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Thousand Nights & One Night
IBRAHIM BEN
EL KHAWWAS AND THE CHRISTIAN KING'S DAUGHTER
(Quoth Sidi Ibrahim ben el Khawwas, (17) on whom be the mercy of
God), My soul was instant with me, once upon a time, to go forth
into the country of the infidels; and I strove with it and essayed
to put away this thought from me, but it persisted and would not be
denied. So I went forth and journeyed about the land of the
unbelievers and traversed it in all its parts, for the grace of God
enveloped me and His protection encompassed me, so that I met not a
Christian, but he turned away his eyes and held aloof from me, till
I came to a great city at whose gate I found a company of black
slaves, clad in armour and bearing iron maces in their hands. When
they saw me, they rose to their feet and said to me, 'Art thou a
physician?' I said, 'Yes.' Quoth they, 'By order of the King,' and
carried me before their monarch, who was a handsome man of majestic
aspect. When I came into his presence, he looked at me and said,
'Art thou a physician?' 'Yes,' answered I; and he said to his
officers, 'Carry him to her and acquaint him with the condition, ere
he enter.' So they took me out and said to me, 'Know that the King
hath a daughter, who is stricken with a sore distemper, which no
physician hath availed to cure: and none goeth in to her and
treateth her, without curing her, but the King putteth him to death.
So bethink thee what thou wilt do?' Quoth I, 'The King sent me to
her; so carry me to her.' Accordingly, they brought me to her door
and knocked; and I heard her cry out from within, saying, 'Admit the
physician, lord of the wondrous secret!' And she recited the
following verses:
Open the door, for the physician's here; And see, I have a secret
wonder-dear.
How many near in spirit distant are! How many spirit-distant yet are
near!
I was an exile midst you, but the Truth (18) Willed that my solace
should eftsoon appear.
Religious kinship bound us and we met, As lover and belov'd, in joy
and cheer.
He summoned me to meeting; but the spy And censor 'twixt our loves
did interfere.
Out on ye! Leave your chiding and your prate; For unto you I may not
lend an ear.
With that which passes by I've no concern; Upon the eternal things
my hopes I rear.
And behold, an old man opened the door in haste and said to me,
'Enter.' So I entered and found myself in a saloon strewn with
sweet-scented herbs and with a curtain drawn across one corner, from
behind which came a sound of groaning, weak as from an emaciated
body. I sat down before the curtain and was about to pronounce the
salutation, when I bethought me of the words of him whom God bless
and preserve, 'Accost not a Jew nor a Christian with the salutation,
and when ye meet them in the way, constrain them to the straitest
part thereof.' So I held my peace, but she cried out from behind the
curtain, saying, 'Where is the salutation, that is due from one true
believer in the Unity of God and His indivisibility to another, O
Khawwas?' I was astonished at her speech and said, 'How knowest thou
me?' 'When the heart and thoughts are pure,' answered she, 'the
tongue speaks clearly from the secret places of the soul. I besought
Him yesterday to send me one of His saints, at whose hands I might
have deliverance, and behold, it was cried to me from the recesses
of my house, "Grieve not; for we will send thee Ibrahim el Khawwas."'
Then said I to her, 'What ails thee?' 'It is now four years,'
answered she, 'since there appeared to me the manifest Truth, and He
[or it] is the story-teller, the comrade, the ally; whereupon my
folk looked upon me with evil eyes and taxed me with madness, and
there came not in to me physician or visitor from them, but
terrified and confounded me.' 'And who led thee to the knowledge of
the true faith?' asked I. 'God's manifest signs and His visible
portents,' replied she; 'and when the road is patent to thee, thou
seest with thine own eyes both proof and prover.'
Whilst we were talking, in came the old man affected to her guard
and said to her, 'What doth thy physician?' Quoth she, 'He knoweth
the disease and hath hit upon the remedy.' When he heard this, he
manifested joy and gladness and accosted me with a cheerful favour,
then went and told the King, who bade him entreat me with all
consideration. So I visited her daily for seven days, at the end of
which time she said to me, 'O Abou Ishac, (19) when shall be our
flight to the land of Islam?' 'How canst thou go forth,' replied I,
'and who would dare to attempt thine escape?' 'He,' rejoined she,
'who sent thee to me.' 'Thou sayst well,' answered I. So on the
morrow, we went out by the gate of the city and [men's] eyes were
veiled from us, by His commandment, [who] when He desireth aught,
saith to it, 'Be,' and it is; (20) so that I journeyed with her in
safety to Mecca, where she abode by the House of God seven years,
till the days of her life came to an end. The earth of Mecca was her
tomb, and never saw I any more steadfast in prayer and fasting than
she, may God send down His mercies upon her and have compassion on
him who saith:
When they brought me the physician (and indeed upon my face Sickness
and constant floods of tears had left full many a trace,)
He drew the veil away and saw nought neath it but a soul Sans life
or body or aught else to fill the empty place.
"Indeed," said he to them, "a thing uneath is this to cure; Love
hath a secret not to win by sheer conjecture's grace."
Quoth they, "An one know not what is therein and if there be No way
its nature to define and symptoms to embrace,
How then shall medicine thereon have anywise effect?" Leave me;
indeed, I will not judge, by guess-work, of the case.
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