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Thousand Nights & One Night
Story of the
Third Calender
I also am a king, the son of a king, and my name is Agib, son of
Khesib. My father died, and I took the kingdom after him and ruled
my subjects with justice and beneficence. My capital city stood on
the shore of a wide spreading sea, on which I had fifty merchant
ships and fifty smaller vessels for pleasure and a hundred and fifty
cruisers equipped for war; and near at hand were many great islands
in the midst of the ocean. Now I loved to sail the sea and had a
mind to visit the islands aforesaid so I took ship with a month's
victual and set out and took my pleasure in the islands and returned
to my capital Then, being minded to make a longer voyage upon the
ocean, I fitted out half a score ships with provision for two months
and sailed twenty days, till one night the wind blew contrary and
the sea rose against us with great billows; the waves clashed
together and there fell on us a great darkness. So we gave ourselves
up for lost and I said, "He who perils himself is not to be
commended, though he come off safe." Then we prayed to God and
besought Him, but the wind ceased not to rage and the waves to clash
together, till daybreak, when the wind fell, the sea became calm and
the sun shone out. Presently we sighted an island, where we landed
and cooked food and ate and rested two days. Then we set out again
and sailed other twenty days, without seeing land; but the currents
carried us out of our true course, so that the captain lost his
reckoning and finding himself in strange waters, bade the watch go
up to the mast-head and look out. So he climbed the mast and looked
out and said "O captain, I see nothing to right and left save sky
and water, but ahead I see something looming afar off in the midst
of the sea, now black and now white." When the captain heard the
look-out's words, he cast his turban on the deck and plucked out his
beard and buffeted his face and said, "O King, we are all dead men,
not one of us can be saved." We all wept for his weeping and I said
to him, "O captain, tell us what it is the look-out saw." "O my
lord," answered he, "know that we lost our way on the night of the
storm and since then we have gone astray one-and-twenty days and
there is no wind to bring us back to our true course. To-morrow, by
the end of the day, we shall come to a mountain of black stone,
called loadstone, for thither the currents bear us perforce. As soon
as we come within a certain distance, all the nails in the ships
will fly out and fasten to the mountain, and the ships will open and
fall to pieces, for that God the Most High has gifted the loadstone
with a secret virtue, by reason whereof all iron is attracted to it;
and on this mountain is much iron, how much God only knows, from the
many ships that have been wrecked there from old time. On its summit
there stands a dome of brass, raised on ten columns and on the top
of the dome are a horse and horseman of the same metal. The latter
holds in his hand a brazen lance and on his breast is a tablet of
lead, graven with names and talismans: and, O King, it is nought but
this horseman that causeth the folk to perish, nor will the charm be
broken till he fall from his horse." Then he wept sore and we all
made sure of death and each took leave of his comrade and charged
him with his last wishes, in case he should be saved. That night we
slept not, and in the morning, we sighted the loadstone mountain,
towards which the currents carried us with irresistible force. When
the ships came within a certain distance, they opened and the nails
started out and all the iron in them sought the loadstone and clove
to it; so that by the end of the day, we were all struggling in the
sea round the mountain. Some of us were saved, but the most part
drowned, and even those who escaped knew not one of the other, being
stupefied by the raging wind and the buffeting of the waves. As for
me, God preserved me that I might suffer that which He willed to me
of trouble and torment and affliction, for I got on a plank from one
of the ships and, the wind driving it ashore, I happened on a
pathway leading to the top, as it were a stair hewn out of the rock.
So I called upon the name of God the Most High and besought His
succour and clinging to the steps, addressed myself to climb up
little by little. And God stilled the wind and aided me in my
ascent, so that I reached the summit in safety. There I found
nothing but the dome; so I entered, mightily rejoiced at my escape,
and made my ablutions and prayed a two-bow prayer in gratitude
to God for my preservation. Then I fell asleep under the dome and
saw in a dream one who said to me, "O son of Khesib, when thou
awakest, dig under thy feet and thou wilt find a bow of brass and
three leaden arrows, inscribed with talismanic characters. Take the
bow and shoot the arrows at the horseman on the top of the dome and
rid mankind of this great calamity. When thou shootest at him, he
will fall into the sea and the horse will drop at thy feet: take it
and bury it in the place of the bow. This done, the sea will swell
and rise till it is level with the top of the mountain, and there
will appear on it a boat containing a man of brass (other than he
whom thou shalt have thrown down), with an oar in his hands. He will
come to thee, and do thou embark with him, but beware of naming God.
He will row with thee for the space of ten days, till he brings thee
to a port of safety, where thou shalt find those who will carry thee
to thine own country: and all this shall be fulfilled to thee, so
thou pronounce not the name of God." I started up from my sleep and
hastening to do the bidding of the mysterious voice, found the bow
and arrows and shot at the horseman and overthrew him; whereupon he
fell into the sea, whilst the horse dropped at my feet and I took it
and buried it. Then the sea grew troubled and rose till it reached
the top of the mountain; nor had I long to wait before I saw a boat
in the midst of the sea coming towards me. So I gave thanks to God:
and when the boat came up to me, I saw in it a man of brass, with a
tablet of lead on his breast, inscribed with names and talismans;
and I embarked without saying a word. The boatman rowed on with me
for ten whole days, till I caught sight of islands and mountains and
signs of safety; whereat I was beyond measure rejoiced and in the
excess of my gladness, I called upon the name of the Almighty and
exclaimed, "There is no god but God! God is most great!" When
behold, the boat turned over and cast me out into the sea, then
righted and sank beneath the water. Now, I knew how to swim, so I
swam the whole day till nightfall, when my arms and shoulders failed
me for fatigue, and I abode in mortal peril and made the profession
of the Faith, (39) looking for nothing but death. Presently, the sea
rose, for the greatness of the wind, and a wave like a great rampart
took me and bearing me forward, cast me up on the land, that the
will of God might be done. I clambered up the beach and, putting off
my clothes, wrung them and spread them out to dry, then lay down and
slept all night. As soon as it was day, I put on my clothes and rose
to look about me. Presently I came to a grove of trees and making a
circuit round it, found that I was on a little island, surrounded on
all sides by the sea; whereupon I said to myself, "No sooner do I
escape from one peril than I fall into a worse." But as I was
pondering my case and wishing for death, I spied a ship afar off
making towards me; so I climbed up into a tree and hid myself among
the branches. Presently the ship came to an anchor, and ten slaves
landed, bearing spades, and made for the middle of the island, where
they dug till they uncovered a trapdoor and raised it. Then they
returned to the ship and brought thence bread and flour and oil and
honey and meat and carpets and all else that was needed to furnish
one dwelling there; nor did they leave going back and forth till
they had transferred to the underground dwelling all that was in the
ship: after which they again repaired to the vessel and returned,
laden with wearing apparel of the finest kind and in their midst a
very old man, whom time had mauled till he was wasted and worn, as
he were a bone wrapped in a rag of blue cloth, through which the
winds blew East and West. As says the poet of him:
Time makes us tremble ah, how piteously! For full of violence and
might is he.
Once on a time I walked and was not tired: Now am I tired, yet have
not walked, ah me!
He held by the hand a youth cast in the mould of symmetry and
perfection, so fair that his beauty might well be the subject of
proverbs; for he was like a tender sapling, ravishing every heart
with his beauty and seducing every wit with his amorous grace. It
was of him the poet spoke, when he said:
Beauty they brought to liken it with him: But Beauty hung its head
for shame and fear.
O Beauty," said they, "dost thou know his like?" It answered, "Never
have I seen his peer."
They proceeded to the underground, where they descended all and did
not reappear for an hour or more, at the end of which time the old
man and the slaves came up, without the youth, and replacing the
trap-door, covered it again with earth; then returned to the ship
and set sail. As soon as they were out of sight, I came down from
the tree and going to the place I had seen them fill up, made shift
to clear away the earth, till I came to the trap-door, which was of
wood, the shape and bigness of a mill-stone, and raised it, when
there appeared underneath a winding stair of stone. At this I
wondered and descending, came to a fair chamber, spread with various
kinds of carpets and hung with silken stuffs, where I saw the youth
sitting alone upon a raised couch and leant upon a cushion, with a
fan in his hand and sweet-scented flowers and herbs and fruits
before him. When he saw me, he turned pale; but I saluted him,
saying, "Calm thyself and put away fear; no harm shall come to thee:
I am a man like unto thee and a king's son, whom Providence hath
sent to bear thee company in thy solitude. But now tell me thy
history and why thou dwellest underground by thyself." When he was
assured that I was of his kind, he was glad and his colour returned;
then he made me draw near to him and said, "O my brother, my story
is a strange one, and it is as follows. My father is a merchant
jeweller, possessed of great wealth and having black and white
slaves, who make trading voyages, on his account, in ships and on
camels, to the most distant countries; and he has dealings with
kings. Until my birth, he had never been blessed with a child, but
one night he dreamt that a son had been born to him, who lived but a
short time, and awoke weeping and crying out. The following night my
mother conceived and he took note of the date of her conception. The
days of her pregnancy were accomplished and she gave birth to
myself, whereupon my father rejoiced and made banquets and fed the
poor and the needy for that I had been vouchsafed to him in his old
age. Then he assembled the astrologers and mathematicians of the day
and those learned in nativities and horoscopes; and they drew my
horoscope and said to my father, 'Thy son will live till the age of
fifteen, at which date there is a break in his line of life, which
if he tide over in safety, he shall live long. The danger with which
he is threatened is as follows. In the Sea of Peril stands a
mountain called the Loadstone Mountain, on whose summit is a
horseman of brass, seated on a horse of the same metal, with a
tablet of lead on his breast. Fifty days after this horseman falls
from his horse, thy son will die, and his slayer will be he who
overthrows the statue, a king called Agib, son of Khesib.' My father
was sore concerned at this prediction; but he brought me up and gave
me a good education, till I attained my fifteenth year. Ten days
ago, news came to him that the horseman had fallen into the sea and
that he who overthrew him was Agib, son of King Khesib; whereat he
was as one distraught and feared for my life. So he built me this
place under the earth and stocking it with all that I need during
the forty days that yet remain of the period of danger, transported
me hither, that I might be safe from King Agib's hands. When the
forty days are past, he will come back and fetch me; and this is my
story and why thou findest me here alone." When I heard his story, I
marvelled and said to myself, "I am that King Agib of whom he
speaks; but, by Allah, I will assuredly not kill him!" And I said to
him, "O my lord, God willing, thou shalt be spared suffering and
death, nor shalt thou see trouble or sorrow or disquiet, for I will
abide with thee and serve thee; and when I have borne thee company
during the appointed days, I will go with thee to thy dwelling-place
and thou shalt bring me to some of thy father's servants, with whom
I may journey to my own country; and God shall requite thee for me."
He rejoiced in my words and we sat conversing till nightfall when I
rose and lighted a great wax candle and fed the lamps and set on
meat and drink and sweetmeats. We ate and drank and sat talking till
late into the night, when he lay down to sleep and I covered him up
and went to sleep myself. Next morning, I rose and heated a little
water, then woke him gently and brought him the warm water, with
which he washed his face and thanked me, saying, "God requite thee
with good, O youth! By Allah, if I escape from this my danger and
from him they call Agib ben Khesib, I will make my father reward
thee!" "May the day never come on which evil shall befall thee,"
answered I, "and may God appoint my last day before thine!" Then I
set on food and we ate, and I made ready perfumes with which he
scented himself. Moreover, I made him a backgammon board, and we
played and ate sweetmeats and played again till nightfall when I
rose and lighting the lamps, set on food; and we ate and sat talking
till the night was far spent. Then he lay down to sleep and I
covered him up and went to sleep myself. Thus I did with him, day
and night, and the love of him got hold upon my heart and I forgot
my troubles and said to myself, "The astrologers lied; by Allah, I
will not kill him!" I ceased not to serve him and bear him company
and entertain him thus, till nine-and-thirty days were passed and we
came to the morning of the fortieth day, when he rejoiced and said
to me, "O my brother, the forty days are up to-day, praised be God
who hath preserved me from death, and this by thy blessing and the
blessing of thy coming to me, and I pray Him to restore thee to thy
country! But now, O my brother, I prithee heat me some water, that I
may wash my body and change my clothes. "With all my heart,"
answered I; and heated water in plenty and carrying it in to him,
washed his body well with lupin-meal and rubbed him down and changed
his clothes and spread him a high bed, on which he lay down to rest
after the bath. Then said he, "O my brother, cut me a melon and
sweeten it with sugar-candy." So I went to the closet and bringing a
fine melon I found there on a platter, said to him, "O my lord, hast
thou no knife?" "Here it is," answered he, "on the high shelf at my
head." So I got up hurriedly and taking the knife, drew it from its
sheath; but in stepping down backward, my foot slipped and I fell
heavily on the youth, holding in my hand the knife, which hastened
to fulfil that which was ordained and entered his heart, and he died
forthright. When I saw that he was no more and that I had indeed
killed him, I cried out grievously and buffeted my face and tore my
clothes, saying, "We are God's and to Him we return! There remained
for this youth but one day of the period of danger that the
astrologers had foretold for him, and the death of this fair one was
to be at my hand! Verily, my life is nought but disasters and
afflictions! Would he had not asked me to cut the melon or would I
had died before him! But what God decrees cometh to pass." When I
was certain that there was no life left in him, I rose and ascending
the stair, replaced the trap-door and covered it with earth. Then I
looked out to sea and saw the ship cleaving the waters in the
direction of the island. Whereat I was afeared and said, "They will
be here anon and will find their son dead and know 'twas I killed
him and will slay me without fail." So I climbed up into a high tree
and hid myself among the leaves. Hardly had I done so, when the
vessel came to an anchor and the slaves landed with the old man and
made direct for the place, where they cleared away the earth and
were surprised to find it soft. Then they raised the trap-door and
going down, found the boy lying dead, clad in clean clothes, with
his face shining from the bath and the knife sticking in his breast.
At this sight, they shrieked aloud and wept and buffeted their faces
and cried out, "Alas! woe worth the day!" whilst the old man swooned
away and remained so long insensible, that the slaves thought he
would not survive his son. So they wrapped the dead youth in his
clothes and carried him up and laid him on the ground, covering him
with a shroud of silk. Then they addressed themselves to transport
all that was in the place to the ship, and presently the old man
revived and coming up after them, saw his son laid out, whereupon he
fell on the ground and strewed dust on his head and buffeted his
face and tore his beard; and his weeping redoubled, as he hung over
his dead son, till he swooned away again. After awhile the slaves
came back, with a silken carpet, and laying the old man thereon, sat
down at his head. All this time I was in the tree above them,
watching them; and indeed my heart became hoary before my head, for
all the grief and affliction I had undergone. The old man ceased not
from his swoon till nigh upon sundown, when he came to himself and
looking upon his dead son, recalled what had happened and how what
he had feared had come to pass: and he buffeted his face and head
and recited the following verses:
My heart is cleft in twain for severance of loves; The burning tears
pour down in torrents from my eye.
My every wish with him I loved is fled away: What can I do or say?
what help, what hope have I?
Would I had never looked upon his lovely face! Alas, the ways on me
are straitened far and nigh!
What charm can bring me peace, what drink forgetfulness, Whilst in
my heart the fire of love burns fierce and high?
Would that my feet had trod with him the road of death! Then should
I not, as now, in lonely sorrow sigh.
O God, that art my hope, have pity upon me! Unite us twain, I crave,
in Paradise for aye!
How blessed were we once, whilst one house held us both And twinned
in pure content our happy lives passed by!
Till fortune aimed at us the shafts of severance And parted us; for
who her arrows can defy?
For lo! the age's pearl, the darling of his folk, The mould of every
grace, was singled out to die!
I call him back: "Would God thine hour had never come!" What while
the case takes speech and doth forestall my cry.
Which is the speediest way to win to thee, my son! My soul had paid
the price, if that thy life might buy.
The sun could not compare with him, for lo! it sets. Nor yet the
moon that wanes and wasteth from the sky.
Alas, my grief for thee and my complaint of fate! None can console
for thee nor aught thy place supply.
Thy sire is all distraught with languishment for thee; Since death
upon thee came, his hopes are gone awry.
Surely, some foe hath cast an envious eye on us: May he who wrought
this thing his just deserts aby!
Then he sobbed once and gave up the ghost; whereupon the slaves
cried out, "Alas, our master!" and strewed dust on their heads and
wept sore. Then they carried the two bodies to the ship and set
sail. As soon as they were out of sight, I came down from the tree
and raising the trap-door, went down into the underground dwelling,
where the sight of some of the youth's gear recalled him to my mind,
and I repeated the following verses:
I see their traces and pine for longing pain; My tears rain down on
the empty dwelling-place!
And I pray to God, who willed that we should part, One day to grant
us reunion, of His grace!
Then I went up again and spent the day in walking about the island,
returning to the underground dwelling for the night. Thus I lived
for a month, during which time I became aware that the sea was
gradually receding day by day from the western side of the island,
till by the end of the month, I found that the water was become low
enough to afford a passage to the mainland. At this I rejoiced,
making sure of delivery, and fording the little water that remained,
made shift to reach the mainland, where I found great heaps of sand,
in which even a camel would sink up to the knees. However, I took
heart and making my way through the sand, espied something shining
afar off, as it were a bright-blazing fire. So I made towards it,
thinking to find succour and repeating the following verses:
It may be Fate at last shall draw its bridle-rein And bring me happy
chance; for Fortune changes still;
And things shall happen yet, despite the things fordone, To further
forth my hopes and bring me to my will.
When I drew near the supposed fire, behold, it was a palace, with a
gate of brass, whereon, when the sun shone, it gleamed and glistened
and showed from afar, as it were a fire. I rejoiced at the sight and
sat down before the palace gate; but hardly had I done so, when
there came up ten young men, sumptuously clad and all blind of the
right eye. They were accompanied by an old man; and I marvelled at
their appearance and at their being all blind of the same eye. They
saluted me and questioned me of my condition, whereupon I told them
all that had befallen me. They wondered at my story and carried me
into the palace, where I saw ten couches, with beds and coverlets of
blue stuff, ranged in a circle, with a like couch of smaller size in
the midst. As we entered, each of the young men went up to his own
couch, and the old man seated himself on the smaller one in the
middle. Then said they unto me, "O youth, sit down on the ground and
enquire not of our doings nor of the loss of our right eyes."
Presently the old man rose and brought each one of the young men and
myself his portion of meat and drink in separate vessels; and we sat
talking, they questioning me of my adventures and I replying, till
the night was far spent. Then said they to the old man, "O elder,
wilt thou not bring us our ordinary? The time is come." "Willingly,"
answered he, and rose and entering a closet, disappeared and
presently returned, bearing on his head ten dishes, each covered
with a piece of blue stuff. He set a dish before each youth and
lighting ten wax-candles, set one upon each dish; after which he
uncovered the dishes, and lo, they were full of ashes and powdered
charcoal and soot. Then all the young men tucked up their sleeves
and fell to weeping and lamenting; and they blackened their faces
and rent their clothes and buffeted their cheeks and beat their
breasts, exclaiming "We were seated at our ease, but our impertinent
curiosity would not let us be!" They ceased not to do thus till near
daybreak, when the old man rose and heated water for them, and they
washed their faces and put on fresh clothes. When I saw this, my
senses left me for wonderment and my heart was troubled and my mind
perplexed, for their strange behaviour, till I forgot what had
befallen me and could not refrain from questioning them; so I said
to them, "What makes you do thus, after our sport and merry-making
together? Praised be God, ye are whole of wit, yet these are the
doings of madmen! I conjure you, by all that is most precious to
you, tell me why you behave thus and how ye came to lose each an
eye!" At this, they turned to me and said, "O young man, let not thy
youth beguile thee, but leave thy questioning." Then they slept and
I with them, and when we awoke, the old man served up food; and
after we had eaten and the vessels had been removed, we sat
conversing till nightfall, when the old man rose and lit the candles
and lamps and set meat and drink before us. We ate and sat talking
and carousing till midnight, when they said to the old man, "Bring
us our ordinary, for the hour of sleep is at hand." So he rose and
brought them the dishes of soot and ashes, and they did as they had
done on the preceding night. I abode with them on this wise for a
month, during which time they blackened their faces every night,
then washed them and changed their clothes and my trouble and
amazement increased upon me till I could neither eat nor drink. At
last, I lost patience and said to them, "O young men, if ye will not
relieve my concern and acquaint me with the reason of your
blackening your faces and the meaning of your words, 'We were seated
at our ease, but our impertinent curiosity would not let us be,' let
me leave you and return to my own people and be at rest from seeing
these things, for as says the proverb,
'Twere wiser and better your presence to leave, For when the eye
sees not, the heart does not grieve."
"O youth," answered they, "we have not concealed this thing from
thee but in our concern for thee, lest what befell us before thee
and thou become like unto us." "It avails not," said I; "you must
tell me." "We give thee good advice," rejoined they; "do thou take
it and leave questioning us of our case, or thou wilt become
one-eyed like unto us." But I still persisted in my demand and they
said, "O youth, if this thing befall thee, we warn thee that we will
never again receive thee into our company nor let thee abide with
us." Then they took a ram and slaughtering it, skinned it and gave
me a knife, saying, "Lie down on the skin and we will sew thee up in
it and leave thee and go away. Presently there will come to thee a
bird called the roc, that will catch thee up in its claws and
fly away with thee and set thee down on a mountain. As soon as thou
feelest it alight with thee, slit the skin with the knife and come
forth; whereupon the bird will take fright at thee and fly away and
leave thee. Then rise and fare on half a day's journey, till thou
comest to a palace rising high into the air, builded of khelenj
and aloes and sandal-wood and plated with red gold, inlaid with all
manner emeralds and other jewels. There enter and thou wilt attain
thy desire. We all have been in that place, and this is the cause of
the loss of our right eyes and the reason why we blacken our faces.
Were we to tell thee our stories, it would take too much time, for
each lost his eye by a separate adventure." They then sewed me up in
the skin and left me on the ground outside the palace; and the roc
carried me off and set me down on the mountain. I cut open the skin
and came out, whereupon the bird flew away and I walked on till I
reached the palace. The door stood open; so I entered and found
myself in a very wide and goodly hall, as big as a tilting-ground,
round which were a hundred doors of sandal and aloes-wood, plated
with red gold and furnished with rings of silver. At the upper end
of the hall, I saw forty young ladies, sumptuously clad and adorned,
as they were moons, one could never tire of gazing on them: and they
all came up to me, saying, "Welcome and fair welcome, O my lord!
This month past have we been expecting the like of thee; and praised
be God who hath sent us one who is worthy of us and we of him!" Then
they made me sit down on a high divan and said to me, "From to-day
thou art our lord and master, and we are thy handmaids; so order us
as thou wilt." And I marvelled at their case. Presently one of them
arose and set food before me, and I ate, whilst others heated water
and washed my hands and feet and changed my clothes, and yet others
made ready sherbets and gave me to drink; and they were all full of
joy and delight at my coming. Then they sat down and conversed with
me till nightfall, when five of them arose and spreading a mat,
covered it with flowers and fruits and confections in profusion and
set on wine; and we sat down to drink, while some of them sang and
others played the lute and psaltery and recorders and other
instruments. So the cup went round amongst us and such gladness
possessed me that I forgot all the cares of the world and said,
"This is indeed life, but that it is fleeting." We ceased not to
drink and make merry till the night was far spent and we were warm
with wine, when they said to me, "O our lord, choose from amongst us
one who shall be thy bedfellow this night and not lie with thee
again till forty days be past." So I chose a girl fair of face, with
liquid black eyes and jetty hair, slightly parted teeth and
joining eyebrows, perfect in shape and form, as she were a
palm-sapling or a stalk of sweet basil; such an one as troubles the
heart and bewilders the wit, even as saith of her the poet:
'Twere vain to liken her unto the tender branch, And out on who
compares her form to the gazelle!
Whence should gazelles indeed her shape's perfection get Or yet her
honeyed lips so sweet to taste and smell,
Or those great eyes of hers, so dire to those who love, That bind
their victims fast in passion's fatal spell?
I dote on her with all the folly of a child. What wonder if he turn
a child who loves too well!
And I repeated to her the following verses:
My eyes to gaze on aught but thy grace disdain And none but thou in
my thought shall ever reign.
The love of thee is my sole concern, my fair; In love of thee, I
will die and rise again.
So I lay with her that night, never knew I a fairer, and when it was
morning, the ladies carried me to the bath and washed me and clad me
in rich clothes. Then they served up food and we ate and drank, and
the cup went round amongst us till the night, when I chose from
among them one who was fair to look upon and soft of sides, such an
one as the poet describes, when he says:
I saw upon her breast two caskets snowy-white, Musk-sealed; she doth
forbid to lovers their delight.
She guards them with the darts that glitter from her eyes; And those
who would them press, her arrowy glances smite.
I passed a most delightful night with her; and to make a long story
short, I led the goodliest life with them, eating and drinking and
carousing and every night taking one or other of them to my bed, for
a whole year, at the end of which time they came in to me in tears
and fell to bidding me farewell and clinging to me, weeping and
crying out; whereat I marvelled and said to them, "What ails you?
Indeed you break my heart." "Would we had never known thee!"
answered they. "We have companied with many men, but never saw we a
pleasanter or more courteous than thou: and now we must part from
thee. Yet it rests with thee to see us again, and if thou hearken to
us, we need never be parted: but our hearts forebode us that thou
will not hearken to us; and this is the cause of our weeping" "Tell
me how the case stands," said I; and they answered, "Know that we
are the daughters of kings, who have lived here together for years
past, and once in every year we are absent for forty days; then we
return and abide here for the rest of the year, eating and drinking
and making merry. We are now about to depart according to our
custom, and we fear lest thou disobey our injunctions in our
absence, in which case we shall never see thee again; but if thou do
as we bid thee, all will yet be well. Take these keys: they are
those of the hundred apartments of the palace, each of which
contains what will suffice thee for a day's entertainment.
Ninety-and-nine of these thou mayst open and take thy pleasure
therein, but beware lest thou open the hundredth, that which has a
door of red gold; for therein is that which will bring about a
separation between us and thee." Quoth I, "I will assuredly not open
the hundredth door, if therein be separation from you." Then one of
them came up to me and embraced me and repeated the following
verses:
If but the days once more our severed loves unite, If but my eyes
once more be gladdened by thy sight,
Then shall the face of Time smile after many a frown, And I will
pardon Fate for all its past despite.
And I repeated the following:
When she drew near to bid farewell, upon our parting day, Whilst on
her heart the double stroke of love and longing smote,
She wept pure pearls, and eke mine eyes did rain cornelians forth;
And lo, they all combined and made a necklace for her throat!
When I saw her weeping, I said, "By Allah, I will never open the
hundredth door!" Then they bade me farewell and departed, leaving me
alone in the palace. When the evening drew near, I opened the first
door and found myself in an orchard, full of blooming trees, laden
with ripe fruit, and the air resounded with the loud singing of
birds and the ripple of running waters. The sight brought solace to
my soul, and I entered and walked among the trees, inhaling the
odours of the flowers and listening to the warble of the birds, that
sang the praises of God the One, the Almighty. I looked upon the
apple, whose colour is parcel red and parcel yellow, as says the
poet:
The apple in itself two colours doth unite, The loved one's cheek of
red, and yellow of despite.
Then I looked upon the quince and inhaled its fragrance that puts
musk and ambergris to shame, even as says the poet:
The quince contains all pleasant things that can delight mankind,
Wherefore above all fruits that be its virtues are renowned.
Its taste is as the taste of wine, its breath the scent of musk; Its
hue is that of virgin gold, its shape the full moon's round.
Thence I passed to the pear, whose taste surpasses rose-water and
sugar, and the plum, whose beauty delights the eye, as it were a
polished ruby. When I had taken my fill of looking on the place, I
went and locked the door again. Next day, I opened the second door
and found myself in a great pleasaunce, set with many palm-trees and
watered by a running stream, whose borders were decked with bushes
of rose and jessamine and henna and camomile and marjoram and
sweetbriar and carpeted with narcissus and ox-eye and violets and
lilies and gillyflowers. The breeze fluttered over all these
sweet-smelling plants and scattered their scents right and left,
possessing me with complete delight. I took my pleasure in the place
awhile, and my chagrin was somewhat lightened. Then I went out and
locked the door and opening the third door, found therein a great
hall paved with vari-coloured marbles and other precious stones and
hung with cages of sandal and aloes wood, full of singing-birds,
such as the thousand-voiced nightingale and the cushat and the
blackbird and the turtle-dove and the Nubian warbler. My heart was
ravished by the song of the birds and I forgot my cares and slept in
the aviary till the morning. Then I opened the fourth door and saw a
great hall, with forty cabinets ranged on either side. The doors of
the latter stood open; so I entered and found them full of pearls
and rubies and chrysolites and beryls and emeralds and corals and
carbuncles and all manner of precious stones and jewels of gold and
silver, such as the tongue fails to describe. I was amazed at what I
saw and said in myself "Methinks, if all the kings of the earth
joined together they could not produce the like of these treasures!"
And my heart dilated and I exclaimed, "Now am I king of my time, for
all these riches are mine by the favour of God, and I have forty
young ladies under my hand, nor is there any with them but myself!"
In short, I passed nine-and-thirty days after this fashion,
exploring the riches of the place, till I had opened all the doors,
except that which the princesses had charged me not to open, but my
thoughts ran ever on this latter and Satan urged me, for my ruin, to
open it, nor had I patience to forbear; though there remained but
one day of the appointed time. So I opened the hundredth door, that
which was plated with red gold, and was met by a perfume, whose like
I had never before smelt and which was of so subtle and penetrating
a quality, that it invaded my head and I fell down, as if
intoxicated, and lay awhile unconscious. Then I revived and took
heart and entering, found myself in a place strewn with saffron and
blazing with light shed by lamps of gold and candles, that diffused
a scent of musk and aloes. In the midst stood two great censers,
full of burning aloes wood and ambergris and other perfumes, and the
place was full of their fragrance. Presently I espied a horse, black
as night at its darkest, girt and bridled and saddled with red gold,
standing before two mangers of white crystal, one full of winnowed
sesame and the other of rose-water flavoured with musk. When I saw
this, I was amazed and said to myself, "Surely this horse must be of
extraordinary value!" and the devil tempted me, so that I took him
out and mounted him, but he would not stir. So I spurred him with my
heel, but he did not move; and I took a. switch and struck him with
it. When he felt the blow, he gave a neigh like the roaring thunder,
and spreading a pair of wings flew up with me high into the air.
After awhile, he descended and set me down on the terrace of a
palace; then, shaking me off his back, he smote me on the face with
his tail and struck out my right eye and flew away, leaving me
there. I went down into the palace and found myself again among the
ten one-eyed youths, who exclaimed, when they saw me, "An ill
welcome to thee!" Quoth I, "Behold, I am become like unto you, and
now I would have you give me a dish of soot, that I may blacken my
face and admit me to your company." "By Allah," answered they, "thou
shalt not abide with us! Depart hence!" And they drove me away. I
was grieved at their rejection of me and went out from them,
mourning-hearted and tearful-eyed, saying to myself, "Of a truth, I
was sitting at my ease, but my impertinent curiosity would not let
me be." Then I shaved my beard and eyebrows and renouncing the
world, became a Calender and wandered about God's earth, till by His
blessing, I arrived at Baghdad in safety this evening and met with
these two other Calenders standing bewildered. So I saluted them,
saying, "I am a stranger;" to which they replied, "We also are
strangers." And, as it chanced, we were all Calenders and each blind
of the right eye. This, then, O my lady, is my story and the manner
of the shaving of my face and the loss of my eye.' Quoth the
mistress of the house, 'Begone about thy business.' But he said, 'By
Allah, I will not go, till I hear the others' stories!' Then she
turned to the Khalif and his companions and said, 'Give me an
account of yourselves.' So Jaafer came forward and repeated the
story he had told the portress; whereupon the lady said, 'I pardon
you all: go your ways.' So they all went out; and when they reached
the street the Khalif said to the Calenders, 'O folk, whither are
you bound now, seeing that it is not yet day?' 'By Allah, O my
lord,' answered they, 'we know not where to go!' 'Then come and pass
the rest of the night with us,' said the Khalif, and turning to
Jaafer, said to him, 'Take them home with thee and to-morrow bring
them before me, that we may cause their adventures to be recorded.'
Jaafer did as the Khalif bade him, and the latter returned to his
palace. Sleep did not visit him that night, but he lay awake,
pondering the adventures of the three Calenders and full of
impatience to know the history of the two ladies and the black
bitches; and no sooner had the day dawned than he went out and sat
down on his chair of estate. Then his courtiers presented themselves
and withdrew, whereupon he turned to Jaafer and said to him, 'Bring
me the three ladies and the bitches and the Calenders, and make
haste.' So Jaafer went out and brought them all before him and
seated the ladies behind a curtain; then turned to them and said,
speaking for the Khalif, 'O women, we pardon you your rough usage of
us, in consideration of your previous kindness and for that ye knew
us not: and now I would have you to know that you are in the
presence of the fifth of the sons of Abbas, the Commander of the
Faithful Haroun er Reshid, son of El Mehdi Mohammed, son of Abou
Jaafer el Mensour. So do ye acquaint him with your stories and tell
him nothing but the truth.' When the ladies heard Jaafer's speech,
the eldest came forward and said, 'O Commander of the Faithful, my
story is one which, were it graven with needles on the corners of
the eye, would serve for an example to those who can profit by
example and a warning to those who can take warning. And it is that
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