of his house, accompanied only by Almasta he was seen at
+once by the two beggars who were always on the watch. And then, wishing
+to warn their companions, of whom many were lying asleep upon doorsteps
+in the same street and in others close by, these two made haste to get
+up, pretending to be lame and making a great clatter with their staves,
+as they limped after Abdullah. Then he, who loved to exercise charity in
+the market-place, but not in the dark where none could applaud him, made
+a pretence of not seeing the poor men, and went swiftly on with Almasta
+running by his side. But as he walked fast, the two beggars although
+apparently lame increased their speed with his, and their clatter also.
+
+'Does a sound man need a horse to escape from cripples?' asked Abdullah.
+And he turned quickly into a narrow lane.
+
+'It will be wiser to scatter a few coins to them,' said Almasta. 'They
+will then stop and search for them in the dark. For these men are very
+importunate and will certainly hinder us.'
+
+But Abdullah was confident in his legs as a strong man and only walked
+the faster, so that Almasta could with great difficulty keep beside him.
+Then they heard the beggars running after them in the dark and calling
+upon them.
+
+'O Abdullah!' they cried. 'The light of your charitable countenance goes
+before us like a lantern, and illuminates the whole street! Be merciful
+and give us a small coin, and Allah will reward you!'
+
+Then Abdullah stopped in the darkest part of the narrow lane, seeing
+that they had recognised him, and conceiving that it would be a reproach
+for a sheikh of pure blood to run from beggars; and he feared also that
+it would be remembered against him on the morrow. He therefore made a
+pretence of being diverted, and laughed.
+
+'Surely,' he said, 'the lame men of Riad could outrun in a race the
+sound men of any other city. And, by Allah, I have little money with me,
+for I was going to a friend's house to receive a sum due to me for
+certain mares; yet I will give you what I have, and I pray you, go in
+peace.'
+
+Thereupon he sought in his wallet for something to give them, and while
+he was seeking they began to praise him after their manner.
+
+'See this Abdullah!' they said. 'He is the father of the poor and
+distressed, and is ever ready to divide all he has with us. Yallah!
+Bless him exceedingly! Yallah! Increase his family!'
+
+But when Abdullah had found the money and was putting it into their
+hands, he was suddenly aware that instead of two beggars there were now
+ten or more, and these again multiplied in an extraordinary manner, so
+that he felt himself hemmed in on every side in a close press.
+
+'O Allah!' he exclaimed. 'Thou art witness that unless these small coins
+are multiplied a hundredfold, as the basket of dates by the Prophet at
+the trench before Medina, I shall have nothing to give these worthy
+persons.'
+
+By this time the blind Sheikh of the beggars was present, and he pushed
+forward, pretending to rebuke his companions.
+
+'O you greedy ones!' he cried. 'How often have I told you not to be so
+importunate? Yet you crowd upon him like wasps upon a date, presuming
+upon the goodness of his heart, and when there is no more room you crowd
+upon each other. Forgive them, O Abdullah!' he said, addressing him
+directly, 'for they have the appetites of jackals together with the
+understanding of little children. They would thrust into the dish a hand
+as small as a crow's foot and withdraw it looking as big as a camel's
+hoof. Their manners are also----'
+
+'My friend,' said Abdullah, 'I have given what I can. Let me therefore
+pass on, for my business is of importance, yet the throng is so great
+that I cannot move a step. To-morrow I will distribute much alms to you
+all.'
+
+'The radiance of your merciful countenance is enough for us,' replied
+the Sheikh of the beggars, 'and even I who am blind am comforted by its
+rays as by those of the sun in spring, and my hunger is appeased by the
+honey of your incomparable eloquence----'
+
+'My friend,' said Abdullah, interrupting him again, 'I pray you to let
+me go forward now, for I have a very important matter in hand, though it
+is with difficulty that I tear myself away from your society and I would
+willingly listen much longer to the words of the wise.'
+
+Then the blind man turned to the other beggars, and his hearing told him
+that by this time there were at least threescore in the street.
+
+'Come, my brothers!' he cried. 'Let us accompany our benefactor to the
+house of his friend, and afterwards we will wait for him and see that he
+reaches his own dwelling in safety. Surely it is not fitting that a
+sheikh of such great consideration should go about the streets at night
+without so much as an attendant carrying a lantern. Let us go with him.'
+
+Now these last words were the signal agreed upon, and even as Abdullah
+began to protest that he desired no such honourable escort as the
+beggars offered him, one came from behind and suddenly drew a thick
+barley-sack over his head, so that his voice was heard no more, and he
+was dragged down by the throat, while the one-eyed hunchback caught him
+by the legs and bound his feet and four others laid hold of his hands
+and tied them firmly behind him. Nor had Almasta time to utter a single
+cry before she was bound hand and foot with her head in a sack, like her
+husband. Then at a signal the beggars took up the two as though they had
+been bales packed ready for a camel's back, and carried them away
+swiftly into the darkness, towards the eastern gate where the blind man
+lived in a ruined house together with three or four of his most trusted
+companions. He also sent a messenger to his relation, the Bedouin, as
+had been agreed. It was already quite dark in the streets and the few
+persons who met the beggars did not see what they were carrying, nor ask
+questions of them, merely supposing that they had lingered long in the
+public square after evening prayers and were now returning in a body to
+their own quarter.
+
+The blind man's house was built of three rooms and a wall, standing in a
+square around a small court. But only one of the rooms had a roof of its
+own, though there was a sort of cellar under the floor of one of the
+others which served at once as a lodging for beggars in winter, as a
+storehouse for food when there was any in supply and as a place of
+deposit for the ancient iron chest in which the common fund of money was
+kept. To this vault the Sheikh of the beggars made his companions bring
+the two prisoners, and having set them on the floor, side by side, he
+proceeded to hold a council, in which the captives themselves had no
+part, since their heads were tied up in dusty barley-sacks and they
+could not speak so as to be heard.
+
+'O my brothers!' said the blind man. 'Allah has delivered the enemies of
+the kingdom into our hand, and it is necessary to decide what we will do
+with them. Let the oldest and the wisest give their opinions first, and
+after them the others, even to the youngest, and last of all I will
+speak, and let us see whether we can agree.'
+
+'Let us kill the man and bury him, and then cast lots among us for the
+woman,' said one.
+
+'No,' said the next, a man who had twice made the pilgrimage, and was
+much respected, 'we cannot do this, for the man is a true believer, and
+evil will befall us if we shed his blood. Let us rather keep him here,
+and purify his hide every day with our staves, until Khaled is in no
+more danger, and then we will take him to the palace and deliver him
+up.'
+
+'It is to be feared,' said the Sheikh of the beggars, 'that the man
+might chance to die of this sort of purification, though indeed it be
+very wholesome for him, and I am not altogether against it.'
+
+'Let us make him our slave,' said a third who had himself been the slave
+of a poor man who had died without heirs. 'The fellow is strong. Let us
+buy millstones and make him grind barley for us in this cellar. In this
+way he will not eat our food for nothing.'
+
+After this many others gave advice of the same kind. But while they were
+talking there was a great clattering and noise upon the stone steps
+which led down into the cellar, and a man fell over the last step and
+rolled over and over into the very midst of the council, railing and
+lamenting.
+
+'It is that ass of Egypt,' said the Sheikh of the beggars. 'I know him
+by the clattering of the wooden hoofs he wears on his hands, and also by
+his braying. Let him also give his opinion when he is recovered from his
+fall.'
+
+'It is strange and marvellous,' said one, 'that he who has no legs
+should suffer so many falls, being, by the will of Allah, always upon
+the earth. For when we first saw him we found him fainting upon the
+ground, having fallen from the wall of a garden, though no man could
+tell how he had climbed upon it.'
+
+'I had been transported to the top of the wall as in a dream,' replied
+the cripple, 'for there were dates in that garden. But having eaten too
+greedily of them I fell asleep on the top and I dreamed that my body was
+torn by hyænas; and waking suddenly I fell down. For the dates were yet
+green.'
+
+'This may or may not be true,' said the blind man. 'For you are an
+Egyptian. Let us, however, hear what you have to advise in the matter of
+Abdullah and his wife, whom we have taken prisoners.'
+
+'I fear that you mock me, O my lord,' answered the man. 'But if I am
+mocked, I will advise that this Abdullah be also made a sport of, for us
+first, and for the people of Riad afterwards.'
+
+'Tell us how this may be done, for a good jest is better than salt for
+roasting, and the sheep lie here bound before us.'
+
+'Take this man, then,' said the cripple, 'and uncover his face, and hold
+him fast. Then let one of us get the razor and shave off all his beard
+and his eyebrows, and the hair of his head even to the nape of his neck.
+Then if he came suddenly before her who bore him and cried, "Mother,"
+she would cover her face and answer, "Begone, thou ostrich's egg!" For
+she would not know him. And to-morrow we will take his excellent clothes
+from him and put them upon our Sheikh. But we will dress Abdullah in
+rags such as would not serve to wipe the mud from a slave's shoes in the
+time of the subsiding waters, and we will tie his hands under his
+arm-pits and put a halter over his head and lead him about the city.
+Then he will cry out against us to the people, saying that he is
+Abdullah, but we will also cry out in answer: "See this madman, who
+believes himself to be a sheikh of Bedouins though Allah has given him
+no beard! O people of Riad, you may know that the spring is come, by the
+braying of this ass."'
+
+'Yet I see now that there may be wisdom in brayings,' said the Sheikh of
+the beggars, 'though Balaam ibn Beor shut his ears against it, and was
+punished for his cursing so that his tongue hung down to his breast, all
+his days, like that of a thirsty dog. This is good counsel, for in this
+way we shall not shed the man's blood, nor render ourselves guilty of
+his death; but I think we shall earn a great reward from Khaled, and his
+kingdom will be saved in laughter.'
+
+During all this time Abdullah had not moved, knowing that he was in the
+power of many enemies and beyond all reach of help, but when he heard
+the decision of the Sheikh of the beggars he was filled with shame and
+rolled himself from side to side upon the floor, as though trying to
+escape from the bonds that held him. Almasta, for her part, lay quietly
+where they had put her, for she saw that all chance of success was gone
+and was pondering how she might take advantage of what happened, to save
+herself.
+
+Then the beggars laid hold of Abdullah and held him, while others took
+the sack from his head. He was indeed half smothered with dust, so that
+at first he could not speak aloud, but coughed and sneezed like a dog
+that has thrust its nose into a dust-heap to find the bone which is
+hidden underneath. But presently he recovered his breath and began to
+rail at them and curse them. To this they paid no attention, but brought
+the oil lamp near him, and one began to rub soap upon his face and head
+while another got the razor with which the beggars shaved their heads
+and began to whet it upon his leathern girdle.
+
+'Do not waste the precious stones of your eloquence upon a barber,'
+said the Sheikh of the beggars, 'but reserve your breath and the rich
+treasures of your speech until you are brought as a plucked bird before
+the people of Riad. Moreover we only wish to shave off your beard, but
+if you are restless some of your hide will certainly be removed also,
+whereby you will be hurt and it will be still harder for your friends to
+recognise you to-morrow. It is also useless to shout and scream as
+though you were driving camels, for you are in the cellar of my house
+which is at a good distance from other habitations, on the borders of
+the city.'
+
+So Abdullah saw that there was no escape, and that his fate was about
+his neck, and he sat still as they had placed him, while the one-eyed
+hunchback shaved off his beard and the hair on his upper lip and his
+eyebrows, and the lock at the back of his head.
+
+When this was done the blind man put out his hand and felt Abdullah's
+face.
+
+'Surely,' he said, 'this is not a man's head, but the round end of a
+walking-staff, rubbed smooth by much use.'
+
+They also tied his hands under his arm-pits and put upon him a ragged
+shirt with sleeves so that he seemed to have lost both arms at the
+elbow.
+
+'This is very well done,' said the hunchback turning his head from side
+to side in order to see all with his one eye. 'But what shall we do
+with the woman? Let us cast lots for her, and he who wins her shall
+marry her, and we will hold the feast immediately, for we have not yet
+supped and there is some of the camel's meat which we received to-day at
+the palace.'
+
+'O my brothers,' answered the Sheikh of the beggars, 'let us do nothing
+unlawful in our haste. For this woman is certainly one of Abdullah's
+wives, as you may see by her clothes, and unless he divorces her none of
+us can take her for ourselves, seeing that she is the wife of a
+believer. Take the sack from her head, however, and if she deafens us
+with her screaming we can put it on again. But you must by no means put
+her to shame by taking the veil from her face, for she may be an honest
+wife, though her husband be a dog. If she has done well, we shall find
+it out, and no harm will have come to her; but if she is a sharer in
+this fellow's plans, her punishment will be grievous, since she will be
+the wife of an outcast, having neither beard nor eyebrows and rejected
+by all men.'
+
+Some of the beggars murmured at this, but most of them praised their
+Sheikh's wisdom, and would indeed have feared greatly to break the holy
+law, being chiefly devout men who prayed daily in the mosque and
+listened to the Khotbah on Friday. They therefore placed Almasta in one
+corner of the cellar and Abdullah in another, so that the two could not
+converse together, and then they took out such food as they had and
+began to eat their supper, laughing and talking over the jest and
+anticipating the reward which awaited them for saving Khaled.
+
+In the meanwhile the night was advancing and many of Abdullah's friends
+left their houses secretly and gathered in the neighbourhood of the
+palace to wait for the first signal from within. By threes and by twos
+and singly they came out of their dwellings, looking to the right and
+left to see whether they were not the first, as men do who are not sure
+of being in the right. All had their swords with them, and some their
+bows also, and some few carried their spears, and they made no secret of
+their bearing weapons; but under each man's aba was concealed the
+largest barley-sack he could find in his house, and concerning this no
+one of the multitude said anything to his neighbour, for each hoped to
+get a greater share than the others of the gold and precious stones from
+the fabulous treasure stored in the palace. Then most of these men sat
+down to wait, as vultures do before the camel is quite dead. But not
+long after the middle of the night they were joined by a great throng of
+Bedouins from Abdullah's tribe. These had been admitted into the city by
+the watchman according to the agreement, and passed up the great street
+from the Hasa gate, in a close body, not speaking and making but little
+noise with their feet as they walked; yet all of them together could be
+heard from a distance, because they were so many, and the sound was like
+the night wind among the branches of dry palm trees. After them, other
+Bedouins came in from camps both near and far, some of them having made
+half a day's journey since sunset; and they surrounded the palace on all
+sides, and filled the great street, and the street which passes by the
+mosque towards the Dereyiyah gate and all the other approaches to the
+open square, sitting down wherever there was room, or leaning against
+the closed shops of the bazar, or standing up in a thick crowd when they
+were too closely pressed to be at ease. They talked together from time
+to time in low tones, but when their voices rose above a whisper some
+man in authority hushed them saying that the hour was not yet come.
+
+'By this time Abdullah has slain Khaled,' said some, 'and the daughter
+of the old Sultan is a prisoner.'
+
+'And by this time,' said others, 'Abdullah is surely unlocking the
+treasure chamber and filling a barley-sack with pearls and rubies. It is
+certain that he who slays the lion deserves his bride, but we hope that
+something will be left for us.'
+
+'Hush!' said the voice of one moving in the darkness. 'Be patient. It is
+not yet time.'
+
+Then, for a space, a deep silence fell on the speakers and they crouched
+in their places watching the high black walls of the palace and marking
+the motion of the stars by the highest point of the tower. Before long
+whispered words were heard again.
+
+'It would have been more just if Abdullah had opened the gate to us as
+soon as he had slain Khaled, for then we could have seen what he took.
+But now, who shall tell us what share of the riches he is hiding away in
+the more secret vaults?'
+
+'This is true,' answered others. 'And besides, what need have we of
+Abdullah to help us into the palace? Surely we could have broken down
+the gates and slain the guards and Khaled himself without Abdullah's
+help. Yet we, for our part, would not shed the blood of a man who has
+always dealt very generously with us, nor do we believe the story of the
+camels laden secretly in Haïl. However, what is ordained will take
+place, and we shall undoubtedly receive plentiful gold merely for
+sitting here to watch the stars through the night.'
+
+'The story of the camels is not true,' said a certain man, speaking
+alone. 'For I was of the drivers sent with them, and being hungry, we
+opened one of the bales on the way. By Allah! There was nothing but
+wheat in it, and it was white and good; but there was nothing else, not
+so much as a few small coins----'
+
+Then there was the sound of a blow, and the man who was speaking was
+struck on the mouth, so that his speech was interrupted.
+
+'Peace and be silent!' said a voice. 'They who speak lies will receive
+no share with the rest when the time comes.'
+
+But the man who had been struck was the strongest of all his tribe,
+though he who had struck him did not know it. And the man caught his
+assailant by the waist in the dark, and wrestled with him violently,
+being very angry, and broke his forearm and his collar-bone and several
+of his ribs, and when he had done with him, he threw him over his
+shoulder so that he fell fainting and moaning three paces away.
+
+'O you who strike honest men on the mouth in the dark, you have been
+over-rash!' he cried. 'Go home and hide yourself lest I recognise you
+and break such bones as you have still whole!'
+
+'This is well done,' said one of the bystanders in a loud voice. 'For
+the story of the camels laden secretly with treasure is a lie. I also
+was with the drivers and ate of the wheat. Nor do I believe that Khaled
+is a robber and a Persian.'
+
+'We do not believe it!' cried a score of Bedouins together. 'And if we
+have come here, it is to get our share like other men, since they tell
+us that Khaled is dead. But now we believe that Abdullah has shut
+himself into the palace and means to keep all for himself, and is
+cheating us.'
+
+These men were none of them of Abdullah's tribe, but as the voices grew
+louder, Abdullah's kinsmen came up, and endeavoured to quiet the growing
+tumult. The crowd had parted a little and the strong man stood alone in
+the midst.
+
+'We pray you to be patient,' said Abdullah's men, 'for the time is at
+hand and the false dawn has already passed, though you have not seen it,
+so that before long it will be day. Then the gates will be opened and
+you shall all go in.'
+
+'We have no need of your sheikh to open gates for us,' said the strong
+man, in a voice that could be heard very far through the crowd. 'And
+moreover it will be better for you not to strike any more of us, or, by
+Allah, we will not only break your bones but shed your blood.'
+
+At this there was a sullen cry and men sprang to their feet and laid
+their hands upon their weapons. But a youth who had come up with
+Abdullah's kinsmen, though not one of them, bent very low over the man
+who had been thrown down and then spoke out with a loud and laughing
+voice.
+
+'Truly they say that crows lead people to the carcases of dogs!' he
+said. 'This fellow is of the family which murdered my father, upon whom
+may Allah send peace! Nor will I exceed the bounds of moderation and
+justice.'
+
+Thereupon the young man drew out his knife and immediately killed his
+father's enemy as he lay upon the ground, and then he withdrew quickly
+into the dark crowd so that none knew him. But though there was only the
+light of the stars and the multitude was great, many had seen the deed
+and each man stood closer by his neighbour and grasped his weapon to be
+in readiness. The kinsmen of Abdullah saw that they were separated from
+their own tribe and drew back, warning the others to keep the peace and
+be silent, lest they should be cut off from their share of the spoil.
+But their voices trembled with fears for their own safety, and they were
+answered by scornful shouts and jeers.
+
+'The young man says well that you are crows,' cried the angry men, 'for
+you wish to keep the carcase for yourselves. Come and take it if you are
+able!'
+
+Now indeed the quarrel which had been begun by the blow struck in the
+dark spread suddenly to great dimensions, for the words spoken were
+caught up as grains of sand by the wind and blown into all men's ears.
+Many were ready enough to believe that Abdullah cared only for
+enriching himself and his tribe, and many more who had been persuaded to
+the enterprise by the hope of gain turned again to their faith in Khaled
+as the dream of gold disappeared from their eyes. Yet Abdullah's tribe
+was numerous, and it was easy to see that if the dissension grew into a
+strife of arms the fight would be long and fierce on both sides.
+
+Then certain of those who were against Abdullah raised the cry that he
+had slain Khaled and escaped with the treasure by a secret passage
+leading under the walls of the city, which passage was spoken of in old
+tales, though no one knew where to find it. But the multitude believed
+and pressed forward in a strong body and began to beat against the
+iron-bound gate of the palace with great stones and pieces of wood.
+Abdullah's men came on fiercely to prevent them, but were opposed by
+many, and as the wing of night was lifted and the dawn drank the stars,
+the wide square was filled with the clashing of arms and the noise of a
+terrible tumult.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+At the time when the beggars were carrying away Abdullah and his wife,
+Khaled was sitting in his accustomed place, silent and heavy at heart,
+and Zehowah played softly to him upon a barbat and sang a sad song in a
+low voice. For she saw that gloominess had overcome him and she feared
+to disturb his mood, though she would gladly have made him smile if she
+had been able.
+
+A black slave of Khaled's whom he had treated with great kindness had
+secretly told him that there was a plan to enter the palace with evil
+during that night, for the fellow had spied upon those who knew and had
+overheard what he now told his master. He had also asked whether he
+should not warn the guards of the palace, in order that a strict watch
+should be kept, but Khaled had bidden him be silent.
+
+'Either the guards are conspiring with the rest,' said Khaled, 'and will
+be the first to attack me, or they are ignorant of the plan; and if so
+how can they withstand so great a multitude? I will abide by my own
+fate, and no man shall lose his life for my sake unless he desires to do
+so.'
+
+But he privately put on a coat of mail under his aba, and when he sat
+down in the harem to await the end he would not let Zehowah take his
+sword, but laid it upon his feet and sat upright against the wall,
+looking towards the door.
+
+'Since I have no soul,' he said to himself, 'this is probably the end of
+all things. But there is no reason why I should not kill as many of
+these murderers as possible.'
+
+He was gloomy and desponding, however, since he saw that his hour was at
+hand, and that Zehowah was no nearer to loving him than before. He
+watched her fingers as she played upon the instrument, and he listened
+to the soft notes of her voice.
+
+'It is a strange thing,' he thought, 'and I believe that she is not able
+to love, any more than my sword upon my feet, which is good and true and
+beautiful, and ever ready to my hand, but is itself cold, having no
+feeling in it.'
+
+Still Zehowah sang and Khaled heard her song, listening watchfully for a
+man's tread upon the threshold and looking to see a man's face and the
+light of steel in the shadow beyond the lamps.
+
+'The night is long,' he said at last, aloud.
+
+'It is not yet midnight,' Zehowah answered. 'But you are tired. Will you
+not go to rest?'
+
+'I shall rest to-morrow,' said Khaled. 'To-night I will sit here and
+look at you, if you will sing to me.'
+
+Zehowah gazed into his eyes, wondering a little at his exceeding
+sadness. Then she bowed her head and struck the strings of the
+instrument to a new measure more melancholy than the last, and sang an
+old song of many verses, with a weeping refrain.
+
+'Are you also heavy at heart to-night?' Khaled asked, when he had
+listened to the end.
+
+'It is not easy to kindle a lamp when the rain is falling heavily,'
+Zehowah said. 'Your sadness has taken hold of me, like the chill of a
+fever. I cannot laugh to-night.'
+
+'And yet you have a good cause, for they say that to-night the earth is
+to be delivered of a great malefactor, a certain Persian, whose name is
+perhaps Hassan, a notorious robber.'
+
+Khaled turned away his head, smiling bitterly, for he desired not to see
+the satisfaction which would come into her face.
+
+'This is a poor jest,' she answered in a low voice, and the barbat
+rolled from her knees to the carpet beside her.
+
+'I mean no jesting, for I do not desire to disappoint you, since you
+will naturally be glad to be freed from me. But I am glad if you are
+willing to sing to me, for this night is very long.'
+
+'Do you think that I believe this of you?' asked Zehowah, after some
+time.
+
+'You believed it yesterday, you believe it to-day, and you will believe
+it to-morrow when you are free to make choice of some other man--whom
+you will doubtless love.'
+
+'Yet I know that it is not true,' she said suddenly.
+
+'It is too late,' Khaled answered. 'The more I love you, the more I see
+how little faith you have in me--and the less faith can I put in you.
+Will you sing to me again?'
+
+'This is very cruel and bitter.' Zehowah sighed and looked at him.
+
+'Will you sing to me again, Zehowah?' he repeated. 'I like your sad
+music.'
+
+Then she took up the barbat from the carpet, but though she struck a
+chord she could not go on and her hand lay idle upon the strings, and
+her voice was still.
+
+'You are perhaps tired,' said Khaled after some time. 'Then lay aside
+the instrument and sleep.' He composed himself in his seat, his sword
+being ready and his eyes towards the door.
+
+But Zehowah shook her head as though awaking from a dream, her fingers
+ran swiftly over the strings and gentle tones came from her lips. Khaled
+listened thoughtfully to the song and the words soothed him, but before
+she had reached the end, she stopped suddenly.
+
+'Why do you not finish it?' he asked.
+
+'If you have told me truth,' she answered, 'this is no time for singing
+and music. But if not, why should I labour to amuse you, as though I
+were a slave? I will call one of the women who has a sweet voice and a
+good memory. She will sing you a kasid which will last till morning.'
+
+'You are wrong,' said Khaled. 'There is no reason in what you say.'
+
+But he reflected upon her nature, while he spoke.
+
+'Surely,' he thought, 'there is nothing in the world so contradictory as
+a woman. I ask of her a song and she is silent. I bid her rest,
+supposing her to be weary, and she sings to me. If I tell her that I
+hate her she will perhaps answer that she loves me. Min Allah! Let us
+see.'
+
+'You inspire hatred in me,' he said aloud, after a few moments.
+
+At this Zehowah was very much astonished, and she again let the barbat
+fall from her knees.
+
+'You wished me to believe that you loved me, and this not long since,'
+she answered.
+
+'It may be so. I did not know you then.'
+
+He looked towards the door as though he would say nothing further.
+Zehowah sighed, not understanding him yet being wounded in that
+sensitive tissue of the heart which divides the outer desert of pride
+from the inner garden of love, belonging to neither but separating the
+two as a veil. And when there is a rent in that veil, pride looks on
+love and scoffs bitterly, and love looks on pride and weeps tears of
+fire.
+
+'I am sorry that you hate me,' she said, but the words were bitter in
+her mouth as a draught from a spring into which the enemy have cast
+wormwood, that none may drink of it.
+
+'Allah is great!' thought Khaled. 'This is already an advantage.'
+
+Then Zehowah took up the barbat and began to sing a careless song not
+like any which Khaled had ever heard. This is the song--
+
+ 'The fisherman of Oman tied the halter under his arms,
+ The sky was as blue as the sea in winter.
+ The fisherman dived into the deep waters
+ As a ray of light shoots through a sapphire of price.
+ The sea was as blue as the sky, for it was winter.
+ Among the rocks below the water it was dark and cold
+ Though the sky above was as blue as a fine sapphire.
+ The fisherman saw a rough shell lying there in the dark between two
+ crabs,
+ "In that shell there must be a large pearl," he said.
+ But when he would have taken it the crabs ran together and fastened
+ upon his hand.
+ His heart was bursting in his ribs for lack of breath
+ And he thought of the sky above, as blue as the sea in winter.
+ So he pulled the halter and was taken half-fainting into the boat.
+ The crabs held his hand but he struck them off,
+ And his heart beat merrily as he breathed the wind
+ Blowing over the sea as blue as the sky in winter.
+ "There are no pearls in this ocean," he said to his companions,
+ "But there are crabs if any one cares to dive."
+ One of them saw the shell caught between the legs of the crabs,
+ He opened it and found a pearl of the value of a kingdom.
+ "The pearl is mine, but you may eat the crabs," he said to the
+ fisherman,
+ "Since you say there are no pearls in this ocean,
+ Which is as blue as the sky in winter."
+ Then the fisherman smote him and tried to take the pearl,
+ But as they strove it fell into the deep water and sank,
+ Where the sea was as blue as the sky in winter.
+ "I will drown you with a heavy weight," said the fisherman, "for you
+ have robbed me of my fortune."
+ "I have not robbed you, O brother, for the pearl is again where you
+ found it,
+ In the sea which is as blue as the sky in winter."
+ Then the fisherman dived again many times in vain
+ Till the drums of his ears were broken and his heart was dissolved for
+ lack of breath.
+ But the pearl is still there, at the bottom of the sea,
+ And the sea is as blue as the sky in winter.
+ This is the kasid of the fisherman of Oman
+ Which Zehowah Bint ul Mahomed el Hamid
+ Has made and sung for her lord, Khaled the Sultan.
+ May Allah send him long life and many such hearts
+ As the one which fell into the ocean
+ When the sky was as blue as the sea in winter.'
+
+'This is a new song,' said Khaled, when she had finished.
+
+'Is it? I made it many months ago,' Zehowah answered. 'Does it please
+you?'
+
+'It is not very melodious, nor do I think there is much truth in the
+matter of it. But I thank you, for it has served to pass the time.'
+
+Zehowah laughed a little scornfully.
+
+'I daresay you would prefer the song of a Persian nightingale,' she
+said. 'Nevertheless my song is full of truth, though you cannot see it.
+There are many who seek for things of great value and do not know when
+they have found them because a crab has bitten their hands.'
+
+'Verily,' thought Khaled, 'this is indeed the spirit of contradiction.'
+
+But he was silent for a time, not wishing that she should think him
+easily moved. In the meantime Zehowah played softly upon the little
+instrument and Khaled watched her, wondering whether she were not
+playing upon the strings of his heart, for her own pleasure, as
+skilfully as her fingers ran upon the chords of the barbat. Many words
+rose to his lips then, and he wished that he also had the science of
+music that he might sing sweetly to her. Then he laughed aloud at his
+own imagination, which was indeed that of a foolish youth.
+
+'The lion roaring for a sweetmeat,' he thought, 'and the sword-hand
+aching to scratch little tunes upon a lute!'
+
+Zehowah turned suddenly when he laughed, and ceased from playing.
+
+'I am glad that you are merry,' she said. 'I like laughter better than
+reproaches and prefer it to gloomy forebodings of evil when none is at
+hand.'
+
+Khaled's face grew dark, and he looked again towards the door.
+
+'If you will stay with me, you shall see that evil is not far off,' he
+answered, for she had reminded him of what he was expecting, and he knew
+that it was no jesting matter. 'But you shall please yourself in this as
+in all other matters, though it were better for you to go now and shut
+yourself up in an inner room and wait for the end. The night is
+advancing, and all will soon be over.'
+
+'Hear me, Khaled,' said Zehowah, speaking earnestly. 'If you bid me go,
+I will go, or if you desire me to stay, I will remain with you. But if
+you are indeed in danger, as you say, let us call up the guards and the
+watchmen who sleep in the palace, that they may stand by you with their
+swords and help you to fight if there is to be strife.'
+
+'I will have no treacherous fellows about me,' Khaled answered, 'and
+there are none here whom I can trust. My hour is coming and I will
+fight this fight alone. But if you were such as I once hoped, I would
+say: "Remain with me, so long as you are safe." Now, since Allah has
+willed it thus, I say to you: "Go and seek safety where you can find
+it." Go, therefore, Zehowah, and leave me alone, for I need no one
+beside me, and you least of all.'
+
+He turned away his head, lest she should see his face, and with his hand
+made a gesture bidding her to leave him. She rose from her seat softly
+and hung the barbat upon the wall with the other musical instruments,
+looking over her shoulder to see whether he would call her back. But he
+neither moved nor spoke, being resolved to venture all upon this trial,
+for he knew that if she loved him even but a little, she would not leave
+him alone in the extremity of danger.
+
+Then she went towards the door of the room, turning her head to look at
+him as she passed near him.
+
+'Farewell,' she said. But he did not answer nor show that he heard her
+voice.
+
+As she lifted the curtain to go out, she lingered and gazed at him. He
+sat motionless upon the carpet, upright against the wall, his sword
+lying across his feet, his hands hidden under his sleeves, looking
+towards her indeed but not seeming to see her.
+
+'There can be no real danger,' she thought. 'Could any man sit thus,
+expecting death, and refusing to let any one stand by him to fight with
+him? Surely, he is playing with me, and setting a trap for me. But he
+shall not catch me.'
+
+She turned to go and the curtain was falling behind her when the night
+wind from the open passage brought a sound to her ears from a far
+distance. She started and listened, as camels do when they hear the
+first moving of the hot wind. There were no voices in the noise, which
+was low and dull, like the breathing of a great multitude and the soft
+moving of feet, and altogether it was as the slow rising and falling
+back of the sea upon the shores of Oman, when the great summer storm is
+coming from the south-west.
+
+Zehowah stood still a moment and drank in every murmur that reached her
+from without. Then her face grew white and her lips trembled when she
+thought of Khaled sitting alone on the other side of the curtain, with
+his sword upon his feet, waiting for the end. She lifted the hanging a
+little and looked at him again. He saw her, but made no sign. Even as
+she looked, the distant murmur grew louder and she fancied that he moved
+his head as though he heard it. Then she entered the room and came and
+stood before him.
+
+'There is a great multitude in the square before the palace,' she said.
+
+'I know it,' he answered, calmly looking up to her face. 'It needed not
+that you should tell me.'
+
+'Will you not let me stay with you now?' asked Zehowah.
+
+'Why should you stay here?' he asked with a pretence of indifference.
+'Of what use are you to me? Take this sword. Can you strike with it?
+Your wrist is feeble. Or take a bow from the weapons on the wall. Can
+you draw the string? Your strength is sufficient for the lute, and your
+skill for scratching the strings of the barbat. Go and save yourself. I
+am alone and every man's hand is against me.'
+
+Zehowah stood still in the room and hesitated, looking into his eyes for
+something which she all at once desired with a hot thirst. At last she
+spoke in an uncertain voice.
+
+'Yet you said not long since that if I were such as you once hoped, you
+would bid me remain.'
+
+'I do not care,' he answered. 'Yet for your own sake, I advise you to go
+away.'
+
+'For my own sake!' she repeated, trying to speak scornfully, and turning
+to go a second time.
+
+But she did not reach the door. She stood still before the weapons which
+hung upon the wall, and paused a moment and then took a sword from its
+place. Khaled watched her. She grasped the hilt as well as she could
+and swung the weapon in the air once with all her might. Then she
+uttered a little cry of pain, for she had twisted her wrist. The sword
+fell to the floor.
+
+'He is right,' she said in a low tone, speaking aloud to herself. 'I am
+weak and can be of no use to him.'
+
+She went on once more towards the door, slowly, her head bent down, then
+stopped and then looked back again. She feared that she might see a
+smile on his face, but his eyes were grave and calm. Then he saw her
+turn and lean against the wall as though she were suddenly weak. She hid
+her face, and there was silence for a moment, and after that a low sound
+of weeping filled the still room.
+
+'Why do you shed tears?' Khaled asked presently. 'There is no danger for
+you, I think. If you will go and shut yourself in the inner rooms you
+will be safe.'
+
+She turned fiercely and their eyes met.
+
+'What do I care for myself?' she cried. 'Among so many deaths there is
+surely one for me!'
+
+Even as she spoke Khaled felt a cool breath upon his forehead, stirring
+the stillness. He knew that it came from the beating of an angel's
+wings. All his body trembled, his head fell forward a little and his
+eyes closed.
+
+'This is death,' he thought, 'and my fate has come. A little longer,
+and she would have loved me.' But he did not speak aloud.
+
+Again Zehowah's face was turned towards the wall, and still the sound of
+her weeping filled the air, not subsiding and dying away, but rather
+increasing with every moment.
+
+'Life is not yet gone,' said Khaled in his heart. 'There is yet hope.'
+For he no longer felt the cold breath on his forehead, and the trembling
+had ceased for a moment.
+
+He tried to speak aloud, but his lips could not form words nor his
+throat utter sounds, and he was amazed at his weakness. A great despair
+came upon him and his eyes were darkened so that he could not see the
+lights.
+
+'If only I could speak to her now, she might love me yet!' he thought.
+
+The distant murmur from without was louder now and reached the room, and
+he heard it. He tried with all his might to raise his hand, to lift his
+head, to speak a single word.
+
+'It may be that this is the nature of death,' he thought again, 'and I
+am already dead.'
+
+The noise from the multitude came louder and louder. Zehowah heard it
+and her breath was caught in her throat. She looked up and saw that the
+high window of the chamber was no longer quite dark. The day was
+dawning. Then pressing her bosom with her hands she looked again at
+Khaled. His head was bent upon his breast and he was so still that she
+thought he had fallen asleep. A cry broke from her lips.
+
+'He cares not!' she exclaimed. 'What is it to him, whether I go, or
+stay?'
+
+Again Khaled felt the cool breeze in the room, fanning his forehead, and
+once more his limbs trembled. Then he felt that his strength was
+returning and that he could move. He raised his head and looked at
+Zehowah, and just then there was a distant crashing roar, as the
+Bedouins began to strike upon the gates.
+
+'It is time,' he said, and taking his sword in his hand he rose from his
+seat.
+
+Zehowah came towards him with outstretched hands, wet cheeks and burning
+eyes. She stood before him as though to bar the way, and hinder him from
+going out.
+
+'What is it to you, whether I go, or stay?' he asked, repeating her own
+words.
+
+'What is it? By Allah, it is all my life--I will not let you go!' And
+she took hold of his wrists with her weak woman's hands, and tried to
+thrust him back.
+
+'Go, Zehowah,' he answered, gently pressing her from him. 'Go now, and
+let me meet them alone, knowing that you are safe. For though this be
+pity which you feel, I know it is nothing more.'
+
+He would have passed by her, but still she held him and kept before him.
+
+'You shall not go!' she cried. 'I will prevent you with my body. Pity,
+you say? Oh, Khaled! Is pity fierce? Is pity strong? Does pity burn like
+fire? You shall not go, I say!'
+
+Then her hands grew cold upon his wrists, her cheeks burned and in her
+eyes there was a deep and gleaming light. All this Khaled felt and saw,
+while he heard the raging of the multitude without. His sight grew again
+uncertain. A third time the cool breath blew in his face.
+
+'Yet it cannot be love,' he said uncertainly. Yet she heard him.
+
+'Not love? Khaled, Khaled--my life, my breath, my soul--breath of my
+life, life of my spirit--oh, Khaled, you have never loved as I love you
+now!'
+
+Her hands let go his wrists and clasped about his neck, and her face was
+hidden upon his shoulder while her breath came and went like the gusts
+of the burning storm in summer.
+
+But as he held her, Khaled looked up and saw that the Angel of Allah was
+before him, having a smiling countenance and bearing in his hand a
+bright flame like the crescent moon.
+
+'It is well done, O Khaled,' said the Angel, 'and this is thy reward.
+Allah sends thee this to be thy own and to live after thy body, saying
+that thou hast well earned it, for love such as thou hast got now is a
+rare thing, not common with women and least of all with wives of kings.
+And now Allah alone knows what thy fate is to be, but thou shalt be
+judged at the end like other men, according to thy deeds, be they good
+or evil. And so receive thy soul and do with it as thou wilt.'
+
+The Angel then held out the flame which was like the crescent moon and
+it immediately took shape and became the brighter image of Khaled
+himself, endowed with immortality, and the knowledge of its own good and
+evil. And when Khaled had looked at it fixedly for a moment, being
+overcome with joy, the vision of himself disappeared, and he was aware
+that it had entered his own body and taken up its life within him.
+
+'Return thanks to Allah, and go thy way to the end,' said the Angel, who
+then unfolded his wings and departed to paradise whence he had come.
+
+But Khaled clasped Zehowah tightly in his arms, and looking upwards
+repeated the first chapter of the Koran and also the one hundred and
+tenth chapter, which is entitled, Assistance. When he had performed
+these inward devotions he turned his gaze upon Zehowah and kissed her.
+
+'Praise be to Allah,' he said, 'for this and all blessings. But now let
+us defend ourselves if we can, my beloved, for I think my enemies are at
+hand.'
+
+And so he would have stooped to take up his sword which had fallen upon
+the floor. But still Zehowah held him and would not let him go.
+
+'Not yet, Khaled!' she cried. 'Not yet, soul of my soul! The gates are
+very strong, and will withstand this battering for some time.'
+
+'Would you have him whom you love sit still in the net until the hunters
+come to catch him?' he asked in a tender voice.
+
+'You said you would wait here,' she pleaded. 'If we must die, let us die
+here--our life will be a little longer so.'
+
+'Did I say so? I thought you did not love me then, and I would have
+slain a few only, for my own sake, that my blood might not be unavenged.
+But now I will slay them all, for your sake, and the bodies of the dead
+shall be a rampart for you.'
+
+'Oh, do not go!' she cried again. 'I know a secret passage from the
+palace, that leads out by the wall of the city--come quickly, there is
+yet time, and we shall escape--for Allah will protect us. Surely, when I
+was fainting in your arms I heard an angel's voice--and surely the angel
+is yet with us, and will lighten the way as we go.'
+
+'The Angel was indeed here, for he brought me the soul that was
+promised, if you loved me. And now all is changed, for if we live, we
+get the victory and if we die we shall inherit paradise.'
+
+And Zehowah looked into his eyes and saw the living soul flaming within,
+and she believed him.
+
+'If you had always been as you are now, I should have always loved you,'
+she said softly, and stooping down she took up his sword and drew it out
+and put it into his hand. 'I tried to wield one when you were not
+looking,' she said, 'but it hurt my wrist. Come, Khaled--let us go
+together.'
+
+Then he kissed her once more, and she kissed him, and putting one arm
+about her, he led her swiftly out by the passage towards the great gate.
+It was now broad dawn and the light was coming in by the narrow windows.
+
+Zehowah clung to Khaled closely, for the noise of the thundering blows
+was terrible and deafening, and the multitude without were shouting to
+each other and calling upon Abdullah to come out, for they supposed him
+to be in the palace. But the guards and soldiers within had all hidden
+themselves though they were awake, for there was no one to command them
+nor to lead them, and they dared not open the gate lest they themselves
+should be slain in the first rush of the crowd.
+
+Then Khaled and Zehowah paused for a moment near the gate.
+
+'It is better that you should go back, my beloved,' said Khaled. 'Hear
+what a multitude of angry men are waiting outside.'
+
+'I will not leave you--neither in life nor in death,' she answered.
+
+'Let it be so, then,' said Khaled, 'and I will do my best. For a hundred
+men could not stop the way before me now, and I think that of five
+hundred I could slay many.'
+
+So he went up to the gate, and Zehowah stood a little behind him so as
+to be free of the first sweep of his sword.
+
+'Abdullah!' cried some of the crowd without, while battering at the
+iron-bound doors. 'Abdullah, thou son of Mohammed and father of lies,
+come out to us, or we will go to thee!'
+
+'Abdullah, thou thief, thou Persian, thou cheat, come out, and may
+boiling water be thy portion!'
+
+'Stand back from the gate, and I will open it to you!' cried Khaled in a
+voice that might have been heard across the Red Desert as far as the
+shores of the great ocean.
+
+'I, Khaled, will open,' he cried again.
+
+Then there was a great silence and the people fell back a little.
+
+Khaled drew the bolts and unfastened the locks, and opened the gates
+inward and stood forth alone in the morning light, his sword in his hand
+and his soul burning in his eyes.
+
+'Khaled!' cried the first who saw him, and the cry was taken up.
+
+The shout was great, and full of joy and shook the earth. For the
+multitude had grown hot in anger against Abdullah, while they battered
+at the gates, supposing that he had slain Khaled. But he himself could
+not at first distinguish whether they were angry or glad.
+
+'If any man wishes to take my life,' he cried, 'let him come and take
+it.'
+
+And the sword they all knew in battle, began to make a storm of
+lightning about his head in the morning sun.
+
+Then the strong man who had wrestled and thrown the other before dawn,
+stood out alone and spoke in a loud voice.
+
+'We will have no Sultan but Khaled!' he cried. 'Give us Abdullah that we
+may make trappings for our camels from his skin.'
+
+Then Khaled sheathed his sword and came forward from under the gate, and
+Zehowah stood veiled beside him.
+
+'Where is this Abdullah?' he asked. 'Find him if you can, for I would
+like to speak with him.'
+
+Then there was silence for a space. But by this time Abdullah's men had
+fled, for they had already been forced back in the crowding, and so soon
+as they saw Khaled standing unhurt under the palace gate, they turned
+quickly and ran for their lives to escape from the city, seeing that all
+was lost.
+
+'Where is Abdullah?' Khaled asked again.
+
+And a voice from afar off answered, as though heralding the coming of a
+great personage.
+
+'Behold Abdullah, the Sultan of Nejed!' it cried.
+
+Then the multitude turned angrily, grasping swords and spears and
+breathing curses. But the murmur broke suddenly into a shout of laughter
+louder even than the cry for Khaled had been. For a great procession had
+entered the square and the people made way for it as it advanced towards
+the palace.
+
+First came a score of lepers, singing in hideous voices and dancing in
+the early sun, filthy and loathsome to behold. And then came all manner
+of cripples, laughing and chattering, with coloured rags fastened to
+their staves, an army of distorted apes.
+
+Then, walking alone and feeling his way with his staff came the Sheikh
+of the beggars. And in one hand he held the end of a halter, which was
+fastened about Abdullah's head and neck and between his teeth, so that
+he could not cry out. And the blind man chanted a kasid which he had
+composed in the night in honour of Abdullah ibn Mohammed el Herir, the
+victorious Sultan of Nejed.
+
+'Upon whom may Allah send much boiling water,' sang the Sheikh of the
+beggars after each stave.
+
+And Abdullah, his head and face shaven as bald as an ostrich's egg, was
+bent by the weight he carried, for upon his shoulders rode the cripple
+whom they called the Ass of Egypt, clapping the wooden shoes he used on
+his hands, like cymbals to accompany the song of the blind man. And last
+of all came a veiled woman, walking sadly, for she could not escape,
+being surrounded and driven on by many scores of beggars, all dancing
+and shouting and crying out mock praises of the Sultan Abdullah and his
+wife.
+
+But as the procession moved on the laughter increased a hundredfold,
+until all men's eyes were blind with mirth, and their breasts were
+bursting and aching with so much merriment.
+
+At last the Sheikh of the beggars stood before Khaled holding the
+halter. And here he made a deep obeisance, pulling the halter so that
+Abdullah nearly fell to the ground.
+
+'In the name of the beggars,' he said, 'I present to your high majesty
+the Sultan of Nejed, Abdullah ibn Mohammed, and his chief minister the
+Ass of Egypt, and moreover the sultan's wife. May it please your high
+majesty to reward the beggars with a few small coins and a little
+barley, for having brought his high majesty, the new sultan, safely to
+the gate of the palace and to the steps of the throne.'
+
+Thereupon all the beggars, the lepers, the cripples, the blind men and
+those of weak understanding fell down together at Khaled's feet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This is the story of Khaled the believing genius, which he caused to be
+written down in letters of gold by the most accomplished scribe in
+Nejed, that all men might remember it. But of what afterwards occurred
+there is nothing told in the scribe's manuscript. It is recounted,
+however, in the commentaries of one Abd ul Latif that Khaled did not
+cause Abdullah to be beheaded, nor in any way hurt, save that he was
+driven out of the city with his wife, where certain Bedouins affirmed
+that he lived for many years with her in great destitution. But it is
+well known that after this Zehowah bore Khaled many strong sons, whose
+children and children's children reigned gloriously for many generations
+in Nejed. And Khaled and Zehowah died full of years on the same day, and
+lie buried together in a garden without the Hasa gate, and the pilgrims
+from Ajman and the east visit their tombs even to the present time.
+
+_Printed by_ R. & R. CLARK, _Edinburgh_.
+
+
+
+
+MESSRS. MACMILLAN AND CO.'S PUBLICATIONS.
+
+
+POPULAR NOVELS BY MR. MARION CRAWFORD. Crown 8vo. Cloth. 3s. 6d. each.
+
+MR. ISAACS: A Tale of Modern India.
+
+ _DAILY NEWS_--"The best novel that has ever laid its scene in
+ our Indian dominions."
+
+ _ATHENÆUM_--"A work of unusual ability."
+
+DR. CLAUDIUS. A True Story.
+
+ _ATHENÆUM_--"Mr. Crawford has achieved another success."
+
+A ROMAN SINGER.
+
+ _TIMES_--"A masterpiece of narrative.... In Mr. Crawford's
+ skilful hands it is unlike any other romance in English
+ literature."
+
+ZOROASTER.
+
+ _GUARDIAN_--"An instance of the highest and noblest form of
+ novel.... Alike in the originality of its conception and the
+ power with which it is wrought out, it stands on a level that
+ is almost entirely its own."
+
+ MARZIO'S CRUCIFIX.
+ A TALE OF A LONELY PARISH.
+
+ _GUARDIAN_--"The tale is written with all Mr. Crawford's
+ skill."
+
+ _SATURDAY REVIEW_--"Unlike most novels, goes on improving up
+ to the end."
+
+PAUL PATOFF.
+
+ _ATHENÆUM_--"The originality of the story, the charm of the
+ description, and the brilliancy of the narrative are
+ undeniable."
+
+WITH THE IMMORTALS.
+
+ _SPECTATOR_--"To do justice to Mr. Crawford's remarkable book
+ by extracts would be impossible.... It cannot fail to please
+ a reader who enjoys crisp, clear, vigorous writing, and
+ thoughts that are alike original and suggestive."
+
+GREIFENSTEIN.
+
+ _SATURDAY REVIEW_--"With the exception of 'Saracinesca,' his
+ most consistent work, Mr. Crawford has not written anything
+ so good as his last novel 'Greifenstein.'"
+
+ _ACADEMY_--"During the whole of his literary career Mr.
+ Marion Crawford has produced nothing quite so powerful as one
+ or two of the situations in 'Greifenstein.'"
+
+SANT' ILARIO.
+
+ _ATHENÆUM_--"The plot is skilfully concocted, and the
+ interest is sustained to the end. The various events,
+ romantic, and even sensational, follow naturally and neatly,
+ and the whole is a very clever piece of work."
+
+ _SCOTSMAN_--"The book is full of passages of remarkable
+ power. A reader will find it hard to decide whether this is
+ not the best of Mr. Crawford's novels."
+
+A CIGARETTE-MAKER'S ROMANCE.
+
+ _OXFORD MAGAZINE_--"The idea of the story is original, the
+ characters well drawn, and the interest sustained to the very
+ last page. That Mr. Crawford, having a good story to tell,
+ should tell it well, was only to be expected."
+
+ _GLOBE_--"We are inclined to think this the best of Mr.
+ Marion Crawford's stories.... His art is here at its best,
+ and those who read his book will feel grateful to him for its
+ keen humanity."
+
+
+NOVELS BY ROLF BOLDREWOOD.
+
+New and Uniform Edition. Crown 8vo. Cloth. 3s. 6d. each.
+
+=ROBBERY UNDER ARMS.=
+
+ A STORY OF LIFE AND ADVENTURE IN THE BUSH AND IN THE
+ GOLD-FIELDS OF AUSTRALIA.
+
+ =GUARDIAN=--"A singularly spirited and stirring tale of
+ Australian life, chiefly in the remoter settlements....
+ Altogether it is a capital story, full of wild adventure and
+ startling incidents, and told with a genuine simplicity and
+ quiet appearance of truth, as if the writer were really
+ drawing upon his memory rather than his imagination."
+
+ =SPECTATOR=--"We have nothing but praise for this story. Of
+ adventure of the most stirring kind there is, as we have
+ said, abundance. But there is more than this. The characters
+ are drawn with great skill. Every one of the gang of
+ bushrangers is strongly individualised. This is a book of no
+ common literary force."
+
+ =WORLD=--"An uncommonly good thing.... The book, in short,
+ has the natural touch, both of place and person, on every
+ page."
+
+ =MORNING POST=--"As a picture of the earlier days of our
+ Australian Colonies, and as an absorbing story, 'Robbery
+ under Arms' has few equals."
+
+ =GRAPHIC=--"That Mr. Boldrewood knows his subject through and
+ through is as certain as his picture of the breaking-out of
+ the first gold fever in Australia is the best ever written."
+
+=THE SQUATTER'S DREAM.=
+
+=THE MINER'S RIGHT.=
+
+ A TALE OF THE AUSTRALIAN GOLD-FIELDS.
+
+ =WORLD=--"Full of good passages, passages abounding in
+ vivacity, in the colour and play of life.... The pith of the
+ book lies in its singularly fresh and vivid pictures of the
+ humours of the gold-fields,--tragic humours enough they are,
+ too, here and again...."
+
+ =MANCHESTER EXAMINER=--"The characters are sketched with real
+ life and picturesqueness. The book is lively and readable
+ from first to last."
+
+=A COLONIAL REFORMER.=
+
+ =ATHENÆUM=--"A series of natural and entertaining pictures of
+ Australian life, which are, above all things, readable."
+
+ =GLASGOW HERALD=--"One of the most interesting books about
+ Australia we have ever read."
+
+ =SATURDAY REVIEW=--"Mr. Boldrewood can tell what he knows
+ with great point and vigour, and there is no better reading
+ than the adventurous parts of his books."
+
+=A SYDNEY-SIDE SAXON.=
+
+ =GLASGOW HERALD=--"The interest never flags, and altogether
+ 'A Sydney-Side Saxon' is a really refreshing book."
+
+ =ANTI-JACOBIN=--"Thoroughly well worth reading.... A clever
+ book, admirably written.... Brisk in incident, truthful and
+ life-like in character.... Beyond and above all it has that
+ stimulating hygienic quality, that cheerful, unconscious
+ healthfulness, which makes a story like 'Robinson Crusoe,' or
+ 'The Vicar of Wakefield,' so unspeakably refreshing after a
+ course of even good contemporary fiction."
+
+=NEVERMORE.=
+
+ =ACADEMY=--"Is perhaps the best story of the Rolf Boldrewood
+ Series. Must be allowed to be one of the best works of the
+ period."
+
+MACMILLAN AND CO., LONDON.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+=MACMILLAN'S=
+
+=Three-and-Sixpenny=
+
+=Library=
+
+OF WORKS BY
+
+POPULAR AUTHORS
+
+In crown 8vo, cloth extra.
+
+
+[Illustration: MR. F. MARION CRAWFORD.]
+
+
+_Recent Additions to the Series:_
+
+=Historical Characters.= By Sir HENRY LYTTON BULWER (Lord DALLING).
+
+=Curiosities of Natural History.= In 4 vols. By FRANK BUCKLAND.
+
+=The Dewy Morn:= A Novel. By RICHARD JEFFERIES.
+
+=The Ingoldsby Legends.= With 50 Illustrations by CRUIKSHANK, LEECH,
+ TENNIEL, etc.
+
+=Consequences:= A Novel. By EGERTON CASTLE.
+
+=Thirlby Hall.= By W. E. NORRIS.
+
+=A Bachelor's Blunder.= By W. E. NORRIS.
+
+=Breezie Langton.= By HAWLEY SMART.
+
+=The Three Clerks.= By ANTHONY TROLLOPE.
+
+=Fickle Fortune.= By E. WERNER.
+
+=Success, and How He Won It.= By E. WERNER.
+
+=Private Life of Marie Antoinette.= By MADAME CAMPAN.
+
+=The Life of Oliver Cromwell.= By M. GUIZOT.
+
+=Mary Queen of Scots.= By M. MIGNET.
+
+=Memories of Father Healy of Little Bray.=
+
+=Autobiography and Reminiscences.= By W. P. FRITH, R.A.
+
+=The Recollections of Marshall Macdonald, Duke of Tarentum.=
+
+
+_A complete List of the Series will be found on the following pages._
+
+
+[Illustration: ROLF BOLDREWOOD.]
+
+
+_ANONYMOUS._
+
+ Hogan, M.P.
+ Tim.
+ The New Antigone.
+ Flitters, Tatters, and the Counsellor.
+
+
+_By ROLF BOLDREWOOD._
+
+ Robbery Under Arms.
+ The Squatter's Dream.
+ A Colonial Reformer.
+ The Miner's Right.
+ A Sidney-Side Saxon.
+ Nevermore.
+ A Modern Buccaneer.
+ The Sealskin Coat.
+ Old Melbourne Memories.
+ My Run Home.
+ The Crooked Stick.
+ Plain Living.
+
+
+_By ROSA N. CAREY._
+
+ Nellie's Memories.
+ Wee Wifie.
+ Barbara Heathcote's Trial.
+ Robert Ord's Atonement.
+ Wooed and Married.
+ Heriot's Choice.
+ Queenie's Whim.
+ Mary St. John.
+ Not Like Other Girls.
+ For Lilias.
+ Uncle Max.
+ Only the Governess.
+ Lover or Friend?
+ Basil Lyndhurst.
+ Sir Godfrey's Grand-daughters.
+ The Old Old Story.
+ Mistress of Brae Farm.
+ Mrs. Romney, and But Men Must Work.
+
+
+_By Mrs. CRAIK._
+
+(The Author of "JOHN HALIFAX, GENTLEMAN.")
+
+ Olive.
+ The Ogilvies.
+ Agatha's Husband.
+ Head of the Family.
+ Two Marriages.
+ The Laurel Bush.
+ About Money, and other Things.
+ My Mother and I.
+ Miss Tommy: A Mediaeval Romance.
+ King Arthur: not a Love Story.
+ Concerning Men, and other Papers.
+
+
+_By F. MARION CRAWFORD._
+
+ Mr. Isaacs.
+ Dr. Claudius.
+ A Roman Singer.
+ Zoroaster.
+ Marzio's Crucifix.
+ A Tale of a Lonely Parish.
+ Paul Patoff.
+ With the Immortals.
+ Greifenstein.
+ Sant' Ilario.
+ A Cigarette-Maker's Romance.
+ Khaled.
+ The Three Fates.
+ The Witch of Prague.
+ Children of the King.
+ Marion Darche.
+ Pietro Ghisleri.
+ Katharine Lauderdale.
+ Don Orsino.
+ The Ralstons.
+ Casa Braccio.
+ Adam Johnstone's Son.
+ A Rose of Yesterday.
+ Taquisara.
+
+
+_By Sir H. CUNNINGHAM._
+
+ The Heriots.
+ Wheat and Tares.
+ The Coeruleans.
+
+
+_By CHARLES DICKENS._
+
+ The Pickwick Papers.
+ Oliver Twist.
+ Nicholas Nickleby.
+ Martin Chuzzlewit.
+ The Old Curiosity Shop.
+ Barnaby Rudge.
+ Dombey and Son.
+ Christmas Books.
+ Sketches by Boz.
+ David Copperfield.
+ American Notes and Pictures from Italy.
+ The Letters of Charles Dickens.
+ Bleak House.
+ Little Dorrit.
+
+
+[Illustration: MISS ROSA N. CAREY.]
+
+
+'ENGLISH MEN OF LETTERS.'
+
+Re-issue in 13 vols.
+
+ Vol. I. Chaucer, Spenser, Dryden.
+ II. Milton, Goldsmith, Cowper.
+ III. Byron, Shelley, Keats.
+ IV. Wordsworth, Southey, Landor.
+ V. Lamb, Addison, Swift.
+ VI. Scott, Burn, Coleridge.
+ VII. Hume, Locke, Burke.
+ VIII. Defoe, Sterne, Hawthorne.
+ IX. Fielding, Thackeray, Dickens.
+ X. Gibbon, Carlyle, Macaulay.
+ XI. Sidney, De Quincey, Sheridan.
+ XII. Pope, Johnson, Gray.
+ XIII. Bacon, Bunyan, Bentley.
+
+
+_By DEAN FARRAR._
+
+ Seekers after God.
+ Eternal Hope.
+ The Fall of Man.
+ The Witness of History to Christ.
+ The Silence and Voices of God.
+ In the Days of thy Youth.
+ Saintly Workers.
+ Ephphatha.
+ Mercy and Judgment.
+ Sermons and Addresses.
+
+
+_By BRET HARTE._
+
+ Cressy.
+ The Heritage of Dedlow Marsh.
+ A First Family of Tasajara.
+
+
+_By THOMAS HUGHES._
+
+ Tom Brown's School Days.
+ Tom Brown at Oxford.
+ The Scouring of the White Horse, and the Ashen Faggot.
+
+
+_By HENRY JAMES._
+
+ A London Life.
+ The Aspen Papers, etc.
+ The Tragic Muse.
+
+
+_By ANNIE KEARY._
+
+ Castle Daly.
+ A York and a Lancaster Rose.
+ Oldbury.
+ A Doubting Heart.
+ Janet's Home.
+ Nations round Israel.
+
+
+_By CHARLES KINGSLEY._
+
+ Westward Ho!
+ Hypatia.
+ Yeast.
+ Alton Locke.
+ Two Years Ago.
+ Hereward the Wake.
+ Poems.
+ The Heroes.
+ The Water Babies.
+ Madam How and Lady Why.
+ At Last.
+ Prose Idylls.
+ Plays and Puritans, etc.
+ The Roman and the Teuton.
+ Sanitary and Social Lectures and Essays.
+ Historical Lectures and Essays.
+ Scientific Lectures and Essays.
+ Literary and General Lectures.
+ The Hermits.
+ Glaucus: or the Wonders of The Seashore.
+ Village and Town and Country Sermons.
+ The Water of Life, and other Sermons.
+ Sermons on National Subjects, and the King of the Earth.
+ Sermons for the Times.
+ Good News of God.
+ The Gospel of the Pentateuch, and David.
+ Discipline, and other Sermons.
+ Westminster Sermons.
+ All Saints' Day, and other Sermons.
+
+
+_By FREDERICK DENISON MAURICE._
+
+ Sermons Preached in Lincoln's Inn Chapel. In 6 vols.
+ Christmas Day, and other Sermons.
+ Theological Essays.
+ Prophets and Kings.
+ Patriarchs and Lawgivers.
+ The Gospel of the Kingdom of Heaven.
+ Gospel of St. John.
+ Epistles of St. John.
+ Friendship of Books.
+ Prayer Book and Lord's Prayer.
+ The Doctrine of Sacrifice.
+ Acts of the Apostles.
+
+
+_By D. CHRISTIE MURRAY._
+
+ Aunt Rachel.
+ He Fell among Thieves. D. C. MURRAY and H. HERMANN.
+ John Vale's Guardian.
+ Schwartz.
+ The Weaker Vessel.
+
+
+_By Mrs. OLIPHANT._
+
+ A Beleaguered City.
+ Joyce.
+ Neighbours on the Green.
+ Kirsteen.
+ Hester.
+ Sir Tom.
+ A Country Gentleman and his Family.
+ The Curate in Charge.
+ The Second Son.
+ He that Will Not when He May.
+ The Railway Man and his Children.
+ The Marriage of Elinor.
+ The Heir-Presumptive and the Heir-Apparent.
+ A Son of the Soil.
+ The Wizard's Son.
+ Young Musgrave.
+ Lady William.
+
+
+[Illustration: MISS C. M. YONGE.]
+
+
+_By Mrs. PARR._
+
+ Adam and Eve.
+ Loyalty George.
+ Dorothy Fox.
+ Robin.
+
+
+_By J. H. SHORTHOUSE._
+
+ John Inglesant.
+ Sir Percival.
+ The Little Schoolmaster Mark.
+ The Countess Eve.
+ A Teacher of the Violin.
+ Blanche, Lady Falaise.
+
+
+_By J. TIMBS._
+
+ Lives of Statesmen.
+ Lives of Painters.
+ Doctors and Patients.
+ Wits and Humourists. 2 vols.
+
+
+_By MONTAGU WILLIAMS._
+
+ Leaves of a Life.
+ Later Leaves.
+ Round London.
+
+
+_By CHARLOTTE M. YONGE._
+
+ The Heir of Redclyffe.
+ Heartsease.
+ Hopes and Fears.
+ Dynevor Terrace.
+ The Daisy Chain.
+ The Trial: More Links of the Daisy Chain.
+ Pillars of the House. Vol. I.
+ Pillars of the House. Vol. II.
+ The Young Stepmother.
+ The Clever Woman of the Family.
+ The Three Brides.
+ My Young Alcides.
+ The Caged Lion.
+ Stray Pearls.
+ The Dove in the Eagle's Nest.
+ The Chaplet of Pearls.
+ Lady Hester, and the Danvers Papers.
+ Magnum Bonum.
+ Love and Life.
+ Unknown to History.
+ The Armourer's 'Prentices.
+ The Two Sides of the Shield.
+ Scenes and Characters.
+ Nuttie's Father.
+ Chantry House.
+ A Modern Telemachus.
+ Bye-Words.
+ More Bye-Words.
+ Beechcroft at Rockstone.
+ A Reputed Changeling.
+ The Little Duke.
+ The Lances of Lynwood.
+ The Prince and the Page.
+ P's and Q's, and Little Lucy's Wonderful Globe.
+ Two Penniless Princesses.
+ That Stick.
+ Grisly Grisell.
+ An Old Woman's Outlook.
+ The Long Vacation.
+ The Release.
+ Pilgrimage of the Ben Beriah.
+ Henrietta's Wish.
+ The Two Guardians.
+
+
+_By_ VARIOUS WRITERS.
+
+ CANON ATKINSON.--=The Last of the Giant Killers.=
+
+ SIR S. W. BAKER.--=True Tales for my Grandsons.=
+
+ R. H. D. BARHAM.--=Life of Rev. R. H. Barham.=--=Life of Theodore
+ Hook.=
+
+ R. BLENNERHASSETT AND L. SLEEMAN.--=Adventures in Mashonaland.=
+
+ SIR HENRY LYTTON BULWER (LORD DALLING).--=Historical Characters.=
+
+ HUGH CONWAY.--=Living or Dead?=--=A Family Affair.=
+
+ SIR MORTIMER DURAND, K.C.I.E.--=Helen Treveryan.=
+
+ LANOE FALCONER.--=Cecilia de Noël.=
+
+ ARCHIBALD FORBES.--=Barracks, Bivouacs, and Battles.=--=Souvenirs of
+ Some Continents.=
+
+ W. FORBES-MITCHELL.--=Reminiscences of the Great Mutiny, 1857-59.=
+
+ W. W. FOWLER.--=A Year with the Birds.=
+
+ REV. J. GILMORE.--=Storm Warriors.=
+
+ HENRY KINGSLEY.--=Tales of Old Travel.=
+
+ AMY LEVY.--=Reuben Sachs.=
+
+ S. R. LYSAGHT.--=The Marplot.=
+
+ LORD LYTTON.--=The Ring of Amasis.=
+
+ M. M'LENNAN.--=Muckle Jock, and other Stories of Peasant Life.=
+
+ LUCAS MALET.--=Mrs. Lorimer.=
+
+ GUSTAVE MASSON.--=A French Dictionary.=
+
+ A. B. MITFORD.--=Tales of Old Japan.=
+
+ MARY R. MITFORD.--=Recollections of a Literary Life.=
+
+ MAJOR G. PARRY.--=The Story of Dick.=
+
+ E. C. PRICE.--=In the Lion's Mouth.=
+
+ W. C. RHOADES.--=John Trevennick.=
+
+ W. CLARK RUSSELL.--=Marooned.=--=A Strange Elopement.=
+
+ THE WORKS OF SHAKESPEARE.--Vol. I. =Comedies.= Vol. II. =Histories.=
+ Vol. III. =Tragedies.= 3 vols.
+
+ MARCHESA THEODOLI.--=Under Pressure.=
+
+ "TIMES!"--=Biographies of Eminent Persons.= In 6 vols.--=Annual
+ Summaries.= In 2 vols.
+
+ MRS. HUMPHRY WARD.--=Miss Bretherton.=
+
+ C. WHITEHEAD.--=Richard Savage.=
+
+
+[Illustration: SIR WALTER SCOTT.]
+
+
+_Now Ready._ Crown 8vo, tastefully bound in Green Cloth, Gilt, in which
+binding any of the Novels may be bought separately, price 3_s._ 6_d._
+each. Also in Special Cloth Binding, Flat Backs, Gilt Tops, supplied in
+Sets only of 24 Volumes, price £4 4_s._
+
+
+The Illustrated Border Edition OF THE Waverley Novels
+
+ Edited with Introductory Essays and Notes to each Novel
+ (supplementing those of the Author) by ANDREW LANG. With 250
+ Original Illustrations from Drawings and Paintings specially
+ executed by eminent Artists.
+
+
+List of the Volumes.
+
+ 1. Waverley.
+ 2. Guy Mannering.
+ 3. The Antiquary.
+ 4. Rob Roy.
+ 5. Old Mortality.
+ 6. The Heart of Midlothian.
+ 7. A Legend of Montrose, and The Black Dwarf.
+ 8. The Bride of Lammermoor.
+ 9. Ivanhoe.
+ 10. The Monastery.
+ 11. The Abbot.
+ 12. Kenilworth.
+ 13. The Pirate.
+ 14. The Fortunes of Nigel.
+ 15. Peveril of the Peak.
+ 16. Quentin Durward.
+ 17. St. Ronan's Well.
+ 18. Redgauntlet.
+ 19. The Betrothed, and the Talisman.
+ 20. Woodstock.
+ 21. The Fair Maid of Perth.
+ 22. Anne of Geierstein.
+ 23. Count Robert of Paris, and The Surgeon's Daughter.
+ 24. Castle Dangerous, Chronicles of the Canongate, etc.
+
+
+Some of the Artists contributing to the "Border Edition."
+
+ Sir J. E. Millais, Bart, P.R.A.
+ Lockhart Bogle.
+ Gordon Browne.
+ D. Y. Cameron.
+ Frank Dadd, R.I.
+ R. de Los Rios.
+ Herbert Dicksee.
+ M. L. Gow, R.I.
+ W. B. Hole, R.S.A.
+ John Pettie, R.A.
+ Sir James De Linton, P.R.I.
+ Ad Lalauze.
+ J. E. Lauder, R.S.A.
+ W. Hatherell, R.I.
+ Sam Bough, R.S.A.
+ W. E. Lockhart, R.S.A.
+ R. W. Macbeth, A.R.A.
+ H. Macbeth-Raeburn.
+ J. Macwhirter, A.R.A., R.S.A.
+ W. Q. Orchardson, R.A.
+ James Orrock, R.I.
+ Walter Paget.
+ Sir George Reid, P.R.S.A.
+ Frank Short.
+ W. Strang.
+ Sir Henry Raeburn, R.A., P.R.S.A.
+ Arthur Hopkins, A.R.W.S.
+ R. Herdman, R.S.A.
+ D. Herdman.
+ Hugh Cameron, R.S.A.
+
+=MACMILLAN & CO., Limited, LONDON=
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+
+Minor punctuation corrections have been made without comment.
+
+On p. 155 the word "Sham" has a macron (straight line) above the "a" in
+the original text which has been removed in this e-text.
+
+A Table of Contents has been created by the transcriber to aid reader
+navigation in this e-text.
+
+
+Word Variations:
+
+ "carcase(s)" (2) (Br. sp.) and "carcass" (1)
+
+ "Khaled ibn Walid" (1) and "Khaled ibn Walad" (1) (both referred to as
+ "the Sword of the Lord")
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Khaled, A Tale of Arabia, by F. Marion Crawford
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KHALED, A TALE OF ARABIA ***
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+
+Project Gutenberg's Khaled, A Tale of Arabia, by F. Marion Crawford
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
+
+
+Title: Khaled, A Tale of Arabia
+
+Author: F. Marion Crawford
+
+Release Date: January 14, 2011 [EBook #34959]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KHALED, A TALE OF ARABIA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Christine Aldridge and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+(This file was produced from images generously made
+available by The Internet Archive)
+
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+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+<p class="title1">KHALED: A TALE OF ARABIA</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 200px;">
+<img src="images/i001.jpg" width="200" height="60" alt="M. M. &amp; Co." title="M. M. &amp; Co." />
+</div>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+
+
+<h1><big>KHALED</big><br />
+A Tale of Arabia</h1>
+
+
+<p class="author"><span class="smcap">By</span> F. MARION CRAWFORD</p>
+
+
+<p class="pub center"><i><b>London</b></i><br />
+MACMILLAN AND CO., <span class="smcap">Limited</span><br />
+<span class="allcaps">NEW YORK: THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span><br />
+1901</p>
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>All rights reserved</i></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<p class="center">COPYRIGHT<br />
+1891<br />
+<span class="allcaps">BY</span><br />
+F. MARION CRAWFORD</p>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>First Edition (2 Vols. Globe 8vo) May 1891. Second
+Edition (1 Vol. Crown 8vo) November 1891, 1892
+Re-issue 1901</i></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h3>TABLE OF CONTENTS</h3>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table width="65%" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Table of Contents">
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><span class="allcaps">PAGE</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</a></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</a></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_22">22</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</a></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</a></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_64">64</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</a></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_86">86</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</a></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_107">107</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</a></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_128">128</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</a></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_150">150</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</a></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_171">171</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</a></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_192">192</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</a></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_213">213</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</a></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_235">235</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left" style="padding-top: 1.5em;"><a href="#MESSRS_MACMILLAN_AND_COS_PUBLICATIONS">MESSRS. MACMILLAN AND CO.'S PUBLICATIONS</a>.</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_259">259</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#MACMILLANS">MACMILLAN'S Three-and-Sixpenny Library</a></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_261">261</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I</h3>
+
+
+<p>Khaled stood in the third heaven, which is the heaven
+of precious stones, and of Asrael, the angel of Death.
+In the midst of the light shed by the fruit of the trees
+Asrael himself is sitting, and will sit until the day of
+the resurrection from the dead, writing in his book the
+names of those who are to be born, and blotting out the
+names of those who have lived their years and must
+die. Each of the trees has seventy thousand branches,
+each branch bears seventy thousand fruits, each fruit is
+composed of seventy thousand diamonds, rubies, emeralds,
+carbuncles, jacinths, and other precious stones. The
+stature and proportions of Asrael are so great that his
+eyes are seventy thousand days' journey apart, the one
+from the other.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled stood motionless during ten months and
+thirteen days, waiting until Asrael should rest from his
+writing and look towards him. Then came the holy
+night called Al Kadr, the night of peace in which the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
+Koran came down from heaven. Asrael paused, and
+raising his eyes from the scroll saw Khaled standing
+before him.</p>
+
+<p>Asrael knew Khaled, who was one of the genii converted
+to the faith on hearing Mohammed read the
+Koran by night in the valley Al Nakhlah. He wondered,
+however, when he saw him standing in his presence;
+for the genii are not allowed to pass even the gate of
+the first heaven, in which the stars hang by chains of
+gold, each star being inhabited by an angel who guards
+the entrance against the approach of devils.</p>
+
+<p>Asrael looked at Khaled in displeasure, therefore,
+supposing that he had eluded the heavenly sentinels
+and concealed an evil purpose. But Khaled inclined
+himself respectfully.</p>
+
+<p>'There is no Allah but Allah. Mohammed is the
+prophet of Allah,' he said, thus declaring himself to be
+of the Moslem genii, who are upright and are true
+believers.</p>
+
+<p>'How camest thou hither?' asked Asrael.</p>
+
+<p>'By the will of Allah, who sent his angel with me
+to the gate,' Khaled answered. 'I am come hither that
+thou mayest write down my name in the book of life
+and death, that I may be a man on earth, and after an
+appointed time thou shalt blot it out again and I shall
+die.'</p>
+
+<p>Asrael gazed at him and knew that this was the will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
+of Allah, for the angels are thus immediately made
+conscious of the divine commands. He took up his pen
+to write, but before he had traced the first letter he
+paused.</p>
+
+<p>'This is the night Al Kadr,' he said. 'If thou wilt,
+tell me therefore thy story, for I am now at leisure to
+hear it.'</p>
+
+<p>'Thou knowest that I am of the upright genii,'
+Khaled answered, 'and I am well disposed towards
+men. In the city of Riad, in Arabia, there rules a
+powerful king, the Sultan of the kingdom of Nejed,
+blessed in all things save that he has no son to inherit
+his vast dominions. One daughter only has been born
+to him in his old age, of such marvellous beauty that
+even the Black Eyed Virgins enclosed in the fruit of
+the tree Sedrat, who wait for the coming of the faithful,
+would seem but mortal women beside her. Her eyes
+are as the deep water in the wells of Zobeideh when
+it is night and the stars are reflected therein. Her hair
+is finer than silk, red with henna, and abundant as the
+foliage of the young cypress tree. Her face is as fair as
+the kernels of young almonds, and her mouth is sweeter
+than the mellow date and more fragrant than 'Ood
+mingled with ambergris. She possesses moreover all
+the virtues which become women, for she is as modest
+as she is beautiful and as charitable as she is modest.
+From all parts of Arabia and Egypt, and from Syria and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
+from Persia, and even from Samarkand, from Afghanistan,
+and from India princes and kings' sons continually
+come to ask her in marriage, for the fame of her beauty
+and of her virtues is as wide as the world. But her
+father, desiring only her happiness, leaves the choice of
+a husband to herself, and for a long time she refused all
+her suitors. For there is in the palace at Riad a certain
+secret chamber from which she can observe all those
+who come and hear their conversation and see the gifts
+which they bring with them.</p>
+
+<p>'At last there came as a suitor an unbeliever, a
+prince of an island by the shores of India, beautiful as
+the moon, whose speech was honey, and who surpassed
+all the suitors in riches and in the magnificence of the
+presents he brought. For he came bearing with him a
+hundred pounds' weight of pure gold, and five hundred
+ounces of ambergris, and a great weight of musk and
+aloes and sandal wood, and rich garments without
+number, and many woven shawls of Kashmir, of which
+the least splendid was valued at a thousand sherifs of
+gold. An innumerable retinue accompanied him, and
+twenty elephants, and horses without number, besides
+camels.</p>
+
+<p>'The Sultan's daughter beheld this beautiful prince
+from her secret hiding-place, and all that he had brought
+with him. The Sultan received him with kindness and
+hospitality, but assured him that unless he would renounce<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
+idolatry and embrace the true faith he could not
+hope to succeed in his purpose. Thereupon he was
+much cast down, and soon afterwards, having received
+magnificent gifts in his turn, he would have departed
+on his way, disappointed and heavy at heart. But
+Zehowah sent for her father and entreated him to bid
+the young prince remain. "For it is not impossible,"
+she said, "that he may yet be converted to the true
+faith. And have I the right to refuse to sacrifice my
+freedom when the sacrifice may be the means of converting
+an idolater to the right way? And if I marry
+him and go with him to his kingdom, shall we not make
+true believers of all his subjects, so that I shall deserve
+to be called the mother of the faithful like Ayesha,
+beloved by the Prophet, upon whom be peace?" The
+Sultan found it hard to oppose this argument which was
+founded upon virtue and edified in righteousness. He
+therefore entreated the Indian prince to remain and to
+profess Islam, promising the hand of Zehowah when he
+should be converted.</p>
+
+<p>'Then I heard the prince taking secret counsel with
+a certain old man who was with him, who shaved his
+face and wore white clothing and ate food which he
+prepared for himself alone. The prince told all, and
+then the old man counselled him in this way. "Speak
+whatsoever words they require of thee," he said, "for
+words are but garments wherewith to make the nakedness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
+of truth modest and agreeable. And take the
+woman, and by and by, when we are returned to our
+own land, if she consent to worship thy gods, it is good;
+and if not, it is yet good, for thou shalt possess her as
+thy wife, and her unbelief shall be of consequence only
+to her own soul, but thy soul shall not be retarded in
+its progress." And the young prince was pleased, and
+promised to do as his counsellor advised him.</p>
+
+<p>'So I saw that he was false and that Zehowah's
+righteousness would be but the means to her sorrow if
+she were allowed to persist. Therefore in the night,
+when all were asleep in the palace, I entered into the
+room where the prince was lying, and I took him in my
+arms and flew with him to the midst of the Red Desert,
+and there I slew him and buried him in the sand, for I
+saw that he was a liar and had determined to be a
+hypocrite.</p>
+
+<p>'But Allah immediately sent an angel to destroy me
+because I had put to death a man who was about to become
+a believer, thereby killing his soul also, since he had
+not yet made profession of the faith. But I stood up and
+defended myself, saying that I had slain a hypocrite
+who had planned in his heart to carry away the daughter
+of a Moslem. Then the angel asked the truth of the
+prince's soul, which was sitting upon the red sand that
+covered the body. The soul answered, weeping, and
+said: "These are true words, and I am fuel for hell."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
+"Have I then deserved death?" I asked. "I have
+killed an unbeliever." The angel answered that I had
+deserved life; and he would have left me and returned
+to paradise, but I would not let him go, and I besought
+him to entreat Allah that I might be allowed to live
+the life of a mortal man upon earth. "For," I said,
+"thou sayest that I deserve life. But even if thou
+destroy me not now I am only one of the genii, who
+shall all die at the first blast of the trumpet before the
+resurrection of the dead. Obtain for me therefore that
+I may have a soul and live a few years, and if I do
+good I shall then be with the faithful in paradise; and
+if not, I shall be bound with red-hot chains and burn
+everlastingly like a sinful man." The angel promised
+to intercede for me and departed. So I sat down upon
+the mound of red sand beside the soul of the Indian
+prince, to wait for the angel's coming again.</p>
+
+<p>'Then the soul reproached me angrily. "But for
+thee," it said, "I should have married Zehowah and
+returned to my own people, and although I purposed to
+be a hypocrite, yet in time Zehowah might have convinced
+me and I should have believed in my heart.
+For I now see that there is no Allah but Allah, and
+that Mohammed is the prophet of Allah. And I should
+perhaps have died full of years, a good Moslem, and
+should have entered paradise. Therefore I pray Allah
+that this may be remembered in thy condemnation." At<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
+these words I was very angry and reviled the soul,
+scoffing at it. "No doubt Allah will hear thy prayer,"
+I answered, "and will hear also at the same time thy
+lies. And as for Zehowah, thinkest thou that she
+would have loved thee, even if she had married thee?
+I tell thee that her soul rejoices only in the light of the
+faith, and that although she might have married thee,
+she would have done so in the hope of turning thy
+people from the worship of false gods and not for love of
+thee. For she will never love any man." When I had
+said this the soul groaned aloud and then remained
+silent.</p>
+
+<p>'In a little while the angel came back, and I saw
+that his face was no longer clouded with anger. "Hear
+the judgment of Allah," he said. "Inasmuch as thou
+tookest the law upon thyself, which belonged to Allah
+alone, thou deservest to die. But in so far as thou hast
+indeed slain a hypocrite and an unbeliever thou hast
+earned life. Allah is just, merciful and forgiving. It
+is not meet that in thy lot there should be nothing but
+reward or nothing but punishment. Therefore thou
+shalt not yet receive a soul. Go hence to the third
+heaven and when the angel Asrael shall be at leisure
+he will write thy name in the book of the living. Then
+thou shalt return hither and go into the city of Riad
+bearing gifts. And Zehowah will accept thee in marriage,
+though she love thee not, for Allah commands that it be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
+so. But if in the course of time this virtuous woman
+be moved to love, and say to thee, 'Khaled, I love thee,'
+then at that moment thou shalt receive an immortal
+soul, and if thy deeds be good thy soul shall enter
+paradise with the believers, but if not, thou shalt burn.
+Thus saith Allah. Thus art thou rewarded, indeed, but
+wisely and temperately, since thou hast not obtained
+life directly, but only the hope of life." Then the angel
+departed again, leading the way.</p>
+
+<p>'But the soul mocked me. "Thou that sayest of
+Zehowah that she will never love any man, thou art
+fallen into thine own trap," it cried. "For now, if she
+love thee not thou must perish. Truly, Allah heard my
+prayer." But I was filled with thankfulness and departed
+after the angel, leaving the soul sitting alone
+upon the red sand.</p>
+
+<p>'Thus have I told thee my history, O Asrael. And
+now I pray thee to write my name in the book of the
+living that I may fulfil the command of Allah and go
+my way to the city of Riad.'</p>
+
+<p>Then Asrael again took up his pen to write in the
+book.</p>
+
+<p>'Now thou art become a living man, though thou
+hast as yet no soul,' he said. 'And thou art subject to
+death by the sword and by sickness and by all those
+evils which spring up in the path of the living. And
+the day of thy death is already known to Allah who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
+knows all things. But he is merciful and will doubtless
+grant thee a term of years in which to make thy trial.
+Nevertheless be swift in thy journey and speedy in all
+thou doest, for though mortal man may live for ever
+hereafter in glory, his years on earth are but as the
+breath which springs up in the desert towards evening
+and is gone before the stars appear.'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled made a salutation before Asrael and went
+out of the third heaven, and passed through the second
+which is of burnished steel, and through the first in
+which the stars hang by golden chains, where Adam
+waits for the day of the resurrection, and at the gate he
+found the angel who had led him, and who now lifted
+him in his arms and bore him back to the Red Desert;
+for as he was now a mortal man he could no longer
+move through the air like the genii between the outer
+gate of heaven and the earth. Nor could he any longer
+see the soul of the Indian prince sitting upon the sand,
+though it was still there. But the angel was visible to
+him. So they stood together, and the angel spoke to
+him.</p>
+
+<p>'Thou art now a mortal man,' he said, 'and subject to
+time as to death. To thee it seems but a moment since
+we went up together to the gate, and yet thou wast
+standing ten months and thirteen days before Asrael,
+and of the body of the man whom thou slewest only
+the bones remain.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>So saying the angel blew upon the red sand and
+Khaled saw the white bones of the prince in the place
+where he had laid his body. So he was first made
+conscious of time.</p>
+
+<p>'Nearly a year has passed, and though Allah be very
+merciful to thee, yet he will assuredly not suffer thee to
+live beyond the time of other men. Make haste therefore
+and depart upon thine errand. Yet because thou
+art come into the world a grown man, having neither
+father nor mother nor inheritance, I will give thee what
+is most necessary for thy journey.'</p>
+
+<p>Then the angel took a handful of leaves from a
+ghada bush close by and gave them to Khaled, and as
+he gave them they were changed into a rich garment,
+and into linen, and into a shawl with which to make a
+turban, and shoes of red leather.</p>
+
+<p>'Clothe thyself with these,' said the angel.</p>
+
+<p>He broke a twig from the bush and placed it in
+Khaled's hand. Immediately it became a sabre of
+Damascus steel, in a sheath of leather with a belt.</p>
+
+<p>'Take this sword, which is of such fine temper that
+it will cleave through an iron headpiece and a shirt of
+mail. But remember that it is not a sword made by
+magic. Let thy magic reside in thy arm, wield it for
+the faith, and put thy trust in Allah.'</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards the angel took up a locust that was
+asleep on the sand waiting for the warmth of the morning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
+sun. The angel held the locust up before Khaled,
+and then let it fall. But as it fell it became at once a
+beautiful bay mare with round black eyes wide apart
+and an arching tail which swept down to the sand like
+a river of silk.</p>
+
+<p>'Take this mare,' said the angel; 'she is of the pure
+breed of Nejed and as swift as the wind, but mortal
+like thyself.'</p>
+
+<p>'But how shall I ride her without saddle or bridle?'
+asked Khaled.</p>
+
+<p>'That is true,' answered the angel.</p>
+
+<p>He laid leaves of the ghada upon the mare's back
+and they became a saddle, and placed a twig in her
+mouth and it turned into a bit and bridle.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled thanked the angel and mounted.</p>
+
+<p>'Farewell and prosper, and put thy trust in Allah,
+and forget not the day of judgment,' the angel said, and
+immediately returned to paradise.</p>
+
+<p>So Khaled was left alone in the Red Desert, a living
+man obliged to shift for himself, liable to suffer hunger
+and thirst or to be slain by robbers, with no worldly
+possessions but his sword, his bay mare, and the clothes
+on his back. He knew moreover that he was more
+than two hundred miles from the city of Riad, and he
+knew that he could not accomplish this journey in less
+than four days. For when he was one of the genii he
+had often watched men toiling through desert on foot,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
+and on camels and on horses, and had laughed with
+his companions at the slow progress they made. But
+now it was no laughing matter, for he had forgotten to
+ask the angel for dates and water, or even for a few
+handfuls of barley meal.</p>
+
+<p>He turned the mare's head westward of the Goat, in
+which is the polar star, for he remembered that when
+he had carried away the Indian prince he had flown
+toward the south-east, and as he began to gallop over
+the dark sand he laughed to himself.</p>
+
+<p>'What poor things are men and their horses,' he said.
+'To destroy me, this mare need only stumble and lame
+herself, and we shall both die of hunger and thirst in
+the desert.'</p>
+
+<p>This reflection made him at first urge the mare to
+her greatest speed, for he thought that the sooner he
+should be out of the desert and among the villages
+beyond, the present danger would be passed. But
+presently he bethought him that the mare would be
+more likely to stumble and hurt herself in the dark if
+she were galloping than if she were moving at a
+moderate pace. He therefore drew bridle and patted
+her neck and made her walk slowly and cautiously
+forward.</p>
+
+<p>But this did not please him either, after a time, for
+he remembered that if he rode too slowly he must die
+of hunger before reaching the end of his journey.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Truly,' he said, 'one must learn what it is to be a
+man, in order to understand the uses of moderation.
+Gallop not lest thy horse fall and thou perish! Nor
+delay walking slowly by the road, lest thou die of thirst
+and hunger! Yet thou art not safe, for Al Walid died
+from treading upon an arrow, and Oda ibn Kais perished
+by perpetual sneezing. Allah is just and merciful! I
+will let the mare go at her own pace, for the end of all
+things is known.'</p>
+
+<p>The mare, being left to herself, began to canter and
+carried Khaled onward all night without changing her
+gait.</p>
+
+<p>'Nevertheless,' thought Khaled, 'if we are not soon
+out of the desert we shall suffer thirst during the day
+as well as hunger.'</p>
+
+<p>When there was enough daylight to distinguish a
+black thread from a white, Khaled looked before him
+and saw that there was nothing but red sand in hillocks
+and ridges, with ghada bushes here and there. But still
+the mare cantered on and did not seem tired. Soon
+the sun rose and it grew very hot, for the air was quite
+still and it was summer time.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled looked always before him and at last he saw
+a white patch in the distance and he knew that there
+must be water near it. For the water of the Red Desert
+whitens the sand. He therefore rode on cheerfully, for
+he was now thirsty, and the mare quickened her pace,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
+for she also knew that she was near a drinking-place.
+But as they came close to the spot Khaled remembered
+that the preceding night had been Al Kadr, which
+falls between the seventh and eighth latter days of the
+month Ramadhan, during which the true believers
+neither eat nor drink so long as there is light enough
+to distinguish a white thread from a black one. So,
+when they reached the well, he let his mare drink her
+fill, and he took off the saddle and bridle and let her
+loose, after which he sat down with his head in the
+shade of a ghada bush to rest himself.</p>
+
+<p>'Allah is merciful,' he said; 'the night will come,
+and then I will drink.' For he dared not ride farther,
+for fear of not finding water again.</p>
+
+<p>Then again he was disturbed, for he had nothing to
+eat, and he thought that if he waited until night he
+would be hungry as well as thirsty. But presently he
+saw the mare trying to catch the locusts that flew about.
+She could only catch one or two, because it was now
+hot and they were able to fly quickly.</p>
+
+<p>'When the night comes,' he said, 'the locusts will
+lie on the ground and cling to the bushes, being stiff
+with the cold, and then I will eat my fill, and drink
+also.'</p>
+
+<p>Soon afterwards he fell asleep, being weary, and
+when he awoke it was night again and the stars were
+shining overhead. Khaled rose hastily and drank at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
+the well and made ablutions and prayed, prostrating
+himself towards the Kebla. He remembered that he
+had slept a long time, and that he had not performed
+his devotions for a day and a night, so that he repeated
+them five times, to atone for the omission.</p>
+
+<p>The mare was eating the locusts that now lay in
+great black patches on the sand unable to move and
+save themselves. Khaled threw his cloak over a great
+number of them and gathered them together. Then he
+kindled a fire of ghada by striking sparks from the
+blade of his sword, and when he had made a bed of
+coals he roasted the locusts after pulling off their legs,
+and ate his fill. While he was doing this he was much
+disturbed in mind.</p>
+
+<p>'I have only just begun to live as a man,' he thought.
+'Did I not stand ten months and thirteen days in the
+third heaven, unconscious of the passing of time? Who
+shall tell me whether I have not slept another ten
+months or more under this bush, like the companions
+of Al Rakim?'</p>
+
+<p>So, when he had done eating and had drunk again
+from the well, and had made the mare drink, he saddled
+her quickly and mounted, and cantered on through the
+night, guiding his course by the stars. On the following
+day he again found a well, but much later than
+before, and he suffered much from thirst as he watched
+his mare dip her black lips into the pool. Nevertheless<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
+he would not break his fast, for he was resolved to be a
+true believer in practice as well as in belief. So he
+fell asleep and awoke when it was night again, and ate
+and drank. In this way he journeyed several days
+until he began to see the hill country which borders
+the desert towards Riad, and he understood that he had
+been much farther away than he had imagined. But
+he reflected that Allah had doubtless intended to try
+his constancy by imposing upon him the journey
+through the desert during the days of fasting. But at
+last, he awoke one day just at sunset, instead of sleeping
+until the night. He had been travelling up the
+first slopes where the ground, though barren, is harder
+than in the desert, and had lain down in a hollow by
+an abundant spring. He rose now and made ablutions
+and prayed, as usual, towards Mecca; that is to say,
+being where he was, he turned his face to the west as
+the sun was setting. When he had finished he stood
+some minutes watching the red light over the desert
+below him, and then he was suddenly aware that the
+new moon was hanging just above the diminishing fire
+of the evening, and he knew that the fast of Ramadhan
+was over and that the feast of Bairam had begun.
+Thereat he was glad, and determined to take an unusual
+number of locusts for his evening meal.</p>
+
+<p>But when he looked about he saw that there were
+no locusts in the place, though there was grass, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
+his mare was eating. Then he looked everywhere near
+the well to see whether some traveller had not perhaps
+dropped a few dates or a little barley by accident, but
+there was nothing.</p>
+
+<p>'Doubtless,' he said, 'Allah wishes to show me that
+greediness is a sin even on the day of feasting.'</p>
+
+<p>He drank as much of the water as he could in order
+to stay his hunger as well as assuage his thirst, and then
+he saddled the mare and rode up out of the hollow
+towards the hill country. Towards the middle of the
+night he came to a small village where all the people
+were celebrating the feast, having killed a young camel
+and several sheep. Seeing that he was a traveller they
+bade him be welcome, and he sat down among them and
+ate his fill of meat, praising Allah. And corn was
+given to his mare, so that the dumb animal also kept
+the feast.</p>
+
+<p>'Truly,' said the people, 'thy mare is a daughter of
+Al Borak, the heavenly steed called "the Lightning,"
+upon which the nocturnal journey was accomplished
+by the Prophet, upon whom be peace.'</p>
+
+<p>They said this not because they divined that the
+mare had been given to Khaled by an angel, but because
+they saw by her beauty that she must be swift as
+the wind. For she had a large head, with bony cheeks,
+and a full forehead and round black eyes wide apart,
+with smooth black skin about them, and a pointed nose,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+and the under lip was like that of a camel, projecting a
+little. And she was neither too long nor too short,
+having straight legs like steel, and small feet and round
+hoofs, neither overgrown in idleness nor overworn with
+much work. And her tail lay flat and long and smooth
+when she was standing still but arched like the plume
+of an ostrich when she moved. Her coat was bright
+bay, glossy and smooth and without any white markings.
+By all these signs, which belong to the purest
+blood, the people of the village knew that she was
+of the fleetest reared in Arabia. And Khaled was
+glad that the people admired her, since she was the
+chief of his few possessions, which indeed were not
+many.</p>
+
+<p>He did not know beforehand what he should do, nor
+what he should say when in the presence of the Sultan
+of Nejed, still less how he could venture to ask Zehowah
+in marriage, having no gifts to offer and not being himself
+a prince. Before he had become a man it would
+have been easy for him to find treasures in the earth
+such as men had never seen, for, like all the genii, he
+had been acquainted with the most deeply hidden
+mines and with all places where men had hidden
+wealth in old times. But this knowledge does not
+belong to the intelligence becoming mortals, but rather
+to the faculty of seeing through solid substance which
+is exercised by the spirits of the air, and in his present<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
+state it was taken from him, together with all possibility
+of communicating with his former companions. He
+had nothing but his mare and his sword and the garments
+he wore, and though the mare was indeed a gift
+for a king he did not know whether he was meant to
+offer it to any one, seeing that it had been given him
+by an angel.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless he did not lose heart, for the celestial
+messenger had told him that by the will of Allah he
+should marry Zehowah, and Allah was certainly able to
+give him a king's daughter in marriage without the
+aid of gifts, of gold, of musk, of 'Ood, of aloes or of
+pearls.</p>
+
+<p>He rose, therefore, when he had eaten enough and
+had rested himself and his mare, and after thanking the
+people of the village for their entertainment he rode on
+his way. He passed through a hill country, sometimes
+fertile and sometimes stony and deserted, but he found
+water by the way and such food as he needed; and
+accomplished the remainder of the journey without
+hindrance.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of the second day he came to a
+halting-place from which he could see the city of Riad,
+and he was astonished at the size and magnificence of
+the Sultan's palace, which was visible above the walls
+of the fortification. Yet he was aware that he had seen
+all this before as in a dream not altogether forgotten<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
+when a man wakes at dawn after a long and restless
+night.</p>
+
+<p>He gazed awhile, after he had made his ablutions,
+and then calling to his mare to come to him, he mounted
+and rode through the southern gate into the heart of
+the city.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II</h3>
+
+
+<p>When Khaled reached the palace he dismounted from
+his mare, and leading her by the bridle entered the
+gateway. Here he met many persons, guards, and
+slaves both black and white, and porters bearing provisions,
+and a few women, all hurrying hither and
+thither; and many noticed him, but a few gazed curiously
+into his face, and two or three grooms followed
+him a little way, pointing out to each other the beauties
+of his mare.</p>
+
+<p>'Truly,' they said, 'if we did not know the mares of
+the stud better than the faces of our mothers, we should
+swear by Allah that this beast had been stolen from the
+Sultan's stables by a thief in the night, for she is of the
+best blood in Nejed.'</p>
+
+<p>These being curious they saluted Khaled and asked
+him whence he came and whither he was going, seeing
+that it is not courteous to ask a stranger any other
+questions.</p>
+
+<p>'I come from the Red Desert,' Khaled answered, 'and
+I am going into the palace as you see.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The grooms saw that there was a rebuke in the last
+part of his answer and hung back and presently went
+their way.</p>
+
+<p>'Are such mares bred in the Red Desert?' they
+exclaimed. 'The stranger is doubtless the sheikh of
+some powerful tribe. But if this be true, where are the
+men that came with him? And why is he dressed like
+a man of the city?'</p>
+
+<p>So they hastened out of the gateway to find the
+Bedouins who, they supposed, must have accompanied
+Khaled on his journey.</p>
+
+<p>But Khaled went forward and came to a great court
+in which were stone seats by the walls. Here a number
+of people were waiting. So he sat down upon one of
+the seats and his mare laid her nose upon his shoulder
+as though inquiring what he would do.</p>
+
+<p>'Allah knows,' Khaled said, as though answering
+her. So he waited patiently.</p>
+
+<p>At last a man came out into the courtyard who was
+richly dressed, and whom all the people saluted as he
+passed. But he came straight towards Khaled, who
+rose from his seat.</p>
+
+<p>'Whence come you, my friend?' he inquired after
+they had exchanged the salutation.</p>
+
+<p>'From the Red Desert, and I desire permission to
+speak with the Sultan when it shall please his majesty
+to see me.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'And what do you desire of his majesty? I ask
+that I may inform him beforehand. So you will have
+a better reception.'</p>
+
+<p>'Tell the Sultan,' said Khaled, 'that a man is here
+who has neither father nor mother nor any possessions
+beyond a swift mare, a keen sword and a strong hand,
+but who is come nevertheless to ask in marriage
+Zehowah, the Sultan's daughter.'</p>
+
+<p>The minister smiled and gazed at Khaled in silence
+for a moment, but when he had looked keenly at his face,
+he became grave.</p>
+
+<p>'It may be,' he thought, 'that this is some great
+prince who comes thus simply as in a disguise, and it
+were best not to anger him.'</p>
+
+<p>'I will deliver your message,' he answered aloud,
+'though it is a strange one. It is customary for those
+who come to ask for a maiden in marriage to bring
+gifts&mdash;and to receive others in return,' he added.</p>
+
+<p>'I neither bring gifts nor ask any,' said Khaled.
+'Allah is great and will provide me with what I need.'</p>
+
+<p>'I fear that he will not provide you with the Sultan's
+daughter for a wife,' said the minister as he went away,
+but Khaled did not hear the words, though he would
+have cared little if he had.</p>
+
+<p>Now it chanced that Zehowah was sitting in a
+balcony surrounded with lattice, over the courtyard, on
+that morning and she had seen Khaled enter, leading<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
+his mare by the bridle. But though she watched the
+stranger and his beast idly for some time she thought
+as little of the one as of the other, for her heart was not
+turned to love, and she knew nothing of horses. But
+her women thought differently and spoke loudly, praising
+the beauty of both.</p>
+
+<p>'There is indeed a warrior able to fight in the front
+of our armies,' they said. 'Truly such a man must
+have been Khaled ibn Walad, the Sword of the Lord, in
+the days of the Prophet&mdash;upon whom peace.'</p>
+
+<p>By and by there was a cry that the Sultan was
+coming into the room, and the women rose and retired.
+The Sultan sat down upon the carpet by his daughter,
+in the balcony.</p>
+
+<p>'Do you see that stranger, holding a beautiful mare
+by the bridle?' he asked.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, I see him,' answered Zehowah indifferently.</p>
+
+<p>'He is come to ask you in marriage.'</p>
+
+<p>'Another!' she exclaimed with a careless laugh.
+'If it is the will of Allah I will marry him. If not, he
+will go away like the rest.'</p>
+
+<p>'This man is not like the rest, my daughter. He is
+either a madman or some powerful prince in disguise.'</p>
+
+<p>'Or both, perhaps,' laughed Zehowah. She laughed
+often, for although she was not inclined to love, she was
+of a gentle and merry temper.</p>
+
+<p>'His message was a strange one,' said the Sultan.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
+'He says that he neither brings gifts nor asks them,
+that he has neither father nor mother, nor any
+possessions excepting a swift mare, a keen sword and a
+strong hand.'</p>
+
+<p>'I see the mare, the sword and the hand,' answered
+Zehowah. 'But the hand is like any other hand&mdash;how
+can I tell whether it be strong? The sword is in its
+sheath, and I cannot see its edge, and though the mare
+is pretty enough, I have seen many of your own I liked
+as well. The elephants of the Indian prince were more
+amusing, and the prince himself was more beautiful
+than this stranger with his black beard and his solemn
+face.'</p>
+
+<p>'That is true,' said the Sultan with a sigh.</p>
+
+<p>'Do you wish me to marry this man?' Zehowah
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>'My daughter, I wish you to choose of your own free
+will. Nevertheless I trust that you will choose before
+long, that I may see my child's children before I die.'</p>
+
+<p>For the Sultan was old and white-bearded, and was
+already somewhat bowed with advancing years and with
+burden of many cares and the fatigues of many wars.
+Yet his eye was bright and his heart fearless still, though
+his judgment was often weak and vacillating.</p>
+
+<p>'Do you wish me to marry this man?' Zehowah asked
+again. 'He will be a strange husband, for he is a
+strange suitor, coming without gifts and having neither<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
+father nor mother. But I will do as you command. If
+you leave it to me I shall never marry.'</p>
+
+<p>'I did not say that I desired you to take this one
+especially,' protested the Sultan, 'though for the matter
+of gifts I care little, since heaven has sent me wealth
+in abundance. But my remaining years are few,
+and the years of life are like stones slipping from a
+mountain which move slowly at first, and then faster
+until they outrun the lightning and leap into the dark
+valley below. And what is required of a husband is
+that he be a true believer, young and whole in every
+part, and of a charitable disposition.'</p>
+
+<p>'Truly,' laughed Zehowah, 'if he have no possessions,
+charity will avail him little, since he has nothing to
+give.'</p>
+
+<p>'There is other charity besides the giving of alms,
+my daughter, since it is charity even to think charitably
+of others, as you know. But I have not said that you
+should marry this man, for you are free. And indeed I
+have not yet talked with him. But I have sent for him
+and you shall hear him speak. See&mdash;they are just now
+conducting him to the hall of audiences. But indeed
+I think he is no husband for you, after all.'</p>
+
+<p>The Sultan rose and went to receive Khaled, and
+Zehowah went to the secret window above her father's
+raised seat in the hall.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled made the customary salutation with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
+greatest respect, and the Sultan made him sit down at
+his right hand as though he had been a prince, and
+asked him whence he had come. Then a refreshment was
+brought, and Khaled ate and drank a little, after which
+the Sultan inquired his business.</p>
+
+<p>'I come,' said Khaled boldly, 'to ask your daughter
+Zehowah in marriage. I bring no gifts, for I have none
+to offer, nor have I any inheritance. My mare is my
+fortune, my sword is my argument and my wit is in
+my arm.'</p>
+
+<p>'You are a strange suitor,' said the Sultan; but he
+kept a pleasant countenance, since Khaled was his
+guest. 'You are no doubt the sheikh of a tribe of the
+Red Desert, though I was not aware that any tribes
+dwelt there.'</p>
+
+<p>'So far as being the sheikh of my tribe,' said Khaled
+with a smile, 'your majesty may call me so, for my
+tribe consists of myself alone, seeing that I have neither
+father nor mother nor any relations.'</p>
+
+<p>'Truly, I have never talked with such a suitor
+before,' answered the Sultan. 'At least I presume that
+you are a son of some prince, and that you have chosen
+to disguise yourself as a rich traveller and to hide your
+history under an allegory.'</p>
+
+<p>The Sultan would certainly not have allowed himself
+to overstep the bounds of courtesy so far, but for
+his astonishment at Khaled's daring manner. He was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
+too keen, however, not to see that this man was something
+above the ordinary and that, whatever else he
+might be, he was not a common impostor. Such a
+fellow would have found means to rob a caravan of
+valuable goods, to offer as gifts, would have brought
+himself a train of camels and slaves and would have
+given himself out as a prince of some distant country
+from which it would not be possible to obtain information.</p>
+
+<p>'Istaghfir Allah! I am no prince,' Khaled answered.
+'I ask for the hand of your daughter. The will of
+Allah will be accomplished.'</p>
+
+<p>He knew that Zehowah was watching and listening
+behind the lattice in her place of concealment, for the
+memory of such things had not been taken from him
+when he had lost the supernatural vision of the genii
+and had become an ordinary man. He was determined
+therefore to be truthful and to say nothing which he
+might afterwards be called upon to explain. For he
+never doubted but that Zehowah would be his wife,
+since the angel had told him that it should be so.</p>
+
+<p>'And what if I refuse even to consider your proposal?'
+inquired the Sultan, to see what he would say.</p>
+
+<p>'If it is the will of Allah that I marry your daughter,
+your refusal would be useless, but if it is not his will,
+your refusal would be altogether unnecessary.'</p>
+
+<p>The Sultan was much struck by this argument which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
+showed a ready wit in the stranger and which he could
+only have opposed by asserting that his own will was
+superior to that of heaven itself.</p>
+
+<p>'But,' said he, defending himself, 'any of the
+previous suitors might have said the same.'</p>
+
+<p>'Undoubtedly,' replied Khaled, unabashed. 'But they
+did not say it. Your majesty will certainly now consider
+the matter.'</p>
+
+<p>'In the meanwhile,' the Sultan answered, very
+graciously, 'you are my guest, and you have come in
+time to take part in the third day of the feast, to which
+you are welcome in the name of Allah, the merciful.'</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon the Sultan rose and Khaled was conducted
+to the apartments set apart for the guests. But the
+Sultan returned to the harem in a very thoughtful mood,
+and before long he found Zehowah who had returned to
+her seat in the balcony.</p>
+
+<p>'This is a very strange suitor,' he said, shaking his
+head and looking into his daughter's face.</p>
+
+<p>'He is at least bold and outspoken,' she answered.
+'He makes no secret of his poverty nor of his wishes.
+Whatever he be, he is in earnest and speaks truth. I
+would like well to know the only secret which he wishes
+to keep&mdash;who he really is.'</p>
+
+<p>'It may be,' said the Sultan thoughtfully, 'that if I
+threaten to cut off his head he will tell us. But on the
+other hand, he is a guest.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'He is not of those who are easily terrified, I think.
+Tell me, my father, do you wish me to marry him?'</p>
+
+<p>'How could you marry a man who has no family
+and no inheritance? Would such a marriage befit the
+daughter of kings?'</p>
+
+<p>'Why not?' asked Zehowah with much calmness.</p>
+
+<p>The Sultan stared at her in astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>'Has this stranger enchanted your imagination?' he
+inquired by way of answer.</p>
+
+<p>'No,' replied Zehowah scornfully. 'I have seen the
+noblest, the most beautiful and the richest of the earth,
+ready to take me to wife, and I have not loved. Shall
+I love an outcast?'</p>
+
+<p>'Then how can you ask my wishes?'</p>
+
+<p>'Because there are good reasons why I should marry
+this man.'</p>
+
+<p>'Good reasons? In the name of Allah let me hear
+them, if there are any.'</p>
+
+<p>'You are old, my father,' said Zehowah, 'and it has
+not pleased heaven to send you a son, nor to leave you
+any living relation to sit upon the throne when your
+years are accomplished. You must needs think of your
+successor.'</p>
+
+<p>'The better reason for choosing some powerful prince,
+whose territory shall increase the kingdom he inherits
+from me, and whose alliance shall strengthen the
+empire I leave behind me.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Istaghfir Allah! The worse reason. For such a
+prince would be attached to his own country, and would
+take me thither with him and would neglect the
+kingdom of Nejed, regarding it as a land of strangers
+whom he may oppress with taxes to increase his own
+splendour. And this is not unreasonable, since no king
+can wisely govern two kingdoms separated from each
+other by more than three days' journey. No man can
+have other than the one of two reasons for asking me in
+marriage. Either he has heard of me and desires to
+possess me, or he wishes to increase his dominions by
+the inheritance which will be mine.'</p>
+
+<p>'Doubtless, this is the truth,' said the Sultan. 'But
+so much the more does this stranger in all probability
+covet my kingdom, since he has nothing of his own.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is what I mean. For, having no other possessions
+to distract his attention, he will remain always
+here, and will govern your kingdom for its own
+advantage in order that it may profit himself.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is a subtle argument, my daughter, and one
+requiring consideration.'</p>
+
+<p>'The more so because the man seems otherwise well
+fitted to be my husband, since he is a true believer, and
+young, and fearless and outspoken.'</p>
+
+<p>'But if this is all,' objected the Sultan, 'there are
+in Nejed several young men, sons of my chief courtiers,
+who possess the same qualifications. Choose one of them.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'On the contrary, to choose one of them would arouse
+the jealousy of all the rest, with their families and
+slaves and freedmen, whereby the kingdom would easily
+be exposed to civil war. But if I take a stranger it is
+more probable that all will be for him, since you are
+beloved, and there is no reason why one party should
+oppose him and another support him, since none of them
+know anything of him.'</p>
+
+<p>'But he will not be beloved by the people unless
+he is liberal, and he has nothing wherewith to be
+generous.'</p>
+
+<p>'And where are the treasures of Riad?' laughed
+Zehowah. 'Is it not easy for you to go secretly to his
+chamber and to give him as much gold as he needs?'</p>
+
+<p>'That is also true. I see that you have set your
+heart upon him.'</p>
+
+<p>'Not my heart, my father, but my head. For I have
+infinitely more head than heart, and I see that the
+welfare of the kingdom will be better secured with such
+a ruler, than it would have been under a foreign prince
+whose right hand would be perpetually thrust out to
+take in Nejed that which his left hand would throw to
+courtiers in his own country. Do I speak wisdom or
+folly?'</p>
+
+<p>'It is neither all folly nor all wisdom.'</p>
+
+<p>'I have seen this man, I have heard him speak,' said
+Zehowah. 'He is as well as another since I must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
+marry sooner or later. Moreover I have another
+argument.'</p>
+
+<p>'What is that?'</p>
+
+<p>'Either he is a man strong enough to rule me, or he
+is not,' Zehowah answered with a laugh. 'If he can
+govern me, he can govern the kingdom of Nejed. But
+if not I will govern it for him, and rule him also.'</p>
+
+<p>The Sultan looked up to heaven and slightly raised
+his hands from his knees.</p>
+
+<p>'Allah is merciful and forgiving!' he exclaimed.
+'Is this the spirit befitting a wife?'</p>
+
+<p>'Is it charity to cause happiness?'</p>
+
+<p>'Undoubtedly it is charity.'</p>
+
+<p>'And which is greater, the happiness of many or
+the happiness of one?'</p>
+
+<p>'The happiness of many is greater,' answered the
+Sultan. 'What then?' he asked after a time, seeing
+that she said nothing more.</p>
+
+<p>'I have spoken,' she replied. 'It is best that I
+should marry him.'</p>
+
+<p>Then there was silence for a long time, during which
+the Sultan sat quite motionless in his place, watching
+his daughter, while she looked idly through the lattice
+at the people who came and went in the court below.
+She seemed to feel no emotion.</p>
+
+<p>The Sultan did not know how to oppose Zehowah's
+will any more than he could answer her arguments,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
+although his worldly wisdom was altogether at variance
+with her decision. For she was the beloved child of
+his old age and he could refuse her nothing. Moreover,
+in what she had said, there was much which
+recommended itself to his judgment, though by no
+means enough to persuade him. At last he rose from
+the carpet and embraced her.</p>
+
+<p>'If it is your will, let it be so,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>'It is the will of Allah,' answered Zehowah. 'Let
+it be accomplished immediately.'</p>
+
+<p>With a sigh the Sultan withdrew and sent a messenger
+to Khaled requesting him to come to another
+and more secluded chamber, where they could be alone
+and talk freely.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled showed no surprise on hearing that his suit
+was accepted, but he thought it fitting to express much
+gratitude for the favourable decision. Then the Sultan,
+who did not wish to seem too readily yielding, began to
+explain to Khaled Zehowah's reasons for accepting a
+poor stranger, presenting them as though they were his
+own.</p>
+
+<p>'For,' he said, 'whatever you may in reality be, you
+have chosen to present yourself to us in such a manner
+as would not have failed to bring about a refusal under
+any other circumstances. But I have considered that
+as it will be your destiny, if heaven grants you life, to
+rule my kingdom after me, you will in all likelihood<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
+rule it more wisely and carefully, for having no other
+cares in a distant country to distract your attention;
+and because you have no relations you are the less
+liable to the attacks of open or secret jealousy.'</p>
+
+<p>The Sultan then gave him a large sum of money in
+gold pieces, which Khaled gladly accepted, since he had
+not even wherewithal to buy himself a garment for the
+wedding feast, still less to distribute gifts to the courtiers
+and to the multitude. The Sultan also presented
+him with a black slave to attend to his personal wants.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled then sent for merchants from the bazar,
+and they brought him all manner of rich stuffs, such as
+he needed. There came also two tailors, who sat down
+upon a matting in his apartment and immediately
+began to make him clothes, while the black slave sat
+beside them and watched them, lest they should steal
+any of the gold of the embroideries.</p>
+
+<p>When it was known in the palace that the Sultan's
+only daughter was to be married at once, there were
+great rejoicings, and many camels were slaughtered and
+a great number of sheep, to supply food for so great a
+feast. A number of cooks were hired also to help those
+who belonged to the palace, for although the Sultan fed
+daily more than three hundred persons, guests, travellers,
+and poor, besides all the members of the household, yet
+this was as nothing compared with the multitude to be
+provided for on the present occasion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then it was that Hadji Mohammed, the chief of the
+cooks, sat down upon the floor in the midst of the main
+kitchen and beat his breast and wept. For the confusion
+was great so that the voice of one man could not
+be heard for the diabolical screaming of the many, and
+the cooks smote the young lads who helped them, and
+these, running to escape from the blows, fell against the
+porters who came in from outside bearing sacks of
+sugar, and great baskets of fruit and quarters of meat
+and skins of water, and bushels of meal and a hundred
+other things equally necessary to the cooking; and the
+porters, staggering under their burdens, fell between the
+legs of the mules loaded with firewood, that had been
+brought to the gate, and the dumb beasts kicked violently
+in all directions, while the slaves who drove them struck
+them with their staves, and the mules began to run
+among the camels, and the camels, being terrified, rose
+from the ground and began to plunge and skip like
+young foals, while more porters and more mules and
+more slaves came on in multitudes to the door of the
+kitchen. And it was very hot, for it was noontide, and
+in summer, and there were flies without number, and
+the dogs that had been sleeping in the shade sprang up
+and barked loudly and bit whomsoever they could
+reach, and all the men bellowed together, so that the
+confusion was extreme.</p>
+
+<p>'Verily,' cried Hadji Mohammed, 'this is not a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
+kitchen but Yemamah, and I am not the chief of the
+cooks, but the chief of sinners and fuel for hell.' So he
+wept bitterly and beat his breast.</p>
+
+<p>But at last matters mended, for there were many
+who were willing to do well, so that when the time
+came Hadji Mohammed was able to serve an honourable
+feast to all, though the number of the guests was
+not less than two thousand.</p>
+
+<p>But Khaled, having visited the bath, arrayed himself
+magnificently and rode upon his bay mare to the
+mosque, surrounded by the courtiers and the chief
+officers of the state, and by a great throng of slaves
+from the palace. As he rode, he scattered gold pieces
+among the people from the bags which he carried, and
+all praised his liberality and swore by Allah that
+Zehowah was taking a very goodly husband. And as
+none knew whence he came, all were equally pleased,
+but most of all the Bedouins from the desert, of whom
+there were many at that time in Riad, who had come to
+keep the feast Bairam, for Khaled's own words had been
+repeated, and they had heard that he came from the
+desert like themselves. And when he had finished his
+prayers, he rode back to the palace.</p>
+
+<p>When the time for the feast came the Sultan led
+Khaled into the great hall and made him sit at his right
+hand. The Sultan himself was magnificently dressed
+and covered with priceless jewels, so that he shone like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
+the sun among all the rest. Then he presented Khaled
+to the assembly.</p>
+
+<p>'This,' said he, 'is Khaled, my beloved son-in-law,
+the husband of my only daughter, whom it has pleased
+Allah to send me, as the stay of my old age and as the
+successor to my kingdom. He will be terrible in war
+as Khaled ibn Walid, his namesake, the Sword of the
+Lord, and gentle and just in peace as Abu Bakr of
+blessed memory. He is as brave as the lion, as strong
+as the camel, as swift as the ostrich, as sagacious as the
+fox and as generous as the pelican, who feeds her
+young with the blood of her own breast. Love him
+therefore, as you have loved me, for he is extremely
+worthy of affection, and hate his enemies and be faithful
+to him in the time of danger. By the blessing of Allah
+he shall rear up children to me in my old age, to be
+with you when he is gone.'</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon Khaled turned and answered, speaking
+modestly but with much dignity in his manner.</p>
+
+<p>'Ye men of Nejed, this is my marriage feast and I
+invite you all to be merry with me. Whether it shall
+please Allah to give me a long life, or whether it shall
+please him to take me this night I know not. We are
+in the hand of Allah. But this I do know. I will love
+you as my own people, seeing that I have no people of
+my own. I will fight for you as a man fights for his
+own soul, for his wife and for his children, and I will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
+divide justly the spoils in war, and give in peace whatsoever
+I am able, to all those who are in need. I swear
+by Allah! You are all witnesses.'</p>
+
+<p>The courtiers and all the guests were much pleased
+with this short speech, for they saw that Khaled was a
+man of few words and not proud or overbearing, and
+none could look into his face and doubt his promise.
+For the present moment at least Zehowah's prediction
+had been verified, for no one was jealous of him, and
+there was but one party among them all and that was
+for him. So they all feasted together in harmony until
+the sun was low.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime Zehowah remained in the harem,
+surrounded by her women, and a separate meal was
+brought to them. They all sat upon the rich carpets
+leaning on cushions set against the walls, and small
+low tables were brought in, covered with dishes and
+bowls containing delicately prepared rice and mutton
+in great abundance and fresh blanket bread, hot from
+the stones, and olives brought from Syria. Afterwards
+came sweetmeats without number, such as Hadji
+Mohammed knew how to prepare, and gold and silver
+goblets filled with a drink made from large sweet
+lemons and water, which is called 'treng.' Zehowah
+indeed ate sparingly, for she was accustomed to such
+dainties every day, but her women were delighted with
+the abundance and left nothing to be taken away.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>While they were eating six of the women played
+upon musical instruments by turns, while others
+danced slow and graceful measures, singing as they
+moved, and describing the unspeakable happiness
+which awaited their princess in marriage. Afterwards
+when the tables had been taken away and they had
+washed their hands with rose water from Ajjem, Zehowah
+commanded the singing and the dancing to cease, and
+the women brought her one by one the dresses which
+she was to wear before Khaled. They were very magnificent,
+for it had needed many years to prepare them,
+and a great weight of gold and silver threads had been
+weighed out to the tailors and embroiderers who had
+worked in the preparation of them ever since Zehowah
+had been two years old. For the piece of material is
+weighed first, and then the gold, and afterwards, when
+the work is finished, the whole is weighed together, lest
+the tailors should steal anything.</p>
+
+<p>But Zehowah looked coldly at the garments, one after
+the other, as they were brought and taken away, and
+the women fancied that she was to be married to the
+stranger against her will, and that she remembered the
+Indian prince.</p>
+
+<p>'It is a pity,' one of them ventured to say, 'that the
+bridegroom has not brought any elephants with him,
+for we would have watched them from the balconies,
+since they are diverting beasts.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'And it is a pity,' said Zehowah scornfully, 'that my
+husband has not a round, soft face, like the moon in
+May, and the eyes of a gazelle and the heart of a
+hare. Truly, such a one would have made you a good
+king, seeing that he was also an unbeliever!'</p>
+
+<p>'Nay,' said the woman humbly, 'Allah forbid that I
+should make a comparison, or bring an ill omen on the
+day by speaking of that which chanced a year ago.
+Truly, I only spoke of elephants, and not of men. For,
+surely, we all said when we saw him in the court that
+he looked a brave warrior and a goodly man.'</p>
+
+<p>Then a messenger came from the Sultan saying that
+it was time to make ready. So they went to another
+apartment, where the nuptial chamber had been prepared.
+The Sultan came, then, leading Khaled, and
+followed by the Kadi, and all the women veiled themselves
+while the latter read the declaration of marriage.
+After that they all withdrew and Khaled took his seat
+upon the high couch in the middle of the room. Presently
+all the women returned, unveiled, with loud singing
+and playing of instruments, leading Zehowah dressed
+in the first of the dresses which she was to put on, and
+which, though it was very splendid, was of course the
+least magnificent of all those which had been prepared.
+But Khaled sat in his place looking on quietly, for he
+was acquainted with the custom, and he cared little for
+the rich garments, but looked always into Zehowah's face.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III</h3>
+
+
+<p>Khaled sat with his sword upon his feet, and when
+Zehowah was not in the room he played with the hilt and
+thought of all that was happening.</p>
+
+<p>'Truly,' he said to himself, 'Allah is great. Was I
+not, but a few days since, one of the genii condemned
+to perish at the day of the resurrection? And am I
+not now a man, married to the most beautiful woman in
+the whole world, and the wisest and the best, needing only
+to be loved by her in order to obtain an undying soul?
+And why should this woman not love me? Truly, we
+shall see before long, when this mummery is finished.'</p>
+
+<p>So he sat on the couch while Zehowah was led before
+him again and again each time in clothing more splendid
+than before, and each time with new songs and new
+music. But at the last time the attendants left her
+standing before him and went away, and only a very
+old woman remained at the door, screaming out in a
+cracked voice the customary exhortations. Then she,
+too, went away and the door was shut and Khaled and
+Zehowah were alone.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It was now near the middle of the night. The
+chamber was large and high, lighted by a number of
+hanging lamps such as are made in Bagdad, of brass
+perforated with beautiful designs and filled with coloured
+glasses, in each of which a little wick floats upon oil.
+Upon the walls rich carpets were hung, both Arabian
+and Persian, some taken in war as booty, and some
+brought by merchants in time of peace. A brass chafing
+dish stood at some distance from the couch, and upon
+the coals the women had thrown powdered myrrh and
+benzoin before they went away. But Khaled cared
+little for these things, since he had seen all the treasures
+of the earth in their most secret depositories.</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah had watched him narrowly during the ceremony
+of the dresses and had seen that he felt no surprise
+at anything which was brought before him.</p>
+
+<p>'His own country must be full of great wealth and
+magnificence,' she thought, 'since so much treasure does
+not astonish him.' And she was disappointed.</p>
+
+<p>Now that they were alone, he still sat in silence,
+gazing at her as she stood beside him, and not even
+thinking of any speech, for he was overcome and struck
+dumb by her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>'You are not pleased with what I have shown you,'
+Zehowah said at last in a tone of displeasure and disappointment.
+'And yet you have seen the wealth of
+my father's palace.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'I have seen neither wealth nor treasure, neither
+rich garments, nor precious stones nor chains of gold
+nor embroideries of pearls,' Khaled answered slowly.</p>
+
+<p>But Zehowah frowned and tapped the carpet impatiently
+with her foot where she stood, for she was
+annoyed, having expected him to praise the beauty of
+her many dresses.</p>
+
+<p>'They who have eyes can see,' she said. 'But if you are
+not pleased, my father will give me a hundred dresses more
+beautiful than these, and pearls and jewels without end.'</p>
+
+<p>'I should not see them,' Khaled replied. 'I have
+seen two jewels which have dazzled me so that I can
+see nothing else.'</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah gazed at him with a look of inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>'I have seen the eyes of Zehowah,' he continued,
+'which are as the stars Sirius and Aldebaran, when
+they are over the desert in the nights of winter. What
+jewels can you show me like these?'</p>
+
+<p>Then Zehowah laughed softly and sat down beside
+her husband on the edge of the couch.</p>
+
+<p>'Nevertheless,' she said, 'the dresses are very rich.
+You might admire them also.'</p>
+
+<p>'I will look at them when you are not near me, for
+then my sight will be restored for other things.'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled took her hand in his and held it.</p>
+
+<p>'Tell me, Zehowah, will you love me?' he asked in
+a soft voice.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'You are my lord and my master,' she answered,
+looking modestly downward, and her hand lay quite
+still.</p>
+
+<p>She was so very beautiful that as Khaled sat beside
+her and looked at her downcast face, and knew that she
+was his, he could not easily believe that she was cold
+and indifferent to him.</p>
+
+<p>'By Allah!' he thought, 'can it be so hard to get a
+woman's love? Truly, I think she begins to love me
+already.'</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah looked up and smiled carelessly as though
+answering his question, but Khaled was obliged to
+admit in his heart that the answer lacked clearness,
+for he found it no easier to interpret a woman's smile
+than men had found it before him, and have found it
+since, even to this day.</p>
+
+<p>'You have had many suitors,' he said at last, 'and it is
+said that your father has given you your own free choice,
+allowing you to see them and hear them speak while he
+was receiving them. Tell me why you have chosen me
+rather than the rest, unless it is because you love me?
+For I came with empty hands, and without servants or
+slaves, or retinue of any kind, riding alone out of the
+Red Desert. It was therefore for myself that you took
+me.'</p>
+
+<p>'You are right. It was for yourself that I took you.'</p>
+
+<p>'Then it was for love of me, was it not?'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'There were and still are many and good reasons,'
+answered Zehowah calmly, and at the same time withdrawing
+her hand from his and smoothing back the
+black hair from her forehead. 'I told them all to my
+father, and he was convinced.'</p>
+
+<p>'Tell them to me also,' said Khaled.</p>
+
+<p>So she explained all to him in detail, making him
+see everything as she saw it herself. And the explanation
+was so very clear, that Khaled felt a cold chill in
+his heart as he understood that she had chosen him
+rather for politic reasons, than because she wished him
+for her husband.</p>
+
+<p>'And yet,' she added at the end, 'it was the will of
+Allah, for otherwise I would not have chosen you.'</p>
+
+<p>'But surely,' he said, somewhat encouraged by these
+last words, 'there was some love in the choice, too.'</p>
+
+<p>'How can I tell!' she exclaimed, with a little laugh.
+'What is love?'</p>
+
+<p>Finding himself confronted by such an amazing
+question, Khaled was silent, and took her hand again.
+For though many have asked what love is, no one
+has ever been able to find an answer in words to
+satisfy the questioner, seeing that the answer can have
+no more to do with words than love itself, a matter
+sufficiently explained by a certain wise man, who understood
+the heart of man. If, said he, a man who loves a
+woman, or a woman who loves a man could give in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
+words the precise reason why he or she loves, then love
+itself could be defined in language; but as no man or
+woman has ever succeeded in doing this, I infer that
+they who love best do not themselves know in what
+love consists&mdash;still less therefore can any one else know,
+wherefore the definition is impossible, and no one need
+waste time in trying to find it.</p>
+
+<p>A certain wit has also said that although it be impossible
+for any man to explain the nature of love to
+many persons at the same time, he generally finds it
+easy to make his explanations to one person only. But
+this is a mere quibbling jest and not deserving of any
+attention.</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah expected an answer to her question, and
+Khaled was silent, not because he was as yet too little
+acquainted with the feelings of a man to give them
+expression, but because he already felt so much that it
+was hard for him to speak at all.</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah laughed and shook her head, for she was
+not of a timid temper.</p>
+
+<p>'How can you expect me to say that I love you,
+when you yourself are unable to answer such a simple
+question?' she asked. 'And besides, are you not my
+lord and my master? What is it then to you, whether
+I love you or not?'</p>
+
+<p>But again Khaled was silent, debating whether he
+should tell her the truth, how the angel had promised in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
+Allah's name that if she loved him he should obtain an
+undying soul, and how the task of obtaining her love
+had been laid upon him as a sort of atonement for having
+slain the Indian prince. But as he reflected he
+understood that this would probably estrange her all
+the more from him.</p>
+
+<p>'Yet I can answer your question,' he said at last.
+'What is love? It is that which is in me for you only.'</p>
+
+<p>'But how am I to know what that is?' asked
+Zehowah, drawing up the smooth gold bracelets upon
+her arm and letting them fall down to her wrist, so that
+they jangled like a camel's bell.</p>
+
+<p>'If you love me you will know,' Khaled answered,
+'for then, perhaps, you will feel a tenth part of what
+I feel.'</p>
+
+<p>'And why not all that you feel?' she asked, looking
+at him, but still playing with the bracelets.</p>
+
+<p>'Because it is impossible for any woman to love as
+much as I love you, Zehowah.'</p>
+
+<p>'You mean, perhaps, that a woman is too weak to
+love so well,' she suggested. 'And you think, perhaps,
+that we are weak because we sit all our lives upon the
+carpets in the harem eating sweetmeats, and listening
+to singing girls and to old women who tell us tales of
+long ago. Yet there have been strong women too&mdash;as
+strong as men. Kenda, who tore out the heart of Kamsa&mdash;was
+she weak?'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Women are stronger to hate than to love,' said
+Khaled.</p>
+
+<p>'But a man can forget his hatred in the love of a
+woman, and his strength also,' laughed Zehowah. 'I
+would rather that you should not love me at all, than
+that you should forget to be strong in the day of battle.
+For I have married you that you may lead my people
+to war and bring home the spoil.'</p>
+
+<p>'And if I destroy all your enemies and the enemies
+of your people, will you love me then, Zehowah?'</p>
+
+<p>'Why should I love you then, more than now?
+What has war to do with love? Again, I ask, what is
+it to you whether I love you or not? Am I not your
+wife, and are you not my master? What is this love
+of which you talk? Is it a rich garment that you
+can wear? A precious stone that you can fasten in
+your turban? A rich carpet to spread in your house?
+A treasure of gold, a mountain of ambergris, a bushel
+of pearls from Oman? Why do you covet it? Am I
+not beautiful enough? Then is love henna to make
+my hair bright, or kohl to darken my eyes, or a boiled
+egg with almonds to smooth my face? I have all these
+things, and ointments from Egypt, and perfumes from
+Syria, and if I am not beautiful enough to please you,
+it is the will of Allah, and love will not make me
+fairer.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yet love is beauty,' Khaled answered. 'For Kadijah<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
+was lovely in the eyes of the Prophet, upon whom
+be peace, because she loved him, though she was a
+widow and old.'</p>
+
+<p>'Am I a widow? Am I old?' asked Zehowah with
+some indignation. 'Do I need the imaginary cosmetic
+you call love to smooth my wrinkles, to lighten my eyes,
+or to make my teeth white?'</p>
+
+<p>'No. You need nothing to make you beautiful.'</p>
+
+<p>'And for the matter of that, I can say it of you. You
+tell me that you love me. Is it love that makes your
+body tall and straight, your beard black, your forehead
+smooth, your hand strong? Would not any woman
+see what I see, whether you loved her or not? See!
+Is your hand whiter than mine because you love and I
+do not?'</p>
+
+<p>She laughed again as she held her hand beside his.</p>
+
+<p>'Truly,' thought Khaled, 'it is less easy than I supposed.
+For the heart of a woman who does not love is
+like the desert, when the wind blows over it, and there
+are neither tracks nor landmarks. And I am wandering
+in this desert like a man seeking lost camels.'</p>
+
+<p>But he said nothing, for he was not yet skilled in
+the arguments of love. Thereupon Zehowah smiled, and
+resting her cheek upon her hand, looked into his face,
+as though saying scornfully, 'Is it not all vanity and
+folly?'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled sighed, for he was disappointed, as a thirsty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
+man who, coming to drink of a clear spring, finds
+the water bitter, while his thirst increases and grows
+unbearable.</p>
+
+<p>'Why do you sigh?' Zehowah asked, after a little
+silence. 'Are you weary? Are you tired with the
+feasting? Are you full of bitterness, because I do not
+love you? Command me and I will obey. Are you
+not my lord to whom I am subject?'</p>
+
+<p>He did not speak, but she drew him to her, so that
+his head rested upon her bosom, and she began to sing
+to him in a low voice.</p>
+
+<p>For a long time Khaled kept his eyes shut, listening
+to her voice. Then, on a sudden, he looked up, and
+without speaking so much as a word, he clasped her in
+his arms and kissed her.</p>
+
+<p>Before it was day there was a great tumult in the
+streets of Riad, of which the noise came up even to the
+chamber where Khaled and Zehowah were sleeping.
+Zehowah awoke and listened, wondering what had happened
+and trying to understand the cries of the distant
+multitude. Then she laid her hand upon Khaled's
+forehead and waked him.</p>
+
+<p>'What is it?' he asked.</p>
+
+<p>'It is war,' she answered. 'The enemy have surprised
+the city in the night of the feast. Arise and take
+arms and go out to the people.'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled sprang up and in a moment he was clothed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
+and had girt on his sword. Then he took Zehowah in
+his arms.</p>
+
+<p>'While I live, you are safe,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>'Am I afraid? Go quickly,' she answered.</p>
+
+<p>At that time the Sultan of Nejed was at war with
+the northern tribes of Shammar, and the enemy had
+taken advantage of the month of Ramadhan, in which
+few persons travel, to advance in great numbers to Riad.
+During the three days' feast of Bairam they had moved
+on every night, slaying the inhabitants of the villages
+so that not one had escaped to bring the news, and in
+the daytime they had hidden themselves wherever they
+could find shelter. But in the night in which Khaled
+and Zehowah were married they reached the very walls
+of the city, and waiting until all the people were asleep,
+a party of them had climbed up upon the ramparts and
+had opened one of the gates to their companions after
+killing the guards.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled found his mare and mounted her without
+saddle or bridle in his haste, then drawing his sabre
+he rode swiftly out of the palace into the confusion.
+The enemy with their long spears were driving the
+panicstricken guards and the shrieking people before
+them towards the palace, slaughtering all whom they
+overtook, so that the gutters of the streets were already
+flowing with blood, and the horses of the enemy
+stumbled over the bodies of the defenders. The whole<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
+multitude of the pursued and the pursuers were just
+breaking out of the principal street into the open space
+before the palace when Khaled met them, a single man
+facing ten thousand.</p>
+
+<p>'I shall certainly perish in this fight,' he said to
+himself, 'and yet I shall not receive the reward of the
+faithful, since Allah has not given me a soul. Nevertheless
+certain of these dogs shall eat dirt before the
+rest get into the palace.'</p>
+
+<p>So he pressed his legs to the bare sides of his mare
+and lifted up his sword and rode at the foe, having
+neither buckler, nor helmet, nor shirt of mail to protect
+him, but only his clothes and his turban. But his arm
+was strong, and it has been said by the wise that
+it is better to fall upon an old lion with a reed than to
+stand armed in the way of a man who seeks death.</p>
+
+<p>'Yallah! The Sword of the Lord!' shouted Khaled, in
+such a terrible voice that the assailants ceased to kill for
+a moment, and the terrified guards turned to see whence
+so great a voice could proceed; and some who had seen
+Khaled recognised him and ran to meet him, and the
+others followed.</p>
+
+<p>When the enemy saw a single man riding towards
+them across the great square before the palace, they
+sent up a shout of derision, and turned again to the
+slaughter of such of the inhabitants as could not extricate
+themselves.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Shall one man stop an army?' they said. 'Shall a
+fox turn back a herd of hyænas?'</p>
+
+<p>But when Khaled was among them they found less
+matter for laughter. For the sword was keen, the mare
+was swift to double and turn, and Khaled's hand was
+strong. In the twinkling of an eye two of the enemy
+lay dead, the one cloven to the chin, the other headless.</p>
+
+<p>Then a strange fever seized Khaled, such as he had
+not heard of, and all things turned to scarlet before his
+eyes, both the walls of the houses, and the faces and the
+garments of his foes. Men who saw him say that his
+face was white and shining in the dawn, and that the
+flashing of the sword was like a storm of lightning about
+his head, and after each flash there was a great rain of
+blood, and a crashing like thunder as the horses and
+men of the enemy fell to the earth.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, too, the soldiers of the city and the
+Bedouins of the desert who were within the walls for
+the feast, took courage, and turning fiercely began to
+drive the assailants back by the way they had come,
+towards the market-place in the bazar. But those behind
+still kept pressing forward, while those in front were
+driven back, and the press became so great that the
+Shammars could no longer wield their weapons. The
+enemy were crowded together like sheep in a fold, and
+Khaled, with his men, began to cut a broad road through
+the very midst of them, hewing them down in ranks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
+and throwing them aside, as corn is harvested in
+Egypt.</p>
+
+<p>But after some time Khaled saw that he was alone,
+with a few followers, surrounded by a great throng of
+the enemy, for some of his men had been slain after
+slaying many of their foes, and some had not been able
+to follow, being hindered at first by the heaps of dead
+and afterwards by the multitude of their opponents who
+closed in again over the bloody way through which
+Khaled had passed.</p>
+
+<p>And now the Shammars saw that Khaled could not
+escape them, and they pressed him on every side, but
+the archers dared not shoot at him for fear of hitting
+their own friends, if their arrows chanced to go by the
+mark. Otherwise he would undoubtedly have perished,
+since he had no armour, and not even a buckler with
+which to ward off the darts. But they thrust at him
+with spears and struck at him with their swords, and
+wounded him more than once, though he was not
+conscious of pain or loss of blood, being hot with the
+fever of the fight. He was hard pressed therefore, and
+while he smote without ceasing he began to know that
+unless a speedy rescue came to him, his hour was at
+hand. From the borders of the market-place, the men
+of Riad could still see his sword flashing and striking,
+and they still heard his fierce cry.</p>
+
+<p>He looked about him as he fought, and he saw that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
+he was now almost alone. One after another, the few
+who had penetrated so far forward with him into the
+press, were overwhelmed by numbers and fell bleeding
+from a hundred wounds till only a score were left, and
+Khaled saw that unless he could now cut his way free,
+he must inevitably perish. But the press was stubborn
+and a man might as well hope to make his way through
+a herd of camels crowded together in a narrow street.
+Then Khaled bethought him of a stratagem. He alone
+was on horseback, for the enemy's riders had ridden
+before, and he had met them in the street leading to the
+palace, when he had himself slain many, and where the
+rest were even now falling under the swords of the men
+of Riad. And the few men who were with him were
+also all on foot. Therefore looking across the market-place
+he made as though he saw a great force coming
+to his assistance, and he shouted with all his breath,
+while his arm never rested.</p>
+
+<p>'Smite, men of Nejed!' he cried. 'For I see the
+Sultan himself coming to meet us with five hundred horsemen!
+Smite! Yallah! It is the Sword of the Lord!'</p>
+
+<p>Hearing these words, his men were encouraged, and
+of the enemy many turned their heads to see the new
+danger. But being on foot they were hindered from
+seeing by the throng. Yet so much the more Khaled
+shouted that the Sultan was coming, and many of the
+heads that turned to look were not turned back again,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
+but rolled down to the feet of those to whom they had
+belonged. The brave men who were with Khaled took
+heart and hewed with all their might, taking up the cry
+of their leader when they saw that it disconcerted their
+foes, so that the last took fright, and the panic ran
+through the whole multitude.</p>
+
+<p>'We shall be slain like sheep, and taken like locusts
+under a mantle, for we cannot move!' they cried, and
+they began to press away out of the market-place, forcing
+their comrades before them into the narrow streets.</p>
+
+<p>But here many perished. For while every man in
+Riad had taken his sword and had gone out of his house
+to fight, the women had dragged up cauldrons of boiling
+water, and also hand-mill stones, to the roofs, and they
+scalded and crushed their retreating foes. Then too, as
+the market-place was cleared, the soldiers came on from
+the side of the palace, having slain all that stood in
+their way and taken most of their horses alive, which
+alone was a great booty, for there are not many horses
+in Nejed besides those of the Sultan, though these are
+the very best and fleetest in all Arabia. But the Shammars
+of the north are great horse-breeders. So the
+soldiers mounted and joined Khaled in the pursuit,
+and a great slaughter followed in the streets, though
+some of the enemy were able to escape to the gates, and
+warn those of their fellows who were outside to flee to
+the hills for safety, leaving much booty behind.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At the time of the second call to prayer Khaled dismounted
+from his mare in the market-place, and there
+was not one of the enemy left alive within the walls.
+Those who remember that day say that there were five
+thousand dead in the streets in Riad.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled made such ablution as he could, and having
+prayed and given thanks to Allah, he went back on foot
+to the palace, his bay mare following him, and thrusting
+her nose into his hand as he walked. For she was little
+hurt, and the blood that covered her shoulders and her
+flanks was not her own. But Khaled had many wounds
+on him, so that his companions wondered how he was
+able to walk.</p>
+
+<p>In the court of the palace the Sultan came to meet
+him, and fell upon his neck and embraced him, for
+many messengers had come, from time to time, telling
+how the fight went, and of the great slaughter. And
+Khaled smiled, for he thought that he should now win
+the love of Zehowah.</p>
+
+<p>'Said I not truly that he is as brave as the lion, and
+as strong as the camel?' cried the Sultan, addressing
+those who stood in the court. 'Has he not scattered our
+enemies as the wind scatters the sand? Surely he is
+well called by the name Khaled.'</p>
+
+<p>'Forget not your own men,' Khaled answered, 'for
+they have shared in the danger and have slain more
+than I, and deserve the spoil. There was a score of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
+stout fellows with me at the last in the market-place,
+whose faces I should know again on a cloudy night.
+They fought as well as I, and it was the will of Allah
+that their enemies should broil everlastingly and drink
+boiling water. Let them be rewarded.'</p>
+
+<p>'They shall every one have a rich garment and a
+sum of money, besides their share of the spoil. But as
+for you, my beloved son, go in and rest, and bind up
+your wounds, and afterwards there shall be feasting
+and merriment until the night.'</p>
+
+<p>'The enemy is not destroyed yet,' answered Khaled.
+'Command rather that the army make ready for the
+pursuit, and when I have washed I will arm myself
+and we will ride out and pursue the dogs until not one
+of them is left alive, and by the help of Allah we will
+take all Shammar and lay it under tribute and bring
+back the women captive. After that we shall feast
+more safely, and sleep without fear of being waked by a
+herd of hyænas in our streets.'</p>
+
+<p>'Nay, but you must rest before going upon this
+expedition,' objected the Sultan.</p>
+
+<p>'The true believer will find rest in the grave, and
+feasting in paradise,' answered Khaled.</p>
+
+<p>'This is true. But even the camel must eat and drink
+on the journey, or both he and his master will perish.'</p>
+
+<p>'Let us then eat and drink quickly, that we may the
+sooner go.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'As you will, let it be,' said the Sultan, with a sigh,
+for he loved feasting and music, being now too old to
+go out and fight himself as he had formerly done.</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon Khaled went into the harem and returned
+to Zehowah's apartment. As he went the women
+gathered round him with cries of gladness and songs of
+triumph, staunching the blood that flowed from his
+wounds with their veils and garments as he walked.
+And others ran before to prepare the bath and to tell
+Zehowah of his coming.</p>
+
+<p>When she saw him she ran forward and took him by
+the hands and led him in, and herself she bathed his
+wounds and bound them up with precious balsams of
+great healing power, not suffering any of the women to
+help her nor to touch him, but sending them away so
+that she might be alone with Khaled.</p>
+
+<p>'I have slain certain of your enemies, Zehowah,' he
+said, at last, 'and I have driven out the rest from the
+city.' As yet neither of them had spoken.</p>
+
+<p>'Do you think that I have not heard what you have
+done?' Zehowah asked. 'You have saved us all from
+death and captivity. You are our father and our
+mother. And now I will bring you food and drink
+and afterwards you shall sleep.'</p>
+
+<p>'So you are well pleased with the doings of the husband
+you have married,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>He was displeased, for he had supposed that she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
+would love him for his deeds and for his wounds and
+that she would speak differently. But though she
+tended him and bound his wounds, and bathed his brow
+with perfumed waters, and laid pillows under his head
+and fanned him, as a slave might have done, he saw
+that there was no warmth in her cheek, and that the
+depths of her eyes were empty, and that her hands were
+neither hot nor cold. By all these signs he knew that
+she felt no love for him, so he spoke coldly to her.</p>
+
+<p>'Is it for me to be pleased or displeased with the
+deeds of my lord and master?' she asked. 'Nevertheless,
+thousands are even now blessing your name and
+returning thanks to Allah for having sent them a
+preserver in the hour of danger. I am but one of
+them.'</p>
+
+<p>'I would rather see a faint light in your eyes, as of
+a star rising in the desert than hear the blessings of all
+the men of Nejed. I would rather that your hand were
+cold when it touches mine, and your cheek hot when I
+kiss it, than that your father should bestow upon me all
+the treasures of Riad.'</p>
+
+<p>'Is that love?' asked Zehowah with a laugh. 'A
+cold hand, a hot cheek, a bright eye?'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled was silent, for he saw that she understood
+his words but not his meaning. It was now noon and
+it was very hot, even in the inner shade of the harem,
+and Khaled was glad to rest after the hard fighting,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
+for his many slight wounds smarted with the healing
+balsam, and his heart was heavy and discontented.</p>
+
+<p>Then Zehowah called a slave woman to fan him with
+a palm leaf, and presently she brought him meat and
+rice and dates to eat, and cool drink in a golden cup,
+and she sat at his feet while he refreshed himself.</p>
+
+<p>'How many did you slay with your own hand?' she
+asked at last, taking up the good sword which lay beside
+him on the carpet.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV</h3>
+
+
+<p>Khaled pondered deeply, being uncertain what to do,
+and trying to find out some action which could win for
+him what he wanted. Zehowah received no answer to
+her question as to the number of enemies he had slain
+and she did not ask again, for she thought that he was
+weary and wished to rest in silence.</p>
+
+<p>'What do you like best in the whole world?' he
+asked after a long time, to see what she would say.</p>
+
+<p>'I like you best,' she answered, smiling, while she
+still played with his sword.</p>
+
+<p>'That is very strange,' Khaled answered, musing.
+But the colour rose darkly in his cheeks above his
+beard, for he was pleased now as he had been displeased
+before.</p>
+
+<p>'Why is it strange?' asked Zehowah. 'Are you not
+the palm tree in my plain, and a tower of refuge for my
+people?'</p>
+
+<p>'And will you dry up the well from which the tree
+draws life, and take away the corner-stone of the tower's
+foundation?'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'You speak in fables,' said Zehowah, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>'Yet you imagined the fable yourself, when you
+likened me to a palm and to a tower. But I am no
+lover of allegories. The sword is my argument, and my
+wit is in my arm. The wall by the tree is the wall of
+love, and the chief foundation of the tower is the love of
+Zehowah. If you destroy that, the tree will wither and
+the tower will fall.'</p>
+
+<p>'Surely there was never such a man as you,' Zehowah
+answered, half jesting but half in earnest. 'You
+are as one who has bought a white mare; and though
+she is fleet, and good to look at, and obedient to his
+voice and knee, yet he is discontented because she
+cannot speak to him, and he would fain have her black
+instead of white, and if possible would teach her to sing
+like a Persian nightingale.'</p>
+
+<p>'Is it then not natural in a woman to love man?
+Have you heard no tales of love from the story-tellers of
+the harem?'</p>
+
+<p>'I have heard many such tales, but none of them
+were told of me,' Zehowah replied. 'Will you drink
+again? Is the drink too sweet, or is it not cool?'</p>
+
+<p>She had risen from her seat and held the golden cup,
+bending down to him, so that her face was near his.
+He laid his hand upon her shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>'Hear me, Zehowah,' he said. 'I want but one thing
+in the world, and it was for that I came out of the Red<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
+Desert to be your husband. And that thing I will
+have, though the price be greater than rubies, or than
+blood, or than life itself.'</p>
+
+<p>'If it is mine, I freely give it to you. If it is not
+mine, take it by force, or I will help you to take it by
+a stratagem, if I can. Am I not your wife?'</p>
+
+<p>She spoke thus, supposing from his face that he meant
+some treasure that could be taken by strength or by
+wile, for she could not believe a man could speak so
+seriously of a mere thought such as love.</p>
+
+<p>'Neither my right hand nor your wit can give me
+this, but only your heart, Zehowah,' he answered, still
+holding her and looking at her.</p>
+
+<p>But now she did not laugh, for she saw that he was
+greatly in earnest.</p>
+
+<p>'You are still talking of love,' she said. 'And you
+are not jesting. I do not know what to answer you.
+Gladly will I say, I love you. Is that all? What is it
+else? Are those the words?'</p>
+
+<p>'I care little for the words. But I will have the
+reality, though it cost your life and mine.'</p>
+
+<p>'My life? Will you take my life, for the sake of a
+thought?'</p>
+
+<p>'A thought!' he exclaimed. 'Do you call love a
+thought? I had not believed a woman could be so
+cold as that.'</p>
+
+<p>'If not a thought, what then? I have spoken the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
+truth. If it were a treasure, or anything that can be
+taken, you could take it, and I could help you. But if
+the possibility of possessing it lie not in deeds, it lies
+in thoughts, and is itself a thought. If you can teach
+me, I will think what you will; but if you cannot teach
+me, who shall? And how will it profit you to take my
+life or your own?'</p>
+
+<p>'Is it possible that love is only a thought?' asked
+Khaled, speaking rather to himself than to her.</p>
+
+<p>'It must be,' she answered. 'The body is what it is
+in the eyes of others, but the soul is what it thinks
+itself to be, happy or unhappy, loving or not loving.'</p>
+
+<p>'You are too subtle for me, Zehowah,' Khaled said.
+'Yet I know that this is not all true.'</p>
+
+<p>For he knew that he possessed no soul, and yet he
+loved her. Moreover he could think himself happy or
+unhappy.</p>
+
+<p>'You are too subtle,' he repeated. 'I will take my
+sword again and I will go out and fight, and pursue the
+enemy and waste their country, for it is not so hard to
+cut through steel as to touch the heart of a woman who
+does not love, and it is easier to tear down towers and
+strongholds of stone with the naked hands than to build
+a temple upon the moving sand of an empty heart.'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled would have risen at once, but Zehowah took
+his hand and entreated him to stay with her.</p>
+
+<p>'Will you go out in the heat of the day, wounded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
+and wearied?' she asked. 'Surely you will take a
+fever and die before you have followed the Shammars
+so far as two days' journey.'</p>
+
+<p>'My wounds are slight, and I am not weary,' Khaled
+answered. 'When the smith has heated the iron in
+the forge, does he wait until it is cold before striking?'</p>
+
+<p>'But think also of the soldiers, who have striven
+hard, and cannot thus go out upon a great expedition
+without preparation as well as rest.'</p>
+
+<p>'I will take those whom I can find. And if they
+will go with me, it is well. But if not, I will go alone,
+and they and the rest will follow after.'</p>
+
+<p>'It is summer, too,' said Zehowah, keeping him back.
+'Is this a time to go out into the northern desert?
+Both men and beasts will perish by the way.'</p>
+
+<p>'Has not Allah bound every man's fate about his
+neck? And can a man cast it from him?'</p>
+
+<p>'I know not otherwise, but if heat and hunger and
+thirst do not kill the men, they will certainly destroy
+the beasts, whose names are not recorded by Asrael, and
+who have no destiny of their own.'</p>
+
+<p>'You hinder me,' said Khaled. 'And yet you do
+not know how many of the Shammar may be yet lurking
+within a day's march of the city, slaying your
+people, burning their houses and destroying their harvest.
+Let me go. Will you love me better if I stay?'</p>
+
+<p>'You will be the better able to get the victory.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Will you love me better if I stay?'</p>
+
+<p>'If you go now, you may fail in your purpose and
+perish as well. How could I love you at all then?'</p>
+
+<p>'It is the victory you love then&mdash;not me?'</p>
+
+<p>'Could I love defeat? Nay, do not be angry with
+me. Stay here at least until the evening. Think of
+the burning sun and the raging thirst and the smarting
+of your wounds which have only been dressed this first
+time. Think of the soldiers, too&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>'They can bear what I can bear. Was it not summer-time
+when the Prophet went out against the Romans?'</p>
+
+<p>'I do not know. Stay with me, Khaled.'</p>
+
+<p>'I will come back when I have destroyed the
+Shammars.'</p>
+
+<p>'And if the soldiers will not go with you, will you
+indeed go out alone?'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes. I will go alone. When they see that they
+will follow me. They are not foxes. They are brave
+men.'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled rose and girt his sword about him. Zehowah
+helped him, seeing that she could not persuade him to
+stay.</p>
+
+<p>'Farewell,' he said, shortly, and without so much as
+touching her hand he turned and went out. She followed
+him to the door of the room and stood watching as he
+went away.</p>
+
+<p>'One of us two was to rule,' she said to herself, 'and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
+it is he, for I cannot move him. But what is this talk
+of love? Does he need love, who is himself the master?'</p>
+
+<p>She sighed and went back to the carpet on which
+they had been sitting. Then she called in her women
+and bid them tell her all they had heard about the fight
+in the morning; and they, thinking to please her, extolled
+the deeds of Khaled and of the tens he had slain
+they made hundreds, and of the thousands of the
+enemy's army, they made tens of thousands, till the
+walls of Riad could not have contained the hosts of
+which they spoke, and the dry sand of the desert could
+not have drunk all the blood which had been shed.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Khaled went into the outer court of
+the palace, where many soldiers were congregated together
+in the shade of the high wall, eating camel's
+meat and blanket bread and drinking the water from the
+well. They were all able-bodied and unhurt, for those
+who had been wounded were at their houses, tended by
+their wives.</p>
+
+<p>'Men of Riad!' cried Khaled, standing before them.
+'We have fought a good fight this morning and the
+power of our foes is broken. But all are not yet destroyed,
+and it may be that there are many thousands
+still lurking within a day's march of the city, slaying
+the people, burning their houses and destroying their
+harvests. Let us go out and kill them all before they
+are able to go back to their own country. Afterwards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
+we will pursue those who are already escaping, and we
+will lay all the tribes of Shammar under tribute and
+bring back the women captive.'</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon a division arose among the soldiers.
+Some were for going at once with Khaled, but others
+said it was the hot season and no time for war.</p>
+
+<p>'It is indeed summer,' said Khaled. 'But if the
+Shammars were able to come to Riad in the heat, the
+men of Riad are able to go to them. And I at least
+will go at once, and those who wish to share the spoil
+will go with me, but those who are satisfied to sit in
+the shade and eat camel's meat will stay behind. In
+an hour's time I will ride out of the northern gate.'</p>
+
+<p>So saying, Khaled rode slowly down into the city
+towards the market-place. The people were carrying
+away their own dead, and dragging off the bodies of
+their enemies, with camels, by fours and fives tied together
+to bury them in a great ditch without the walls.
+When Khaled appeared, many of the men gathered
+round him, with cries of joy, for they had supposed that
+some of his wounds were dangerous and that they should
+not see him for many days.</p>
+
+<p>'Wallah! He is with us again!' they shouted, jostling
+each other to get near, and standing on tiptoe to see
+the good mare that had carried him so well in the fight.</p>
+
+<p>'Masallah! I am with you,' answered Khaled, 'and
+if you will go with me we will send many more of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
+Shammars to eat thorns and thistles, as many as dwell
+in Kasim and Tabal Shammar as far as Haïl; and by
+the help of Allah we will take the city of Haïl itself
+and divide the spoil and bring away the women captive;
+and when we have taken all that there is we will lay
+the land under tribute and make it subject to Nejed.
+So let those who will go with me arm themselves and
+take every man his horse or his camel, and dates and
+barley and water-skins, and in an hour's time we will
+ride out. For Allah will certainly give us the victory.'</p>
+
+<p>'Let us bury the dead to-day and to-morrow we will
+go,' said many of those nearest to him.</p>
+
+<p>'Are there no old men and boys in Riad to bind the
+sheaves you have mown?' asked Khaled. 'And are
+there no women to mourn over the dead of your kindred
+who have fallen in a good fight? And as for to-morrow,
+it is yet in Allah's hand. But to-day we have already
+with us. However, if you will not go with me, I will
+go alone.'</p>
+
+<p>The men were pleased with Khaled's speech, and
+indeed the greater part of the dead were buried by this
+time, for all the people had made haste to the work,
+fearing lest the bodies should bring a pestilence among
+them, since it was summer-time and very hot. Then
+all those who were unhurt and could bear arms, went
+and washed themselves, and took their weapons and
+food, as Khaled had directed them. Before the call to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
+afternoon prayers the whole host went out of the
+northern gate.</p>
+
+<p>Then Khaled accomplished all that he had spoken
+of, and much more, for he drove the scattered force of
+the enemy before him, overtaking all at last and slaying
+all whom he overtook as far as Zulfah which is by the
+narrow end of the Nefud. Here he rested a short time,
+and then quickly crossing the sand, he entered the
+country called Kasim which is subject to the Shammars.
+Here he was told by a woman who had been taken
+that the Shammars were coming with a new army
+against him out of Haïl. He therefore hid his host in a
+pass of the hills just above the plain, and sent down a
+few Bedouins to encamp at the foot of the mountains,
+bidding them call themselves Shammars and make a
+show of being friendly to the enemy. So when the
+army of the Shammars reached the foot of the hills,
+they saw the tents and only one or two camels, and
+Khaled's Bedouins came out and welcomed them, and
+told them that Khaled was still crossing the Nefud, and
+that if they made haste through the hills they might
+come upon him unawares and at an advantage as he
+began to ascend. Thereupon the enemy rejoiced and
+entered the pass in haste, after filling their water-skins.</p>
+
+<p>When they were in the midst of the hills, Khaled
+and his army sprang up from the ambush and fell upon
+them, and utterly destroyed them, taking all their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
+horses and camels and arms; after which he went down
+into the plain and laid waste the country about Haïl.
+He took the city as the Shammars had taken Riad.
+For he himself got upon the wall at night, with the
+strongest and the bravest of his followers, and slew the
+guards and opened the gate just before the dawn. But
+there was no Khaled in Haïl to rally the soldiers and
+give them heart to turn and make a stand in the streets.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled then entered the palace and took the Sultan
+of Shammar alive, not suffering him to be hurt, for he
+wished to bring him to Riad. This Sultan was a man of
+middle age, having only one eye, and also otherwise ill-favoured,
+besides being cowardly and fat. So Khaled
+ordered that he should be put into a litter, and the
+litter into a cage, and the cage slung between two
+camels. But he commanded that the women of the
+harem should be well treated and brought before him,
+that he might see them, intending to bring back the
+most beautiful of them as presents to his father-in-law.</p>
+
+<p>'Surely,' said the men who were with him, 'you will
+keep the fairest for yourself.'</p>
+
+<p>But Khaled turned angrily upon them.</p>
+
+<p>'Have I not lately married the most beautiful woman
+in the world?' he asked. 'I tell you it is for her sake
+that I have destroyed the Shammars. But the Sultan
+shall have the best of these women, and afterwards the
+rest of them will be divided amongst you by lot.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When the women heard that they were to be distributed
+among the men of Nejed they at first made a
+pretence of howling and beating their breasts, but they
+rejoiced secretly and soon began to laugh and talk
+among themselves, pointing out to each other the
+strongest and most richly dressed of Khaled's
+followers, as though choosing husbands among them.
+But one of them neither wept nor spoke to her companions,
+but stood silently watching Khaled, and when
+he sat down upon a carpet in the chief kahwah of the
+house, she brought him drink in a goblet set with pearls
+from Katar, and sat down at his feet as though she had
+been his wife. But he took little heed of her at first,
+for he was busy with grave matters.</p>
+
+<p>The other women, seeing what she did, thought that
+she was acting wisely in the hope of gaining Khaled's
+favour, seeing that he was the chief of their enemies, so
+they, too, came near, and brought water for his hands,
+and perfumes, and sweetmeats, thinking to outdo her.
+But she pushed them away, taking what they brought
+for him, and offering it herself.</p>
+
+<p>'Are you better than we?' the women said angrily.
+'Has our lord chosen you for himself, that you will not
+let us come near him?'</p>
+
+<p>Then Khaled noticed her and began to wonder at
+her attention and zeal.</p>
+
+<p>'What is your name?' he asked. But she did<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
+not speak. 'Who is she?' he inquired of the other
+women.</p>
+
+<p>'She is an unbeliever,' they answered contemptuously.
+'And she is proud, for she trusts in her white skin and
+her blue eyes, and her hair which is red without henna.
+She thinks she is better than we. Command us to
+uncover our faces, that you may see and judge
+between us.'</p>
+
+<p>'Let it be so. Let us see who is the fairest,' said
+Khaled, and he laughed.</p>
+
+<p>Then the woman who sat at his feet threw aside her
+veil, and all the others did the same. Khaled saw that
+the one was certainly more beautiful than the rest, for
+her skin was as white as milk, and her eyes like the sea
+of Oman when it is blue in winter. She had also long
+hair, plaited in three tresses which came down to her
+feet, red as the locusts when the sun shines upon them
+at evening, and not dyed.</p>
+
+<p>'There is a bay mare in a stable of black ones,'
+Khaled said. 'What is the name of the bay mare?'</p>
+
+<p>'Her name is Aziz, and she is a Christian,' said one
+of the women.</p>
+
+<p>'Not Aziz&mdash;Almasta,' said the beautiful woman in
+an accent which showed that she could not speak Arabic
+fluently. 'Almasta, a Christian.'</p>
+
+<p>'She was lately sent as a present to our master by
+the Emir of Basrah,' said one of the others.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'He paid a thousand and five hundred sequins for her,
+for she was brought from Georgia,' said another. 'But
+I am a free woman, and myself the daughter of an emir.'</p>
+
+<p>Then all the others began to scream.</p>
+
+<p>'It is a lie,' they cried. 'Your father was a white
+slave from Syria.'</p>
+
+<p>'You are fools,' retorted the woman who had spoken.
+'You should have said that you were also free women
+and the daughters of emirs. So our lord would have
+treated you with more consideration.'</p>
+
+<p>The others saw their folly and were silent and drew
+back, but Khaled only smiled.</p>
+
+<p>'As good mares are bred in the stable as in the
+desert,' he said, and the women laughed with him at the
+jest, for they saw that it pleased him.</p>
+
+<p>But Almasta was silent and sat at his feet, looking
+into his face.</p>
+
+<p>'You must learn to talk in Arabic,' he said, 'and then
+you will be able to tell stories of your native country
+to the Sultan, for he loves tales of travel.'</p>
+
+<p>Almasta smiled and bent her head a little, but she
+did not understand all he said, being but lately come
+into Arabia.</p>
+
+<p>'I will go with you,' she answered.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes. You will go with me to Riad to the Sultan,
+and perhaps he will make you his wife, for he has none
+at present.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'I will go with you,' she repeated, looking at him.</p>
+
+<p>'She does not understand you,' said the women,
+laughing at her ignorance of their own tongue.</p>
+
+<p>'It is no matter,' said Khaled. 'She will learn in
+due time. Perhaps it has pleased Allah to send my
+lord the Sultan a wife without a tongue for a blessing
+in his old age.'</p>
+
+<p>'I will go with you,' Almasta said again.</p>
+
+<p>'She can say nothing else,' jeered the women.</p>
+
+<p>One of them pulled her by her upper garment, so
+that she looked round.</p>
+
+<p>'Can you say this, "My father was a dog and the
+son of dogs"?' asked the woman.</p>
+
+<p>But Almasta pushed her angrily away, for she half
+understood. Then the woman grew angry too, and
+shook her fist in Almasta's face.</p>
+
+<p>'If you fight, you shall eat sticks,' said Khaled, and
+then they were all quiet.</p>
+
+<p>Thus he took possession of the city of Haïl and remaining
+there some time he reduced all the country to submission,
+so that it remained a part of the kingdom of Nejed for
+many years after that. For the power of the Shammars
+was broken, and they could nowhere have mustered a
+thousand men able to bear arms. Khaled set a governor
+in the place of the Sultan and ordered all the laws of
+the country in the same manner as those of Nejed, and
+after he had been absent from Riad nearly two months,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
+he set aside a part of his force to remain behind and
+keep the peace in case there should be an outbreak,
+and with the rest he began to journey homeward, taking
+a great spoil and many captives with him.</p>
+
+<p>During the march most of the women captives rode
+on camels, but a few of the most beautiful were taken
+in litters lest the fatigues of riding should injure their
+appearance and thus diminish their value. Almasta
+was one of these, and the Sultan of Haïl was taken in a
+cage as has been said, though he was not otherwise ill-treated,
+and received his portion of camel's meat and
+bread, equal to that of the soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled sent messengers on fleet mares to Riad to
+give warning of his coming, but he could not himself
+proceed very quickly, because his army was burdened
+with so much spoil; and as there was now no haste to
+overtake an enemy he journeyed chiefly at night, resting
+during the day wherever there was water, for although
+the summer was far advanced it was still hot. He
+thought continually of Zehowah, by day in his tent and
+by night on the march, for he supposed that she would
+be glad when she heard of the victory and that she
+would now love him, because he had avenged her people,
+and taken Haïl, and brought back gold and captives,
+besides other treasures.</p>
+
+<p>'She was already pleased with my deeds, before we
+left Riad,' he thought, 'for she asked me how many of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
+the Shammars I had slain with my own hand, and at
+the last she wished me to stay with her, most probably
+that I might tell her more about the fight. How much
+the more will she be glad now, since I have killed so
+many more and have brought back treasure, and made
+a whole country subject to her father. Shall not blood
+and gold buy the love of a woman?'</p>
+
+<p>It chanced once during this journey that Khaled
+was sitting at the door of his tent after the sun had
+gone down and before the night march had begun.
+Upon the one side, at a little distance, was the tent of
+the women captives who had been taken from the palace
+in Haïl, and upon the other the soldiers had set down
+the cage in which the Sultan of Shammar was carried.
+The men had laid a carpet over the cage to keep the
+sun from the prisoner during the heat of the day, lest
+he should not reach Riad alive as Khaled desired. For
+the Sultan was fat and of a choleric temper. Now the
+soldiers had given him food but had forgotten to bring
+him water, and it was hot under the carpet now that
+the evening had come. But he could lift it up a little
+on one side, and having done so, he began to cry out,
+cursing Khaled and railing at him, not knowing that he
+was so near at hand.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh you whose portion it shall be to broil everlastingly,
+and to eat thistles and thorns, and to lie
+bound in red-hot chains as I lie in this cage! Have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
+you brought me out into the desert to die of thirst like
+a lame camel? Surely your entertainment on the day
+of judgment shall be boiling water and the fruit of
+Al Zakkam, and whenever you try to get out of hell
+you shall be dragged back again and beaten with iron
+clubs, and your skin shall dissolve, and the boiling
+water shall be poured upon your head!'</p>
+
+<p>In this way the captive cried out, for he was very
+thirsty. But when Khaled saw that no one gave him
+water he called in the darkness to the women who sat
+by their tent.</p>
+
+<p>'Fetch water and give the man to drink,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>One of the women rose quickly and filled a jar at the
+well close by, and took it to the cage. But then the
+railing and cursing broke out afresh, so that Khaled
+wondered what had happened.</p>
+
+<p>'Who has sent me this unbelieving woman to
+torture me with thirst?' cried the prisoner. 'Are you
+not Aziz whom I was about to take for my fourth wife
+on account of your red hair? But your hair shall be a
+perpetual flame hereafter, burning the bones of your
+head, and your flesh shall be white with heat as iron in
+a forge. If I were still in my kingdom you should eat
+many sticks! If Allah delivers me from my enemies
+I will cause your skin to be embroidered with gold for
+a trapping to my horse!'</p>
+
+<p>The moon rose at this time, being a little past the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
+full, and Khaled looked towards the cage and saw that
+the woman was standing two paces away from the
+Sultan's outstretched hand. She dabbled in the cool
+water with her fingers so that a plashing sound was
+heard, and then drank herself, and scattered afterwards
+a few drops in the face of the thirsty captive.</p>
+
+<p>'It is good water,' she said. 'It is cold.'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled knew from her broken speech that it was
+Almasta, and he understood that she was torturing the
+prisoner with the sound and sight of the water, and
+with her words. So he rose from his place and went
+to the cage.</p>
+
+<p>'Did I not tell you to give him drink?' he asked,
+standing before the woman.</p>
+
+<p>'Oh my lord, be merciful,' cried the captive, when he
+saw that Khaled himself was there. 'Be merciful and
+let me drink, for your heart is easily moved to pity,
+and by an act of charity you shall hereafter sit in the
+shade of the tree Sedrat and drink for ever of the wine
+of paradise.'</p>
+
+<p>'I do not desire wine,' said Khaled. 'But you shall
+certainly not thirst. Give him the jar,' he said to
+Almasta. But she shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>'He is bad and ugly,' she said. 'If he does not
+drink, he will die.'</p>
+
+<p>Then Khaled put out his hand to take the jar of
+water, but Almasta threw it violently to the ground,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
+and it broke to pieces. Thereupon the captive began
+again to rail and curse at Almasta and to implore
+Khaled with many blessings.</p>
+
+<p>'You shall drink, for I will bring water myself,' said
+Khaled. He went back to his tent and took his own
+jar to the well, and filled it carefully.</p>
+
+<p>When he turned he saw that Almasta was running
+from his tent towards the cage, with a drawn sword in
+her hand. He then ran also, and being very swift of
+foot, he overtook her just as she thrust at the Sultan
+through the bars. But the sword caught in the folds of
+the soft carpet, and Khaled took it from her hand, and
+thrust her down so that she fell upon her knees. Then
+he gave the prisoner the jar with the water that
+remained in it, for some had been spilt as he ran.</p>
+
+<p>'Who has given you the right to kill my captives?'
+he asked of Almasta.</p>
+
+<p>'Kill me, then!' she cried.</p>
+
+<p>'Indeed, if you were not so valuable, I would cut off
+your head,' Khaled answered. 'Why do you wish me
+to kill you?'</p>
+
+<p>'I hate him,' she said, pointing to the captive who
+was drinking like a thirsty camel.</p>
+
+<p>'That is no reason why I should kill you. Go back
+to the tents.'</p>
+
+<p>But Almasta laid her hand on the sword he held
+and tried to bring it to her own throat.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'This is a strange woman,' said Khaled. 'Why do
+you wish to die? You shall go to Riad and be the
+Sultan's wife.'</p>
+
+<p>'No, no!' she cried. 'Kill me! Not him, not
+him!'</p>
+
+<p>'Of whom do you speak?'</p>
+
+<p>'Him!' she answered, again pointing to the prisoner.
+'Is he not the Sultan?'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled laughed aloud, for he saw that she had
+supposed she was to be taken to Riad to be made the
+wife of the Sultan of Shammar. Indeed, the other
+women had told her so, to anger her.</p>
+
+<p>'Not this man,' he said, endeavouring to make her
+understand. 'There is another Sultan at Riad. The
+Sultan of Shammar is one, the Sultan of Nejed another.'</p>
+
+<p>'You?' she asked, suddenly springing up. 'With
+you?'</p>
+
+<p>The moon was bright and Khaled saw that her eyes
+gleamed like stars and her face grew warm, and when
+she took his hands her own were cold.</p>
+
+<p>'No, not I,' he answered. 'I am not the Sultan.'</p>
+
+<p>But her face became grey in the moonlight, and she
+covered her head with her veil and went slowly back to
+her tent.</p>
+
+<p>'This woman loves me,' Khaled thought. 'And as
+I have not talked much with her, it must be because I
+am strong and have conquered the people among whom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
+she was captive. How much the more then, will
+Zehowah love me, for the same reason.'</p>
+
+<p>So he was light of heart, and soon afterwards he
+commanded everything to be made ready and mounted
+his bay mare for the night march.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V</h3>
+
+
+<p>When Khaled was within half a day's march of Riad,
+the Sultan came out to meet him with a great train of
+attendants and courtiers, with cooks bringing food and
+sweetmeats, and a number of musicians. And they all
+encamped together for a short time in the shade of the
+trees, for there were gardens in the place. The Sultan
+embraced Khaled and put upon him a very magnificent
+garment, after which they sat down together in a large
+tent which the Sultan had brought with him. When
+they had eaten and refreshed themselves they began to
+talk, and Khaled told his father-in-law all that he had
+done, and gave him an account of the spoils which he
+had brought back, commanding the most valuable
+objects to be brought into the tent. After this the
+Sultan desired to see the women captives.</p>
+
+<p>'There is one especially whom it may please you to
+take for yourself,' said Khaled, and he ordered Almasta
+to be brought in.</p>
+
+<p>When the male slaves had left the tent, Almasta
+drew aside her veil. The Sultan looked at her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
+and smiled, stroking his beard, for he was much
+pleased.</p>
+
+<p>'Her face is like a pearl and her hair is a setting of
+red gold,' he said. 'Truly she is like the sunrise on a
+fair morning when there are red clouds in the east.'</p>
+
+<p>Almasta looked attentively at him, and afterwards she
+glanced at Khaled, who could not avoid looking at her
+on account of her beauty. Her face was grave and
+indifferent. Then Khaled told the Sultan how she had
+hated the Sultan of Shammar and had tried to kill him
+on the journey.</p>
+
+<p>'This is a dangerous woman, my son,' said the old
+man. But he laughed as he said it, for although he
+was old, he was no coward. 'She is dangerous, indeed.
+Will you love me, pearl of my soul's treasures?' he
+inquired of her, still smiling.</p>
+
+<p>'You are my lord and my master,' she answered,
+looking down.</p>
+
+<p>When Khaled heard this he wondered whether his
+father-in-law would get any affection from her. Zehowah
+had answered in the same words.</p>
+
+<p>'By Allah, I will give you such gifts as will make
+you love me,' said the Sultan. 'What shall I give
+you?'</p>
+
+<p>'His head,' answered Almasta, raising her eyes
+quickly.</p>
+
+<p>'The head of the Sultan of Shammar?'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Almasta nodded, and Khaled could see that her lips
+trembled.</p>
+
+<p>'A dead man has no companions,' said the Sultan,
+looking at Khaled to see what he would do. But
+Khaled cared little, and said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>So the Sultan called a slave and ordered the captive's
+head to be struck off immediately. Then Almasta
+threw herself upon the carpet on the floor of the tent
+and embraced his feet.</p>
+
+<p>'See how easily the love of a woman is got,' Khaled
+thought, 'even by an old man whose beard is grey and
+his limbs heavy.'</p>
+
+<p>When Almasta rose again, she looked at Khaled
+triumphantly, as though to remind him of the night on
+the journey when he had hindered her from killing the
+captive in his cage. But though he understood her, he
+held his peace, for he had cared nothing whether the
+prisoner lived or died after he had delivered him over to
+his father-in-law, and he was considering whether he
+might not please Zehowah in some similar manner. This
+was not easy, however, for he was not aware that Zehowah
+had any private enemy, whose head he might offer her.</p>
+
+<p>After the Sultan had seen the other women and the
+best of the spoils, Khaled begged that he might be
+allowed to ride on into Riad alone, for he saw that the
+Sultan intended to spend the night in feasting where he
+had encamped. The Sultan was so much pleased with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
+Almasta and so greatly diverted in examining the rich
+stuffs and the gold and silver vessels and jewels, that he
+let Khaled go, almost without trying to detain him,
+though he made him many speeches praising his conduct
+of the war, and would have loaded him with gifts.
+But Khaled would take nothing with him, saying that he
+would only receive his just share with the rest; and the
+fame of his generosity immediately went abroad among
+the soldiers and the Bedouins throughout all the camp.</p>
+
+<p>'For,' said Khaled, 'there is not a fleeter mare than
+mine among all those we have taken; my sword proves
+to be a good one, for I have tried it well; as for women,
+I am satisfied with one wife; and besides a wife, a
+sword and a horse, there are no treasures in the world
+which I covet.'</p>
+
+<p>So Khaled rode away alone into Riad, for he desired
+no company, being busy with his own thoughts. He
+reached the gates at nightfall and went immediately to
+the palace and entered Zehowah's apartments. He
+found her sitting among her women in her accustomed
+place, listening to the tales of an old woman who
+sat in the midst of the circle. As soon as Zehowah saw
+her husband she sprang up gladly to meet him, as a
+friend would have done.</p>
+
+<p>'Though it is summer-time, I have pursued the enemy,'
+said Khaled. 'And though the sun was hot, I have got
+the victory and brought home the spoil.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He said this remembering how she had tried to
+hinder him from going. Then he gave her his sword
+and he sat down with her, while the women brought
+food and drink, for he was weary, and hungry and
+thirsty. The women also brought their musical instruments
+and began to sing songs in praise of Khaled's
+deeds; but after a time he sent them all away and remained
+alone with Zehowah.</p>
+
+<p>'O Zehowah,' he said, 'you are my law and my rule.
+You are my speech and my occupation. You are my
+Kebla to which I turn in prayer. For the love of you
+I have got the victory over many foes. And yet I see
+that your cheek is cold and the light of your eyes is
+undisturbed. Have you no other enemies for me to
+destroy, or have you no secret foe whose head would be
+a pleasant gift?'</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah laughed, as she fanned him with a palm leaf.</p>
+
+<p>'Do you still thirst for war, Khaled?' she asked.
+'Truly you have swallowed up all our enemies as the
+dry sand swallows up water. Where shall I find
+enemies enough for you to slay? You went out in
+pride and you have returned in glory. Are you not yet
+satisfied? And as for any secret foe, if I have any I
+do not know him. Rest, therefore; eat and drink and
+spend your days in peace.'</p>
+
+<p>'I care little for either food or drink,' Khaled answered,
+'and I need little rest.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Will nothing but war please you? Must you overcome
+Egypt and make Syria pay tribute as far as
+Damascus before you will rest?'</p>
+
+<p>'I will conquer the whole world for you, if you wish
+it,' said Khaled.</p>
+
+<p>'What should I do with the world?' asked Zehowah.
+'Have I not treasures and garments enough and to spare,
+besides the spoil you have now brought home? And
+besides, if you would conquer the world you must needs
+make war upon true believers, amongst whom we do
+not count the people of Shammar. Be satisfied therefore
+and rest in peace.'</p>
+
+<p>'How shall I be satisfied until I have kindled the
+light in Zehowah's eyes at my coming, and until I feel
+that her hand is cold and trembles when I take it in
+mine?'</p>
+
+<p>'Do I say to my eyes, "be dull"&mdash;or to my hand, "do
+not tremble"?' Zehowah asked. 'Is this, which you
+ask of me, something I can command at will, as I
+can a smile or a word? If it is, teach me and I will
+learn. But if not, why do you expect of me what I
+cannot do? Can a camel gallop like a horse, or a horse
+trot like a camel, or bear great burdens through the
+desert? Have you come back from a great war only
+to talk of this something which you call love, which is
+yours and not mine, which you feel and I cannot feel,
+which you cannot explain nor describe, and which, after<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
+all, is but a whim of the fancy, as one man loves sour
+drink and another sweet?'</p>
+
+<p>'Do you think that love is nothing but a whim of
+the fancy?' asked Khaled bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>'What else can it be? Would you love me if you
+were blind?'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes.'</p>
+
+<p>'And if you were deaf?'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes.'</p>
+
+<p>'And if you could not touch my face with your
+hands, nor kiss me with your lips?'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes.'</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah laughed.</p>
+
+<p>'Then love is indeed a fancy. For if you could not
+see me, nor touch me, nor hear me, what would remain
+to you but an empty thought?'</p>
+
+<p>'Have I seen you, or touched you, or heard your
+voice for these two months and a half?' asked Khaled.
+'Yet I have loved you as much during all that time.'</p>
+
+<p>'You mean that you have thought of me, as I have
+thought of you, by the memory of what was not fancy,
+but reality. Would you dispute with me, Khaled?
+You will find me subtle.'</p>
+
+<p>'There is more wit in my arm than in my head,'
+Khaled answered, 'and it is not easy for a man to
+persuade a woman.'</p>
+
+<p>'It is very easy, provided that the man have reason<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
+on his side. But where are the treasures you have
+brought back, the slaves and the rich spoils? I would
+gladly see some of them, for the messengers you sent
+told great tales of the riches of Haïl.'</p>
+
+<p>'To-morrow they will be brought into the city.
+Your father has remained feasting in the gardens
+towards Dereyiyah, and the whole army with him. I
+rode hither alone.'</p>
+
+<p>'Why did you not remain too?'</p>
+
+<p>'Because that whim of the fancy which I call love
+brought me back,' Khaled answered.</p>
+
+<p>'Then I am glad you love me,' said Zehowah. 'For
+I am glad you came quickly.'</p>
+
+<p>'Are you truly glad?'</p>
+
+<p>'I was very tired of my women,' she answered. 'I
+am sorry you have brought nothing with you. Are
+there any among the captives who are beautiful?'</p>
+
+<p>'There is one, a present sent lately to the Sultan of
+Shammar. She is very beautiful, and unlike all the
+rest. Your father is much pleased with her, and will
+perhaps marry her.'</p>
+
+<p>'Of what kind is her beauty?' asked Zehowah.</p>
+
+<p>'She is as white as milk, her eyes are twin sapphires,
+her mouth is a rose, her hair is like gold reddened in
+fire.'</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah was silent for a while, and twisted a string
+of musk-beads round her fingers.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'The others are all Arabian women,' Khaled said at
+last.</p>
+
+<p>'Why did you not keep the beautiful one for yourself?'
+asked Zehowah, suddenly throwing aside her
+beads and looking at him curiously. 'Surely you, who
+have borne the brunt of the war, might have chosen for
+yourself what pleased you best.'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled looked at her in great astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>'Have I not married Zehowah? Would you have
+me take another wife?'</p>
+
+<p>'Why not? Is it not lawful for a man to take
+four wives at one time? And this woman might have
+loved you, as you desire to be loved.'</p>
+
+<p>'Would it be nothing to you, if I took her?'</p>
+
+<p>'Nothing. I am the King's daughter. I shall
+always be first in the house. I say, she might love you.
+Then you would be satisfied.'</p>
+
+<p>'Zehowah, Zehowah!' cried Khaled. 'Is love a
+piece of gold, that it matters not whence it be, so long
+as a man has it in his own possession? Or is it wood
+of the 'Ood tree that one may buy it and bring it home
+and make the whole house fragrant with it? Is a
+man's heart like his belly, which is alike satisfied with
+different kinds of food?'</p>
+
+<p>'He who eats, knows by the taste whether he eats
+Persian mutton, or barley bread, or only broiled locusts.
+But a man who believes that he is loved, knows that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
+is loved, so far as knowing is possible, and must be
+satisfied, if to be loved is what he desires.'</p>
+
+<p>'That may be true. But he who desires bread is not
+satisfied with locusts. It is your love which I would
+have. Not the love of another.'</p>
+
+<p>'You are like a man who hopes to get by argument
+a sum of money from one who has nothing,' said
+Zehowah, smiling at him. 'Can you make gold grow
+in the purse of a beggar? Or can you cause a ghada
+bush to bear dates by reasoning with it? Your heart is
+a palm tree, but mine is a ghada bush.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yet an angel may touch the ghada and it will bear
+fruit,' answered Khaled, for he remembered how the
+angel had turned dry leaves into rich garments for him
+to wear.</p>
+
+<p>'Doubtless, Allah can do all things. But where is
+the angel? Hear me, Khaled, for I speak very reasonably,
+as a wife should speak to her husband, who is her lord
+and master. My lord is not satisfied with me and
+desires something of me which is not mine to give.
+Let him take another wife beside me. I have given
+my lord a kingdom and great riches and power.
+Let him take another wife now, who will give him
+this fancy of his thoughts for which he yearns, though
+she have no other possessions. In this way my lord will
+be satisfied.'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled listened sadly to what Zehowah said, and he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
+began to despair, for he was not subtle in argument nor
+eloquent in speech. The reason of this was plain. In
+the days when he had been one of the genii he had
+wandered over the whole earth and had heard the
+eloquence of all nations and the arguments of all
+philosophers, learning therefrom that deeds are no part
+of words, and that they who would be believed must
+speak little and do much. But the genii possess no
+insight into the hearts of women.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled reflected also that the length of life granted
+him was uncertain, and that he had already spent two
+months and a half at a distance from Zehowah in
+accomplishing the conquest whereby he had hoped to
+win her love. But since this had utterly failed, he cast
+about in his mind for some new deed to do, which could
+be done without leaving her even for a short time.
+But he was troubled by her indifference, and most of
+all by her proposing that he should take another wife.
+As he thought of this, he was filled with horror, and he
+understood that he loved Zehowah more than he had
+supposed, since he could not bear to think of setting
+another woman beside her.</p>
+
+<p>Then his face became very dark and his eyes were
+like camp fires far off in the desert, and he took
+Zehowah's wrist in his hand, holding it tightly as
+though he would not let it go. As his heart grew hot
+in his breast, words came to his lips unawares like the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
+speech of a man in a dream, and he heard his own voice
+as it were from a distance.</p>
+
+<p>'I will not take another,' he said. 'What is the love
+of any other woman to me? It is as dust in the throat
+of a man thirsting for water. Show me a woman who
+loves me. Her face shall be but a cold mirror in which
+the image of a fire is reflected without warmth, her soft
+words shall be to me as the screaming of a parrot, her
+touch a thorn and her lips ashes. What is it to me if
+all the women of the world love me? Kindle a fire and
+burn them before me, for I care not. Let them perish
+all together, for I shall not know that they are gone. I
+love you and not another. Shall it profit a man to fill
+his mouth with dust, though it be the dust of gold
+mingled with precious stones, when he desires water?
+Or shall he be warmed in winter by the reflection of a
+fire in a mirror? By Allah! I want neither the wealth
+of Haïl, nor a wife with red hair. Let them take
+gold who do not ask for love. I want but one thing,
+and Zehowah alone can give it to me. Wallah! My
+heart burns. But I would give it to be burned for ever
+in hell if I might get your love now. This I ask. This
+only I desire. For this I will suffer and for this I am
+ready to die before my time.'</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah was silent, looking at him with wonder, and
+yet not altogether pleased. She saw that she could not
+understand him, though she did as well as she could.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Has he not all that the heart of man can desire?'
+she thought. 'Am I not young and beautiful, and
+possessed of many jewels and treasures? Have I not
+given him wealth and power, and has he not with his
+own hand got the victory over his enemies and mine?
+And yet he is not satisfied. Surely, he is too hard to
+please.'</p>
+
+<p>But he, reading her thoughts from her face, continued
+in his speech.</p>
+
+<p>'What is all the happiness of the world without
+love?' he asked. 'It is like a banquet in which many
+rich viands are served, but the guests cannot eat them
+because there is no salt in any of them. And what is
+a beautiful woman without love? She is like a garden
+in which there are all kinds of rare flowers, and much
+grass, and deep shade, but in which a man cannot live,
+because nothing grows there which he can eat when he
+is hungry.'</p>
+
+<p>'Truly,' said Zehowah, 'that is what you will make
+of your life. For there is a garden called Irem, planted
+in a secret place of the deserts about Aden, by Sheddad
+the son of Ad, who desired to outdo the gardens of
+paradise, and was destroyed for his impiety with all his
+people, by the hand of Allah. But a certain man
+named Abdullah ibn Kelabah was searching in the
+desert for a lost camel, and came unawares upon this
+place. There were fruits and water there and all that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
+a man could wish for, and Abdullah dwelt in peace and
+plenty, praising Allah. Then on a certain day he
+desired to eat an onion, and finding none anywhere, he
+went out, intending to obtain one, and having eaten it,
+to return immediately. But though he searched the
+desert many months he was never able to find the
+garden again. Wherefore it is said that Abdullah ibn
+Kelabah lost the earthly paradise of Irem for a mouthful
+of onion.'</p>
+
+<p>'How can you understand me if you do not love
+me?' asked Khaled. 'Love has its own language, and
+when two love they understand each the other's words.
+But when the one loves and the other loves not, they
+are strangers, though they be man and wife; or they are
+like Persians and Arabians not understanding either the
+other's speech, or that if the wife cries "father," her
+husband will bring her a cup of water supposing her to
+be thirsty. For those who would speak one language
+must be of one heart, and they who would be of one
+heart must love each other.'</p>
+
+<p>Then Zehowah sighed and leaned against the cushions
+by the wall and drew her hand away from Khaled.</p>
+
+<p>'What is it?' she asked in a low voice. 'What is it
+you would have?' But though she had already asked
+the question many times she found no answer, and none
+that he was able to give could enlighten her darkness.</p>
+
+<p>'It is the spark that kindles the flame,' Khaled said,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
+and he pointed to the lights that hung in the room.
+'Your beauty is like that of a cunningly designed lamp,
+inlaid with gold and silver and covered with rich ornament,
+which is seen by day. But there is no light
+within, and it is cold, though it be full of oil and the
+wick be ready.'</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah turned towards him somewhat impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>'And you are as one who would kindle the flame
+with words, having no torch,' she answered.</p>
+
+<p>'Have I not done deeds also?' asked Khaled. 'Or
+have I spoken much, that you should reproach me?
+Surely I have slain more of your enemies than I have
+spoken words to you to-night.'</p>
+
+<p>'But have I asked for an offering of blood, or a
+marriage dower of dead bodies?'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled was silent, for he was bitterly disappointed,
+and as his eyes fell upon the sword which hung on the
+wall, he felt that he could almost have taken it and
+made an end of Zehowah for very anger that she would
+not love him. Had he not gone out for her into the
+raging heat of summer, and borne the burden of a great
+war, and destroyed a nation and taken a city? Moreover,
+if neither words nor deeds could gain her love,
+what means remained to him to try?</p>
+
+<p>All through the night Khaled pondered, calling up
+all that he had seen in the world in former times, until
+he fell asleep at last, wearied in heart.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Very early in the morning one of Zehowah's women
+came and stood by his bed and waked him. He could
+see that her face was pale in the dawn, her limbs
+trembled and her voice was uncertain.</p>
+
+<p>'Arise, my lord!' she said. 'A messenger has come
+from the army with evil news, and stands waiting in the
+court.'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled sprang up, and Zehowah awoke also.</p>
+
+<p>'What is this message?' he asked hastily.</p>
+
+<p>But the woman threw herself upon the floor and
+covered her face, as though begging forgiveness because
+she brought evil tidings.</p>
+
+<p>'Speak!' said Zehowah. 'What is it?'</p>
+
+<p>'Our lord the Sultan is dead!' cried the woman, and
+she broke out into weeping and crying and would say
+nothing more.</p>
+
+<p>But when Zehowah heard that her father was dead,
+she sat down upon the floor and beat her breast and tore
+her hair, and wailed and wept, while all the women of
+the harem came and gathered round her and joined in
+her mourning, so that the whole palace was filled with
+the noise of their lamentations.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled went out into the court and questioned the
+messenger, who told him that the Sultan had held a
+great feast in the evening in the gardens of Dereyiyah,
+having with him the woman Almasta and the other
+captive women, and being served by black slaves. But,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
+suddenly, in the night, when most of the soldiers were
+already asleep, there had been a great cry, and the
+slaves and women had come running from the tent,
+crying that the Sultan was dead. This was true, and
+the Jewish physician who had gone out with his master
+declared that he had died from an access of humours to
+the head, brought on by a surfeit of sweetmeats, there
+being at the time an evil conjunction of Zoharah and Al
+Marech in square aspect to the moon and in the house
+of death.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled therefore mounted his bay mare and rode
+quickly out to Dereyiyah, where he found that the news
+was true, and the women were already preparing the
+Sultan's body for burial. Having ordered the mourning,
+and commanded the army to prepare for the return to the
+city, Khaled set out with the funeral procession; and
+when he reached the walls of Riad he turned to the left
+and passed round to the north-east side of the city where
+the burial-ground is situated. Here he laid the body
+of his father-in-law in the tomb which the latter had
+prepared for himself during his lifetime, and afterwards,
+dismissing the mourners, he went back into the city
+to the palace.</p>
+
+<p>After the days of mourning were accomplished, the will
+of the Sultan was made known, though indeed the people
+were well acquainted with it already. By his will Khaled
+succeeded to the sovereignty of the kingdom of Nejed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
+and to all the riches and treasures which the Sultan
+had accumulated during his lifetime. But the people
+received the announcement with acclamations and much
+joy, followed by a great feasting, for which innumerable
+camels were slain. Khaled also called all the chief
+officers and courtiers to a banquet and addressed them
+in a few words, according to his manner.</p>
+
+<p>'Men of Nejed,' he said, 'it has pleased Allah to
+remove to the companionship of the faithful our master
+the Sultan, my revered father-in-law, upon whom be
+peace, and to set me up among you as King in his stead,
+being the husband of his only daughter, which you all
+know. As for the past, you know me; but if I have
+wronged any man let him declare it and I will make
+reparation. And if not, let none complain hereafter.
+But as for the future I will be a just ruler so long as I
+live, and will lead the men of Nejed to war, when there
+is war, and will divide the spoil fairly; and in peace I
+will not oppress the people with taxes nor change the
+just and good laws of the kingdom. And now the feast
+is prepared. Sit down cheerfully, and may Allah give
+us both the appetite to enjoy and the strength to digest
+all the good things which shall be set before us.'</p>
+
+<p>But Khaled himself ate sparingly, for his heart was
+heavy, and when they had feasted and drunk treng juice
+and heard music, he retired to the harem, where he
+found Zehowah sitting with Almasta, the Georgian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
+woman, there being no other women present in the
+room. He was surprised when he saw Almasta, though
+he knew that the captive women had been lodged in
+the palace, the distribution of the spoil from the war
+having been put off by the mourning for the Sultan.</p>
+
+<p>When Almasta heard him enter, she looked up quickly
+and a bright colour rose in her face, as when the juice
+of a pomegranate is poured into milk, and disappeared
+again as the false dawn before morning, leaving no trace.
+Khaled sat down.</p>
+
+<p>'Is not this the woman of whom you spoke?' Zehowah
+asked. 'I knew her from the rest by her red
+hair.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is the woman. Your father would have taken
+her for his wife. But Allah has disposed otherwise.'</p>
+
+<p>'She is beautiful. She is worthy to be a king's wife,'
+said Zehowah.</p>
+
+<p>'The Sultan?' asked Almasta, for she hardly understood.
+Her face turned as white as bone bleached by
+the sun, and her fingers trembled, while her eyes were
+cast down.</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah looked at Khaled and laughed.</p>
+
+<p>'See how she trembles and turns pale before you,'
+she said. 'And a little while ago her face was red.
+You have found a torch wherewith to kindle this lamp,
+and a breath that can extinguish it.'</p>
+
+<p>'I do not know,' Khaled answered. But he looked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
+attentively at Almasta and remained silent for some
+time. 'It is now necessary to divide the spoils of the
+war,' he said at last, 'and to bestow such of these women
+as you do not wish to keep upon the most deserving of
+the officers.'</p>
+
+<p>'My lord will surely take the fairest for himself,
+since she loves him,' said Zehowah, again laughing, but
+somewhat bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>'May my tongue be cloven and my eyes be put out,
+may my hands wither at the wrists and my feet fall
+from my ankles, if I ever take any wife but you,' said
+Khaled. 'Yallah! So be it.'</p>
+
+<p>When Zehowah heard him say this, even while
+Almasta's face was unveiled before him, she understood
+that he was greatly in earnest.</p>
+
+<p>'Let me keep her for my handmaid,' she said at
+last.</p>
+
+<p>'Is she mine that you need ask me? But it will be
+wiser to give her to Abdul Kerim, the sheikh of the
+horsemen. I have promised that the spoil should be
+fairly divided, and though few have seen this woman
+many have heard of her beauty. And besides, she
+would weary you, for she cannot talk in Arabian, nor
+does she seem quick to learn. Abdul Kerim has the
+first right, since Allah has removed your father, upon
+whom be peace.'</p>
+
+<p>'Your words are my laws,' answered Zehowah<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
+obediently. 'And, indeed, it may be that you are right,
+for I believe she can neither dance nor sing, nor play upon
+any musical instrument. She would certainly weary
+me after a time, as you say. Give her therefore to
+Abdul Kerim for his share.'</p>
+
+<p>They then made Almasta understand that she was to
+be given to the sheikh of the horsemen; but when she
+had understood she shook her head and smiled, though
+at first she said nothing, so that Khaled and Zehowah
+wondered whether she had comprehended what they
+had told her.</p>
+
+<p>'Do you understand what we have told you?' asked
+Zehowah, who was diverted by her ignorance of the
+Arabic language.</p>
+
+<p>'I understand.'</p>
+
+<p>'And are you not pleased that you are to be the wife
+of Abdul Kerim, who is a rich man and still young?'</p>
+
+<p>'I was to be the Sultan's wife,' said Almasta, with
+difficulty, looking at Khaled. 'You told me so.'</p>
+
+<p>'The Sultan is dead,' Khaled answered.</p>
+
+<p>'Who is the Sultan now?' she asked.</p>
+
+<p>'Khaled is the Sultan,' said Zehowah.</p>
+
+<p>'You said that I should be the Sultan's wife,' Almasta
+repeated.</p>
+
+<p>'Doubtless, I said so,' Khaled replied. 'But Allah
+has ordered it otherwise.'</p>
+
+<p>Almasta again smiled and shook her head.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI</h3>
+
+
+<p>On the following day Khaled made a division of the
+spoils, and gave Almasta to Abdul Kerim, enjoining
+upon him to marry her, since he had but two wives and
+could do so lawfully. The sheikh of the horsemen was
+glad, for he had heard much of Almasta's beauty, and
+he loved fair women, being of a fierce temper and not
+more than forty years old. So he called his friends to
+the marriage feast that same day, and Zehowah sent
+Almasta in a litter to his harem, giving her also numerous
+rich garments by way of a dower, but which in fact
+were due to Abdul Kerim as his share of the booty. So
+the men feasted, with music, until the evening, when
+the bridegroom retired to the harem and the Kadi came
+and read the contract; after which Abdul Kerim sat
+down while Almasta was brought before him in various
+dresses, one after the other, as is customary.</p>
+
+<p>When the women were all gone away, Abdul Kerim
+began to talk to his wife, but she only laughed and said
+the few words she knew, not knowing what he said,
+and presently she began to sing to him in a low voice,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
+in her own language. Her voice was very clear and
+quite different from that of the Arabian women whom
+Abdul had heard, and the tones vibrated with great
+passion and sweetness, so that he was enchanted and
+listened, as in a dream, while his head rested against
+Almasta's knee. She continued to sing in such a
+manner that his soul was transported with delight;
+and at last, as the sound soothed him, he fell into a
+gentle sleep.</p>
+
+<p>Almasta, still singing softly, loosened his vest, touching
+him so gently that he did not wake. She then drew
+out of one of the three tresses of her hair a fine steel
+needle, extremely long and sharp, having at one end a
+small wooden ball for a handle, and while she sang, she
+thrust it very quickly into his breast to its full length,
+so that it pierced his heart and he died instantly. But
+she continued to sing, lest any of the women should be
+listening from a distance. Presently she withdrew the
+needle so slowly that not a drop of blood followed it,
+and having made it pass thrice through the carpet she
+restored it to her hair, after which she fastened the dead
+man's vest again, so that nothing was disarranged. She
+sang on, after this for some time, and then after a short
+silence she sprang up from the couch, uttering loud
+screams and lamentations and beating her breast
+violently.</p>
+
+<p>The women of the harem came in quickly, and when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
+they saw that their master was dead, they sat down
+with Almasta and wept with her, for as he lay dead
+there was no mark of any violence nor any sign whereby
+it could be told that he had not died naturally.</p>
+
+<p>When Khaled heard that Abdul Kerim was dead, he
+was much grieved at heart, for the man had been brave
+and had been often at his right hand in battle. But
+the news being brought to him at dawn when he awoke,
+he immediately sent the Jewish physician of the court
+to ascertain if possible the cause of the sudden death.
+The physician made careful examination of the body,
+and having purified himself returned to Khaled to give
+an account.</p>
+
+<p>'I have executed my lord's orders with scrupulous
+exactness,' he said, 'and I find that without doubt the
+sheikh of the horsemen died suddenly by an access of
+humours to the heart, the sun being at that time in the
+Nadir, for he died about midnight, and being moreover
+in evil conjunction with the Dragon's Tail in the Heart
+of the Lion, and not yet far from the square aspect of
+Al Marech which caused the death of his majesty the
+late Sultan, upon whom be peace.'</p>
+
+<p>But Khaled was thoughtful, for he reflected that this
+was the second time that a man had died suddenly
+when he was about to be Almasta's husband, and he
+remembered, how she had attempted to kill the Sultan
+of Haïl, and had ultimately brought about his death.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Have you examined the dead man as minutely as
+you have observed the stars?' he inquired. 'Is there
+no mark of violence upon him, nor of poison, nor of
+strangling?'</p>
+
+<p>'There is no mark. By Allah! I speak truth. My
+lord may see for himself, for the man is not yet buried.'</p>
+
+<p>'Am I a jackal, that I should sniff at dead bodies?'
+asked Khaled. 'Go in peace.'</p>
+
+<p>The physician withdrew, for he saw that Khaled
+was displeased, and he was himself as much surprised
+as any one by the death of Abdul Kerim, a man lean
+and strong, not given to surfeiting and in the prime of
+health.</p>
+
+<p>'Min Allah!' he said as he departed. 'We are in the
+hand of the Lord, who knoweth our rising up and our
+lying down. It is possible that if I had seen this man
+at the moment of death, or a little before, I might have
+discovered the nature of his disease, for I could have
+talked with him and questioned him.'</p>
+
+<p>But Khaled went in and talked with Zehowah. She
+was greatly astonished when she heard that Almasta's
+husband was dead, but she was satisfied with the answer
+of the Jewish physician, who enjoyed great reputation and
+was believed to be at that time the wisest man in Arabia.</p>
+
+<p>'Give her back to me, to be one of my women,' said
+she. 'It is not written that she should marry a man of
+Nejed, unless you will take her yourself.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But Khaled bent his brow angrily and his eyes
+glowed like the coals of a camp fire which is almost
+extinguished, when the night wind blows suddenly over
+the ashes.</p>
+
+<p>'I have spoken,' he said.</p>
+
+<p>'And I have heard,' she answered. 'Let there be an
+end. But give me this woman to divert me with her
+broken speech.'</p>
+
+<p>'I fear she will do you an injury of which you may
+not live,' said Khaled.</p>
+
+<p>'What injury can she do me?' asked Zehowah in
+astonishment, not understanding him.</p>
+
+<p>'She asked of your father the head of the Sultan of
+Haïl, whom she hated. And your father gave it to her.'</p>
+
+<p>'Peace be upon him!' exclaimed Zehowah piously.</p>
+
+<p>'Upon him peace. And when he would have
+married her, he died suddenly at the feasting. And
+now this Abdul Kerim, who was to have been her husband,
+is dead also, without sign, in the night, as a man
+stung by a serpent in his sleep. These are strange
+doings.'</p>
+
+<p>'If you think she has done evil, let her be put to
+death,' said Zehowah. 'But the physician found no
+mark upon Abdul Kerim. By the hand of Allah he
+was taken.'</p>
+
+<p>'Doubtless his fate was about his neck. But it is
+strange.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Zehowah looked at Khaled in silence, but presently
+she smiled and laid her hand upon his.</p>
+
+<p>'This woman loves you with her whole soul,' she
+said. 'You think that she has slain Abdul Kerim by
+secret arts, in the hope that she may marry you.'</p>
+
+<p>'And your father also.'</p>
+
+<p>Then they were both silent, and Zehowah covered
+her face, since she could not prevent tears from falling
+when she thought of her father, whom she had loved.</p>
+
+<p>'If this be so,' she said after a long time, 'let the
+woman die immediately.'</p>
+
+<p>'It is necessary to be just,' Khaled answered. 'I
+will put no one to death without witnesses, not even a
+captive woman, who is certainly an unbeliever at heart.
+Has any one seen her do these deeds, or does any one
+know by what means a man may be slain in his sleep,
+or at a feast, so that no mark is left upon his body?
+At Dereyiyah your father was alone with her in the
+inner part of the tent, and she was singing to him that
+he might sleep. For I have made inquiry. And when
+Abdul Kerim died he was also alone with her. I cannot
+understand these things. But you are a woman and subtle.
+It may be that you can see what is too dark for me.'</p>
+
+<p>'It may be. Therefore give her back to me, and I
+will lay a trap for her, so that she will betray herself if
+she has really done evil. And when we have convicted
+her by her own words she shall die.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Are you not afraid, Zehowah?'</p>
+
+<p>'Can I change my destiny? If my hour is come, I
+shall die of a fever, or of a cold, whether she be with
+me or not. But if my years are not full, she cannot
+hurt me.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is undoubtedly true,' answered Khaled, who
+could find nothing to say. 'But I will first question
+the woman myself.'</p>
+
+<p>So he sent slaves with a litter to bring Almasta from
+the house of mourning to the palace, and when she was
+come he sent out all the other women and remained
+alone with her and Zehowah, making her sit down
+before him so that he could see her face. Her cheeks
+were pale, for she had not slept, having been occupied
+in weeping and lamentation during the whole night,
+and her eyes moved restlessly as those of a person distracted
+with grief.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled then drew his sword and laid it across his
+feet as he sat and looked fixedly at Almasta.</p>
+
+<p>'If you do not speak the truth,' he said, 'I will cut
+off your head with my own hand. Allah is witness.'</p>
+
+<p>When Almasta saw the drawn sword, her face grew
+whiter than before, and for some moments she seemed
+not able to breathe. But suddenly she began to beat
+her breast, and broke out into loud wailings, rocking herself
+to and fro as she sat on the carpet.</p>
+
+<p>'My husband is dead!' she cried. 'He was young;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
+he was beautiful! He is dead! Wah! Wah! my
+husband is dead! Kill me too!'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled looked at Zehowah, but she said nothing,
+though she watched Almasta attentively. Then Khaled
+spoke to the woman again.</p>
+
+<p>'Make an end of lamenting for the present,' he
+said. 'It has pleased Allah to take your husband to
+the fellowship of the faithful. Peace be upon him.
+Tell us in what manner he died, and what words he
+spoke when he felt his end approaching, for he was my
+good friend and I wish to know all.'</p>
+
+<p>Almasta either did not understand or made a pretence
+of not understanding, but when she heard Khaled's
+words she ceased from wailing and sobbed silently,
+beating her breast from time to time.</p>
+
+<p>'How did he die?' Khaled asked in a stern voice.</p>
+
+<p>'He was asleep. He died,' replied Almasta in broken
+tones.</p>
+
+<p>'You will get no other answer,' said Zehowah. 'She
+cannot speak our tongue.'</p>
+
+<p>'Is there no woman among them all who can talk
+this woman's language?' asked Khaled with impatience,
+for he saw how useless it was to question her.</p>
+
+<p>'There is no one. I have inquired. Leave her
+with me, and if there is anything to be known, I will
+try to find it out.'</p>
+
+<p>So Khaled went away and Zehowah endeavoured to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
+soothe Almasta and make her talk in her broken words.
+But the woman made as though she would not be comforted,
+and went and sat apart upon the stone floor where
+there was no carpet, rocking to and fro, and wailing in
+a low voice. Zehowah understood that whatever the
+truth might be Almasta was determined to express her
+sorrow in the customary way, and that it would be
+better to leave her alone.</p>
+
+<p>For seven days she sat thus apart, covering her head
+and mourning, and refusing to speak with any one, so
+that all the women supposed her to be indeed distracted
+with grief at the death of Abdul Kerim. And each
+day Khaled inquired of his wife whether she had yet
+learned anything, and received the same answer. But
+in the meantime he was occupied with his own thoughts,
+as well as with the affairs of the kingdom, though the
+latter were as nothing in his mind compared with the
+workings of his heart when he thought of Zehowah.</p>
+
+<p>It chanced one evening that Khaled was riding
+among the gardens without the city, attended only by a
+few horsemen, for he was simple in all his ways and
+liked little to have a great throng of attendants about
+him. So he rode alone, while the horsemen followed at
+a distance.</p>
+
+<p>'Was ever a man, or an angel, so placed in the world
+as I am placed?' he thought. 'How much better would
+it have been had I never seen Zehowah, and if I had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
+never slain the Indian prince. For I should still have
+been with my fellows, the genii, from whom I am now
+cut off, and at least I should have lived until the day
+of the resurrection. But now my horse may stumble
+and fall, and my neck may be broken, and there is no
+hereafter. Or I may die in my sleep, or be killed in
+my sleep, and there will be no resurrection for me, nor
+any more life, anywhere in earth or heaven. For
+Zehowah will never love me. Was ever a man so
+placed? And I am ashamed to complain to her any
+more, for she is a good wife, obedient and careful of
+my wants, and beautiful as the moon at the full, rising
+amidst palm trees, besides being very wise and subtle.
+How can I complain? Has she not given me herself,
+whom I desired, and a great kingdom which, indeed, I did
+not desire, but which no man can despise as a gift? Yet
+I am burned up within, and my heart is melting as a piece
+of frankincense laid upon coals in an empty chamber,
+when no man cares for its sweet savour. Surely, I am
+the most wretched of mankind. Oh, that the angel who
+made garments for me of a ghada bush, and a bay mare
+of a locust, would come down and lay his hand upon
+Zehowah's breast and make a living heart of the stone
+which Allah has set in its place!'</p>
+
+<p>So he rode slowly on, reasoning as he had often
+reasoned before, and reaching the same conclusion in
+all his argument, which availed him nothing. But suddenly,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
+as the sun went down, a new thought entered
+his mind and gave him a little hope.</p>
+
+<p>'The sun is gone down,' he said to himself. 'But
+Allah has not destroyed the sun. It will rise in the
+east to-morrow when the white cock crows in the first
+heaven. Many things have being, which the sight of
+man cannot see. It may be that although I see no
+signs of love in the heaven of Zehowah's eyes, yet love
+is already there and will before long rise as the sun and
+illuminate my darkness. For I am not subtle as the
+evil genii are, but I must see very clearly before I am
+able to distinguish.'</p>
+
+<p>He rode back into the city, planning how he might
+surprise Zehowah and obtain from her unawares some
+proof that she indeed loved him. To this end he
+entered the palace by a secret gate, covering his garments
+with his aba, and his head with the kefiyeh he
+wore, in order to disguise himself from the slaves and
+the soldiers whom he met on his way to the harem.
+He passed on towards Zehowah's apartment by an unlighted
+passage not generally used, and hid himself in
+a niche of the wall close to the open door, from which
+he could see all that happened, and hear what was said.</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah was seated in her accustomed place and
+Almasta was beside her. Khaled could watch their
+faces by the light of the hanging lamps, as the two
+women talked together.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'You must put aside all mourning now,' Zehowah
+was saying. 'For I will find another husband for you.'</p>
+
+<p>'Another husband?' Almasta smiled and shook her
+head.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, there are other goodly men in Riad, though
+Abdul Kerim was of the goodliest, as all say who knew
+him. He was the Sultan's friend, but he was more
+soldier than courtier. He deserved a better death.'</p>
+
+<p>'Abdul Kerim died in peace. He was asleep.'
+Almasta smiled still, but more sadly, and her eyes were
+cast down.</p>
+
+<p>'He died in peace,' Zehowah repeated, watching her
+narrowly. 'But it is better to die in battle by the
+enemy's hand. Such a man, falling in the front of the
+fight for the true faith, enters immediately into paradise,
+to dwell for ever under the perpetual shade of the tree
+Sedrat, and neither blackness nor shame shall cover his
+face. There the rivers flow with milk and with clarified
+honey, and he shall rest on a couch covered with thick
+silk embroidered with gold, and shall possess seventy
+beautiful virgins whose eyes are blacker than mine and
+their skin whiter than yours, having colour like rubies
+and pearls, and their voices like the song of nightingales
+in Ajjem, of which travellers tell. These are the
+rewards of the true believer as set forth in Al Koran by
+our prophet, upon whom peace. A man slain in battle
+for the faith enters directly into the possession of all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
+this, but unbelievers shall be taken by the forelock and
+the heels and cast into hell, to drink boiling molten
+brass, as a thirsty camel drinks clear water.'</p>
+
+<p>Almasta understood very little of what Zehowah
+said, but she smiled, nevertheless, catching the meaning
+of some of the words.</p>
+
+<p>'The Sultan Khaled loves black eyes,' she said. 'He
+will go to paradise.'</p>
+
+<p>'Doubtless, he will quench his thirst in the incorruptible
+milk of heavenly rivers,' Zehowah replied.
+'He is the chief of the brave, the light of the faith and
+the burning torch of righteousness. Otherwise Allah
+would not have chosen him to rule. But I spoke of
+Abdul Kerim.'</p>
+
+<p>'He died in peace,' said Almasta the second time,
+and again looking down.</p>
+
+<p>'I do not know how he died,' Zehowah answered,
+looking steadily at the woman's face. 'It was a great
+misfortune for you. Do you understand? I am very
+sorry for you. You would have been happy with Abdul
+Kerim.'</p>
+
+<p>'I mourn for him,' Almasta said, not raising her
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>'It is natural and right. Doubtless you loved him
+as soon as you saw him.'</p>
+
+<p>Almasta glanced quickly at Zehowah, as though
+suspecting a hidden meaning in the words, and for a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
+moment each of the women looked into the other's eyes,
+but Zehowah saw nothing. For a wise man has truly
+said that one may see into the depths of black eyes as
+into a deep well, but that blue eyes are like the sea of
+Oman in winter, sparkling in the sun as a plain of blue
+sand, but underneath more unfathomable than the
+desert.</p>
+
+<p>Almasta was too wise and deceitful to let the silence
+last. So when she had looked at Zehowah and understood,
+she smiled somewhat sorrowfully and spoke.</p>
+
+<p>'I could have loved him,' she said. 'I desire no
+husband now.'</p>
+
+<p>'That is not true,' Zehowah answered quickly. 'You
+wish to marry Khaled, and that is the reason why you
+killed Abdul Kerim.'</p>
+
+<p>Almasta started as a camel struck by a flight of
+locusts.</p>
+
+<p>'What is this lie?' she cried out with indignation.
+'Who has told you this lie?' But her face was as grey
+as a stone, and her lips trembled.</p>
+
+<p>'You probably killed him by magic arts learned in
+your own country,' said Zehowah quietly. 'Do not be
+afraid. We are alone, and no one can hear us. Tell me
+how you killed him. Truly it was very skilful of you,
+since the physician, who is the wisest man in Arabia,
+could not tell how it was done.'</p>
+
+<p>But Almasta began to beat her breast and to make<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
+oaths and asseverations in her own language, which
+Zehowah could not understand.</p>
+
+<p>'If you will tell me how you did it, I will give you
+a rich gift,' Zehowah continued.</p>
+
+<p>But so much the more Almasta cried out, stretching
+her hands upwards and speaking incomprehensible
+words. So Zehowah waited until she became quiet
+again.</p>
+
+<p>'It may be that Khaled will marry you, if you will
+tell me your secret,' Zehowah said, after a time.</p>
+
+<p>Then Almasta's cheek burned and she bent down her
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>'Will you tell me how to kill a man and leave no
+trace?' asked Zehowah, still pressing her. 'Look at
+this pearl. Is it not beautiful? See how well it looks
+upon your hair. It is as the leaf of a white rose upon
+a river of red gold. And on your neck&mdash;you cannot
+see it yourself&mdash;it is like the full moon hanging upon a
+milky cloud. Khaled would give you many pearls like
+this, if he married you. Will you not tell me?'</p>
+
+<p>'Whom do you wish to kill?' Almasta asked, very
+suddenly. But Zehowah was unmoved.</p>
+
+<p>'It may be that I have a private enemy,' she said.
+'Perhaps there is one who disturbs me, against whom I
+plot in the night, but can find no way of ridding myself
+of him. A woman might give much to destroy such a
+one.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Khaled will kill your enemies. He loves you. He
+will kill all whom you hate.'</p>
+
+<p>'You make progress. You speak our language
+better,' said Zehowah, laughing a little. 'You will
+soon be able to tell the Sultan that you love him, as
+well as I could myself.'</p>
+
+<p>'But you do not love him,' Almasta answered boldly.</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah bent her brows so that they met between
+her eyes as the grip of a bow. Then Khaled's heart
+leaped in his breast, for he saw that she was angry with
+the woman, and he supposed it was because she secretly
+loved him. But he held his breath lest even his breathing
+should betray him.</p>
+
+<p>'The portion of fools is fire,' said Zehowah, not
+deigning to give any other answer. For she was a
+king's daughter and Almasta a bought slave, though
+Khaled had taken her in war.</p>
+
+<p>'Be merciful!' exclaimed Almasta, in humble tones.
+'I am your handmaid, and I speak Arabic badly.'</p>
+
+<p>'You speak with exceeding clearness when it pleases
+you.'</p>
+
+<p>'Indeed I cannot talk in your language, for it is not
+long since I came into Arabia.'</p>
+
+<p>'We will have you taught, for we will give you a
+husband who will teach you with sticks. There is a
+certain hunchback, having one eye and marked with the
+smallpox, whose fists are as the feet of an old camel.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
+He will be a good husband for you and will teach you
+the Arabic language, and your skin shall be dissolved
+but your mind will be enlightened thereby.'</p>
+
+<p>'Be merciful! I desire no husband.'</p>
+
+<p>'It is good that a woman should marry, even though
+the bridegroom be a hunchback. But if you will tell me
+your secret I will give you a better husband and forgive
+you.'</p>
+
+<p>'There is no secret! I have killed no one!' cried
+Almasta. 'Who has told you the lie?'</p>
+
+<p>'And moreover,' continued Zehowah, not regarding
+her protestations, 'there are other ways of learning
+secrets, besides by kindness; such, for instance, as
+sticks, and hot irons, and hunger and thirst in a prison
+where there are reptiles and poisonous spiders, besides
+many other things with which I have no doubt the
+slaves of the palace are acquainted. It is better that
+you should tell your secret and be happy.'</p>
+
+<p>'There is no secret,' Almasta repeated, and she would
+say nothing else, for she did not trust Zehowah and
+feared a cruel death if she told the truth.</p>
+
+<p>But Zehowah wearied of the contest at last, being by
+no means sure that the woman had really done any
+evil, and having no intention of using any violent means
+such as she had suggested. For she was as just as she
+was wise and would have no one suffer wrongly.
+Khaled, indeed, cared little for the pain of others, having<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
+seen much blood shed in war, and would have
+caused Almasta to be tortured if Zehowah had desired
+it. But she did not, preferring to wait and see whether
+she could not entrap the slave into a confession.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled now came out of his hiding-place into the
+room and advanced towards Zehowah, who remained
+sitting upon the carpet, while Almasta rose and made
+a respectful salutation. But neither of the women
+knew that he had been hidden in the niche. Zehowah
+did not seem surprised, but Almasta's face was white
+and her eyes were cast down, though indeed Khaled
+wished that it had been otherwise. He was encouraged,
+however, by what he had seen, for Zehowah had certainly
+been angry with Almasta on his account, and he dismissed
+the latter that he might be alone with his wife.</p>
+
+<p>'You are wise, Zehowah,' he said, 'and gifted with
+much insight, but you will learn nothing from this
+woman, though you talk with her a whole year. For
+she suspects you and is guarded in her speech and
+manner. I was standing by the doorway a long time.
+You did not see me, but I heard all that you said.'</p>
+
+<p>'Why did you hide yourself?' Zehowah asked, looking
+at him curiously.</p>
+
+<p>'In order to listen,' he answered. 'And I heard
+something and saw something which pleased me. For
+when she said that you did not love me, you were
+angry.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Did that please you? You are more easily pleased
+than I had thought. Shall I bear such things from a
+slave? How is it her business whether I love or not?'</p>
+
+<p>'But you were angry,' Khaled repeated, vainly hoping
+that she would say more, yet not wishing to press her
+too far, lest she should say again that she did not love
+him.</p>
+
+<p>She, however, said nothing in reply, but busied herself
+in taking his kefiyeh from his head and his sword
+from his side that he might be at ease. He rested
+against the cushions and drank of the cool drink she
+offered him.</p>
+
+<p>'This woman, Almasta, is exceedingly beautiful,' he
+said at last. 'It would indeed be a pity that a slave of
+such value should go into the possession of another so
+that we could see her no more. It is best that you
+should keep her with you.'</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah laughed a little, as she sat down beside
+him and began to play with her beads.</p>
+
+<p>'This is what I have always said,' she answered.
+'I will keep her with me.'</p>
+
+<p>'It is better so,' said Khaled.</p>
+
+<p>Then he remained silent in deep thought, having
+devised a new plan for gaining what he most desired.
+It seemed to him possible that Zehowah might be
+moved by jealousy, if by nothing else; for although he
+had sworn to her, and angrily, that he would never take<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
+Almasta for his wife, and though nothing could really
+have prevailed upon him to make him do so, yet it
+would be easy for him to talk to the woman and speak
+to her of her beauty, and appear to take delight in her
+singing, which was more melodious than that of a
+Persian nightingale. Since she would be now permanently
+established in his harem, nothing would be easier
+than for him to spend many hours in the woman's
+society. Being a simple-minded man the plan seemed
+to him subtle, and he determined to put it into execution
+without delay. He knew also that Almasta had
+loved him since the first day when she had been
+brought before him in the palace at Haïl, and this
+would make it still more easy to rouse Zehowah's
+jealousy.</p>
+
+<p>Though she had herself advised him to marry
+Almasta, he did not believe that she was greatly in
+earnest, and he felt assured that if the possibility were
+presented before her, in such a way as to appear
+imminent, she would be deceived by the appearance.</p>
+
+<p>'It is better that she should remain here,' he said
+after a long time. 'For we cannot put her to death
+without evidence of her guilt, and if we are obstinate in
+wishing to give her a husband, we do not know how
+many husbands she may destroy before she is satisfied.
+She is beautiful, and will be an ornament in your
+kahwah. Indeed I do not know why I sent her away<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
+just now, when I came in. Let us call her back, that
+she may sing to us some of her own songs.'</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah clapped her hands and Almasta immediately
+returned, for she had indeed been waiting outside
+the door, endeavouring to hear what was said, since she
+suspected that Khaled would speak of her and ask
+questions. She understood well enough, and often
+much better than she was willing to show, though she
+could as yet speak but few words of the Arabic language.</p>
+
+<p>'Sit at my feet,' said Khaled, 'and sing to me the
+songs of your own people.'</p>
+
+<p>Almasta took a musical instrument from the wall
+and sat down to sing. Her voice, indeed, was of enchanting
+sweetness, but as for the words of her songs,
+the seven wise men themselves could not have understood
+a syllable of them, seeing that they were neither
+Arabic nor Persian, nor even Greek. Nevertheless,
+Khaled made a pretence of being much pleased, resting
+his head against the cushions and closing his eyes as
+though the sound soothed him. As for Zehowah, she
+watched the woman with great curiosity, wondering
+whether it were possible that a creature so fair as
+Almasta could have done the evil deeds of which she
+was suspected, and planning how she might surprise
+her into a confession of guilt.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII</h3>
+
+
+<p>Not many days passed after this, before the women of
+the harem began to whisper among themselves in the
+passages and outer chambers.</p>
+
+<p>'See,' they said, 'how our master favours this
+foreign woman, who is in all probability a devil from
+the Persian mountains. Every day he will have her
+to sing to him, and to bring him drink, and to sit at
+his feet. And he has given her several bracelets of
+gold and a large ruby. Surely it will be better for
+us to flatter her and show her reverence, for if not she
+will before long give us sticks to eat, and we shall
+mourn our folly.'</p>
+
+<p>So they began to exhibit great respect for Almasta,
+giving her always the best seat amongst them and
+setting aside for her the best portions of the mutton,
+and the whitest of the rice, and the largest of the
+sweetmeats and the mellowest of the old sugar dates,
+so that Almasta fared sumptuously. But though she
+understood the reason why the women treated her so
+much more kindly than before, she was careful always<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
+to appear thankful and to speak softly to them, for
+she feared Zehowah, to whom they might speak of her,
+and who was very powerful with the Sultan. She
+was indeed secretly transported with joy, for she loved
+Khaled and she began to think that before long he
+would marry her. This was her only motive, also,
+for she was not otherwise ambitious, and though she
+afterwards did many evil deeds, she did them all out
+of love for him.</p>
+
+<p>Though Khaled was by no means soft-hearted, he
+could not but pity her sometimes, seeing how she was
+deceived by his kindness, while he was only making a
+pretence of preferring her in order to gain Zehowah's
+love. Often he sat long with closed eyes while she
+sang to him or played softly upon the barbat, and he
+tried to fancy that the voice and the presence were
+Zehowah's. But her strange language disturbed him,
+for there were sounds in it like the hissing of serpents
+and like choking, which caused him to start suddenly
+just when her voice was sweetest. For the Georgian
+tongue is barbarous and not like any human speech
+under the sun, resembling by turns the inarticulate
+warbling of birds, and the croaking of ravens, and the
+noises made by an angry cat. Nevertheless, Khaled
+always made a pretence of being pleased, though he
+enjoined upon Almasta to learn to sing in Arabic.</p>
+
+<p>'For Arabic,' he said to her, 'is the language of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
+paradise, and is spoken by all beings among the
+blessed, from Adam, our father, who waits for the
+resurrection in the first heaven, to the birds that fly
+among the branches of the tree Sedrat, near the throne
+of Allah, singing perpetually the verses of Al Koran.
+The black-eyed virgins reserved for the faithful, also
+speak only in Arabic.'</p>
+
+<p>'Shall I be of the Hur al Oyun of whom you
+speak?' Almasta inquired.</p>
+
+<p>'How is it possible that you should be of the black-eyed
+ones, when your eyes are blue?' Khaled asked,
+laughing. 'And besides, are you not an unbeliever?'</p>
+
+<p>'I believe what you believe, and am learning your
+language. There is no Allah beside Allah.'</p>
+
+<p>'And Mohammed is Allah's prophet.'</p>
+
+<p>'And Mohammed is Allah's prophet,' Almasta repeated
+devoutly.</p>
+
+<p>'Good. And the six articles of belief are also
+necessary.'</p>
+
+<p>'Teach me,' said Almasta, laying the barbat upon
+the carpet and folding her hands.</p>
+
+<p>'You must believe first in Allah, and secondly in
+all the angels. Thirdly you must believe in Al
+Koran, fourthly in the prophets of Allah, fifthly in
+the resurrection of the dead and the last judgment,
+and lastly that your destiny is about your neck so
+that you cannot escape it.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'I believe in everything,' said Almasta, who understood
+nothing of these sacred matters. 'Shall I now
+be one of the Hur al Oyun?'</p>
+
+<p>'But you have blue eyes.'</p>
+
+<p>'When I know that I am dying, I will paint them
+black,' said Almasta, laughing sweetly.</p>
+
+<p>'The angels Monkar and Nakir will discover your
+deception,' said Khaled. 'When you are dead and
+buried, these two angels, who are black, will enter
+your tomb. They are of extremely terrible appearance.
+Then they will make you sit upright in the grave and
+will examine you first as to your belief and then as
+to your deeds. You will then not be able to tell lies.
+If you truly believe and have done good, your soul
+will then be breathed out of your lips and will float
+in a state of rest over your grave until the last judgment.
+But if not, the black angels will beat your
+head with iron maces, and tear your soul from your
+body with a torment greater than that caused by
+tearing the flesh from the bones.'</p>
+
+<p>'I believe in everything,' Almasta said again, supposing
+that her assent would please him.</p>
+
+<p>'You find it an easy matter to believe what I tell
+you,' he said, for he could see that she would have
+received any other faith as readily. 'But it is not
+easy for a woman to enter paradise, and since it is
+your destiny to have blue eyes, they will not become<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
+black. The Hur al Oyun, however, are not mortal
+women and no mortal woman can ever be one of
+them, since they are especially prepared for the faithful.
+But a man's wives may enter paradise with him,
+in a glorified beauty which may not be inferior to that
+of the black-eyed ones. If, for instance, Abdul Kerim
+had lived and been your husband, you might, by faith
+and good works, have entered heaven with him as one
+of his wives.'</p>
+
+<p>Almasta looked long at Khaled, trying to see
+whether he still suspected her, and indeed he found
+it very hard to do so, for her look was clear and
+innocent as that of a young dove that is fed by a
+familiar hand.</p>
+
+<p>'I would like to enter paradise with you,' said
+Almasta, with an appearance of timidity. 'Is it not
+possible?'</p>
+
+<p>'It may be possible. But I doubt it,' Khaled
+answered, with gravity.</p>
+
+<p>In those days, while Khaled thus spent many
+hours with Almasta, Zehowah often remained for a
+long time in another part of the harem, either surrounded
+by her women, or sitting alone upon the
+balcony over the court, absorbed in watching the
+people who came and went. The slaves were surprised
+to see that Khaled seemed to prefer the society
+of the Georgian to that of his wife, but they dared say<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
+nothing to Zehowah and contented themselves with
+watching her face and endeavouring to find out
+whether she were displeased at what was happening,
+or really indifferent as she appeared to be.</p>
+
+<p>Almasta herself was distrustful, supposing that
+Khaled and Zehowah were in league together to entrap
+her into a self-accusation, and though her heart was
+transported with happiness while she was with Khaled,
+yet she did not forget to be cautious whenever any
+reference was made to Abdul Kerim's death. She
+also took the long needle out of her hair and hid it
+carefully in a corner, in a crevice between the pavement
+and the wall, lest it should at any time fall from
+its place and bring suspicion upon her.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled watched Zehowah as narrowly as the women
+did, to see whether any signs of jealousy showed themselves
+in her face, and sometimes they talked together
+of Almasta.</p>
+
+<p>'It is strange,' said Khaled, 'that Allah, being all
+powerful, should have provided matter for dissension
+on earth by creating one woman more beautiful than
+another, the one with blue eyes, the other with black,
+the one with red hair and the other with hair needing
+henna to brighten it. Are not all women the children
+of one mother?'</p>
+
+<p>'And are not all men her sons also?' asked
+Zehowah. 'It is strange that Allah, being all powerful,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
+should have provided matter for sorrow by creating
+one man with a spirit easily satisfied, and the
+other with a soul tormented by discontent.'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled looked fixedly at his wife, and bent his
+brows. But in secret he was glad, for he supposed
+that she was beginning to be jealous. However, he
+made a pretence of being displeased.</p>
+
+<p>'Is man a rock that he should never change?' he
+asked. 'Or has he but one eye with which to see
+but one kind of beauty? Have I not two hands, two
+feet, two ears, two nostrils and two eyes?'</p>
+
+<p>'That is true,' Zehowah answered. 'But a man
+has only one heart with which to love, one voice with
+which to speak kind words, and one mouth with which
+to kiss the woman he has chosen. And if a man had
+two souls, they would rend him so that he would be mad.'</p>
+
+<p>At this Khaled laughed a little and would gladly
+have shown Zehowah that she was right. But he feared
+to be treated with indifference, if he yielded to her
+argument so soon, and he held his peace.</p>
+
+<p>'Nevertheless,' Zehowah continued, after a time,
+'you are right and so am I. You said, indeed, not
+many days ago that your two hands should wither at
+the wrists if you took another wife, yet I advised you
+to do so; and now it is clear from what you say that
+you wish to marry Almasta. I am your handmaiden.
+Take her, therefore, and be contented, for she loves you.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But now Khaled was much disturbed as to what
+he should answer, for he had hoped that Zehowah
+would break out into jealous anger. He could not
+accept her advice, because of his oath and still more
+because of his love for her; yet he could not send
+away Almasta, since by so doing he would be giving
+over his last hope of obtaining Zehowah's love by
+rousing her jealousy.</p>
+
+<p>'Take her,' Zehowah repeated. 'The palace is
+wide and spacious. There is room for us both, and
+for two others also, if need be, according to divine law.
+Take her, and let there be contentment. Have you
+not said that she is more beautiful than I?'</p>
+
+<p>'No,' answered Khaled, 'I have not said so.'</p>
+
+<p>'You have thought it, which is much the same, for
+you said that her hair was red but that mine needed
+henna to brighten it. Marry her therefore, this very
+day. Send for the Kadi, and order a feast, and let it
+be done quickly.'</p>
+
+<p>'Is it nothing to you, whether I take her or not?'
+Khaled asked, seeking desperately for something to
+say.</p>
+
+<p>'Is it for me to set myself up against the holy
+law? Or did any one exact from you a promise that
+you would not take another wife? And if you rashly
+promised anything of your own free will, the promise
+is not binding seeing that there is no authority for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
+it in Al Koran, and that no one desires you to keep
+it&mdash;neither I, nor Almasta.'</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah laughed at her own speech, and Khaled was
+too much disturbed to notice that the laugh was rather
+of scorn than of mirth.</p>
+
+<p>'How shall I take a woman who is perhaps a
+murderess?' he asked. 'Shall I take her who was
+perhaps the cause of your revered father's death?
+May Allah give him peace! Surely, the very thought
+is terrible to me, and I will not do it.'</p>
+
+<p>'Will you convict her without witnesses? And
+where is your witness? Did not the physician
+explain the reason of the death, and did he suspect
+that there was anything unnatural about it? But
+if you still think that she destroyed my father and
+Abdul Kerim&mdash;peace on them both&mdash;why do you
+make her sit all day long at your feet and sing to
+you in her barbarous language, which resembles the
+barking of jackals? And why do you command
+her to bring you drink and fan you when it is
+hot, and you sleep in the afternoon? This shows
+a forgiving and trustful disposition.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is an unanswerable argument,' thought Khaled,
+being very much perplexed. 'Can I answer that I do
+all this in order to see whether Zehowah is jealous?
+She would certainly laugh to herself and say in her
+heart that she has married a fool.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>So he said nothing, but bent his brows again, and
+endeavoured to seem angry. But Zehowah took no
+notice of his face and continued to urge him to marry
+Almasta.</p>
+
+<p>'Have you ever seen such a woman?' she asked.
+'Have you ever seen such eyes? Are they not like
+twin heavens of a deep blue, each having a shining sun
+in the midst? Is not her hair like seventy thousand
+pieces of gold poured out upon the carpet from a
+height? Her nose is a straight piece of pure ivory.
+Her lips are redder than pomegranates when they are
+ripe, and her cheeks are as smooth as silk. Moreover
+she is as white as milk, freshly taken from the camel,
+whereas my hands are of the colour of blanket-bread
+before it is baked.'</p>
+
+<p>'Your hands are much smaller than hers,' said
+Khaled, who could not suffer Zehowah to discredit her
+own beauty.</p>
+
+<p>'I do not know,' she answered, looking at her
+fingers. 'But they are less white. And Almasta
+is far more beautiful than I. You yourself said so.'</p>
+
+<p>'I never said so,' Khaled replied, more and more
+perplexed. 'There are two kinds of beauty. That is
+what I said. Allah has willed it. Almasta is a slave,
+and her hands are large. It is a pity, for she is like a
+mare that has many good points, but whose hoofs are
+overgrown through too much idleness in the stable. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
+say that there are two kinds of beauty. Yours is that
+of the free woman of a pure and beautiful race; hers
+is that of the slave accidentally born beautiful.'</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah gathered up her three long black tresses
+and laid them across her knees as she sat. Then she
+shook off her golden bracelets, one after the other, to the
+number of a score and heaped them upon the hair.</p>
+
+<p>'Which do you like best?' she asked. 'The black
+or the gold? The day or the night? Here you see
+them together and can judge fairly between them.'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled sought for a crafty answer and made a pretence
+of pondering the matter deeply.</p>
+
+<p>'After the night,' he said at last, 'the day is very
+bright and glorious. But when we have looked on it
+long, only the night can bring rest and peace.'</p>
+
+<p>He was pleased with himself when he had made
+this answer, supposing that Zehowah would find
+nothing to say. But he had only laid a new trap
+for himself.</p>
+
+<p>'That is quite true,' she answered, laughing. 'That
+is also the reason why Allah made the day and the
+night to follow each other in succession, lest men
+should grow weary of eternal light or eternal darkness.
+For the same reason also, since you have a
+wife whose hair is black, I counsel you to take a
+red-haired one. In this way you will obtain that
+variety which the taste of man craves.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'If I follow your advice, you will regret it,' said
+Khaled.</p>
+
+<p>'You think I shall be jealous, but you are mistaken.
+I am what I am. Can another woman make me more
+or less beautiful? Moreover, I shall always be first in
+the palace, though you take three other wives. The
+others will rise up when you come in, but I shall remain
+sitting. I shall always be the first wife.'</p>
+
+<p>'Undoubtedly, that is your right,' Khaled replied.
+'Do you suppose that I wish to put any woman in
+your place?'</p>
+
+<p>Then Zehowah laughed, and laid her hand upon
+Khaled's arm.</p>
+
+<p>'How foolish men are!' she exclaimed. 'Do you
+think you can deceive me? Do you imagine, because
+I have answered you and talked with you to-day, and
+listened to your arguments, that I do not understand
+your heart? Oh, Khaled, this is true which you often
+say of yourself, that your wit is in your arm. If I
+were a warrior and stood before you with a sword in
+my hand, you could argue better, for you would cut off
+my head, and the argument would end suddenly. But
+Allah has not made you subtle, and words in your
+mouth are of no more avail than a sword would be
+in mine, for you entangle yourself in your own
+language, as I should wound myself if I tried to
+handle a weapon.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At this Khaled was much disconcerted, and he
+stroked his beard thoughtfully, looking away so as not
+to meet her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>'I do not know what you mean,' he said, at last.
+'You certainly imagine something which has no existence.'</p>
+
+<p>'I imagine nothing, for I have seen the truth, ever
+since the first day when you desired to be alone with
+Almasta. You are only foolishly trying to make me
+jealous of her, in order that I may love you better.'</p>
+
+<p>When Khaled saw that she understood him, he was
+without any defence, for he had built a wall of sand
+for himself, like a child playing in the desert, which
+the first breath of wind causes to crumble, and the
+second blast leaves no trace of it behind.</p>
+
+<p>'And am I foolish, because I have done this thing?'
+he cried, not attempting to deny the truth. 'Am I a
+fool because I desire your love? But it is folly to
+speak of it, for you will reproach me and say that I
+am discontented, and will offer me another woman for
+my wife. Go. Leave me alone. If you do not love
+me, the sight of you is as vinegar poured into a fresh
+wound, and as salt rubbed into eyes that are sore with
+the sand. Go. Why do you stay? Do you not believe
+me? Do you wish me to kill you that I may
+have peace from you? It is a pity that you did not
+marry one of the hundred suitors who came before me,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
+for you certainly loved one of them, since you cannot
+love me. You doubtless loved the Indian prince.
+Would you have him back? I can give you his
+bones, for I slew him with my own hands and buried
+him in the Red Desert, where his soul is sitting upon
+a heap of sand, waiting for the day of resurrection.'</p>
+
+<p>Then Zehowah was greatly astonished, for neither
+she nor any one else had ever known what had been
+the end of that suitor, and after waiting a long time,
+his people who had been with him had departed
+sorrowing to their own country, and she had heard
+no more of them.</p>
+
+<p>'What is this?' she asked in amazement. 'Why
+did you kill him? And how could you have done
+this thing unseen, since he was guarded by many
+attendants?'</p>
+
+<p>'I took him out of the palace in the night, when
+all were asleep, and then I killed him,' said Khaled,
+and Zehowah could get no other answer, for he would
+not confess that he had been one of the genii, lest she
+should not believe the truth, or else, believing, should
+be afraid of him in the future.</p>
+
+<p>'I will give you his bones,' he said, 'if you desire
+them, for I know where they are, and you certainly
+loved him, and are still mourning for him. If he
+could be alive, I would kill him again.'</p>
+
+<p>'I never loved him,' Zehowah answered, at last.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
+'How was it possible? But I would perhaps have
+married him, hoping to convert all his people to the
+true faith.'</p>
+
+<p>'As you have married me in the hope, or the
+assurance, of giving your people a just king.'</p>
+
+<p>'You are angry, Khaled. And, indeed, I could be
+angry, too, but with myself and not with you, as you
+are with me, though it be for the same reason. For I
+begin to see and understand why you are discontented,
+and indeed I will do what I can to satisfy
+you.'</p>
+
+<p>'You must love me, as I love you, if you would
+save me from destruction,' said Khaled.</p>
+
+<p>Though Zehowah could not comprehend the meaning
+of the words, she saw by his face that he was
+terribly moved, and she herself began to be more
+sorry for him.</p>
+
+<p>'Indeed, Khaled,' she said, 'I will try to love you
+from this hour. But it is a hard thing, because you
+cannot explain it, and it is not easy to learn what
+cannot be explained. Do you think that all women
+love their husbands in this way you mean? Am I
+unlike all the rest?'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled took her hand and held it, and looked into
+her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>'Love is the first mystery of the world,' he said.
+'Death is the second. Between the two there is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
+nothing but a weariness darkened with shadows and
+thick with mists. What is gold? A cinder that
+glows in the darkness for a moment and falls away to
+a cold ash in our hand when we have taken it. But
+love is a treasure which remains. What is renown?
+A cry uttered in the bazar by men whose minds are
+subject to change as their bodies are to death. But
+the voice of love is heard in paradise, singing beside
+the fountains Tasnim and Salsahil. What is power?
+A net with which to draw wealth and fame from the
+waters of life? To what end? We must die. Or
+is power a sword to kill our enemies? If their time
+is come they will die without the sword. Or is it a
+stick to purify the hides of fools? The fool will die
+also, like his master, and both will be forgotten. But
+they who love shall enter the seventh heaven together,
+according to the promise of Allah. Death is stronger
+than man or woman, but love is stronger than death,
+and all else is but a vision seen in the desert, having
+no reality.'</p>
+
+<p>'I will try to understand it, for I see that you are
+very unhappy,' said Zehowah.</p>
+
+<p>She was silent after this, for Khaled's words were
+earnest and sank into her soul. Yet the more she
+tried to imagine what the passion in him could be like,
+the less she was able to understand it, for some of
+Khaled's actions had been foolish, but she supposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
+that there must have been some wisdom in them,
+having its foundation in the nature of love.</p>
+
+<p>'What he says is true,' she thought. 'I married
+him in order to give my people a just and brave king,
+and he is both brave and just. And I am certainly a
+good wife, for I should be dissolved in shame if
+another man were to see my face, and moreover I am
+careful of his wants, and I take his kefiyeh from his
+head with my own hands, and smooth the cushions
+for him and bring him food and drink when he desires
+it. Or have I withheld from him any of the treasures
+of the palace, or stood in the way of his taking another
+wife? Until to-day, I thought indeed that this talk
+of love meant but little, and that he spoke of it
+because he desired an excuse for marrying Almasta
+who loves him. But when I said at a venture that
+he wished to make me jealous, he confessed the truth.
+Now all the tales of love told by the old women are
+of young persons who have seen each other from a
+distance, but are hindered from marrying. And we
+are already married. Surely, it is very hard to understand.'</p>
+
+<p>After this Khaled never called Almasta to sit at
+his feet and sing to him, as he had done before, and
+Zehowah was constantly with him in her stead. At
+first Almasta supposed that Khaled only made a pretence
+of disregarding her, out of respect for his wife,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
+but she soon perceived that he was indifferent and no
+longer noticed her. She then grew fierce and jealous,
+and her voice was not heard singing in the harem;
+but she went and took her needle again from the
+crevice in the pavement and hid it in her hair, and
+though Zehowah often called her, when Khaled was
+not in the house, she made as though she understood
+even less of the Arabic language than before and sat
+stupidly on the carpet, gazing at her hands. Zehowah
+wearied of her silence, for she understood the reason
+of it well enough.</p>
+
+<p>'I am tired of this woman,' she said to Khaled.
+'Do you think I am jealous of her now?'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled smiled a little, but said nothing, only
+shaking his head.</p>
+
+<p>'I am tired of her,' Zehowah repeated. 'She sits
+before me like a sack of barley in a grainseller's shop,
+neither moving nor speaking.'</p>
+
+<p>'She is yours,' Khaled answered. 'Send her away.
+Or we will give her in marriage to one of the sheikhs
+who will take her away to the desert. In this way
+she will not be able even to visit you except when her
+husband comes into the city.'</p>
+
+<p>But they decided nothing at that time. Some
+days later Khaled was sitting alone upon a balcony,
+Zehowah having gone to the bath, when Almasta came
+suddenly before him and threw herself at his feet,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
+beating her forehead and tearing her hair, though not
+indeed in a way to injure it.</p>
+
+<p>'What have I done?' she cried. 'Why is my
+lord displeased?'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled looked at her in surprise, but answered
+nothing at first.</p>
+
+<p>'Why are my lord's eyes like frozen pools by the
+Kura, and why is his forehead like Kasbek in a mist?'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled laughed a little at her words.</p>
+
+<p>'Kasbek is far from Riad,' he answered, 'and the
+waters of the Kura do not irrigate the Red Desert. I
+am not displeased. On the contrary, I will give you
+a husband and a sufficient dowry. Go in peace.'</p>
+
+<p>But Almasta remained where she was, weeping and
+beating her forehead.</p>
+
+<p>'Let me stay!' she cried. 'Let me stay, for I love
+you. I will eat the dust under your feet. Only let
+me stay.'</p>
+
+<p>'I think not,' Khaled answered. 'You weary
+Zehowah with your silence and your sullenness.'</p>
+
+<p>'Let me stay!' she repeated, over and over again.</p>
+
+<p>She was not making any pretence of grief, for the
+tears ran down abundantly and stained the red leather
+of Khaled's shoes. Though he was hard-hearted he
+was not altogether cruel, for a man who loves one
+woman greatly is somewhat softened towards all such
+as do not stand immediately in his way.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'It is true,' he thought, 'that I have given this
+woman some occasion of hope, for I have treated her
+kindly during many days, and she has probably supposed
+that I would marry her. For she is less keen-sighted
+than Zehowah, and moreover she loves me.'</p>
+
+<p>'Do not drive me out!' cried Almasta. 'For I
+shall die if I cannot see your face. What have I
+done?'</p>
+
+<p>'You have indeed done nothing worthy of death,
+for I cannot prove that you killed Abdul Kerim. I
+will therefore give you a good husband and you shall
+be happy.'</p>
+
+<p>But Almasta would not go away, and embracing
+his knees she looked up into his face, imploring him
+to let her remain. Khaled could not but see that she
+was beautiful, for the mid-day light fell upon her white
+face and her red lips, and made shadows in her hair
+of the colour of mellow dates, and reflections as bright
+as gold when the burnisher is still in the goldsmith's
+hand. Though he cared nothing for Almasta and
+little for her sorrow, his eye was pleased and he
+smiled.</p>
+
+<p>Then he looked up and saw Zehowah standing
+before him, just as she had come from the bath,
+wrapped in loose garments of silk and gold. He
+gazed at her attentively for there was a distant gleam
+of light in her eyes and her cheeks were warm, though<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
+she stood in the shadow, so that he thought she had
+never been more beautiful, and he did not care to look
+at Almasta's face again.</p>
+
+<p>'Why is Almasta lamenting in this way?'
+Zehowah asked.</p>
+
+<p>'She desires to stay in the palace,' Khaled
+answered; 'but I have told her that she shall be
+married, and yet she wishes to stay.'</p>
+
+<p>'Let her be married quickly, then. Is she a free
+woman, that she should resist, or is she rich that she
+should refuse alms? Let her be married.'</p>
+
+<p>'There is a certain young man, cousin to Abdul
+Kerim, a Bedouin of pure descent. Let him take her,
+if he will, and let the marriage be celebrated to-morrow.'</p>
+
+<p>But Almasta shook her head, and her tears never
+ceased from flowing.</p>
+
+<p>'You will marry him,' said Khaled. 'And if any
+harm comes to him, I will cause you to be put to
+death before the second call to prayer on the following
+morning.'</p>
+
+<p>When Almasta heard this, her tears were suddenly
+dried and her lips closed tightly. She rose from the
+floor and retired to a distance within the room.</p>
+
+<p>On that day Khaled sent for the young man of
+whom he had spoken, whose name was Abdullah ibn
+Mohammed el Herir, and offered him Almasta for a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
+wife. And he accepted her joyfully, for he had heard
+of her wonderful beauty, and was moreover much
+gratified by being given a woman whom the former
+Sultan would probably have married if he had lived.
+Khaled also gave him a grey mare as a wedding gift,
+and a handsome garment.</p>
+
+<p>The marriage was therefore celebrated in the
+customary manner, and no harm came to Abdullah.
+But as the autumn had now set in, he soon afterwards
+left the city, taking Almasta with him, to live in tents,
+after the manner of the Bedouins.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h3>
+
+
+<p>Abdullah ibn Mohammed, though a young man, was
+now the sheikh of a considerable tribe which had
+frequently done good service to the late Sultan,
+Zehowah's father, and which had also borne a prominent
+part in the recent war. Abdul Kerim, whom
+Almasta had murdered, had been the sheikh during
+his lifetime, and if the claims of birth had been justly
+considered, his son, though a mere boy, should have
+succeeded him. But Abdullah had found it easy to
+usurp the chief place, and in the council which was
+held after Abdul Kerim's death he was chosen by
+acclamation. It chanced, too, that he was not married
+at the time when he took Almasta, for of two
+wives the one had died of a fever during the summer,
+and he had divorced the other on account of her
+unbearable temper, having been deceived in respect of
+this by her parents, who had assured him that she was
+as gentle as a dove and as submissive as a lamb. But
+she had turned out to be as quarrelsome as a wasp
+and as unmanageable as an untrained hawk, so he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
+divorced her, and the more readily because she was
+not beautiful and her dower had been insignificant.
+Almasta therefore found that she was her husband's
+only wife.</p>
+
+<p>She would certainly have killed him, as she had
+killed Abdul Kerim, and, indeed, the late Sultan, in
+the hope of being taken back into the palace, but she
+was prevented by the fear of death, for she had seen
+that Khaled's threat was not empty and would be
+executed if harm came to Abdullah after his marriage.
+She accordingly set herself to please him, and first of
+all she learned to speak the Arabic language, in order
+that she might sing to him in his own tongue and tell
+him tales of distant countries, which she had learned
+in her own home.</p>
+
+<p>Abdullah passed the months of autumn and the
+early winter in the desert, moving about from place to
+place, as is the custom of the Bedouins, it being his
+intention to reach a northerly point of Ajman in the
+spring, in order to fall upon the Persian pilgrims and
+extort a ransom before they entered the territory of
+Nejed. For it would not be lawful to attack them
+after that, since there was a treaty with the Emir of
+Basrah, allowing the pilgrims a safe and free passage
+towards Mecca, for which the Emir paid yearly a sum
+of money to the Sultan of Nejed.</p>
+
+<p>But Almasta knew nothing of this, for she was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
+wholly ignorant of the desert; and moreover Abdullah
+was a cautious man, who held that whatsoever is to
+be kept secret must not be uttered aloud, though there
+be no one within three days' journey to hear it.</p>
+
+<p>Abdullah treated her with great consideration, not
+obliging her to weary herself overmuch with cooking
+and other work of the tents. For he rejoiced in her
+beauty and in the sweetness of her voice, and his chief
+delight was to sit in the door of the tent at night,
+chewing frankincense, while Almasta sat within, close
+behind him, and told him tales of her own country, or
+of the life in the palace of Riad. The latter indeed
+was as strange to him as the former, and much more
+interesting.</p>
+
+<p>Now one evening they were alone together in this
+manner, and it was not yet very cold. But the stars
+shone brightly as though there would be a frost before
+morning, and the other tents were all closed and no
+one was near the coals which remained from the fire
+after baking the blanket-bread. One might hear the
+chewing of the camels in the dark and the tramping
+of a mare that moved slowly about, her hind feet
+being chained together.</p>
+
+<p>'Tell me more of the palace at Riad,' said Abdullah.
+'For your Kura, and your snow-covered Kasbek, and
+your Tiflis with its warm springs and gardens, I
+shall never see. But I have seen the courts of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
+palace from my youth, and the Sultan's kahwah, and
+the latticed windows of the harem, from which you
+say that you saw me and loved me in the last days of
+summer.'</p>
+
+<p>Almasta had said this to please him, though it
+was not true. For she knew that men easily believe
+what flatters them, as women believe that what they
+desire must come to pass.</p>
+
+<p>'The palace is a wonderful palace,' said Almasta,
+'and I will tell you of the treasures which are in it.'</p>
+
+<p>'That is what I wish to hear,' answered Abdullah,
+putting a piece of frankincense into his mouth and
+beginning to chew it. 'Tell me of the treasures, for
+it is said that they are great and of extraordinary
+value.'</p>
+
+<p>'The value of them cannot be calculated, O Abdullah,
+for if you had seventy thousand hands and
+on each hand seventy thousand fingers you could not
+count upon your fingers in a whole lifetime the gold
+sherifs and sequins and tomans which are hidden
+away there in bags. Beneath the court of strangers
+there is a great chamber built of stone in which the
+sacks of gold are kept, and they are piled up to the
+roof of the vault on all sides and in the middle,
+leaving only narrow passages between.'</p>
+
+<p>'If it is all gold, what is the use of the passages?'
+asked Abdullah.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'I do not know, but they are there, and there is
+another room filled with silver in the same manner.
+There are also secret places underground in which
+jewels are kept in chests, rubies and pearls and Indian
+diamonds and emeralds, in such quantities that they
+would suffice to make necklaces of a thousand rows
+each for each of the mountains in my country. And
+we have many mountains, great ones, not such as the
+little hills you have seen, but several days' journey in
+height. For we say that when the Lord made the
+earth it was at first unsteady, and He set our mountains
+upon it, in the middle, to make it firm, and it
+has never moved since.'</p>
+
+<p>'I do not believe this,' said Abdullah. 'Tell me
+more about the jewels in Riad.'</p>
+
+<p>'There is no end of them. They are like the
+grains of sand in the desert, and no one of them is
+worth less than a thousand gold sherifs. I do not
+even know the names of the different kinds, but there
+are turquoises without number, of the Maidan, and all
+good, so that you may write upon them with a piece
+of gold as with a pen; and there are red stones as
+large as a dove's egg, red and fiery as the wine of
+Kachetia, and others, blue as the sky in winter, and
+yellow ones, and some with leaves of gold in them,
+like morsels of treng floating in the juice. But
+besides the gold and silver and precious stones there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
+are thousands of rich garments which are kept in
+chests of fragrant wood, in upper chambers, abas woven
+of gold and silk and linen, and vests embroidered with
+pearls, and shoes of which even the soles appear to be
+of gold. And there are great pieces of stuff, Indian
+silk, and Persian velvet, and even satin from Stamboul,
+woven by unbelievers with the help of devils.
+Then too, in the palace of Riad, there are stored great
+quantities of precious weapons, most of them made in
+Syria, with many swords of Sh&#257;m, which you say are
+the best, though I do not understand the matter, each
+having an inscription in letters of gold upon the
+blade, and the hilt most cunningly chiselled in the
+same metal, or carved out of ivory.'</p>
+
+<p>'I saw the treasure of Haïl when we took it away
+after the war, and most of it was distributed among us,
+but there was nothing like this,' said Abdullah.</p>
+
+<p>'The treasure of Haïl is to the treasure of Riad, as
+a small black fly walking upon the face of the sun,'
+answered Almasta. 'And yet there was wealth there
+also, and there was much which you never saw. For
+that Khaled, who is now Sultan, is crafty and avaricious,
+and he loaded many camels secretly by night,
+being helped by black slaves, all of whom he slew
+afterwards with his own hand lest they should tell the
+tale, and he then called camel-drivers and sent them
+away with the beasts to Riad. And he said to them:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
+"These are certain loads of fine wheat and of mellow
+dates, for the Sultan's table, such as cannot be found in
+Riad." But he sent a letter to his father-in-law, who
+caused all the packs to be taken immediately to one
+of the secret chambers, where he and his daughter
+Zehowah took out the jewels and stored them with
+their own. And as for me, I believe that Khaled
+made an end of the Sultan himself by means of poison
+in Dereyiyah, for he rode away suddenly after they
+had met, as though his conscience smote him.'</p>
+
+<p>'What is this evil tale which you are telling me?'
+cried Abdullah. 'Surely, it is a lie, for Khaled is a
+brave man who gives every one his due and deceives
+no one. And he is by no means subtle, for I have
+heard him in council, and he generally said only,
+"Smite," but sometimes he said "Strike," and that
+was all his eloquence. But whether he said the one
+or the other, he was generally the first to follow his
+own advice which, indeed, by the merciful dispensation
+of Allah, procured us the victory. But what is
+this tale which you have invented?'</p>
+
+<p>'And who is this Khaled whom you praise?'
+asked Almasta. 'And how can you know his craftiness
+as I know it, who have lived in the palace and
+braided his wife's hair, and brought him drink when
+he was thirsty? Is he a man of your tribe whose
+descent you can count upon your fingers, from him to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
+his grandfather and to Ishmael and Abraham? Or is
+he a man of a tribe known to you, and whose generations
+you also know? Has any man called him
+Khaled ibn Mohammed, or Khaled ibn Abdullah? Or
+has he ever spoken of his father, who is probably now
+drinking boiling water, and the black angels are pounding
+his head with iron maces. Yet he says that he
+came from the desert. Then you, who are of the desert,
+do not know the desert, for you do not know whence
+he is. But there are those who do know, and he fears
+them, lest they should tell the truth and destroy him.'</p>
+
+<p>'These are idle tales,' said Abdullah. 'Is it
+probable that the Sultan would have bestowed his
+daughter and all the treasures you have described
+upon such a man without having made inquiries concerning
+his family? And if the Sultan said nothing
+to us about it, and if Khaled holds his peace, they
+have doubtless their reasons. For it may be that
+there is a blood feud between the people of Khaled
+and some great person in Riad, so that he would be in
+danger of his life if he revealed his father's name.
+Allah knows. It is not our business.'</p>
+
+<p>'O Abdullah, you are simple, and you believe all
+things!' cried Almasta. 'But I heard of him in
+Basrah.'</p>
+
+<p>'What did you hear in Basrah? And how could
+you have heard of him there?'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'I was in the Emir's harem, being kept there to
+rest from the journey after they had brought me from
+the north. And there I heard of Khaled, for the
+women talked of him, having been told tales about him
+by a merchant who was admitted to the palace.'</p>
+
+<p>'Now this is great folly,' answered Abdullah. 'For
+Khaled came suddenly to Riad, and was married
+immediately to Zehowah, and on the next day he
+went out with us against Haïl, which we took from
+the Shammar in three weeks' time from the day of our
+marching. Moreover we found you there in the palace.
+How then could news of Khaled have reached Basrah
+before you left that place?'</p>
+
+<p>'I had come to Haïl but the day before you
+attacked the city,' said Almasta. 'But did I say that
+I had heard of him as already married to Zehowah?'</p>
+
+<p>For she saw that she had run the risk of being
+found out in a lie, and she made haste to defend herself.</p>
+
+<p>'What did you hear of him?' asked Abdullah.</p>
+
+<p>'He was a notable fellow and a robber,' answered
+Almasta. 'For he is a Persian, and a Shiyah, who
+offers prayers to Ali in secret. But because he had
+done many outrageous deeds, a great price was set
+upon his head throughout Persia, so he fled into
+Arabia and by his boldness and craft he married
+Zehowah. And now he has made a secret covenant
+to deliver over the kingdom of Nejed to the Persians.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then Abdullah laughed aloud.</p>
+
+<p>'Who shall deliver over the Bedouin to a white-faced
+people, who live on boiled chestnuts and ride
+astride of a camel? And when a man has got a
+kingdom, why should he give it up to any one, except
+under force?'</p>
+
+<p>'There is a reason for this, too,' Almasta answered
+unabashed. 'For the King of the Persians, whom they
+call the Padeshah, has an only daughter, of great
+beauty, and Khaled is to receive her in marriage as
+the price of Nejed. Then he will by treachery destroy
+the Padeshah's sons and will inherit Persia also, as he
+has inherited Nejed; and after that he will make war
+upon the Romans in Stamboul and will become the
+master of the whole world.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is a strange tale, and seems full of madness,'
+said Abdullah. 'I do not believe it. Tell me rather
+a story of your own country, and afterwards we will
+sleep, for to-morrow we will leave this place.'</p>
+
+<p>'I will tell you a wonderful history, which is quite
+true,' answered Almasta. 'Take this fresh piece of
+frankincense which I have prepared for you, and put
+it into your mouth, for you will then not interrupt me
+with questions while I am speaking.'</p>
+
+<p>So Abdullah took the savoury gum and chewed it,
+and Almasta told him the tale which here follows.</p>
+
+<p>'There is in the north, beyond Persia, a great and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
+prosperous kingdom, lying between two seas, and
+resembling paradise for its wonderful beauty. All the
+hills are covered with trees of every description in
+which innumerable birds make their nests, all of a
+beautiful plumage and good for man to eat. And in
+these forests there are also great herds of animals,
+whose name I do not know in Arabic, having branching
+horns and kindred to the little beast which you call
+the cow of the desert, but far better to eat and as large
+as full-grown camels. A man who is hungry need
+only shoot an arrow at a venture, for the birds and
+animals are so numerous that he will certainly hit
+something. This kingdom is watered everywhere by
+rivers and streams abounding in fish, all good to eat
+and easily caught, and all the valleys are filled with
+vineyards of black and white grapes. But the people
+of this country are chiefly Christians. May Allah send
+them enlightenment! Now the King was an old man,
+who delighted in feasting and cared little for the affairs
+of the nation, preferring a lute to a sword, and a wine-cup
+to a shield, and the feet of dancing girls to the
+hoofs of war horses. He had no son to go out to war
+for him, but only one beautiful daughter.'</p>
+
+<p>'Like the Sultan of our country who died,' said
+Abdullah.</p>
+
+<p>'Very much. There were also other points of
+resemblance. Now there was a certain Tartar in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
+kingdom of Samarkand, called Ismaïl, who was a
+robber and had destroyed many caravans on the march,
+and had broken into many houses both in Samarkand
+and Tashkent, a notable evildoer. But having
+one day stolen a fleet mare from the Sultan's stables,
+the soldiers pursued him, and in order to escape impalement
+he fled. No one could catch him because
+the mare he had stolen was the fleetest in Great Tartary.
+So he rode westward through many countries, and by
+the shores of the inland sea, until he came to the
+kingdom which I have described. There he hid himself
+in the forest for some time and waylaid travellers,
+making them tell him all that they knew of the
+kingdom, and afterwards killing them. But when he
+had obtained all that he wanted, both rich garments
+and splendid weapons, and the necessary information,
+he left the forest and rode into the capital city. Then
+he went to the King and desired of him a private
+audience, which was granted. He said that he was
+the son of a powerful Christian prince, and had been
+taken captive by the Tartars, but had escaped, and he
+offered to make all Tartary subject to the King, if only
+he might marry his daughter. And whether by magic,
+or by eloquence, he succeeded, for the King was old
+and feeble-minded. But soon after the wedding, he
+poisoned his father-in-law and became king in his
+place, though there were many in the land who had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
+a better right, being closely connected with the royal
+blood.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is the story of Khaled,' said Abdullah. 'I
+know the truth. Why do you weary me, trying to
+deceive me, and calling him a robber? But it is true
+that in Nejed there are men of good descent who have
+a better right to sit on the throne.'</p>
+
+<p>'Hear what followed,' answered Almasta. 'This
+man Ismaïl afterwards took captive a woman of the
+Tartars, who knew who he was, though he supposed
+her ignorant. And he gave her in marriage to the
+youngest and bravest of his captains, a man to whom
+Allah had vouchsafed the tongue of eloquence, and the
+teeth of strength, and the lips of discretion to close
+together and hide both at the proper season. The
+woman told her husband who Ismaïl was, and instructed
+him concerning the palace, its passages and secret
+places, and the treasures that were hidden there. And
+she told him also that Ismaïl had made a covenant
+with the Sultan of his own country, which would
+bring destruction upon the nation he now ruled. For
+she loved her husband on account of his youth and
+beauty, and she had embraced his faith and was ready
+to die for him.'</p>
+
+<p>'The husband's name was Abdullah,' said Abdullah.
+'And he also loved his wife, who surpassed other
+women in beauty, as a bay mare surpasses pigs.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'He afterwards loved her still better,' answered
+Almasta, 'for though he was only chief over four
+hundred tents, she gave him a kingdom. Hear what
+followed. But I will call him Abdullah if you please,
+though his name was Mskhet.'</p>
+
+<p>'Allah is merciful! There are no such names in
+Arabia. This one is like the breaking of earthen
+vessels upon stones. Call him Abdullah.'</p>
+
+<p>'Abdullah therefore went to the wisest and most
+discreet of his kindred, and spoke to them of the great
+treasures which were hidden in the palace, and he
+pointed out to their obscured sight that all this wealth
+had been got by them and their fathers in war, and
+had been taken in tithes from the people, and was
+now in the possession of Ismaïl. And they talked
+among themselves and saw that this was indeed
+true. And at another time, he told them that Ismaïl
+was not really of their religion, but a hypocrite. And
+again a third time he told them the whole truth, so
+that their hearts burned when they knew that their
+King was but a robber who had been condemned to
+death. Though they were discreet men, the story was
+in some way told abroad among the soldiers, doubtless
+by the intervention of angels, so that all the people
+knew it, and were angry against Ismaïl and ready to
+break out against him so soon as a man could be found
+to lead them.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>'</p>
+
+<p>'But,' said Abdullah, 'this Ismaïl doubtless had a
+strong guard of soldiers about him, and had given gifts
+to his captains, and shown honour to them, so that they
+were attached to him.'</p>
+
+<p>'Undoubtedly,' replied Almasta, 'and but for his
+wife, Abdullah could not have succeeded. She advised
+him to go to his discreet kindred and friends and
+say to them, "See, if you will afterwards support me, I
+will go alone into the palace and will get the better of
+this Ismaïl, when he is asleep, and I will so do that the
+soldiers shall not oppose me. And afterwards, you will
+all enter together and the treasure shall be divided.
+But we will throw some of it to the people, lest they
+be disappointed." And so he did. For his wife knew
+the secret entrances to the palace and took him in with
+her by night, disguised as a woman. And they went
+together silently into the harem, and slew Ismaïl and
+bound his wife, and took the keys of the treasure
+chambers from under the pillow. After this they took
+from the gold as many bags as there were soldiers, and
+waked each man, giving him a sack of sherifs, and
+bidding him take as much more as he could find, for
+the King was dead. Then Abdullah's friends were admitted
+and they divided the treasure, and went abroad
+before it was day, calling upon the people that Ismaïl
+was dead and that a man of their own nation was
+King in his place, and scattering handfuls of gold into<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
+every house as they passed. And, behold, before the
+second call to prayer, Abdullah was King, and all the
+people came and did homage to him. And Abdullah
+himself was astonished when he saw how easy it had
+been, and loved his wife even better than before.'</p>
+
+<p>So Almasta finished her tale and there was silence
+for a time, while Abdullah sat still and gazed at the
+closed tents in the starlight, and listened to the distant
+chewing of the camels.</p>
+
+<p>'Give me some water,' he said at last. 'I am very
+thirsty.'</p>
+
+<p>She brought him drink from the skin, and soon
+afterwards he lay down to rest. But they said nothing
+more to each other that night of the story which Almasta
+had told.</p>
+
+<p>On the following day they journeyed fully eleven
+hours, to a place where there was much water, and
+in the evening, when the camels were chewing, and
+all the Bedouins had eaten and were resting in
+their tents, Abdullah sat again in his accustomed
+place.</p>
+
+<p>'Almasta, light of my darkness,' he said, 'I would
+gladly hear again something of the tale you told me
+last night, for I have not remembered it well, being
+overburdened with the cares of my people and the
+direction of the march. Surely you said that when
+the woman and her husband had killed Ismaïl they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
+took the keys of the treasure chambers from under his
+pillow. Is it not so?'</p>
+
+<p>'They did so, Abdullah,'</p>
+
+<p>'And they immediately went and took the gold and
+gave it to the guards? But I have forgotten, for it is
+a matter of little importance, being but a tale.'</p>
+
+<p>'That is what they did,' answered Almasta.</p>
+
+<p>'But surely this is a fable. How could the woman
+know the way to the treasure chambers and find it in
+the dark? For you said also that these secret places
+were underground and therefore a great way from the
+harem.'</p>
+
+<p>'I did not say that, Abdullah, for the secret places
+underground are those in Riad, which I described to
+you before I began the other story.'</p>
+
+<p>'This may be true, for I am very forgetful. But I
+daresay that the treasures in the city you described
+were also hidden in similar places.'</p>
+
+<p>'Since you speak of this, I remember that it was
+so. The glorious light of your intelligence penetrates
+the darkness of my memory and makes it clear. The
+places were exactly similar.'</p>
+
+<p>'How then could the woman, who only knew the
+harem, find her way in the dark, and lead her husband,
+to a part of the palace which she had never visited?
+This is a hard thing.'</p>
+
+<p>'It was not hard for her. She had seen Ismaïl<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
+open with his key a door in his sleeping chamber, and
+he had gone in and after some time had returned
+bearing sacks of gold pieces. Was this a hard thing?
+Or does a wise man make two doors to his treasure-house,
+the one for himself and the other for thieves?
+The one leading to his own chamber, for his own use,
+and the other opening upon the highway for the convenience
+of robbers? It is possible, but I think not.
+Ismaïl had but one door. He was not an Egyptian
+jackass.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is reasonable,' said Abdullah. 'And I am
+now satisfied. But my imagination was not at rest, for
+the story is a good one and deserves to be well told.'</p>
+
+<p>After this Abdullah wandered for a long time with
+the Bedouins who accompanied him, often changing his
+direction, so that they wondered whither he was leading
+them, and began to question him. But he answered
+that he had heard secretly of a great spoil to be taken,
+and that they should all have a share of it, and whenever
+they came upon Arabs of another tribe Abdullah
+invited the sheikh and the most notable men to his
+tent and entertained them sumptuously with camel's
+meat, afterwards talking long with them in private.
+Before many weeks had passed, the skilful men of the
+tribe, who knew the signs, were aware that many other
+Bedouins were travelling in the same direction as
+themselves, though they could not be seen.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But neither Abdullah's men, nor Almasta herself,
+could know that in three months the sheikhs of all the
+tribes from Hasa to Harb, and from Ajman to El
+Kora, had heard that Khaled the Sultan was a Persian
+robber, and a Shiyah at heart, venerating Ali and
+execrating the true Sonna, a man who in all probability
+drank wine in secret, and who was certainly plotting
+to deliver up all Nejed to the power of the Ajjem.
+Some of them believed the tale readily enough, for all
+had asked whence Khaled was and none had got an
+answer. Could a man be of the desert, they asked,
+and yet not be known by name in any of the tribes,
+nor his father before him? Surely, there was a secret,
+they said, and he who will not tell the name of his
+father has a reason for changing his own. And as for
+his being brave and having fought well in the war
+with the Shammar, how could a man have been a
+robber if he were not brave, and why should he not
+fight manfully, since he had everything to gain and
+nothing to lose? As for the spoils, too, he had made
+a pretence of dividing them justly, but it was now
+well known that he had laden camels by stealth at
+Haïl and had sent them secretly to Riad, slaughtering
+with his own hand all those who had helped him.</p>
+
+<p>Little by little, too, the story came to Riad and
+was told in a low voice by merchants in the bazar,
+and repeated by their wives among their acquaintance,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
+and by the slaves in the market and among the
+beggars who begged by the doors of the great mosque
+but were fed daily from the palace. And though many
+persons of the better sort thought that the story might
+be true, and wagged their heads when Khaled's
+name was spoken, yet the beggars with one accord
+declared that it was a lie. For Khaled was generous
+in almsgiving, and they said, 'If Khaled is overthrown
+and another Sultan set up in his place, how do we
+know whether there will be boiled camel's meat from
+time to time as well as blanket-bread and a small
+measure of barley meal? And will the next Sultan
+scatter gold in the streets as Khaled did on the first
+day when he rode to the mosque? Truly these chatterers
+of Bedouins talk much of the treasure in the
+palace which will be divided, but they who talk most
+of gold, are they who most desire it, and we shall get
+none. Therefore we say it is a lie, and Khaled is a
+true man, and a Sonna like ourselves, not a swiller of
+wine nor a devourer of pigs. Allah show him mercy
+now and at the day of resurrection! The cock-sparrow
+is pluming his breast while the hunter is pulling the
+string of the snare.'</p>
+
+<p>Thus the beggars talked among themselves all day,
+reasoning after the manner of their kind. But they
+suffered other people to talk as they pleased, for one
+who desires alms must not exhibit a contradictory<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
+disposition, lest the rich man be offended and eat the
+melon together with the melon peels, and exclaim that
+the dirt-scraper has become a preacher. For the rich
+man's anger is at the edge of his nostrils and always
+ready.</p>
+
+<p>As the winter passed away and the spring began,
+the tribes of the desert drew nearer and nearer to the
+city, as is their wont at that season. For many of the
+sheikhs had houses in the city, in which they spent
+the hot months of the year, while their people were
+encamped in the low hill country not far off, where the
+heat is less fierce than in the plains and the deserts.
+And now also the season of the Haj was approaching,
+for Ramadhan was not far off, and the beggars
+congregated at the gates waiting for the first pilgrims,
+and expecting plentiful alms, which in due time they
+received, for in that year Abdullah did not molest the
+Persian pilgrimage, his mind being occupied with other
+matters.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX</h3>
+
+
+<p>The story which was thus repeated from mouth to
+mouth in Riad reached the palace at the last, and the
+guards told it to each other as they sat together under
+the shadow of the great wall, the cooks related it
+among themselves in the kitchen, and the black slaves
+gossiped about it in the corners of the courtyard, and
+the women slaves stood and listened while they talked
+and carried the tale into the harem. But the people
+of the palace were more slow to believe than the people
+of the city, for they shared in a measure in Khaled's
+right of possession, and desired no change of master,
+so that for a long time neither Zehowah nor Khaled
+heard anything of what was commonly reported. Yet
+at last the old woman who had been Zehowah's nurse
+told her the substance of the story, with many protestations
+of unbelief, and of anger against those who
+had invented the lie.</p>
+
+<p>'It is right that my lady and mistress should know
+these things,' she said, 'and when our lord the Sultan
+has been informed of them, he will doubtless cause his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
+soldiers to go forth with sticks and purify the hides of
+the chief evil-speakers in the bazar. There is one
+especially, a merchant whose shop is opposite the door
+of the little mosque, who is continually bold in falsehood,
+being the same who sold me this garment for
+linen; but it afterwards turned out to be cotton and
+the gold threads are brass and have turned black. I
+pray Allah to be just as well as merciful.'</p>
+
+<p>At first Zehowah laughed, but soon afterwards her
+face became grave, and she bent her brows, for though
+the story was but a lie she saw how easily it would
+find credence. She therefore sent the old woman
+away with a gift and she herself went to Khaled, and
+sat down beside him and took his hand.</p>
+
+<p>'You have secret enemies,' she said, 'who are
+plotting against your life, and who have already begun
+to attack you by filling the air of the city with falsehoods
+which fly from house to house like flies in summer
+entering at the window and going out by the door. You
+must sift this matter, for it is worthy of attention.'</p>
+
+<p>'And what are these lies of which you speak?'</p>
+
+<p>'It is said openly in the city that you are a Shiyah
+and a Persian, having been a robber before you came
+here, and that you are plotting to deliver over Nejed to
+the Persians. Look to this, Khaled, for they say
+that you are no Bedouin since no one knows your
+descent nor the name of your father.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Do you believe this of me, Zehowah?' Khaled
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>'Do I believe that the sun is black and the night
+as white as the sun? But it is true that I do not
+know your father's name.'</p>
+
+<p>Then Khaled was troubled, for he saw that it would
+be a hard matter to explain, and that without explanation
+his safety might be endangered. Zehowah sat
+still beside him, holding his hand and looking into his
+face, as though expecting an answer.</p>
+
+<p>'Have I done wisely in telling you?' she asked at
+last. 'You are troubled. I should have said nothing.'</p>
+
+<p>'You have done wisely,' he answered. 'For I will
+go and speak to them, and if they believe me, the
+matter is finished, but if not I have lost nothing.'</p>
+
+<p>'It will be well to give the chief men presents, and
+to distribute something among the people, for gifts are
+great persuaders of unbelief.'</p>
+
+<p>'Shall I give them presents because they have
+believed evil of me?' asked Khaled, laughing. 'Rather
+would I give you the treasures of the whole earth
+because you have not believed it.'</p>
+
+<p>'If I had the wealth of the whole world I would
+give it to them rather than that they should hurt a hair
+of your head,' Zehowah answered.</p>
+
+<p>'Am I more dear to you than so much gold,
+Zehowah?'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'What is gold that it should be weighed in the
+balance with the life of a man? You are dearer to
+me than gold.'</p>
+
+<p>'Is this love, Zehowah?' Khaled asked, in a low
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>'I do not know whether it be love or not.'</p>
+
+<p>'The wing of night is lifted for a moment, and the
+false dawn is seen, and afterwards it is night again.
+But the true dawn will come by and by, when night
+folds her wings before the day.'</p>
+
+<p>'You speak in a riddle, Khaled.'</p>
+
+<p>'It is no matter. I will neither make a speech
+to the people, nor give them gifts. What is it to me?
+Let them chatter from the first call to prayer until the
+lights are put out in the evening. My fate is about
+my neck, and I cannot change it, any more than I can
+make you love me. Allah is great. I will wait and
+see what happens.'</p>
+
+<p>'Everything is undoubtedly in Allah's hand,' said
+Zehowah. 'But if a man, having meat set before him,
+will not raise his right hand to thrust it into the dish,
+he will die of hunger.'</p>
+
+<p>'And do you think that Allah does not know
+before whether the man will stretch out his hand or
+not?'</p>
+
+<p>'Undoubtedly Allah knows. And he also knows
+that if you will not sift this matter and stop the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
+mouths of the liars, I will, though I am but a woman,
+for otherwise we may both perish.'</p>
+
+<p>'If they destroy me, yet they cannot take the
+kingdom from you, nor hurt you,' said Khaled. 'How
+then are you in danger? If I am slain you will then
+choose a husband, whose father's name is known to
+them. They will be satisfied and you will be no worse
+off than before and possibly better. This is truth. I
+will therefore wait for the end.'</p>
+
+<p>'Who has put these words into your mouth, Khaled?
+For the thought is not in your heart. Moreover, if
+the tribes should rise up and overthrow you, they would
+not spare me, for I would fight against them with my
+hands and they would kill me.'</p>
+
+<p>'Why should you fight for me, since you do not
+love me? But this is folly. No one ever heard of
+a woman taking arms and fighting.'</p>
+
+<p>'I have heard of such deeds. And if I had not
+heard of them, others should through me, for I would be
+the first to do them.'</p>
+
+<p>'I think that so long as Khaled lives, Zehowah
+need not bear arms,' said Khaled. 'I will therefore
+go and call the chief men together and speak to
+them.'</p>
+
+<p>And so he did. When the principal officers who
+had remained in the city during the winter season
+were assembled in the kahwah, and had hung up their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
+swords on the pegs and partaken of a refreshment,
+Khaled sent the slaves away, and spoke in a few words
+as was his manner.</p>
+
+<p>'Men of Riad, Aared and all Nejed,' he said, 'I
+regret that more of you are not present here, but a
+great number of sheikhs are still in the desert, and it
+cannot be helped. I desire to tell you that I have
+heard of a tale concerning me which is circulated from
+mouth to ear throughout Riad and the whole kingdom.
+This tale is untrue, a lie such as no honest man repeats
+even to his own wife at home in the harem. For it is
+said that I am not called Khaled, but perhaps Ali
+Hassan, or perhaps Ali Hussein, that I am a Shiyah,
+a wine-bibber and an idolatrous one who prays for
+the intercession of Ali, besides being a Persian and a
+robber. It is also said that I plot to deliver over the
+kingdom of Nejed to the Persians, though how this
+could be done I do not know, seeing that the Persians
+are a meal-faced people of white jackals who do not
+know how to ride a camel. These are all lies. I
+swear by Allah.'</p>
+
+<p>When the men heard these words, they looked
+stealthily one at another, to see who would answer
+Khaled, for they had all heard the story and most of
+them were inclined to believe it. Peace is the mother
+of evil-speaking, as garbage breeds flies in a corner,
+which afterwards fly into clean houses and men ask<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
+whence they come. But none of the chief men found
+anything to say at first, so that Khaled sat in silence
+a long time, waiting for some one to speak. He therefore
+turned to the one nearest to him, and addressed
+him.</p>
+
+<p>'Have you heard this tale?' he inquired. 'And
+if you have heard it do you believe it?'</p>
+
+<p>'I think, indeed, that I have heard something of
+the kind,' answered the man. 'But it was as the
+chattering of an uncertain vision in a dream, which
+rings in the ears for a moment while it is yet dark in
+the morning, but is forgotten when the sun rises. By
+the instrumentality of a just mind Allah caused that
+which entered at one ear to run out from the other as
+the rinsing of a water-skin.'</p>
+
+<p>'Good,' answered Khaled. 'Yet it is not well to
+rinse the brains with falsehoods. And you?' he
+inquired, turning to the next. 'Have you heard it
+also?'</p>
+
+<p>'Just lord, I have heard,' replied this one. 'But
+if I have believed, may my head be shaved with a
+red-hot razor having a jagged edge.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is well,' Khaled said, and he questioned a
+third.</p>
+
+<p>'O Khaled!' cried the man. 'Is the milk sour,
+because the slave has imagined a lie saying, "I will
+say it is bad and then it will be given to me to drink"?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
+Or is honey bitter because the cook has put salt in the
+sweetmeats? Or is it night because the woman has
+shut the door and the window, to keep out the sun?'</p>
+
+<p>The next also found an answer, having collected
+his thoughts while the others were speaking.</p>
+
+<p>'A certain man,' said he, 'kept sheep in Tabal
+Shammar, and the dog was with the sheep in the fold.
+Then two foxes came to the fold in the evening and
+one of them said to the man: "All dogs are wolves,
+for we have seen their like in the mountains, and your
+dog is also a wolf and will eat up your sheep. Make
+haste to kill him therefore and cast out his carcass."
+And to the sheep the other fox said: "How many
+sheep hang by the heels at the butcher's! And how
+many dogs live in sheepfolds! This is an evil world for
+innocent people." And the sheep were at first persuaded,
+but presently the dog ran out and caught one
+of the foxes and broke his neck, and the man threw a
+stone at the other and hit him, so that he also died.
+Then the sheep said one to another: "The foxes have
+suffered justly, for they were liars and robbers and the
+dog and our master have protected us against them,
+which they would not have done had they desired our
+destruction." And so are the people, O Khaled. For
+if you let the liars go unhurt the people will believe
+them, but if you destroy them the faith of the multitude
+will be turned again to you.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'This is a fable,' said Khaled, 'and it is not without
+truth. I am the sheep-dog and the people are
+the sheep. But in the name of Allah, which are the
+foxes?'</p>
+
+<p>Then he turned to another, an old man who was
+the Kadi, celebrated for his wisdom and for his
+religious teaching in the chief mosque.</p>
+
+<p>'I ask you last of all,' said Khaled, 'because you
+are the wisest, and when the wisest words are heard
+last they are most easily remembered. For we first
+put water into the lamp, and then oil to float upon
+the surface, and next the wick, and last of all we take
+a torch and light the lamp and the darkness disappears.
+Light our lamp, therefore, O Kadi, and
+let us see clearly.'</p>
+
+<p>'O Khaled,' replied the Kadi, 'I am old and
+have seen the world. You cannot destroy the tree by
+cutting off one or two of its branches. It is necessary
+to strike at the root. Now the root of this tree of
+lies which has grown up is this. Neither we nor the
+people know whence you are, nor what was your
+father's name, and though I for my part do not impiously
+ask whence Allah takes the good gifts which
+he gives to men, there are many who are not satisfied,
+and who will go about in jealousy to make trouble
+until their questioning is answered. If you ask
+counsel of me, I say, tell us here present of what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
+tribe you are, for we believe you a pure Bedouin like
+the best of us, and tell us your father's name, and
+peace be upon him. We are men in authority and
+will speak to the people, and I will address them from
+the pulpit of the great mosque, and they will believe
+us. Then all will be ended, and the lies will be
+extinguished as the coals of an evening fire go out
+when the night frost descends upon the camp in
+winter. But if you will not tell us, yet I, for one, do
+not believe ill of you; and moreover you are lord,
+and we are vassals, so long as you are King and hold
+good and evil in your hand.'</p>
+
+<p>'So long as I am King,' Khaled repeated. 'And
+you think that if I do not tell my father's name, I
+shall not be where I am for a long time.'</p>
+
+<p>'Allah is wise, and knows,' answered the Kadi,
+but he would say nothing more.</p>
+
+<p>'This is plain speaking,' said Khaled, 'such as I
+like. But I might plainly take advantage of it. You
+desire to know my father's name and whence I come.
+Then is it not easy for me to say that I come from a
+distant part of the Great Dahna? Is there a man in
+Nejed who has crossed the Red Desert? And if I say
+that my father was Mohammed ibn Abd el Hamid
+ibn Abd el Latif, and so on to our father Ismaïl, upon
+whom be peace, shall any one deny that I speak truth?
+This is a very easy matter.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'So much the more will it be easy for us to satisfy
+the people,' answered the Kadi.</p>
+
+<p>'No doubt. I will think of what you have said.
+And now, I pray you, partake of another refreshment
+and go in peace.'</p>
+
+<p>At this all the chief men looked one at the other
+again, for they saw that Khaled would not tell them
+what they wished to know. And those of them who
+had doubted the story before now began to believe it.
+But they held their peace, and presently made their
+salutation and took their swords from the wall and
+departed.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled then left the kahwah and returned to
+Zehowah in the harem.</p>
+
+<p>'I have told them that these tales are lies,' he said,
+'but they do not believe me.'</p>
+
+<p>He repeated to Zehowah all that had been said,
+and she listened attentively, for she began to understand
+that there was danger not far off.</p>
+
+<p>'And I told them,' he said at last, 'that it would
+be as easy for me to invent names, as for them to hear
+them. Then they looked sideways each at the other
+and kept silent.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is a foolish thing which you have done,'
+answered Zehowah. 'They will now all believe that
+your father was an evildoer and that you yourself
+are no better. Otherwise, they will say, why should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
+he wish to conceal anything? You should have told
+them the truth, whatever it is.'</p>
+
+<p>'You also wish to know it, I see,' said Khaled,
+looking at Zehowah curiously. 'But if I were to tell
+you, you would not believe me, I think, any more than
+they would.'</p>
+
+<p>Then Zehowah looked at him in her turn, but he
+could not understand the language of her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>'What is this secret of yours?' she asked. 'I
+would indeed like to hear it, and if you swear to me
+that it is true, by Allah, I will believe you. For you
+are a very truthful man, and not subtle.'</p>
+
+<p>But Khaled was troubled at this. For he knew
+that she would find it hard to believe; and that if she
+did believe it, she would be terrified to think that she
+had married one of the genii, and if not, she would
+suspect him of a hidden purpose in telling her an
+empty fable, and he would then be further from her
+love than before. He held his peace, therefore, for
+some time, while she watched him, playing with her
+beads. In reality she was very curious to know the
+truth, though she had always been unwilling to ask it
+of him, seeing that she had married him as a stranger,
+of her own will and choice, without inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>'Is it just,' she asked at last, 'that the people
+should accuse you of evil deeds and fill the air of the
+city with falsehoods concerning you, so that the very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
+slaves hear the guards repeating the lies to each other
+in the courtyard, and that I, who am your wife, should
+not know the truth? What have I done that you
+should not trust me? Or what have I said that you
+should regard me no more than a slave who sprinkles
+the floor and makes the fire, and while she is present
+in the room you hold your peace lest she should know
+your thoughts and betray them? Am I not your
+wife, and faithful? Have I not given you a kingdom
+and treasure beyond counting? Surely there were
+times when you talked more freely with that barbarian
+slave-woman, whose hair was red, than you ever talk
+with me.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is not true,' said Khaled. 'And if I talked
+familiarly with Almasta, you know the reason, for you
+yourself found it out, and called me simple for trying
+to deceive you. And now she is gone to the desert
+with her husband and there is no more question of her,
+or her red hair. But all the rest is true, and you have
+indeed given me a kingdom, which I am likely to lose
+and wealth which I do not desire, though you have not
+given me that which I covet more than gold or kingdoms,
+for I desire it indeed, and that is your love.
+Moreover if you have given me the rest, I have done
+something in return, for I have fought for your people,
+and shed my blood freely, and given you a nation captive,
+besides loving you and refusing to take another<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
+wife into my house. And this last is a matter of
+which some women would think more highly than
+you.'</p>
+
+<p>But Zehowah's curiosity was burning within her like
+a thirst, for although she had at first cared little to
+know of Khaled's former life, she was astonished at his
+persistency in keeping the secret now, seeing that the
+whole country was full of false rumours about him.</p>
+
+<p>'How can a man expect that a woman should love
+him, if he will not put his trust in her?' she asked.</p>
+
+<p>Then Khaled did not hesitate any longer, for he was
+never slow to do anything by which there seemed to be
+any hope of gaining her love. He therefore took her
+hand in his, and it trembled a little so that he was
+pleased, though indeed the unsteadiness came more
+from her anxiety to know the story he was about to
+tell, than from any love she felt at that moment.</p>
+
+<p>'You have sworn that you will believe me, Zehowah,'
+he said. 'But I forewarn you that there are
+hard things to understand. For the reason why I will
+not tell my father's name, nor the name of my tribe is
+a plain one, seeing that I was not born like other men,
+and have no father at all, and my brethren are not men
+but genii of the air, created from the beginning and
+destined to die at the second blast of the trumpet before
+the resurrection of the dead.'</p>
+
+<p>At this Zehowah started suddenly in fright and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
+looked into his face, expecting to see that he had coals
+of fire for eyes and an appalling countenance. But
+when she saw that he was not changed and had the
+face of a man and the eyes of a man, she laughed.</p>
+
+<p>'What is this idle tale of Afrits?' she exclaimed.
+'Frighten children with it.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is what I foresaw in you,' said Khaled.
+'You cannot believe me. Of what use is it then to
+tell you my story?'</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah answered nothing, for she was angry,
+supposing that Khaled was attempting to put her off
+with a foolish tale. She had heard, indeed, of Genii and
+Afrits and she was sure that they had existence, since
+they were expressly mentioned in the Koran, but she
+had never heard that any of them had taken the shape
+and manner of a man. She remembered also how
+Khaled had always fought with his hands in war, like
+other men and been wounded, and she was sure that if
+his story were true he would have summoned whole
+legions of his fellows through the air to destroy the
+enemy.</p>
+
+<p>'You do not believe me,' he repeated somewhat
+bitterly. 'And if you do not believe me, how shall
+others do so?'</p>
+
+<p>'You ask me to believe too much. If you ask for
+my faith, you must offer me truths and not fables. It
+is true that I am curious, which is foolish and womanly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
+But if you do not wish to tell me your secret, I cannot
+force you to do so, nor have I any right to expect confidence.
+Let us therefore talk of other things, or else
+not talk at all, for though you will not satisfy me you
+cannot deceive me in this way.'</p>
+
+<p>'So you also believe that I am a Persian and a
+robber,' said Khaled. 'Is it not so?'</p>
+
+<p>'How can I tell what you are, if you will not tell
+me? Is your name written in your face that I may
+know it is indeed Khaled and not Ali Hassan as the
+people say? Or is the record of your deeds inscribed
+upon your forehead for me to read? You may be a
+Persian. I cannot tell.'</p>
+
+<p>Then Khaled bent his brows and turned his eyes
+away from her, for he was angry and disappointed,
+though indeed she knew in her heart that he was no
+Persian. But she let him suppose that she thought
+so, hoping perhaps to goad him into satisfying her
+curiosity.</p>
+
+<p>If Khaled had been a man like other men, as
+Zehowah supposed him to be, he would doubtless have
+invented a well-framed history such as she would have
+believed, at least for the present. But to him such a
+falsehood appeared useless, for he had seen the world
+during many ages and had observed that a lie is never
+really successful except by chance, seeing that no intelligence
+is profound enough to foresee the manner in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
+which it will be some day examined, whereas the
+truth, being always coincident with the reality, can
+never be wholly refuted.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled therefore hesitated as to whether he should
+tell his story from the beginning, or hold his peace;
+but in the end he decided to speak, because it was intolerable
+to him to be thought an evildoer by her.</p>
+
+<p>'You make haste to disbelieve, before you have
+heard all,' he said at last. 'Hear me to the end. I
+have told you that I slew the Indian prince. That
+was before I became a man. You yourself could not
+understand how I was able to enter the palace and
+carry him away without being observed. But as I
+was at that time able to fly and to make both myself
+and him invisible, this need not surprise you. If you
+do not believe that I did it, let us order a litter to be
+brought for you, and I will take my mare and a
+sufficient number of attendants, and let us ride southwards
+into the Red Desert. There I will show you
+the man's bones. You will probably recognise them
+by the gold chain which he wore about his neck and
+by his ring. After that, when I had buried him, the
+messenger of Allah came to me, and because the man
+was an unbeliever, and had intended to embrace the
+faith outwardly, having evil in his heart, Allah did
+not destroy me immediately, but commanded that the
+angel Asrael should write my name in the book of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
+life, that I might become a man. But Allah gave me
+no soul, promising only that if I could win your love,
+whose suitor I had killed, I should receive an immortal
+spirit, which should then be judged according
+to my deeds. This is truth. I swear it in the name
+of Allah, the merciful, the compassionate. Then an
+angel gave me garments such as men wear, and a
+sword, and a good mare, and I travelled hither to
+Riad, eating locusts for food. And though no man
+knew me, you married me at once, for it was the will of
+Allah, whose will shall also be done to the end. The
+rest you know. If, therefore, you will love me before
+I die, I shall receive a soul and it may be that I shall
+inherit paradise, for I am a true believer and have
+shed blood for the faith. But if you do not love me,
+when I die I shall perish as the flame of a lamp that
+is blown out at dawn. This is the truth.'</p>
+
+<p>He ceased from speaking and looked again at
+Zehowah. At first he supposed from her face that
+she believed him, and his heart was comforted, but
+presently she smiled, and he understood that she was
+not convinced. For the story had interested her
+greatly and she had almost forgotten not to believe it,
+but when she no longer heard his voice, it seemed too
+hard for her.</p>
+
+<p>'This is a strange tale,' she said, 'and it will
+probably not satisfy the people.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'I do not care whether they are satisfied or not,'
+Khaled answered. 'All I desire is to be believed by
+you, for I cannot bear that you should think me what
+I am not.'</p>
+
+<p>'What can I do? I cannot say to my intelligence,
+take this and reject that, any more than I can say to
+my heart, love or love not. It would indeed have
+been easier if you had said, "I am a certain Persian,
+a fugitive, protect me, for my enemies are upon me."
+I could perhaps give you protection if you require it,
+as you may. But you come to me with a monstrous
+tale, and you ask me to love, not a man, but a Jinn or
+an Afrit, or whatever it pleases you to call yourself.
+Assuredly this is too hard for me.'</p>
+
+<p>And again Zehowah smiled scornfully, for she was
+really beginning to think that he might be a Persian
+disguised as the people said.</p>
+
+<p>'I need no protection from man or woman,' said
+Khaled, 'for I fear neither the one nor the other.
+For I am strong, and if I am able to give out of
+charity I am also able to take by force. My fate is
+ever with me. I cannot escape it. But neither can
+others escape theirs. I will fight alone if need be,
+for if you will not love me I care little how I may
+end. Moreover, in battle, it is not good to stand in
+the way of a man who seeks death.'</p>
+
+<p>But Zehowah thought this might be the speech of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
+a desperate man such as Ali Hassan, the robber, as
+well as of Khaled, the Jinn, and she was not convinced,
+though she no longer smiled. For she knew little of
+supernatural beings, and a devil might easily call himself
+a good spirit, so that she was convinced that she
+was married either to a demon or to a dangerous robber,
+and she could not even decide which of the two she
+would have preferred, for either was bad enough, and as
+for love there could no longer be any question of that.</p>
+
+<p>Khaled understood well enough and rose from his
+seat and went away, desiring to be alone. He knew
+that he was now surrounded by danger on every side
+and that he could not even look to his wife for comfort,
+since she also believed him to be an impostor.</p>
+
+<p>'Truly,' he said to himself, 'this is a task beyond
+accomplishment, which Allah has laid upon me. It
+is harder to get a woman's love than to win kingdoms,
+and it is easier to destroy a whole army with
+one stroke of a sword than to make a woman believe
+that which she does not desire. And now the end is
+at hand. For she will never love me and I shall
+certainly perish in this fight, being alone against so
+many. Allah assuredly did not intend me to run
+away, and moreover there is no reason left for remaining
+alive.'</p>
+
+<p>On that day Khaled again called the chief men
+together in his kahwah, and addressed them briefly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Men of Riad,' he said, 'I am aware that there is
+a conspiracy to overthrow and destroy me, and I
+daresay that you yourselves are among the plotters.
+I will not tell you who I am, but I swear by Allah
+that I am neither a Persian nor a robber, nor yet a
+Shiyah. You will doubtless attack me unawares, but
+you will not find me sleeping. I will kill as many
+of you as I can, and afterwards I also shall undoubtedly
+be killed, for I am alone and you have
+many thousands on your side. Min Allah&mdash;it is in
+Allah's hands. Go in peace.'</p>
+
+<p>So they departed, shaking their heads, but saying
+nothing.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X</h3>
+
+
+<p>The Sheikh of the beggars was an old man, blind from
+his childhood, but otherwise strong and full of health,
+delighting in quarrels and swift to handle his staff.
+He had at first become a beggar, being still a young
+man, for his father and mother had died without
+making provision for him, and he had no brothers.
+As he boasted that he was of the pure blood of the
+desert on both sides, the other beggars jeered at him
+in the beginning, calling him Ibn el Sheikh in derision
+and sometimes stealing his food from him. But
+he beat them mightily, the just and the unjust
+together, since he could not see, and acquired great
+consideration amongst them, after which he behaved
+generously, giving his share with the rest for the
+common good, and something more. His companions
+learned also that his story was true and that his
+blood was as good as any from Ajman to El Kara, for
+a Bedouin of the same tribe as Abdullah, the husband
+of Almasta, came to see him not less than once every
+year, and called him brother and filled his sack with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
+barley. This Bedouin was a person of consideration,
+also, as the beggars saw from his having a mare of
+his own, provided with a good saddle, and from his
+weapons. In the course of time therefore the blind
+man grew great in the eyes of his fellows, until they
+called him Sheikh respectfully, and waited on him
+when he performed his ablutions, and he obtained
+over them a supremacy as great as was Khaled's over
+the kingdom he governed. He was very wise also,
+acquainted with the interpretation of dreams, and able
+to recite various chapters of the Koran. It was even
+said that he was able to distinguish a good man from
+a bad by the sound of his tread, though some thought
+that he only heard the jingling of coins in the girdle,
+and judged by this, having a finer hearing than other
+men. At all events he was often aware that a person
+able to give alms was approaching, while his companions
+were talking among themselves and noticed
+nothing, though they had eyes to see, being mostly
+only cripples and lepers.</p>
+
+<p>On a certain day in the spring, when the sun was
+beginning to be hot and not long after Khaled had
+told Zehowah his story, many of the beggars were
+sitting in the eastern gate, by which the great road
+issues out of the city towards Hasa. They expected
+the coming of the first pilgrims every day, for the
+season was advancing. And now they sat talking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
+together of the good prospects before them, and rejoicing
+that the winter was over so that they would
+not suffer any more from the cold.</p>
+
+<p>'There is a horseman on the road,' said the Sheikh
+of the beggars, interrupting the conversation. 'O you
+to whom Allah has preserved the light of day, look
+forth and tell me who the rider is.'</p>
+
+<p>'It is undoubtedly a pilgrim,' answered a young
+beggar, who was a stranger but had found his way to
+Riad without legs, no man knew how.</p>
+
+<p>'Ass of Egypt,' replied the Sheikh reprovingly, 'do
+pilgrims ride at a full gallop upon steeds of pure
+blood? But though your eyes are open your ears are
+deaf with the sleep of stupidity from which there is no
+awakening. That is a good horse, ridden by a light
+rider. Truly a man must itch to be called Haji who
+gallops thus on the road to Mecca.'</p>
+
+<p>Then the others looked, and at last one of them
+spoke, a hunchback having but one eye, but that one
+was keen.</p>
+
+<p>'O Sheikh,' he said, 'rejoice and praise Allah, for I
+think it is he whom you call your brother, who comes
+in from the desert to visit you.'</p>
+
+<p>'If that is the case, I will indeed give thanks,'
+answered the blind man, 'for there is little in my
+barley-sack, less in my wallet and nothing at all in
+my stomach. Allah is gracious and compassionate!'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The hunchback's eye had not deceived him, and
+before long the Bedouin dismounted at the gate and
+looked about until he saw the Sheikh of the beggars,
+who indeed had already risen to welcome him. When
+they had embraced the Bedouin led the blind man
+along in the shadow of the eastern wall until they
+were so far from the rest that they might freely talk
+without being overheard. Then they sat down together,
+and the mare stood waiting before them.</p>
+
+<p>'O my brother,' the Bedouin began, 'was not my
+mother the adopted daughter of your uncle, upon whom
+be peace? And have I not called you brother and filled
+your barley-sack from time to time these many years?'</p>
+
+<p>'This is true,' answered the Sheikh of the beggars.
+'Allah will requite you with seventy thousand days of
+unspeakable bliss for every grain of barley you have
+caused to pass my teeth. "Be constant in prayer and
+in giving alms," says the holy book, "and you shall
+find with Allah all the good which you have sent
+before you, for your souls." And it is also said, "Give
+alms to your kindred, and to the poor and to orphans."
+I am also grateful for all you have done, and my gratitude
+grows as a palm tree in the garden of my soul
+which is irrigated by your charity.'</p>
+
+<p>'It is well, my brother, it is well. I know the
+uprightness of your heart, and I have not ridden
+hither from the desert to count the treasure which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
+may be in store for me in paradise. Allah knows the
+good, as well as the evil. I have come for another
+purpose. But tell me first, what is the news in the
+city? Are there no strange rumours afloat of late
+concerning Khaled the Sultan?'</p>
+
+<p>'In each man's soul there are two wells,' said the
+blind man. 'The one is the spring of truth, the other
+is the fountain of lies.'</p>
+
+<p>'You are wise and full of years,' said the Bedouin,
+'and I understand your caution, for I also am not
+very young. But here we must speak plainly, for the
+time is short in which to act. A sand-storm has
+darkened the eyes of the men of the desert and they
+are saying that Khaled is a Shiyah, a Persian and a
+robber, and that he must be overthrown and a man of
+our own people made king in his stead.'</p>
+
+<p>'I have indeed heard such a rumour.'</p>
+
+<p>'It is more than a rumour. The tribes are even
+now assembling towards Riad, and before many days
+are past the end will come. Abdullah is the chief
+mover in this. But with your help, my brother, we
+will make his plotting empty and his scheming fruitless
+as a twig of ghada stuck into the sand, which will
+neither strike root nor bear leaves.'</p>
+
+<p>When the Sheikh of the beggars heard that he was
+expected to give help in frustrating Abdullah's plans
+he was troubled and much astonished.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Shall the blind sheep go out and fight the lion?'
+he inquired tremulously.</p>
+
+<p>'Even so,' replied the Bedouin unmoved, 'and,
+moreover, without danger to himself. Hear me first.
+Abdullah and his tribe will encamp in the low hills, in
+a few days, as usual, but somewhat earlier than in
+other years, and a great number of other Bedouins will
+be in the neighbouring valleys at the same time.
+Then Abdullah will come into the city openly and go
+to his house with his wife and slaves, and during
+several days he will receive the visits of his friends and
+return them, and go to the palace and salute Khaled,
+as though nothing were about to happen. But in the
+meantime he will make everything ready, for it is his
+intention to go into the palace at night, disguised in
+a woman's garment, with his wife, and they will slay
+Khaled in his sleep, and bind Zehowah, and distribute
+much treasure among the guards and slaves, and before
+morning the city will be full of Bedouins all ready to
+proclaim Abdullah Sultan. And you alone can prevent
+all this.'</p>
+
+<p>But the blind man laughed in his beard.</p>
+
+<p>'This is a good jest!' he cried. 'You have sought
+out a valiant warrior to stand between the Sultan and
+death! I am blind and old, and a beggar, and you
+would have me stand in the path of Abdullah and a
+thousand armed men. They would certainly laugh, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
+I do. Let me take with me a few lepers and the
+Egyptian jackass without legs, who has flown among
+us lately like a locust out of the clear air. Verily,
+their strength shall avail against the lances of the desert.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is no jest, my brother,' answered the Bedouin,
+gravely. 'Neither I, nor a hundred armed horsemen
+with me could do what you will do unhurt. But I
+will save Khaled. For in the battle of the pass before
+we came to Haïl last summer when I had an arrow
+in my right arm and a spear thrust in my side, certain
+dogs of Shammars encompassed me, and darkness was
+already descending upon my eyes when Khaled rode
+in like a whirlwind of scythes, and sent four of them to
+hell, where they are now drinking molten brass like
+thirsty camels. Then I swore by Allah that I would
+defend him in the hour of need.'</p>
+
+<p>'Why do you not then lie in wait for Abdullah
+yourself and slay him as he passes you in the dark?'</p>
+
+<p>'Is he not the sheikh of my tribe? How then can
+I lay a hand on him? But I have thought of this
+during many nights in my tent, and you alone can do
+what is needed.'</p>
+
+<p>'Surely this is folly,' said the Sheikh of the beggars.
+'You have met a hot wind in the desert and your mind
+is unsettled by it. I pray you come with me into the
+city to my dwelling, and take some refreshment, or at
+least let me send to the well for a drink of water.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'My head is cool and I am not thirsty, nor is the
+hot wind blowing at this time of year. Hear me. I
+will tell you how to save Khaled from destruction, and
+you shall receive more gold than you have dreamed of,
+and a house, and rich garments, and a young wife of a
+good family to comfort your old age. For the deed is
+easy and safe, but the reward will be great, and you
+alone can do the one and earn the other.'</p>
+
+<p>'I perceive,' said the blind man, 'that you are
+indeed in earnest, but I cannot understand what I can
+do. We know that Khaled is forewarned, for it is
+not many days since he summoned the chief men in
+Riad, with the Kadi, to the palace, and refused to tell
+them the name of his father, but said that if they
+attacked him he would kill as many of them as he
+could.'</p>
+
+<p>'I did not know this,' answered the Bedouin.
+'But the knowledge does not change my plan. Now
+hear me. You are the Sheikh of all the beggars in
+Riad&mdash;may Allah send you long life and much gain&mdash;they
+are an army and you are a captain. Moreover
+the beggars are doubtless attached to Khaled by his
+generosity, and all of you say in your hearts that
+under Abdullah there may be more sticks and less
+barley for you.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is true. But then, my brother, it is otherwise
+with you, for you are of Abdullah's tribe and will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
+have honour and riches if he is made Sultan. How
+then is my advantage also yours?'</p>
+
+<p>'And did not this Abdullah in the first place
+divorce with ignominy his second wife, who is my
+kinswoman, being the daughter of my father's sister?
+And has he restored the dowry as the law commands?
+Truly his new wife is even now sitting upon my
+cousin's carpet. And secondly Abdullah made himself
+sheikh unjustly, for our sheikh should be Abdul
+Kerim's son.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yet you accepted Abdullah and promised him
+allegiance.'</p>
+
+<p>'Does the camel say to his driver: "I do not like
+to carry a load of barley, I would rather bear a basket
+of dates"? "Eat what you please in your tent, but
+dress as other men," says the proverb. Hear me, for I
+speak wisdom. Abdullah will come into the city and
+go to his house, intending to prepare the way for evil.
+And he will walk about the streets as usual, without
+attendants, both because he knows that the people are
+mostly with him, and also in order not to attract
+notice. Now Abdullah is the spring from which all
+this wickedness flows, he is the chief camel whom the
+others follow, the coal in the ashes by which the fire
+is kept alive, the head without which the body cannot
+live. Dry up the spring, therefore, let the chief camel
+fall into a pit suddenly, extinguish the coal, strike off<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
+the head. Let them ask in the morning: "Where is
+he?" And let him not be found anywhere. Then
+the people will be amazed and will not know what to
+do, having no leader. This is for you to do, and it
+can easily be done.'</p>
+
+<p>'What folly is this?' asked the blind man, shaking
+his head. 'And how can I do what you wish?'</p>
+
+<p>'It is very easy, for I know that you and your
+companions are as one man, living together for the
+common good. Go to the beggars therefore and tell
+them what I have told you, and be not afraid, for
+they will not betray you. And when Abdullah walks
+about the city alone lie in wait for him, for you will
+easily catch him in a narrow street, and two or three
+score of you can run after him begging for alms, until
+he is surrounded on all sides. Then fall upon him,
+and bind him, and take him secretly to one of your
+dwellings and keep him there, so that none find him,
+until the storm is past. In this way you will save
+Khaled and the kingdom, and when all is quiet you
+can deliver him up to be a laughing-stock at the
+palace and to all who believed in him. For there is
+nothing to fear, and I, for my part, am sure that
+Abdul Kerim's son will immediately be made sheikh
+of our tribe so that Abdullah will not return to us.'</p>
+
+<p>'You are subtle, my brother,' said the Sheikh of
+the beggars, smiling and stroking his beard. 'This is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
+a good plan, being very simple, and Khaled will be
+grateful to us, and honour us beggars exceedingly.
+Said I not well that the jest was good? Surely it is
+better than I had thought, and more profitable.'</p>
+
+<p>'I have thought of it long in the nights of winter,
+both by the camp fire and in my tent and on the
+march. But I have told no one, nor will tell any one
+until all is done. But so soon as you have taken
+Abdullah and hidden him, let me know of it. To this
+end, when we are encamped outside the city I will
+come every evening to prayers in the great mosque and
+afterwards will wait for you near the door. As soon
+as I know that Abdullah is out of finding I will spread
+the report that he is lost, and before long all our tribe
+will give up the search, being indeed glad to get rid
+of him. And the rest is in the hand of Allah. I
+have done what I can, you must now do your share.'</p>
+
+<p>'By Allah! You shall not complain of me,'
+answered the blind man, 'nor of my people, for the
+jest is surpassingly good, and shall be well carried
+out.'</p>
+
+<p>'I will therefore go into the city, where I have
+business,' said the Bedouin. 'For I gave a reason for
+coming alone to Riad, and must needs show myself
+there to those who know me.'</p>
+
+<p>So the Bedouin filled the blind beggar's sack with
+barley and dates from his own supply and embraced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
+him and went into the city, but the Sheikh of the
+beggars remained sitting in the same place for some
+time, at a distance from the rest, in an attitude of
+inward contemplation, though he was in reality listening
+to what the hunchback was telling the new cripple
+from Egypt. The Sheikh's ears were sharper than those
+of other men and he heard very clearly what was said.</p>
+
+<p>'This Bedouin,' said the hunchback, 'is a near
+relation of our Sheikh, and holds him in great veneration,
+coming frequently to see him even from a considerable
+distance, and always bringing him a present
+of food. And you may see by his mare and by his
+weapons that he is a person of consideration in his
+tribe. For our Sheikh is not a negro, nor the son of a
+Syrian camel-driver, but an Arab of the best blood in
+the desert, and wise enough to sit in the council in the
+Sultan's palace. You, who are but lately arrived, being
+transported into our midst by the mercy of Allah,
+must learn all these things, and you will also find out
+that our Sheikh has eyes in his ears, and in his fingers
+and in his staff, though he is counted blind, and you
+cannot deceive him easily as you might suppose.'</p>
+
+<p>The Sheikh of the beggars was pleased when he
+heard this and listened attentively to hear the answer
+made by the Egyptian, whom he did not yet trust
+because he was a newcomer and a stranger.</p>
+
+<p>'Truly,' replied the cripple, 'Allah has been merciful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
+and compassionate to me, for he has brought me
+into the society of the wise and the good, which is
+better than much feasting in the company of the
+ignorant and the ill-mannered. And as for the Sheikh,
+he is evidently a very holy man, to whom eyes are not
+in any way necessary, his inward sight being constantly
+fixed upon heavenly things.'</p>
+
+<p>This answer did not altogether please the blind man,
+for it savoured somewhat of flattery. But the other
+beggars approved of the speech, deeming that it showed
+a submissive spirit, and readiness to obey and respect
+their chief.</p>
+
+<p>'O you of Egypt!' cried the Sheikh, calling to him.
+'Come here and sit beside me, for I have heard what
+you said and desire your company.'</p>
+
+<p>The cripple immediately began to crawl along by
+the wall, dragging himself upon his hands and body,
+for he had no legs.</p>
+
+<p>'He is obedient,' thought the blind man, 'though it
+costs him much labour to move.'</p>
+
+<p>When the man was beside him, the Sheikh took an
+onion and a date from his wallet and set them down
+upon the ground.</p>
+
+<p>'Eat,' he said, 'and give thanks.'</p>
+
+<p>The cripple thanked him and taking the food, began
+to eat the onion.</p>
+
+<p>'You have taken the onion in your right hand and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
+the date in your left,' said the Sheikh. 'And you are
+eating the onion first.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is true,' answered the Egyptian. 'I see that
+my lord has indeed eyes in his fingers.'</p>
+
+<p>'I have,' said the Sheikh. 'But that is not all, for
+this is an allegory. All men like to eat the onion first
+and the date afterwards, for though the onion be ever
+so sweet and tender, its taste is bitter when a man has
+eaten sugar-dates before it. But you have begun by
+giving us the mellow fruit of flattery, and when you
+give us the wholesome vegetable of truth it will be too
+sharp for our palates. Ponder this in your heart, chew
+it as the camel does her cud, and the well-digested
+food of wisdom shall nourish your understanding.'</p>
+
+<p>The cripple listened in astonishment at the depth
+of the Sheikh's thought, and he would have spoken out
+his admiration, but it is not possible to eat an onion
+and to be eloquent at the same time. The blind man
+knew this and continued to give him instruction.</p>
+
+<p>'The onion has saved you,' he said, 'for your
+mouth being full you could say nothing flattering,
+and now you will think before you speak. Consider
+how I have treated you. Have I at once rendered
+thanks to Allah for sending into our midst a young
+man whose gifts of eloquence are at least equal to
+those of the Kadi himself? I have said nothing so
+foolish. I have called you an ass of Egypt and otherwise<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
+rebuked you, for the good of your understanding,
+though I begin to think that you are indeed a very
+estimable young man, and it is possible that your wit
+may ripen in our society. But now I perceive by my
+hearing that you are eating the date. I pray you now,
+eat another onion after it.'</p>
+
+<p>'I cannot,' answered the cripple, 'for my lips are
+puckered at the thought of it.'</p>
+
+<p>'Neither is truth sweet after flattery,' said the
+Sheikh, who then began to eat the other onion himself.</p>
+
+<p>'I will endeavour to profit by your precepts, my
+lord,' replied the Egyptian.</p>
+
+<p>'Allah will then certainly enlighten you, my son.
+Remember also another thing. We are ourselves here
+a community, distinct from the citizens of Riad, and
+what we do, we do for the common good. Remember
+therefore to share what you receive with the rest, as
+they will share what they have with you, and take
+part with them in whatsoever is done by common consent.
+In this way it will be well with you and you
+shall grow fat; but if you are against us you will find
+evil in every man's hand, for since it has pleased Allah
+to give you no legs, you cannot possibly run away.'</p>
+
+<p>Having said this much the Sheikh of the beggars
+was silent. But afterwards on the same day he
+gathered about him the strongest of his companions,
+being mostly men who had the use of both arms<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
+and both legs, though some of them were lepers
+and some had but one eye, and some were deaf and
+dumb, according to the affliction which it had pleased
+Allah to send upon each. These were the most trusty
+and faithful of his people, and to them he communicated
+openly what the Bedouin had proposed to him
+in secret. All of them approved the plan, for they
+greatly feared the overthrow of Khaled.</p>
+
+<p>'But,' said one, 'we cannot keep this Abdullah for
+ever, and we can surely not kill him, for we should
+bring upon ourselves a grievous punishment.'</p>
+
+<p>'Allah forbid that we should shed blood,' replied
+the Sheikh. 'But when Abdul Kerim's son is made
+Sheikh of the tribe, Abdullah will probably not wish
+to go back to his people. Moreover it shall be for
+Khaled to judge what shall be done to the man, and
+he will probably cut off his head. But in the meantime
+it is necessary to choose amongst us spies, two
+for each gate of the city, to the number of twenty-two
+men, to watch for Abdullah. For we do not know
+when he will come, and of the two spies who see him
+enter, both must follow him and see whither he goes,
+and then the one will immediately inform all the rest
+while the other waits for him. From the time he enters
+the city he will not be able to go anywhere without
+our knowledge, and we shall certainly catch him one
+day towards dusk in some narrow street of the city.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The beggars saw that this plan was wise and
+safe for themselves, and they did as the Sheikh advised,
+posting men at all the gates to wait for Abdullah.
+He was, indeed, not far distant, and before many days
+he rode into the city towards evening, attended by a
+few slaves and two Bedouins, his wife Almasta riding
+in the midst of them upon a camel. His face was
+not hidden and the two beggars who were watching
+recognised him immediately. They both followed him,
+until he entered his own house, and then the one sat
+down in the street to watch until he should come out,
+asking alms of those who accompanied him, until they
+also went in, with the beasts. But the other made
+haste to find the Sheikh and to inform him that
+Abdullah had come and was now in his own dwelling.</p>
+
+<p>'It is well,' said the blind man. 'The cat is now
+asleep, and dreams of mice, but he shall wake in the
+midst of dogs. Abdullah will not leave his house to-night,
+for it is late, and though he is not afraid in the
+daytime, he will not go out much at night, lest a
+secret messenger from Khaled, bearing evil in his
+hand, should meet him by the way. But to-morrow
+before dawn, some of us will wait in the neighbourhood
+of his house, and two or three score of others
+feigning to be all blind, as I am, must always be near
+at hand, watching us. We will then begin to importune
+him for alms, flattering him with fine language, as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
+though we knew his plans. And this we will do continually,
+when he is abroad, until one day to escape
+from us he will turn quickly into a narrow street, supposing
+that we cannot see him. For he will not wish
+to be pursued by our cries in the bazar lest he be
+obliged for shame to give something to each. Then
+those who can see will open their eyes and we will
+catch him in the lane, and bind rags over his head
+so that he cannot cry out, and lead him away to my
+dwelling by the Yemamah gate. And if any meet
+us by the way and inquire whom we are taking with
+us, we will say that he is one of ourselves, who is
+an epileptic and has fallen down in a fit, and that we
+are taking him to the farrier's by the gate, to be
+burned with red-hot irons for his recovery, as the
+physicians recommend in such cases. Surely we have
+now foreseen most things, but if we have forgotten
+anything, Allah will doubtless provide.'</p>
+
+<p>All the beggars in council approved this plan, for
+they saw that it could be easily carried out, if they
+could only catch Abdullah in a lonely street at the
+hour of prayer when few persons are passing.</p>
+
+<p>But Abdullah himself was ignorant of the evil
+in store for him, and feared nothing, having been
+secretly informed that most of the better sort of people
+were ready to support him if he would strike the
+blow; for they suspected Khaled of being a traitor,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
+especially since he had last addressed the chief men
+and refused to tell the name of his father. Abdullah
+therefore came and went openly in the city.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, however, Khaled was informed of
+his presence and was warned of the danger. The aged
+Kadi came secretly by night to the palace and desired
+to be received by the Sultan in order to communicate
+to him news of great importance, as he said. Khaled
+immediately received him, and the Kadi proceeded to
+give a full account of Abdullah's designs; but the
+Sultan expressed no astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>'Let him do what he will,' he answered, 'for I care
+little and, after all, what must be will be.'</p>
+
+<p>'But I beseech you to consider,' said the Kadi,
+'that by acting promptly you could easily quell this
+revolution, in which I, by Allah, have no part and
+will have none. For though many persons may just
+now desire your overthrow, because they expect to get
+a share of the treasure in the confusion, yet few are
+disposed to accept such a man as Abdullah ibn Mohammed
+el Herir in your place. Even his own tribe
+are not all faithful to him, and I am credibly informed
+that many look upon him as an intruder, and would
+prefer the son of Abdul Kerim for sheikh, as would
+be just, if the rights of birth were considered. And
+it would be an easy matter to remove this Abdullah.
+I implore you to think of the matter.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Would this not be a murder?' asked Khaled,
+looking curiously at the venerable preacher.</p>
+
+<p>'Allah is merciful and forgiving,' replied the old
+man, looking down and stroking his beard. 'And
+moreover, if you suffer Abdullah to go about a few
+days longer he will certainly destroy you, whereas it is
+an easy matter to give him a cup of such good drink
+as will save him from thirst ever afterwards, and you
+would obtain quiet and the kingdom would be at
+peace.'</p>
+
+<p>'They shall not find me sleeping,' said Khaled, 'and
+so that I may only slay a score of them first, I care
+not how soon I perish.'</p>
+
+<p>'This is indeed a new kind of madness!' exclaimed
+the Kadi. 'I cannot understand it. But I have
+done what I could, and I can do nothing more.'</p>
+
+<p>'Nor is there anything more to be done,' said
+Khaled. 'But I thank you, for it is clear that you
+have spoken from a good intention.'</p>
+
+<p>So the Kadi went away again, and Khaled returned
+to Zehowah, caring not at all whether he lived
+or died. But Zehowah began to watch him narrowly.</p>
+
+<p>'If this man were a Persian, an enemy and a
+traitor,' she thought, 'he would now begin to take
+measures for his own safety, seeing that he is threatened
+on every side. Yet he does not lift a hand to
+defend himself. This can proceed only from one of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
+two causes. Either he is a Jinn, as he has told me,
+and they cannot kill him, and so he does not fear
+them; or else he desires death, out of a sort of madness
+which has grown up in him through this love of
+which he is always speaking.'</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI</h3>
+
+
+<p>In these days many of the Bedouin tribes came near
+the city and encamped in great numbers within half
+a day's journey and less. Abdullah was exceedingly
+busy with his preparations, and spent much time in
+talking with other sheikhs, hardly making any concealment
+of his movements or plans. For by this
+time it seemed clear to him that the greater part of
+the people were with him, and every one spoke of
+the coming overthrow of Khaled as an open matter.
+Khaled himself, too, was reported to be in fear of his
+life, and he was no longer seen in the streets as
+formerly, nor in the courts of the palace, nor even
+every day in the hall, but remained shut up in the
+harem, and none saw him except the women and a
+few slaves. Men said aloud that he was in great fear
+and distress, and as this story gained credence, so
+Abdullah's importance increased, since it was he who
+had brought such terror upon Khaled. All this was
+open talk in the bazar, but Abdullah was himself
+somewhat suspicious, supposing that Khaled must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
+have a plan in reserve for defending his possession
+of the throne. Abdullah, however, kept secret the
+manner in which he intended to enter the palace,
+though he promised his adherents to open to them the
+gates of the castle, and the doors of the treasure
+chambers on a certain day, which he named, at the
+time of the first call to prayer in the morning, warning
+all those who were with him to come together in the
+great square before that hour in order to be ready to
+help him, if necessary, and to overwhelm the guards
+of the palace if they should make any resistance.
+But he did not know that the man of his tribe who
+was kinsman to the chief of the beggars had overheard
+his talk with his wife.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the beggars seemed to be multiplied
+exceedingly in Riad, for whenever Abdullah went out
+of his house they came upon him, sometimes by twos
+and threes and sometimes in scores, pressing close to
+him and begging alms. They also cried out a great
+deal, praising his generosity and praying for blessings
+upon him.</p>
+
+<p>'Behold the sheikh of sheikhs!' they exclaimed.
+'He bears gold in his right hand and silver in his left.
+Yallah! Send him a long life and prosperity, for he
+loves the poor and his name is the Alms-giver. He
+is not El Herir but Er Rahman and his heart over-flows
+with mercy as his purse does with small coins.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
+Come, O brothers, and taste of his charity, which is a
+perpetual spring of good water beside a palm tree full
+of sugar-dates! Ya Abdullah, Servant of Allah, we
+love you! You are our father and mother. Your
+kefiyeh is the banner which goes before our pilgrimage.
+Come, O brothers, and taste of his charity.'</p>
+
+<p>Abdullah was not dissatisfied with these words, and
+the beggars said much more to the same effect, which
+he regarded as signs of his popularity, so that he
+opened his purse from time to time and threw handfuls
+of money into the crowd, not counting the cost
+since he expected to be master of all the treasure
+in Riad within a few days. But the beggars were
+disappointed, for they had hoped that he would turn
+out to be avaricious, and endeavour to elude them by
+walking through narrow and lonely streets, where they
+might catch him. So they pressed more and more
+upon him every day, trying to exhaust his patience
+and his charity. In this however they failed, not
+understanding that the vanity of such a man is inexhaustible
+and knows no price. Abdullah, too, chose
+rather to be abroad during the daytime than in the
+evening or the early morning, for he desired to be
+seen by the multitude and spoken of as he went
+through the market-place. Yet on the last evening of
+all he fell into the hands of the Sheikh of the beggars,
+and evil befell him.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The hour of prayer was passed and it was almost
+the time when lights are extinguished. Then Abdullah
+took his sword under his aba, and also a good knife,
+which he had proved in battle, and which in his hand
+would pierce a coat of mail as though it were silk.
+Almasta, his wife, also made a bundle of woman's
+clothing and carried it in her arms. For they intended
+to go to a lonely place by the city wall, that
+Abdullah might there put on female garments, before
+entering the palace. He feared, indeed, lest if it were
+afterwards known by what disguise he had accomplished
+his purpose, he might receive some name in
+derision, from which he should never escape so long
+as he lived. Yet he had no choice but to dress as
+a woman, since he could not otherwise by any means
+have gone into the harem.</p>
+
+<p>As he came out of his house, accompanied only by
+Almasta he was seen at once by the two beggars who
+were always on the watch. And then, wishing to warn
+their companions, of whom many were lying asleep
+upon doorsteps in the same street and in others close
+by, these two made haste to get up, pretending to be
+lame and making a great clatter with their staves, as
+they limped after Abdullah. Then he, who loved to
+exercise charity in the market-place, but not in the
+dark where none could applaud him, made a pretence
+of not seeing the poor men, and went swiftly on with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
+Almasta running by his side. But as he walked fast,
+the two beggars although apparently lame increased
+their speed with his, and their clatter also.</p>
+
+<p>'Does a sound man need a horse to escape from
+cripples?' asked Abdullah. And he turned quickly
+into a narrow lane.</p>
+
+<p>'It will be wiser to scatter a few coins to them,'
+said Almasta. 'They will then stop and search for
+them in the dark. For these men are very importunate
+and will certainly hinder us.'</p>
+
+<p>But Abdullah was confident in his legs as a strong
+man and only walked the faster, so that Almasta could
+with great difficulty keep beside him. Then they
+heard the beggars running after them in the dark and
+calling upon them.</p>
+
+<p>'O Abdullah!' they cried. 'The light of your
+charitable countenance goes before us like a lantern,
+and illuminates the whole street! Be merciful and
+give us a small coin, and Allah will reward you!'</p>
+
+<p>Then Abdullah stopped in the darkest part of the
+narrow lane, seeing that they had recognised him, and
+conceiving that it would be a reproach for a sheikh of
+pure blood to run from beggars; and he feared also that
+it would be remembered against him on the morrow.
+He therefore made a pretence of being diverted, and
+laughed.</p>
+
+<p>'Surely,' he said, 'the lame men of Riad could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
+outrun in a race the sound men of any other city.
+And, by Allah, I have little money with me, for I was
+going to a friend's house to receive a sum due to me for
+certain mares; yet I will give you what I have, and I
+pray you, go in peace.'</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon he sought in his wallet for something to
+give them, and while he was seeking they began to
+praise him after their manner.</p>
+
+<p>'See this Abdullah!' they said. 'He is the father
+of the poor and distressed, and is ever ready to divide
+all he has with us. Yallah! Bless him exceedingly!
+Yallah! Increase his family!'</p>
+
+<p>But when Abdullah had found the money and was
+putting it into their hands, he was suddenly aware that
+instead of two beggars there were now ten or more, and
+these again multiplied in an extraordinary manner, so
+that he felt himself hemmed in on every side in a close
+press.</p>
+
+<p>'O Allah!' he exclaimed. 'Thou art witness that
+unless these small coins are multiplied a hundredfold,
+as the basket of dates by the Prophet at the trench
+before Medina, I shall have nothing to give these
+worthy persons.'</p>
+
+<p>By this time the blind Sheikh of the beggars was
+present, and he pushed forward, pretending to rebuke
+his companions.</p>
+
+<p>'O you greedy ones!' he cried. 'How often have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
+I told you not to be so importunate? Yet you crowd
+upon him like wasps upon a date, presuming upon the
+goodness of his heart, and when there is no more room
+you crowd upon each other. Forgive them, O Abdullah!'
+he said, addressing him directly, 'for they
+have the appetites of jackals together with the understanding
+of little children. They would thrust into
+the dish a hand as small as a crow's foot and withdraw
+it looking as big as a camel's hoof. Their
+manners are also&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>'My friend,' said Abdullah, 'I have given what I
+can. Let me therefore pass on, for my business is of
+importance, yet the throng is so great that I cannot
+move a step. To-morrow I will distribute much alms
+to you all.'</p>
+
+<p>'The radiance of your merciful countenance is
+enough for us,' replied the Sheikh of the beggars,
+'and even I who am blind am comforted by its
+rays as by those of the sun in spring, and my
+hunger is appeased by the honey of your incomparable
+eloquence&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>'My friend,' said Abdullah, interrupting him again,
+'I pray you to let me go forward now, for I have a
+very important matter in hand, though it is with
+difficulty that I tear myself away from your society
+and I would willingly listen much longer to the words
+of the wise.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then the blind man turned to the other beggars,
+and his hearing told him that by this time there were
+at least threescore in the street.</p>
+
+<p>'Come, my brothers!' he cried. 'Let us accompany
+our benefactor to the house of his friend, and
+afterwards we will wait for him and see that he
+reaches his own dwelling in safety. Surely it is not
+fitting that a sheikh of such great consideration
+should go about the streets at night without so much
+as an attendant carrying a lantern. Let us go with
+him.'</p>
+
+<p>Now these last words were the signal agreed upon,
+and even as Abdullah began to protest that he desired
+no such honourable escort as the beggars offered him,
+one came from behind and suddenly drew a thick
+barley-sack over his head, so that his voice was heard
+no more, and he was dragged down by the throat,
+while the one-eyed hunchback caught him by the legs
+and bound his feet and four others laid hold of his
+hands and tied them firmly behind him. Nor had
+Almasta time to utter a single cry before she was
+bound hand and foot with her head in a sack, like her
+husband. Then at a signal the beggars took up the
+two as though they had been bales packed ready for a
+camel's back, and carried them away swiftly into the
+darkness, towards the eastern gate where the blind
+man lived in a ruined house together with three or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
+four of his most trusted companions. He also sent a
+messenger to his relation, the Bedouin, as had been
+agreed. It was already quite dark in the streets and
+the few persons who met the beggars did not see what
+they were carrying, nor ask questions of them, merely
+supposing that they had lingered long in the public
+square after evening prayers and were now returning
+in a body to their own quarter.</p>
+
+<p>The blind man's house was built of three rooms and
+a wall, standing in a square around a small court. But
+only one of the rooms had a roof of its own, though
+there was a sort of cellar under the floor of one of the
+others which served at once as a lodging for beggars in
+winter, as a storehouse for food when there was any in
+supply and as a place of deposit for the ancient iron
+chest in which the common fund of money was kept.
+To this vault the Sheikh of the beggars made his companions
+bring the two prisoners, and having set them
+on the floor, side by side, he proceeded to hold a
+council, in which the captives themselves had no part,
+since their heads were tied up in dusty barley-sacks
+and they could not speak so as to be heard.</p>
+
+<p>'O my brothers!' said the blind man. 'Allah has
+delivered the enemies of the kingdom into our hand,
+and it is necessary to decide what we will do
+with them. Let the oldest and the wisest give their
+opinions first, and after them the others, even to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
+youngest, and last of all I will speak, and let us
+see whether we can agree.'</p>
+
+<p>'Let us kill the man and bury him, and then cast
+lots among us for the woman,' said one.</p>
+
+<p>'No,' said the next, a man who had twice made the
+pilgrimage, and was much respected, 'we cannot do
+this, for the man is a true believer, and evil will befall
+us if we shed his blood. Let us rather keep him here,
+and purify his hide every day with our staves, until
+Khaled is in no more danger, and then we will take
+him to the palace and deliver him up.'</p>
+
+<p>'It is to be feared,' said the Sheikh of the beggars,
+'that the man might chance to die of this sort of purification,
+though indeed it be very wholesome for him,
+and I am not altogether against it.'</p>
+
+<p>'Let us make him our slave,' said a third who had
+himself been the slave of a poor man who had died
+without heirs. 'The fellow is strong. Let us buy
+millstones and make him grind barley for us in this
+cellar. In this way he will not eat our food for
+nothing.'</p>
+
+<p>After this many others gave advice of the same
+kind. But while they were talking there was a great
+clattering and noise upon the stone steps which led
+down into the cellar, and a man fell over the last step
+and rolled over and over into the very midst of the
+council, railing and lamenting.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'It is that ass of Egypt,' said the Sheikh of the
+beggars. 'I know him by the clattering of the
+wooden hoofs he wears on his hands, and also by his
+braying. Let him also give his opinion when he is
+recovered from his fall.'</p>
+
+<p>'It is strange and marvellous,' said one, 'that he
+who has no legs should suffer so many falls, being, by
+the will of Allah, always upon the earth. For when
+we first saw him we found him fainting upon the
+ground, having fallen from the wall of a garden,
+though no man could tell how he had climbed upon
+it.'</p>
+
+<p>'I had been transported to the top of the wall as
+in a dream,' replied the cripple, 'for there were dates
+in that garden. But having eaten too greedily of
+them I fell asleep on the top and I dreamed that my
+body was torn by hyænas; and waking suddenly I fell
+down. For the dates were yet green.'</p>
+
+<p>'This may or may not be true,' said the blind man.
+'For you are an Egyptian. Let us, however, hear
+what you have to advise in the matter of Abdullah
+and his wife, whom we have taken prisoners.'</p>
+
+<p>'I fear that you mock me, O my lord,' answered
+the man. 'But if I am mocked, I will advise that
+this Abdullah be also made a sport of, for us first, and
+for the people of Riad afterwards.'</p>
+
+<p>'Tell us how this may be done, for a good jest is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
+better than salt for roasting, and the sheep lie here
+bound before us.'</p>
+
+<p>'Take this man, then,' said the cripple, 'and
+uncover his face, and hold him fast. Then let one of
+us get the razor and shave off all his beard and his
+eyebrows, and the hair of his head even to the nape
+of his neck. Then if he came suddenly before her
+who bore him and cried, "Mother," she would cover
+her face and answer, "Begone, thou ostrich's egg!"
+For she would not know him. And to-morrow we
+will take his excellent clothes from him and put them
+upon our Sheikh. But we will dress Abdullah in
+rags such as would not serve to wipe the mud from a
+slave's shoes in the time of the subsiding waters, and
+we will tie his hands under his arm-pits and put a
+halter over his head and lead him about the city.
+Then he will cry out against us to the people, saying
+that he is Abdullah, but we will also cry out in
+answer: "See this madman, who believes himself to
+be a sheikh of Bedouins though Allah has given him
+no beard! O people of Riad, you may know that the
+spring is come, by the braying of this ass."'</p>
+
+<p>'Yet I see now that there may be wisdom in brayings,'
+said the Sheikh of the beggars, 'though Balaam ibn
+Beor shut his ears against it, and was punished for his
+cursing so that his tongue hung down to his breast,
+all his days, like that of a thirsty dog. This is good<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
+counsel, for in this way we shall not shed the man's
+blood, nor render ourselves guilty of his death; but I
+think we shall earn a great reward from Khaled, and
+his kingdom will be saved in laughter.'</p>
+
+<p>During all this time Abdullah had not moved,
+knowing that he was in the power of many enemies
+and beyond all reach of help, but when he heard the
+decision of the Sheikh of the beggars he was filled with
+shame and rolled himself from side to side upon the
+floor, as though trying to escape from the bonds that
+held him. Almasta, for her part, lay quietly where
+they had put her, for she saw that all chance of
+success was gone and was pondering how she might
+take advantage of what happened, to save herself.</p>
+
+<p>Then the beggars laid hold of Abdullah and held
+him, while others took the sack from his head. He
+was indeed half smothered with dust, so that at first
+he could not speak aloud, but coughed and sneezed
+like a dog that has thrust its nose into a dust-heap to
+find the bone which is hidden underneath. But presently
+he recovered his breath and began to rail at
+them and curse them. To this they paid no attention,
+but brought the oil lamp near him, and one began to
+rub soap upon his face and head while another got
+the razor with which the beggars shaved their heads
+and began to whet it upon his leathern girdle.</p>
+
+<p>'Do not waste the precious stones of your eloquence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
+upon a barber,' said the Sheikh of the beggars, 'but
+reserve your breath and the rich treasures of your
+speech until you are brought as a plucked bird before
+the people of Riad. Moreover we only wish to shave
+off your beard, but if you are restless some of your
+hide will certainly be removed also, whereby you will
+be hurt and it will be still harder for your friends to
+recognise you to-morrow. It is also useless to shout
+and scream as though you were driving camels, for you
+are in the cellar of my house which is at a good distance
+from other habitations, on the borders of the
+city.'</p>
+
+<p>So Abdullah saw that there was no escape, and
+that his fate was about his neck, and he sat still as
+they had placed him, while the one-eyed hunchback
+shaved off his beard and the hair on his upper lip and
+his eyebrows, and the lock at the back of his head.</p>
+
+<p>When this was done the blind man put out his
+hand and felt Abdullah's face.</p>
+
+<p>'Surely,' he said, 'this is not a man's head, but
+the round end of a walking-staff, rubbed smooth by
+much use.'</p>
+
+<p>They also tied his hands under his arm-pits and
+put upon him a ragged shirt with sleeves so that he
+seemed to have lost both arms at the elbow.</p>
+
+<p>'This is very well done,' said the hunchback
+turning his head from side to side in order to see<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
+all with his one eye. 'But what shall we do with the
+woman? Let us cast lots for her, and he who wins
+her shall marry her, and we will hold the feast immediately,
+for we have not yet supped and there is
+some of the camel's meat which we received to-day at
+the palace.'</p>
+
+<p>'O my brothers,' answered the Sheikh of the
+beggars, 'let us do nothing unlawful in our haste.
+For this woman is certainly one of Abdullah's wives,
+as you may see by her clothes, and unless he divorces
+her none of us can take her for ourselves, seeing that
+she is the wife of a believer. Take the sack from her
+head, however, and if she deafens us with her screaming
+we can put it on again. But you must by no
+means put her to shame by taking the veil from her
+face, for she may be an honest wife, though her
+husband be a dog. If she has done well, we shall
+find it out, and no harm will have come to her; but
+if she is a sharer in this fellow's plans, her punishment
+will be grievous, since she will be the wife of
+an outcast, having neither beard nor eyebrows and
+rejected by all men.'</p>
+
+<p>Some of the beggars murmured at this, but most of
+them praised their Sheikh's wisdom, and would indeed
+have feared greatly to break the holy law, being chiefly
+devout men who prayed daily in the mosque and
+listened to the Khotbah on Friday. They therefore<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
+placed Almasta in one corner of the cellar and Abdullah
+in another, so that the two could not converse together,
+and then they took out such food as they had and
+began to eat their supper, laughing and talking over
+the jest and anticipating the reward which awaited
+them for saving Khaled.</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile the night was advancing and
+many of Abdullah's friends left their houses secretly
+and gathered in the neighbourhood of the palace to
+wait for the first signal from within. By threes and
+by twos and singly they came out of their dwellings,
+looking to the right and left to see whether they were
+not the first, as men do who are not sure of being in
+the right. All had their swords with them, and some
+their bows also, and some few carried their spears, and
+they made no secret of their bearing weapons; but
+under each man's aba was concealed the largest barley-sack
+he could find in his house, and concerning this
+no one of the multitude said anything to his neighbour,
+for each hoped to get a greater share than the
+others of the gold and precious stones from the fabulous
+treasure stored in the palace. Then most of these
+men sat down to wait, as vultures do before the camel
+is quite dead. But not long after the middle of the
+night they were joined by a great throng of Bedouins
+from Abdullah's tribe. These had been admitted into
+the city by the watchman according to the agreement,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
+and passed up the great street from the Hasa gate, in
+a close body, not speaking and making but little noise
+with their feet as they walked; yet all of them together
+could be heard from a distance, because they
+were so many, and the sound was like the night wind
+among the branches of dry palm trees. After them,
+other Bedouins came in from camps both near and far,
+some of them having made half a day's journey since
+sunset; and they surrounded the palace on all sides,
+and filled the great street, and the street which passes
+by the mosque towards the Dereyiyah gate and all the
+other approaches to the open square, sitting down
+wherever there was room, or leaning against the closed
+shops of the bazar, or standing up in a thick crowd
+when they were too closely pressed to be at ease.
+They talked together from time to time in low tones,
+but when their voices rose above a whisper some man
+in authority hushed them saying that the hour was
+not yet come.</p>
+
+<p>'By this time Abdullah has slain Khaled,' said
+some, 'and the daughter of the old Sultan is a
+prisoner.'</p>
+
+<p>'And by this time,' said others, 'Abdullah is surely
+unlocking the treasure chamber and filling a barley-sack
+with pearls and rubies. It is certain that he
+who slays the lion deserves his bride, but we hope
+that something will be left for us.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Hush!' said the voice of one moving in the darkness.
+'Be patient. It is not yet time.'</p>
+
+<p>Then, for a space, a deep silence fell on the speakers
+and they crouched in their places watching the high
+black walls of the palace and marking the motion of
+the stars by the highest point of the tower. Before
+long whispered words were heard again.</p>
+
+<p>'It would have been more just if Abdullah had
+opened the gate to us as soon as he had slain Khaled,
+for then we could have seen what he took. But now,
+who shall tell us what share of the riches he is hiding
+away in the more secret vaults?'</p>
+
+<p>'This is true,' answered others. 'And besides, what
+need have we of Abdullah to help us into the palace?
+Surely we could have broken down the gates and slain
+the guards and Khaled himself without Abdullah's
+help. Yet we, for our part, would not shed the blood
+of a man who has always dealt very generously with
+us, nor do we believe the story of the camels laden
+secretly in Haïl. However, what is ordained will take
+place, and we shall undoubtedly receive plentiful gold
+merely for sitting here to watch the stars through the
+night.'</p>
+
+<p>'The story of the camels is not true,' said a certain
+man, speaking alone. 'For I was of the drivers
+sent with them, and being hungry, we opened one of
+the bales on the way. By Allah! There was nothing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
+but wheat in it, and it was white and good; but
+there was nothing else, not so much as a few small
+coins&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>Then there was the sound of a blow, and the man
+who was speaking was struck on the mouth, so that
+his speech was interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>'Peace and be silent!' said a voice. 'They who
+speak lies will receive no share with the rest when the
+time comes.'</p>
+
+<p>But the man who had been struck was the strongest
+of all his tribe, though he who had struck him
+did not know it. And the man caught his assailant
+by the waist in the dark, and wrestled with him
+violently, being very angry, and broke his forearm and
+his collar-bone and several of his ribs, and when he
+had done with him, he threw him over his shoulder so
+that he fell fainting and moaning three paces away.</p>
+
+<p>'O you who strike honest men on the mouth in
+the dark, you have been over-rash!' he cried. 'Go
+home and hide yourself lest I recognise you and break
+such bones as you have still whole!'</p>
+
+<p>'This is well done,' said one of the bystanders in a
+loud voice. 'For the story of the camels laden secretly
+with treasure is a lie. I also was with the drivers
+and ate of the wheat. Nor do I believe that Khaled
+is a robber and a Persian.'</p>
+
+<p>'We do not believe it!' cried a score of Bedouins<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
+together. 'And if we have come here, it is to get our
+share like other men, since they tell us that Khaled is
+dead. But now we believe that Abdullah has shut
+himself into the palace and means to keep all for himself,
+and is cheating us.'</p>
+
+<p>These men were none of them of Abdullah's tribe,
+but as the voices grew louder, Abdullah's kinsmen
+came up, and endeavoured to quiet the growing tumult.
+The crowd had parted a little and the strong man
+stood alone in the midst.</p>
+
+<p>'We pray you to be patient,' said Abdullah's men,
+'for the time is at hand and the false dawn has already
+passed, though you have not seen it, so that before
+long it will be day. Then the gates will be opened
+and you shall all go in.'</p>
+
+<p>'We have no need of your sheikh to open gates for
+us,' said the strong man, in a voice that could be heard
+very far through the crowd. 'And moreover it will
+be better for you not to strike any more of us, or, by
+Allah, we will not only break your bones but shed
+your blood.'</p>
+
+<p>At this there was a sullen cry and men sprang to
+their feet and laid their hands upon their weapons.
+But a youth who had come up with Abdullah's kinsmen,
+though not one of them, bent very low over the
+man who had been thrown down and then spoke out
+with a loud and laughing voice.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Truly they say that crows lead people to the
+carcases of dogs!' he said. 'This fellow is of the
+family which murdered my father, upon whom may
+Allah send peace! Nor will I exceed the bounds of
+moderation and justice.'</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon the young man drew out his knife and
+immediately killed his father's enemy as he lay upon
+the ground, and then he withdrew quickly into the
+dark crowd so that none knew him. But though there
+was only the light of the stars and the multitude was
+great, many had seen the deed and each man stood
+closer by his neighbour and grasped his weapon to be
+in readiness. The kinsmen of Abdullah saw that they
+were separated from their own tribe and drew back,
+warning the others to keep the peace and be silent,
+lest they should be cut off from their share of the
+spoil. But their voices trembled with fears for their
+own safety, and they were answered by scornful shouts
+and jeers.</p>
+
+<p>'The young man says well that you are crows,'
+cried the angry men, 'for you wish to keep the carcase
+for yourselves. Come and take it if you are able!'</p>
+
+<p>Now indeed the quarrel which had been begun by
+the blow struck in the dark spread suddenly to great
+dimensions, for the words spoken were caught up as
+grains of sand by the wind and blown into all men's
+ears. Many were ready enough to believe that Abdullah<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
+cared only for enriching himself and his tribe,
+and many more who had been persuaded to the enterprise
+by the hope of gain turned again to their faith
+in Khaled as the dream of gold disappeared from their
+eyes. Yet Abdullah's tribe was numerous, and it was
+easy to see that if the dissension grew into a strife of
+arms the fight would be long and fierce on both sides.</p>
+
+<p>Then certain of those who were against Abdullah
+raised the cry that he had slain Khaled and escaped
+with the treasure by a secret passage leading under
+the walls of the city, which passage was spoken of in
+old tales, though no one knew where to find it. But
+the multitude believed and pressed forward in a
+strong body and began to beat against the iron-bound
+gate of the palace with great stones and pieces of
+wood. Abdullah's men came on fiercely to prevent
+them, but were opposed by many, and as the wing of
+night was lifted and the dawn drank the stars, the
+wide square was filled with the clashing of arms and
+the noise of a terrible tumult.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII</h3>
+
+
+<p>At the time when the beggars were carrying away
+Abdullah and his wife, Khaled was sitting in his
+accustomed place, silent and heavy at heart, and
+Zehowah played softly to him upon a barbat and sang
+a sad song in a low voice. For she saw that gloominess
+had overcome him and she feared to disturb his
+mood, though she would gladly have made him smile
+if she had been able.</p>
+
+<p>A black slave of Khaled's whom he had treated
+with great kindness had secretly told him that there
+was a plan to enter the palace with evil during that
+night, for the fellow had spied upon those who knew
+and had overheard what he now told his master.
+He had also asked whether he should not warn the
+guards of the palace, in order that a strict watch should
+be kept, but Khaled had bidden him be silent.</p>
+
+<p>'Either the guards are conspiring with the rest,'
+said Khaled, 'and will be the first to attack me, or
+they are ignorant of the plan; and if so how can they
+withstand so great a multitude? I will abide by my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
+own fate, and no man shall lose his life for my sake
+unless he desires to do so.'</p>
+
+<p>But he privately put on a coat of mail under his
+aba, and when he sat down in the harem to await
+the end he would not let Zehowah take his sword, but
+laid it upon his feet and sat upright against the wall,
+looking towards the door.</p>
+
+<p>'Since I have no soul,' he said to himself, 'this is probably
+the end of all things. But there is no reason why I
+should not kill as many of these murderers as possible.'</p>
+
+<p>He was gloomy and desponding, however, since he
+saw that his hour was at hand, and that Zehowah was
+no nearer to loving him than before. He watched her
+fingers as she played upon the instrument, and he
+listened to the soft notes of her voice.</p>
+
+<p>'It is a strange thing,' he thought, 'and I believe
+that she is not able to love, any more than my sword
+upon my feet, which is good and true and beautiful,
+and ever ready to my hand, but is itself cold, having
+no feeling in it.'</p>
+
+<p>Still Zehowah sang and Khaled heard her song,
+listening watchfully for a man's tread upon the
+threshold and looking to see a man's face and the
+light of steel in the shadow beyond the lamps.</p>
+
+<p>'The night is long,' he said at last, aloud.</p>
+
+<p>'It is not yet midnight,' Zehowah answered. 'But
+you are tired. Will you not go to rest?'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'I shall rest to-morrow,' said Khaled. 'To-night I
+will sit here and look at you, if you will sing to me.'</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah gazed into his eyes, wondering a little at
+his exceeding sadness. Then she bowed her head and
+struck the strings of the instrument to a new measure
+more melancholy than the last, and sang an old song
+of many verses, with a weeping refrain.</p>
+
+<p>'Are you also heavy at heart to-night?' Khaled
+asked, when he had listened to the end.</p>
+
+<p>'It is not easy to kindle a lamp when the rain is
+falling heavily,' Zehowah said. 'Your sadness has
+taken hold of me, like the chill of a fever. I cannot
+laugh to-night.'</p>
+
+<p>'And yet you have a good cause, for they say
+that to-night the earth is to be delivered of a great
+malefactor, a certain Persian, whose name is perhaps
+Hassan, a notorious robber.'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled turned away his head, smiling bitterly, for
+he desired not to see the satisfaction which would
+come into her face.</p>
+
+<p>'This is a poor jest,' she answered in a low voice,
+and the barbat rolled from her knees to the carpet
+beside her.</p>
+
+<p>'I mean no jesting, for I do not desire to disappoint
+you, since you will naturally be glad to be freed
+from me. But I am glad if you are willing to sing
+to me, for this night is very long.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Do you think that I believe this of you?' asked
+Zehowah, after some time.</p>
+
+<p>'You believed it yesterday, you believe it to-day,
+and you will believe it to-morrow when you are free
+to make choice of some other man&mdash;whom you will
+doubtless love.'</p>
+
+<p>'Yet I know that it is not true,' she said suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>'It is too late,' Khaled answered. 'The more I
+love you, the more I see how little faith you have in
+me&mdash;and the less faith can I put in you. Will you sing
+to me again?'</p>
+
+<p>'This is very cruel and bitter.' Zehowah sighed and
+looked at him.</p>
+
+<p>'Will you sing to me again, Zehowah?' he repeated.
+'I like your sad music.'</p>
+
+<p>Then she took up the barbat from the carpet, but
+though she struck a chord she could not go on and
+her hand lay idle upon the strings, and her voice was
+still.</p>
+
+<p>'You are perhaps tired,' said Khaled after some
+time. 'Then lay aside the instrument and sleep.' He
+composed himself in his seat, his sword being ready
+and his eyes towards the door.</p>
+
+<p>But Zehowah shook her head as though awaking
+from a dream, her fingers ran swiftly over the strings
+and gentle tones came from her lips. Khaled listened
+thoughtfully to the song and the words soothed him,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
+but before she had reached the end, she stopped
+suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>'Why do you not finish it?' he asked.</p>
+
+<p>'If you have told me truth,' she answered, 'this is
+no time for singing and music. But if not, why
+should I labour to amuse you, as though I were a
+slave? I will call one of the women who has a sweet
+voice and a good memory. She will sing you a kasid
+which will last till morning.'</p>
+
+<p>'You are wrong,' said Khaled. 'There is no reason
+in what you say.'</p>
+
+<p>But he reflected upon her nature, while he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>'Surely,' he thought, 'there is nothing in the world
+so contradictory as a woman. I ask of her a song and
+she is silent. I bid her rest, supposing her to be
+weary, and she sings to me. If I tell her that I hate
+her she will perhaps answer that she loves me. Min
+Allah! Let us see.'</p>
+
+<p>'You inspire hatred in me,' he said aloud, after a
+few moments.</p>
+
+<p>At this Zehowah was very much astonished, and
+she again let the barbat fall from her knees.</p>
+
+<p>'You wished me to believe that you loved me, and
+this not long since,' she answered.</p>
+
+<p>'It may be so. I did not know you then.'</p>
+
+<p>He looked towards the door as though he would
+say nothing further. Zehowah sighed, not understanding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
+him yet being wounded in that sensitive tissue of
+the heart which divides the outer desert of pride from
+the inner garden of love, belonging to neither but
+separating the two as a veil. And when there is a
+rent in that veil, pride looks on love and scoffs
+bitterly, and love looks on pride and weeps tears of
+fire.</p>
+
+<p>'I am sorry that you hate me,' she said, but the
+words were bitter in her mouth as a draught from a
+spring into which the enemy have cast wormwood,
+that none may drink of it.</p>
+
+<p>'Allah is great!' thought Khaled. 'This is
+already an advantage.'</p>
+
+<p>Then Zehowah took up the barbat and began to
+sing a careless song not like any which Khaled had
+ever heard. This is the song&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'The fisherman of Oman tied the halter under his arms,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The sky was as blue as the sea in winter.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The fisherman dived into the deep waters<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As a ray of light shoots through a sapphire of price.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The sea was as blue as the sky, for it was winter.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Among the rocks below the water it was dark and cold<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Though the sky above was as blue as a fine sapphire.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The fisherman saw a rough shell lying there in the dark between two crabs,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"In that shell there must be a large pearl," he said.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But when he would have taken it the crabs ran together and fastened upon his hand.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His heart was bursting in his ribs for lack of breath<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And he thought of the sky above, as blue as the sea in winter.<br /></span><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
+<span class="i0">So he pulled the halter and was taken half-fainting into the boat.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The crabs held his hand but he struck them off,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And his heart beat merrily as he breathed the wind<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Blowing over the sea as blue as the sky in winter.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"There are no pearls in this ocean," he said to his companions,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"But there are crabs if any one cares to dive."<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">One of them saw the shell caught between the legs of the crabs,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He opened it and found a pearl of the value of a kingdom.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"The pearl is mine, but you may eat the crabs," he said to the fisherman,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"Since you say there are no pearls in this ocean,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Which is as blue as the sky in winter."<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then the fisherman smote him and tried to take the pearl,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But as they strove it fell into the deep water and sank,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where the sea was as blue as the sky in winter.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"I will drown you with a heavy weight," said the fisherman, "for you have robbed me of my fortune."<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"I have not robbed you, O brother, for the pearl is again where you found it,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In the sea which is as blue as the sky in winter."<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then the fisherman dived again many times in vain<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till the drums of his ears were broken and his heart was dissolved for lack of breath.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But the pearl is still there, at the bottom of the sea,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the sea is as blue as the sky in winter.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">This is the kasid of the fisherman of Oman<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Which Zehowah Bint ul Mahomed el Hamid<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Has made and sung for her lord, Khaled the Sultan.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">May Allah send him long life and many such hearts<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As the one which fell into the ocean<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When the sky was as blue as the sea in winter.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'This is a new song,' said Khaled, when she had
+finished.</p>
+
+<p>'Is it? I made it many months ago,' Zehowah
+answered. 'Does it please you?'</p>
+
+<p>'It is not very melodious, nor do I think there
+is much truth in the matter of it. But I thank you,
+for it has served to pass the time.'</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah laughed a little scornfully.</p>
+
+<p>'I daresay you would prefer the song of a Persian
+nightingale,' she said. 'Nevertheless my song is full
+of truth, though you cannot see it. There are many
+who seek for things of great value and do not know
+when they have found them because a crab has bitten
+their hands.'</p>
+
+<p>'Verily,' thought Khaled, 'this is indeed the spirit
+of contradiction.'</p>
+
+<p>But he was silent for a time, not wishing that she
+should think him easily moved. In the meantime
+Zehowah played softly upon the little instrument and
+Khaled watched her, wondering whether she were not
+playing upon the strings of his heart, for her own
+pleasure, as skilfully as her fingers ran upon the chords
+of the barbat. Many words rose to his lips then, and
+he wished that he also had the science of music that
+he might sing sweetly to her. Then he laughed aloud
+at his own imagination, which was indeed that of a
+foolish youth.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'The lion roaring for a sweetmeat,' he thought,
+'and the sword-hand aching to scratch little tunes
+upon a lute!'</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah turned suddenly when he laughed, and
+ceased from playing.</p>
+
+<p>'I am glad that you are merry,' she said. 'I like
+laughter better than reproaches and prefer it to gloomy
+forebodings of evil when none is at hand.'</p>
+
+<p>Khaled's face grew dark, and he looked again
+towards the door.</p>
+
+<p>'If you will stay with me, you shall see that evil is
+not far off,' he answered, for she had reminded him of
+what he was expecting, and he knew that it was no
+jesting matter. 'But you shall please yourself in this
+as in all other matters, though it were better for you
+to go now and shut yourself up in an inner room and
+wait for the end. The night is advancing, and all
+will soon be over.'</p>
+
+<p>'Hear me, Khaled,' said Zehowah, speaking earnestly.
+'If you bid me go, I will go, or if you desire me to
+stay, I will remain with you. But if you are indeed
+in danger, as you say, let us call up the guards and the
+watchmen who sleep in the palace, that they may stand
+by you with their swords and help you to fight if there
+is to be strife.'</p>
+
+<p>'I will have no treacherous fellows about me,'
+Khaled answered, 'and there are none here whom I can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
+trust. My hour is coming and I will fight this fight
+alone. But if you were such as I once hoped, I would
+say: "Remain with me, so long as you are safe."
+Now, since Allah has willed it thus, I say to you:
+"Go and seek safety where you can find it." Go,
+therefore, Zehowah, and leave me alone, for I need
+no one beside me, and you least of all.'</p>
+
+<p>He turned away his head, lest she should see his
+face, and with his hand made a gesture bidding her to
+leave him. She rose from her seat softly and hung
+the barbat upon the wall with the other musical
+instruments, looking over her shoulder to see whether
+he would call her back. But he neither moved nor
+spoke, being resolved to venture all upon this trial,
+for he knew that if she loved him even but a little,
+she would not leave him alone in the extremity of
+danger.</p>
+
+<p>Then she went towards the door of the room, turning
+her head to look at him as she passed near him.</p>
+
+<p>'Farewell,' she said. But he did not answer nor
+show that he heard her voice.</p>
+
+<p>As she lifted the curtain to go out, she lingered
+and gazed at him. He sat motionless upon the carpet,
+upright against the wall, his sword lying across his
+feet, his hands hidden under his sleeves, looking
+towards her indeed but not seeming to see her.</p>
+
+<p>'There can be no real danger,' she thought. 'Could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
+any man sit thus, expecting death, and refusing to let
+any one stand by him to fight with him? Surely, he
+is playing with me, and setting a trap for me. But
+he shall not catch me.'</p>
+
+<p>She turned to go and the curtain was falling
+behind her when the night wind from the open passage
+brought a sound to her ears from a far distance. She
+started and listened, as camels do when they hear the
+first moving of the hot wind. There were no voices
+in the noise, which was low and dull, like the breathing
+of a great multitude and the soft moving of feet,
+and altogether it was as the slow rising and falling
+back of the sea upon the shores of Oman, when the
+great summer storm is coming from the south-west.</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah stood still a moment and drank in every
+murmur that reached her from without. Then her
+face grew white and her lips trembled when she
+thought of Khaled sitting alone on the other side of
+the curtain, with his sword upon his feet, waiting for
+the end. She lifted the hanging a little and looked
+at him again. He saw her, but made no sign. Even
+as she looked, the distant murmur grew louder and
+she fancied that he moved his head as though he
+heard it. Then she entered the room and came and
+stood before him.</p>
+
+<p>'There is a great multitude in the square before
+the palace,' she said.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'I know it,' he answered, calmly looking up to her
+face. 'It needed not that you should tell me.'</p>
+
+<p>'Will you not let me stay with you now?' asked
+Zehowah.</p>
+
+<p>'Why should you stay here?' he asked with a
+pretence of indifference. 'Of what use are you to
+me? Take this sword. Can you strike with it?
+Your wrist is feeble. Or take a bow from the
+weapons on the wall. Can you draw the string?
+Your strength is sufficient for the lute, and your skill
+for scratching the strings of the barbat. Go and save
+yourself. I am alone and every man's hand is against
+me.'</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah stood still in the room and hesitated,
+looking into his eyes for something which she all at
+once desired with a hot thirst. At last she spoke in
+an uncertain voice.</p>
+
+<p>'Yet you said not long since that if I were such as
+you once hoped, you would bid me remain.'</p>
+
+<p>'I do not care,' he answered. 'Yet for your own
+sake, I advise you to go away.'</p>
+
+<p>'For my own sake!' she repeated, trying to speak
+scornfully, and turning to go a second time.</p>
+
+<p>But she did not reach the door. She stood still
+before the weapons which hung upon the wall, and
+paused a moment and then took a sword from its
+place. Khaled watched her. She grasped the hilt as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
+well as she could and swung the weapon in the air
+once with all her might. Then she uttered a little
+cry of pain, for she had twisted her wrist. The
+sword fell to the floor.</p>
+
+<p>'He is right,' she said in a low tone, speaking
+aloud to herself. 'I am weak and can be of no use
+to him.'</p>
+
+<p>She went on once more towards the door, slowly,
+her head bent down, then stopped and then looked
+back again. She feared that she might see a smile on
+his face, but his eyes were grave and calm. Then he
+saw her turn and lean against the wall as though she
+were suddenly weak. She hid her face, and there was
+silence for a moment, and after that a low sound of
+weeping filled the still room.</p>
+
+<p>'Why do you shed tears?' Khaled asked presently.
+'There is no danger for you, I think. If you will go
+and shut yourself in the inner rooms you will be safe.'</p>
+
+<p>She turned fiercely and their eyes met.</p>
+
+<p>'What do I care for myself?' she cried. 'Among
+so many deaths there is surely one for me!'</p>
+
+<p>Even as she spoke Khaled felt a cool breath upon
+his forehead, stirring the stillness. He knew that it
+came from the beating of an angel's wings. All his
+body trembled, his head fell forward a little and his
+eyes closed.</p>
+
+<p>'This is death,' he thought, 'and my fate has come.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
+A little longer, and she would have loved me.' But
+he did not speak aloud.</p>
+
+<p>Again Zehowah's face was turned towards the wall,
+and still the sound of her weeping filled the air, not
+subsiding and dying away, but rather increasing with
+every moment.</p>
+
+<p>'Life is not yet gone,' said Khaled in his heart.
+'There is yet hope.' For he no longer felt the cold
+breath on his forehead, and the trembling had ceased
+for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>He tried to speak aloud, but his lips could not
+form words nor his throat utter sounds, and he was
+amazed at his weakness. A great despair came upon
+him and his eyes were darkened so that he could not
+see the lights.</p>
+
+<p>'If only I could speak to her now, she might love
+me yet!' he thought.</p>
+
+<p>The distant murmur from without was louder now
+and reached the room, and he heard it. He tried with
+all his might to raise his hand, to lift his head, to
+speak a single word.</p>
+
+<p>'It may be that this is the nature of death,' he
+thought again, 'and I am already dead.'</p>
+
+<p>The noise from the multitude came louder and
+louder. Zehowah heard it and her breath was caught
+in her throat. She looked up and saw that the high
+window of the chamber was no longer quite dark.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
+The day was dawning. Then pressing her bosom with
+her hands she looked again at Khaled. His head was
+bent upon his breast and he was so still that she
+thought he had fallen asleep. A cry broke from her
+lips.</p>
+
+<p>'He cares not!' she exclaimed. 'What is it to
+him, whether I go, or stay?'</p>
+
+<p>Again Khaled felt the cool breeze in the room,
+fanning his forehead, and once more his limbs trembled.
+Then he felt that his strength was returning and that
+he could move. He raised his head and looked at
+Zehowah, and just then there was a distant crashing
+roar, as the Bedouins began to strike upon the gates.</p>
+
+<p>'It is time,' he said, and taking his sword in his
+hand he rose from his seat.</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah came towards him with outstretched
+hands, wet cheeks and burning eyes. She stood
+before him as though to bar the way, and hinder him
+from going out.</p>
+
+<p>'What is it to you, whether I go, or stay?' he
+asked, repeating her own words.</p>
+
+<p>'What is it? By Allah, it is all my life&mdash;I will
+not let you go!' And she took hold of his wrists
+with her weak woman's hands, and tried to thrust
+him back.</p>
+
+<p>'Go, Zehowah,' he answered, gently pressing her
+from him. 'Go now, and let me meet them alone,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
+knowing that you are safe. For though this be pity
+which you feel, I know it is nothing more.'</p>
+
+<p>He would have passed by her, but still she held
+him and kept before him.</p>
+
+<p>'You shall not go!' she cried. 'I will prevent
+you with my body. Pity, you say? Oh, Khaled!
+Is pity fierce? Is pity strong? Does pity burn like
+fire? You shall not go, I say!'</p>
+
+<p>Then her hands grew cold upon his wrists, her
+cheeks burned and in her eyes there was a deep and
+gleaming light. All this Khaled felt and saw, while
+he heard the raging of the multitude without. His
+sight grew again uncertain. A third time the cool
+breath blew in his face.</p>
+
+<p>'Yet it cannot be love,' he said uncertainly. Yet
+she heard him.</p>
+
+<p>'Not love? Khaled, Khaled&mdash;my life, my breath,
+my soul&mdash;breath of my life, life of my spirit&mdash;oh,
+Khaled, you have never loved as I love you now!'</p>
+
+<p>Her hands let go his wrists and clasped about his
+neck, and her face was hidden upon his shoulder
+while her breath came and went like the gusts of the
+burning storm in summer.</p>
+
+<p>But as he held her, Khaled looked up and saw
+that the Angel of Allah was before him, having a
+smiling countenance and bearing in his hand a bright
+flame like the crescent moon.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'It is well done, O Khaled,' said the Angel, 'and
+this is thy reward. Allah sends thee this to be thy
+own and to live after thy body, saying that thou hast
+well earned it, for love such as thou hast got now is a
+rare thing, not common with women and least of all
+with wives of kings. And now Allah alone knows
+what thy fate is to be, but thou shalt be judged at the
+end like other men, according to thy deeds, be they
+good or evil. And so receive thy soul and do with it
+as thou wilt.'</p>
+
+<p>The Angel then held out the flame which was like
+the crescent moon and it immediately took shape and
+became the brighter image of Khaled himself, endowed
+with immortality, and the knowledge of its own good
+and evil. And when Khaled had looked at it fixedly
+for a moment, being overcome with joy, the vision of
+himself disappeared, and he was aware that it had
+entered his own body and taken up its life within him.</p>
+
+<p>'Return thanks to Allah, and go thy way to the
+end,' said the Angel, who then unfolded his wings and
+departed to paradise whence he had come.</p>
+
+<p>But Khaled clasped Zehowah tightly in his arms,
+and looking upwards repeated the first chapter of the
+Koran and also the one hundred and tenth chapter,
+which is entitled, Assistance. When he had performed
+these inward devotions he turned his gaze
+upon Zehowah and kissed her.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Praise be to Allah,' he said, 'for this and all
+blessings. But now let us defend ourselves if we can,
+my beloved, for I think my enemies are at hand.'</p>
+
+<p>And so he would have stooped to take up his
+sword which had fallen upon the floor. But still
+Zehowah held him and would not let him go.</p>
+
+<p>'Not yet, Khaled!' she cried. 'Not yet, soul of
+my soul! The gates are very strong, and will withstand
+this battering for some time.'</p>
+
+<p>'Would you have him whom you love sit still in
+the net until the hunters come to catch him?' he
+asked in a tender voice.</p>
+
+<p>'You said you would wait here,' she pleaded. 'If
+we must die, let us die here&mdash;our life will be a little
+longer so.'</p>
+
+<p>'Did I say so? I thought you did not love me
+then, and I would have slain a few only, for my own
+sake, that my blood might not be unavenged. But
+now I will slay them all, for your sake, and the
+bodies of the dead shall be a rampart for you.'</p>
+
+<p>'Oh, do not go!' she cried again. 'I know a
+secret passage from the palace, that leads out by the
+wall of the city&mdash;come quickly, there is yet time, and
+we shall escape&mdash;for Allah will protect us. Surely,
+when I was fainting in your arms I heard an angel's
+voice&mdash;and surely the angel is yet with us, and will
+lighten the way as we go.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'The Angel was indeed here, for he brought me the
+soul that was promised, if you loved me. And now
+all is changed, for if we live, we get the victory and if
+we die we shall inherit paradise.'</p>
+
+<p>And Zehowah looked into his eyes and saw the
+living soul flaming within, and she believed him.</p>
+
+<p>'If you had always been as you are now, I should
+have always loved you,' she said softly, and stooping
+down she took up his sword and drew it out and put
+it into his hand. 'I tried to wield one when you
+were not looking,' she said, 'but it hurt my wrist.
+Come, Khaled&mdash;let us go together.'</p>
+
+<p>Then he kissed her once more, and she kissed him,
+and putting one arm about her, he led her swiftly out
+by the passage towards the great gate. It was now
+broad dawn and the light was coming in by the
+narrow windows.</p>
+
+<p>Zehowah clung to Khaled closely, for the noise of
+the thundering blows was terrible and deafening, and
+the multitude without were shouting to each other and
+calling upon Abdullah to come out, for they supposed
+him to be in the palace. But the guards and soldiers
+within had all hidden themselves though they were
+awake, for there was no one to command them nor to
+lead them, and they dared not open the gate lest
+they themselves should be slain in the first rush of the
+crowd.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then Khaled and Zehowah paused for a moment
+near the gate.</p>
+
+<p>'It is better that you should go back, my beloved,'
+said Khaled. 'Hear what a multitude of angry men
+are waiting outside.'</p>
+
+<p>'I will not leave you&mdash;neither in life nor in
+death,' she answered.</p>
+
+<p>'Let it be so, then,' said Khaled, 'and I will do my
+best. For a hundred men could not stop the way
+before me now, and I think that of five hundred I
+could slay many.'</p>
+
+<p>So he went up to the gate, and Zehowah stood a
+little behind him so as to be free of the first sweep of
+his sword.</p>
+
+<p>'Abdullah!' cried some of the crowd without, while
+battering at the iron-bound doors. 'Abdullah, thou
+son of Mohammed and father of lies, come out to us,
+or we will go to thee!'</p>
+
+<p>'Abdullah, thou thief, thou Persian, thou cheat,
+come out, and may boiling water be thy portion!'</p>
+
+<p>'Stand back from the gate, and I will open it to
+you!' cried Khaled in a voice that might have been
+heard across the Red Desert as far as the shores of the
+great ocean.</p>
+
+<p>'I, Khaled, will open,' he cried again.</p>
+
+<p>Then there was a great silence and the people fell
+back a little.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Khaled drew the bolts and unfastened the locks,
+and opened the gates inward and stood forth alone in
+the morning light, his sword in his hand and his soul
+burning in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>'Khaled!' cried the first who saw him, and the
+cry was taken up.</p>
+
+<p>The shout was great, and full of joy and shook the
+earth. For the multitude had grown hot in anger
+against Abdullah, while they battered at the gates, supposing
+that he had slain Khaled. But he himself could
+not at first distinguish whether they were angry or glad.</p>
+
+<p>'If any man wishes to take my life,' he cried, 'let
+him come and take it.'</p>
+
+<p>And the sword they all knew in battle, began to
+make a storm of lightning about his head in the
+morning sun.</p>
+
+<p>Then the strong man who had wrestled and thrown
+the other before dawn, stood out alone and spoke in a
+loud voice.</p>
+
+<p>'We will have no Sultan but Khaled!' he cried.
+'Give us Abdullah that we may make trappings for
+our camels from his skin.'</p>
+
+<p>Then Khaled sheathed his sword and came forward
+from under the gate, and Zehowah stood veiled beside
+him.</p>
+
+<p>'Where is this Abdullah?' he asked. 'Find him
+if you can, for I would like to speak with him.'<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then there was silence for a space. But by this
+time Abdullah's men had fled, for they had already
+been forced back in the crowding, and so soon as they
+saw Khaled standing unhurt under the palace gate,
+they turned quickly and ran for their lives to escape
+from the city, seeing that all was lost.</p>
+
+<p>'Where is Abdullah?' Khaled asked again.</p>
+
+<p>And a voice from afar off answered, as though
+heralding the coming of a great personage.</p>
+
+<p>'Behold Abdullah, the Sultan of Nejed!' it cried.</p>
+
+<p>Then the multitude turned angrily, grasping swords
+and spears and breathing curses. But the murmur
+broke suddenly into a shout of laughter louder even
+than the cry for Khaled had been. For a great procession
+had entered the square and the people made
+way for it as it advanced towards the palace.</p>
+
+<p>First came a score of lepers, singing in hideous
+voices and dancing in the early sun, filthy and loathsome
+to behold. And then came all manner of
+cripples, laughing and chattering, with coloured rags
+fastened to their staves, an army of distorted apes.</p>
+
+<p>Then, walking alone and feeling his way with his
+staff came the Sheikh of the beggars. And in one
+hand he held the end of a halter, which was fastened
+about Abdullah's head and neck and between his
+teeth, so that he could not cry out. And the blind
+man chanted a kasid which he had composed in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
+night in honour of Abdullah ibn Mohammed el Herir,
+the victorious Sultan of Nejed.</p>
+
+<p>'Upon whom may Allah send much boiling water,'
+sang the Sheikh of the beggars after each stave.</p>
+
+<p>And Abdullah, his head and face shaven as bald as
+an ostrich's egg, was bent by the weight he carried, for
+upon his shoulders rode the cripple whom they called
+the Ass of Egypt, clapping the wooden shoes he used
+on his hands, like cymbals to accompany the song of
+the blind man. And last of all came a veiled woman,
+walking sadly, for she could not escape, being surrounded
+and driven on by many scores of beggars, all
+dancing and shouting and crying out mock praises of
+the Sultan Abdullah and his wife.</p>
+
+<p>But as the procession moved on the laughter
+increased a hundredfold, until all men's eyes were
+blind with mirth, and their breasts were bursting and
+aching with so much merriment.</p>
+
+<p>At last the Sheikh of the beggars stood before
+Khaled holding the halter. And here he made a deep
+obeisance, pulling the halter so that Abdullah nearly
+fell to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>'In the name of the beggars,' he said, 'I present
+to your high majesty the Sultan of Nejed, Abdullah
+ibn Mohammed, and his chief minister the Ass of
+Egypt, and moreover the sultan's wife. May it
+please your high majesty to reward the beggars with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
+a few small coins and a little barley, for having
+brought his high majesty, the new sultan, safely to
+the gate of the palace and to the steps of the throne.'</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon all the beggars, the lepers, the cripples,
+the blind men and those of weak understanding fell
+down together at Khaled's feet.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>This is the story of Khaled the believing genius,
+which he caused to be written down in letters of gold
+by the most accomplished scribe in Nejed, that all men
+might remember it. But of what afterwards occurred
+there is nothing told in the scribe's manuscript. It is
+recounted, however, in the commentaries of one Abd
+ul Latif that Khaled did not cause Abdullah to be
+beheaded, nor in any way hurt, save that he was
+driven out of the city with his wife, where certain
+Bedouins affirmed that he lived for many years with
+her in great destitution. But it is well known that
+after this Zehowah bore Khaled many strong sons,
+whose children and children's children reigned gloriously
+for many generations in Nejed. And Khaled
+and Zehowah died full of years on the same day, and
+lie buried together in a garden without the Hasa gate,
+and the pilgrims from Ajman and the east visit their
+tombs even to the present time.</p>
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>Printed by</i> <span class="smcap">R. &amp; R. Clark</span>, <i>Edinburgh</i>.</p>
+
+
+<div class="main">
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span></p>
+
+<h3><a name="MESSRS_MACMILLAN_AND_COS_PUBLICATIONS" id="MESSRS_MACMILLAN_AND_COS_PUBLICATIONS"></a>MESSRS. MACMILLAN AND CO.'S PUBLICATIONS.</h3>
+
+<h4 class="booklist">POPULAR NOVELS BY MR. MARION CRAWFORD.</h4>
+<p class="center">Crown 8vo. Cloth. 3s. 6d. each.</p>
+
+<h4 class="booklist">MR. ISAACS: A Tale of Modern India.</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="txt90"><i>DAILY NEWS</i>&mdash;"The best novel that has ever laid its scene in our
+Indian dominions."</p>
+
+<p class="txt90"><i>ATHENÆUM</i>&mdash;"A work of unusual ability."</p></div>
+
+<h4 class="booklist">DR. CLAUDIUS. A True Story.</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="txt90"><i>ATHENÆUM</i>&mdash;"Mr. Crawford has achieved another success."</p></div>
+
+<h4 class="booklist">A ROMAN SINGER.</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="txt90"><i>TIMES</i>&mdash;"A masterpiece of narrative.... In Mr. Crawford's skilful
+hands it is unlike any other romance in English literature."</p></div>
+
+<h4 class="booklist">ZOROASTER.</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="txt90"><i>GUARDIAN</i>&mdash;"An instance of the highest and noblest form of novel....
+Alike in the originality of its conception and the power with which it is
+wrought out, it stands on a level that is almost entirely its own."</p></div>
+
+<h4 class="booklist">MARZIO'S CRUCIFIX.<br />
+A TALE OF A LONELY PARISH.</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="txt90"><i>GUARDIAN</i>&mdash;"The tale is written with all Mr. Crawford's skill."</p>
+
+<p class="txt90"><i>SATURDAY REVIEW</i>&mdash;"Unlike most novels, goes on improving up
+to the end."</p></div>
+
+<h4 class="booklist">PAUL PATOFF.</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="txt90"><i>ATHENÆUM</i>&mdash;"The originality of the story, the charm of the description,
+and the brilliancy of the narrative are undeniable."</p></div>
+
+<h4 class="booklist">WITH THE IMMORTALS.</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="txt90"><i>SPECTATOR</i>&mdash;"To do justice to Mr. Crawford's remarkable book by
+extracts would be impossible.... It cannot fail to please a reader who enjoys
+crisp, clear, vigorous writing, and thoughts that are alike original and suggestive."</p></div>
+
+<h4 class="booklist">GREIFENSTEIN.</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="txt90"><i>SATURDAY REVIEW</i>&mdash;"With the exception of 'Saracinesca,' his
+most consistent work, Mr. Crawford has not written anything so good as his
+last novel 'Greifenstein.'"</p>
+
+<p class="txt90"><i>ACADEMY</i>&mdash;"During the whole of his literary career Mr. Marion Crawford
+has produced nothing quite so powerful as one or two of the situations in
+'Greifenstein.'"</p></div>
+
+<h4 class="booklist">SANT' ILARIO.</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="txt90"><i>ATHENÆUM</i>&mdash;"The plot is skilfully concocted, and the interest is
+sustained to the end. The various events, romantic, and even sensational,
+follow naturally and neatly, and the whole is a very clever piece of work."</p>
+
+<p class="txt90"><i>SCOTSMAN</i>&mdash;"The book is full of passages of remarkable power. A
+reader will find it hard to decide whether this is not the best of Mr. Crawford's
+novels."</p></div>
+
+<h4 class="booklist">A CIGARETTE-MAKER'S ROMANCE.</h4>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="txt90"><i>OXFORD MAGAZINE</i>&mdash;"The idea of the story is original, the
+characters well drawn, and the interest sustained to the very last page.
+That Mr. Crawford, having a good story to tell, should tell it well, was only
+to be expected."</p>
+
+<p class="txt90"><i>GLOBE</i>&mdash;"We are inclined to think this the best of Mr. Marion Crawford's
+stories.... His art is here at its best, and those who read his book
+will feel grateful to him for its keen humanity."</p></div>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="tall center">NOVELS BY ROLF BOLDREWOOD.</p>
+
+<p class="center">New and Uniform Edition. Crown 8vo. Cloth. 3s. 6d. each.</p>
+
+<p class="txt110"><b>ROBBERY UNDER ARMS.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="center">A STORY OF LIFE AND ADVENTURE IN THE BUSH AND
+IN THE GOLD-FIELDS OF AUSTRALIA.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="txt90"><b>GUARDIAN</b>&mdash;"A singularly spirited and stirring tale of Australian life, chiefly in
+the remoter settlements.... Altogether it is a capital story, full of wild adventure
+and startling incidents, and told with a genuine simplicity and quiet appearance
+of truth, as if the writer were really drawing upon his memory rather than his
+imagination."</p>
+
+<p class="txt90"><b>SPECTATOR</b>&mdash;"We have nothing but praise for this story. Of adventure of the
+most stirring kind there is, as we have said, abundance. But there is more than this.
+The characters are drawn with great skill. Every one of the gang of bushrangers is
+strongly individualised. This is a book of no common literary force."</p>
+
+<p class="txt90"><b>WORLD</b>&mdash;"An uncommonly good thing.... The book, in short, has the natural
+touch, both of place and person, on every page."</p>
+
+<p class="txt90"><b>MORNING POST</b>&mdash;"As a picture of the earlier days of our Australian Colonies, and
+as an absorbing story, 'Robbery under Arms' has few equals."</p>
+
+<p class="txt90"><b>GRAPHIC</b>&mdash;"That Mr. Boldrewood knows his subject through and through is as
+certain as his picture of the breaking-out of the first gold fever in Australia is the best
+ever written."</p></div>
+
+<p class="txt110"><b>THE SQUATTER'S DREAM.</b></p>
+
+<p class="txt110"><b>THE MINER'S RIGHT.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="center">A TALE OF THE AUSTRALIAN GOLD-FIELDS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="txt90"><b>WORLD</b>&mdash;"Full of good passages, passages abounding in vivacity, in the colour and
+play of life.... The pith of the book lies in its singularly fresh and vivid pictures of
+the humours of the gold-fields,&mdash;tragic humours enough they are, too, here and
+again...."</p>
+
+<p class="txt90"><b>MANCHESTER EXAMINER</b>&mdash;"The characters are sketched with real life and
+picturesqueness. The book is lively and readable from first to last."</p></div>
+
+<p class="txt110"><b>A COLONIAL REFORMER.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="txt90"><b>ATHENÆUM</b>&mdash;"A series of natural and entertaining pictures of Australian life,
+which are, above all things, readable."</p>
+
+<p class="txt90"><b>GLASGOW HERALD</b>&mdash;"One of the most interesting books about Australia we have
+ever read."</p>
+
+<p class="txt90"><b>SATURDAY REVIEW</b>&mdash;"Mr. Boldrewood can tell what he knows with great point
+and vigour, and there is no better reading than the adventurous parts of his books."</p></div>
+
+<p class="txt110"><b>A SYDNEY-SIDE SAXON.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="txt80"><b>GLASGOW HERALD</b>&mdash;"The interest never flags, and altogether 'A Sydney-Side
+Saxon' is a really refreshing book."</p>
+
+<p class="txt90"><b>ANTI-JACOBIN</b>&mdash;"Thoroughly well worth reading.... A clever book, admirably
+written.... Brisk in incident, truthful and life-like in character.... Beyond and
+above all it has that stimulating hygienic quality, that cheerful, unconscious healthfulness,
+which makes a story like 'Robinson Crusoe,' or 'The Vicar of Wakefield,' so
+unspeakably refreshing after a course of even good contemporary fiction."</p></div>
+
+<p class="txt110"><b>NEVERMORE.</b></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class="txt90"><b>ACADEMY</b>&mdash;"Is perhaps the best story of the Rolf Boldrewood Series. Must be
+allowed to be one of the best works of the period."</p></div>
+
+<p class="tall center">MACMILLAN AND CO., LONDON.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 179px;">
+<img src="images/i002.jpg" width="179" height="300" alt="Mr. F. Marion Crawford." title="Mr. F. Marion Crawford." />
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Mr. F. Marion Crawford.</span></span>
+</div>
+
+<p class="center txt150"><a name="MACMILLANS" id="MACMILLANS"></a>MACMILLAN'S</p>
+
+<p class="center txt200" style="line-height: 1.5em;">Three-and-Sixpenny Library</p>
+
+<div style="line-height: 1.5em;">
+<p class="allcaps center">OF WORKS BY</p>
+
+<p class="center">POPULAR AUTHORS</p>
+
+<p class="center">In crown 8vo, cloth extra.</p></div>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Recent Additions to the Series:</i></p>
+
+<p class="hang"><b>Historical Characters.</b> By Sir <span class="smcap">Henry Lytton Bulwer</span>
+(Lord <span class="smcap">Dalling</span>).</p>
+
+<p class="hang"><b>Curiosities of Natural History.</b> In 4 vols. By <span class="smcap">Frank
+Buckland</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hang"><b>The Dewy Morn:</b> A Novel. By <span class="smcap">Richard Jefferies</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hang"><b>The Ingoldsby Legends.</b> With 50 Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Cruikshank,
+Leech, Tenniel</span>, etc.</p>
+
+<p class="hang"><b>Consequences:</b> A Novel. By <span class="smcap">Egerton Castle</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hang"><b>Thirlby Hall.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. E. Norris</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hang"><b>A Bachelor's Blunder.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. E. Norris</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hang"><b>Breezie Langton.</b> By <span class="smcap">Hawley Smart</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hang"><b>The Three Clerks.</b> By <span class="smcap">Anthony Trollope</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hang"><b>Fickle Fortune.</b> By <span class="smcap">E. Werner</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hang"><b>Success, and How He Won It.</b> By <span class="smcap">E. Werner</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hang"><b>Private Life of Marie Antoinette.</b> By <span class="smcap">Madame Campan</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hang"><b>The Life of Oliver Cromwell.</b> By <span class="smcap">M. Guizot</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hang"><b>Mary Queen of Scots.</b> By <span class="smcap">M. Mignet</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hang"><b>Memories of Father Healy of Little Bray.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang"><b>Autobiography and Reminiscences.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. P. Frith, R.A.</span></p>
+
+<p class="hang"><b>The Recollections of Marshall Macdonald, Duke of
+Tarentum.</b></p>
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>A complete List of the Series will be found on the following pages</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 227px;">
+<img src="images/i003.jpg" width="227" height="300" alt="Rolf Boldrewood." title="Rolf Boldrewood." />
+<span class="caption">Rolf Boldrewood.</span>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>ANONYMOUS.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>Hogan, M.P.</li>
+<li>Tim.</li>
+<li>The New Antigone.</li>
+<li>Flitters, Tatters, and the Counsellor.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By</i><br />
+<i>ROLF BOLDREWOOD.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>Robbery Under Arms.</li>
+<li>The Squatter's Dream.</li>
+<li>A Colonial Reformer.</li>
+<li>The Miner's Right.</li>
+<li>A Sidney-Side Saxon.</li>
+<li>Nevermore.</li>
+<li>A Modern Buccaneer.</li>
+<li>The Sealskin Coat.</li>
+<li>Old Melbourne Memories.</li>
+<li>My Run Home.</li>
+<li>The Crooked Stick.</li>
+<li>Plain Living.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By ROSA N. CAREY.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>Nellie's Memories.</li>
+<li>Wee Wifie.</li>
+<li>Barbara Heathcote's Trial.</li>
+<li>Robert Ord's Atonement.</li>
+<li>Wooed and Married.</li>
+<li>Heriot's Choice.</li>
+<li>Queenie's Whim.</li>
+<li>Mary St. John.</li>
+<li>Not Like Other Girls.</li>
+<li>For Lilias.</li>
+<li>Uncle Max.</li>
+<li>Only the Governess.</li>
+<li>Lover or Friend?</li>
+<li>Basil Lyndhurst.</li>
+<li>Sir Godfrey's Grand-daughters.</li>
+<li>The Old Old Story.</li>
+<li>Mistress of Brae Farm.</li>
+<li>Mrs. Romney, and But Men Must Work.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span></p>
+<p class="tall center"><i>By Mrs. CRAIK.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center">(The Author of "<span class="smcap">John Halifax, Gentleman</span>.")</p>
+
+
+<ul><li>Olive.</li>
+<li>The Ogilvies.</li>
+<li>Agatha's Husband.</li>
+<li>Head of the Family.</li>
+<li>Two Marriages.</li>
+<li>The Laurel Bush.</li>
+<li>About Money, and other Things.</li>
+<li>My Mother and I.</li>
+<li>Miss Tommy: A Mediaeval Romance.</li>
+<li>King Arthur: not a Love Story.</li>
+<li>Concerning Men, and other Papers.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By F. MARION CRAWFORD.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>Mr. Isaacs.</li>
+<li>Dr. Claudius.</li>
+<li>A Roman Singer.</li>
+<li>Zoroaster.</li>
+<li>Marzio's Crucifix.</li>
+<li>A Tale of a Lonely Parish.</li>
+<li>Paul Patoff.</li>
+<li>With the Immortals.</li>
+<li>Greifenstein.</li>
+<li>Sant' Ilario.</li>
+<li>A Cigarette-Maker's Romance.</li>
+<li>Khaled.</li>
+<li>The Three Fates.</li>
+<li>The Witch of Prague.</li>
+<li>Children of the King.</li>
+<li>Marion Darche.</li>
+<li>Pietro Ghisleri.</li>
+<li>Katharine Lauderdale.</li>
+<li>Don Orsino.</li>
+<li>The Ralstons.</li>
+<li>Casa Braccio.</li>
+<li>Adam Johnstone's Son.</li>
+<li>A Rose of Yesterday.</li>
+<li>Taquisara.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By Sir H. CUNNINGHAM.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>The Heriots.</li>
+<li>Wheat and Tares.</li>
+<li>The Coeruleans.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By CHARLES DICKENS.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>The Pickwick Papers.</li>
+<li>Oliver Twist.</li>
+<li>Nicholas Nickleby.</li>
+<li>Martin Chuzzlewit.</li>
+<li>The Old Curiosity Shop.</li>
+<li>Barnaby Rudge.</li>
+<li>Dombey and Son.</li>
+<li>Christmas Books.</li>
+<li>Sketches by Boz.</li>
+<li>David Copperfield.</li>
+<li>American Notes and Pictures from Italy.</li>
+<li>The Letters of Charles Dickens.</li>
+<li>Bleak House.</li>
+<li>Little Dorrit.</li>
+</ul>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 228px;">
+<img src="images/i004.jpg" width="228" height="300" alt="Miss Rosa N. Carey." title="Miss Rosa N. Carey." />
+<span class="caption">Miss Rosa N. Carey.</span>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="tall center">'ENGLISH MEN OF LETTERS.'</p>
+
+<p class="center">Re-issue in 13 vols.</p>
+
+
+<table class="books" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Booklist">
+<tr><td class="tcol1">Vol. I.</td><td align="left">Chaucer, Spenser, Dryden.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">II.</td><td align="left">Milton, Goldsmith, Cowper.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">III.</td><td align="left">Byron, Shelley, Keats.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">IV.</td><td align="left">Wordsworth, Southey, Landor.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">V.</td><td align="left">Lamb, Addison, Swift.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">VI.</td><td align="left">Scott, Burn, Coleridge.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">VII.</td><td align="left">Hume, Locke, Burke.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">VIII.</td><td align="left">Defoe, Sterne, Hawthorne.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">IX.</td><td align="left">Fielding, Thackeray, Dickens.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">X.</td><td align="left">Gibbon, Carlyle, Macaulay.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">XI.</td><td align="left">Sidney, De Quincey, Sheridan.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">XII.</td><td align="left">Pope, Johnson, Gray.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">XIII.</td><td align="left">Bacon, Bunyan, Bentley.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By DEAN FARRAR.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>Seekers after God.</li>
+<li>Eternal Hope.</li>
+<li>The Fall of Man.</li>
+<li>The Witness of History to Christ.</li>
+<li>The Silence and Voices of God.</li>
+<li>In the Days of thy Youth.</li>
+<li>Saintly Workers.</li>
+<li>Ephphatha.</li>
+<li>Mercy and Judgment.</li>
+<li>Sermons and Addresses.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By BRET HARTE.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>Cressy.</li>
+<li>The Heritage of Dedlow Marsh.</li>
+<li>A First Family of Tasajara.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By THOMAS HUGHES.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>Tom Brown's School Days.</li>
+<li>Tom Brown at Oxford.</li>
+<li>The Scouring of the White Horse, and the Ashen Faggot.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By HENRY JAMES.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>A London Life.</li>
+<li>The Aspen Papers, etc.</li>
+<li>The Tragic Muse.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By ANNIE KEARY.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>Castle Daly.</li>
+<li>A York and a Lancaster Rose.</li>
+<li>Oldbury.</li>
+<li>A Doubting Heart.</li>
+<li>Janet's Home.</li>
+<li>Nations round Israel.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span></p>
+<p class="tall center"><i>By CHARLES KINGSLEY.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>Westward Ho!</li>
+<li>Hypatia.</li>
+<li>Yeast.</li>
+<li>Alton Locke.</li>
+<li>Two Years Ago.</li>
+<li>Hereward the Wake.</li>
+<li>Poems.</li>
+<li>The Heroes.</li>
+<li>The Water Babies.</li>
+<li>Madam How and Lady Why.</li>
+<li>At Last.</li>
+<li>Prose Idylls.</li>
+<li>Plays and Puritans, etc.</li>
+<li>The Roman and the Teuton.</li>
+<li>Sanitary and Social Lectures and Essays.</li>
+<li>Historical Lectures and Essays.</li>
+<li>Scientific Lectures and Essays.</li>
+<li>Literary and General Lectures.</li>
+<li>The Hermits.</li>
+<li>Glaucus: or the Wonders of The Seashore.</li>
+<li>Village and Town and Country Sermons.</li>
+<li>The Water of Life, and other Sermons.</li>
+<li>Sermons on National Subjects, and the King of the Earth.</li>
+<li>Sermons for the Times.</li>
+<li>Good News of God.</li>
+<li>The Gospel of the Pentateuch, and David.</li>
+<li>Discipline, and other Sermons.</li>
+<li>Westminster Sermons.</li>
+<li>All Saints' Day, and other Sermons.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By FREDERICK DENISON MAURICE.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>Sermons Preached in Lincoln's Inn Chapel. In 6 vols.</li>
+<li>Christmas Day, and other Sermons.</li>
+<li>Theological Essays.</li>
+<li>Prophets and Kings.</li>
+<li>Patriarchs and Lawgivers.</li>
+<li>The Gospel of the Kingdom of Heaven.</li>
+<li>Gospel of St. John.</li>
+<li>Epistles of St. John.</li>
+<li>Friendship of Books.</li>
+<li>Prayer Book and Lord's Prayer.</li>
+<li>The Doctrine of Sacrifice.</li>
+<li>Acts of the Apostles.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By D. CHRISTIE MURRAY.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>Aunt Rachel.</li>
+<li>He Fell among Thieves. <span class="smcap">D. C. Murray</span> and <span class="smcap">H. Hermann</span>.</li>
+<li>John Vale's Guardian.</li>
+<li>Schwartz.</li>
+<li>The Weaker Vessel.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By Mrs. OLIPHANT.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>A Beleaguered City.</li>
+<li>Joyce.</li>
+<li>Neighbours on the Green.</li>
+<li>Kirsteen.</li>
+<li>Hester.</li>
+<li>Sir Tom.</li>
+<li>A Country Gentleman and his Family.</li>
+<li>The Curate in Charge.</li>
+<li>The Second Son.</li>
+<li>He that Will Not when He May.</li>
+<li>The Railway Man and his Children.</li>
+<li>The Marriage of Elinor.</li>
+<li>The Heir-Presumptive and the Heir-Apparent.</li>
+<li>A Son of the Soil.</li>
+<li>The Wizard's Son.</li>
+<li>Young Musgrave.</li>
+<li>Lady William.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 226px;">
+<img src="images/i005.jpg" width="226" height="300" alt="Miss C. M. Yonge." title="Miss C. M. Yonge." />
+<span class="caption">Miss C. M. Yonge.</span>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By Mrs. PARR.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>Adam and Eve.</li>
+<li>Loyalty George.</li>
+<li>Dorothy Fox.</li>
+<li>Robin.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By J. H. SHORTHOUSE.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>John Inglesant.</li>
+<li>Sir Percival.</li>
+<li>The Little Schoolmaster Mark.</li>
+<li>The Countess Eve.</li>
+<li>A Teacher of the Violin.</li>
+<li>Blanche, Lady Falaise.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By J. TIMBS.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>Lives of Statesmen.</li>
+<li>Lives of Painters.</li>
+<li>Doctors and Patients.</li>
+<li>Wits and Humourists. 2 vols.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By MONTAGU WILLIAMS.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>Leaves of a Life.</li>
+<li>Later Leaves.</li>
+<li>Round London.</li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="tall center"><i>By CHARLOTTE M. YONGE.</i></p>
+
+
+<ul><li>The Heir of Redclyffe.</li>
+<li>Heartsease.</li>
+<li>Hopes and Fears.</li>
+<li>Dynevor Terrace.</li>
+<li>The Daisy Chain.</li>
+<li>The Trial: More Links of the Daisy Chain.</li>
+<li>Pillars of the House. Vol. I.</li>
+<li>Pillars of the House. Vol. II.</li>
+<li>The Young Stepmother.</li>
+<li>The Clever Woman of the Family.</li>
+<li>The Three Brides.</li>
+<li>My Young Alcides.</li>
+<li>The Caged Lion.</li>
+<li>Stray Pearls.</li>
+<li>The Dove in the Eagle's Nest.</li>
+<li>The Chaplet of Pearls.</li>
+<li>Lady Hester, and the Danvers Papers.</li>
+<li>Magnum Bonum.</li>
+<li>Love and Life.</li>
+<li>Unknown to History.</li>
+<li>The Armourer's 'Prentices.</li>
+<li>The Two Sides of the Shield.</li>
+<li>Scenes and Characters.</li>
+<li>Nuttie's Father.</li>
+<li>Chantry House.</li>
+<li>A Modern Telemachus.</li>
+<li>Bye-Words.</li>
+<li>More Bye-Words.</li>
+<li>Beechcroft at Rockstone.</li>
+<li>A Reputed Changeling.</li>
+<li>The Little Duke.</li>
+<li>The Lances of Lynwood.</li>
+<li>The Prince and the Page.</li>
+<li>P's and Q's, and Little Lucy's Wonderful Globe.</li>
+<li>Two Penniless Princesses.</li>
+<li>That Stick.</li>
+<li>Grisly Grisell.</li>
+<li>An Old Woman's Outlook.</li>
+<li>The Long Vacation.</li>
+<li>The Release.</li>
+<li>Pilgrimage of the Ben Beriah.</li>
+<li>Henrietta's Wish.</li>
+<li>The Two Guardians.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span></p>
+<p class="tall center"><i>By</i> VARIOUS WRITERS.</p>
+
+<div class="txt90">
+<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">Canon</span> ATKINSON.&mdash;<b>The Last of the Giant Killers.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">Sir</span> S. W. BAKER.&mdash;<b>True Tales for my Grandsons.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">R. H. D. BARHAM.&mdash;<b>Life of Rev. R. H. Barham.</b>&mdash;<b>Life of Theodore Hook.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">R. BLENNERHASSETT <span class="smcap">and</span> L. SLEEMAN.&mdash;<b>Adventures in Mashonaland.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">Sir</span> HENRY LYTTON BULWER (<span class="smcap">Lord</span> DALLING).&mdash;<b>Historical Characters.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">HUGH CONWAY.&mdash;<b>Living or Dead?</b>&mdash;<b>A Family Affair.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">Sir</span> MORTIMER DURAND, K.C.I.E.&mdash;<b>Helen Treveryan.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">LANOE FALCONER.&mdash;<b>Cecilia de Noël.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">ARCHIBALD FORBES.&mdash;<b>Barracks, Bivouacs, and Battles.</b>&mdash;<b>Souvenirs of Some Continents.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">W. FORBES-MITCHELL.&mdash;<b>Reminiscences of the Great Mutiny, 1857-59.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">W. W. FOWLER.&mdash;<b>A Year with the Birds.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">Rev.</span> J. GILMORE.&mdash;<b>Storm Warriors.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">HENRY KINGSLEY.&mdash;<b>Tales of Old Travel.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">AMY LEVY.&mdash;<b>Reuben Sachs.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">S. R. LYSAGHT.&mdash;<b>The Marplot.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">LORD LYTTON.&mdash;<b>The Ring of Amasis.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">M. M'LENNAN.&mdash;<b>Muckle Jock, and other Stories of Peasant Life.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">LUCAS MALET.&mdash;<b>Mrs. Lorimer.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">GUSTAVE MASSON.&mdash;<b>A French Dictionary.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">A. B. MITFORD.&mdash;<b>Tales of Old Japan.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">MARY R. MITFORD.&mdash;<b>Recollections of a Literary Life.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">Major</span> G. PARRY.&mdash;<b>The Story of Dick.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">E. C. PRICE.&mdash;<b>In the Lion's Mouth.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">W. C. RHOADES.&mdash;<b>John Trevennick.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">W. CLARK RUSSELL.&mdash;<b>Marooned.</b>&mdash;<b>A Strange Elopement.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">THE WORKS OF SHAKESPEARE.&mdash;Vol. I. <b>Comedies.</b> Vol. II. <b>Histories.</b>
+Vol. III. <b>Tragedies.</b> 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="hang">MARCHESA THEODOLI.&mdash;<b>Under Pressure.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">"TIMES!"&mdash;<b>Biographies of Eminent Persons.</b> In 6 vols.&mdash;<b>Annual Summaries.</b>
+In 2 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="hang"><span class="smcap">Mrs.</span> HUMPHRY WARD.&mdash;<b>Miss Bretherton.</b></p>
+
+<p class="hang">C. WHITEHEAD.&mdash;<b>Richard Savage.</b></p></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 204px;">
+<img src="images/i006.jpg" width="204" height="300" alt="Sir Walter Scott." title="Sir Walter Scott." />
+<span class="caption">Sir Walter Scott.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p class="tall txt90"><i>Now Ready.</i> Crown 8vo, tastefully bound
+in Green Cloth, Gilt, in which binding any
+of the Novels may be bought separately,
+price 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each. Also in Special Cloth
+Binding, Flat Backs, Gilt Tops, supplied
+in Sets only of 24 Volumes, price £4 4<i>s.</i></p>
+
+
+<p class="center txt200">The Illustrated
+Border Edition<br />
+<span class="txt50">OF THE</span><br />
+Waverley Novels</p>
+
+<p class="txt90">Edited with Introductory Essays and
+Notes to each Novel (supplementing those
+of the Author) by <span class="smcap">Andrew Lang</span>. With
+250 Original Illustrations from Drawings
+and Paintings specially executed by eminent
+Artists.</p>
+
+
+<h3>List of the Volumes.</h3>
+
+
+
+<table class="books" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Booklist">
+<tr><td class="tcol1">1.</td><td align="left">Waverley.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">2.</td><td align="left">Guy Mannering.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">3.</td><td align="left">The Antiquary.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">4.</td><td align="left">Rob Roy.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">5.</td><td align="left">Old Mortality.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">6.</td><td align="left">The Heart of Midlothian.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">7.</td><td align="left">A Legend of Montrose, and The Black Dwarf.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">8.</td><td align="left">The Bride of Lammermoor.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">9.</td><td align="left">Ivanhoe.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">10.</td><td align="left">The Monastery.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">11.</td><td align="left">The Abbot.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">12.</td><td align="left">Kenilworth.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">13.</td><td align="left">The Pirate.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">14.</td><td align="left">The Fortunes of Nigel.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">15.</td><td align="left">Peveril of the Peak.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">16.</td><td align="left">Quentin Durward.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">17.</td><td align="left">St. Ronan's Well.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">18.</td><td align="left">Redgauntlet.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">19.</td><td align="left">The Betrothed, and the Talisman.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">20.</td><td align="left">Woodstock.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">21.</td><td align="left">The Fair Maid of Perth.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">22.</td><td align="left">Anne of Geierstein.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">23.</td><td align="left">Count Robert of Paris, and The Surgeon's Daughter.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcol1">24.</td><td align="left">Castle Dangerous, Chronicles of the Canongate, etc.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+
+<h3>Some of the Artists contributing to the "Border Edition."</h3>
+
+
+<ul><li>Sir J. E. Millais, Bart, P.R.A.</li>
+<li>Lockhart Bogle.</li>
+<li>Gordon Browne.</li>
+<li>D. Y. Cameron.</li>
+<li>Frank Dadd, R.I.</li>
+<li>R. de Los Rios.</li>
+<li>Herbert Dicksee.</li>
+<li>M. L. Gow, R.I.</li>
+<li>W. B. Hole, R.S.A.</li>
+<li>John Pettie, R.A.</li>
+<li>Sir James De Linton, P.R.I.</li>
+<li>Ad Lalauze.</li>
+<li>J. E. Lauder, R.S.A.</li>
+<li>W. Hatherell, R.I.</li>
+<li>Sam Bough, R.S.A.</li>
+<li>W. E. Lockhart, R.S.A.</li>
+<li>R. W. Macbeth, A.R.A.</li>
+<li>H. Macbeth-Raeburn.</li>
+<li>J. Macwhirter, A.R.A., R.S.A.</li>
+<li>W. Q. Orchardson, R.A.</li>
+<li>James Orrock, R.I.</li>
+<li>Walter Paget.</li>
+<li>Sir George Reid, P.R.S.A.</li>
+<li>Frank Short.</li>
+<li>W. Strang.</li>
+<li>Sir Henry Raeburn, R.A., P.R.S.A.</li>
+<li>Arthur Hopkins, A.R.W.S.</li>
+<li>R. Herdman, R.S.A.</li>
+<li>D. Herdman.</li>
+<li>Hugh Cameron, R.S.A.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="tall center">MACMILLAN &amp; CO., Limited, LONDON</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="tr">
+<h4>Transcriber's Notes:</h4>
+
+
+<p>Minor punctuation corrections have been made without comment.</p>
+
+<p>A Table of Contents has been created by the transcriber to aid reader
+navigation in this e-text.</p>
+
+<p>Word Variations:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"carcase(s)" (2) (Br. sp.) and "carcass" (1)</p>
+
+ <p class="hang">"Khaled ibn Walid" (1) and "Khaled ibn Walad" (1)
+ (both referred to as "the Sword of the Lord")</p></div></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Khaled, A Tale of Arabia, by F. Marion Crawford
+
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+Project Gutenberg's Khaled, A Tale of Arabia, by F. Marion Crawford
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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
+
+
+Title: Khaled, A Tale of Arabia
+
+Author: F. Marion Crawford
+
+Release Date: January 14, 2011 [EBook #34959]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KHALED, A TALE OF ARABIA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Christine Aldridge and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+(This file was produced from images generously made
+available by The Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Passages in italics are surrounded by _underscores_.
+Passages in bold are surrounded by =equal signs=.
+Passages in gothic fonts are surrounded by +plus signs+.
+
+Other transcription notes appear at the end of this e-text.
+
+
+
+
+KHALED: A TALE OF ARABIA
+
+
+[Illustration: M. M. & Co.]
+
+
+
+
+ KHALED
+
+ A Tale of Arabia
+
+ BY F. MARION CRAWFORD
+
+
+ +London+
+ MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
+ NEW YORK: THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
+ 1901
+
+ _All rights reserved_
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT
+ 1891
+ BY
+ F. MARION CRAWFORD
+
+_First Edition (2 Vols. Globe 8vo) May 1891.
+Second Edition (1 Vol. Crown 8vo) November
+ 1891, 1892 Re-issue 1901_
+
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER I 1
+ CHAPTER II 22
+ CHAPTER III 43
+ CHAPTER IV 64
+ CHAPTER V 86
+ CHAPTER VI 107
+ CHAPTER VII 128
+CHAPTER VIII 150
+ CHAPTER IX 171
+ CHAPTER X 192
+ CHAPTER XI 213
+ CHAPTER XII 235
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+Khaled stood in the third heaven, which is the heaven of precious
+stones, and of Asrael, the angel of Death. In the midst of the light
+shed by the fruit of the trees Asrael himself is sitting, and will sit
+until the day of the resurrection from the dead, writing in his book the
+names of those who are to be born, and blotting out the names of those
+who have lived their years and must die. Each of the trees has seventy
+thousand branches, each branch bears seventy thousand fruits, each fruit
+is composed of seventy thousand diamonds, rubies, emeralds, carbuncles,
+jacinths, and other precious stones. The stature and proportions of
+Asrael are so great that his eyes are seventy thousand days' journey
+apart, the one from the other.
+
+Khaled stood motionless during ten months and thirteen days, waiting
+until Asrael should rest from his writing and look towards him. Then
+came the holy night called Al Kadr, the night of peace in which the
+Koran came down from heaven. Asrael paused, and raising his eyes from
+the scroll saw Khaled standing before him.
+
+Asrael knew Khaled, who was one of the genii converted to the faith on
+hearing Mohammed read the Koran by night in the valley Al Nakhlah. He
+wondered, however, when he saw him standing in his presence; for the
+genii are not allowed to pass even the gate of the first heaven, in
+which the stars hang by chains of gold, each star being inhabited by an
+angel who guards the entrance against the approach of devils.
+
+Asrael looked at Khaled in displeasure, therefore, supposing that he had
+eluded the heavenly sentinels and concealed an evil purpose. But Khaled
+inclined himself respectfully.
+
+'There is no Allah but Allah. Mohammed is the prophet of Allah,' he
+said, thus declaring himself to be of the Moslem genii, who are upright
+and are true believers.
+
+'How camest thou hither?' asked Asrael.
+
+'By the will of Allah, who sent his angel with me to the gate,' Khaled
+answered. 'I am come hither that thou mayest write down my name in the
+book of life and death, that I may be a man on earth, and after an
+appointed time thou shalt blot it out again and I shall die.'
+
+Asrael gazed at him and knew that this was the will of Allah, for the
+angels are thus immediately made conscious of the divine commands. He
+took up his pen to write, but before he had traced the first letter he
+paused.
+
+'This is the night Al Kadr,' he said. 'If thou wilt, tell me therefore
+thy story, for I am now at leisure to hear it.'
+
+'Thou knowest that I am of the upright genii,' Khaled answered, 'and I
+am well disposed towards men. In the city of Riad, in Arabia, there
+rules a powerful king, the Sultan of the kingdom of Nejed, blessed in
+all things save that he has no son to inherit his vast dominions. One
+daughter only has been born to him in his old age, of such marvellous
+beauty that even the Black Eyed Virgins enclosed in the fruit of the
+tree Sedrat, who wait for the coming of the faithful, would seem but
+mortal women beside her. Her eyes are as the deep water in the wells of
+Zobeideh when it is night and the stars are reflected therein. Her hair
+is finer than silk, red with henna, and abundant as the foliage of the
+young cypress tree. Her face is as fair as the kernels of young almonds,
+and her mouth is sweeter than the mellow date and more fragrant than
+'Ood mingled with ambergris. She possesses moreover all the virtues
+which become women, for she is as modest as she is beautiful and as
+charitable as she is modest. From all parts of Arabia and Egypt, and
+from Syria and from Persia, and even from Samarkand, from Afghanistan,
+and from India princes and kings' sons continually come to ask her in
+marriage, for the fame of her beauty and of her virtues is as wide as
+the world. But her father, desiring only her happiness, leaves the
+choice of a husband to herself, and for a long time she refused all her
+suitors. For there is in the palace at Riad a certain secret chamber
+from which she can observe all those who come and hear their
+conversation and see the gifts which they bring with them.
+
+'At last there came as a suitor an unbeliever, a prince of an island by
+the shores of India, beautiful as the moon, whose speech was honey, and
+who surpassed all the suitors in riches and in the magnificence of the
+presents he brought. For he came bearing with him a hundred pounds'
+weight of pure gold, and five hundred ounces of ambergris, and a great
+weight of musk and aloes and sandal wood, and rich garments without
+number, and many woven shawls of Kashmir, of which the least splendid
+was valued at a thousand sherifs of gold. An innumerable retinue
+accompanied him, and twenty elephants, and horses without number,
+besides camels.
+
+'The Sultan's daughter beheld this beautiful prince from her secret
+hiding-place, and all that he had brought with him. The Sultan received
+him with kindness and hospitality, but assured him that unless he would
+renounce idolatry and embrace the true faith he could not hope to
+succeed in his purpose. Thereupon he was much cast down, and soon
+afterwards, having received magnificent gifts in his turn, he would have
+departed on his way, disappointed and heavy at heart. But Zehowah sent
+for her father and entreated him to bid the young prince remain. "For it
+is not impossible," she said, "that he may yet be converted to the true
+faith. And have I the right to refuse to sacrifice my freedom when the
+sacrifice may be the means of converting an idolater to the right way?
+And if I marry him and go with him to his kingdom, shall we not make
+true believers of all his subjects, so that I shall deserve to be called
+the mother of the faithful like Ayesha, beloved by the Prophet, upon
+whom be peace?" The Sultan found it hard to oppose this argument which
+was founded upon virtue and edified in righteousness. He therefore
+entreated the Indian prince to remain and to profess Islam, promising
+the hand of Zehowah when he should be converted.
+
+'Then I heard the prince taking secret counsel with a certain old man
+who was with him, who shaved his face and wore white clothing and ate
+food which he prepared for himself alone. The prince told all, and then
+the old man counselled him in this way. "Speak whatsoever words they
+require of thee," he said, "for words are but garments wherewith to make
+the nakedness of truth modest and agreeable. And take the woman, and by
+and by, when we are returned to our own land, if she consent to worship
+thy gods, it is good; and if not, it is yet good, for thou shalt possess
+her as thy wife, and her unbelief shall be of consequence only to her
+own soul, but thy soul shall not be retarded in its progress." And the
+young prince was pleased, and promised to do as his counsellor advised
+him.
+
+'So I saw that he was false and that Zehowah's righteousness would be
+but the means to her sorrow if she were allowed to persist. Therefore in
+the night, when all were asleep in the palace, I entered into the room
+where the prince was lying, and I took him in my arms and flew with him
+to the midst of the Red Desert, and there I slew him and buried him in
+the sand, for I saw that he was a liar and had determined to be a
+hypocrite.
+
+'But Allah immediately sent an angel to destroy me because I had put to
+death a man who was about to become a believer, thereby killing his soul
+also, since he had not yet made profession of the faith. But I stood up
+and defended myself, saying that I had slain a hypocrite who had planned
+in his heart to carry away the daughter of a Moslem. Then the angel
+asked the truth of the prince's soul, which was sitting upon the red
+sand that covered the body. The soul answered, weeping, and said: "These
+are true words, and I am fuel for hell." "Have I then deserved death?"
+I asked. "I have killed an unbeliever." The angel answered that I had
+deserved life; and he would have left me and returned to paradise, but I
+would not let him go, and I besought him to entreat Allah that I might
+be allowed to live the life of a mortal man upon earth. "For," I said,
+"thou sayest that I deserve life. But even if thou destroy me not now I
+am only one of the genii, who shall all die at the first blast of the
+trumpet before the resurrection of the dead. Obtain for me therefore
+that I may have a soul and live a few years, and if I do good I shall
+then be with the faithful in paradise; and if not, I shall be bound with
+red-hot chains and burn everlastingly like a sinful man." The angel
+promised to intercede for me and departed. So I sat down upon the mound
+of red sand beside the soul of the Indian prince, to wait for the
+angel's coming again.
+
+'Then the soul reproached me angrily. "But for thee," it said, "I should
+have married Zehowah and returned to my own people, and although I
+purposed to be a hypocrite, yet in time Zehowah might have convinced me
+and I should have believed in my heart. For I now see that there is no
+Allah but Allah, and that Mohammed is the prophet of Allah. And I should
+perhaps have died full of years, a good Moslem, and should have entered
+paradise. Therefore I pray Allah that this may be remembered in thy
+condemnation." At these words I was very angry and reviled the soul,
+scoffing at it. "No doubt Allah will hear thy prayer," I answered, "and
+will hear also at the same time thy lies. And as for Zehowah, thinkest
+thou that she would have loved thee, even if she had married thee? I
+tell thee that her soul rejoices only in the light of the faith, and
+that although she might have married thee, she would have done so in the
+hope of turning thy people from the worship of false gods and not for
+love of thee. For she will never love any man." When I had said this the
+soul groaned aloud and then remained silent.
+
+'In a little while the angel came back, and I saw that his face was no
+longer clouded with anger. "Hear the judgment of Allah," he said.
+"Inasmuch as thou tookest the law upon thyself, which belonged to Allah
+alone, thou deservest to die. But in so far as thou hast indeed slain a
+hypocrite and an unbeliever thou hast earned life. Allah is just,
+merciful and forgiving. It is not meet that in thy lot there should be
+nothing but reward or nothing but punishment. Therefore thou shalt not
+yet receive a soul. Go hence to the third heaven and when the angel
+Asrael shall be at leisure he will write thy name in the book of the
+living. Then thou shalt return hither and go into the city of Riad
+bearing gifts. And Zehowah will accept thee in marriage, though she love
+thee not, for Allah commands that it be so. But if in the course of
+time this virtuous woman be moved to love, and say to thee, 'Khaled, I
+love thee,' then at that moment thou shalt receive an immortal soul, and
+if thy deeds be good thy soul shall enter paradise with the believers,
+but if not, thou shalt burn. Thus saith Allah. Thus art thou rewarded,
+indeed, but wisely and temperately, since thou hast not obtained life
+directly, but only the hope of life." Then the angel departed again,
+leading the way.
+
+'But the soul mocked me. "Thou that sayest of Zehowah that she will
+never love any man, thou art fallen into thine own trap," it cried. "For
+now, if she love thee not thou must perish. Truly, Allah heard my
+prayer." But I was filled with thankfulness and departed after the
+angel, leaving the soul sitting alone upon the red sand.
+
+'Thus have I told thee my history, O Asrael. And now I pray thee to
+write my name in the book of the living that I may fulfil the command of
+Allah and go my way to the city of Riad.'
+
+Then Asrael again took up his pen to write in the book.
+
+'Now thou art become a living man, though thou hast as yet no soul,' he
+said. 'And thou art subject to death by the sword and by sickness and by
+all those evils which spring up in the path of the living. And the day
+of thy death is already known to Allah who knows all things. But he is
+merciful and will doubtless grant thee a term of years in which to make
+thy trial. Nevertheless be swift in thy journey and speedy in all thou
+doest, for though mortal man may live for ever hereafter in glory, his
+years on earth are but as the breath which springs up in the desert
+towards evening and is gone before the stars appear.'
+
+Khaled made a salutation before Asrael and went out of the third heaven,
+and passed through the second which is of burnished steel, and through
+the first in which the stars hang by golden chains, where Adam waits for
+the day of the resurrection, and at the gate he found the angel who had
+led him, and who now lifted him in his arms and bore him back to the Red
+Desert; for as he was now a mortal man he could no longer move through
+the air like the genii between the outer gate of heaven and the earth.
+Nor could he any longer see the soul of the Indian prince sitting upon
+the sand, though it was still there. But the angel was visible to him.
+So they stood together, and the angel spoke to him.
+
+'Thou art now a mortal man,' he said, 'and subject to time as to death.
+To thee it seems but a moment since we went up together to the gate, and
+yet thou wast standing ten months and thirteen days before Asrael, and
+of the body of the man whom thou slewest only the bones remain.'
+
+So saying the angel blew upon the red sand and Khaled saw the white
+bones of the prince in the place where he had laid his body. So he was
+first made conscious of time.
+
+'Nearly a year has passed, and though Allah be very merciful to thee,
+yet he will assuredly not suffer thee to live beyond the time of other
+men. Make haste therefore and depart upon thine errand. Yet because thou
+art come into the world a grown man, having neither father nor mother
+nor inheritance, I will give thee what is most necessary for thy
+journey.'
+
+Then the angel took a handful of leaves from a ghada bush close by and
+gave them to Khaled, and as he gave them they were changed into a rich
+garment, and into linen, and into a shawl with which to make a turban,
+and shoes of red leather.
+
+'Clothe thyself with these,' said the angel.
+
+He broke a twig from the bush and placed it in Khaled's hand.
+Immediately it became a sabre of Damascus steel, in a sheath of leather
+with a belt.
+
+'Take this sword, which is of such fine temper that it will cleave
+through an iron headpiece and a shirt of mail. But remember that it is
+not a sword made by magic. Let thy magic reside in thy arm, wield it for
+the faith, and put thy trust in Allah.'
+
+Afterwards the angel took up a locust that was asleep on the sand
+waiting for the warmth of the morning sun. The angel held the locust up
+before Khaled, and then let it fall. But as it fell it became at once a
+beautiful bay mare with round black eyes wide apart and an arching tail
+which swept down to the sand like a river of silk.
+
+'Take this mare,' said the angel; 'she is of the pure breed of Nejed and
+as swift as the wind, but mortal like thyself.'
+
+'But how shall I ride her without saddle or bridle?' asked Khaled.
+
+'That is true,' answered the angel.
+
+He laid leaves of the ghada upon the mare's back and they became a
+saddle, and placed a twig in her mouth and it turned into a bit and
+bridle.
+
+Khaled thanked the angel and mounted.
+
+'Farewell and prosper, and put thy trust in Allah, and forget not the
+day of judgment,' the angel said, and immediately returned to paradise.
+
+So Khaled was left alone in the Red Desert, a living man obliged to
+shift for himself, liable to suffer hunger and thirst or to be slain by
+robbers, with no worldly possessions but his sword, his bay mare, and
+the clothes on his back. He knew moreover that he was more than two
+hundred miles from the city of Riad, and he knew that he could not
+accomplish this journey in less than four days. For when he was one of
+the genii he had often watched men toiling through desert on foot, and
+on camels and on horses, and had laughed with his companions at the slow
+progress they made. But now it was no laughing matter, for he had
+forgotten to ask the angel for dates and water, or even for a few
+handfuls of barley meal.
+
+He turned the mare's head westward of the Goat, in which is the polar
+star, for he remembered that when he had carried away the Indian prince
+he had flown toward the south-east, and as he began to gallop over the
+dark sand he laughed to himself.
+
+'What poor things are men and their horses,' he said. 'To destroy me,
+this mare need only stumble and lame herself, and we shall both die of
+hunger and thirst in the desert.'
+
+This reflection made him at first urge the mare to her greatest speed,
+for he thought that the sooner he should be out of the desert and among
+the villages beyond, the present danger would be passed. But presently
+he bethought him that the mare would be more likely to stumble and hurt
+herself in the dark if she were galloping than if she were moving at a
+moderate pace. He therefore drew bridle and patted her neck and made her
+walk slowly and cautiously forward.
+
+But this did not please him either, after a time, for he remembered that
+if he rode too slowly he must die of hunger before reaching the end of
+his journey.
+
+'Truly,' he said, 'one must learn what it is to be a man, in order to
+understand the uses of moderation. Gallop not lest thy horse fall and
+thou perish! Nor delay walking slowly by the road, lest thou die of
+thirst and hunger! Yet thou art not safe, for Al Walid died from
+treading upon an arrow, and Oda ibn Kais perished by perpetual sneezing.
+Allah is just and merciful! I will let the mare go at her own pace, for
+the end of all things is known.'
+
+The mare, being left to herself, began to canter and carried Khaled
+onward all night without changing her gait.
+
+'Nevertheless,' thought Khaled, 'if we are not soon out of the desert we
+shall suffer thirst during the day as well as hunger.'
+
+When there was enough daylight to distinguish a black thread from a
+white, Khaled looked before him and saw that there was nothing but red
+sand in hillocks and ridges, with ghada bushes here and there. But still
+the mare cantered on and did not seem tired. Soon the sun rose and it
+grew very hot, for the air was quite still and it was summer time.
+
+Khaled looked always before him and at last he saw a white patch in the
+distance and he knew that there must be water near it. For the water of
+the Red Desert whitens the sand. He therefore rode on cheerfully, for he
+was now thirsty, and the mare quickened her pace, for she also knew
+that she was near a drinking-place. But as they came close to the spot
+Khaled remembered that the preceding night had been Al Kadr, which falls
+between the seventh and eighth latter days of the month Ramadhan, during
+which the true believers neither eat nor drink so long as there is light
+enough to distinguish a white thread from a black one. So, when they
+reached the well, he let his mare drink her fill, and he took off the
+saddle and bridle and let her loose, after which he sat down with his
+head in the shade of a ghada bush to rest himself.
+
+'Allah is merciful,' he said; 'the night will come, and then I will
+drink.' For he dared not ride farther, for fear of not finding water
+again.
+
+Then again he was disturbed, for he had nothing to eat, and he thought
+that if he waited until night he would be hungry as well as thirsty. But
+presently he saw the mare trying to catch the locusts that flew about.
+She could only catch one or two, because it was now hot and they were
+able to fly quickly.
+
+'When the night comes,' he said, 'the locusts will lie on the ground and
+cling to the bushes, being stiff with the cold, and then I will eat my
+fill, and drink also.'
+
+Soon afterwards he fell asleep, being weary, and when he awoke it was
+night again and the stars were shining overhead. Khaled rose hastily and
+drank at the well and made ablutions and prayed, prostrating himself
+towards the Kebla. He remembered that he had slept a long time, and that
+he had not performed his devotions for a day and a night, so that he
+repeated them five times, to atone for the omission.
+
+The mare was eating the locusts that now lay in great black patches on
+the sand unable to move and save themselves. Khaled threw his cloak over
+a great number of them and gathered them together. Then he kindled a
+fire of ghada by striking sparks from the blade of his sword, and when
+he had made a bed of coals he roasted the locusts after pulling off
+their legs, and ate his fill. While he was doing this he was much
+disturbed in mind.
+
+'I have only just begun to live as a man,' he thought. 'Did I not stand
+ten months and thirteen days in the third heaven, unconscious of the
+passing of time? Who shall tell me whether I have not slept another ten
+months or more under this bush, like the companions of Al Rakim?'
+
+So, when he had done eating and had drunk again from the well, and had
+made the mare drink, he saddled her quickly and mounted, and cantered on
+through the night, guiding his course by the stars. On the following day
+he again found a well, but much later than before, and he suffered much
+from thirst as he watched his mare dip her black lips into the pool.
+Nevertheless he would not break his fast, for he was resolved to be a
+true believer in practice as well as in belief. So he fell asleep and
+awoke when it was night again, and ate and drank. In this way he
+journeyed several days until he began to see the hill country which
+borders the desert towards Riad, and he understood that he had been much
+farther away than he had imagined. But he reflected that Allah had
+doubtless intended to try his constancy by imposing upon him the journey
+through the desert during the days of fasting. But at last, he awoke one
+day just at sunset, instead of sleeping until the night. He had been
+travelling up the first slopes where the ground, though barren, is
+harder than in the desert, and had lain down in a hollow by an abundant
+spring. He rose now and made ablutions and prayed, as usual, towards
+Mecca; that is to say, being where he was, he turned his face to the
+west as the sun was setting. When he had finished he stood some minutes
+watching the red light over the desert below him, and then he was
+suddenly aware that the new moon was hanging just above the diminishing
+fire of the evening, and he knew that the fast of Ramadhan was over and
+that the feast of Bairam had begun. Thereat he was glad, and determined
+to take an unusual number of locusts for his evening meal.
+
+But when he looked about he saw that there were no locusts in the place,
+though there was grass, which his mare was eating. Then he looked
+everywhere near the well to see whether some traveller had not perhaps
+dropped a few dates or a little barley by accident, but there was
+nothing.
+
+'Doubtless,' he said, 'Allah wishes to show me that greediness is a sin
+even on the day of feasting.'
+
+He drank as much of the water as he could in order to stay his hunger as
+well as assuage his thirst, and then he saddled the mare and rode up out
+of the hollow towards the hill country. Towards the middle of the night
+he came to a small village where all the people were celebrating the
+feast, having killed a young camel and several sheep. Seeing that he was
+a traveller they bade him be welcome, and he sat down among them and ate
+his fill of meat, praising Allah. And corn was given to his mare, so
+that the dumb animal also kept the feast.
+
+'Truly,' said the people, 'thy mare is a daughter of Al Borak, the
+heavenly steed called "the Lightning," upon which the nocturnal journey
+was accomplished by the Prophet, upon whom be peace.'
+
+They said this not because they divined that the mare had been given to
+Khaled by an angel, but because they saw by her beauty that she must be
+swift as the wind. For she had a large head, with bony cheeks, and a
+full forehead and round black eyes wide apart, with smooth black skin
+about them, and a pointed nose, and the under lip was like that of a
+camel, projecting a little. And she was neither too long nor too short,
+having straight legs like steel, and small feet and round hoofs, neither
+overgrown in idleness nor overworn with much work. And her tail lay flat
+and long and smooth when she was standing still but arched like the
+plume of an ostrich when she moved. Her coat was bright bay, glossy and
+smooth and without any white markings. By all these signs, which belong
+to the purest blood, the people of the village knew that she was of the
+fleetest reared in Arabia. And Khaled was glad that the people admired
+her, since she was the chief of his few possessions, which indeed were
+not many.
+
+He did not know beforehand what he should do, nor what he should say
+when in the presence of the Sultan of Nejed, still less how he could
+venture to ask Zehowah in marriage, having no gifts to offer and not
+being himself a prince. Before he had become a man it would have been
+easy for him to find treasures in the earth such as men had never seen,
+for, like all the genii, he had been acquainted with the most deeply
+hidden mines and with all places where men had hidden wealth in old
+times. But this knowledge does not belong to the intelligence becoming
+mortals, but rather to the faculty of seeing through solid substance
+which is exercised by the spirits of the air, and in his present state
+it was taken from him, together with all possibility of communicating
+with his former companions. He had nothing but his mare and his sword
+and the garments he wore, and though the mare was indeed a gift for a
+king he did not know whether he was meant to offer it to any one, seeing
+that it had been given him by an angel.
+
+Nevertheless he did not lose heart, for the celestial messenger had told
+him that by the will of Allah he should marry Zehowah, and Allah was
+certainly able to give him a king's daughter in marriage without the aid
+of gifts, of gold, of musk, of 'Ood, of aloes or of pearls.
+
+He rose, therefore, when he had eaten enough and had rested himself and
+his mare, and after thanking the people of the village for their
+entertainment he rode on his way. He passed through a hill country,
+sometimes fertile and sometimes stony and deserted, but he found water
+by the way and such food as he needed; and accomplished the remainder of
+the journey without hindrance.
+
+On the morning of the second day he came to a halting-place from which
+he could see the city of Riad, and he was astonished at the size and
+magnificence of the Sultan's palace, which was visible above the walls
+of the fortification. Yet he was aware that he had seen all this before
+as in a dream not altogether forgotten when a man wakes at dawn after a
+long and restless night.
+
+He gazed awhile, after he had made his ablutions, and then calling to
+his mare to come to him, he mounted and rode through the southern gate
+into the heart of the city.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+When Khaled reached the palace he dismounted from his mare, and leading
+her by the bridle entered the gateway. Here he met many persons, guards,
+and slaves both black and white, and porters bearing provisions, and a
+few women, all hurrying hither and thither; and many noticed him, but a
+few gazed curiously into his face, and two or three grooms followed him
+a little way, pointing out to each other the beauties of his mare.
+
+'Truly,' they said, 'if we did not know the mares of the stud better
+than the faces of our mothers, we should swear by Allah that this beast
+had been stolen from the Sultan's stables by a thief in the night, for
+she is of the best blood in Nejed.'
+
+These being curious they saluted Khaled and asked him whence he came and
+whither he was going, seeing that it is not courteous to ask a stranger
+any other questions.
+
+'I come from the Red Desert,' Khaled answered, 'and I am going into the
+palace as you see.'
+
+The grooms saw that there was a rebuke in the last part of his answer
+and hung back and presently went their way.
+
+'Are such mares bred in the Red Desert?' they exclaimed. 'The stranger
+is doubtless the sheikh of some powerful tribe. But if this be true,
+where are the men that came with him? And why is he dressed like a man
+of the city?'
+
+So they hastened out of the gateway to find the Bedouins who, they
+supposed, must have accompanied Khaled on his journey.
+
+But Khaled went forward and came to a great court in which were stone
+seats by the walls. Here a number of people were waiting. So he sat down
+upon one of the seats and his mare laid her nose upon his shoulder as
+though inquiring what he would do.
+
+'Allah knows,' Khaled said, as though answering her. So he waited
+patiently.
+
+At last a man came out into the courtyard who was richly dressed, and
+whom all the people saluted as he passed. But he came straight towards
+Khaled, who rose from his seat.
+
+'Whence come you, my friend?' he inquired after they had exchanged the
+salutation.
+
+'From the Red Desert, and I desire permission to speak with the Sultan
+when it shall please his majesty to see me.'
+
+'And what do you desire of his majesty? I ask that I may inform him
+beforehand. So you will have a better reception.'
+
+'Tell the Sultan,' said Khaled, 'that a man is here who has neither
+father nor mother nor any possessions beyond a swift mare, a keen sword
+and a strong hand, but who is come nevertheless to ask in marriage
+Zehowah, the Sultan's daughter.'
+
+The minister smiled and gazed at Khaled in silence for a moment, but
+when he had looked keenly at his face, he became grave.
+
+'It may be,' he thought, 'that this is some great prince who comes thus
+simply as in a disguise, and it were best not to anger him.'
+
+'I will deliver your message,' he answered aloud, 'though it is a
+strange one. It is customary for those who come to ask for a maiden in
+marriage to bring gifts--and to receive others in return,' he added.
+
+'I neither bring gifts nor ask any,' said Khaled. 'Allah is great and
+will provide me with what I need.'
+
+'I fear that he will not provide you with the Sultan's daughter for a
+wife,' said the minister as he went away, but Khaled did not hear the
+words, though he would have cared little if he had.
+
+Now it chanced that Zehowah was sitting in a balcony surrounded with
+lattice, over the courtyard, on that morning and she had seen Khaled
+enter, leading his mare by the bridle. But though she watched the
+stranger and his beast idly for some time she thought as little of the
+one as of the other, for her heart was not turned to love, and she knew
+nothing of horses. But her women thought differently and spoke loudly,
+praising the beauty of both.
+
+'There is indeed a warrior able to fight in the front of our armies,'
+they said. 'Truly such a man must have been Khaled ibn Walad, the Sword
+of the Lord, in the days of the Prophet--upon whom peace.'
+
+By and by there was a cry that the Sultan was coming into the room, and
+the women rose and retired. The Sultan sat down upon the carpet by his
+daughter, in the balcony.
+
+'Do you see that stranger, holding a beautiful mare by the bridle?' he
+asked.
+
+'Yes, I see him,' answered Zehowah indifferently.
+
+'He is come to ask you in marriage.'
+
+'Another!' she exclaimed with a careless laugh. 'If it is the will of
+Allah I will marry him. If not, he will go away like the rest.'
+
+'This man is not like the rest, my daughter. He is either a madman or
+some powerful prince in disguise.'
+
+'Or both, perhaps,' laughed Zehowah. She laughed often, for although she
+was not inclined to love, she was of a gentle and merry temper.
+
+'His message was a strange one,' said the Sultan. 'He says that he
+neither brings gifts nor asks them, that he has neither father nor
+mother, nor any possessions excepting a swift mare, a keen sword and a
+strong hand.'
+
+'I see the mare, the sword and the hand,' answered Zehowah. 'But the
+hand is like any other hand--how can I tell whether it be strong? The
+sword is in its sheath, and I cannot see its edge, and though the mare
+is pretty enough, I have seen many of your own I liked as well. The
+elephants of the Indian prince were more amusing, and the prince himself
+was more beautiful than this stranger with his black beard and his
+solemn face.'
+
+'That is true,' said the Sultan with a sigh.
+
+'Do you wish me to marry this man?' Zehowah asked.
+
+'My daughter, I wish you to choose of your own free will. Nevertheless I
+trust that you will choose before long, that I may see my child's
+children before I die.'
+
+For the Sultan was old and white-bearded, and was already somewhat bowed
+with advancing years and with burden of many cares and the fatigues of
+many wars. Yet his eye was bright and his heart fearless still, though
+his judgment was often weak and vacillating.
+
+'Do you wish me to marry this man?' Zehowah asked again. 'He will be a
+strange husband, for he is a strange suitor, coming without gifts and
+having neither father nor mother. But I will do as you command. If you
+leave it to me I shall never marry.'
+
+'I did not say that I desired you to take this one especially,'
+protested the Sultan, 'though for the matter of gifts I care little,
+since heaven has sent me wealth in abundance. But my remaining years are
+few, and the years of life are like stones slipping from a mountain
+which move slowly at first, and then faster until they outrun the
+lightning and leap into the dark valley below. And what is required of a
+husband is that he be a true believer, young and whole in every part,
+and of a charitable disposition.'
+
+'Truly,' laughed Zehowah, 'if he have no possessions, charity will avail
+him little, since he has nothing to give.'
+
+'There is other charity besides the giving of alms, my daughter, since
+it is charity even to think charitably of others, as you know. But I
+have not said that you should marry this man, for you are free. And
+indeed I have not yet talked with him. But I have sent for him and you
+shall hear him speak. See--they are just now conducting him to the hall
+of audiences. But indeed I think he is no husband for you, after all.'
+
+The Sultan rose and went to receive Khaled, and Zehowah went to the
+secret window above her father's raised seat in the hall.
+
+Khaled made the customary salutation with the greatest respect, and the
+Sultan made him sit down at his right hand as though he had been a
+prince, and asked him whence he had come. Then a refreshment was
+brought, and Khaled ate and drank a little, after which the Sultan
+inquired his business.
+
+'I come,' said Khaled boldly, 'to ask your daughter Zehowah in marriage.
+I bring no gifts, for I have none to offer, nor have I any inheritance.
+My mare is my fortune, my sword is my argument and my wit is in my arm.'
+
+'You are a strange suitor,' said the Sultan; but he kept a pleasant
+countenance, since Khaled was his guest. 'You are no doubt the sheikh of
+a tribe of the Red Desert, though I was not aware that any tribes dwelt
+there.'
+
+'So far as being the sheikh of my tribe,' said Khaled with a smile,
+'your majesty may call me so, for my tribe consists of myself alone,
+seeing that I have neither father nor mother nor any relations.'
+
+'Truly, I have never talked with such a suitor before,' answered the
+Sultan. 'At least I presume that you are a son of some prince, and that
+you have chosen to disguise yourself as a rich traveller and to hide
+your history under an allegory.'
+
+The Sultan would certainly not have allowed himself to overstep the
+bounds of courtesy so far, but for his astonishment at Khaled's daring
+manner. He was too keen, however, not to see that this man was
+something above the ordinary and that, whatever else he might be, he was
+not a common impostor. Such a fellow would have found means to rob a
+caravan of valuable goods, to offer as gifts, would have brought himself
+a train of camels and slaves and would have given himself out as a
+prince of some distant country from which it would not be possible to
+obtain information.
+
+'Istaghfir Allah! I am no prince,' Khaled answered. 'I ask for the hand
+of your daughter. The will of Allah will be accomplished.'
+
+He knew that Zehowah was watching and listening behind the lattice in
+her place of concealment, for the memory of such things had not been
+taken from him when he had lost the supernatural vision of the genii and
+had become an ordinary man. He was determined therefore to be truthful
+and to say nothing which he might afterwards be called upon to explain.
+For he never doubted but that Zehowah would be his wife, since the angel
+had told him that it should be so.
+
+'And what if I refuse even to consider your proposal?' inquired the
+Sultan, to see what he would say.
+
+'If it is the will of Allah that I marry your daughter, your refusal
+would be useless, but if it is not his will, your refusal would be
+altogether unnecessary.'
+
+The Sultan was much struck by this argument which showed a ready wit in
+the stranger and which he could only have opposed by asserting that his
+own will was superior to that of heaven itself.
+
+'But,' said he, defending himself, 'any of the previous suitors might
+have said the same.'
+
+'Undoubtedly,' replied Khaled, unabashed. 'But they did not say it. Your
+majesty will certainly now consider the matter.'
+
+'In the meanwhile,' the Sultan answered, very graciously, 'you are my
+guest, and you have come in time to take part in the third day of the
+feast, to which you are welcome in the name of Allah, the merciful.'
+
+Thereupon the Sultan rose and Khaled was conducted to the apartments set
+apart for the guests. But the Sultan returned to the harem in a very
+thoughtful mood, and before long he found Zehowah who had returned to
+her seat in the balcony.
+
+'This is a very strange suitor,' he said, shaking his head and looking
+into his daughter's face.
+
+'He is at least bold and outspoken,' she answered. 'He makes no secret
+of his poverty nor of his wishes. Whatever he be, he is in earnest and
+speaks truth. I would like well to know the only secret which he wishes
+to keep--who he really is.'
+
+'It may be,' said the Sultan thoughtfully, 'that if I threaten to cut
+off his head he will tell us. But on the other hand, he is a guest.'
+
+'He is not of those who are easily terrified, I think. Tell me, my
+father, do you wish me to marry him?'
+
+'How could you marry a man who has no family and no inheritance? Would
+such a marriage befit the daughter of kings?'
+
+'Why not?' asked Zehowah with much calmness.
+
+The Sultan stared at her in astonishment.
+
+'Has this stranger enchanted your imagination?' he inquired by way of
+answer.
+
+'No,' replied Zehowah scornfully. 'I have seen the noblest, the most
+beautiful and the richest of the earth, ready to take me to wife, and I
+have not loved. Shall I love an outcast?'
+
+'Then how can you ask my wishes?'
+
+'Because there are good reasons why I should marry this man.'
+
+'Good reasons? In the name of Allah let me hear them, if there are any.'
+
+'You are old, my father,' said Zehowah, 'and it has not pleased heaven
+to send you a son, nor to leave you any living relation to sit upon the
+throne when your years are accomplished. You must needs think of your
+successor.'
+
+'The better reason for choosing some powerful prince, whose territory
+shall increase the kingdom he inherits from me, and whose alliance shall
+strengthen the empire I leave behind me.'
+
+'Istaghfir Allah! The worse reason. For such a prince would be attached
+to his own country, and would take me thither with him and would neglect
+the kingdom of Nejed, regarding it as a land of strangers whom he may
+oppress with taxes to increase his own splendour. And this is not
+unreasonable, since no king can wisely govern two kingdoms separated
+from each other by more than three days' journey. No man can have other
+than the one of two reasons for asking me in marriage. Either he has
+heard of me and desires to possess me, or he wishes to increase his
+dominions by the inheritance which will be mine.'
+
+'Doubtless, this is the truth,' said the Sultan. 'But so much the more
+does this stranger in all probability covet my kingdom, since he has
+nothing of his own.'
+
+'This is what I mean. For, having no other possessions to distract his
+attention, he will remain always here, and will govern your kingdom for
+its own advantage in order that it may profit himself.'
+
+'This is a subtle argument, my daughter, and one requiring
+consideration.'
+
+'The more so because the man seems otherwise well fitted to be my
+husband, since he is a true believer, and young, and fearless and
+outspoken.'
+
+'But if this is all,' objected the Sultan, 'there are in Nejed several
+young men, sons of my chief courtiers, who possess the same
+qualifications. Choose one of them.'
+
+'On the contrary, to choose one of them would arouse the jealousy of all
+the rest, with their families and slaves and freedmen, whereby the
+kingdom would easily be exposed to civil war. But if I take a stranger
+it is more probable that all will be for him, since you are beloved, and
+there is no reason why one party should oppose him and another support
+him, since none of them know anything of him.'
+
+'But he will not be beloved by the people unless he is liberal, and he
+has nothing wherewith to be generous.'
+
+'And where are the treasures of Riad?' laughed Zehowah. 'Is it not easy
+for you to go secretly to his chamber and to give him as much gold as he
+needs?'
+
+'That is also true. I see that you have set your heart upon him.'
+
+'Not my heart, my father, but my head. For I have infinitely more head
+than heart, and I see that the welfare of the kingdom will be better
+secured with such a ruler, than it would have been under a foreign
+prince whose right hand would be perpetually thrust out to take in Nejed
+that which his left hand would throw to courtiers in his own country. Do
+I speak wisdom or folly?'
+
+'It is neither all folly nor all wisdom.'
+
+'I have seen this man, I have heard him speak,' said Zehowah. 'He is as
+well as another since I must marry sooner or later. Moreover I have
+another argument.'
+
+'What is that?'
+
+'Either he is a man strong enough to rule me, or he is not,' Zehowah
+answered with a laugh. 'If he can govern me, he can govern the kingdom
+of Nejed. But if not I will govern it for him, and rule him also.'
+
+The Sultan looked up to heaven and slightly raised his hands from his
+knees.
+
+'Allah is merciful and forgiving!' he exclaimed. 'Is this the spirit
+befitting a wife?'
+
+'Is it charity to cause happiness?'
+
+'Undoubtedly it is charity.'
+
+'And which is greater, the happiness of many or the happiness of one?'
+
+'The happiness of many is greater,' answered the Sultan. 'What then?' he
+asked after a time, seeing that she said nothing more.
+
+'I have spoken,' she replied. 'It is best that I should marry him.'
+
+Then there was silence for a long time, during which the Sultan sat
+quite motionless in his place, watching his daughter, while she looked
+idly through the lattice at the people who came and went in the court
+below. She seemed to feel no emotion.
+
+The Sultan did not know how to oppose Zehowah's will any more than he
+could answer her arguments, although his worldly wisdom was altogether
+at variance with her decision. For she was the beloved child of his old
+age and he could refuse her nothing. Moreover, in what she had said,
+there was much which recommended itself to his judgment, though by no
+means enough to persuade him. At last he rose from the carpet and
+embraced her.
+
+'If it is your will, let it be so,' he said.
+
+'It is the will of Allah,' answered Zehowah. 'Let it be accomplished
+immediately.'
+
+With a sigh the Sultan withdrew and sent a messenger to Khaled
+requesting him to come to another and more secluded chamber, where they
+could be alone and talk freely.
+
+Khaled showed no surprise on hearing that his suit was accepted, but he
+thought it fitting to express much gratitude for the favourable
+decision. Then the Sultan, who did not wish to seem too readily
+yielding, began to explain to Khaled Zehowah's reasons for accepting a
+poor stranger, presenting them as though they were his own.
+
+'For,' he said, 'whatever you may in reality be, you have chosen to
+present yourself to us in such a manner as would not have failed to
+bring about a refusal under any other circumstances. But I have
+considered that as it will be your destiny, if heaven grants you life,
+to rule my kingdom after me, you will in all likelihood rule it more
+wisely and carefully, for having no other cares in a distant country to
+distract your attention; and because you have no relations you are the
+less liable to the attacks of open or secret jealousy.'
+
+The Sultan then gave him a large sum of money in gold pieces, which
+Khaled gladly accepted, since he had not even wherewithal to buy himself
+a garment for the wedding feast, still less to distribute gifts to the
+courtiers and to the multitude. The Sultan also presented him with a
+black slave to attend to his personal wants.
+
+Khaled then sent for merchants from the bazar, and they brought him all
+manner of rich stuffs, such as he needed. There came also two tailors,
+who sat down upon a matting in his apartment and immediately began to
+make him clothes, while the black slave sat beside them and watched
+them, lest they should steal any of the gold of the embroideries.
+
+When it was known in the palace that the Sultan's only daughter was to
+be married at once, there were great rejoicings, and many camels were
+slaughtered and a great number of sheep, to supply food for so great a
+feast. A number of cooks were hired also to help those who belonged to
+the palace, for although the Sultan fed daily more than three hundred
+persons, guests, travellers, and poor, besides all the members of the
+household, yet this was as nothing compared with the multitude to be
+provided for on the present occasion.
+
+Then it was that Hadji Mohammed, the chief of the cooks, sat down upon
+the floor in the midst of the main kitchen and beat his breast and wept.
+For the confusion was great so that the voice of one man could not be
+heard for the diabolical screaming of the many, and the cooks smote the
+young lads who helped them, and these, running to escape from the blows,
+fell against the porters who came in from outside bearing sacks of
+sugar, and great baskets of fruit and quarters of meat and skins of
+water, and bushels of meal and a hundred other things equally necessary
+to the cooking; and the porters, staggering under their burdens, fell
+between the legs of the mules loaded with firewood, that had been
+brought to the gate, and the dumb beasts kicked violently in all
+directions, while the slaves who drove them struck them with their
+staves, and the mules began to run among the camels, and the camels,
+being terrified, rose from the ground and began to plunge and skip like
+young foals, while more porters and more mules and more slaves came on
+in multitudes to the door of the kitchen. And it was very hot, for it
+was noontide, and in summer, and there were flies without number, and
+the dogs that had been sleeping in the shade sprang up and barked loudly
+and bit whomsoever they could reach, and all the men bellowed together,
+so that the confusion was extreme.
+
+'Verily,' cried Hadji Mohammed, 'this is not a kitchen but Yemamah, and
+I am not the chief of the cooks, but the chief of sinners and fuel for
+hell.' So he wept bitterly and beat his breast.
+
+But at last matters mended, for there were many who were willing to do
+well, so that when the time came Hadji Mohammed was able to serve an
+honourable feast to all, though the number of the guests was not less
+than two thousand.
+
+But Khaled, having visited the bath, arrayed himself magnificently and
+rode upon his bay mare to the mosque, surrounded by the courtiers and
+the chief officers of the state, and by a great throng of slaves from
+the palace. As he rode, he scattered gold pieces among the people from
+the bags which he carried, and all praised his liberality and swore by
+Allah that Zehowah was taking a very goodly husband. And as none knew
+whence he came, all were equally pleased, but most of all the Bedouins
+from the desert, of whom there were many at that time in Riad, who had
+come to keep the feast Bairam, for Khaled's own words had been repeated,
+and they had heard that he came from the desert like themselves. And
+when he had finished his prayers, he rode back to the palace.
+
+When the time for the feast came the Sultan led Khaled into the great
+hall and made him sit at his right hand. The Sultan himself was
+magnificently dressed and covered with priceless jewels, so that he
+shone like the sun among all the rest. Then he presented Khaled to the
+assembly.
+
+'This,' said he, 'is Khaled, my beloved son-in-law, the husband of my
+only daughter, whom it has pleased Allah to send me, as the stay of my
+old age and as the successor to my kingdom. He will be terrible in war
+as Khaled ibn Walid, his namesake, the Sword of the Lord, and gentle and
+just in peace as Abu Bakr of blessed memory. He is as brave as the lion,
+as strong as the camel, as swift as the ostrich, as sagacious as the fox
+and as generous as the pelican, who feeds her young with the blood of
+her own breast. Love him therefore, as you have loved me, for he is
+extremely worthy of affection, and hate his enemies and be faithful to
+him in the time of danger. By the blessing of Allah he shall rear up
+children to me in my old age, to be with you when he is gone.'
+
+Thereupon Khaled turned and answered, speaking modestly but with much
+dignity in his manner.
+
+'Ye men of Nejed, this is my marriage feast and I invite you all to be
+merry with me. Whether it shall please Allah to give me a long life, or
+whether it shall please him to take me this night I know not. We are in
+the hand of Allah. But this I do know. I will love you as my own people,
+seeing that I have no people of my own. I will fight for you as a man
+fights for his own soul, for his wife and for his children, and I will
+divide justly the spoils in war, and give in peace whatsoever I am able,
+to all those who are in need. I swear by Allah! You are all witnesses.'
+
+The courtiers and all the guests were much pleased with this short
+speech, for they saw that Khaled was a man of few words and not proud or
+overbearing, and none could look into his face and doubt his promise.
+For the present moment at least Zehowah's prediction had been verified,
+for no one was jealous of him, and there was but one party among them
+all and that was for him. So they all feasted together in harmony until
+the sun was low.
+
+In the meantime Zehowah remained in the harem, surrounded by her women,
+and a separate meal was brought to them. They all sat upon the rich
+carpets leaning on cushions set against the walls, and small low tables
+were brought in, covered with dishes and bowls containing delicately
+prepared rice and mutton in great abundance and fresh blanket bread, hot
+from the stones, and olives brought from Syria. Afterwards came
+sweetmeats without number, such as Hadji Mohammed knew how to prepare,
+and gold and silver goblets filled with a drink made from large sweet
+lemons and water, which is called 'treng.' Zehowah indeed ate sparingly,
+for she was accustomed to such dainties every day, but her women were
+delighted with the abundance and left nothing to be taken away.
+
+While they were eating six of the women played upon musical instruments
+by turns, while others danced slow and graceful measures, singing as
+they moved, and describing the unspeakable happiness which awaited their
+princess in marriage. Afterwards when the tables had been taken away and
+they had washed their hands with rose water from Ajjem, Zehowah
+commanded the singing and the dancing to cease, and the women brought
+her one by one the dresses which she was to wear before Khaled. They
+were very magnificent, for it had needed many years to prepare them, and
+a great weight of gold and silver threads had been weighed out to the
+tailors and embroiderers who had worked in the preparation of them ever
+since Zehowah had been two years old. For the piece of material is
+weighed first, and then the gold, and afterwards, when the work is
+finished, the whole is weighed together, lest the tailors should steal
+anything.
+
+But Zehowah looked coldly at the garments, one after the other, as they
+were brought and taken away, and the women fancied that she was to be
+married to the stranger against her will, and that she remembered the
+Indian prince.
+
+'It is a pity,' one of them ventured to say, 'that the bridegroom has
+not brought any elephants with him, for we would have watched them from
+the balconies, since they are diverting beasts.'
+
+'And it is a pity,' said Zehowah scornfully, 'that my husband has not a
+round, soft face, like the moon in May, and the eyes of a gazelle and
+the heart of a hare. Truly, such a one would have made you a good king,
+seeing that he was also an unbeliever!'
+
+'Nay,' said the woman humbly, 'Allah forbid that I should make a
+comparison, or bring an ill omen on the day by speaking of that which
+chanced a year ago. Truly, I only spoke of elephants, and not of men.
+For, surely, we all said when we saw him in the court that he looked a
+brave warrior and a goodly man.'
+
+Then a messenger came from the Sultan saying that it was time to make
+ready. So they went to another apartment, where the nuptial chamber had
+been prepared. The Sultan came, then, leading Khaled, and followed by
+the Kadi, and all the women veiled themselves while the latter read the
+declaration of marriage. After that they all withdrew and Khaled took
+his seat upon the high couch in the middle of the room. Presently all
+the women returned, unveiled, with loud singing and playing of
+instruments, leading Zehowah dressed in the first of the dresses which
+she was to put on, and which, though it was very splendid, was of course
+the least magnificent of all those which had been prepared. But Khaled
+sat in his place looking on quietly, for he was acquainted with the
+custom, and he cared little for the rich garments, but looked always
+into Zehowah's face.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+Khaled sat with his sword upon his feet, and when Zehowah was not in the
+room he played with the hilt and thought of all that was happening.
+
+'Truly,' he said to himself, 'Allah is great. Was I not, but a few days
+since, one of the genii condemned to perish at the day of the
+resurrection? And am I not now a man, married to the most beautiful
+woman in the whole world, and the wisest and the best, needing only to
+be loved by her in order to obtain an undying soul? And why should this
+woman not love me? Truly, we shall see before long, when this mummery is
+finished.'
+
+So he sat on the couch while Zehowah was led before him again and again
+each time in clothing more splendid than before, and each time with new
+songs and new music. But at the last time the attendants left her
+standing before him and went away, and only a very old woman remained at
+the door, screaming out in a cracked voice the customary exhortations.
+Then she, too, went away and the door was shut and Khaled and Zehowah
+were alone.
+
+It was now near the middle of the night. The chamber was large and high,
+lighted by a number of hanging lamps such as are made in Bagdad, of
+brass perforated with beautiful designs and filled with coloured
+glasses, in each of which a little wick floats upon oil. Upon the walls
+rich carpets were hung, both Arabian and Persian, some taken in war as
+booty, and some brought by merchants in time of peace. A brass chafing
+dish stood at some distance from the couch, and upon the coals the women
+had thrown powdered myrrh and benzoin before they went away. But Khaled
+cared little for these things, since he had seen all the treasures of
+the earth in their most secret depositories.
+
+Zehowah had watched him narrowly during the ceremony of the dresses and
+had seen that he felt no surprise at anything which was brought before
+him.
+
+'His own country must be full of great wealth and magnificence,' she
+thought, 'since so much treasure does not astonish him.' And she was
+disappointed.
+
+Now that they were alone, he still sat in silence, gazing at her as she
+stood beside him, and not even thinking of any speech, for he was
+overcome and struck dumb by her eyes.
+
+'You are not pleased with what I have shown you,' Zehowah said at last
+in a tone of displeasure and disappointment. 'And yet you have seen the
+wealth of my father's palace.'
+
+'I have seen neither wealth nor treasure, neither rich garments, nor
+precious stones nor chains of gold nor embroideries of pearls,' Khaled
+answered slowly.
+
+But Zehowah frowned and tapped the carpet impatiently with her foot
+where she stood, for she was annoyed, having expected him to praise the
+beauty of her many dresses.
+
+'They who have eyes can see,' she said. 'But if you are not pleased, my
+father will give me a hundred dresses more beautiful than these, and
+pearls and jewels without end.'
+
+'I should not see them,' Khaled replied. 'I have seen two jewels which
+have dazzled me so that I can see nothing else.'
+
+Zehowah gazed at him with a look of inquiry.
+
+'I have seen the eyes of Zehowah,' he continued, 'which are as the stars
+Sirius and Aldebaran, when they are over the desert in the nights of
+winter. What jewels can you show me like these?'
+
+Then Zehowah laughed softly and sat down beside her husband on the edge
+of the couch.
+
+'Nevertheless,' she said, 'the dresses are very rich. You might admire
+them also.'
+
+'I will look at them when you are not near me, for then my sight will be
+restored for other things.'
+
+Khaled took her hand in his and held it.
+
+'Tell me, Zehowah, will you love me?' he asked in a soft voice.
+
+'You are my lord and my master,' she answered, looking modestly
+downward, and her hand lay quite still.
+
+She was so very beautiful that as Khaled sat beside her and looked at
+her downcast face, and knew that she was his, he could not easily
+believe that she was cold and indifferent to him.
+
+'By Allah!' he thought, 'can it be so hard to get a woman's love? Truly,
+I think she begins to love me already.'
+
+Zehowah looked up and smiled carelessly as though answering his
+question, but Khaled was obliged to admit in his heart that the answer
+lacked clearness, for he found it no easier to interpret a woman's smile
+than men had found it before him, and have found it since, even to this
+day.
+
+'You have had many suitors,' he said at last, 'and it is said that your
+father has given you your own free choice, allowing you to see them and
+hear them speak while he was receiving them. Tell me why you have chosen
+me rather than the rest, unless it is because you love me? For I came
+with empty hands, and without servants or slaves, or retinue of any
+kind, riding alone out of the Red Desert. It was therefore for myself
+that you took me.'
+
+'You are right. It was for yourself that I took you.'
+
+'Then it was for love of me, was it not?'
+
+'There were and still are many and good reasons,' answered Zehowah
+calmly, and at the same time withdrawing her hand from his and smoothing
+back the black hair from her forehead. 'I told them all to my father,
+and he was convinced.'
+
+'Tell them to me also,' said Khaled.
+
+So she explained all to him in detail, making him see everything as she
+saw it herself. And the explanation was so very clear, that Khaled felt
+a cold chill in his heart as he understood that she had chosen him
+rather for politic reasons, than because she wished him for her husband.
+
+'And yet,' she added at the end, 'it was the will of Allah, for
+otherwise I would not have chosen you.'
+
+'But surely,' he said, somewhat encouraged by these last words, 'there
+was some love in the choice, too.'
+
+'How can I tell!' she exclaimed, with a little laugh. 'What is love?'
+
+Finding himself confronted by such an amazing question, Khaled was
+silent, and took her hand again. For though many have asked what love
+is, no one has ever been able to find an answer in words to satisfy the
+questioner, seeing that the answer can have no more to do with words
+than love itself, a matter sufficiently explained by a certain wise man,
+who understood the heart of man. If, said he, a man who loves a woman,
+or a woman who loves a man could give in words the precise reason why
+he or she loves, then love itself could be defined in language; but as
+no man or woman has ever succeeded in doing this, I infer that they who
+love best do not themselves know in what love consists--still less
+therefore can any one else know, wherefore the definition is impossible,
+and no one need waste time in trying to find it.
+
+A certain wit has also said that although it be impossible for any man
+to explain the nature of love to many persons at the same time, he
+generally finds it easy to make his explanations to one person only. But
+this is a mere quibbling jest and not deserving of any attention.
+
+Zehowah expected an answer to her question, and Khaled was silent, not
+because he was as yet too little acquainted with the feelings of a man
+to give them expression, but because he already felt so much that it was
+hard for him to speak at all.
+
+Zehowah laughed and shook her head, for she was not of a timid temper.
+
+'How can you expect me to say that I love you, when you yourself are
+unable to answer such a simple question?' she asked. 'And besides, are
+you not my lord and my master? What is it then to you, whether I love
+you or not?'
+
+But again Khaled was silent, debating whether he should tell her the
+truth, how the angel had promised in Allah's name that if she loved him
+he should obtain an undying soul, and how the task of obtaining her love
+had been laid upon him as a sort of atonement for having slain the
+Indian prince. But as he reflected he understood that this would
+probably estrange her all the more from him.
+
+'Yet I can answer your question,' he said at last. 'What is love? It is
+that which is in me for you only.'
+
+'But how am I to know what that is?' asked Zehowah, drawing up the
+smooth gold bracelets upon her arm and letting them fall down to her
+wrist, so that they jangled like a camel's bell.
+
+'If you love me you will know,' Khaled answered, 'for then, perhaps, you
+will feel a tenth part of what I feel.'
+
+'And why not all that you feel?' she asked, looking at him, but still
+playing with the bracelets.
+
+'Because it is impossible for any woman to love as much as I love you,
+Zehowah.'
+
+'You mean, perhaps, that a woman is too weak to love so well,' she
+suggested. 'And you think, perhaps, that we are weak because we sit all
+our lives upon the carpets in the harem eating sweetmeats, and listening
+to singing girls and to old women who tell us tales of long ago. Yet
+there have been strong women too--as strong as men. Kenda, who tore out
+the heart of Kamsa--was she weak?'
+
+'Women are stronger to hate than to love,' said Khaled.
+
+'But a man can forget his hatred in the love of a woman, and his
+strength also,' laughed Zehowah. 'I would rather that you should not
+love me at all, than that you should forget to be strong in the day of
+battle. For I have married you that you may lead my people to war and
+bring home the spoil.'
+
+'And if I destroy all your enemies and the enemies of your people, will
+you love me then, Zehowah?'
+
+'Why should I love you then, more than now? What has war to do with
+love? Again, I ask, what is it to you whether I love you or not? Am I
+not your wife, and are you not my master? What is this love of which you
+talk? Is it a rich garment that you can wear? A precious stone that you
+can fasten in your turban? A rich carpet to spread in your house? A
+treasure of gold, a mountain of ambergris, a bushel of pearls from Oman?
+Why do you covet it? Am I not beautiful enough? Then is love henna to
+make my hair bright, or kohl to darken my eyes, or a boiled egg with
+almonds to smooth my face? I have all these things, and ointments from
+Egypt, and perfumes from Syria, and if I am not beautiful enough to
+please you, it is the will of Allah, and love will not make me fairer.'
+
+'Yet love is beauty,' Khaled answered. 'For Kadijah was lovely in the
+eyes of the Prophet, upon whom be peace, because she loved him, though
+she was a widow and old.'
+
+'Am I a widow? Am I old?' asked Zehowah with some indignation. 'Do I
+need the imaginary cosmetic you call love to smooth my wrinkles, to
+lighten my eyes, or to make my teeth white?'
+
+'No. You need nothing to make you beautiful.'
+
+'And for the matter of that, I can say it of you. You tell me that you
+love me. Is it love that makes your body tall and straight, your beard
+black, your forehead smooth, your hand strong? Would not any woman see
+what I see, whether you loved her or not? See! Is your hand whiter than
+mine because you love and I do not?'
+
+She laughed again as she held her hand beside his.
+
+'Truly,' thought Khaled, 'it is less easy than I supposed. For the heart
+of a woman who does not love is like the desert, when the wind blows
+over it, and there are neither tracks nor landmarks. And I am wandering
+in this desert like a man seeking lost camels.'
+
+But he said nothing, for he was not yet skilled in the arguments of
+love. Thereupon Zehowah smiled, and resting her cheek upon her hand,
+looked into his face, as though saying scornfully, 'Is it not all vanity
+and folly?'
+
+Khaled sighed, for he was disappointed, as a thirsty man who, coming to
+drink of a clear spring, finds the water bitter, while his thirst
+increases and grows unbearable.
+
+'Why do you sigh?' Zehowah asked, after a little silence. 'Are you
+weary? Are you tired with the feasting? Are you full of bitterness,
+because I do not love you? Command me and I will obey. Are you not my
+lord to whom I am subject?'
+
+He did not speak, but she drew him to her, so that his head rested upon
+her bosom, and she began to sing to him in a low voice.
+
+For a long time Khaled kept his eyes shut, listening to her voice. Then,
+on a sudden, he looked up, and without speaking so much as a word, he
+clasped her in his arms and kissed her.
+
+Before it was day there was a great tumult in the streets of Riad, of
+which the noise came up even to the chamber where Khaled and Zehowah
+were sleeping. Zehowah awoke and listened, wondering what had happened
+and trying to understand the cries of the distant multitude. Then she
+laid her hand upon Khaled's forehead and waked him.
+
+'What is it?' he asked.
+
+'It is war,' she answered. 'The enemy have surprised the city in the
+night of the feast. Arise and take arms and go out to the people.'
+
+Khaled sprang up and in a moment he was clothed and had girt on his
+sword. Then he took Zehowah in his arms.
+
+'While I live, you are safe,' he said.
+
+'Am I afraid? Go quickly,' she answered.
+
+At that time the Sultan of Nejed was at war with the northern tribes of
+Shammar, and the enemy had taken advantage of the month of Ramadhan, in
+which few persons travel, to advance in great numbers to Riad. During
+the three days' feast of Bairam they had moved on every night, slaying
+the inhabitants of the villages so that not one had escaped to bring the
+news, and in the daytime they had hidden themselves wherever they could
+find shelter. But in the night in which Khaled and Zehowah were married
+they reached the very walls of the city, and waiting until all the
+people were asleep, a party of them had climbed up upon the ramparts and
+had opened one of the gates to their companions after killing the
+guards.
+
+Khaled found his mare and mounted her without saddle or bridle in his
+haste, then drawing his sabre he rode swiftly out of the palace into the
+confusion. The enemy with their long spears were driving the
+panicstricken guards and the shrieking people before them towards the
+palace, slaughtering all whom they overtook, so that the gutters of the
+streets were already flowing with blood, and the horses of the enemy
+stumbled over the bodies of the defenders. The whole multitude of the
+pursued and the pursuers were just breaking out of the principal street
+into the open space before the palace when Khaled met them, a single man
+facing ten thousand.
+
+'I shall certainly perish in this fight,' he said to himself, 'and yet I
+shall not receive the reward of the faithful, since Allah has not given
+me a soul. Nevertheless certain of these dogs shall eat dirt before the
+rest get into the palace.'
+
+So he pressed his legs to the bare sides of his mare and lifted up his
+sword and rode at the foe, having neither buckler, nor helmet, nor shirt
+of mail to protect him, but only his clothes and his turban. But his arm
+was strong, and it has been said by the wise that it is better to fall
+upon an old lion with a reed than to stand armed in the way of a man who
+seeks death.
+
+'Yallah! The Sword of the Lord!' shouted Khaled, in such a terrible
+voice that the assailants ceased to kill for a moment, and the terrified
+guards turned to see whence so great a voice could proceed; and some who
+had seen Khaled recognised him and ran to meet him, and the others
+followed.
+
+When the enemy saw a single man riding towards them across the great
+square before the palace, they sent up a shout of derision, and turned
+again to the slaughter of such of the inhabitants as could not extricate
+themselves.
+
+'Shall one man stop an army?' they said. 'Shall a fox turn back a herd
+of hyaenas?'
+
+But when Khaled was among them they found less matter for laughter. For
+the sword was keen, the mare was swift to double and turn, and Khaled's
+hand was strong. In the twinkling of an eye two of the enemy lay dead,
+the one cloven to the chin, the other headless.
+
+Then a strange fever seized Khaled, such as he had not heard of, and all
+things turned to scarlet before his eyes, both the walls of the houses,
+and the faces and the garments of his foes. Men who saw him say that his
+face was white and shining in the dawn, and that the flashing of the
+sword was like a storm of lightning about his head, and after each flash
+there was a great rain of blood, and a crashing like thunder as the
+horses and men of the enemy fell to the earth.
+
+In the meantime, too, the soldiers of the city and the Bedouins of the
+desert who were within the walls for the feast, took courage, and
+turning fiercely began to drive the assailants back by the way they had
+come, towards the market-place in the bazar. But those behind still kept
+pressing forward, while those in front were driven back, and the press
+became so great that the Shammars could no longer wield their weapons.
+The enemy were crowded together like sheep in a fold, and Khaled, with
+his men, began to cut a broad road through the very midst of them,
+hewing them down in ranks and throwing them aside, as corn is harvested
+in Egypt.
+
+But after some time Khaled saw that he was alone, with a few followers,
+surrounded by a great throng of the enemy, for some of his men had been
+slain after slaying many of their foes, and some had not been able to
+follow, being hindered at first by the heaps of dead and afterwards by
+the multitude of their opponents who closed in again over the bloody way
+through which Khaled had passed.
+
+And now the Shammars saw that Khaled could not escape them, and they
+pressed him on every side, but the archers dared not shoot at him for
+fear of hitting their own friends, if their arrows chanced to go by the
+mark. Otherwise he would undoubtedly have perished, since he had no
+armour, and not even a buckler with which to ward off the darts. But
+they thrust at him with spears and struck at him with their swords, and
+wounded him more than once, though he was not conscious of pain or loss
+of blood, being hot with the fever of the fight. He was hard pressed
+therefore, and while he smote without ceasing he began to know that
+unless a speedy rescue came to him, his hour was at hand. From the
+borders of the market-place, the men of Riad could still see his sword
+flashing and striking, and they still heard his fierce cry.
+
+He looked about him as he fought, and he saw that he was now almost
+alone. One after another, the few who had penetrated so far forward with
+him into the press, were overwhelmed by numbers and fell bleeding from a
+hundred wounds till only a score were left, and Khaled saw that unless
+he could now cut his way free, he must inevitably perish. But the press
+was stubborn and a man might as well hope to make his way through a herd
+of camels crowded together in a narrow street. Then Khaled bethought him
+of a stratagem. He alone was on horseback, for the enemy's riders had
+ridden before, and he had met them in the street leading to the palace,
+when he had himself slain many, and where the rest were even now falling
+under the swords of the men of Riad. And the few men who were with him
+were also all on foot. Therefore looking across the market-place he made
+as though he saw a great force coming to his assistance, and he shouted
+with all his breath, while his arm never rested.
+
+'Smite, men of Nejed!' he cried. 'For I see the Sultan himself coming to
+meet us with five hundred horsemen! Smite! Yallah! It is the Sword of
+the Lord!'
+
+Hearing these words, his men were encouraged, and of the enemy many
+turned their heads to see the new danger. But being on foot they were
+hindered from seeing by the throng. Yet so much the more Khaled shouted
+that the Sultan was coming, and many of the heads that turned to look
+were not turned back again, but rolled down to the feet of those to
+whom they had belonged. The brave men who were with Khaled took heart
+and hewed with all their might, taking up the cry of their leader when
+they saw that it disconcerted their foes, so that the last took fright,
+and the panic ran through the whole multitude.
+
+'We shall be slain like sheep, and taken like locusts under a mantle,
+for we cannot move!' they cried, and they began to press away out of the
+market-place, forcing their comrades before them into the narrow
+streets.
+
+But here many perished. For while every man in Riad had taken his sword
+and had gone out of his house to fight, the women had dragged up
+cauldrons of boiling water, and also hand-mill stones, to the roofs, and
+they scalded and crushed their retreating foes. Then too, as the
+market-place was cleared, the soldiers came on from the side of the
+palace, having slain all that stood in their way and taken most of their
+horses alive, which alone was a great booty, for there are not many
+horses in Nejed besides those of the Sultan, though these are the very
+best and fleetest in all Arabia. But the Shammars of the north are great
+horse-breeders. So the soldiers mounted and joined Khaled in the
+pursuit, and a great slaughter followed in the streets, though some of
+the enemy were able to escape to the gates, and warn those of their
+fellows who were outside to flee to the hills for safety, leaving much
+booty behind.
+
+At the time of the second call to prayer Khaled dismounted from his mare
+in the market-place, and there was not one of the enemy left alive
+within the walls. Those who remember that day say that there were five
+thousand dead in the streets in Riad.
+
+Khaled made such ablution as he could, and having prayed and given
+thanks to Allah, he went back on foot to the palace, his bay mare
+following him, and thrusting her nose into his hand as he walked. For
+she was little hurt, and the blood that covered her shoulders and her
+flanks was not her own. But Khaled had many wounds on him, so that his
+companions wondered how he was able to walk.
+
+In the court of the palace the Sultan came to meet him, and fell upon
+his neck and embraced him, for many messengers had come, from time to
+time, telling how the fight went, and of the great slaughter. And Khaled
+smiled, for he thought that he should now win the love of Zehowah.
+
+'Said I not truly that he is as brave as the lion, and as strong as the
+camel?' cried the Sultan, addressing those who stood in the court. 'Has
+he not scattered our enemies as the wind scatters the sand? Surely he is
+well called by the name Khaled.'
+
+'Forget not your own men,' Khaled answered, 'for they have shared in the
+danger and have slain more than I, and deserve the spoil. There was a
+score of stout fellows with me at the last in the market-place, whose
+faces I should know again on a cloudy night. They fought as well as I,
+and it was the will of Allah that their enemies should broil
+everlastingly and drink boiling water. Let them be rewarded.'
+
+'They shall every one have a rich garment and a sum of money, besides
+their share of the spoil. But as for you, my beloved son, go in and
+rest, and bind up your wounds, and afterwards there shall be feasting
+and merriment until the night.'
+
+'The enemy is not destroyed yet,' answered Khaled. 'Command rather that
+the army make ready for the pursuit, and when I have washed I will arm
+myself and we will ride out and pursue the dogs until not one of them is
+left alive, and by the help of Allah we will take all Shammar and lay it
+under tribute and bring back the women captive. After that we shall
+feast more safely, and sleep without fear of being waked by a herd of
+hyaenas in our streets.'
+
+'Nay, but you must rest before going upon this expedition,' objected the
+Sultan.
+
+'The true believer will find rest in the grave, and feasting in
+paradise,' answered Khaled.
+
+'This is true. But even the camel must eat and drink on the journey, or
+both he and his master will perish.'
+
+'Let us then eat and drink quickly, that we may the sooner go.'
+
+'As you will, let it be,' said the Sultan, with a sigh, for he loved
+feasting and music, being now too old to go out and fight himself as he
+had formerly done.
+
+Thereupon Khaled went into the harem and returned to Zehowah's
+apartment. As he went the women gathered round him with cries of
+gladness and songs of triumph, staunching the blood that flowed from his
+wounds with their veils and garments as he walked. And others ran before
+to prepare the bath and to tell Zehowah of his coming.
+
+When she saw him she ran forward and took him by the hands and led him
+in, and herself she bathed his wounds and bound them up with precious
+balsams of great healing power, not suffering any of the women to help
+her nor to touch him, but sending them away so that she might be alone
+with Khaled.
+
+'I have slain certain of your enemies, Zehowah,' he said, at last, 'and
+I have driven out the rest from the city.' As yet neither of them had
+spoken.
+
+'Do you think that I have not heard what you have done?' Zehowah asked.
+'You have saved us all from death and captivity. You are our father and
+our mother. And now I will bring you food and drink and afterwards you
+shall sleep.'
+
+'So you are well pleased with the doings of the husband you have
+married,' he said.
+
+He was displeased, for he had supposed that she would love him for his
+deeds and for his wounds and that she would speak differently. But
+though she tended him and bound his wounds, and bathed his brow with
+perfumed waters, and laid pillows under his head and fanned him, as a
+slave might have done, he saw that there was no warmth in her cheek, and
+that the depths of her eyes were empty, and that her hands were neither
+hot nor cold. By all these signs he knew that she felt no love for him,
+so he spoke coldly to her.
+
+'Is it for me to be pleased or displeased with the deeds of my lord and
+master?' she asked. 'Nevertheless, thousands are even now blessing your
+name and returning thanks to Allah for having sent them a preserver in
+the hour of danger. I am but one of them.'
+
+'I would rather see a faint light in your eyes, as of a star rising in
+the desert than hear the blessings of all the men of Nejed. I would
+rather that your hand were cold when it touches mine, and your cheek hot
+when I kiss it, than that your father should bestow upon me all the
+treasures of Riad.'
+
+'Is that love?' asked Zehowah with a laugh. 'A cold hand, a hot cheek, a
+bright eye?'
+
+Khaled was silent, for he saw that she understood his words but not his
+meaning. It was now noon and it was very hot, even in the inner shade of
+the harem, and Khaled was glad to rest after the hard fighting, for his
+many slight wounds smarted with the healing balsam, and his heart was
+heavy and discontented.
+
+Then Zehowah called a slave woman to fan him with a palm leaf, and
+presently she brought him meat and rice and dates to eat, and cool drink
+in a golden cup, and she sat at his feet while he refreshed himself.
+
+'How many did you slay with your own hand?' she asked at last, taking up
+the good sword which lay beside him on the carpet.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+Khaled pondered deeply, being uncertain what to do, and trying to find
+out some action which could win for him what he wanted. Zehowah received
+no answer to her question as to the number of enemies he had slain and
+she did not ask again, for she thought that he was weary and wished to
+rest in silence.
+
+'What do you like best in the whole world?' he asked after a long time,
+to see what she would say.
+
+'I like you best,' she answered, smiling, while she still played with
+his sword.
+
+'That is very strange,' Khaled answered, musing. But the colour rose
+darkly in his cheeks above his beard, for he was pleased now as he had
+been displeased before.
+
+'Why is it strange?' asked Zehowah. 'Are you not the palm tree in my
+plain, and a tower of refuge for my people?'
+
+'And will you dry up the well from which the tree draws life, and take
+away the corner-stone of the tower's foundation?'
+
+'You speak in fables,' said Zehowah, laughing.
+
+'Yet you imagined the fable yourself, when you likened me to a palm and
+to a tower. But I am no lover of allegories. The sword is my argument,
+and my wit is in my arm. The wall by the tree is the wall of love, and
+the chief foundation of the tower is the love of Zehowah. If you destroy
+that, the tree will wither and the tower will fall.'
+
+'Surely there was never such a man as you,' Zehowah answered, half
+jesting but half in earnest. 'You are as one who has bought a white
+mare; and though she is fleet, and good to look at, and obedient to his
+voice and knee, yet he is discontented because she cannot speak to him,
+and he would fain have her black instead of white, and if possible would
+teach her to sing like a Persian nightingale.'
+
+'Is it then not natural in a woman to love man? Have you heard no tales
+of love from the story-tellers of the harem?'
+
+'I have heard many such tales, but none of them were told of me,'
+Zehowah replied. 'Will you drink again? Is the drink too sweet, or is it
+not cool?'
+
+She had risen from her seat and held the golden cup, bending down to
+him, so that her face was near his. He laid his hand upon her shoulder.
+
+'Hear me, Zehowah,' he said. 'I want but one thing in the world, and it
+was for that I came out of the Red Desert to be your husband. And that
+thing I will have, though the price be greater than rubies, or than
+blood, or than life itself.'
+
+'If it is mine, I freely give it to you. If it is not mine, take it by
+force, or I will help you to take it by a stratagem, if I can. Am I not
+your wife?'
+
+She spoke thus, supposing from his face that he meant some treasure that
+could be taken by strength or by wile, for she could not believe a man
+could speak so seriously of a mere thought such as love.
+
+'Neither my right hand nor your wit can give me this, but only your
+heart, Zehowah,' he answered, still holding her and looking at her.
+
+But now she did not laugh, for she saw that he was greatly in earnest.
+
+'You are still talking of love,' she said. 'And you are not jesting. I
+do not know what to answer you. Gladly will I say, I love you. Is that
+all? What is it else? Are those the words?'
+
+'I care little for the words. But I will have the reality, though it
+cost your life and mine.'
+
+'My life? Will you take my life, for the sake of a thought?'
+
+'A thought!' he exclaimed. 'Do you call love a thought? I had not
+believed a woman could be so cold as that.'
+
+'If not a thought, what then? I have spoken the truth. If it were a
+treasure, or anything that can be taken, you could take it, and I could
+help you. But if the possibility of possessing it lie not in deeds, it
+lies in thoughts, and is itself a thought. If you can teach me, I will
+think what you will; but if you cannot teach me, who shall? And how will
+it profit you to take my life or your own?'
+
+'Is it possible that love is only a thought?' asked Khaled, speaking
+rather to himself than to her.
+
+'It must be,' she answered. 'The body is what it is in the eyes of
+others, but the soul is what it thinks itself to be, happy or unhappy,
+loving or not loving.'
+
+'You are too subtle for me, Zehowah,' Khaled said. 'Yet I know that this
+is not all true.'
+
+For he knew that he possessed no soul, and yet he loved her. Moreover he
+could think himself happy or unhappy.
+
+'You are too subtle,' he repeated. 'I will take my sword again and I
+will go out and fight, and pursue the enemy and waste their country, for
+it is not so hard to cut through steel as to touch the heart of a woman
+who does not love, and it is easier to tear down towers and strongholds
+of stone with the naked hands than to build a temple upon the moving
+sand of an empty heart.'
+
+Khaled would have risen at once, but Zehowah took his hand and entreated
+him to stay with her.
+
+'Will you go out in the heat of the day, wounded and wearied?' she
+asked. 'Surely you will take a fever and die before you have followed
+the Shammars so far as two days' journey.'
+
+'My wounds are slight, and I am not weary,' Khaled answered. 'When the
+smith has heated the iron in the forge, does he wait until it is cold
+before striking?'
+
+'But think also of the soldiers, who have striven hard, and cannot thus
+go out upon a great expedition without preparation as well as rest.'
+
+'I will take those whom I can find. And if they will go with me, it is
+well. But if not, I will go alone, and they and the rest will follow
+after.'
+
+'It is summer, too,' said Zehowah, keeping him back. 'Is this a time to
+go out into the northern desert? Both men and beasts will perish by the
+way.'
+
+'Has not Allah bound every man's fate about his neck? And can a man cast
+it from him?'
+
+'I know not otherwise, but if heat and hunger and thirst do not kill the
+men, they will certainly destroy the beasts, whose names are not
+recorded by Asrael, and who have no destiny of their own.'
+
+'You hinder me,' said Khaled. 'And yet you do not know how many of the
+Shammar may be yet lurking within a day's march of the city, slaying
+your people, burning their houses and destroying their harvest. Let me
+go. Will you love me better if I stay?'
+
+'You will be the better able to get the victory.'
+
+'Will you love me better if I stay?'
+
+'If you go now, you may fail in your purpose and perish as well. How
+could I love you at all then?'
+
+'It is the victory you love then--not me?'
+
+'Could I love defeat? Nay, do not be angry with me. Stay here at least
+until the evening. Think of the burning sun and the raging thirst and
+the smarting of your wounds which have only been dressed this first
+time. Think of the soldiers, too----'
+
+'They can bear what I can bear. Was it not summer-time when the Prophet
+went out against the Romans?'
+
+'I do not know. Stay with me, Khaled.'
+
+'I will come back when I have destroyed the Shammars.'
+
+'And if the soldiers will not go with you, will you indeed go out
+alone?'
+
+'Yes. I will go alone. When they see that they will follow me. They are
+not foxes. They are brave men.'
+
+Khaled rose and girt his sword about him. Zehowah helped him, seeing
+that she could not persuade him to stay.
+
+'Farewell,' he said, shortly, and without so much as touching her hand
+he turned and went out. She followed him to the door of the room and
+stood watching as he went away.
+
+'One of us two was to rule,' she said to herself, 'and it is he, for I
+cannot move him. But what is this talk of love? Does he need love, who
+is himself the master?'
+
+She sighed and went back to the carpet on which they had been sitting.
+Then she called in her women and bid them tell her all they had heard
+about the fight in the morning; and they, thinking to please her,
+extolled the deeds of Khaled and of the tens he had slain they made
+hundreds, and of the thousands of the enemy's army, they made tens of
+thousands, till the walls of Riad could not have contained the hosts of
+which they spoke, and the dry sand of the desert could not have drunk
+all the blood which had been shed.
+
+Meanwhile Khaled went into the outer court of the palace, where many
+soldiers were congregated together in the shade of the high wall, eating
+camel's meat and blanket bread and drinking the water from the well.
+They were all able-bodied and unhurt, for those who had been wounded
+were at their houses, tended by their wives.
+
+'Men of Riad!' cried Khaled, standing before them. 'We have fought a
+good fight this morning and the power of our foes is broken. But all are
+not yet destroyed, and it may be that there are many thousands still
+lurking within a day's march of the city, slaying the people, burning
+their houses and destroying their harvests. Let us go out and kill them
+all before they are able to go back to their own country. Afterwards we
+will pursue those who are already escaping, and we will lay all the
+tribes of Shammar under tribute and bring back the women captive.'
+
+Thereupon a division arose among the soldiers. Some were for going at
+once with Khaled, but others said it was the hot season and no time for
+war.
+
+'It is indeed summer,' said Khaled. 'But if the Shammars were able to
+come to Riad in the heat, the men of Riad are able to go to them. And I
+at least will go at once, and those who wish to share the spoil will go
+with me, but those who are satisfied to sit in the shade and eat camel's
+meat will stay behind. In an hour's time I will ride out of the northern
+gate.'
+
+So saying, Khaled rode slowly down into the city towards the
+market-place. The people were carrying away their own dead, and dragging
+off the bodies of their enemies, with camels, by fours and fives tied
+together to bury them in a great ditch without the walls. When Khaled
+appeared, many of the men gathered round him, with cries of joy, for
+they had supposed that some of his wounds were dangerous and that they
+should not see him for many days.
+
+'Wallah! He is with us again!' they shouted, jostling each other to get
+near, and standing on tiptoe to see the good mare that had carried him
+so well in the fight.
+
+'Masallah! I am with you,' answered Khaled, 'and if you will go with me
+we will send many more of the Shammars to eat thorns and thistles, as
+many as dwell in Kasim and Tabal Shammar as far as Hail; and by the help
+of Allah we will take the city of Hail itself and divide the spoil and
+bring away the women captive; and when we have taken all that there is
+we will lay the land under tribute and make it subject to Nejed. So let
+those who will go with me arm themselves and take every man his horse or
+his camel, and dates and barley and water-skins, and in an hour's time
+we will ride out. For Allah will certainly give us the victory.'
+
+'Let us bury the dead to-day and to-morrow we will go,' said many of
+those nearest to him.
+
+'Are there no old men and boys in Riad to bind the sheaves you have
+mown?' asked Khaled. 'And are there no women to mourn over the dead of
+your kindred who have fallen in a good fight? And as for to-morrow, it
+is yet in Allah's hand. But to-day we have already with us. However, if
+you will not go with me, I will go alone.'
+
+The men were pleased with Khaled's speech, and indeed the greater part
+of the dead were buried by this time, for all the people had made haste
+to the work, fearing lest the bodies should bring a pestilence among
+them, since it was summer-time and very hot. Then all those who were
+unhurt and could bear arms, went and washed themselves, and took their
+weapons and food, as Khaled had directed them. Before the call to
+afternoon prayers the whole host went out of the northern gate.
+
+Then Khaled accomplished all that he had spoken of, and much more, for
+he drove the scattered force of the enemy before him, overtaking all at
+last and slaying all whom he overtook as far as Zulfah which is by the
+narrow end of the Nefud. Here he rested a short time, and then quickly
+crossing the sand, he entered the country called Kasim which is subject
+to the Shammars. Here he was told by a woman who had been taken that the
+Shammars were coming with a new army against him out of Hail. He
+therefore hid his host in a pass of the hills just above the plain, and
+sent down a few Bedouins to encamp at the foot of the mountains, bidding
+them call themselves Shammars and make a show of being friendly to the
+enemy. So when the army of the Shammars reached the foot of the hills,
+they saw the tents and only one or two camels, and Khaled's Bedouins
+came out and welcomed them, and told them that Khaled was still crossing
+the Nefud, and that if they made haste through the hills they might come
+upon him unawares and at an advantage as he began to ascend. Thereupon
+the enemy rejoiced and entered the pass in haste, after filling their
+water-skins.
+
+When they were in the midst of the hills, Khaled and his army sprang up
+from the ambush and fell upon them, and utterly destroyed them, taking
+all their horses and camels and arms; after which he went down into the
+plain and laid waste the country about Hail. He took the city as the
+Shammars had taken Riad. For he himself got upon the wall at night, with
+the strongest and the bravest of his followers, and slew the guards and
+opened the gate just before the dawn. But there was no Khaled in Hail to
+rally the soldiers and give them heart to turn and make a stand in the
+streets.
+
+Khaled then entered the palace and took the Sultan of Shammar alive, not
+suffering him to be hurt, for he wished to bring him to Riad. This
+Sultan was a man of middle age, having only one eye, and also otherwise
+ill-favoured, besides being cowardly and fat. So Khaled ordered that he
+should be put into a litter, and the litter into a cage, and the cage
+slung between two camels. But he commanded that the women of the harem
+should be well treated and brought before him, that he might see them,
+intending to bring back the most beautiful of them as presents to his
+father-in-law.
+
+'Surely,' said the men who were with him, 'you will keep the fairest for
+yourself.'
+
+But Khaled turned angrily upon them.
+
+'Have I not lately married the most beautiful woman in the world?' he
+asked. 'I tell you it is for her sake that I have destroyed the
+Shammars. But the Sultan shall have the best of these women, and
+afterwards the rest of them will be divided amongst you by lot.'
+
+When the women heard that they were to be distributed among the men of
+Nejed they at first made a pretence of howling and beating their
+breasts, but they rejoiced secretly and soon began to laugh and talk
+among themselves, pointing out to each other the strongest and most
+richly dressed of Khaled's followers, as though choosing husbands among
+them. But one of them neither wept nor spoke to her companions, but
+stood silently watching Khaled, and when he sat down upon a carpet in
+the chief kahwah of the house, she brought him drink in a goblet set
+with pearls from Katar, and sat down at his feet as though she had been
+his wife. But he took little heed of her at first, for he was busy with
+grave matters.
+
+The other women, seeing what she did, thought that she was acting wisely
+in the hope of gaining Khaled's favour, seeing that he was the chief of
+their enemies, so they, too, came near, and brought water for his hands,
+and perfumes, and sweetmeats, thinking to outdo her. But she pushed them
+away, taking what they brought for him, and offering it herself.
+
+'Are you better than we?' the women said angrily. 'Has our lord chosen
+you for himself, that you will not let us come near him?'
+
+Then Khaled noticed her and began to wonder at her attention and zeal.
+
+'What is your name?' he asked. But she did not speak. 'Who is she?' he
+inquired of the other women.
+
+'She is an unbeliever,' they answered contemptuously. 'And she is proud,
+for she trusts in her white skin and her blue eyes, and her hair which
+is red without henna. She thinks she is better than we. Command us to
+uncover our faces, that you may see and judge between us.'
+
+'Let it be so. Let us see who is the fairest,' said Khaled, and he
+laughed.
+
+Then the woman who sat at his feet threw aside her veil, and all the
+others did the same. Khaled saw that the one was certainly more
+beautiful than the rest, for her skin was as white as milk, and her eyes
+like the sea of Oman when it is blue in winter. She had also long hair,
+plaited in three tresses which came down to her feet, red as the locusts
+when the sun shines upon them at evening, and not dyed.
+
+'There is a bay mare in a stable of black ones,' Khaled said. 'What is
+the name of the bay mare?'
+
+'Her name is Aziz, and she is a Christian,' said one of the women.
+
+'Not Aziz--Almasta,' said the beautiful woman in an accent which showed
+that she could not speak Arabic fluently. 'Almasta, a Christian.'
+
+'She was lately sent as a present to our master by the Emir of Basrah,'
+said one of the others.
+
+'He paid a thousand and five hundred sequins for her, for she was
+brought from Georgia,' said another. 'But I am a free woman, and myself
+the daughter of an emir.'
+
+Then all the others began to scream.
+
+'It is a lie,' they cried. 'Your father was a white slave from Syria.'
+
+'You are fools,' retorted the woman who had spoken. 'You should have
+said that you were also free women and the daughters of emirs. So our
+lord would have treated you with more consideration.'
+
+The others saw their folly and were silent and drew back, but Khaled
+only smiled.
+
+'As good mares are bred in the stable as in the desert,' he said, and
+the women laughed with him at the jest, for they saw that it pleased
+him.
+
+But Almasta was silent and sat at his feet, looking into his face.
+
+'You must learn to talk in Arabic,' he said, 'and then you will be able
+to tell stories of your native country to the Sultan, for he loves tales
+of travel.'
+
+Almasta smiled and bent her head a little, but she did not understand
+all he said, being but lately come into Arabia.
+
+'I will go with you,' she answered.
+
+'Yes. You will go with me to Riad to the Sultan, and perhaps he will
+make you his wife, for he has none at present.'
+
+'I will go with you,' she repeated, looking at him.
+
+'She does not understand you,' said the women, laughing at her ignorance
+of their own tongue.
+
+'It is no matter,' said Khaled. 'She will learn in due time. Perhaps it
+has pleased Allah to send my lord the Sultan a wife without a tongue for
+a blessing in his old age.'
+
+'I will go with you,' Almasta said again.
+
+'She can say nothing else,' jeered the women.
+
+One of them pulled her by her upper garment, so that she looked round.
+
+'Can you say this, "My father was a dog and the son of dogs"?' asked the
+woman.
+
+But Almasta pushed her angrily away, for she half understood. Then the
+woman grew angry too, and shook her fist in Almasta's face.
+
+'If you fight, you shall eat sticks,' said Khaled, and then they were
+all quiet.
+
+Thus he took possession of the city of Hail and remaining there some
+time he reduced all the country to submission, so that it remained a
+part of the kingdom of Nejed for many years after that. For the power of
+the Shammars was broken, and they could nowhere have mustered a thousand
+men able to bear arms. Khaled set a governor in the place of the Sultan
+and ordered all the laws of the country in the same manner as those of
+Nejed, and after he had been absent from Riad nearly two months, he set
+aside a part of his force to remain behind and keep the peace in case
+there should be an outbreak, and with the rest he began to journey
+homeward, taking a great spoil and many captives with him.
+
+During the march most of the women captives rode on camels, but a few of
+the most beautiful were taken in litters lest the fatigues of riding
+should injure their appearance and thus diminish their value. Almasta
+was one of these, and the Sultan of Hail was taken in a cage as has been
+said, though he was not otherwise ill-treated, and received his portion
+of camel's meat and bread, equal to that of the soldiers.
+
+Khaled sent messengers on fleet mares to Riad to give warning of his
+coming, but he could not himself proceed very quickly, because his army
+was burdened with so much spoil; and as there was now no haste to
+overtake an enemy he journeyed chiefly at night, resting during the day
+wherever there was water, for although the summer was far advanced it
+was still hot. He thought continually of Zehowah, by day in his tent and
+by night on the march, for he supposed that she would be glad when she
+heard of the victory and that she would now love him, because he had
+avenged her people, and taken Hail, and brought back gold and captives,
+besides other treasures.
+
+'She was already pleased with my deeds, before we left Riad,' he
+thought, 'for she asked me how many of the Shammars I had slain with my
+own hand, and at the last she wished me to stay with her, most probably
+that I might tell her more about the fight. How much the more will she
+be glad now, since I have killed so many more and have brought back
+treasure, and made a whole country subject to her father. Shall not
+blood and gold buy the love of a woman?'
+
+It chanced once during this journey that Khaled was sitting at the door
+of his tent after the sun had gone down and before the night march had
+begun. Upon the one side, at a little distance, was the tent of the
+women captives who had been taken from the palace in Hail, and upon the
+other the soldiers had set down the cage in which the Sultan of Shammar
+was carried. The men had laid a carpet over the cage to keep the sun
+from the prisoner during the heat of the day, lest he should not reach
+Riad alive as Khaled desired. For the Sultan was fat and of a choleric
+temper. Now the soldiers had given him food but had forgotten to bring
+him water, and it was hot under the carpet now that the evening had
+come. But he could lift it up a little on one side, and having done so,
+he began to cry out, cursing Khaled and railing at him, not knowing that
+he was so near at hand.
+
+'Oh you whose portion it shall be to broil everlastingly, and to eat
+thistles and thorns, and to lie bound in red-hot chains as I lie in this
+cage! Have you brought me out into the desert to die of thirst like a
+lame camel? Surely your entertainment on the day of judgment shall be
+boiling water and the fruit of Al Zakkam, and whenever you try to get
+out of hell you shall be dragged back again and beaten with iron clubs,
+and your skin shall dissolve, and the boiling water shall be poured upon
+your head!'
+
+In this way the captive cried out, for he was very thirsty. But when
+Khaled saw that no one gave him water he called in the darkness to the
+women who sat by their tent.
+
+'Fetch water and give the man to drink,' he said.
+
+One of the women rose quickly and filled a jar at the well close by, and
+took it to the cage. But then the railing and cursing broke out afresh,
+so that Khaled wondered what had happened.
+
+'Who has sent me this unbelieving woman to torture me with thirst?'
+cried the prisoner. 'Are you not Aziz whom I was about to take for my
+fourth wife on account of your red hair? But your hair shall be a
+perpetual flame hereafter, burning the bones of your head, and your
+flesh shall be white with heat as iron in a forge. If I were still in my
+kingdom you should eat many sticks! If Allah delivers me from my enemies
+I will cause your skin to be embroidered with gold for a trapping to my
+horse!'
+
+The moon rose at this time, being a little past the full, and Khaled
+looked towards the cage and saw that the woman was standing two paces
+away from the Sultan's outstretched hand. She dabbled in the cool water
+with her fingers so that a plashing sound was heard, and then drank
+herself, and scattered afterwards a few drops in the face of the thirsty
+captive.
+
+'It is good water,' she said. 'It is cold.'
+
+Khaled knew from her broken speech that it was Almasta, and he
+understood that she was torturing the prisoner with the sound and sight
+of the water, and with her words. So he rose from his place and went to
+the cage.
+
+'Did I not tell you to give him drink?' he asked, standing before the
+woman.
+
+'Oh my lord, be merciful,' cried the captive, when he saw that Khaled
+himself was there. 'Be merciful and let me drink, for your heart is
+easily moved to pity, and by an act of charity you shall hereafter sit
+in the shade of the tree Sedrat and drink for ever of the wine of
+paradise.'
+
+'I do not desire wine,' said Khaled. 'But you shall certainly not
+thirst. Give him the jar,' he said to Almasta. But she shook her head.
+
+'He is bad and ugly,' she said. 'If he does not drink, he will die.'
+
+Then Khaled put out his hand to take the jar of water, but Almasta threw
+it violently to the ground, and it broke to pieces. Thereupon the
+captive began again to rail and curse at Almasta and to implore Khaled
+with many blessings.
+
+'You shall drink, for I will bring water myself,' said Khaled. He went
+back to his tent and took his own jar to the well, and filled it
+carefully.
+
+When he turned he saw that Almasta was running from his tent towards the
+cage, with a drawn sword in her hand. He then ran also, and being very
+swift of foot, he overtook her just as she thrust at the Sultan through
+the bars. But the sword caught in the folds of the soft carpet, and
+Khaled took it from her hand, and thrust her down so that she fell upon
+her knees. Then he gave the prisoner the jar with the water that
+remained in it, for some had been spilt as he ran.
+
+'Who has given you the right to kill my captives?' he asked of Almasta.
+
+'Kill me, then!' she cried.
+
+'Indeed, if you were not so valuable, I would cut off your head,' Khaled
+answered. 'Why do you wish me to kill you?'
+
+'I hate him,' she said, pointing to the captive who was drinking like a
+thirsty camel.
+
+'That is no reason why I should kill you. Go back to the tents.'
+
+But Almasta laid her hand on the sword he held and tried to bring it to
+her own throat.
+
+'This is a strange woman,' said Khaled. 'Why do you wish to die? You
+shall go to Riad and be the Sultan's wife.'
+
+'No, no!' she cried. 'Kill me! Not him, not him!'
+
+'Of whom do you speak?'
+
+'Him!' she answered, again pointing to the prisoner. 'Is he not the
+Sultan?'
+
+Khaled laughed aloud, for he saw that she had supposed she was to be
+taken to Riad to be made the wife of the Sultan of Shammar. Indeed, the
+other women had told her so, to anger her.
+
+'Not this man,' he said, endeavouring to make her understand. 'There is
+another Sultan at Riad. The Sultan of Shammar is one, the Sultan of
+Nejed another.'
+
+'You?' she asked, suddenly springing up. 'With you?'
+
+The moon was bright and Khaled saw that her eyes gleamed like stars and
+her face grew warm, and when she took his hands her own were cold.
+
+'No, not I,' he answered. 'I am not the Sultan.'
+
+But her face became grey in the moonlight, and she covered her head with
+her veil and went slowly back to her tent.
+
+'This woman loves me,' Khaled thought. 'And as I have not talked much
+with her, it must be because I am strong and have conquered the people
+among whom she was captive. How much the more then, will Zehowah love
+me, for the same reason.'
+
+So he was light of heart, and soon afterwards he commanded everything to
+be made ready and mounted his bay mare for the night march.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+When Khaled was within half a day's march of Riad, the Sultan came out
+to meet him with a great train of attendants and courtiers, with cooks
+bringing food and sweetmeats, and a number of musicians. And they all
+encamped together for a short time in the shade of the trees, for there
+were gardens in the place. The Sultan embraced Khaled and put upon him a
+very magnificent garment, after which they sat down together in a large
+tent which the Sultan had brought with him. When they had eaten and
+refreshed themselves they began to talk, and Khaled told his
+father-in-law all that he had done, and gave him an account of the
+spoils which he had brought back, commanding the most valuable objects
+to be brought into the tent. After this the Sultan desired to see the
+women captives.
+
+'There is one especially whom it may please you to take for yourself,'
+said Khaled, and he ordered Almasta to be brought in.
+
+When the male slaves had left the tent, Almasta drew aside her veil. The
+Sultan looked at her and smiled, stroking his beard, for he was much
+pleased.
+
+'Her face is like a pearl and her hair is a setting of red gold,' he
+said. 'Truly she is like the sunrise on a fair morning when there are
+red clouds in the east.'
+
+Almasta looked attentively at him, and afterwards she glanced at Khaled,
+who could not avoid looking at her on account of her beauty. Her face
+was grave and indifferent. Then Khaled told the Sultan how she had hated
+the Sultan of Shammar and had tried to kill him on the journey.
+
+'This is a dangerous woman, my son,' said the old man. But he laughed as
+he said it, for although he was old, he was no coward. 'She is
+dangerous, indeed. Will you love me, pearl of my soul's treasures?' he
+inquired of her, still smiling.
+
+'You are my lord and my master,' she answered, looking down.
+
+When Khaled heard this he wondered whether his father-in-law would get
+any affection from her. Zehowah had answered in the same words.
+
+'By Allah, I will give you such gifts as will make you love me,' said
+the Sultan. 'What shall I give you?'
+
+'His head,' answered Almasta, raising her eyes quickly.
+
+'The head of the Sultan of Shammar?'
+
+Almasta nodded, and Khaled could see that her lips trembled.
+
+'A dead man has no companions,' said the Sultan, looking at Khaled to
+see what he would do. But Khaled cared little, and said nothing.
+
+So the Sultan called a slave and ordered the captive's head to be struck
+off immediately. Then Almasta threw herself upon the carpet on the floor
+of the tent and embraced his feet.
+
+'See how easily the love of a woman is got,' Khaled thought, 'even by an
+old man whose beard is grey and his limbs heavy.'
+
+When Almasta rose again, she looked at Khaled triumphantly, as though to
+remind him of the night on the journey when he had hindered her from
+killing the captive in his cage. But though he understood her, he held
+his peace, for he had cared nothing whether the prisoner lived or died
+after he had delivered him over to his father-in-law, and he was
+considering whether he might not please Zehowah in some similar manner.
+This was not easy, however, for he was not aware that Zehowah had any
+private enemy, whose head he might offer her.
+
+After the Sultan had seen the other women and the best of the spoils,
+Khaled begged that he might be allowed to ride on into Riad alone, for
+he saw that the Sultan intended to spend the night in feasting where he
+had encamped. The Sultan was so much pleased with Almasta and so
+greatly diverted in examining the rich stuffs and the gold and silver
+vessels and jewels, that he let Khaled go, almost without trying to
+detain him, though he made him many speeches praising his conduct of the
+war, and would have loaded him with gifts. But Khaled would take nothing
+with him, saying that he would only receive his just share with the
+rest; and the fame of his generosity immediately went abroad among the
+soldiers and the Bedouins throughout all the camp.
+
+'For,' said Khaled, 'there is not a fleeter mare than mine among all
+those we have taken; my sword proves to be a good one, for I have tried
+it well; as for women, I am satisfied with one wife; and besides a wife,
+a sword and a horse, there are no treasures in the world which I covet.'
+
+So Khaled rode away alone into Riad, for he desired no company, being
+busy with his own thoughts. He reached the gates at nightfall and went
+immediately to the palace and entered Zehowah's apartments. He found her
+sitting among her women in her accustomed place, listening to the tales
+of an old woman who sat in the midst of the circle. As soon as Zehowah
+saw her husband she sprang up gladly to meet him, as a friend would have
+done.
+
+'Though it is summer-time, I have pursued the enemy,' said Khaled. 'And
+though the sun was hot, I have got the victory and brought home the
+spoil.'
+
+He said this remembering how she had tried to hinder him from going.
+Then he gave her his sword and he sat down with her, while the women
+brought food and drink, for he was weary, and hungry and thirsty. The
+women also brought their musical instruments and began to sing songs in
+praise of Khaled's deeds; but after a time he sent them all away and
+remained alone with Zehowah.
+
+'O Zehowah,' he said, 'you are my law and my rule. You are my speech and
+my occupation. You are my Kebla to which I turn in prayer. For the love
+of you I have got the victory over many foes. And yet I see that your
+cheek is cold and the light of your eyes is undisturbed. Have you no
+other enemies for me to destroy, or have you no secret foe whose head
+would be a pleasant gift?'
+
+Zehowah laughed, as she fanned him with a palm leaf.
+
+'Do you still thirst for war, Khaled?' she asked. 'Truly you have
+swallowed up all our enemies as the dry sand swallows up water. Where
+shall I find enemies enough for you to slay? You went out in pride and
+you have returned in glory. Are you not yet satisfied? And as for any
+secret foe, if I have any I do not know him. Rest, therefore; eat and
+drink and spend your days in peace.'
+
+'I care little for either food or drink,' Khaled answered, 'and I need
+little rest.'
+
+'Will nothing but war please you? Must you overcome Egypt and make Syria
+pay tribute as far as Damascus before you will rest?'
+
+'I will conquer the whole world for you, if you wish it,' said Khaled.
+
+'What should I do with the world?' asked Zehowah. 'Have I not treasures
+and garments enough and to spare, besides the spoil you have now brought
+home? And besides, if you would conquer the world you must needs make
+war upon true believers, amongst whom we do not count the people of
+Shammar. Be satisfied therefore and rest in peace.'
+
+'How shall I be satisfied until I have kindled the light in Zehowah's
+eyes at my coming, and until I feel that her hand is cold and trembles
+when I take it in mine?'
+
+'Do I say to my eyes, "be dull"--or to my hand, "do not tremble"?'
+Zehowah asked. 'Is this, which you ask of me, something I can command at
+will, as I can a smile or a word? If it is, teach me and I will learn.
+But if not, why do you expect of me what I cannot do? Can a camel gallop
+like a horse, or a horse trot like a camel, or bear great burdens
+through the desert? Have you come back from a great war only to talk of
+this something which you call love, which is yours and not mine, which
+you feel and I cannot feel, which you cannot explain nor describe, and
+which, after all, is but a whim of the fancy, as one man loves sour
+drink and another sweet?'
+
+'Do you think that love is nothing but a whim of the fancy?' asked
+Khaled bitterly.
+
+'What else can it be? Would you love me if you were blind?'
+
+'Yes.'
+
+'And if you were deaf?'
+
+'Yes.'
+
+'And if you could not touch my face with your hands, nor kiss me with
+your lips?'
+
+'Yes.'
+
+Zehowah laughed.
+
+'Then love is indeed a fancy. For if you could not see me, nor touch me,
+nor hear me, what would remain to you but an empty thought?'
+
+'Have I seen you, or touched you, or heard your voice for these two
+months and a half?' asked Khaled. 'Yet I have loved you as much during
+all that time.'
+
+'You mean that you have thought of me, as I have thought of you, by the
+memory of what was not fancy, but reality. Would you dispute with me,
+Khaled? You will find me subtle.'
+
+'There is more wit in my arm than in my head,' Khaled answered, 'and it
+is not easy for a man to persuade a woman.'
+
+'It is very easy, provided that the man have reason on his side. But
+where are the treasures you have brought back, the slaves and the rich
+spoils? I would gladly see some of them, for the messengers you sent
+told great tales of the riches of Hail.'
+
+'To-morrow they will be brought into the city. Your father has remained
+feasting in the gardens towards Dereyiyah, and the whole army with him.
+I rode hither alone.'
+
+'Why did you not remain too?'
+
+'Because that whim of the fancy which I call love brought me back,'
+Khaled answered.
+
+'Then I am glad you love me,' said Zehowah. 'For I am glad you came
+quickly.'
+
+'Are you truly glad?'
+
+'I was very tired of my women,' she answered. 'I am sorry you have
+brought nothing with you. Are there any among the captives who are
+beautiful?'
+
+'There is one, a present sent lately to the Sultan of Shammar. She is
+very beautiful, and unlike all the rest. Your father is much pleased
+with her, and will perhaps marry her.'
+
+'Of what kind is her beauty?' asked Zehowah.
+
+'She is as white as milk, her eyes are twin sapphires, her mouth is a
+rose, her hair is like gold reddened in fire.'
+
+Zehowah was silent for a while, and twisted a string of musk-beads round
+her fingers.
+
+'The others are all Arabian women,' Khaled said at last.
+
+'Why did you not keep the beautiful one for yourself?' asked Zehowah,
+suddenly throwing aside her beads and looking at him curiously. 'Surely
+you, who have borne the brunt of the war, might have chosen for yourself
+what pleased you best.'
+
+Khaled looked at her in great astonishment.
+
+'Have I not married Zehowah? Would you have me take another wife?'
+
+'Why not? Is it not lawful for a man to take four wives at one time? And
+this woman might have loved you, as you desire to be loved.'
+
+'Would it be nothing to you, if I took her?'
+
+'Nothing. I am the King's daughter. I shall always be first in the
+house. I say, she might love you. Then you would be satisfied.'
+
+'Zehowah, Zehowah!' cried Khaled. 'Is love a piece of gold, that it
+matters not whence it be, so long as a man has it in his own possession?
+Or is it wood of the 'Ood tree that one may buy it and bring it home and
+make the whole house fragrant with it? Is a man's heart like his belly,
+which is alike satisfied with different kinds of food?'
+
+'He who eats, knows by the taste whether he eats Persian mutton, or
+barley bread, or only broiled locusts. But a man who believes that he is
+loved, knows that he is loved, so far as knowing is possible, and must
+be satisfied, if to be loved is what he desires.'
+
+'That may be true. But he who desires bread is not satisfied with
+locusts. It is your love which I would have. Not the love of another.'
+
+'You are like a man who hopes to get by argument a sum of money from one
+who has nothing,' said Zehowah, smiling at him. 'Can you make gold grow
+in the purse of a beggar? Or can you cause a ghada bush to bear dates by
+reasoning with it? Your heart is a palm tree, but mine is a ghada bush.'
+
+'Yet an angel may touch the ghada and it will bear fruit,' answered
+Khaled, for he remembered how the angel had turned dry leaves into rich
+garments for him to wear.
+
+'Doubtless, Allah can do all things. But where is the angel? Hear me,
+Khaled, for I speak very reasonably, as a wife should speak to her
+husband, who is her lord and master. My lord is not satisfied with me
+and desires something of me which is not mine to give. Let him take
+another wife beside me. I have given my lord a kingdom and great riches
+and power. Let him take another wife now, who will give him this fancy
+of his thoughts for which he yearns, though she have no other
+possessions. In this way my lord will be satisfied.'
+
+Khaled listened sadly to what Zehowah said, and he began to despair,
+for he was not subtle in argument nor eloquent in speech. The reason of
+this was plain. In the days when he had been one of the genii he had
+wandered over the whole earth and had heard the eloquence of all nations
+and the arguments of all philosophers, learning therefrom that deeds are
+no part of words, and that they who would be believed must speak little
+and do much. But the genii possess no insight into the hearts of women.
+
+Khaled reflected also that the length of life granted him was uncertain,
+and that he had already spent two months and a half at a distance from
+Zehowah in accomplishing the conquest whereby he had hoped to win her
+love. But since this had utterly failed, he cast about in his mind for
+some new deed to do, which could be done without leaving her even for a
+short time. But he was troubled by her indifference, and most of all by
+her proposing that he should take another wife. As he thought of this,
+he was filled with horror, and he understood that he loved Zehowah more
+than he had supposed, since he could not bear to think of setting
+another woman beside her.
+
+Then his face became very dark and his eyes were like camp fires far off
+in the desert, and he took Zehowah's wrist in his hand, holding it
+tightly as though he would not let it go. As his heart grew hot in his
+breast, words came to his lips unawares like the speech of a man in a
+dream, and he heard his own voice as it were from a distance.
+
+'I will not take another,' he said. 'What is the love of any other woman
+to me? It is as dust in the throat of a man thirsting for water. Show me
+a woman who loves me. Her face shall be but a cold mirror in which the
+image of a fire is reflected without warmth, her soft words shall be to
+me as the screaming of a parrot, her touch a thorn and her lips ashes.
+What is it to me if all the women of the world love me? Kindle a fire
+and burn them before me, for I care not. Let them perish all together,
+for I shall not know that they are gone. I love you and not another.
+Shall it profit a man to fill his mouth with dust, though it be the dust
+of gold mingled with precious stones, when he desires water? Or shall he
+be warmed in winter by the reflection of a fire in a mirror? By Allah! I
+want neither the wealth of Hail, nor a wife with red hair. Let them take
+gold who do not ask for love. I want but one thing, and Zehowah alone
+can give it to me. Wallah! My heart burns. But I would give it to be
+burned for ever in hell if I might get your love now. This I ask. This
+only I desire. For this I will suffer and for this I am ready to die
+before my time.'
+
+Zehowah was silent, looking at him with wonder, and yet not altogether
+pleased. She saw that she could not understand him, though she did as
+well as she could.
+
+'Has he not all that the heart of man can desire?' she thought. 'Am I
+not young and beautiful, and possessed of many jewels and treasures?
+Have I not given him wealth and power, and has he not with his own hand
+got the victory over his enemies and mine? And yet he is not satisfied.
+Surely, he is too hard to please.'
+
+But he, reading her thoughts from her face, continued in his speech.
+
+'What is all the happiness of the world without love?' he asked. 'It is
+like a banquet in which many rich viands are served, but the guests
+cannot eat them because there is no salt in any of them. And what is a
+beautiful woman without love? She is like a garden in which there are
+all kinds of rare flowers, and much grass, and deep shade, but in which
+a man cannot live, because nothing grows there which he can eat when he
+is hungry.'
+
+'Truly,' said Zehowah, 'that is what you will make of your life. For
+there is a garden called Irem, planted in a secret place of the deserts
+about Aden, by Sheddad the son of Ad, who desired to outdo the gardens
+of paradise, and was destroyed for his impiety with all his people, by
+the hand of Allah. But a certain man named Abdullah ibn Kelabah was
+searching in the desert for a lost camel, and came unawares upon this
+place. There were fruits and water there and all that a man could wish
+for, and Abdullah dwelt in peace and plenty, praising Allah. Then on a
+certain day he desired to eat an onion, and finding none anywhere, he
+went out, intending to obtain one, and having eaten it, to return
+immediately. But though he searched the desert many months he was never
+able to find the garden again. Wherefore it is said that Abdullah ibn
+Kelabah lost the earthly paradise of Irem for a mouthful of onion.'
+
+'How can you understand me if you do not love me?' asked Khaled. 'Love
+has its own language, and when two love they understand each the other's
+words. But when the one loves and the other loves not, they are
+strangers, though they be man and wife; or they are like Persians and
+Arabians not understanding either the other's speech, or that if the
+wife cries "father," her husband will bring her a cup of water supposing
+her to be thirsty. For those who would speak one language must be of one
+heart, and they who would be of one heart must love each other.'
+
+Then Zehowah sighed and leaned against the cushions by the wall and drew
+her hand away from Khaled.
+
+'What is it?' she asked in a low voice. 'What is it you would have?' But
+though she had already asked the question many times she found no
+answer, and none that he was able to give could enlighten her darkness.
+
+'It is the spark that kindles the flame,' Khaled said, and he pointed
+to the lights that hung in the room. 'Your beauty is like that of a
+cunningly designed lamp, inlaid with gold and silver and covered with
+rich ornament, which is seen by day. But there is no light within, and
+it is cold, though it be full of oil and the wick be ready.'
+
+Zehowah turned towards him somewhat impatiently.
+
+'And you are as one who would kindle the flame with words, having no
+torch,' she answered.
+
+'Have I not done deeds also?' asked Khaled. 'Or have I spoken much, that
+you should reproach me? Surely I have slain more of your enemies than I
+have spoken words to you to-night.'
+
+'But have I asked for an offering of blood, or a marriage dower of dead
+bodies?'
+
+Khaled was silent, for he was bitterly disappointed, and as his eyes
+fell upon the sword which hung on the wall, he felt that he could almost
+have taken it and made an end of Zehowah for very anger that she would
+not love him. Had he not gone out for her into the raging heat of
+summer, and borne the burden of a great war, and destroyed a nation and
+taken a city? Moreover, if neither words nor deeds could gain her love,
+what means remained to him to try?
+
+All through the night Khaled pondered, calling up all that he had seen
+in the world in former times, until he fell asleep at last, wearied in
+heart.
+
+Very early in the morning one of Zehowah's women came and stood by his
+bed and waked him. He could see that her face was pale in the dawn, her
+limbs trembled and her voice was uncertain.
+
+'Arise, my lord!' she said. 'A messenger has come from the army with
+evil news, and stands waiting in the court.'
+
+Khaled sprang up, and Zehowah awoke also.
+
+'What is this message?' he asked hastily.
+
+But the woman threw herself upon the floor and covered her face, as
+though begging forgiveness because she brought evil tidings.
+
+'Speak!' said Zehowah. 'What is it?'
+
+'Our lord the Sultan is dead!' cried the woman, and she broke out into
+weeping and crying and would say nothing more.
+
+But when Zehowah heard that her father was dead, she sat down upon the
+floor and beat her breast and tore her hair, and wailed and wept, while
+all the women of the harem came and gathered round her and joined in her
+mourning, so that the whole palace was filled with the noise of their
+lamentations.
+
+Khaled went out into the court and questioned the messenger, who told
+him that the Sultan had held a great feast in the evening in the gardens
+of Dereyiyah, having with him the woman Almasta and the other captive
+women, and being served by black slaves. But, suddenly, in the night,
+when most of the soldiers were already asleep, there had been a great
+cry, and the slaves and women had come running from the tent, crying
+that the Sultan was dead. This was true, and the Jewish physician who
+had gone out with his master declared that he had died from an access of
+humours to the head, brought on by a surfeit of sweetmeats, there being
+at the time an evil conjunction of Zoharah and Al Marech in square
+aspect to the moon and in the house of death.
+
+Khaled therefore mounted his bay mare and rode quickly out to Dereyiyah,
+where he found that the news was true, and the women were already
+preparing the Sultan's body for burial. Having ordered the mourning, and
+commanded the army to prepare for the return to the city, Khaled set out
+with the funeral procession; and when he reached the walls of Riad he
+turned to the left and passed round to the north-east side of the city
+where the burial-ground is situated. Here he laid the body of his
+father-in-law in the tomb which the latter had prepared for himself
+during his lifetime, and afterwards, dismissing the mourners, he went
+back into the city to the palace.
+
+After the days of mourning were accomplished, the will of the Sultan was
+made known, though indeed the people were well acquainted with it
+already. By his will Khaled succeeded to the sovereignty of the kingdom
+of Nejed and to all the riches and treasures which the Sultan had
+accumulated during his lifetime. But the people received the
+announcement with acclamations and much joy, followed by a great
+feasting, for which innumerable camels were slain. Khaled also called
+all the chief officers and courtiers to a banquet and addressed them in
+a few words, according to his manner.
+
+'Men of Nejed,' he said, 'it has pleased Allah to remove to the
+companionship of the faithful our master the Sultan, my revered
+father-in-law, upon whom be peace, and to set me up among you as King in
+his stead, being the husband of his only daughter, which you all know.
+As for the past, you know me; but if I have wronged any man let him
+declare it and I will make reparation. And if not, let none complain
+hereafter. But as for the future I will be a just ruler so long as I
+live, and will lead the men of Nejed to war, when there is war, and will
+divide the spoil fairly; and in peace I will not oppress the people with
+taxes nor change the just and good laws of the kingdom. And now the
+feast is prepared. Sit down cheerfully, and may Allah give us both the
+appetite to enjoy and the strength to digest all the good things which
+shall be set before us.'
+
+But Khaled himself ate sparingly, for his heart was heavy, and when they
+had feasted and drunk treng juice and heard music, he retired to the
+harem, where he found Zehowah sitting with Almasta, the Georgian woman,
+there being no other women present in the room. He was surprised when he
+saw Almasta, though he knew that the captive women had been lodged in
+the palace, the distribution of the spoil from the war having been put
+off by the mourning for the Sultan.
+
+When Almasta heard him enter, she looked up quickly and a bright colour
+rose in her face, as when the juice of a pomegranate is poured into
+milk, and disappeared again as the false dawn before morning, leaving no
+trace. Khaled sat down.
+
+'Is not this the woman of whom you spoke?' Zehowah asked. 'I knew her
+from the rest by her red hair.'
+
+'This is the woman. Your father would have taken her for his wife. But
+Allah has disposed otherwise.'
+
+'She is beautiful. She is worthy to be a king's wife,' said Zehowah.
+
+'The Sultan?' asked Almasta, for she hardly understood. Her face turned
+as white as bone bleached by the sun, and her fingers trembled, while
+her eyes were cast down.
+
+Zehowah looked at Khaled and laughed.
+
+'See how she trembles and turns pale before you,' she said. 'And a
+little while ago her face was red. You have found a torch wherewith to
+kindle this lamp, and a breath that can extinguish it.'
+
+'I do not know,' Khaled answered. But he looked attentively at Almasta
+and remained silent for some time. 'It is now necessary to divide the
+spoils of the war,' he said at last, 'and to bestow such of these women
+as you do not wish to keep upon the most deserving of the officers.'
+
+'My lord will surely take the fairest for himself, since she loves him,'
+said Zehowah, again laughing, but somewhat bitterly.
+
+'May my tongue be cloven and my eyes be put out, may my hands wither at
+the wrists and my feet fall from my ankles, if I ever take any wife but
+you,' said Khaled. 'Yallah! So be it.'
+
+When Zehowah heard him say this, even while Almasta's face was unveiled
+before him, she understood that he was greatly in earnest.
+
+'Let me keep her for my handmaid,' she said at last.
+
+'Is she mine that you need ask me? But it will be wiser to give her to
+Abdul Kerim, the sheikh of the horsemen. I have promised that the spoil
+should be fairly divided, and though few have seen this woman many have
+heard of her beauty. And besides, she would weary you, for she cannot
+talk in Arabian, nor does she seem quick to learn. Abdul Kerim has the
+first right, since Allah has removed your father, upon whom be peace.'
+
+'Your words are my laws,' answered Zehowah obediently. 'And, indeed, it
+may be that you are right, for I believe she can neither dance nor sing,
+nor play upon any musical instrument. She would certainly weary me after
+a time, as you say. Give her therefore to Abdul Kerim for his share.'
+
+They then made Almasta understand that she was to be given to the sheikh
+of the horsemen; but when she had understood she shook her head and
+smiled, though at first she said nothing, so that Khaled and Zehowah
+wondered whether she had comprehended what they had told her.
+
+'Do you understand what we have told you?' asked Zehowah, who was
+diverted by her ignorance of the Arabic language.
+
+'I understand.'
+
+'And are you not pleased that you are to be the wife of Abdul Kerim, who
+is a rich man and still young?'
+
+'I was to be the Sultan's wife,' said Almasta, with difficulty, looking
+at Khaled. 'You told me so.'
+
+'The Sultan is dead,' Khaled answered.
+
+'Who is the Sultan now?' she asked.
+
+'Khaled is the Sultan,' said Zehowah.
+
+'You said that I should be the Sultan's wife,' Almasta repeated.
+
+'Doubtless, I said so,' Khaled replied. 'But Allah has ordered it
+otherwise.'
+
+Almasta again smiled and shook her head.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+On the following day Khaled made a division of the spoils, and gave
+Almasta to Abdul Kerim, enjoining upon him to marry her, since he had
+but two wives and could do so lawfully. The sheikh of the horsemen was
+glad, for he had heard much of Almasta's beauty, and he loved fair
+women, being of a fierce temper and not more than forty years old. So he
+called his friends to the marriage feast that same day, and Zehowah sent
+Almasta in a litter to his harem, giving her also numerous rich garments
+by way of a dower, but which in fact were due to Abdul Kerim as his
+share of the booty. So the men feasted, with music, until the evening,
+when the bridegroom retired to the harem and the Kadi came and read the
+contract; after which Abdul Kerim sat down while Almasta was brought
+before him in various dresses, one after the other, as is customary.
+
+When the women were all gone away, Abdul Kerim began to talk to his
+wife, but she only laughed and said the few words she knew, not knowing
+what he said, and presently she began to sing to him in a low voice, in
+her own language. Her voice was very clear and quite different from that
+of the Arabian women whom Abdul had heard, and the tones vibrated with
+great passion and sweetness, so that he was enchanted and listened, as
+in a dream, while his head rested against Almasta's knee. She continued
+to sing in such a manner that his soul was transported with delight; and
+at last, as the sound soothed him, he fell into a gentle sleep.
+
+Almasta, still singing softly, loosened his vest, touching him so gently
+that he did not wake. She then drew out of one of the three tresses of
+her hair a fine steel needle, extremely long and sharp, having at one
+end a small wooden ball for a handle, and while she sang, she thrust it
+very quickly into his breast to its full length, so that it pierced his
+heart and he died instantly. But she continued to sing, lest any of the
+women should be listening from a distance. Presently she withdrew the
+needle so slowly that not a drop of blood followed it, and having made
+it pass thrice through the carpet she restored it to her hair, after
+which she fastened the dead man's vest again, so that nothing was
+disarranged. She sang on, after this for some time, and then after a
+short silence she sprang up from the couch, uttering loud screams and
+lamentations and beating her breast violently.
+
+The women of the harem came in quickly, and when they saw that their
+master was dead, they sat down with Almasta and wept with her, for as he
+lay dead there was no mark of any violence nor any sign whereby it could
+be told that he had not died naturally.
+
+When Khaled heard that Abdul Kerim was dead, he was much grieved at
+heart, for the man had been brave and had been often at his right hand
+in battle. But the news being brought to him at dawn when he awoke, he
+immediately sent the Jewish physician of the court to ascertain if
+possible the cause of the sudden death. The physician made careful
+examination of the body, and having purified himself returned to Khaled
+to give an account.
+
+'I have executed my lord's orders with scrupulous exactness,' he said,
+'and I find that without doubt the sheikh of the horsemen died suddenly
+by an access of humours to the heart, the sun being at that time in the
+Nadir, for he died about midnight, and being moreover in evil
+conjunction with the Dragon's Tail in the Heart of the Lion, and not yet
+far from the square aspect of Al Marech which caused the death of his
+majesty the late Sultan, upon whom be peace.'
+
+But Khaled was thoughtful, for he reflected that this was the second
+time that a man had died suddenly when he was about to be Almasta's
+husband, and he remembered, how she had attempted to kill the Sultan of
+Hail, and had ultimately brought about his death.
+
+'Have you examined the dead man as minutely as you have observed the
+stars?' he inquired. 'Is there no mark of violence upon him, nor of
+poison, nor of strangling?'
+
+'There is no mark. By Allah! I speak truth. My lord may see for himself,
+for the man is not yet buried.'
+
+'Am I a jackal, that I should sniff at dead bodies?' asked Khaled. 'Go
+in peace.'
+
+The physician withdrew, for he saw that Khaled was displeased, and he
+was himself as much surprised as any one by the death of Abdul Kerim, a
+man lean and strong, not given to surfeiting and in the prime of health.
+
+'Min Allah!' he said as he departed. 'We are in the hand of the Lord,
+who knoweth our rising up and our lying down. It is possible that if I
+had seen this man at the moment of death, or a little before, I might
+have discovered the nature of his disease, for I could have talked with
+him and questioned him.'
+
+But Khaled went in and talked with Zehowah. She was greatly astonished
+when she heard that Almasta's husband was dead, but she was satisfied
+with the answer of the Jewish physician, who enjoyed great reputation
+and was believed to be at that time the wisest man in Arabia.
+
+'Give her back to me, to be one of my women,' said she. 'It is not
+written that she should marry a man of Nejed, unless you will take her
+yourself.'
+
+But Khaled bent his brow angrily and his eyes glowed like the coals of a
+camp fire which is almost extinguished, when the night wind blows
+suddenly over the ashes.
+
+'I have spoken,' he said.
+
+'And I have heard,' she answered. 'Let there be an end. But give me this
+woman to divert me with her broken speech.'
+
+'I fear she will do you an injury of which you may not live,' said
+Khaled.
+
+'What injury can she do me?' asked Zehowah in astonishment, not
+understanding him.
+
+'She asked of your father the head of the Sultan of Hail, whom she
+hated. And your father gave it to her.'
+
+'Peace be upon him!' exclaimed Zehowah piously.
+
+'Upon him peace. And when he would have married her, he died suddenly at
+the feasting. And now this Abdul Kerim, who was to have been her
+husband, is dead also, without sign, in the night, as a man stung by a
+serpent in his sleep. These are strange doings.'
+
+'If you think she has done evil, let her be put to death,' said Zehowah.
+'But the physician found no mark upon Abdul Kerim. By the hand of Allah
+he was taken.'
+
+'Doubtless his fate was about his neck. But it is strange.'
+
+Zehowah looked at Khaled in silence, but presently she smiled and laid
+her hand upon his.
+
+'This woman loves you with her whole soul,' she said. 'You think that
+she has slain Abdul Kerim by secret arts, in the hope that she may marry
+you.'
+
+'And your father also.'
+
+Then they were both silent, and Zehowah covered her face, since she
+could not prevent tears from falling when she thought of her father,
+whom she had loved.
+
+'If this be so,' she said after a long time, 'let the woman die
+immediately.'
+
+'It is necessary to be just,' Khaled answered. 'I will put no one to
+death without witnesses, not even a captive woman, who is certainly an
+unbeliever at heart. Has any one seen her do these deeds, or does any
+one know by what means a man may be slain in his sleep, or at a feast,
+so that no mark is left upon his body? At Dereyiyah your father was
+alone with her in the inner part of the tent, and she was singing to him
+that he might sleep. For I have made inquiry. And when Abdul Kerim died
+he was also alone with her. I cannot understand these things. But you
+are a woman and subtle. It may be that you can see what is too dark for
+me.'
+
+'It may be. Therefore give her back to me, and I will lay a trap for
+her, so that she will betray herself if she has really done evil. And
+when we have convicted her by her own words she shall die.'
+
+'Are you not afraid, Zehowah?'
+
+'Can I change my destiny? If my hour is come, I shall die of a fever, or
+of a cold, whether she be with me or not. But if my years are not full,
+she cannot hurt me.'
+
+'This is undoubtedly true,' answered Khaled, who could find nothing to
+say. 'But I will first question the woman myself.'
+
+So he sent slaves with a litter to bring Almasta from the house of
+mourning to the palace, and when she was come he sent out all the other
+women and remained alone with her and Zehowah, making her sit down
+before him so that he could see her face. Her cheeks were pale, for she
+had not slept, having been occupied in weeping and lamentation during
+the whole night, and her eyes moved restlessly as those of a person
+distracted with grief.
+
+Khaled then drew his sword and laid it across his feet as he sat and
+looked fixedly at Almasta.
+
+'If you do not speak the truth,' he said, 'I will cut off your head with
+my own hand. Allah is witness.'
+
+When Almasta saw the drawn sword, her face grew whiter than before, and
+for some moments she seemed not able to breathe. But suddenly she began
+to beat her breast, and broke out into loud wailings, rocking herself to
+and fro as she sat on the carpet.
+
+'My husband is dead!' she cried. 'He was young; he was beautiful! He is
+dead! Wah! Wah! my husband is dead! Kill me too!'
+
+Khaled looked at Zehowah, but she said nothing, though she watched
+Almasta attentively. Then Khaled spoke to the woman again.
+
+'Make an end of lamenting for the present,' he said. 'It has pleased
+Allah to take your husband to the fellowship of the faithful. Peace be
+upon him. Tell us in what manner he died, and what words he spoke when
+he felt his end approaching, for he was my good friend and I wish to
+know all.'
+
+Almasta either did not understand or made a pretence of not
+understanding, but when she heard Khaled's words she ceased from wailing
+and sobbed silently, beating her breast from time to time.
+
+'How did he die?' Khaled asked in a stern voice.
+
+'He was asleep. He died,' replied Almasta in broken tones.
+
+'You will get no other answer,' said Zehowah. 'She cannot speak our
+tongue.'
+
+'Is there no woman among them all who can talk this woman's language?'
+asked Khaled with impatience, for he saw how useless it was to question
+her.
+
+'There is no one. I have inquired. Leave her with me, and if there is
+anything to be known, I will try to find it out.'
+
+So Khaled went away and Zehowah endeavoured to soothe Almasta and make
+her talk in her broken words. But the woman made as though she would not
+be comforted, and went and sat apart upon the stone floor where there
+was no carpet, rocking to and fro, and wailing in a low voice. Zehowah
+understood that whatever the truth might be Almasta was determined to
+express her sorrow in the customary way, and that it would be better to
+leave her alone.
+
+For seven days she sat thus apart, covering her head and mourning, and
+refusing to speak with any one, so that all the women supposed her to be
+indeed distracted with grief at the death of Abdul Kerim. And each day
+Khaled inquired of his wife whether she had yet learned anything, and
+received the same answer. But in the meantime he was occupied with his
+own thoughts, as well as with the affairs of the kingdom, though the
+latter were as nothing in his mind compared with the workings of his
+heart when he thought of Zehowah.
+
+It chanced one evening that Khaled was riding among the gardens without
+the city, attended only by a few horsemen, for he was simple in all his
+ways and liked little to have a great throng of attendants about him. So
+he rode alone, while the horsemen followed at a distance.
+
+'Was ever a man, or an angel, so placed in the world as I am placed?' he
+thought. 'How much better would it have been had I never seen Zehowah,
+and if I had never slain the Indian prince. For I should still have
+been with my fellows, the genii, from whom I am now cut off, and at
+least I should have lived until the day of the resurrection. But now my
+horse may stumble and fall, and my neck may be broken, and there is no
+hereafter. Or I may die in my sleep, or be killed in my sleep, and there
+will be no resurrection for me, nor any more life, anywhere in earth or
+heaven. For Zehowah will never love me. Was ever a man so placed? And I
+am ashamed to complain to her any more, for she is a good wife, obedient
+and careful of my wants, and beautiful as the moon at the full, rising
+amidst palm trees, besides being very wise and subtle. How can I
+complain? Has she not given me herself, whom I desired, and a great
+kingdom which, indeed, I did not desire, but which no man can despise as
+a gift? Yet I am burned up within, and my heart is melting as a piece of
+frankincense laid upon coals in an empty chamber, when no man cares for
+its sweet savour. Surely, I am the most wretched of mankind. Oh, that
+the angel who made garments for me of a ghada bush, and a bay mare of a
+locust, would come down and lay his hand upon Zehowah's breast and make
+a living heart of the stone which Allah has set in its place!'
+
+So he rode slowly on, reasoning as he had often reasoned before, and
+reaching the same conclusion in all his argument, which availed him
+nothing. But suddenly, as the sun went down, a new thought entered his
+mind and gave him a little hope.
+
+'The sun is gone down,' he said to himself. 'But Allah has not destroyed
+the sun. It will rise in the east to-morrow when the white cock crows in
+the first heaven. Many things have being, which the sight of man cannot
+see. It may be that although I see no signs of love in the heaven of
+Zehowah's eyes, yet love is already there and will before long rise as
+the sun and illuminate my darkness. For I am not subtle as the evil
+genii are, but I must see very clearly before I am able to distinguish.'
+
+He rode back into the city, planning how he might surprise Zehowah and
+obtain from her unawares some proof that she indeed loved him. To this
+end he entered the palace by a secret gate, covering his garments with
+his aba, and his head with the kefiyeh he wore, in order to disguise
+himself from the slaves and the soldiers whom he met on his way to the
+harem. He passed on towards Zehowah's apartment by an unlighted passage
+not generally used, and hid himself in a niche of the wall close to the
+open door, from which he could see all that happened, and hear what was
+said.
+
+Zehowah was seated in her accustomed place and Almasta was beside her.
+Khaled could watch their faces by the light of the hanging lamps, as the
+two women talked together.
+
+'You must put aside all mourning now,' Zehowah was saying. 'For I will
+find another husband for you.'
+
+'Another husband?' Almasta smiled and shook her head.
+
+'Yes, there are other goodly men in Riad, though Abdul Kerim was of the
+goodliest, as all say who knew him. He was the Sultan's friend, but he
+was more soldier than courtier. He deserved a better death.'
+
+'Abdul Kerim died in peace. He was asleep.' Almasta smiled still, but
+more sadly, and her eyes were cast down.
+
+'He died in peace,' Zehowah repeated, watching her narrowly. 'But it is
+better to die in battle by the enemy's hand. Such a man, falling in the
+front of the fight for the true faith, enters immediately into paradise,
+to dwell for ever under the perpetual shade of the tree Sedrat, and
+neither blackness nor shame shall cover his face. There the rivers flow
+with milk and with clarified honey, and he shall rest on a couch covered
+with thick silk embroidered with gold, and shall possess seventy
+beautiful virgins whose eyes are blacker than mine and their skin whiter
+than yours, having colour like rubies and pearls, and their voices like
+the song of nightingales in Ajjem, of which travellers tell. These are
+the rewards of the true believer as set forth in Al Koran by our
+prophet, upon whom peace. A man slain in battle for the faith enters
+directly into the possession of all this, but unbelievers shall be
+taken by the forelock and the heels and cast into hell, to drink boiling
+molten brass, as a thirsty camel drinks clear water.'
+
+Almasta understood very little of what Zehowah said, but she smiled,
+nevertheless, catching the meaning of some of the words.
+
+'The Sultan Khaled loves black eyes,' she said. 'He will go to
+paradise.'
+
+'Doubtless, he will quench his thirst in the incorruptible milk of
+heavenly rivers,' Zehowah replied. 'He is the chief of the brave, the
+light of the faith and the burning torch of righteousness. Otherwise
+Allah would not have chosen him to rule. But I spoke of Abdul Kerim.'
+
+'He died in peace,' said Almasta the second time, and again looking
+down.
+
+'I do not know how he died,' Zehowah answered, looking steadily at the
+woman's face. 'It was a great misfortune for you. Do you understand? I
+am very sorry for you. You would have been happy with Abdul Kerim.'
+
+'I mourn for him,' Almasta said, not raising her eyes.
+
+'It is natural and right. Doubtless you loved him as soon as you saw
+him.'
+
+Almasta glanced quickly at Zehowah, as though suspecting a hidden
+meaning in the words, and for a moment each of the women looked into
+the other's eyes, but Zehowah saw nothing. For a wise man has truly said
+that one may see into the depths of black eyes as into a deep well, but
+that blue eyes are like the sea of Oman in winter, sparkling in the sun
+as a plain of blue sand, but underneath more unfathomable than the
+desert.
+
+Almasta was too wise and deceitful to let the silence last. So when she
+had looked at Zehowah and understood, she smiled somewhat sorrowfully
+and spoke.
+
+'I could have loved him,' she said. 'I desire no husband now.'
+
+'That is not true,' Zehowah answered quickly. 'You wish to marry Khaled,
+and that is the reason why you killed Abdul Kerim.'
+
+Almasta started as a camel struck by a flight of locusts.
+
+'What is this lie?' she cried out with indignation. 'Who has told you
+this lie?' But her face was as grey as a stone, and her lips trembled.
+
+'You probably killed him by magic arts learned in your own country,'
+said Zehowah quietly. 'Do not be afraid. We are alone, and no one can
+hear us. Tell me how you killed him. Truly it was very skilful of you,
+since the physician, who is the wisest man in Arabia, could not tell how
+it was done.'
+
+But Almasta began to beat her breast and to make oaths and
+asseverations in her own language, which Zehowah could not understand.
+
+'If you will tell me how you did it, I will give you a rich gift,'
+Zehowah continued.
+
+But so much the more Almasta cried out, stretching her hands upwards and
+speaking incomprehensible words. So Zehowah waited until she became
+quiet again.
+
+'It may be that Khaled will marry you, if you will tell me your secret,'
+Zehowah said, after a time.
+
+Then Almasta's cheek burned and she bent down her eyes.
+
+'Will you tell me how to kill a man and leave no trace?' asked Zehowah,
+still pressing her. 'Look at this pearl. Is it not beautiful? See how
+well it looks upon your hair. It is as the leaf of a white rose upon a
+river of red gold. And on your neck--you cannot see it yourself--it is
+like the full moon hanging upon a milky cloud. Khaled would give you
+many pearls like this, if he married you. Will you not tell me?'
+
+'Whom do you wish to kill?' Almasta asked, very suddenly. But Zehowah
+was unmoved.
+
+'It may be that I have a private enemy,' she said. 'Perhaps there is one
+who disturbs me, against whom I plot in the night, but can find no way
+of ridding myself of him. A woman might give much to destroy such a
+one.'
+
+'Khaled will kill your enemies. He loves you. He will kill all whom you
+hate.'
+
+'You make progress. You speak our language better,' said Zehowah,
+laughing a little. 'You will soon be able to tell the Sultan that you
+love him, as well as I could myself.'
+
+'But you do not love him,' Almasta answered boldly.
+
+Zehowah bent her brows so that they met between her eyes as the grip of
+a bow. Then Khaled's heart leaped in his breast, for he saw that she was
+angry with the woman, and he supposed it was because she secretly loved
+him. But he held his breath lest even his breathing should betray him.
+
+'The portion of fools is fire,' said Zehowah, not deigning to give any
+other answer. For she was a king's daughter and Almasta a bought slave,
+though Khaled had taken her in war.
+
+'Be merciful!' exclaimed Almasta, in humble tones. 'I am your handmaid,
+and I speak Arabic badly.'
+
+'You speak with exceeding clearness when it pleases you.'
+
+'Indeed I cannot talk in your language, for it is not long since I came
+into Arabia.'
+
+'We will have you taught, for we will give you a husband who will teach
+you with sticks. There is a certain hunchback, having one eye and marked
+with the smallpox, whose fists are as the feet of an old camel. He will
+be a good husband for you and will teach you the Arabic language, and
+your skin shall be dissolved but your mind will be enlightened thereby.'
+
+'Be merciful! I desire no husband.'
+
+'It is good that a woman should marry, even though the bridegroom be a
+hunchback. But if you will tell me your secret I will give you a better
+husband and forgive you.'
+
+'There is no secret! I have killed no one!' cried Almasta. 'Who has told
+you the lie?'
+
+'And moreover,' continued Zehowah, not regarding her protestations,
+'there are other ways of learning secrets, besides by kindness; such,
+for instance, as sticks, and hot irons, and hunger and thirst in a
+prison where there are reptiles and poisonous spiders, besides many
+other things with which I have no doubt the slaves of the palace are
+acquainted. It is better that you should tell your secret and be happy.'
+
+'There is no secret,' Almasta repeated, and she would say nothing else,
+for she did not trust Zehowah and feared a cruel death if she told the
+truth.
+
+But Zehowah wearied of the contest at last, being by no means sure that
+the woman had really done any evil, and having no intention of using any
+violent means such as she had suggested. For she was as just as she was
+wise and would have no one suffer wrongly. Khaled, indeed, cared little
+for the pain of others, having seen much blood shed in war, and would
+have caused Almasta to be tortured if Zehowah had desired it. But she
+did not, preferring to wait and see whether she could not entrap the
+slave into a confession.
+
+Khaled now came out of his hiding-place into the room and advanced
+towards Zehowah, who remained sitting upon the carpet, while Almasta
+rose and made a respectful salutation. But neither of the women knew
+that he had been hidden in the niche. Zehowah did not seem surprised,
+but Almasta's face was white and her eyes were cast down, though indeed
+Khaled wished that it had been otherwise. He was encouraged, however, by
+what he had seen, for Zehowah had certainly been angry with Almasta on
+his account, and he dismissed the latter that he might be alone with his
+wife.
+
+'You are wise, Zehowah,' he said, 'and gifted with much insight, but you
+will learn nothing from this woman, though you talk with her a whole
+year. For she suspects you and is guarded in her speech and manner. I
+was standing by the doorway a long time. You did not see me, but I heard
+all that you said.'
+
+'Why did you hide yourself?' Zehowah asked, looking at him curiously.
+
+'In order to listen,' he answered. 'And I heard something and saw
+something which pleased me. For when she said that you did not love me,
+you were angry.'
+
+'Did that please you? You are more easily pleased than I had thought.
+Shall I bear such things from a slave? How is it her business whether I
+love or not?'
+
+'But you were angry,' Khaled repeated, vainly hoping that she would say
+more, yet not wishing to press her too far, lest she should say again
+that she did not love him.
+
+She, however, said nothing in reply, but busied herself in taking his
+kefiyeh from his head and his sword from his side that he might be at
+ease. He rested against the cushions and drank of the cool drink she
+offered him.
+
+'This woman, Almasta, is exceedingly beautiful,' he said at last. 'It
+would indeed be a pity that a slave of such value should go into the
+possession of another so that we could see her no more. It is best that
+you should keep her with you.'
+
+Zehowah laughed a little, as she sat down beside him and began to play
+with her beads.
+
+'This is what I have always said,' she answered. 'I will keep her with
+me.'
+
+'It is better so,' said Khaled.
+
+Then he remained silent in deep thought, having devised a new plan for
+gaining what he most desired. It seemed to him possible that Zehowah
+might be moved by jealousy, if by nothing else; for although he had
+sworn to her, and angrily, that he would never take Almasta for his
+wife, and though nothing could really have prevailed upon him to make
+him do so, yet it would be easy for him to talk to the woman and speak
+to her of her beauty, and appear to take delight in her singing, which
+was more melodious than that of a Persian nightingale. Since she would
+be now permanently established in his harem, nothing would be easier
+than for him to spend many hours in the woman's society. Being a
+simple-minded man the plan seemed to him subtle, and he determined to
+put it into execution without delay. He knew also that Almasta had loved
+him since the first day when she had been brought before him in the
+palace at Hail, and this would make it still more easy to rouse
+Zehowah's jealousy.
+
+Though she had herself advised him to marry Almasta, he did not believe
+that she was greatly in earnest, and he felt assured that if the
+possibility were presented before her, in such a way as to appear
+imminent, she would be deceived by the appearance.
+
+'It is better that she should remain here,' he said after a long time.
+'For we cannot put her to death without evidence of her guilt, and if we
+are obstinate in wishing to give her a husband, we do not know how many
+husbands she may destroy before she is satisfied. She is beautiful, and
+will be an ornament in your kahwah. Indeed I do not know why I sent her
+away just now, when I came in. Let us call her back, that she may sing
+to us some of her own songs.'
+
+Zehowah clapped her hands and Almasta immediately returned, for she had
+indeed been waiting outside the door, endeavouring to hear what was
+said, since she suspected that Khaled would speak of her and ask
+questions. She understood well enough, and often much better than she
+was willing to show, though she could as yet speak but few words of the
+Arabic language.
+
+'Sit at my feet,' said Khaled, 'and sing to me the songs of your own
+people.'
+
+Almasta took a musical instrument from the wall and sat down to sing.
+Her voice, indeed, was of enchanting sweetness, but as for the words of
+her songs, the seven wise men themselves could not have understood a
+syllable of them, seeing that they were neither Arabic nor Persian, nor
+even Greek. Nevertheless, Khaled made a pretence of being much pleased,
+resting his head against the cushions and closing his eyes as though the
+sound soothed him. As for Zehowah, she watched the woman with great
+curiosity, wondering whether it were possible that a creature so fair as
+Almasta could have done the evil deeds of which she was suspected, and
+planning how she might surprise her into a confession of guilt.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+Not many days passed after this, before the women of the harem began to
+whisper among themselves in the passages and outer chambers.
+
+'See,' they said, 'how our master favours this foreign woman, who is in
+all probability a devil from the Persian mountains. Every day he will
+have her to sing to him, and to bring him drink, and to sit at his feet.
+And he has given her several bracelets of gold and a large ruby. Surely
+it will be better for us to flatter her and show her reverence, for if
+not she will before long give us sticks to eat, and we shall mourn our
+folly.'
+
+So they began to exhibit great respect for Almasta, giving her always
+the best seat amongst them and setting aside for her the best portions
+of the mutton, and the whitest of the rice, and the largest of the
+sweetmeats and the mellowest of the old sugar dates, so that Almasta
+fared sumptuously. But though she understood the reason why the women
+treated her so much more kindly than before, she was careful always to
+appear thankful and to speak softly to them, for she feared Zehowah, to
+whom they might speak of her, and who was very powerful with the Sultan.
+She was indeed secretly transported with joy, for she loved Khaled and
+she began to think that before long he would marry her. This was her
+only motive, also, for she was not otherwise ambitious, and though she
+afterwards did many evil deeds, she did them all out of love for him.
+
+Though Khaled was by no means soft-hearted, he could not but pity her
+sometimes, seeing how she was deceived by his kindness, while he was
+only making a pretence of preferring her in order to gain Zehowah's
+love. Often he sat long with closed eyes while she sang to him or played
+softly upon the barbat, and he tried to fancy that the voice and the
+presence were Zehowah's. But her strange language disturbed him, for
+there were sounds in it like the hissing of serpents and like choking,
+which caused him to start suddenly just when her voice was sweetest. For
+the Georgian tongue is barbarous and not like any human speech under the
+sun, resembling by turns the inarticulate warbling of birds, and the
+croaking of ravens, and the noises made by an angry cat. Nevertheless,
+Khaled always made a pretence of being pleased, though he enjoined upon
+Almasta to learn to sing in Arabic.
+
+'For Arabic,' he said to her, 'is the language of paradise, and is
+spoken by all beings among the blessed, from Adam, our father, who waits
+for the resurrection in the first heaven, to the birds that fly among
+the branches of the tree Sedrat, near the throne of Allah, singing
+perpetually the verses of Al Koran. The black-eyed virgins reserved for
+the faithful, also speak only in Arabic.'
+
+'Shall I be of the Hur al Oyun of whom you speak?' Almasta inquired.
+
+'How is it possible that you should be of the black-eyed ones, when your
+eyes are blue?' Khaled asked, laughing. 'And besides, are you not an
+unbeliever?'
+
+'I believe what you believe, and am learning your language. There is no
+Allah beside Allah.'
+
+'And Mohammed is Allah's prophet.'
+
+'And Mohammed is Allah's prophet,' Almasta repeated devoutly.
+
+'Good. And the six articles of belief are also necessary.'
+
+'Teach me,' said Almasta, laying the barbat upon the carpet and folding
+her hands.
+
+'You must believe first in Allah, and secondly in all the angels.
+Thirdly you must believe in Al Koran, fourthly in the prophets of Allah,
+fifthly in the resurrection of the dead and the last judgment, and
+lastly that your destiny is about your neck so that you cannot escape
+it.'
+
+'I believe in everything,' said Almasta, who understood nothing of these
+sacred matters. 'Shall I now be one of the Hur al Oyun?'
+
+'But you have blue eyes.'
+
+'When I know that I am dying, I will paint them black,' said Almasta,
+laughing sweetly.
+
+'The angels Monkar and Nakir will discover your deception,' said Khaled.
+'When you are dead and buried, these two angels, who are black, will
+enter your tomb. They are of extremely terrible appearance. Then they
+will make you sit upright in the grave and will examine you first as to
+your belief and then as to your deeds. You will then not be able to tell
+lies. If you truly believe and have done good, your soul will then be
+breathed out of your lips and will float in a state of rest over your
+grave until the last judgment. But if not, the black angels will beat
+your head with iron maces, and tear your soul from your body with a
+torment greater than that caused by tearing the flesh from the bones.'
+
+'I believe in everything,' Almasta said again, supposing that her assent
+would please him.
+
+'You find it an easy matter to believe what I tell you,' he said, for he
+could see that she would have received any other faith as readily. 'But
+it is not easy for a woman to enter paradise, and since it is your
+destiny to have blue eyes, they will not become black. The Hur al Oyun,
+however, are not mortal women and no mortal woman can ever be one of
+them, since they are especially prepared for the faithful. But a man's
+wives may enter paradise with him, in a glorified beauty which may not
+be inferior to that of the black-eyed ones. If, for instance, Abdul
+Kerim had lived and been your husband, you might, by faith and good
+works, have entered heaven with him as one of his wives.'
+
+Almasta looked long at Khaled, trying to see whether he still suspected
+her, and indeed he found it very hard to do so, for her look was clear
+and innocent as that of a young dove that is fed by a familiar hand.
+
+'I would like to enter paradise with you,' said Almasta, with an
+appearance of timidity. 'Is it not possible?'
+
+'It may be possible. But I doubt it,' Khaled answered, with gravity.
+
+In those days, while Khaled thus spent many hours with Almasta, Zehowah
+often remained for a long time in another part of the harem, either
+surrounded by her women, or sitting alone upon the balcony over the
+court, absorbed in watching the people who came and went. The slaves
+were surprised to see that Khaled seemed to prefer the society of the
+Georgian to that of his wife, but they dared say nothing to Zehowah and
+contented themselves with watching her face and endeavouring to find out
+whether she were displeased at what was happening, or really indifferent
+as she appeared to be.
+
+Almasta herself was distrustful, supposing that Khaled and Zehowah were
+in league together to entrap her into a self-accusation, and though her
+heart was transported with happiness while she was with Khaled, yet she
+did not forget to be cautious whenever any reference was made to Abdul
+Kerim's death. She also took the long needle out of her hair and hid it
+carefully in a corner, in a crevice between the pavement and the wall,
+lest it should at any time fall from its place and bring suspicion upon
+her.
+
+Khaled watched Zehowah as narrowly as the women did, to see whether any
+signs of jealousy showed themselves in her face, and sometimes they
+talked together of Almasta.
+
+'It is strange,' said Khaled, 'that Allah, being all powerful, should
+have provided matter for dissension on earth by creating one woman more
+beautiful than another, the one with blue eyes, the other with black,
+the one with red hair and the other with hair needing henna to brighten
+it. Are not all women the children of one mother?'
+
+'And are not all men her sons also?' asked Zehowah. 'It is strange that
+Allah, being all powerful, should have provided matter for sorrow by
+creating one man with a spirit easily satisfied, and the other with a
+soul tormented by discontent.'
+
+Khaled looked fixedly at his wife, and bent his brows. But in secret he
+was glad, for he supposed that she was beginning to be jealous. However,
+he made a pretence of being displeased.
+
+'Is man a rock that he should never change?' he asked. 'Or has he but
+one eye with which to see but one kind of beauty? Have I not two hands,
+two feet, two ears, two nostrils and two eyes?'
+
+'That is true,' Zehowah answered. 'But a man has only one heart with
+which to love, one voice with which to speak kind words, and one mouth
+with which to kiss the woman he has chosen. And if a man had two souls,
+they would rend him so that he would be mad.'
+
+At this Khaled laughed a little and would gladly have shown Zehowah that
+she was right. But he feared to be treated with indifference, if he
+yielded to her argument so soon, and he held his peace.
+
+'Nevertheless,' Zehowah continued, after a time, 'you are right and so
+am I. You said, indeed, not many days ago that your two hands should
+wither at the wrists if you took another wife, yet I advised you to do
+so; and now it is clear from what you say that you wish to marry
+Almasta. I am your handmaiden. Take her, therefore, and be contented,
+for she loves you.'
+
+But now Khaled was much disturbed as to what he should answer, for he
+had hoped that Zehowah would break out into jealous anger. He could not
+accept her advice, because of his oath and still more because of his
+love for her; yet he could not send away Almasta, since by so doing he
+would be giving over his last hope of obtaining Zehowah's love by
+rousing her jealousy.
+
+'Take her,' Zehowah repeated. 'The palace is wide and spacious. There is
+room for us both, and for two others also, if need be, according to
+divine law. Take her, and let there be contentment. Have you not said
+that she is more beautiful than I?'
+
+'No,' answered Khaled, 'I have not said so.'
+
+'You have thought it, which is much the same, for you said that her hair
+was red but that mine needed henna to brighten it. Marry her therefore,
+this very day. Send for the Kadi, and order a feast, and let it be done
+quickly.'
+
+'Is it nothing to you, whether I take her or not?' Khaled asked, seeking
+desperately for something to say.
+
+'Is it for me to set myself up against the holy law? Or did any one
+exact from you a promise that you would not take another wife? And if
+you rashly promised anything of your own free will, the promise is not
+binding seeing that there is no authority for it in Al Koran, and that
+no one desires you to keep it--neither I, nor Almasta.'
+
+Zehowah laughed at her own speech, and Khaled was too much disturbed to
+notice that the laugh was rather of scorn than of mirth.
+
+'How shall I take a woman who is perhaps a murderess?' he asked. 'Shall
+I take her who was perhaps the cause of your revered father's death? May
+Allah give him peace! Surely, the very thought is terrible to me, and I
+will not do it.'
+
+'Will you convict her without witnesses? And where is your witness? Did
+not the physician explain the reason of the death, and did he suspect
+that there was anything unnatural about it? But if you still think that
+she destroyed my father and Abdul Kerim--peace on them both--why do you
+make her sit all day long at your feet and sing to you in her barbarous
+language, which resembles the barking of jackals? And why do you command
+her to bring you drink and fan you when it is hot, and you sleep in the
+afternoon? This shows a forgiving and trustful disposition.'
+
+'This is an unanswerable argument,' thought Khaled, being very much
+perplexed. 'Can I answer that I do all this in order to see whether
+Zehowah is jealous? She would certainly laugh to herself and say in her
+heart that she has married a fool.'
+
+So he said nothing, but bent his brows again, and endeavoured to seem
+angry. But Zehowah took no notice of his face and continued to urge him
+to marry Almasta.
+
+'Have you ever seen such a woman?' she asked. 'Have you ever seen such
+eyes? Are they not like twin heavens of a deep blue, each having a
+shining sun in the midst? Is not her hair like seventy thousand pieces
+of gold poured out upon the carpet from a height? Her nose is a straight
+piece of pure ivory. Her lips are redder than pomegranates when they are
+ripe, and her cheeks are as smooth as silk. Moreover she is as white as
+milk, freshly taken from the camel, whereas my hands are of the colour
+of blanket-bread before it is baked.'
+
+'Your hands are much smaller than hers,' said Khaled, who could not
+suffer Zehowah to discredit her own beauty.
+
+'I do not know,' she answered, looking at her fingers. 'But they are
+less white. And Almasta is far more beautiful than I. You yourself said
+so.'
+
+'I never said so,' Khaled replied, more and more perplexed. 'There are
+two kinds of beauty. That is what I said. Allah has willed it. Almasta
+is a slave, and her hands are large. It is a pity, for she is like a
+mare that has many good points, but whose hoofs are overgrown through
+too much idleness in the stable. I say that there are two kinds of
+beauty. Yours is that of the free woman of a pure and beautiful race;
+hers is that of the slave accidentally born beautiful.'
+
+Zehowah gathered up her three long black tresses and laid them across
+her knees as she sat. Then she shook off her golden bracelets, one after
+the other, to the number of a score and heaped them upon the hair.
+
+'Which do you like best?' she asked. 'The black or the gold? The day or
+the night? Here you see them together and can judge fairly between
+them.'
+
+Khaled sought for a crafty answer and made a pretence of pondering the
+matter deeply.
+
+'After the night,' he said at last, 'the day is very bright and
+glorious. But when we have looked on it long, only the night can bring
+rest and peace.'
+
+He was pleased with himself when he had made this answer, supposing that
+Zehowah would find nothing to say. But he had only laid a new trap for
+himself.
+
+'That is quite true,' she answered, laughing. 'That is also the reason
+why Allah made the day and the night to follow each other in succession,
+lest men should grow weary of eternal light or eternal darkness. For the
+same reason also, since you have a wife whose hair is black, I counsel
+you to take a red-haired one. In this way you will obtain that variety
+which the taste of man craves.'
+
+'If I follow your advice, you will regret it,' said Khaled.
+
+'You think I shall be jealous, but you are mistaken. I am what I am. Can
+another woman make me more or less beautiful? Moreover, I shall always
+be first in the palace, though you take three other wives. The others
+will rise up when you come in, but I shall remain sitting. I shall
+always be the first wife.'
+
+'Undoubtedly, that is your right,' Khaled replied. 'Do you suppose that
+I wish to put any woman in your place?'
+
+Then Zehowah laughed, and laid her hand upon Khaled's arm.
+
+'How foolish men are!' she exclaimed. 'Do you think you can deceive me?
+Do you imagine, because I have answered you and talked with you to-day,
+and listened to your arguments, that I do not understand your heart? Oh,
+Khaled, this is true which you often say of yourself, that your wit is
+in your arm. If I were a warrior and stood before you with a sword in my
+hand, you could argue better, for you would cut off my head, and the
+argument would end suddenly. But Allah has not made you subtle, and
+words in your mouth are of no more avail than a sword would be in mine,
+for you entangle yourself in your own language, as I should wound myself
+if I tried to handle a weapon.'
+
+At this Khaled was much disconcerted, and he stroked his beard
+thoughtfully, looking away so as not to meet her eyes.
+
+'I do not know what you mean,' he said, at last. 'You certainly imagine
+something which has no existence.'
+
+'I imagine nothing, for I have seen the truth, ever since the first day
+when you desired to be alone with Almasta. You are only foolishly trying
+to make me jealous of her, in order that I may love you better.'
+
+When Khaled saw that she understood him, he was without any defence, for
+he had built a wall of sand for himself, like a child playing in the
+desert, which the first breath of wind causes to crumble, and the second
+blast leaves no trace of it behind.
+
+'And am I foolish, because I have done this thing?' he cried, not
+attempting to deny the truth. 'Am I a fool because I desire your love?
+But it is folly to speak of it, for you will reproach me and say that I
+am discontented, and will offer me another woman for my wife. Go. Leave
+me alone. If you do not love me, the sight of you is as vinegar poured
+into a fresh wound, and as salt rubbed into eyes that are sore with the
+sand. Go. Why do you stay? Do you not believe me? Do you wish me to kill
+you that I may have peace from you? It is a pity that you did not marry
+one of the hundred suitors who came before me, for you certainly loved
+one of them, since you cannot love me. You doubtless loved the Indian
+prince. Would you have him back? I can give you his bones, for I slew
+him with my own hands and buried him in the Red Desert, where his soul
+is sitting upon a heap of sand, waiting for the day of resurrection.'
+
+Then Zehowah was greatly astonished, for neither she nor any one else
+had ever known what had been the end of that suitor, and after waiting a
+long time, his people who had been with him had departed sorrowing to
+their own country, and she had heard no more of them.
+
+'What is this?' she asked in amazement. 'Why did you kill him? And how
+could you have done this thing unseen, since he was guarded by many
+attendants?'
+
+'I took him out of the palace in the night, when all were asleep, and
+then I killed him,' said Khaled, and Zehowah could get no other answer,
+for he would not confess that he had been one of the genii, lest she
+should not believe the truth, or else, believing, should be afraid of
+him in the future.
+
+'I will give you his bones,' he said, 'if you desire them, for I know
+where they are, and you certainly loved him, and are still mourning for
+him. If he could be alive, I would kill him again.'
+
+'I never loved him,' Zehowah answered, at last. 'How was it possible?
+But I would perhaps have married him, hoping to convert all his people
+to the true faith.'
+
+'As you have married me in the hope, or the assurance, of giving your
+people a just king.'
+
+'You are angry, Khaled. And, indeed, I could be angry, too, but with
+myself and not with you, as you are with me, though it be for the same
+reason. For I begin to see and understand why you are discontented, and
+indeed I will do what I can to satisfy you.'
+
+'You must love me, as I love you, if you would save me from
+destruction,' said Khaled.
+
+Though Zehowah could not comprehend the meaning of the words, she saw by
+his face that he was terribly moved, and she herself began to be more
+sorry for him.
+
+'Indeed, Khaled,' she said, 'I will try to love you from this hour. But
+it is a hard thing, because you cannot explain it, and it is not easy to
+learn what cannot be explained. Do you think that all women love their
+husbands in this way you mean? Am I unlike all the rest?'
+
+Khaled took her hand and held it, and looked into her eyes.
+
+'Love is the first mystery of the world,' he said. 'Death is the second.
+Between the two there is nothing but a weariness darkened with shadows
+and thick with mists. What is gold? A cinder that glows in the darkness
+for a moment and falls away to a cold ash in our hand when we have taken
+it. But love is a treasure which remains. What is renown? A cry uttered
+in the bazar by men whose minds are subject to change as their bodies
+are to death. But the voice of love is heard in paradise, singing beside
+the fountains Tasnim and Salsahil. What is power? A net with which to
+draw wealth and fame from the waters of life? To what end? We must die.
+Or is power a sword to kill our enemies? If their time is come they will
+die without the sword. Or is it a stick to purify the hides of fools?
+The fool will die also, like his master, and both will be forgotten. But
+they who love shall enter the seventh heaven together, according to the
+promise of Allah. Death is stronger than man or woman, but love is
+stronger than death, and all else is but a vision seen in the desert,
+having no reality.'
+
+'I will try to understand it, for I see that you are very unhappy,' said
+Zehowah.
+
+She was silent after this, for Khaled's words were earnest and sank into
+her soul. Yet the more she tried to imagine what the passion in him
+could be like, the less she was able to understand it, for some of
+Khaled's actions had been foolish, but she supposed that there must
+have been some wisdom in them, having its foundation in the nature of
+love.
+
+'What he says is true,' she thought. 'I married him in order to give my
+people a just and brave king, and he is both brave and just. And I am
+certainly a good wife, for I should be dissolved in shame if another man
+were to see my face, and moreover I am careful of his wants, and I take
+his kefiyeh from his head with my own hands, and smooth the cushions for
+him and bring him food and drink when he desires it. Or have I withheld
+from him any of the treasures of the palace, or stood in the way of his
+taking another wife? Until to-day, I thought indeed that this talk of
+love meant but little, and that he spoke of it because he desired an
+excuse for marrying Almasta who loves him. But when I said at a venture
+that he wished to make me jealous, he confessed the truth. Now all the
+tales of love told by the old women are of young persons who have seen
+each other from a distance, but are hindered from marrying. And we are
+already married. Surely, it is very hard to understand.'
+
+After this Khaled never called Almasta to sit at his feet and sing to
+him, as he had done before, and Zehowah was constantly with him in her
+stead. At first Almasta supposed that Khaled only made a pretence of
+disregarding her, out of respect for his wife, but she soon perceived
+that he was indifferent and no longer noticed her. She then grew fierce
+and jealous, and her voice was not heard singing in the harem; but she
+went and took her needle again from the crevice in the pavement and hid
+it in her hair, and though Zehowah often called her, when Khaled was not
+in the house, she made as though she understood even less of the Arabic
+language than before and sat stupidly on the carpet, gazing at her
+hands. Zehowah wearied of her silence, for she understood the reason of
+it well enough.
+
+'I am tired of this woman,' she said to Khaled. 'Do you think I am
+jealous of her now?'
+
+Khaled smiled a little, but said nothing, only shaking his head.
+
+'I am tired of her,' Zehowah repeated. 'She sits before me like a sack
+of barley in a grainseller's shop, neither moving nor speaking.'
+
+'She is yours,' Khaled answered. 'Send her away. Or we will give her in
+marriage to one of the sheikhs who will take her away to the desert. In
+this way she will not be able even to visit you except when her husband
+comes into the city.'
+
+But they decided nothing at that time. Some days later Khaled was
+sitting alone upon a balcony, Zehowah having gone to the bath, when
+Almasta came suddenly before him and threw herself at his feet, beating
+her forehead and tearing her hair, though not indeed in a way to injure
+it.
+
+'What have I done?' she cried. 'Why is my lord displeased?'
+
+Khaled looked at her in surprise, but answered nothing at first.
+
+'Why are my lord's eyes like frozen pools by the Kura, and why is his
+forehead like Kasbek in a mist?'
+
+Khaled laughed a little at her words.
+
+'Kasbek is far from Riad,' he answered, 'and the waters of the Kura do
+not irrigate the Red Desert. I am not displeased. On the contrary, I
+will give you a husband and a sufficient dowry. Go in peace.'
+
+But Almasta remained where she was, weeping and beating her forehead.
+
+'Let me stay!' she cried. 'Let me stay, for I love you. I will eat the
+dust under your feet. Only let me stay.'
+
+'I think not,' Khaled answered. 'You weary Zehowah with your silence and
+your sullenness.'
+
+'Let me stay!' she repeated, over and over again.
+
+She was not making any pretence of grief, for the tears ran down
+abundantly and stained the red leather of Khaled's shoes. Though he was
+hard-hearted he was not altogether cruel, for a man who loves one woman
+greatly is somewhat softened towards all such as do not stand
+immediately in his way.
+
+'It is true,' he thought, 'that I have given this woman some occasion of
+hope, for I have treated her kindly during many days, and she has
+probably supposed that I would marry her. For she is less keen-sighted
+than Zehowah, and moreover she loves me.'
+
+'Do not drive me out!' cried Almasta. 'For I shall die if I cannot see
+your face. What have I done?'
+
+'You have indeed done nothing worthy of death, for I cannot prove that
+you killed Abdul Kerim. I will therefore give you a good husband and you
+shall be happy.'
+
+But Almasta would not go away, and embracing his knees she looked up
+into his face, imploring him to let her remain. Khaled could not but see
+that she was beautiful, for the mid-day light fell upon her white face
+and her red lips, and made shadows in her hair of the colour of mellow
+dates, and reflections as bright as gold when the burnisher is still in
+the goldsmith's hand. Though he cared nothing for Almasta and little for
+her sorrow, his eye was pleased and he smiled.
+
+Then he looked up and saw Zehowah standing before him, just as she had
+come from the bath, wrapped in loose garments of silk and gold. He gazed
+at her attentively for there was a distant gleam of light in her eyes
+and her cheeks were warm, though she stood in the shadow, so that he
+thought she had never been more beautiful, and he did not care to look
+at Almasta's face again.
+
+'Why is Almasta lamenting in this way?' Zehowah asked.
+
+'She desires to stay in the palace,' Khaled answered; 'but I have told
+her that she shall be married, and yet she wishes to stay.'
+
+'Let her be married quickly, then. Is she a free woman, that she should
+resist, or is she rich that she should refuse alms? Let her be married.'
+
+'There is a certain young man, cousin to Abdul Kerim, a Bedouin of pure
+descent. Let him take her, if he will, and let the marriage be
+celebrated to-morrow.'
+
+But Almasta shook her head, and her tears never ceased from flowing.
+
+'You will marry him,' said Khaled. 'And if any harm comes to him, I will
+cause you to be put to death before the second call to prayer on the
+following morning.'
+
+When Almasta heard this, her tears were suddenly dried and her lips
+closed tightly. She rose from the floor and retired to a distance within
+the room.
+
+On that day Khaled sent for the young man of whom he had spoken, whose
+name was Abdullah ibn Mohammed el Herir, and offered him Almasta for a
+wife. And he accepted her joyfully, for he had heard of her wonderful
+beauty, and was moreover much gratified by being given a woman whom the
+former Sultan would probably have married if he had lived. Khaled also
+gave him a grey mare as a wedding gift, and a handsome garment.
+
+The marriage was therefore celebrated in the customary manner, and no
+harm came to Abdullah. But as the autumn had now set in, he soon
+afterwards left the city, taking Almasta with him, to live in tents,
+after the manner of the Bedouins.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+Abdullah ibn Mohammed, though a young man, was now the sheikh of a
+considerable tribe which had frequently done good service to the late
+Sultan, Zehowah's father, and which had also borne a prominent part in
+the recent war. Abdul Kerim, whom Almasta had murdered, had been the
+sheikh during his lifetime, and if the claims of birth had been justly
+considered, his son, though a mere boy, should have succeeded him. But
+Abdullah had found it easy to usurp the chief place, and in the council
+which was held after Abdul Kerim's death he was chosen by acclamation.
+It chanced, too, that he was not married at the time when he took
+Almasta, for of two wives the one had died of a fever during the summer,
+and he had divorced the other on account of her unbearable temper,
+having been deceived in respect of this by her parents, who had assured
+him that she was as gentle as a dove and as submissive as a lamb. But
+she had turned out to be as quarrelsome as a wasp and as unmanageable as
+an untrained hawk, so he divorced her, and the more readily because she
+was not beautiful and her dower had been insignificant. Almasta
+therefore found that she was her husband's only wife.
+
+She would certainly have killed him, as she had killed Abdul Kerim, and,
+indeed, the late Sultan, in the hope of being taken back into the
+palace, but she was prevented by the fear of death, for she had seen
+that Khaled's threat was not empty and would be executed if harm came to
+Abdullah after his marriage. She accordingly set herself to please him,
+and first of all she learned to speak the Arabic language, in order that
+she might sing to him in his own tongue and tell him tales of distant
+countries, which she had learned in her own home.
+
+Abdullah passed the months of autumn and the early winter in the desert,
+moving about from place to place, as is the custom of the Bedouins, it
+being his intention to reach a northerly point of Ajman in the spring,
+in order to fall upon the Persian pilgrims and extort a ransom before
+they entered the territory of Nejed. For it would not be lawful to
+attack them after that, since there was a treaty with the Emir of
+Basrah, allowing the pilgrims a safe and free passage towards Mecca, for
+which the Emir paid yearly a sum of money to the Sultan of Nejed.
+
+But Almasta knew nothing of this, for she was wholly ignorant of the
+desert; and moreover Abdullah was a cautious man, who held that
+whatsoever is to be kept secret must not be uttered aloud, though there
+be no one within three days' journey to hear it.
+
+Abdullah treated her with great consideration, not obliging her to weary
+herself overmuch with cooking and other work of the tents. For he
+rejoiced in her beauty and in the sweetness of her voice, and his chief
+delight was to sit in the door of the tent at night, chewing
+frankincense, while Almasta sat within, close behind him, and told him
+tales of her own country, or of the life in the palace of Riad. The
+latter indeed was as strange to him as the former, and much more
+interesting.
+
+Now one evening they were alone together in this manner, and it was not
+yet very cold. But the stars shone brightly as though there would be a
+frost before morning, and the other tents were all closed and no one was
+near the coals which remained from the fire after baking the
+blanket-bread. One might hear the chewing of the camels in the dark and
+the tramping of a mare that moved slowly about, her hind feet being
+chained together.
+
+'Tell me more of the palace at Riad,' said Abdullah. 'For your Kura, and
+your snow-covered Kasbek, and your Tiflis with its warm springs and
+gardens, I shall never see. But I have seen the courts of the palace
+from my youth, and the Sultan's kahwah, and the latticed windows of the
+harem, from which you say that you saw me and loved me in the last days
+of summer.'
+
+Almasta had said this to please him, though it was not true. For she
+knew that men easily believe what flatters them, as women believe that
+what they desire must come to pass.
+
+'The palace is a wonderful palace,' said Almasta, 'and I will tell you
+of the treasures which are in it.'
+
+'That is what I wish to hear,' answered Abdullah, putting a piece of
+frankincense into his mouth and beginning to chew it. 'Tell me of the
+treasures, for it is said that they are great and of extraordinary
+value.'
+
+'The value of them cannot be calculated, O Abdullah, for if you had
+seventy thousand hands and on each hand seventy thousand fingers you
+could not count upon your fingers in a whole lifetime the gold sherifs
+and sequins and tomans which are hidden away there in bags. Beneath the
+court of strangers there is a great chamber built of stone in which the
+sacks of gold are kept, and they are piled up to the roof of the vault
+on all sides and in the middle, leaving only narrow passages between.'
+
+'If it is all gold, what is the use of the passages?' asked Abdullah.
+
+'I do not know, but they are there, and there is another room filled
+with silver in the same manner. There are also secret places underground
+in which jewels are kept in chests, rubies and pearls and Indian
+diamonds and emeralds, in such quantities that they would suffice to
+make necklaces of a thousand rows each for each of the mountains in my
+country. And we have many mountains, great ones, not such as the little
+hills you have seen, but several days' journey in height. For we say
+that when the Lord made the earth it was at first unsteady, and He set
+our mountains upon it, in the middle, to make it firm, and it has never
+moved since.'
+
+'I do not believe this,' said Abdullah. 'Tell me more about the jewels
+in Riad.'
+
+'There is no end of them. They are like the grains of sand in the
+desert, and no one of them is worth less than a thousand gold sherifs. I
+do not even know the names of the different kinds, but there are
+turquoises without number, of the Maidan, and all good, so that you may
+write upon them with a piece of gold as with a pen; and there are red
+stones as large as a dove's egg, red and fiery as the wine of Kachetia,
+and others, blue as the sky in winter, and yellow ones, and some with
+leaves of gold in them, like morsels of treng floating in the juice. But
+besides the gold and silver and precious stones there are thousands of
+rich garments which are kept in chests of fragrant wood, in upper
+chambers, abas woven of gold and silk and linen, and vests embroidered
+with pearls, and shoes of which even the soles appear to be of gold. And
+there are great pieces of stuff, Indian silk, and Persian velvet, and
+even satin from Stamboul, woven by unbelievers with the help of devils.
+Then too, in the palace of Riad, there are stored great quantities of
+precious weapons, most of them made in Syria, with many swords of Sham,
+which you say are the best, though I do not understand the matter, each
+having an inscription in letters of gold upon the blade, and the hilt
+most cunningly chiselled in the same metal, or carved out of ivory.'
+
+'I saw the treasure of Hail when we took it away after the war, and most
+of it was distributed among us, but there was nothing like this,' said
+Abdullah.
+
+'The treasure of Hail is to the treasure of Riad, as a small black fly
+walking upon the face of the sun,' answered Almasta. 'And yet there was
+wealth there also, and there was much which you never saw. For that
+Khaled, who is now Sultan, is crafty and avaricious, and he loaded many
+camels secretly by night, being helped by black slaves, all of whom he
+slew afterwards with his own hand lest they should tell the tale, and he
+then called camel-drivers and sent them away with the beasts to Riad.
+And he said to them: "These are certain loads of fine wheat and of
+mellow dates, for the Sultan's table, such as cannot be found in Riad."
+But he sent a letter to his father-in-law, who caused all the packs to
+be taken immediately to one of the secret chambers, where he and his
+daughter Zehowah took out the jewels and stored them with their own. And
+as for me, I believe that Khaled made an end of the Sultan himself by
+means of poison in Dereyiyah, for he rode away suddenly after they had
+met, as though his conscience smote him.'
+
+'What is this evil tale which you are telling me?' cried Abdullah.
+'Surely, it is a lie, for Khaled is a brave man who gives every one his
+due and deceives no one. And he is by no means subtle, for I have heard
+him in council, and he generally said only, "Smite," but sometimes he
+said "Strike," and that was all his eloquence. But whether he said the
+one or the other, he was generally the first to follow his own advice
+which, indeed, by the merciful dispensation of Allah, procured us the
+victory. But what is this tale which you have invented?'
+
+'And who is this Khaled whom you praise?' asked Almasta. 'And how can
+you know his craftiness as I know it, who have lived in the palace and
+braided his wife's hair, and brought him drink when he was thirsty? Is
+he a man of your tribe whose descent you can count upon your fingers,
+from him to his grandfather and to Ishmael and Abraham? Or is he a man
+of a tribe known to you, and whose generations you also know? Has any
+man called him Khaled ibn Mohammed, or Khaled ibn Abdullah? Or has he
+ever spoken of his father, who is probably now drinking boiling water,
+and the black angels are pounding his head with iron maces. Yet he says
+that he came from the desert. Then you, who are of the desert, do not
+know the desert, for you do not know whence he is. But there are those
+who do know, and he fears them, lest they should tell the truth and
+destroy him.'
+
+'These are idle tales,' said Abdullah. 'Is it probable that the Sultan
+would have bestowed his daughter and all the treasures you have
+described upon such a man without having made inquiries concerning his
+family? And if the Sultan said nothing to us about it, and if Khaled
+holds his peace, they have doubtless their reasons. For it may be that
+there is a blood feud between the people of Khaled and some great person
+in Riad, so that he would be in danger of his life if he revealed his
+father's name. Allah knows. It is not our business.'
+
+'O Abdullah, you are simple, and you believe all things!' cried Almasta.
+'But I heard of him in Basrah.'
+
+'What did you hear in Basrah? And how could you have heard of him
+there?'
+
+'I was in the Emir's harem, being kept there to rest from the journey
+after they had brought me from the north. And there I heard of Khaled,
+for the women talked of him, having been told tales about him by a
+merchant who was admitted to the palace.'
+
+'Now this is great folly,' answered Abdullah. 'For Khaled came suddenly
+to Riad, and was married immediately to Zehowah, and on the next day he
+went out with us against Hail, which we took from the Shammar in three
+weeks' time from the day of our marching. Moreover we found you there in
+the palace. How then could news of Khaled have reached Basrah before you
+left that place?'
+
+'I had come to Hail but the day before you attacked the city,' said
+Almasta. 'But did I say that I had heard of him as already married to
+Zehowah?'
+
+For she saw that she had run the risk of being found out in a lie, and
+she made haste to defend herself.
+
+'What did you hear of him?' asked Abdullah.
+
+'He was a notable fellow and a robber,' answered Almasta. 'For he is a
+Persian, and a Shiyah, who offers prayers to Ali in secret. But because
+he had done many outrageous deeds, a great price was set upon his head
+throughout Persia, so he fled into Arabia and by his boldness and craft
+he married Zehowah. And now he has made a secret covenant to deliver
+over the kingdom of Nejed to the Persians.'
+
+Then Abdullah laughed aloud.
+
+'Who shall deliver over the Bedouin to a white-faced people, who live on
+boiled chestnuts and ride astride of a camel? And when a man has got a
+kingdom, why should he give it up to any one, except under force?'
+
+'There is a reason for this, too,' Almasta answered unabashed. 'For the
+King of the Persians, whom they call the Padeshah, has an only daughter,
+of great beauty, and Khaled is to receive her in marriage as the price
+of Nejed. Then he will by treachery destroy the Padeshah's sons and will
+inherit Persia also, as he has inherited Nejed; and after that he will
+make war upon the Romans in Stamboul and will become the master of the
+whole world.'
+
+'This is a strange tale, and seems full of madness,' said Abdullah. 'I
+do not believe it. Tell me rather a story of your own country, and
+afterwards we will sleep, for to-morrow we will leave this place.'
+
+'I will tell you a wonderful history, which is quite true,' answered
+Almasta. 'Take this fresh piece of frankincense which I have prepared
+for you, and put it into your mouth, for you will then not interrupt me
+with questions while I am speaking.'
+
+So Abdullah took the savoury gum and chewed it, and Almasta told him the
+tale which here follows.
+
+'There is in the north, beyond Persia, a great and prosperous kingdom,
+lying between two seas, and resembling paradise for its wonderful
+beauty. All the hills are covered with trees of every description in
+which innumerable birds make their nests, all of a beautiful plumage and
+good for man to eat. And in these forests there are also great herds of
+animals, whose name I do not know in Arabic, having branching horns and
+kindred to the little beast which you call the cow of the desert, but
+far better to eat and as large as full-grown camels. A man who is hungry
+need only shoot an arrow at a venture, for the birds and animals are so
+numerous that he will certainly hit something. This kingdom is watered
+everywhere by rivers and streams abounding in fish, all good to eat and
+easily caught, and all the valleys are filled with vineyards of black
+and white grapes. But the people of this country are chiefly Christians.
+May Allah send them enlightenment! Now the King was an old man, who
+delighted in feasting and cared little for the affairs of the nation,
+preferring a lute to a sword, and a wine-cup to a shield, and the feet
+of dancing girls to the hoofs of war horses. He had no son to go out to
+war for him, but only one beautiful daughter.'
+
+'Like the Sultan of our country who died,' said Abdullah.
+
+'Very much. There were also other points of resemblance. Now there was a
+certain Tartar in the kingdom of Samarkand, called Ismail, who was a
+robber and had destroyed many caravans on the march, and had broken into
+many houses both in Samarkand and Tashkent, a notable evildoer. But
+having one day stolen a fleet mare from the Sultan's stables, the
+soldiers pursued him, and in order to escape impalement he fled. No one
+could catch him because the mare he had stolen was the fleetest in Great
+Tartary. So he rode westward through many countries, and by the shores
+of the inland sea, until he came to the kingdom which I have described.
+There he hid himself in the forest for some time and waylaid travellers,
+making them tell him all that they knew of the kingdom, and afterwards
+killing them. But when he had obtained all that he wanted, both rich
+garments and splendid weapons, and the necessary information, he left
+the forest and rode into the capital city. Then he went to the King and
+desired of him a private audience, which was granted. He said that he
+was the son of a powerful Christian prince, and had been taken captive
+by the Tartars, but had escaped, and he offered to make all Tartary
+subject to the King, if only he might marry his daughter. And whether by
+magic, or by eloquence, he succeeded, for the King was old and
+feeble-minded. But soon after the wedding, he poisoned his father-in-law
+and became king in his place, though there were many in the land who
+had a better right, being closely connected with the royal blood.'
+
+'This is the story of Khaled,' said Abdullah. 'I know the truth. Why do
+you weary me, trying to deceive me, and calling him a robber? But it is
+true that in Nejed there are men of good descent who have a better right
+to sit on the throne.'
+
+'Hear what followed,' answered Almasta. 'This man Ismail afterwards took
+captive a woman of the Tartars, who knew who he was, though he supposed
+her ignorant. And he gave her in marriage to the youngest and bravest of
+his captains, a man to whom Allah had vouchsafed the tongue of
+eloquence, and the teeth of strength, and the lips of discretion to
+close together and hide both at the proper season. The woman told her
+husband who Ismail was, and instructed him concerning the palace, its
+passages and secret places, and the treasures that were hidden there.
+And she told him also that Ismail had made a covenant with the Sultan of
+his own country, which would bring destruction upon the nation he now
+ruled. For she loved her husband on account of his youth and beauty, and
+she had embraced his faith and was ready to die for him.'
+
+'The husband's name was Abdullah,' said Abdullah. 'And he also loved his
+wife, who surpassed other women in beauty, as a bay mare surpasses
+pigs.'
+
+'He afterwards loved her still better,' answered Almasta, 'for though he
+was only chief over four hundred tents, she gave him a kingdom. Hear
+what followed. But I will call him Abdullah if you please, though his
+name was Mskhet.'
+
+'Allah is merciful! There are no such names in Arabia. This one is like
+the breaking of earthen vessels upon stones. Call him Abdullah.'
+
+'Abdullah therefore went to the wisest and most discreet of his kindred,
+and spoke to them of the great treasures which were hidden in the
+palace, and he pointed out to their obscured sight that all this wealth
+had been got by them and their fathers in war, and had been taken in
+tithes from the people, and was now in the possession of Ismail. And
+they talked among themselves and saw that this was indeed true. And at
+another time, he told them that Ismail was not really of their religion,
+but a hypocrite. And again a third time he told them the whole truth, so
+that their hearts burned when they knew that their King was but a robber
+who had been condemned to death. Though they were discreet men, the
+story was in some way told abroad among the soldiers, doubtless by the
+intervention of angels, so that all the people knew it, and were angry
+against Ismail and ready to break out against him so soon as a man could
+be found to lead them.'
+
+'But,' said Abdullah, 'this Ismail doubtless had a strong guard of
+soldiers about him, and had given gifts to his captains, and shown
+honour to them, so that they were attached to him.'
+
+'Undoubtedly,' replied Almasta, 'and but for his wife, Abdullah could
+not have succeeded. She advised him to go to his discreet kindred and
+friends and say to them, "See, if you will afterwards support me, I will
+go alone into the palace and will get the better of this Ismail, when he
+is asleep, and I will so do that the soldiers shall not oppose me. And
+afterwards, you will all enter together and the treasure shall be
+divided. But we will throw some of it to the people, lest they be
+disappointed." And so he did. For his wife knew the secret entrances to
+the palace and took him in with her by night, disguised as a woman. And
+they went together silently into the harem, and slew Ismail and bound
+his wife, and took the keys of the treasure chambers from under the
+pillow. After this they took from the gold as many bags as there were
+soldiers, and waked each man, giving him a sack of sherifs, and bidding
+him take as much more as he could find, for the King was dead. Then
+Abdullah's friends were admitted and they divided the treasure, and went
+abroad before it was day, calling upon the people that Ismail was dead
+and that a man of their own nation was King in his place, and scattering
+handfuls of gold into every house as they passed. And, behold, before
+the second call to prayer, Abdullah was King, and all the people came
+and did homage to him. And Abdullah himself was astonished when he saw
+how easy it had been, and loved his wife even better than before.'
+
+So Almasta finished her tale and there was silence for a time, while
+Abdullah sat still and gazed at the closed tents in the starlight, and
+listened to the distant chewing of the camels.
+
+'Give me some water,' he said at last. 'I am very thirsty.'
+
+She brought him drink from the skin, and soon afterwards he lay down to
+rest. But they said nothing more to each other that night of the story
+which Almasta had told.
+
+On the following day they journeyed fully eleven hours, to a place where
+there was much water, and in the evening, when the camels were chewing,
+and all the Bedouins had eaten and were resting in their tents, Abdullah
+sat again in his accustomed place.
+
+'Almasta, light of my darkness,' he said, 'I would gladly hear again
+something of the tale you told me last night, for I have not remembered
+it well, being overburdened with the cares of my people and the
+direction of the march. Surely you said that when the woman and her
+husband had killed Ismail they took the keys of the treasure chambers
+from under his pillow. Is it not so?'
+
+'They did so, Abdullah,'
+
+'And they immediately went and took the gold and gave it to the guards?
+But I have forgotten, for it is a matter of little importance, being but
+a tale.'
+
+'That is what they did,' answered Almasta.
+
+'But surely this is a fable. How could the woman know the way to the
+treasure chambers and find it in the dark? For you said also that these
+secret places were underground and therefore a great way from the
+harem.'
+
+'I did not say that, Abdullah, for the secret places underground are
+those in Riad, which I described to you before I began the other story.'
+
+'This may be true, for I am very forgetful. But I daresay that the
+treasures in the city you described were also hidden in similar places.'
+
+'Since you speak of this, I remember that it was so. The glorious light
+of your intelligence penetrates the darkness of my memory and makes it
+clear. The places were exactly similar.'
+
+'How then could the woman, who only knew the harem, find her way in the
+dark, and lead her husband, to a part of the palace which she had never
+visited? This is a hard thing.'
+
+'It was not hard for her. She had seen Ismail open with his key a door
+in his sleeping chamber, and he had gone in and after some time had
+returned bearing sacks of gold pieces. Was this a hard thing? Or does a
+wise man make two doors to his treasure-house, the one for himself and
+the other for thieves? The one leading to his own chamber, for his own
+use, and the other opening upon the highway for the convenience of
+robbers? It is possible, but I think not. Ismail had but one door. He
+was not an Egyptian jackass.'
+
+'This is reasonable,' said Abdullah. 'And I am now satisfied. But my
+imagination was not at rest, for the story is a good one and deserves to
+be well told.'
+
+After this Abdullah wandered for a long time with the Bedouins who
+accompanied him, often changing his direction, so that they wondered
+whither he was leading them, and began to question him. But he answered
+that he had heard secretly of a great spoil to be taken, and that they
+should all have a share of it, and whenever they came upon Arabs of
+another tribe Abdullah invited the sheikh and the most notable men to
+his tent and entertained them sumptuously with camel's meat, afterwards
+talking long with them in private. Before many weeks had passed, the
+skilful men of the tribe, who knew the signs, were aware that many other
+Bedouins were travelling in the same direction as themselves, though
+they could not be seen.
+
+But neither Abdullah's men, nor Almasta herself, could know that in
+three months the sheikhs of all the tribes from Hasa to Harb, and from
+Ajman to El Kora, had heard that Khaled the Sultan was a Persian robber,
+and a Shiyah at heart, venerating Ali and execrating the true Sonna, a
+man who in all probability drank wine in secret, and who was certainly
+plotting to deliver up all Nejed to the power of the Ajjem. Some of them
+believed the tale readily enough, for all had asked whence Khaled was
+and none had got an answer. Could a man be of the desert, they asked,
+and yet not be known by name in any of the tribes, nor his father before
+him? Surely, there was a secret, they said, and he who will not tell the
+name of his father has a reason for changing his own. And as for his
+being brave and having fought well in the war with the Shammar, how
+could a man have been a robber if he were not brave, and why should he
+not fight manfully, since he had everything to gain and nothing to lose?
+As for the spoils, too, he had made a pretence of dividing them justly,
+but it was now well known that he had laden camels by stealth at Hail
+and had sent them secretly to Riad, slaughtering with his own hand all
+those who had helped him.
+
+Little by little, too, the story came to Riad and was told in a low
+voice by merchants in the bazar, and repeated by their wives among their
+acquaintance, and by the slaves in the market and among the beggars who
+begged by the doors of the great mosque but were fed daily from the
+palace. And though many persons of the better sort thought that the
+story might be true, and wagged their heads when Khaled's name was
+spoken, yet the beggars with one accord declared that it was a lie. For
+Khaled was generous in almsgiving, and they said, 'If Khaled is
+overthrown and another Sultan set up in his place, how do we know
+whether there will be boiled camel's meat from time to time as well as
+blanket-bread and a small measure of barley meal? And will the next
+Sultan scatter gold in the streets as Khaled did on the first day when
+he rode to the mosque? Truly these chatterers of Bedouins talk much of
+the treasure in the palace which will be divided, but they who talk most
+of gold, are they who most desire it, and we shall get none. Therefore
+we say it is a lie, and Khaled is a true man, and a Sonna like
+ourselves, not a swiller of wine nor a devourer of pigs. Allah show him
+mercy now and at the day of resurrection! The cock-sparrow is pluming
+his breast while the hunter is pulling the string of the snare.'
+
+Thus the beggars talked among themselves all day, reasoning after the
+manner of their kind. But they suffered other people to talk as they
+pleased, for one who desires alms must not exhibit a contradictory
+disposition, lest the rich man be offended and eat the melon together
+with the melon peels, and exclaim that the dirt-scraper has become a
+preacher. For the rich man's anger is at the edge of his nostrils and
+always ready.
+
+As the winter passed away and the spring began, the tribes of the desert
+drew nearer and nearer to the city, as is their wont at that season. For
+many of the sheikhs had houses in the city, in which they spent the hot
+months of the year, while their people were encamped in the low hill
+country not far off, where the heat is less fierce than in the plains
+and the deserts. And now also the season of the Haj was approaching, for
+Ramadhan was not far off, and the beggars congregated at the gates
+waiting for the first pilgrims, and expecting plentiful alms, which in
+due time they received, for in that year Abdullah did not molest the
+Persian pilgrimage, his mind being occupied with other matters.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+The story which was thus repeated from mouth to mouth in Riad reached
+the palace at the last, and the guards told it to each other as they sat
+together under the shadow of the great wall, the cooks related it among
+themselves in the kitchen, and the black slaves gossiped about it in the
+corners of the courtyard, and the women slaves stood and listened while
+they talked and carried the tale into the harem. But the people of the
+palace were more slow to believe than the people of the city, for they
+shared in a measure in Khaled's right of possession, and desired no
+change of master, so that for a long time neither Zehowah nor Khaled
+heard anything of what was commonly reported. Yet at last the old woman
+who had been Zehowah's nurse told her the substance of the story, with
+many protestations of unbelief, and of anger against those who had
+invented the lie.
+
+'It is right that my lady and mistress should know these things,' she
+said, 'and when our lord the Sultan has been informed of them, he will
+doubtless cause his soldiers to go forth with sticks and purify the
+hides of the chief evil-speakers in the bazar. There is one especially,
+a merchant whose shop is opposite the door of the little mosque, who is
+continually bold in falsehood, being the same who sold me this garment
+for linen; but it afterwards turned out to be cotton and the gold
+threads are brass and have turned black. I pray Allah to be just as well
+as merciful.'
+
+At first Zehowah laughed, but soon afterwards her face became grave, and
+she bent her brows, for though the story was but a lie she saw how
+easily it would find credence. She therefore sent the old woman away
+with a gift and she herself went to Khaled, and sat down beside him and
+took his hand.
+
+'You have secret enemies,' she said, 'who are plotting against your
+life, and who have already begun to attack you by filling the air of the
+city with falsehoods which fly from house to house like flies in summer
+entering at the window and going out by the door. You must sift this
+matter, for it is worthy of attention.'
+
+'And what are these lies of which you speak?'
+
+'It is said openly in the city that you are a Shiyah and a Persian,
+having been a robber before you came here, and that you are plotting to
+deliver over Nejed to the Persians. Look to this, Khaled, for they say
+that you are no Bedouin since no one knows your descent nor the name of
+your father.'
+
+'Do you believe this of me, Zehowah?' Khaled asked.
+
+'Do I believe that the sun is black and the night as white as the sun?
+But it is true that I do not know your father's name.'
+
+Then Khaled was troubled, for he saw that it would be a hard matter to
+explain, and that without explanation his safety might be endangered.
+Zehowah sat still beside him, holding his hand and looking into his
+face, as though expecting an answer.
+
+'Have I done wisely in telling you?' she asked at last. 'You are
+troubled. I should have said nothing.'
+
+'You have done wisely,' he answered. 'For I will go and speak to them,
+and if they believe me, the matter is finished, but if not I have lost
+nothing.'
+
+'It will be well to give the chief men presents, and to distribute
+something among the people, for gifts are great persuaders of unbelief.'
+
+'Shall I give them presents because they have believed evil of me?'
+asked Khaled, laughing. 'Rather would I give you the treasures of the
+whole earth because you have not believed it.'
+
+'If I had the wealth of the whole world I would give it to them rather
+than that they should hurt a hair of your head,' Zehowah answered.
+
+'Am I more dear to you than so much gold, Zehowah?'
+
+'What is gold that it should be weighed in the balance with the life of
+a man? You are dearer to me than gold.'
+
+'Is this love, Zehowah?' Khaled asked, in a low voice.
+
+'I do not know whether it be love or not.'
+
+'The wing of night is lifted for a moment, and the false dawn is seen,
+and afterwards it is night again. But the true dawn will come by and by,
+when night folds her wings before the day.'
+
+'You speak in a riddle, Khaled.'
+
+'It is no matter. I will neither make a speech to the people, nor give
+them gifts. What is it to me? Let them chatter from the first call to
+prayer until the lights are put out in the evening. My fate is about my
+neck, and I cannot change it, any more than I can make you love me.
+Allah is great. I will wait and see what happens.'
+
+'Everything is undoubtedly in Allah's hand,' said Zehowah. 'But if a
+man, having meat set before him, will not raise his right hand to thrust
+it into the dish, he will die of hunger.'
+
+'And do you think that Allah does not know before whether the man will
+stretch out his hand or not?'
+
+'Undoubtedly Allah knows. And he also knows that if you will not sift
+this matter and stop the mouths of the liars, I will, though I am but a
+woman, for otherwise we may both perish.'
+
+'If they destroy me, yet they cannot take the kingdom from you, nor hurt
+you,' said Khaled. 'How then are you in danger? If I am slain you will
+then choose a husband, whose father's name is known to them. They will
+be satisfied and you will be no worse off than before and possibly
+better. This is truth. I will therefore wait for the end.'
+
+'Who has put these words into your mouth, Khaled? For the thought is not
+in your heart. Moreover, if the tribes should rise up and overthrow you,
+they would not spare me, for I would fight against them with my hands
+and they would kill me.'
+
+'Why should you fight for me, since you do not love me? But this is
+folly. No one ever heard of a woman taking arms and fighting.'
+
+'I have heard of such deeds. And if I had not heard of them, others
+should through me, for I would be the first to do them.'
+
+'I think that so long as Khaled lives, Zehowah need not bear arms,' said
+Khaled. 'I will therefore go and call the chief men together and speak
+to them.'
+
+And so he did. When the principal officers who had remained in the city
+during the winter season were assembled in the kahwah, and had hung up
+their swords on the pegs and partaken of a refreshment, Khaled sent the
+slaves away, and spoke in a few words as was his manner.
+
+'Men of Riad, Aared and all Nejed,' he said, 'I regret that more of you
+are not present here, but a great number of sheikhs are still in the
+desert, and it cannot be helped. I desire to tell you that I have heard
+of a tale concerning me which is circulated from mouth to ear throughout
+Riad and the whole kingdom. This tale is untrue, a lie such as no honest
+man repeats even to his own wife at home in the harem. For it is said
+that I am not called Khaled, but perhaps Ali Hassan, or perhaps Ali
+Hussein, that I am a Shiyah, a wine-bibber and an idolatrous one who
+prays for the intercession of Ali, besides being a Persian and a robber.
+It is also said that I plot to deliver over the kingdom of Nejed to the
+Persians, though how this could be done I do not know, seeing that the
+Persians are a meal-faced people of white jackals who do not know how to
+ride a camel. These are all lies. I swear by Allah.'
+
+When the men heard these words, they looked stealthily one at another,
+to see who would answer Khaled, for they had all heard the story and
+most of them were inclined to believe it. Peace is the mother of
+evil-speaking, as garbage breeds flies in a corner, which afterwards fly
+into clean houses and men ask whence they come. But none of the chief
+men found anything to say at first, so that Khaled sat in silence a long
+time, waiting for some one to speak. He therefore turned to the one
+nearest to him, and addressed him.
+
+'Have you heard this tale?' he inquired. 'And if you have heard it do
+you believe it?'
+
+'I think, indeed, that I have heard something of the kind,' answered the
+man. 'But it was as the chattering of an uncertain vision in a dream,
+which rings in the ears for a moment while it is yet dark in the
+morning, but is forgotten when the sun rises. By the instrumentality of
+a just mind Allah caused that which entered at one ear to run out from
+the other as the rinsing of a water-skin.'
+
+'Good,' answered Khaled. 'Yet it is not well to rinse the brains with
+falsehoods. And you?' he inquired, turning to the next. 'Have you heard
+it also?'
+
+'Just lord, I have heard,' replied this one. 'But if I have believed,
+may my head be shaved with a red-hot razor having a jagged edge.'
+
+'This is well,' Khaled said, and he questioned a third.
+
+'O Khaled!' cried the man. 'Is the milk sour, because the slave has
+imagined a lie saying, "I will say it is bad and then it will be given
+to me to drink"? Or is honey bitter because the cook has put salt in
+the sweetmeats? Or is it night because the woman has shut the door and
+the window, to keep out the sun?'
+
+The next also found an answer, having collected his thoughts while the
+others were speaking.
+
+'A certain man,' said he, 'kept sheep in Tabal Shammar, and the dog was
+with the sheep in the fold. Then two foxes came to the fold in the
+evening and one of them said to the man: "All dogs are wolves, for we
+have seen their like in the mountains, and your dog is also a wolf and
+will eat up your sheep. Make haste to kill him therefore and cast out
+his carcass." And to the sheep the other fox said: "How many sheep hang
+by the heels at the butcher's! And how many dogs live in sheepfolds!
+This is an evil world for innocent people." And the sheep were at first
+persuaded, but presently the dog ran out and caught one of the foxes and
+broke his neck, and the man threw a stone at the other and hit him, so
+that he also died. Then the sheep said one to another: "The foxes have
+suffered justly, for they were liars and robbers and the dog and our
+master have protected us against them, which they would not have done
+had they desired our destruction." And so are the people, O Khaled. For
+if you let the liars go unhurt the people will believe them, but if you
+destroy them the faith of the multitude will be turned again to you.'
+
+'This is a fable,' said Khaled, 'and it is not without truth. I am the
+sheep-dog and the people are the sheep. But in the name of Allah, which
+are the foxes?'
+
+Then he turned to another, an old man who was the Kadi, celebrated for
+his wisdom and for his religious teaching in the chief mosque.
+
+'I ask you last of all,' said Khaled, 'because you are the wisest, and
+when the wisest words are heard last they are most easily remembered.
+For we first put water into the lamp, and then oil to float upon the
+surface, and next the wick, and last of all we take a torch and light
+the lamp and the darkness disappears. Light our lamp, therefore, O Kadi,
+and let us see clearly.'
+
+'O Khaled,' replied the Kadi, 'I am old and have seen the world. You
+cannot destroy the tree by cutting off one or two of its branches. It is
+necessary to strike at the root. Now the root of this tree of lies which
+has grown up is this. Neither we nor the people know whence you are, nor
+what was your father's name, and though I for my part do not impiously
+ask whence Allah takes the good gifts which he gives to men, there are
+many who are not satisfied, and who will go about in jealousy to make
+trouble until their questioning is answered. If you ask counsel of me, I
+say, tell us here present of what tribe you are, for we believe you a
+pure Bedouin like the best of us, and tell us your father's name, and
+peace be upon him. We are men in authority and will speak to the people,
+and I will address them from the pulpit of the great mosque, and they
+will believe us. Then all will be ended, and the lies will be
+extinguished as the coals of an evening fire go out when the night frost
+descends upon the camp in winter. But if you will not tell us, yet I,
+for one, do not believe ill of you; and moreover you are lord, and we
+are vassals, so long as you are King and hold good and evil in your
+hand.'
+
+'So long as I am King,' Khaled repeated. 'And you think that if I do not
+tell my father's name, I shall not be where I am for a long time.'
+
+'Allah is wise, and knows,' answered the Kadi, but he would say nothing
+more.
+
+'This is plain speaking,' said Khaled, 'such as I like. But I might
+plainly take advantage of it. You desire to know my father's name and
+whence I come. Then is it not easy for me to say that I come from a
+distant part of the Great Dahna? Is there a man in Nejed who has crossed
+the Red Desert? And if I say that my father was Mohammed ibn Abd el
+Hamid ibn Abd el Latif, and so on to our father Ismail, upon whom be
+peace, shall any one deny that I speak truth? This is a very easy
+matter.'
+
+'So much the more will it be easy for us to satisfy the people,'
+answered the Kadi.
+
+'No doubt. I will think of what you have said. And now, I pray you,
+partake of another refreshment and go in peace.'
+
+At this all the chief men looked one at the other again, for they saw
+that Khaled would not tell them what they wished to know. And those of
+them who had doubted the story before now began to believe it. But they
+held their peace, and presently made their salutation and took their
+swords from the wall and departed.
+
+Khaled then left the kahwah and returned to Zehowah in the harem.
+
+'I have told them that these tales are lies,' he said, 'but they do not
+believe me.'
+
+He repeated to Zehowah all that had been said, and she listened
+attentively, for she began to understand that there was danger not far
+off.
+
+'And I told them,' he said at last, 'that it would be as easy for me to
+invent names, as for them to hear them. Then they looked sideways each
+at the other and kept silent.'
+
+'This is a foolish thing which you have done,' answered Zehowah. 'They
+will now all believe that your father was an evildoer and that you
+yourself are no better. Otherwise, they will say, why should he wish to
+conceal anything? You should have told them the truth, whatever it is.'
+
+'You also wish to know it, I see,' said Khaled, looking at Zehowah
+curiously. 'But if I were to tell you, you would not believe me, I
+think, any more than they would.'
+
+Then Zehowah looked at him in her turn, but he could not understand the
+language of her eyes.
+
+'What is this secret of yours?' she asked. 'I would indeed like to hear
+it, and if you swear to me that it is true, by Allah, I will believe
+you. For you are a very truthful man, and not subtle.'
+
+But Khaled was troubled at this. For he knew that she would find it hard
+to believe; and that if she did believe it, she would be terrified to
+think that she had married one of the genii, and if not, she would
+suspect him of a hidden purpose in telling her an empty fable, and he
+would then be further from her love than before. He held his peace,
+therefore, for some time, while she watched him, playing with her beads.
+In reality she was very curious to know the truth, though she had always
+been unwilling to ask it of him, seeing that she had married him as a
+stranger, of her own will and choice, without inquiry.
+
+'Is it just,' she asked at last, 'that the people should accuse you of
+evil deeds and fill the air of the city with falsehoods concerning you,
+so that the very slaves hear the guards repeating the lies to each
+other in the courtyard, and that I, who am your wife, should not know
+the truth? What have I done that you should not trust me? Or what have I
+said that you should regard me no more than a slave who sprinkles the
+floor and makes the fire, and while she is present in the room you hold
+your peace lest she should know your thoughts and betray them? Am I not
+your wife, and faithful? Have I not given you a kingdom and treasure
+beyond counting? Surely there were times when you talked more freely
+with that barbarian slave-woman, whose hair was red, than you ever talk
+with me.'
+
+'This is not true,' said Khaled. 'And if I talked familiarly with
+Almasta, you know the reason, for you yourself found it out, and called
+me simple for trying to deceive you. And now she is gone to the desert
+with her husband and there is no more question of her, or her red hair.
+But all the rest is true, and you have indeed given me a kingdom, which
+I am likely to lose and wealth which I do not desire, though you have
+not given me that which I covet more than gold or kingdoms, for I desire
+it indeed, and that is your love. Moreover if you have given me the
+rest, I have done something in return, for I have fought for your
+people, and shed my blood freely, and given you a nation captive,
+besides loving you and refusing to take another wife into my house. And
+this last is a matter of which some women would think more highly than
+you.'
+
+But Zehowah's curiosity was burning within her like a thirst, for
+although she had at first cared little to know of Khaled's former life,
+she was astonished at his persistency in keeping the secret now, seeing
+that the whole country was full of false rumours about him.
+
+'How can a man expect that a woman should love him, if he will not put
+his trust in her?' she asked.
+
+Then Khaled did not hesitate any longer, for he was never slow to do
+anything by which there seemed to be any hope of gaining her love. He
+therefore took her hand in his, and it trembled a little so that he was
+pleased, though indeed the unsteadiness came more from her anxiety to
+know the story he was about to tell, than from any love she felt at that
+moment.
+
+'You have sworn that you will believe me, Zehowah,' he said. 'But I
+forewarn you that there are hard things to understand. For the reason
+why I will not tell my father's name, nor the name of my tribe is a
+plain one, seeing that I was not born like other men, and have no father
+at all, and my brethren are not men but genii of the air, created from
+the beginning and destined to die at the second blast of the trumpet
+before the resurrection of the dead.'
+
+At this Zehowah started suddenly in fright and looked into his face,
+expecting to see that he had coals of fire for eyes and an appalling
+countenance. But when she saw that he was not changed and had the face
+of a man and the eyes of a man, she laughed.
+
+'What is this idle tale of Afrits?' she exclaimed. 'Frighten children
+with it.'
+
+'This is what I foresaw in you,' said Khaled. 'You cannot believe me. Of
+what use is it then to tell you my story?'
+
+Zehowah answered nothing, for she was angry, supposing that Khaled was
+attempting to put her off with a foolish tale. She had heard, indeed, of
+Genii and Afrits and she was sure that they had existence, since they
+were expressly mentioned in the Koran, but she had never heard that any
+of them had taken the shape and manner of a man. She remembered also how
+Khaled had always fought with his hands in war, like other men and been
+wounded, and she was sure that if his story were true he would have
+summoned whole legions of his fellows through the air to destroy the
+enemy.
+
+'You do not believe me,' he repeated somewhat bitterly. 'And if you do
+not believe me, how shall others do so?'
+
+'You ask me to believe too much. If you ask for my faith, you must offer
+me truths and not fables. It is true that I am curious, which is foolish
+and womanly. But if you do not wish to tell me your secret, I cannot
+force you to do so, nor have I any right to expect confidence. Let us
+therefore talk of other things, or else not talk at all, for though you
+will not satisfy me you cannot deceive me in this way.'
+
+'So you also believe that I am a Persian and a robber,' said Khaled. 'Is
+it not so?'
+
+'How can I tell what you are, if you will not tell me? Is your name
+written in your face that I may know it is indeed Khaled and not Ali
+Hassan as the people say? Or is the record of your deeds inscribed upon
+your forehead for me to read? You may be a Persian. I cannot tell.'
+
+Then Khaled bent his brows and turned his eyes away from her, for he was
+angry and disappointed, though indeed she knew in her heart that he was
+no Persian. But she let him suppose that she thought so, hoping perhaps
+to goad him into satisfying her curiosity.
+
+If Khaled had been a man like other men, as Zehowah supposed him to be,
+he would doubtless have invented a well-framed history such as she would
+have believed, at least for the present. But to him such a falsehood
+appeared useless, for he had seen the world during many ages and had
+observed that a lie is never really successful except by chance, seeing
+that no intelligence is profound enough to foresee the manner in which
+it will be some day examined, whereas the truth, being always coincident
+with the reality, can never be wholly refuted.
+
+Khaled therefore hesitated as to whether he should tell his story from
+the beginning, or hold his peace; but in the end he decided to speak,
+because it was intolerable to him to be thought an evildoer by her.
+
+'You make haste to disbelieve, before you have heard all,' he said at
+last. 'Hear me to the end. I have told you that I slew the Indian
+prince. That was before I became a man. You yourself could not
+understand how I was able to enter the palace and carry him away without
+being observed. But as I was at that time able to fly and to make both
+myself and him invisible, this need not surprise you. If you do not
+believe that I did it, let us order a litter to be brought for you, and
+I will take my mare and a sufficient number of attendants, and let us
+ride southwards into the Red Desert. There I will show you the man's
+bones. You will probably recognise them by the gold chain which he wore
+about his neck and by his ring. After that, when I had buried him, the
+messenger of Allah came to me, and because the man was an unbeliever,
+and had intended to embrace the faith outwardly, having evil in his
+heart, Allah did not destroy me immediately, but commanded that the
+angel Asrael should write my name in the book of life, that I might
+become a man. But Allah gave me no soul, promising only that if I could
+win your love, whose suitor I had killed, I should receive an immortal
+spirit, which should then be judged according to my deeds. This is
+truth. I swear it in the name of Allah, the merciful, the compassionate.
+Then an angel gave me garments such as men wear, and a sword, and a good
+mare, and I travelled hither to Riad, eating locusts for food. And
+though no man knew me, you married me at once, for it was the will of
+Allah, whose will shall also be done to the end. The rest you know. If,
+therefore, you will love me before I die, I shall receive a soul and it
+may be that I shall inherit paradise, for I am a true believer and have
+shed blood for the faith. But if you do not love me, when I die I shall
+perish as the flame of a lamp that is blown out at dawn. This is the
+truth.'
+
+He ceased from speaking and looked again at Zehowah. At first he
+supposed from her face that she believed him, and his heart was
+comforted, but presently she smiled, and he understood that she was not
+convinced. For the story had interested her greatly and she had almost
+forgotten not to believe it, but when she no longer heard his voice, it
+seemed too hard for her.
+
+'This is a strange tale,' she said, 'and it will probably not satisfy
+the people.'
+
+'I do not care whether they are satisfied or not,' Khaled answered. 'All
+I desire is to be believed by you, for I cannot bear that you should
+think me what I am not.'
+
+'What can I do? I cannot say to my intelligence, take this and reject
+that, any more than I can say to my heart, love or love not. It would
+indeed have been easier if you had said, "I am a certain Persian, a
+fugitive, protect me, for my enemies are upon me." I could perhaps give
+you protection if you require it, as you may. But you come to me with a
+monstrous tale, and you ask me to love, not a man, but a Jinn or an
+Afrit, or whatever it pleases you to call yourself. Assuredly this is
+too hard for me.'
+
+And again Zehowah smiled scornfully, for she was really beginning to
+think that he might be a Persian disguised as the people said.
+
+'I need no protection from man or woman,' said Khaled, 'for I fear
+neither the one nor the other. For I am strong, and if I am able to give
+out of charity I am also able to take by force. My fate is ever with me.
+I cannot escape it. But neither can others escape theirs. I will fight
+alone if need be, for if you will not love me I care little how I may
+end. Moreover, in battle, it is not good to stand in the way of a man
+who seeks death.'
+
+But Zehowah thought this might be the speech of a desperate man such as
+Ali Hassan, the robber, as well as of Khaled, the Jinn, and she was not
+convinced, though she no longer smiled. For she knew little of
+supernatural beings, and a devil might easily call himself a good
+spirit, so that she was convinced that she was married either to a demon
+or to a dangerous robber, and she could not even decide which of the two
+she would have preferred, for either was bad enough, and as for love
+there could no longer be any question of that.
+
+Khaled understood well enough and rose from his seat and went away,
+desiring to be alone. He knew that he was now surrounded by danger on
+every side and that he could not even look to his wife for comfort,
+since she also believed him to be an impostor.
+
+'Truly,' he said to himself, 'this is a task beyond accomplishment,
+which Allah has laid upon me. It is harder to get a woman's love than to
+win kingdoms, and it is easier to destroy a whole army with one stroke
+of a sword than to make a woman believe that which she does not desire.
+And now the end is at hand. For she will never love me and I shall
+certainly perish in this fight, being alone against so many. Allah
+assuredly did not intend me to run away, and moreover there is no reason
+left for remaining alive.'
+
+On that day Khaled again called the chief men together in his kahwah,
+and addressed them briefly.
+
+'Men of Riad,' he said, 'I am aware that there is a conspiracy to
+overthrow and destroy me, and I daresay that you yourselves are among
+the plotters. I will not tell you who I am, but I swear by Allah that I
+am neither a Persian nor a robber, nor yet a Shiyah. You will doubtless
+attack me unawares, but you will not find me sleeping. I will kill as
+many of you as I can, and afterwards I also shall undoubtedly be killed,
+for I am alone and you have many thousands on your side. Min Allah--it
+is in Allah's hands. Go in peace.'
+
+So they departed, shaking their heads, but saying nothing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+The Sheikh of the beggars was an old man, blind from his childhood, but
+otherwise strong and full of health, delighting in quarrels and swift to
+handle his staff. He had at first become a beggar, being still a young
+man, for his father and mother had died without making provision for
+him, and he had no brothers. As he boasted that he was of the pure blood
+of the desert on both sides, the other beggars jeered at him in the
+beginning, calling him Ibn el Sheikh in derision and sometimes stealing
+his food from him. But he beat them mightily, the just and the unjust
+together, since he could not see, and acquired great consideration
+amongst them, after which he behaved generously, giving his share with
+the rest for the common good, and something more. His companions learned
+also that his story was true and that his blood was as good as any from
+Ajman to El Kara, for a Bedouin of the same tribe as Abdullah, the
+husband of Almasta, came to see him not less than once every year, and
+called him brother and filled his sack with barley. This Bedouin was a
+person of consideration, also, as the beggars saw from his having a mare
+of his own, provided with a good saddle, and from his weapons. In the
+course of time therefore the blind man grew great in the eyes of his
+fellows, until they called him Sheikh respectfully, and waited on him
+when he performed his ablutions, and he obtained over them a supremacy
+as great as was Khaled's over the kingdom he governed. He was very wise
+also, acquainted with the interpretation of dreams, and able to recite
+various chapters of the Koran. It was even said that he was able to
+distinguish a good man from a bad by the sound of his tread, though some
+thought that he only heard the jingling of coins in the girdle, and
+judged by this, having a finer hearing than other men. At all events he
+was often aware that a person able to give alms was approaching, while
+his companions were talking among themselves and noticed nothing, though
+they had eyes to see, being mostly only cripples and lepers.
+
+On a certain day in the spring, when the sun was beginning to be hot and
+not long after Khaled had told Zehowah his story, many of the beggars
+were sitting in the eastern gate, by which the great road issues out of
+the city towards Hasa. They expected the coming of the first pilgrims
+every day, for the season was advancing. And now they sat talking
+together of the good prospects before them, and rejoicing that the
+winter was over so that they would not suffer any more from the cold.
+
+'There is a horseman on the road,' said the Sheikh of the beggars,
+interrupting the conversation. 'O you to whom Allah has preserved the
+light of day, look forth and tell me who the rider is.'
+
+'It is undoubtedly a pilgrim,' answered a young beggar, who was a
+stranger but had found his way to Riad without legs, no man knew how.
+
+'Ass of Egypt,' replied the Sheikh reprovingly, 'do pilgrims ride at a
+full gallop upon steeds of pure blood? But though your eyes are open
+your ears are deaf with the sleep of stupidity from which there is no
+awakening. That is a good horse, ridden by a light rider. Truly a man
+must itch to be called Haji who gallops thus on the road to Mecca.'
+
+Then the others looked, and at last one of them spoke, a hunchback
+having but one eye, but that one was keen.
+
+'O Sheikh,' he said, 'rejoice and praise Allah, for I think it is he
+whom you call your brother, who comes in from the desert to visit you.'
+
+'If that is the case, I will indeed give thanks,' answered the blind
+man, 'for there is little in my barley-sack, less in my wallet and
+nothing at all in my stomach. Allah is gracious and compassionate!'
+
+The hunchback's eye had not deceived him, and before long the Bedouin
+dismounted at the gate and looked about until he saw the Sheikh of the
+beggars, who indeed had already risen to welcome him. When they had
+embraced the Bedouin led the blind man along in the shadow of the
+eastern wall until they were so far from the rest that they might freely
+talk without being overheard. Then they sat down together, and the mare
+stood waiting before them.
+
+'O my brother,' the Bedouin began, 'was not my mother the adopted
+daughter of your uncle, upon whom be peace? And have I not called you
+brother and filled your barley-sack from time to time these many years?'
+
+'This is true,' answered the Sheikh of the beggars. 'Allah will requite
+you with seventy thousand days of unspeakable bliss for every grain of
+barley you have caused to pass my teeth. "Be constant in prayer and in
+giving alms," says the holy book, "and you shall find with Allah all the
+good which you have sent before you, for your souls." And it is also
+said, "Give alms to your kindred, and to the poor and to orphans." I am
+also grateful for all you have done, and my gratitude grows as a palm
+tree in the garden of my soul which is irrigated by your charity.'
+
+'It is well, my brother, it is well. I know the uprightness of your
+heart, and I have not ridden hither from the desert to count the
+treasure which may be in store for me in paradise. Allah knows the
+good, as well as the evil. I have come for another purpose. But tell me
+first, what is the news in the city? Are there no strange rumours afloat
+of late concerning Khaled the Sultan?'
+
+'In each man's soul there are two wells,' said the blind man. 'The one
+is the spring of truth, the other is the fountain of lies.'
+
+'You are wise and full of years,' said the Bedouin, 'and I understand
+your caution, for I also am not very young. But here we must speak
+plainly, for the time is short in which to act. A sand-storm has
+darkened the eyes of the men of the desert and they are saying that
+Khaled is a Shiyah, a Persian and a robber, and that he must be
+overthrown and a man of our own people made king in his stead.'
+
+'I have indeed heard such a rumour.'
+
+'It is more than a rumour. The tribes are even now assembling towards
+Riad, and before many days are past the end will come. Abdullah is the
+chief mover in this. But with your help, my brother, we will make his
+plotting empty and his scheming fruitless as a twig of ghada stuck into
+the sand, which will neither strike root nor bear leaves.'
+
+When the Sheikh of the beggars heard that he was expected to give help
+in frustrating Abdullah's plans he was troubled and much astonished.
+
+'Shall the blind sheep go out and fight the lion?' he inquired
+tremulously.
+
+'Even so,' replied the Bedouin unmoved, 'and, moreover, without danger
+to himself. Hear me first. Abdullah and his tribe will encamp in the low
+hills, in a few days, as usual, but somewhat earlier than in other
+years, and a great number of other Bedouins will be in the neighbouring
+valleys at the same time. Then Abdullah will come into the city openly
+and go to his house with his wife and slaves, and during several days he
+will receive the visits of his friends and return them, and go to the
+palace and salute Khaled, as though nothing were about to happen. But in
+the meantime he will make everything ready, for it is his intention to
+go into the palace at night, disguised in a woman's garment, with his
+wife, and they will slay Khaled in his sleep, and bind Zehowah, and
+distribute much treasure among the guards and slaves, and before morning
+the city will be full of Bedouins all ready to proclaim Abdullah Sultan.
+And you alone can prevent all this.'
+
+But the blind man laughed in his beard.
+
+'This is a good jest!' he cried. 'You have sought out a valiant warrior
+to stand between the Sultan and death! I am blind and old, and a beggar,
+and you would have me stand in the path of Abdullah and a thousand armed
+men. They would certainly laugh, as I do. Let me take with me a few
+lepers and the Egyptian jackass without legs, who has flown among us
+lately like a locust out of the clear air. Verily, their strength shall
+avail against the lances of the desert.'
+
+'This is no jest, my brother,' answered the Bedouin, gravely. 'Neither
+I, nor a hundred armed horsemen with me could do what you will do
+unhurt. But I will save Khaled. For in the battle of the pass before we
+came to Hail last summer when I had an arrow in my right arm and a spear
+thrust in my side, certain dogs of Shammars encompassed me, and darkness
+was already descending upon my eyes when Khaled rode in like a whirlwind
+of scythes, and sent four of them to hell, where they are now drinking
+molten brass like thirsty camels. Then I swore by Allah that I would
+defend him in the hour of need.'
+
+'Why do you not then lie in wait for Abdullah yourself and slay him as
+he passes you in the dark?'
+
+'Is he not the sheikh of my tribe? How then can I lay a hand on him? But
+I have thought of this during many nights in my tent, and you alone can
+do what is needed.'
+
+'Surely this is folly,' said the Sheikh of the beggars. 'You have met a
+hot wind in the desert and your mind is unsettled by it. I pray you come
+with me into the city to my dwelling, and take some refreshment, or at
+least let me send to the well for a drink of water.'
+
+'My head is cool and I am not thirsty, nor is the hot wind blowing at
+this time of year. Hear me. I will tell you how to save Khaled from
+destruction, and you shall receive more gold than you have dreamed of,
+and a house, and rich garments, and a young wife of a good family to
+comfort your old age. For the deed is easy and safe, but the reward will
+be great, and you alone can do the one and earn the other.'
+
+'I perceive,' said the blind man, 'that you are indeed in earnest, but I
+cannot understand what I can do. We know that Khaled is forewarned, for
+it is not many days since he summoned the chief men in Riad, with the
+Kadi, to the palace, and refused to tell them the name of his father,
+but said that if they attacked him he would kill as many of them as he
+could.'
+
+'I did not know this,' answered the Bedouin. 'But the knowledge does not
+change my plan. Now hear me. You are the Sheikh of all the beggars in
+Riad--may Allah send you long life and much gain--they are an army and
+you are a captain. Moreover the beggars are doubtless attached to Khaled
+by his generosity, and all of you say in your hearts that under Abdullah
+there may be more sticks and less barley for you.'
+
+'This is true. But then, my brother, it is otherwise with you, for you
+are of Abdullah's tribe and will have honour and riches if he is made
+Sultan. How then is my advantage also yours?'
+
+'And did not this Abdullah in the first place divorce with ignominy his
+second wife, who is my kinswoman, being the daughter of my father's
+sister? And has he restored the dowry as the law commands? Truly his new
+wife is even now sitting upon my cousin's carpet. And secondly Abdullah
+made himself sheikh unjustly, for our sheikh should be Abdul Kerim's
+son.'
+
+'Yet you accepted Abdullah and promised him allegiance.'
+
+'Does the camel say to his driver: "I do not like to carry a load of
+barley, I would rather bear a basket of dates"? "Eat what you please in
+your tent, but dress as other men," says the proverb. Hear me, for I
+speak wisdom. Abdullah will come into the city and go to his house,
+intending to prepare the way for evil. And he will walk about the
+streets as usual, without attendants, both because he knows that the
+people are mostly with him, and also in order not to attract notice. Now
+Abdullah is the spring from which all this wickedness flows, he is the
+chief camel whom the others follow, the coal in the ashes by which the
+fire is kept alive, the head without which the body cannot live. Dry up
+the spring, therefore, let the chief camel fall into a pit suddenly,
+extinguish the coal, strike off the head. Let them ask in the morning:
+"Where is he?" And let him not be found anywhere. Then the people will
+be amazed and will not know what to do, having no leader. This is for
+you to do, and it can easily be done.'
+
+'What folly is this?' asked the blind man, shaking his head. 'And how
+can I do what you wish?'
+
+'It is very easy, for I know that you and your companions are as one
+man, living together for the common good. Go to the beggars therefore
+and tell them what I have told you, and be not afraid, for they will not
+betray you. And when Abdullah walks about the city alone lie in wait for
+him, for you will easily catch him in a narrow street, and two or three
+score of you can run after him begging for alms, until he is surrounded
+on all sides. Then fall upon him, and bind him, and take him secretly to
+one of your dwellings and keep him there, so that none find him, until
+the storm is past. In this way you will save Khaled and the kingdom, and
+when all is quiet you can deliver him up to be a laughing-stock at the
+palace and to all who believed in him. For there is nothing to fear, and
+I, for my part, am sure that Abdul Kerim's son will immediately be made
+sheikh of our tribe so that Abdullah will not return to us.'
+
+'You are subtle, my brother,' said the Sheikh of the beggars, smiling
+and stroking his beard. 'This is a good plan, being very simple, and
+Khaled will be grateful to us, and honour us beggars exceedingly. Said I
+not well that the jest was good? Surely it is better than I had thought,
+and more profitable.'
+
+'I have thought of it long in the nights of winter, both by the camp
+fire and in my tent and on the march. But I have told no one, nor will
+tell any one until all is done. But so soon as you have taken Abdullah
+and hidden him, let me know of it. To this end, when we are encamped
+outside the city I will come every evening to prayers in the great
+mosque and afterwards will wait for you near the door. As soon as I know
+that Abdullah is out of finding I will spread the report that he is
+lost, and before long all our tribe will give up the search, being
+indeed glad to get rid of him. And the rest is in the hand of Allah. I
+have done what I can, you must now do your share.'
+
+'By Allah! You shall not complain of me,' answered the blind man, 'nor
+of my people, for the jest is surpassingly good, and shall be well
+carried out.'
+
+'I will therefore go into the city, where I have business,' said the
+Bedouin. 'For I gave a reason for coming alone to Riad, and must needs
+show myself there to those who know me.'
+
+So the Bedouin filled the blind beggar's sack with barley and dates from
+his own supply and embraced him and went into the city, but the Sheikh
+of the beggars remained sitting in the same place for some time, at a
+distance from the rest, in an attitude of inward contemplation, though
+he was in reality listening to what the hunchback was telling the new
+cripple from Egypt. The Sheikh's ears were sharper than those of other
+men and he heard very clearly what was said.
+
+'This Bedouin,' said the hunchback, 'is a near relation of our Sheikh,
+and holds him in great veneration, coming frequently to see him even
+from a considerable distance, and always bringing him a present of food.
+And you may see by his mare and by his weapons that he is a person of
+consideration in his tribe. For our Sheikh is not a negro, nor the son
+of a Syrian camel-driver, but an Arab of the best blood in the desert,
+and wise enough to sit in the council in the Sultan's palace. You, who
+are but lately arrived, being transported into our midst by the mercy of
+Allah, must learn all these things, and you will also find out that our
+Sheikh has eyes in his ears, and in his fingers and in his staff, though
+he is counted blind, and you cannot deceive him easily as you might
+suppose.'
+
+The Sheikh of the beggars was pleased when he heard this and listened
+attentively to hear the answer made by the Egyptian, whom he did not yet
+trust because he was a newcomer and a stranger.
+
+'Truly,' replied the cripple, 'Allah has been merciful and
+compassionate to me, for he has brought me into the society of the wise
+and the good, which is better than much feasting in the company of the
+ignorant and the ill-mannered. And as for the Sheikh, he is evidently a
+very holy man, to whom eyes are not in any way necessary, his inward
+sight being constantly fixed upon heavenly things.'
+
+This answer did not altogether please the blind man, for it savoured
+somewhat of flattery. But the other beggars approved of the speech,
+deeming that it showed a submissive spirit, and readiness to obey and
+respect their chief.
+
+'O you of Egypt!' cried the Sheikh, calling to him. 'Come here and sit
+beside me, for I have heard what you said and desire your company.'
+
+The cripple immediately began to crawl along by the wall, dragging
+himself upon his hands and body, for he had no legs.
+
+'He is obedient,' thought the blind man, 'though it costs him much
+labour to move.'
+
+When the man was beside him, the Sheikh took an onion and a date from
+his wallet and set them down upon the ground.
+
+'Eat,' he said, 'and give thanks.'
+
+The cripple thanked him and taking the food, began to eat the onion.
+
+'You have taken the onion in your right hand and the date in your
+left,' said the Sheikh. 'And you are eating the onion first.'
+
+'This is true,' answered the Egyptian. 'I see that my lord has indeed
+eyes in his fingers.'
+
+'I have,' said the Sheikh. 'But that is not all, for this is an
+allegory. All men like to eat the onion first and the date afterwards,
+for though the onion be ever so sweet and tender, its taste is bitter
+when a man has eaten sugar-dates before it. But you have begun by giving
+us the mellow fruit of flattery, and when you give us the wholesome
+vegetable of truth it will be too sharp for our palates. Ponder this in
+your heart, chew it as the camel does her cud, and the well-digested
+food of wisdom shall nourish your understanding.'
+
+The cripple listened in astonishment at the depth of the Sheikh's
+thought, and he would have spoken out his admiration, but it is not
+possible to eat an onion and to be eloquent at the same time. The blind
+man knew this and continued to give him instruction.
+
+'The onion has saved you,' he said, 'for your mouth being full you could
+say nothing flattering, and now you will think before you speak.
+Consider how I have treated you. Have I at once rendered thanks to Allah
+for sending into our midst a young man whose gifts of eloquence are at
+least equal to those of the Kadi himself? I have said nothing so
+foolish. I have called you an ass of Egypt and otherwise rebuked you,
+for the good of your understanding, though I begin to think that you are
+indeed a very estimable young man, and it is possible that your wit may
+ripen in our society. But now I perceive by my hearing that you are
+eating the date. I pray you now, eat another onion after it.'
+
+'I cannot,' answered the cripple, 'for my lips are puckered at the
+thought of it.'
+
+'Neither is truth sweet after flattery,' said the Sheikh, who then began
+to eat the other onion himself.
+
+'I will endeavour to profit by your precepts, my lord,' replied the
+Egyptian.
+
+'Allah will then certainly enlighten you, my son. Remember also another
+thing. We are ourselves here a community, distinct from the citizens of
+Riad, and what we do, we do for the common good. Remember therefore to
+share what you receive with the rest, as they will share what they have
+with you, and take part with them in whatsoever is done by common
+consent. In this way it will be well with you and you shall grow fat;
+but if you are against us you will find evil in every man's hand, for
+since it has pleased Allah to give you no legs, you cannot possibly run
+away.'
+
+Having said this much the Sheikh of the beggars was silent. But
+afterwards on the same day he gathered about him the strongest of his
+companions, being mostly men who had the use of both arms and both
+legs, though some of them were lepers and some had but one eye, and some
+were deaf and dumb, according to the affliction which it had pleased
+Allah to send upon each. These were the most trusty and faithful of his
+people, and to them he communicated openly what the Bedouin had proposed
+to him in secret. All of them approved the plan, for they greatly feared
+the overthrow of Khaled.
+
+'But,' said one, 'we cannot keep this Abdullah for ever, and we can
+surely not kill him, for we should bring upon ourselves a grievous
+punishment.'
+
+'Allah forbid that we should shed blood,' replied the Sheikh. 'But when
+Abdul Kerim's son is made Sheikh of the tribe, Abdullah will probably
+not wish to go back to his people. Moreover it shall be for Khaled to
+judge what shall be done to the man, and he will probably cut off his
+head. But in the meantime it is necessary to choose amongst us spies,
+two for each gate of the city, to the number of twenty-two men, to watch
+for Abdullah. For we do not know when he will come, and of the two spies
+who see him enter, both must follow him and see whither he goes, and
+then the one will immediately inform all the rest while the other waits
+for him. From the time he enters the city he will not be able to go
+anywhere without our knowledge, and we shall certainly catch him one day
+towards dusk in some narrow street of the city.'
+
+The beggars saw that this plan was wise and safe for themselves, and
+they did as the Sheikh advised, posting men at all the gates to wait for
+Abdullah. He was, indeed, not far distant, and before many days he rode
+into the city towards evening, attended by a few slaves and two
+Bedouins, his wife Almasta riding in the midst of them upon a camel. His
+face was not hidden and the two beggars who were watching recognised him
+immediately. They both followed him, until he entered his own house, and
+then the one sat down in the street to watch until he should come out,
+asking alms of those who accompanied him, until they also went in, with
+the beasts. But the other made haste to find the Sheikh and to inform
+him that Abdullah had come and was now in his own dwelling.
+
+'It is well,' said the blind man. 'The cat is now asleep, and dreams of
+mice, but he shall wake in the midst of dogs. Abdullah will not leave
+his house to-night, for it is late, and though he is not afraid in the
+daytime, he will not go out much at night, lest a secret messenger from
+Khaled, bearing evil in his hand, should meet him by the way. But
+to-morrow before dawn, some of us will wait in the neighbourhood of his
+house, and two or three score of others feigning to be all blind, as I
+am, must always be near at hand, watching us. We will then begin to
+importune him for alms, flattering him with fine language, as though we
+knew his plans. And this we will do continually, when he is abroad,
+until one day to escape from us he will turn quickly into a narrow
+street, supposing that we cannot see him. For he will not wish to be
+pursued by our cries in the bazar lest he be obliged for shame to give
+something to each. Then those who can see will open their eyes and we
+will catch him in the lane, and bind rags over his head so that he
+cannot cry out, and lead him away to my dwelling by the Yemamah gate.
+And if any meet us by the way and inquire whom we are taking with us, we
+will say that he is one of ourselves, who is an epileptic and has fallen
+down in a fit, and that we are taking him to the farrier's by the gate,
+to be burned with red-hot irons for his recovery, as the physicians
+recommend in such cases. Surely we have now foreseen most things, but if
+we have forgotten anything, Allah will doubtless provide.'
+
+All the beggars in council approved this plan, for they saw that it
+could be easily carried out, if they could only catch Abdullah in a
+lonely street at the hour of prayer when few persons are passing.
+
+But Abdullah himself was ignorant of the evil in store for him, and
+feared nothing, having been secretly informed that most of the better
+sort of people were ready to support him if he would strike the blow;
+for they suspected Khaled of being a traitor, especially since he had
+last addressed the chief men and refused to tell the name of his father.
+Abdullah therefore came and went openly in the city.
+
+In the meantime, however, Khaled was informed of his presence and was
+warned of the danger. The aged Kadi came secretly by night to the palace
+and desired to be received by the Sultan in order to communicate to him
+news of great importance, as he said. Khaled immediately received him,
+and the Kadi proceeded to give a full account of Abdullah's designs; but
+the Sultan expressed no astonishment.
+
+'Let him do what he will,' he answered, 'for I care little and, after
+all, what must be will be.'
+
+'But I beseech you to consider,' said the Kadi, 'that by acting promptly
+you could easily quell this revolution, in which I, by Allah, have no
+part and will have none. For though many persons may just now desire
+your overthrow, because they expect to get a share of the treasure in
+the confusion, yet few are disposed to accept such a man as Abdullah ibn
+Mohammed el Herir in your place. Even his own tribe are not all faithful
+to him, and I am credibly informed that many look upon him as an
+intruder, and would prefer the son of Abdul Kerim for sheikh, as would
+be just, if the rights of birth were considered. And it would be an easy
+matter to remove this Abdullah. I implore you to think of the matter.'
+
+'Would this not be a murder?' asked Khaled, looking curiously at the
+venerable preacher.
+
+'Allah is merciful and forgiving,' replied the old man, looking down and
+stroking his beard. 'And moreover, if you suffer Abdullah to go about a
+few days longer he will certainly destroy you, whereas it is an easy
+matter to give him a cup of such good drink as will save him from thirst
+ever afterwards, and you would obtain quiet and the kingdom would be at
+peace.'
+
+'They shall not find me sleeping,' said Khaled, 'and so that I may only
+slay a score of them first, I care not how soon I perish.'
+
+'This is indeed a new kind of madness!' exclaimed the Kadi. 'I cannot
+understand it. But I have done what I could, and I can do nothing more.'
+
+'Nor is there anything more to be done,' said Khaled. 'But I thank you,
+for it is clear that you have spoken from a good intention.'
+
+So the Kadi went away again, and Khaled returned to Zehowah, caring not
+at all whether he lived or died. But Zehowah began to watch him
+narrowly.
+
+'If this man were a Persian, an enemy and a traitor,' she thought, 'he
+would now begin to take measures for his own safety, seeing that he is
+threatened on every side. Yet he does not lift a hand to defend himself.
+This can proceed only from one of two causes. Either he is a Jinn, as
+he has told me, and they cannot kill him, and so he does not fear them;
+or else he desires death, out of a sort of madness which has grown up in
+him through this love of which he is always speaking.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+In these days many of the Bedouin tribes came near the city and encamped
+in great numbers within half a day's journey and less. Abdullah was
+exceedingly busy with his preparations, and spent much time in talking
+with other sheikhs, hardly making any concealment of his movements or
+plans. For by this time it seemed clear to him that the greater part of
+the people were with him, and every one spoke of the coming overthrow of
+Khaled as an open matter. Khaled himself, too, was reported to be in
+fear of his life, and he was no longer seen in the streets as formerly,
+nor in the courts of the palace, nor even every day in the hall, but
+remained shut up in the harem, and none saw him except the women and a
+few slaves. Men said aloud that he was in great fear and distress, and
+as this story gained credence, so Abdullah's importance increased, since
+it was he who had brought such terror upon Khaled. All this was open
+talk in the bazar, but Abdullah was himself somewhat suspicious,
+supposing that Khaled must have a plan in reserve for defending his
+possession of the throne. Abdullah, however, kept secret the manner in
+which he intended to enter the palace, though he promised his adherents
+to open to them the gates of the castle, and the doors of the treasure
+chambers on a certain day, which he named, at the time of the first call
+to prayer in the morning, warning all those who were with him to come
+together in the great square before that hour in order to be ready to
+help him, if necessary, and to overwhelm the guards of the palace if
+they should make any resistance. But he did not know that the man of his
+tribe who was kinsman to the chief of the beggars had overheard his talk
+with his wife.
+
+Meanwhile the beggars seemed to be multiplied exceedingly in Riad, for
+whenever Abdullah went out of his house they came upon him, sometimes by
+twos and threes and sometimes in scores, pressing close to him and
+begging alms. They also cried out a great deal, praising his generosity
+and praying for blessings upon him.
+
+'Behold the sheikh of sheikhs!' they exclaimed. 'He bears gold in his
+right hand and silver in his left. Yallah! Send him a long life and
+prosperity, for he loves the poor and his name is the Alms-giver. He is
+not El Herir but Er Rahman and his heart over-flows with mercy as his
+purse does with small coins. Come, O brothers, and taste of his
+charity, which is a perpetual spring of good water beside a palm tree
+full of sugar-dates! Ya Abdullah, Servant of Allah, we love you! You are
+our father and mother. Your kefiyeh is the banner which goes before our
+pilgrimage. Come, O brothers, and taste of his charity.'
+
+Abdullah was not dissatisfied with these words, and the beggars said
+much more to the same effect, which he regarded as signs of his
+popularity, so that he opened his purse from time to time and threw
+handfuls of money into the crowd, not counting the cost since he
+expected to be master of all the treasure in Riad within a few days. But
+the beggars were disappointed, for they had hoped that he would turn out
+to be avaricious, and endeavour to elude them by walking through narrow
+and lonely streets, where they might catch him. So they pressed more and
+more upon him every day, trying to exhaust his patience and his charity.
+In this however they failed, not understanding that the vanity of such a
+man is inexhaustible and knows no price. Abdullah, too, chose rather to
+be abroad during the daytime than in the evening or the early morning,
+for he desired to be seen by the multitude and spoken of as he went
+through the market-place. Yet on the last evening of all he fell into
+the hands of the Sheikh of the beggars, and evil befell him.
+
+The hour of prayer was passed and it was almost the time when lights are
+extinguished. Then Abdullah took his sword under his aba, and also a
+good knife, which he had proved in battle, and which in his hand would
+pierce a coat of mail as though it were silk. Almasta, his wife, also
+made a bundle of woman's clothing and carried it in her arms. For they
+intended to go to a lonely place by the city wall, that Abdullah might
+there put on female garments, before entering the palace. He feared,
+indeed, lest if it were afterwards known by what disguise he had
+accomplished his purpose, he might receive some name in derision, from
+which he should never escape so long as he lived. Yet he had no choice
+but to dress as a woman, since he could not otherwise by any means have
+gone into the harem.
+
+As he came out of his house, accompanied only by Almasta he was seen at
+once by the two beggars who were always on the watch. And then, wishing
+to warn their companions, of whom many were lying asleep upon doorsteps
+in the same street and in others close by, these two made haste to get
+up, pretending to be lame and making a great clatter with their staves,
+as they limped after Abdullah. Then he, who loved to exercise charity in
+the market-place, but not in the dark where none could applaud him, made
+a pretence of not seeing the poor men, and went swiftly on with Almasta
+running by his side. But as he walked fast, the two beggars although
+apparently lame increased their speed with his, and their clatter also.
+
+'Does a sound man need a horse to escape from cripples?' asked Abdullah.
+And he turned quickly into a narrow lane.
+
+'It will be wiser to scatter a few coins to them,' said Almasta. 'They
+will then stop and search for them in the dark. For these men are very
+importunate and will certainly hinder us.'
+
+But Abdullah was confident in his legs as a strong man and only walked
+the faster, so that Almasta could with great difficulty keep beside him.
+Then they heard the beggars running after them in the dark and calling
+upon them.
+
+'O Abdullah!' they cried. 'The light of your charitable countenance goes
+before us like a lantern, and illuminates the whole street! Be merciful
+and give us a small coin, and Allah will reward you!'
+
+Then Abdullah stopped in the darkest part of the narrow lane, seeing
+that they had recognised him, and conceiving that it would be a reproach
+for a sheikh of pure blood to run from beggars; and he feared also that
+it would be remembered against him on the morrow. He therefore made a
+pretence of being diverted, and laughed.
+
+'Surely,' he said, 'the lame men of Riad could outrun in a race the
+sound men of any other city. And, by Allah, I have little money with me,
+for I was going to a friend's house to receive a sum due to me for
+certain mares; yet I will give you what I have, and I pray you, go in
+peace.'
+
+Thereupon he sought in his wallet for something to give them, and while
+he was seeking they began to praise him after their manner.
+
+'See this Abdullah!' they said. 'He is the father of the poor and
+distressed, and is ever ready to divide all he has with us. Yallah!
+Bless him exceedingly! Yallah! Increase his family!'
+
+But when Abdullah had found the money and was putting it into their
+hands, he was suddenly aware that instead of two beggars there were now
+ten or more, and these again multiplied in an extraordinary manner, so
+that he felt himself hemmed in on every side in a close press.
+
+'O Allah!' he exclaimed. 'Thou art witness that unless these small coins
+are multiplied a hundredfold, as the basket of dates by the Prophet at
+the trench before Medina, I shall have nothing to give these worthy
+persons.'
+
+By this time the blind Sheikh of the beggars was present, and he pushed
+forward, pretending to rebuke his companions.
+
+'O you greedy ones!' he cried. 'How often have I told you not to be so
+importunate? Yet you crowd upon him like wasps upon a date, presuming
+upon the goodness of his heart, and when there is no more room you crowd
+upon each other. Forgive them, O Abdullah!' he said, addressing him
+directly, 'for they have the appetites of jackals together with the
+understanding of little children. They would thrust into the dish a hand
+as small as a crow's foot and withdraw it looking as big as a camel's
+hoof. Their manners are also----'
+
+'My friend,' said Abdullah, 'I have given what I can. Let me therefore
+pass on, for my business is of importance, yet the throng is so great
+that I cannot move a step. To-morrow I will distribute much alms to you
+all.'
+
+'The radiance of your merciful countenance is enough for us,' replied
+the Sheikh of the beggars, 'and even I who am blind am comforted by its
+rays as by those of the sun in spring, and my hunger is appeased by the
+honey of your incomparable eloquence----'
+
+'My friend,' said Abdullah, interrupting him again, 'I pray you to let
+me go forward now, for I have a very important matter in hand, though it
+is with difficulty that I tear myself away from your society and I would
+willingly listen much longer to the words of the wise.'
+
+Then the blind man turned to the other beggars, and his hearing told him
+that by this time there were at least threescore in the street.
+
+'Come, my brothers!' he cried. 'Let us accompany our benefactor to the
+house of his friend, and afterwards we will wait for him and see that he
+reaches his own dwelling in safety. Surely it is not fitting that a
+sheikh of such great consideration should go about the streets at night
+without so much as an attendant carrying a lantern. Let us go with him.'
+
+Now these last words were the signal agreed upon, and even as Abdullah
+began to protest that he desired no such honourable escort as the
+beggars offered him, one came from behind and suddenly drew a thick
+barley-sack over his head, so that his voice was heard no more, and he
+was dragged down by the throat, while the one-eyed hunchback caught him
+by the legs and bound his feet and four others laid hold of his hands
+and tied them firmly behind him. Nor had Almasta time to utter a single
+cry before she was bound hand and foot with her head in a sack, like her
+husband. Then at a signal the beggars took up the two as though they had
+been bales packed ready for a camel's back, and carried them away
+swiftly into the darkness, towards the eastern gate where the blind man
+lived in a ruined house together with three or four of his most trusted
+companions. He also sent a messenger to his relation, the Bedouin, as
+had been agreed. It was already quite dark in the streets and the few
+persons who met the beggars did not see what they were carrying, nor ask
+questions of them, merely supposing that they had lingered long in the
+public square after evening prayers and were now returning in a body to
+their own quarter.
+
+The blind man's house was built of three rooms and a wall, standing in a
+square around a small court. But only one of the rooms had a roof of its
+own, though there was a sort of cellar under the floor of one of the
+others which served at once as a lodging for beggars in winter, as a
+storehouse for food when there was any in supply and as a place of
+deposit for the ancient iron chest in which the common fund of money was
+kept. To this vault the Sheikh of the beggars made his companions bring
+the two prisoners, and having set them on the floor, side by side, he
+proceeded to hold a council, in which the captives themselves had no
+part, since their heads were tied up in dusty barley-sacks and they
+could not speak so as to be heard.
+
+'O my brothers!' said the blind man. 'Allah has delivered the enemies of
+the kingdom into our hand, and it is necessary to decide what we will do
+with them. Let the oldest and the wisest give their opinions first, and
+after them the others, even to the youngest, and last of all I will
+speak, and let us see whether we can agree.'
+
+'Let us kill the man and bury him, and then cast lots among us for the
+woman,' said one.
+
+'No,' said the next, a man who had twice made the pilgrimage, and was
+much respected, 'we cannot do this, for the man is a true believer, and
+evil will befall us if we shed his blood. Let us rather keep him here,
+and purify his hide every day with our staves, until Khaled is in no
+more danger, and then we will take him to the palace and deliver him
+up.'
+
+'It is to be feared,' said the Sheikh of the beggars, 'that the man
+might chance to die of this sort of purification, though indeed it be
+very wholesome for him, and I am not altogether against it.'
+
+'Let us make him our slave,' said a third who had himself been the slave
+of a poor man who had died without heirs. 'The fellow is strong. Let us
+buy millstones and make him grind barley for us in this cellar. In this
+way he will not eat our food for nothing.'
+
+After this many others gave advice of the same kind. But while they were
+talking there was a great clattering and noise upon the stone steps
+which led down into the cellar, and a man fell over the last step and
+rolled over and over into the very midst of the council, railing and
+lamenting.
+
+'It is that ass of Egypt,' said the Sheikh of the beggars. 'I know him
+by the clattering of the wooden hoofs he wears on his hands, and also by
+his braying. Let him also give his opinion when he is recovered from his
+fall.'
+
+'It is strange and marvellous,' said one, 'that he who has no legs
+should suffer so many falls, being, by the will of Allah, always upon
+the earth. For when we first saw him we found him fainting upon the
+ground, having fallen from the wall of a garden, though no man could
+tell how he had climbed upon it.'
+
+'I had been transported to the top of the wall as in a dream,' replied
+the cripple, 'for there were dates in that garden. But having eaten too
+greedily of them I fell asleep on the top and I dreamed that my body was
+torn by hyaenas; and waking suddenly I fell down. For the dates were yet
+green.'
+
+'This may or may not be true,' said the blind man. 'For you are an
+Egyptian. Let us, however, hear what you have to advise in the matter of
+Abdullah and his wife, whom we have taken prisoners.'
+
+'I fear that you mock me, O my lord,' answered the man. 'But if I am
+mocked, I will advise that this Abdullah be also made a sport of, for us
+first, and for the people of Riad afterwards.'
+
+'Tell us how this may be done, for a good jest is better than salt for
+roasting, and the sheep lie here bound before us.'
+
+'Take this man, then,' said the cripple, 'and uncover his face, and hold
+him fast. Then let one of us get the razor and shave off all his beard
+and his eyebrows, and the hair of his head even to the nape of his neck.
+Then if he came suddenly before her who bore him and cried, "Mother,"
+she would cover her face and answer, "Begone, thou ostrich's egg!" For
+she would not know him. And to-morrow we will take his excellent clothes
+from him and put them upon our Sheikh. But we will dress Abdullah in
+rags such as would not serve to wipe the mud from a slave's shoes in the
+time of the subsiding waters, and we will tie his hands under his
+arm-pits and put a halter over his head and lead him about the city.
+Then he will cry out against us to the people, saying that he is
+Abdullah, but we will also cry out in answer: "See this madman, who
+believes himself to be a sheikh of Bedouins though Allah has given him
+no beard! O people of Riad, you may know that the spring is come, by the
+braying of this ass."'
+
+'Yet I see now that there may be wisdom in brayings,' said the Sheikh of
+the beggars, 'though Balaam ibn Beor shut his ears against it, and was
+punished for his cursing so that his tongue hung down to his breast, all
+his days, like that of a thirsty dog. This is good counsel, for in this
+way we shall not shed the man's blood, nor render ourselves guilty of
+his death; but I think we shall earn a great reward from Khaled, and his
+kingdom will be saved in laughter.'
+
+During all this time Abdullah had not moved, knowing that he was in the
+power of many enemies and beyond all reach of help, but when he heard
+the decision of the Sheikh of the beggars he was filled with shame and
+rolled himself from side to side upon the floor, as though trying to
+escape from the bonds that held him. Almasta, for her part, lay quietly
+where they had put her, for she saw that all chance of success was gone
+and was pondering how she might take advantage of what happened, to save
+herself.
+
+Then the beggars laid hold of Abdullah and held him, while others took
+the sack from his head. He was indeed half smothered with dust, so that
+at first he could not speak aloud, but coughed and sneezed like a dog
+that has thrust its nose into a dust-heap to find the bone which is
+hidden underneath. But presently he recovered his breath and began to
+rail at them and curse them. To this they paid no attention, but brought
+the oil lamp near him, and one began to rub soap upon his face and head
+while another got the razor with which the beggars shaved their heads
+and began to whet it upon his leathern girdle.
+
+'Do not waste the precious stones of your eloquence upon a barber,'
+said the Sheikh of the beggars, 'but reserve your breath and the rich
+treasures of your speech until you are brought as a plucked bird before
+the people of Riad. Moreover we only wish to shave off your beard, but
+if you are restless some of your hide will certainly be removed also,
+whereby you will be hurt and it will be still harder for your friends to
+recognise you to-morrow. It is also useless to shout and scream as
+though you were driving camels, for you are in the cellar of my house
+which is at a good distance from other habitations, on the borders of
+the city.'
+
+So Abdullah saw that there was no escape, and that his fate was about
+his neck, and he sat still as they had placed him, while the one-eyed
+hunchback shaved off his beard and the hair on his upper lip and his
+eyebrows, and the lock at the back of his head.
+
+When this was done the blind man put out his hand and felt Abdullah's
+face.
+
+'Surely,' he said, 'this is not a man's head, but the round end of a
+walking-staff, rubbed smooth by much use.'
+
+They also tied his hands under his arm-pits and put upon him a ragged
+shirt with sleeves so that he seemed to have lost both arms at the
+elbow.
+
+'This is very well done,' said the hunchback turning his head from side
+to side in order to see all with his one eye. 'But what shall we do
+with the woman? Let us cast lots for her, and he who wins her shall
+marry her, and we will hold the feast immediately, for we have not yet
+supped and there is some of the camel's meat which we received to-day at
+the palace.'
+
+'O my brothers,' answered the Sheikh of the beggars, 'let us do nothing
+unlawful in our haste. For this woman is certainly one of Abdullah's
+wives, as you may see by her clothes, and unless he divorces her none of
+us can take her for ourselves, seeing that she is the wife of a
+believer. Take the sack from her head, however, and if she deafens us
+with her screaming we can put it on again. But you must by no means put
+her to shame by taking the veil from her face, for she may be an honest
+wife, though her husband be a dog. If she has done well, we shall find
+it out, and no harm will have come to her; but if she is a sharer in
+this fellow's plans, her punishment will be grievous, since she will be
+the wife of an outcast, having neither beard nor eyebrows and rejected
+by all men.'
+
+Some of the beggars murmured at this, but most of them praised their
+Sheikh's wisdom, and would indeed have feared greatly to break the holy
+law, being chiefly devout men who prayed daily in the mosque and
+listened to the Khotbah on Friday. They therefore placed Almasta in one
+corner of the cellar and Abdullah in another, so that the two could not
+converse together, and then they took out such food as they had and
+began to eat their supper, laughing and talking over the jest and
+anticipating the reward which awaited them for saving Khaled.
+
+In the meanwhile the night was advancing and many of Abdullah's friends
+left their houses secretly and gathered in the neighbourhood of the
+palace to wait for the first signal from within. By threes and by twos
+and singly they came out of their dwellings, looking to the right and
+left to see whether they were not the first, as men do who are not sure
+of being in the right. All had their swords with them, and some their
+bows also, and some few carried their spears, and they made no secret of
+their bearing weapons; but under each man's aba was concealed the
+largest barley-sack he could find in his house, and concerning this no
+one of the multitude said anything to his neighbour, for each hoped to
+get a greater share than the others of the gold and precious stones from
+the fabulous treasure stored in the palace. Then most of these men sat
+down to wait, as vultures do before the camel is quite dead. But not
+long after the middle of the night they were joined by a great throng of
+Bedouins from Abdullah's tribe. These had been admitted into the city by
+the watchman according to the agreement, and passed up the great street
+from the Hasa gate, in a close body, not speaking and making but little
+noise with their feet as they walked; yet all of them together could be
+heard from a distance, because they were so many, and the sound was like
+the night wind among the branches of dry palm trees. After them, other
+Bedouins came in from camps both near and far, some of them having made
+half a day's journey since sunset; and they surrounded the palace on all
+sides, and filled the great street, and the street which passes by the
+mosque towards the Dereyiyah gate and all the other approaches to the
+open square, sitting down wherever there was room, or leaning against
+the closed shops of the bazar, or standing up in a thick crowd when they
+were too closely pressed to be at ease. They talked together from time
+to time in low tones, but when their voices rose above a whisper some
+man in authority hushed them saying that the hour was not yet come.
+
+'By this time Abdullah has slain Khaled,' said some, 'and the daughter
+of the old Sultan is a prisoner.'
+
+'And by this time,' said others, 'Abdullah is surely unlocking the
+treasure chamber and filling a barley-sack with pearls and rubies. It is
+certain that he who slays the lion deserves his bride, but we hope that
+something will be left for us.'
+
+'Hush!' said the voice of one moving in the darkness. 'Be patient. It is
+not yet time.'
+
+Then, for a space, a deep silence fell on the speakers and they crouched
+in their places watching the high black walls of the palace and marking
+the motion of the stars by the highest point of the tower. Before long
+whispered words were heard again.
+
+'It would have been more just if Abdullah had opened the gate to us as
+soon as he had slain Khaled, for then we could have seen what he took.
+But now, who shall tell us what share of the riches he is hiding away in
+the more secret vaults?'
+
+'This is true,' answered others. 'And besides, what need have we of
+Abdullah to help us into the palace? Surely we could have broken down
+the gates and slain the guards and Khaled himself without Abdullah's
+help. Yet we, for our part, would not shed the blood of a man who has
+always dealt very generously with us, nor do we believe the story of the
+camels laden secretly in Hail. However, what is ordained will take
+place, and we shall undoubtedly receive plentiful gold merely for
+sitting here to watch the stars through the night.'
+
+'The story of the camels is not true,' said a certain man, speaking
+alone. 'For I was of the drivers sent with them, and being hungry, we
+opened one of the bales on the way. By Allah! There was nothing but
+wheat in it, and it was white and good; but there was nothing else, not
+so much as a few small coins----'
+
+Then there was the sound of a blow, and the man who was speaking was
+struck on the mouth, so that his speech was interrupted.
+
+'Peace and be silent!' said a voice. 'They who speak lies will receive
+no share with the rest when the time comes.'
+
+But the man who had been struck was the strongest of all his tribe,
+though he who had struck him did not know it. And the man caught his
+assailant by the waist in the dark, and wrestled with him violently,
+being very angry, and broke his forearm and his collar-bone and several
+of his ribs, and when he had done with him, he threw him over his
+shoulder so that he fell fainting and moaning three paces away.
+
+'O you who strike honest men on the mouth in the dark, you have been
+over-rash!' he cried. 'Go home and hide yourself lest I recognise you
+and break such bones as you have still whole!'
+
+'This is well done,' said one of the bystanders in a loud voice. 'For
+the story of the camels laden secretly with treasure is a lie. I also
+was with the drivers and ate of the wheat. Nor do I believe that Khaled
+is a robber and a Persian.'
+
+'We do not believe it!' cried a score of Bedouins together. 'And if we
+have come here, it is to get our share like other men, since they tell
+us that Khaled is dead. But now we believe that Abdullah has shut
+himself into the palace and means to keep all for himself, and is
+cheating us.'
+
+These men were none of them of Abdullah's tribe, but as the voices grew
+louder, Abdullah's kinsmen came up, and endeavoured to quiet the growing
+tumult. The crowd had parted a little and the strong man stood alone in
+the midst.
+
+'We pray you to be patient,' said Abdullah's men, 'for the time is at
+hand and the false dawn has already passed, though you have not seen it,
+so that before long it will be day. Then the gates will be opened and
+you shall all go in.'
+
+'We have no need of your sheikh to open gates for us,' said the strong
+man, in a voice that could be heard very far through the crowd. 'And
+moreover it will be better for you not to strike any more of us, or, by
+Allah, we will not only break your bones but shed your blood.'
+
+At this there was a sullen cry and men sprang to their feet and laid
+their hands upon their weapons. But a youth who had come up with
+Abdullah's kinsmen, though not one of them, bent very low over the man
+who had been thrown down and then spoke out with a loud and laughing
+voice.
+
+'Truly they say that crows lead people to the carcases of dogs!' he
+said. 'This fellow is of the family which murdered my father, upon whom
+may Allah send peace! Nor will I exceed the bounds of moderation and
+justice.'
+
+Thereupon the young man drew out his knife and immediately killed his
+father's enemy as he lay upon the ground, and then he withdrew quickly
+into the dark crowd so that none knew him. But though there was only the
+light of the stars and the multitude was great, many had seen the deed
+and each man stood closer by his neighbour and grasped his weapon to be
+in readiness. The kinsmen of Abdullah saw that they were separated from
+their own tribe and drew back, warning the others to keep the peace and
+be silent, lest they should be cut off from their share of the spoil.
+But their voices trembled with fears for their own safety, and they were
+answered by scornful shouts and jeers.
+
+'The young man says well that you are crows,' cried the angry men, 'for
+you wish to keep the carcase for yourselves. Come and take it if you are
+able!'
+
+Now indeed the quarrel which had been begun by the blow struck in the
+dark spread suddenly to great dimensions, for the words spoken were
+caught up as grains of sand by the wind and blown into all men's ears.
+Many were ready enough to believe that Abdullah cared only for
+enriching himself and his tribe, and many more who had been persuaded to
+the enterprise by the hope of gain turned again to their faith in Khaled
+as the dream of gold disappeared from their eyes. Yet Abdullah's tribe
+was numerous, and it was easy to see that if the dissension grew into a
+strife of arms the fight would be long and fierce on both sides.
+
+Then certain of those who were against Abdullah raised the cry that he
+had slain Khaled and escaped with the treasure by a secret passage
+leading under the walls of the city, which passage was spoken of in old
+tales, though no one knew where to find it. But the multitude believed
+and pressed forward in a strong body and began to beat against the
+iron-bound gate of the palace with great stones and pieces of wood.
+Abdullah's men came on fiercely to prevent them, but were opposed by
+many, and as the wing of night was lifted and the dawn drank the stars,
+the wide square was filled with the clashing of arms and the noise of a
+terrible tumult.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+At the time when the beggars were carrying away Abdullah and his wife,
+Khaled was sitting in his accustomed place, silent and heavy at heart,
+and Zehowah played softly to him upon a barbat and sang a sad song in a
+low voice. For she saw that gloominess had overcome him and she feared
+to disturb his mood, though she would gladly have made him smile if she
+had been able.
+
+A black slave of Khaled's whom he had treated with great kindness had
+secretly told him that there was a plan to enter the palace with evil
+during that night, for the fellow had spied upon those who knew and had
+overheard what he now told his master. He had also asked whether he
+should not warn the guards of the palace, in order that a strict watch
+should be kept, but Khaled had bidden him be silent.
+
+'Either the guards are conspiring with the rest,' said Khaled, 'and will
+be the first to attack me, or they are ignorant of the plan; and if so
+how can they withstand so great a multitude? I will abide by my own
+fate, and no man shall lose his life for my sake unless he desires to do
+so.'
+
+But he privately put on a coat of mail under his aba, and when he sat
+down in the harem to await the end he would not let Zehowah take his
+sword, but laid it upon his feet and sat upright against the wall,
+looking towards the door.
+
+'Since I have no soul,' he said to himself, 'this is probably the end of
+all things. But there is no reason why I should not kill as many of
+these murderers as possible.'
+
+He was gloomy and desponding, however, since he saw that his hour was at
+hand, and that Zehowah was no nearer to loving him than before. He
+watched her fingers as she played upon the instrument, and he listened
+to the soft notes of her voice.
+
+'It is a strange thing,' he thought, 'and I believe that she is not able
+to love, any more than my sword upon my feet, which is good and true and
+beautiful, and ever ready to my hand, but is itself cold, having no
+feeling in it.'
+
+Still Zehowah sang and Khaled heard her song, listening watchfully for a
+man's tread upon the threshold and looking to see a man's face and the
+light of steel in the shadow beyond the lamps.
+
+'The night is long,' he said at last, aloud.
+
+'It is not yet midnight,' Zehowah answered. 'But you are tired. Will you
+not go to rest?'
+
+'I shall rest to-morrow,' said Khaled. 'To-night I will sit here and
+look at you, if you will sing to me.'
+
+Zehowah gazed into his eyes, wondering a little at his exceeding
+sadness. Then she bowed her head and struck the strings of the
+instrument to a new measure more melancholy than the last, and sang an
+old song of many verses, with a weeping refrain.
+
+'Are you also heavy at heart to-night?' Khaled asked, when he had
+listened to the end.
+
+'It is not easy to kindle a lamp when the rain is falling heavily,'
+Zehowah said. 'Your sadness has taken hold of me, like the chill of a
+fever. I cannot laugh to-night.'
+
+'And yet you have a good cause, for they say that to-night the earth is
+to be delivered of a great malefactor, a certain Persian, whose name is
+perhaps Hassan, a notorious robber.'
+
+Khaled turned away his head, smiling bitterly, for he desired not to see
+the satisfaction which would come into her face.
+
+'This is a poor jest,' she answered in a low voice, and the barbat
+rolled from her knees to the carpet beside her.
+
+'I mean no jesting, for I do not desire to disappoint you, since you
+will naturally be glad to be freed from me. But I am glad if you are
+willing to sing to me, for this night is very long.'
+
+'Do you think that I believe this of you?' asked Zehowah, after some
+time.
+
+'You believed it yesterday, you believe it to-day, and you will believe
+it to-morrow when you are free to make choice of some other man--whom
+you will doubtless love.'
+
+'Yet I know that it is not true,' she said suddenly.
+
+'It is too late,' Khaled answered. 'The more I love you, the more I see
+how little faith you have in me--and the less faith can I put in you.
+Will you sing to me again?'
+
+'This is very cruel and bitter.' Zehowah sighed and looked at him.
+
+'Will you sing to me again, Zehowah?' he repeated. 'I like your sad
+music.'
+
+Then she took up the barbat from the carpet, but though she struck a
+chord she could not go on and her hand lay idle upon the strings, and
+her voice was still.
+
+'You are perhaps tired,' said Khaled after some time. 'Then lay aside
+the instrument and sleep.' He composed himself in his seat, his sword
+being ready and his eyes towards the door.
+
+But Zehowah shook her head as though awaking from a dream, her fingers
+ran swiftly over the strings and gentle tones came from her lips. Khaled
+listened thoughtfully to the song and the words soothed him, but before
+she had reached the end, she stopped suddenly.
+
+'Why do you not finish it?' he asked.
+
+'If you have told me truth,' she answered, 'this is no time for singing
+and music. But if not, why should I labour to amuse you, as though I
+were a slave? I will call one of the women who has a sweet voice and a
+good memory. She will sing you a kasid which will last till morning.'
+
+'You are wrong,' said Khaled. 'There is no reason in what you say.'
+
+But he reflected upon her nature, while he spoke.
+
+'Surely,' he thought, 'there is nothing in the world so contradictory as
+a woman. I ask of her a song and she is silent. I bid her rest,
+supposing her to be weary, and she sings to me. If I tell her that I
+hate her she will perhaps answer that she loves me. Min Allah! Let us
+see.'
+
+'You inspire hatred in me,' he said aloud, after a few moments.
+
+At this Zehowah was very much astonished, and she again let the barbat
+fall from her knees.
+
+'You wished me to believe that you loved me, and this not long since,'
+she answered.
+
+'It may be so. I did not know you then.'
+
+He looked towards the door as though he would say nothing further.
+Zehowah sighed, not understanding him yet being wounded in that
+sensitive tissue of the heart which divides the outer desert of pride
+from the inner garden of love, belonging to neither but separating the
+two as a veil. And when there is a rent in that veil, pride looks on
+love and scoffs bitterly, and love looks on pride and weeps tears of
+fire.
+
+'I am sorry that you hate me,' she said, but the words were bitter in
+her mouth as a draught from a spring into which the enemy have cast
+wormwood, that none may drink of it.
+
+'Allah is great!' thought Khaled. 'This is already an advantage.'
+
+Then Zehowah took up the barbat and began to sing a careless song not
+like any which Khaled had ever heard. This is the song--
+
+ 'The fisherman of Oman tied the halter under his arms,
+ The sky was as blue as the sea in winter.
+ The fisherman dived into the deep waters
+ As a ray of light shoots through a sapphire of price.
+ The sea was as blue as the sky, for it was winter.
+ Among the rocks below the water it was dark and cold
+ Though the sky above was as blue as a fine sapphire.
+ The fisherman saw a rough shell lying there in the dark between two
+ crabs,
+ "In that shell there must be a large pearl," he said.
+ But when he would have taken it the crabs ran together and fastened
+ upon his hand.
+ His heart was bursting in his ribs for lack of breath
+ And he thought of the sky above, as blue as the sea in winter.
+ So he pulled the halter and was taken half-fainting into the boat.
+ The crabs held his hand but he struck them off,
+ And his heart beat merrily as he breathed the wind
+ Blowing over the sea as blue as the sky in winter.
+ "There are no pearls in this ocean," he said to his companions,
+ "But there are crabs if any one cares to dive."
+ One of them saw the shell caught between the legs of the crabs,
+ He opened it and found a pearl of the value of a kingdom.
+ "The pearl is mine, but you may eat the crabs," he said to the
+ fisherman,
+ "Since you say there are no pearls in this ocean,
+ Which is as blue as the sky in winter."
+ Then the fisherman smote him and tried to take the pearl,
+ But as they strove it fell into the deep water and sank,
+ Where the sea was as blue as the sky in winter.
+ "I will drown you with a heavy weight," said the fisherman, "for you
+ have robbed me of my fortune."
+ "I have not robbed you, O brother, for the pearl is again where you
+ found it,
+ In the sea which is as blue as the sky in winter."
+ Then the fisherman dived again many times in vain
+ Till the drums of his ears were broken and his heart was dissolved for
+ lack of breath.
+ But the pearl is still there, at the bottom of the sea,
+ And the sea is as blue as the sky in winter.
+ This is the kasid of the fisherman of Oman
+ Which Zehowah Bint ul Mahomed el Hamid
+ Has made and sung for her lord, Khaled the Sultan.
+ May Allah send him long life and many such hearts
+ As the one which fell into the ocean
+ When the sky was as blue as the sea in winter.'
+
+'This is a new song,' said Khaled, when she had finished.
+
+'Is it? I made it many months ago,' Zehowah answered. 'Does it please
+you?'
+
+'It is not very melodious, nor do I think there is much truth in the
+matter of it. But I thank you, for it has served to pass the time.'
+
+Zehowah laughed a little scornfully.
+
+'I daresay you would prefer the song of a Persian nightingale,' she
+said. 'Nevertheless my song is full of truth, though you cannot see it.
+There are many who seek for things of great value and do not know when
+they have found them because a crab has bitten their hands.'
+
+'Verily,' thought Khaled, 'this is indeed the spirit of contradiction.'
+
+But he was silent for a time, not wishing that she should think him
+easily moved. In the meantime Zehowah played softly upon the little
+instrument and Khaled watched her, wondering whether she were not
+playing upon the strings of his heart, for her own pleasure, as
+skilfully as her fingers ran upon the chords of the barbat. Many words
+rose to his lips then, and he wished that he also had the science of
+music that he might sing sweetly to her. Then he laughed aloud at his
+own imagination, which was indeed that of a foolish youth.
+
+'The lion roaring for a sweetmeat,' he thought, 'and the sword-hand
+aching to scratch little tunes upon a lute!'
+
+Zehowah turned suddenly when he laughed, and ceased from playing.
+
+'I am glad that you are merry,' she said. 'I like laughter better than
+reproaches and prefer it to gloomy forebodings of evil when none is at
+hand.'
+
+Khaled's face grew dark, and he looked again towards the door.
+
+'If you will stay with me, you shall see that evil is not far off,' he
+answered, for she had reminded him of what he was expecting, and he knew
+that it was no jesting matter. 'But you shall please yourself in this as
+in all other matters, though it were better for you to go now and shut
+yourself up in an inner room and wait for the end. The night is
+advancing, and all will soon be over.'
+
+'Hear me, Khaled,' said Zehowah, speaking earnestly. 'If you bid me go,
+I will go, or if you desire me to stay, I will remain with you. But if
+you are indeed in danger, as you say, let us call up the guards and the
+watchmen who sleep in the palace, that they may stand by you with their
+swords and help you to fight if there is to be strife.'
+
+'I will have no treacherous fellows about me,' Khaled answered, 'and
+there are none here whom I can trust. My hour is coming and I will
+fight this fight alone. But if you were such as I once hoped, I would
+say: "Remain with me, so long as you are safe." Now, since Allah has
+willed it thus, I say to you: "Go and seek safety where you can find
+it." Go, therefore, Zehowah, and leave me alone, for I need no one
+beside me, and you least of all.'
+
+He turned away his head, lest she should see his face, and with his hand
+made a gesture bidding her to leave him. She rose from her seat softly
+and hung the barbat upon the wall with the other musical instruments,
+looking over her shoulder to see whether he would call her back. But he
+neither moved nor spoke, being resolved to venture all upon this trial,
+for he knew that if she loved him even but a little, she would not leave
+him alone in the extremity of danger.
+
+Then she went towards the door of the room, turning her head to look at
+him as she passed near him.
+
+'Farewell,' she said. But he did not answer nor show that he heard her
+voice.
+
+As she lifted the curtain to go out, she lingered and gazed at him. He
+sat motionless upon the carpet, upright against the wall, his sword
+lying across his feet, his hands hidden under his sleeves, looking
+towards her indeed but not seeming to see her.
+
+'There can be no real danger,' she thought. 'Could any man sit thus,
+expecting death, and refusing to let any one stand by him to fight with
+him? Surely, he is playing with me, and setting a trap for me. But he
+shall not catch me.'
+
+She turned to go and the curtain was falling behind her when the night
+wind from the open passage brought a sound to her ears from a far
+distance. She started and listened, as camels do when they hear the
+first moving of the hot wind. There were no voices in the noise, which
+was low and dull, like the breathing of a great multitude and the soft
+moving of feet, and altogether it was as the slow rising and falling
+back of the sea upon the shores of Oman, when the great summer storm is
+coming from the south-west.
+
+Zehowah stood still a moment and drank in every murmur that reached her
+from without. Then her face grew white and her lips trembled when she
+thought of Khaled sitting alone on the other side of the curtain, with
+his sword upon his feet, waiting for the end. She lifted the hanging a
+little and looked at him again. He saw her, but made no sign. Even as
+she looked, the distant murmur grew louder and she fancied that he moved
+his head as though he heard it. Then she entered the room and came and
+stood before him.
+
+'There is a great multitude in the square before the palace,' she said.
+
+'I know it,' he answered, calmly looking up to her face. 'It needed not
+that you should tell me.'
+
+'Will you not let me stay with you now?' asked Zehowah.
+
+'Why should you stay here?' he asked with a pretence of indifference.
+'Of what use are you to me? Take this sword. Can you strike with it?
+Your wrist is feeble. Or take a bow from the weapons on the wall. Can
+you draw the string? Your strength is sufficient for the lute, and your
+skill for scratching the strings of the barbat. Go and save yourself. I
+am alone and every man's hand is against me.'
+
+Zehowah stood still in the room and hesitated, looking into his eyes for
+something which she all at once desired with a hot thirst. At last she
+spoke in an uncertain voice.
+
+'Yet you said not long since that if I were such as you once hoped, you
+would bid me remain.'
+
+'I do not care,' he answered. 'Yet for your own sake, I advise you to go
+away.'
+
+'For my own sake!' she repeated, trying to speak scornfully, and turning
+to go a second time.
+
+But she did not reach the door. She stood still before the weapons which
+hung upon the wall, and paused a moment and then took a sword from its
+place. Khaled watched her. She grasped the hilt as well as she could
+and swung the weapon in the air once with all her might. Then she
+uttered a little cry of pain, for she had twisted her wrist. The sword
+fell to the floor.
+
+'He is right,' she said in a low tone, speaking aloud to herself. 'I am
+weak and can be of no use to him.'
+
+She went on once more towards the door, slowly, her head bent down, then
+stopped and then looked back again. She feared that she might see a
+smile on his face, but his eyes were grave and calm. Then he saw her
+turn and lean against the wall as though she were suddenly weak. She hid
+her face, and there was silence for a moment, and after that a low sound
+of weeping filled the still room.
+
+'Why do you shed tears?' Khaled asked presently. 'There is no danger for
+you, I think. If you will go and shut yourself in the inner rooms you
+will be safe.'
+
+She turned fiercely and their eyes met.
+
+'What do I care for myself?' she cried. 'Among so many deaths there is
+surely one for me!'
+
+Even as she spoke Khaled felt a cool breath upon his forehead, stirring
+the stillness. He knew that it came from the beating of an angel's
+wings. All his body trembled, his head fell forward a little and his
+eyes closed.
+
+'This is death,' he thought, 'and my fate has come. A little longer,
+and she would have loved me.' But he did not speak aloud.
+
+Again Zehowah's face was turned towards the wall, and still the sound of
+her weeping filled the air, not subsiding and dying away, but rather
+increasing with every moment.
+
+'Life is not yet gone,' said Khaled in his heart. 'There is yet hope.'
+For he no longer felt the cold breath on his forehead, and the trembling
+had ceased for a moment.
+
+He tried to speak aloud, but his lips could not form words nor his
+throat utter sounds, and he was amazed at his weakness. A great despair
+came upon him and his eyes were darkened so that he could not see the
+lights.
+
+'If only I could speak to her now, she might love me yet!' he thought.
+
+The distant murmur from without was louder now and reached the room, and
+he heard it. He tried with all his might to raise his hand, to lift his
+head, to speak a single word.
+
+'It may be that this is the nature of death,' he thought again, 'and I
+am already dead.'
+
+The noise from the multitude came louder and louder. Zehowah heard it
+and her breath was caught in her throat. She looked up and saw that the
+high window of the chamber was no longer quite dark. The day was
+dawning. Then pressing her bosom with her hands she looked again at
+Khaled. His head was bent upon his breast and he was so still that she
+thought he had fallen asleep. A cry broke from her lips.
+
+'He cares not!' she exclaimed. 'What is it to him, whether I go, or
+stay?'
+
+Again Khaled felt the cool breeze in the room, fanning his forehead, and
+once more his limbs trembled. Then he felt that his strength was
+returning and that he could move. He raised his head and looked at
+Zehowah, and just then there was a distant crashing roar, as the
+Bedouins began to strike upon the gates.
+
+'It is time,' he said, and taking his sword in his hand he rose from his
+seat.
+
+Zehowah came towards him with outstretched hands, wet cheeks and burning
+eyes. She stood before him as though to bar the way, and hinder him from
+going out.
+
+'What is it to you, whether I go, or stay?' he asked, repeating her own
+words.
+
+'What is it? By Allah, it is all my life--I will not let you go!' And
+she took hold of his wrists with her weak woman's hands, and tried to
+thrust him back.
+
+'Go, Zehowah,' he answered, gently pressing her from him. 'Go now, and
+let me meet them alone, knowing that you are safe. For though this be
+pity which you feel, I know it is nothing more.'
+
+He would have passed by her, but still she held him and kept before him.
+
+'You shall not go!' she cried. 'I will prevent you with my body. Pity,
+you say? Oh, Khaled! Is pity fierce? Is pity strong? Does pity burn like
+fire? You shall not go, I say!'
+
+Then her hands grew cold upon his wrists, her cheeks burned and in her
+eyes there was a deep and gleaming light. All this Khaled felt and saw,
+while he heard the raging of the multitude without. His sight grew again
+uncertain. A third time the cool breath blew in his face.
+
+'Yet it cannot be love,' he said uncertainly. Yet she heard him.
+
+'Not love? Khaled, Khaled--my life, my breath, my soul--breath of my
+life, life of my spirit--oh, Khaled, you have never loved as I love you
+now!'
+
+Her hands let go his wrists and clasped about his neck, and her face was
+hidden upon his shoulder while her breath came and went like the gusts
+of the burning storm in summer.
+
+But as he held her, Khaled looked up and saw that the Angel of Allah was
+before him, having a smiling countenance and bearing in his hand a
+bright flame like the crescent moon.
+
+'It is well done, O Khaled,' said the Angel, 'and this is thy reward.
+Allah sends thee this to be thy own and to live after thy body, saying
+that thou hast well earned it, for love such as thou hast got now is a
+rare thing, not common with women and least of all with wives of kings.
+And now Allah alone knows what thy fate is to be, but thou shalt be
+judged at the end like other men, according to thy deeds, be they good
+or evil. And so receive thy soul and do with it as thou wilt.'
+
+The Angel then held out the flame which was like the crescent moon and
+it immediately took shape and became the brighter image of Khaled
+himself, endowed with immortality, and the knowledge of its own good and
+evil. And when Khaled had looked at it fixedly for a moment, being
+overcome with joy, the vision of himself disappeared, and he was aware
+that it had entered his own body and taken up its life within him.
+
+'Return thanks to Allah, and go thy way to the end,' said the Angel, who
+then unfolded his wings and departed to paradise whence he had come.
+
+But Khaled clasped Zehowah tightly in his arms, and looking upwards
+repeated the first chapter of the Koran and also the one hundred and
+tenth chapter, which is entitled, Assistance. When he had performed
+these inward devotions he turned his gaze upon Zehowah and kissed her.
+
+'Praise be to Allah,' he said, 'for this and all blessings. But now let
+us defend ourselves if we can, my beloved, for I think my enemies are at
+hand.'
+
+And so he would have stooped to take up his sword which had fallen upon
+the floor. But still Zehowah held him and would not let him go.
+
+'Not yet, Khaled!' she cried. 'Not yet, soul of my soul! The gates are
+very strong, and will withstand this battering for some time.'
+
+'Would you have him whom you love sit still in the net until the hunters
+come to catch him?' he asked in a tender voice.
+
+'You said you would wait here,' she pleaded. 'If we must die, let us die
+here--our life will be a little longer so.'
+
+'Did I say so? I thought you did not love me then, and I would have
+slain a few only, for my own sake, that my blood might not be unavenged.
+But now I will slay them all, for your sake, and the bodies of the dead
+shall be a rampart for you.'
+
+'Oh, do not go!' she cried again. 'I know a secret passage from the
+palace, that leads out by the wall of the city--come quickly, there is
+yet time, and we shall escape--for Allah will protect us. Surely, when I
+was fainting in your arms I heard an angel's voice--and surely the angel
+is yet with us, and will lighten the way as we go.'
+
+'The Angel was indeed here, for he brought me the soul that was
+promised, if you loved me. And now all is changed, for if we live, we
+get the victory and if we die we shall inherit paradise.'
+
+And Zehowah looked into his eyes and saw the living soul flaming within,
+and she believed him.
+
+'If you had always been as you are now, I should have always loved you,'
+she said softly, and stooping down she took up his sword and drew it out
+and put it into his hand. 'I tried to wield one when you were not
+looking,' she said, 'but it hurt my wrist. Come, Khaled--let us go
+together.'
+
+Then he kissed her once more, and she kissed him, and putting one arm
+about her, he led her swiftly out by the passage towards the great gate.
+It was now broad dawn and the light was coming in by the narrow windows.
+
+Zehowah clung to Khaled closely, for the noise of the thundering blows
+was terrible and deafening, and the multitude without were shouting to
+each other and calling upon Abdullah to come out, for they supposed him
+to be in the palace. But the guards and soldiers within had all hidden
+themselves though they were awake, for there was no one to command them
+nor to lead them, and they dared not open the gate lest they themselves
+should be slain in the first rush of the crowd.
+
+Then Khaled and Zehowah paused for a moment near the gate.
+
+'It is better that you should go back, my beloved,' said Khaled. 'Hear
+what a multitude of angry men are waiting outside.'
+
+'I will not leave you--neither in life nor in death,' she answered.
+
+'Let it be so, then,' said Khaled, 'and I will do my best. For a hundred
+men could not stop the way before me now, and I think that of five
+hundred I could slay many.'
+
+So he went up to the gate, and Zehowah stood a little behind him so as
+to be free of the first sweep of his sword.
+
+'Abdullah!' cried some of the crowd without, while battering at the
+iron-bound doors. 'Abdullah, thou son of Mohammed and father of lies,
+come out to us, or we will go to thee!'
+
+'Abdullah, thou thief, thou Persian, thou cheat, come out, and may
+boiling water be thy portion!'
+
+'Stand back from the gate, and I will open it to you!' cried Khaled in a
+voice that might have been heard across the Red Desert as far as the
+shores of the great ocean.
+
+'I, Khaled, will open,' he cried again.
+
+Then there was a great silence and the people fell back a little.
+
+Khaled drew the bolts and unfastened the locks, and opened the gates
+inward and stood forth alone in the morning light, his sword in his hand
+and his soul burning in his eyes.
+
+'Khaled!' cried the first who saw him, and the cry was taken up.
+
+The shout was great, and full of joy and shook the earth. For the
+multitude had grown hot in anger against Abdullah, while they battered
+at the gates, supposing that he had slain Khaled. But he himself could
+not at first distinguish whether they were angry or glad.
+
+'If any man wishes to take my life,' he cried, 'let him come and take
+it.'
+
+And the sword they all knew in battle, began to make a storm of
+lightning about his head in the morning sun.
+
+Then the strong man who had wrestled and thrown the other before dawn,
+stood out alone and spoke in a loud voice.
+
+'We will have no Sultan but Khaled!' he cried. 'Give us Abdullah that we
+may make trappings for our camels from his skin.'
+
+Then Khaled sheathed his sword and came forward from under the gate, and
+Zehowah stood veiled beside him.
+
+'Where is this Abdullah?' he asked. 'Find him if you can, for I would
+like to speak with him.'
+
+Then there was silence for a space. But by this time Abdullah's men had
+fled, for they had already been forced back in the crowding, and so soon
+as they saw Khaled standing unhurt under the palace gate, they turned
+quickly and ran for their lives to escape from the city, seeing that all
+was lost.
+
+'Where is Abdullah?' Khaled asked again.
+
+And a voice from afar off answered, as though heralding the coming of a
+great personage.
+
+'Behold Abdullah, the Sultan of Nejed!' it cried.
+
+Then the multitude turned angrily, grasping swords and spears and
+breathing curses. But the murmur broke suddenly into a shout of laughter
+louder even than the cry for Khaled had been. For a great procession had
+entered the square and the people made way for it as it advanced towards
+the palace.
+
+First came a score of lepers, singing in hideous voices and dancing in
+the early sun, filthy and loathsome to behold. And then came all manner
+of cripples, laughing and chattering, with coloured rags fastened to
+their staves, an army of distorted apes.
+
+Then, walking alone and feeling his way with his staff came the Sheikh
+of the beggars. And in one hand he held the end of a halter, which was
+fastened about Abdullah's head and neck and between his teeth, so that
+he could not cry out. And the blind man chanted a kasid which he had
+composed in the night in honour of Abdullah ibn Mohammed el Herir, the
+victorious Sultan of Nejed.
+
+'Upon whom may Allah send much boiling water,' sang the Sheikh of the
+beggars after each stave.
+
+And Abdullah, his head and face shaven as bald as an ostrich's egg, was
+bent by the weight he carried, for upon his shoulders rode the cripple
+whom they called the Ass of Egypt, clapping the wooden shoes he used on
+his hands, like cymbals to accompany the song of the blind man. And last
+of all came a veiled woman, walking sadly, for she could not escape,
+being surrounded and driven on by many scores of beggars, all dancing
+and shouting and crying out mock praises of the Sultan Abdullah and his
+wife.
+
+But as the procession moved on the laughter increased a hundredfold,
+until all men's eyes were blind with mirth, and their breasts were
+bursting and aching with so much merriment.
+
+At last the Sheikh of the beggars stood before Khaled holding the
+halter. And here he made a deep obeisance, pulling the halter so that
+Abdullah nearly fell to the ground.
+
+'In the name of the beggars,' he said, 'I present to your high majesty
+the Sultan of Nejed, Abdullah ibn Mohammed, and his chief minister the
+Ass of Egypt, and moreover the sultan's wife. May it please your high
+majesty to reward the beggars with a few small coins and a little
+barley, for having brought his high majesty, the new sultan, safely to
+the gate of the palace and to the steps of the throne.'
+
+Thereupon all the beggars, the lepers, the cripples, the blind men and
+those of weak understanding fell down together at Khaled's feet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This is the story of Khaled the believing genius, which he caused to be
+written down in letters of gold by the most accomplished scribe in
+Nejed, that all men might remember it. But of what afterwards occurred
+there is nothing told in the scribe's manuscript. It is recounted,
+however, in the commentaries of one Abd ul Latif that Khaled did not
+cause Abdullah to be beheaded, nor in any way hurt, save that he was
+driven out of the city with his wife, where certain Bedouins affirmed
+that he lived for many years with her in great destitution. But it is
+well known that after this Zehowah bore Khaled many strong sons, whose
+children and children's children reigned gloriously for many generations
+in Nejed. And Khaled and Zehowah died full of years on the same day, and
+lie buried together in a garden without the Hasa gate, and the pilgrims
+from Ajman and the east visit their tombs even to the present time.
+
+_Printed by_ R. & R. CLARK, _Edinburgh_.
+
+
+
+
+MESSRS. MACMILLAN AND CO.'S PUBLICATIONS.
+
+
+POPULAR NOVELS BY MR. MARION CRAWFORD. Crown 8vo. Cloth. 3s. 6d. each.
+
+MR. ISAACS: A Tale of Modern India.
+
+ _DAILY NEWS_--"The best novel that has ever laid its scene in
+ our Indian dominions."
+
+ _ATHENAEUM_--"A work of unusual ability."
+
+DR. CLAUDIUS. A True Story.
+
+ _ATHENAEUM_--"Mr. Crawford has achieved another success."
+
+A ROMAN SINGER.
+
+ _TIMES_--"A masterpiece of narrative.... In Mr. Crawford's
+ skilful hands it is unlike any other romance in English
+ literature."
+
+ZOROASTER.
+
+ _GUARDIAN_--"An instance of the highest and noblest form of
+ novel.... Alike in the originality of its conception and the
+ power with which it is wrought out, it stands on a level that
+ is almost entirely its own."
+
+ MARZIO'S CRUCIFIX.
+ A TALE OF A LONELY PARISH.
+
+ _GUARDIAN_--"The tale is written with all Mr. Crawford's
+ skill."
+
+ _SATURDAY REVIEW_--"Unlike most novels, goes on improving up
+ to the end."
+
+PAUL PATOFF.
+
+ _ATHENAEUM_--"The originality of the story, the charm of the
+ description, and the brilliancy of the narrative are
+ undeniable."
+
+WITH THE IMMORTALS.
+
+ _SPECTATOR_--"To do justice to Mr. Crawford's remarkable book
+ by extracts would be impossible.... It cannot fail to please
+ a reader who enjoys crisp, clear, vigorous writing, and
+ thoughts that are alike original and suggestive."
+
+GREIFENSTEIN.
+
+ _SATURDAY REVIEW_--"With the exception of 'Saracinesca,' his
+ most consistent work, Mr. Crawford has not written anything
+ so good as his last novel 'Greifenstein.'"
+
+ _ACADEMY_--"During the whole of his literary career Mr.
+ Marion Crawford has produced nothing quite so powerful as one
+ or two of the situations in 'Greifenstein.'"
+
+SANT' ILARIO.
+
+ _ATHENAEUM_--"The plot is skilfully concocted, and the
+ interest is sustained to the end. The various events,
+ romantic, and even sensational, follow naturally and neatly,
+ and the whole is a very clever piece of work."
+
+ _SCOTSMAN_--"The book is full of passages of remarkable
+ power. A reader will find it hard to decide whether this is
+ not the best of Mr. Crawford's novels."
+
+A CIGARETTE-MAKER'S ROMANCE.
+
+ _OXFORD MAGAZINE_--"The idea of the story is original, the
+ characters well drawn, and the interest sustained to the very
+ last page. That Mr. Crawford, having a good story to tell,
+ should tell it well, was only to be expected."
+
+ _GLOBE_--"We are inclined to think this the best of Mr.
+ Marion Crawford's stories.... His art is here at its best,
+ and those who read his book will feel grateful to him for its
+ keen humanity."
+
+
+NOVELS BY ROLF BOLDREWOOD.
+
+New and Uniform Edition. Crown 8vo. Cloth. 3s. 6d. each.
+
+=ROBBERY UNDER ARMS.=
+
+ A STORY OF LIFE AND ADVENTURE IN THE BUSH AND IN THE
+ GOLD-FIELDS OF AUSTRALIA.
+
+ =GUARDIAN=--"A singularly spirited and stirring tale of
+ Australian life, chiefly in the remoter settlements....
+ Altogether it is a capital story, full of wild adventure and
+ startling incidents, and told with a genuine simplicity and
+ quiet appearance of truth, as if the writer were really
+ drawing upon his memory rather than his imagination."
+
+ =SPECTATOR=--"We have nothing but praise for this story. Of
+ adventure of the most stirring kind there is, as we have
+ said, abundance. But there is more than this. The characters
+ are drawn with great skill. Every one of the gang of
+ bushrangers is strongly individualised. This is a book of no
+ common literary force."
+
+ =WORLD=--"An uncommonly good thing.... The book, in short,
+ has the natural touch, both of place and person, on every
+ page."
+
+ =MORNING POST=--"As a picture of the earlier days of our
+ Australian Colonies, and as an absorbing story, 'Robbery
+ under Arms' has few equals."
+
+ =GRAPHIC=--"That Mr. Boldrewood knows his subject through and
+ through is as certain as his picture of the breaking-out of
+ the first gold fever in Australia is the best ever written."
+
+=THE SQUATTER'S DREAM.=
+
+=THE MINER'S RIGHT.=
+
+ A TALE OF THE AUSTRALIAN GOLD-FIELDS.
+
+ =WORLD=--"Full of good passages, passages abounding in
+ vivacity, in the colour and play of life.... The pith of the
+ book lies in its singularly fresh and vivid pictures of the
+ humours of the gold-fields,--tragic humours enough they are,
+ too, here and again...."
+
+ =MANCHESTER EXAMINER=--"The characters are sketched with real
+ life and picturesqueness. The book is lively and readable
+ from first to last."
+
+=A COLONIAL REFORMER.=
+
+ =ATHENAEUM=--"A series of natural and entertaining pictures of
+ Australian life, which are, above all things, readable."
+
+ =GLASGOW HERALD=--"One of the most interesting books about
+ Australia we have ever read."
+
+ =SATURDAY REVIEW=--"Mr. Boldrewood can tell what he knows
+ with great point and vigour, and there is no better reading
+ than the adventurous parts of his books."
+
+=A SYDNEY-SIDE SAXON.=
+
+ =GLASGOW HERALD=--"The interest never flags, and altogether
+ 'A Sydney-Side Saxon' is a really refreshing book."
+
+ =ANTI-JACOBIN=--"Thoroughly well worth reading.... A clever
+ book, admirably written.... Brisk in incident, truthful and
+ life-like in character.... Beyond and above all it has that
+ stimulating hygienic quality, that cheerful, unconscious
+ healthfulness, which makes a story like 'Robinson Crusoe,' or
+ 'The Vicar of Wakefield,' so unspeakably refreshing after a
+ course of even good contemporary fiction."
+
+=NEVERMORE.=
+
+ =ACADEMY=--"Is perhaps the best story of the Rolf Boldrewood
+ Series. Must be allowed to be one of the best works of the
+ period."
+
+MACMILLAN AND CO., LONDON.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+=MACMILLAN'S=
+
+=Three-and-Sixpenny=
+
+=Library=
+
+OF WORKS BY
+
+POPULAR AUTHORS
+
+In crown 8vo, cloth extra.
+
+
+[Illustration: MR. F. MARION CRAWFORD.]
+
+
+_Recent Additions to the Series:_
+
+=Historical Characters.= By Sir HENRY LYTTON BULWER (Lord DALLING).
+
+=Curiosities of Natural History.= In 4 vols. By FRANK BUCKLAND.
+
+=The Dewy Morn:= A Novel. By RICHARD JEFFERIES.
+
+=The Ingoldsby Legends.= With 50 Illustrations by CRUIKSHANK, LEECH,
+ TENNIEL, etc.
+
+=Consequences:= A Novel. By EGERTON CASTLE.
+
+=Thirlby Hall.= By W. E. NORRIS.
+
+=A Bachelor's Blunder.= By W. E. NORRIS.
+
+=Breezie Langton.= By HAWLEY SMART.
+
+=The Three Clerks.= By ANTHONY TROLLOPE.
+
+=Fickle Fortune.= By E. WERNER.
+
+=Success, and How He Won It.= By E. WERNER.
+
+=Private Life of Marie Antoinette.= By MADAME CAMPAN.
+
+=The Life of Oliver Cromwell.= By M. GUIZOT.
+
+=Mary Queen of Scots.= By M. MIGNET.
+
+=Memories of Father Healy of Little Bray.=
+
+=Autobiography and Reminiscences.= By W. P. FRITH, R.A.
+
+=The Recollections of Marshall Macdonald, Duke of Tarentum.=
+
+
+_A complete List of the Series will be found on the following pages._
+
+
+[Illustration: ROLF BOLDREWOOD.]
+
+
+_ANONYMOUS._
+
+ Hogan, M.P.
+ Tim.
+ The New Antigone.
+ Flitters, Tatters, and the Counsellor.
+
+
+_By ROLF BOLDREWOOD._
+
+ Robbery Under Arms.
+ The Squatter's Dream.
+ A Colonial Reformer.
+ The Miner's Right.
+ A Sidney-Side Saxon.
+ Nevermore.
+ A Modern Buccaneer.
+ The Sealskin Coat.
+ Old Melbourne Memories.
+ My Run Home.
+ The Crooked Stick.
+ Plain Living.
+
+
+_By ROSA N. CAREY._
+
+ Nellie's Memories.
+ Wee Wifie.
+ Barbara Heathcote's Trial.
+ Robert Ord's Atonement.
+ Wooed and Married.
+ Heriot's Choice.
+ Queenie's Whim.
+ Mary St. John.
+ Not Like Other Girls.
+ For Lilias.
+ Uncle Max.
+ Only the Governess.
+ Lover or Friend?
+ Basil Lyndhurst.
+ Sir Godfrey's Grand-daughters.
+ The Old Old Story.
+ Mistress of Brae Farm.
+ Mrs. Romney, and But Men Must Work.
+
+
+_By Mrs. CRAIK._
+
+(The Author of "JOHN HALIFAX, GENTLEMAN.")
+
+ Olive.
+ The Ogilvies.
+ Agatha's Husband.
+ Head of the Family.
+ Two Marriages.
+ The Laurel Bush.
+ About Money, and other Things.
+ My Mother and I.
+ Miss Tommy: A Mediaeval Romance.
+ King Arthur: not a Love Story.
+ Concerning Men, and other Papers.
+
+
+_By F. MARION CRAWFORD._
+
+ Mr. Isaacs.
+ Dr. Claudius.
+ A Roman Singer.
+ Zoroaster.
+ Marzio's Crucifix.
+ A Tale of a Lonely Parish.
+ Paul Patoff.
+ With the Immortals.
+ Greifenstein.
+ Sant' Ilario.
+ A Cigarette-Maker's Romance.
+ Khaled.
+ The Three Fates.
+ The Witch of Prague.
+ Children of the King.
+ Marion Darche.
+ Pietro Ghisleri.
+ Katharine Lauderdale.
+ Don Orsino.
+ The Ralstons.
+ Casa Braccio.
+ Adam Johnstone's Son.
+ A Rose of Yesterday.
+ Taquisara.
+
+
+_By Sir H. CUNNINGHAM._
+
+ The Heriots.
+ Wheat and Tares.
+ The Coeruleans.
+
+
+_By CHARLES DICKENS._
+
+ The Pickwick Papers.
+ Oliver Twist.
+ Nicholas Nickleby.
+ Martin Chuzzlewit.
+ The Old Curiosity Shop.
+ Barnaby Rudge.
+ Dombey and Son.
+ Christmas Books.
+ Sketches by Boz.
+ David Copperfield.
+ American Notes and Pictures from Italy.
+ The Letters of Charles Dickens.
+ Bleak House.
+ Little Dorrit.
+
+
+[Illustration: MISS ROSA N. CAREY.]
+
+
+'ENGLISH MEN OF LETTERS.'
+
+Re-issue in 13 vols.
+
+ Vol. I. Chaucer, Spenser, Dryden.
+ II. Milton, Goldsmith, Cowper.
+ III. Byron, Shelley, Keats.
+ IV. Wordsworth, Southey, Landor.
+ V. Lamb, Addison, Swift.
+ VI. Scott, Burn, Coleridge.
+ VII. Hume, Locke, Burke.
+ VIII. Defoe, Sterne, Hawthorne.
+ IX. Fielding, Thackeray, Dickens.
+ X. Gibbon, Carlyle, Macaulay.
+ XI. Sidney, De Quincey, Sheridan.
+ XII. Pope, Johnson, Gray.
+ XIII. Bacon, Bunyan, Bentley.
+
+
+_By DEAN FARRAR._
+
+ Seekers after God.
+ Eternal Hope.
+ The Fall of Man.
+ The Witness of History to Christ.
+ The Silence and Voices of God.
+ In the Days of thy Youth.
+ Saintly Workers.
+ Ephphatha.
+ Mercy and Judgment.
+ Sermons and Addresses.
+
+
+_By BRET HARTE._
+
+ Cressy.
+ The Heritage of Dedlow Marsh.
+ A First Family of Tasajara.
+
+
+_By THOMAS HUGHES._
+
+ Tom Brown's School Days.
+ Tom Brown at Oxford.
+ The Scouring of the White Horse, and the Ashen Faggot.
+
+
+_By HENRY JAMES._
+
+ A London Life.
+ The Aspen Papers, etc.
+ The Tragic Muse.
+
+
+_By ANNIE KEARY._
+
+ Castle Daly.
+ A York and a Lancaster Rose.
+ Oldbury.
+ A Doubting Heart.
+ Janet's Home.
+ Nations round Israel.
+
+
+_By CHARLES KINGSLEY._
+
+ Westward Ho!
+ Hypatia.
+ Yeast.
+ Alton Locke.
+ Two Years Ago.
+ Hereward the Wake.
+ Poems.
+ The Heroes.
+ The Water Babies.
+ Madam How and Lady Why.
+ At Last.
+ Prose Idylls.
+ Plays and Puritans, etc.
+ The Roman and the Teuton.
+ Sanitary and Social Lectures and Essays.
+ Historical Lectures and Essays.
+ Scientific Lectures and Essays.
+ Literary and General Lectures.
+ The Hermits.
+ Glaucus: or the Wonders of The Seashore.
+ Village and Town and Country Sermons.
+ The Water of Life, and other Sermons.
+ Sermons on National Subjects, and the King of the Earth.
+ Sermons for the Times.
+ Good News of God.
+ The Gospel of the Pentateuch, and David.
+ Discipline, and other Sermons.
+ Westminster Sermons.
+ All Saints' Day, and other Sermons.
+
+
+_By FREDERICK DENISON MAURICE._
+
+ Sermons Preached in Lincoln's Inn Chapel. In 6 vols.
+ Christmas Day, and other Sermons.
+ Theological Essays.
+ Prophets and Kings.
+ Patriarchs and Lawgivers.
+ The Gospel of the Kingdom of Heaven.
+ Gospel of St. John.
+ Epistles of St. John.
+ Friendship of Books.
+ Prayer Book and Lord's Prayer.
+ The Doctrine of Sacrifice.
+ Acts of the Apostles.
+
+
+_By D. CHRISTIE MURRAY._
+
+ Aunt Rachel.
+ He Fell among Thieves. D. C. MURRAY and H. HERMANN.
+ John Vale's Guardian.
+ Schwartz.
+ The Weaker Vessel.
+
+
+_By Mrs. OLIPHANT._
+
+ A Beleaguered City.
+ Joyce.
+ Neighbours on the Green.
+ Kirsteen.
+ Hester.
+ Sir Tom.
+ A Country Gentleman and his Family.
+ The Curate in Charge.
+ The Second Son.
+ He that Will Not when He May.
+ The Railway Man and his Children.
+ The Marriage of Elinor.
+ The Heir-Presumptive and the Heir-Apparent.
+ A Son of the Soil.
+ The Wizard's Son.
+ Young Musgrave.
+ Lady William.
+
+
+[Illustration: MISS C. M. YONGE.]
+
+
+_By Mrs. PARR._
+
+ Adam and Eve.
+ Loyalty George.
+ Dorothy Fox.
+ Robin.
+
+
+_By J. H. SHORTHOUSE._
+
+ John Inglesant.
+ Sir Percival.
+ The Little Schoolmaster Mark.
+ The Countess Eve.
+ A Teacher of the Violin.
+ Blanche, Lady Falaise.
+
+
+_By J. TIMBS._
+
+ Lives of Statesmen.
+ Lives of Painters.
+ Doctors and Patients.
+ Wits and Humourists. 2 vols.
+
+
+_By MONTAGU WILLIAMS._
+
+ Leaves of a Life.
+ Later Leaves.
+ Round London.
+
+
+_By CHARLOTTE M. YONGE._
+
+ The Heir of Redclyffe.
+ Heartsease.
+ Hopes and Fears.
+ Dynevor Terrace.
+ The Daisy Chain.
+ The Trial: More Links of the Daisy Chain.
+ Pillars of the House. Vol. I.
+ Pillars of the House. Vol. II.
+ The Young Stepmother.
+ The Clever Woman of the Family.
+ The Three Brides.
+ My Young Alcides.
+ The Caged Lion.
+ Stray Pearls.
+ The Dove in the Eagle's Nest.
+ The Chaplet of Pearls.
+ Lady Hester, and the Danvers Papers.
+ Magnum Bonum.
+ Love and Life.
+ Unknown to History.
+ The Armourer's 'Prentices.
+ The Two Sides of the Shield.
+ Scenes and Characters.
+ Nuttie's Father.
+ Chantry House.
+ A Modern Telemachus.
+ Bye-Words.
+ More Bye-Words.
+ Beechcroft at Rockstone.
+ A Reputed Changeling.
+ The Little Duke.
+ The Lances of Lynwood.
+ The Prince and the Page.
+ P's and Q's, and Little Lucy's Wonderful Globe.
+ Two Penniless Princesses.
+ That Stick.
+ Grisly Grisell.
+ An Old Woman's Outlook.
+ The Long Vacation.
+ The Release.
+ Pilgrimage of the Ben Beriah.
+ Henrietta's Wish.
+ The Two Guardians.
+
+
+_By_ VARIOUS WRITERS.
+
+ CANON ATKINSON.--=The Last of the Giant Killers.=
+
+ SIR S. W. BAKER.--=True Tales for my Grandsons.=
+
+ R. H. D. BARHAM.--=Life of Rev. R. H. Barham.=--=Life of Theodore
+ Hook.=
+
+ R. BLENNERHASSETT AND L. SLEEMAN.--=Adventures in Mashonaland.=
+
+ SIR HENRY LYTTON BULWER (LORD DALLING).--=Historical Characters.=
+
+ HUGH CONWAY.--=Living or Dead?=--=A Family Affair.=
+
+ SIR MORTIMER DURAND, K.C.I.E.--=Helen Treveryan.=
+
+ LANOE FALCONER.--=Cecilia de Noel.=
+
+ ARCHIBALD FORBES.--=Barracks, Bivouacs, and Battles.=--=Souvenirs of
+ Some Continents.=
+
+ W. FORBES-MITCHELL.--=Reminiscences of the Great Mutiny, 1857-59.=
+
+ W. W. FOWLER.--=A Year with the Birds.=
+
+ REV. J. GILMORE.--=Storm Warriors.=
+
+ HENRY KINGSLEY.--=Tales of Old Travel.=
+
+ AMY LEVY.--=Reuben Sachs.=
+
+ S. R. LYSAGHT.--=The Marplot.=
+
+ LORD LYTTON.--=The Ring of Amasis.=
+
+ M. M'LENNAN.--=Muckle Jock, and other Stories of Peasant Life.=
+
+ LUCAS MALET.--=Mrs. Lorimer.=
+
+ GUSTAVE MASSON.--=A French Dictionary.=
+
+ A. B. MITFORD.--=Tales of Old Japan.=
+
+ MARY R. MITFORD.--=Recollections of a Literary Life.=
+
+ MAJOR G. PARRY.--=The Story of Dick.=
+
+ E. C. PRICE.--=In the Lion's Mouth.=
+
+ W. C. RHOADES.--=John Trevennick.=
+
+ W. CLARK RUSSELL.--=Marooned.=--=A Strange Elopement.=
+
+ THE WORKS OF SHAKESPEARE.--Vol. I. =Comedies.= Vol. II. =Histories.=
+ Vol. III. =Tragedies.= 3 vols.
+
+ MARCHESA THEODOLI.--=Under Pressure.=
+
+ "TIMES!"--=Biographies of Eminent Persons.= In 6 vols.--=Annual
+ Summaries.= In 2 vols.
+
+ MRS. HUMPHRY WARD.--=Miss Bretherton.=
+
+ C. WHITEHEAD.--=Richard Savage.=
+
+
+[Illustration: SIR WALTER SCOTT.]
+
+
+_Now Ready._ Crown 8vo, tastefully bound in Green Cloth, Gilt, in which
+binding any of the Novels may be bought separately, price 3_s._ 6_d._
+each. Also in Special Cloth Binding, Flat Backs, Gilt Tops, supplied in
+Sets only of 24 Volumes, price L4 4_s._
+
+
+The Illustrated Border Edition OF THE Waverley Novels
+
+ Edited with Introductory Essays and Notes to each Novel
+ (supplementing those of the Author) by ANDREW LANG. With 250
+ Original Illustrations from Drawings and Paintings specially
+ executed by eminent Artists.
+
+
+List of the Volumes.
+
+ 1. Waverley.
+ 2. Guy Mannering.
+ 3. The Antiquary.
+ 4. Rob Roy.
+ 5. Old Mortality.
+ 6. The Heart of Midlothian.
+ 7. A Legend of Montrose, and The Black Dwarf.
+ 8. The Bride of Lammermoor.
+ 9. Ivanhoe.
+ 10. The Monastery.
+ 11. The Abbot.
+ 12. Kenilworth.
+ 13. The Pirate.
+ 14. The Fortunes of Nigel.
+ 15. Peveril of the Peak.
+ 16. Quentin Durward.
+ 17. St. Ronan's Well.
+ 18. Redgauntlet.
+ 19. The Betrothed, and the Talisman.
+ 20. Woodstock.
+ 21. The Fair Maid of Perth.
+ 22. Anne of Geierstein.
+ 23. Count Robert of Paris, and The Surgeon's Daughter.
+ 24. Castle Dangerous, Chronicles of the Canongate, etc.
+
+
+Some of the Artists contributing to the "Border Edition."
+
+ Sir J. E. Millais, Bart, P.R.A.
+ Lockhart Bogle.
+ Gordon Browne.
+ D. Y. Cameron.
+ Frank Dadd, R.I.
+ R. de Los Rios.
+ Herbert Dicksee.
+ M. L. Gow, R.I.
+ W. B. Hole, R.S.A.
+ John Pettie, R.A.
+ Sir James De Linton, P.R.I.
+ Ad Lalauze.
+ J. E. Lauder, R.S.A.
+ W. Hatherell, R.I.
+ Sam Bough, R.S.A.
+ W. E. Lockhart, R.S.A.
+ R. W. Macbeth, A.R.A.
+ H. Macbeth-Raeburn.
+ J. Macwhirter, A.R.A., R.S.A.
+ W. Q. Orchardson, R.A.
+ James Orrock, R.I.
+ Walter Paget.
+ Sir George Reid, P.R.S.A.
+ Frank Short.
+ W. Strang.
+ Sir Henry Raeburn, R.A., P.R.S.A.
+ Arthur Hopkins, A.R.W.S.
+ R. Herdman, R.S.A.
+ D. Herdman.
+ Hugh Cameron, R.S.A.
+
+=MACMILLAN & CO., Limited, LONDON=
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+
+Minor punctuation corrections have been made without comment.
+
+On p. 155 the word "Sham" has a macron (straight line) above the "a" in
+the original text which has been removed in this e-text.
+
+A Table of Contents has been created by the transcriber to aid reader
+navigation in this e-text.
+
+
+Word Variations:
+
+ "carcase(s)" (2) (Br. sp.) and "carcass" (1)
+
+ "Khaled ibn Walid" (1) and "Khaled ibn Walad" (1) (both referred to as
+ "the Sword of the Lord")
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Khaled, A Tale of Arabia, by F. Marion Crawford
+
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