|
Back to:
Thousand Nights & One Night
THE FOX AND THE CROW
A fox once dwelt in a cave of a certain mountain, and as often as a
cub was born to him and grew stout, he would eat it, for, except he
did so, he had died of hunger; and this was grievous to him. Now on
the top of the same mountain a crow had made his nest, and the fox
said to himself, 'I have a mind to strike up a friendship with this
crow and make a comrade of him, that he may help me to my day's
meat, for he can do what I cannot.' So he made for the crow's stead,
and when he came within earshot, he saluted him, saying, 'O my
neighbour, verily a true-believer hath two claims upon his
true-believing neighbour, that of neighbourliness and that of
community of faith; and know, O my friend, that thou art my
neighbour and hast a claim upon me, which it behoves me to observe,
the more that I have been long thy neighbour. Moreover, God hath set
in my breast a store of love to thee, that bids me speak thee fair
and solicit thy friendship. What sayst thou?' 'Verily,' answered the
crow, 'the best speech is that which is soothest, and most like thou
speakest with thy tongue that which is not in thy heart. I fear lest
thy friendship be but of the tongue, outward, and shine enmity of
the heart, inward; for that thou art the Eater and I the Eaten, and
to hold aloof one from the other were more apt to us than friendship
and fellowship. What, then, maketh thee seek that thou mayst not
come at and desire what may not be, seeing that thou art of the
beast and I of the bird kind? Verily, this brotherhood [thou
profferest] may not be, neither were it seemly.' He who knoweth the
abiding-place of excellent things,' rejoined the fox, 'betters
choice in what he chooses therefrom, so haply he may win to
advantage his brethren; and indeed I should love to be near thee and
I have chosen thy companionship, to the end that we may help one
another to our several desires; and success shall surely wait upon
our loves. I have store of tales of the goodliness of friendship,
which, an it like thee, I will relate to thee.' 'Thou hast my
leave,' answered the crow; 'let me hear thy story and weigh it and
judge of thine intent thereby.' 'Hear then, O my friend,' rejoined
the fox, 'that which is told of a mouse and a flea and which bears
out what I have said to thee.' 'How so?' asked the crow. 'It is
said,' answered the fox, 'that
The Mouse and the Flea
A mouse once dwelt in the house of a rich and busy merchant. One
night, a flea took shelter in the merchant's bed and finding his
body soft and being athirst, drank of his blood. The smart of the
bite awoke the merchant, who sat up and called to his serving men
and maids. So they hastened to him and tucking up their sleeves,
fell to searching for the flea. As soon as the latter was ware of
the search, he turned to flee and happening on the mouse's hole,
entered it. When the mouse saw him, she said to him, "What brings
thee in to me, seeing that thou art not of my kind and canst not
therefore be assured of safety from violence or ill-usage?"
"Verily," answered the flea, "I took refuge in thy dwelling from
slaughter and come to thee, seeking thy protection and not anywise
coveting thy house, nor shall aught of mischief betide thee from me
nor aught to make thee leave it. Nay, I hope to repay thy favours to
me with all good, and thou shalt assuredly see and praise the issue
of my words." "If the case be as thou sayest," answered the mouse,
"be at thine ease here; for nought shall betide thee, save what may
pleasure thee; there shall fall on thee rain of peace alone nor
shall aught befall thee, but what befalls me. I will give thee my
love without stint and do not thou regret thy loss of the merchant's
blood nor lament for thy subsistence from him, but be content with
what little of sufficient sustenance thou canst lightly come by; for
indeed this is the safer for thee, and I have heard that one of the
moral poets saith as follows:
I have trodden the road of content and retirement And lived out my
life with whatever betided;
With a morsel of bread and a draught of cold water, Coarse salt and
patched garments content I abided.
If God willed it, He made my life easy of living; Else, I was
contented with what He provided."
"O my sister," rejoined the flea, "I hearken to thine injunction and
submit myself to yield thee obedience, nor have I power to gainsay
thee, till life be fulfilled, in this fair intent." "Purity of
intent suffices to sincere affection," replied the mouse. So love
befell and was contracted between them and after this, the flea used
(by night) to go to the merchant's bed and not exceed moderation (in
sucking his blood) and harbour with the mouse by day in the latter's
hole. One night, the merchant brought home great store of dinars and
began to turn them over. When the mouse heard the chink of the coin,
she put her head out of her hole and gazed at it, till the merchant
laid it under his pillow and went to sleep, when she said to the
flea, "Seest thou not the favourable opportunity and the great good
fortune! Hast thou any device to bring us to our desire of yonder
dinars?" "Verily," answered the flea, "it is not good for one to
strive for aught, but if he be able to compass his desire; for if he
lack of ableness thereto, he falls into that of which he should be
ware and attains not his wish for weakness, though he use all
possible cunning, like the sparrow that picks up grain and falls
into the net and is caught by the fowler. Thou hast no strength to
take the dinars and carry them into thy hole, nor can I do this; on
the contrary, I could not lift a single dinar; so what hast thou to
do with them?" Quoth the mouse, "I have made me these seventy
openings, whence I may go out, and set apart a place for things of
price, strong and safe; and if thou canst contrive to get the
merchant out of the house, I doubt not of success, so Fate aid me."
"I will engage to get him out of the house for thee," answered the
flea and going to the merchant's bed, gave him a terrible bite, such
as he had never before felt, then fled to a place of safety. The
merchant awoke and sought for the flea, but finding it not, lay down
again on his other side. Then came the flea and bit him again, more
sharply than before. So he lost patience and leaving his bed, went
out and lay down on the bench before the door and slept there and
awoke not till the morning. Meanwhile the mouse came out and fell to
carrying the dinars into her hole, till not one was left; and when
it was day, the merchant began to accuse the folk and imagine all
manner of things. And know, O wise, clear-sighted and experienced
crow (continued the fox), that I only tell thee this to the intent
that thou mayst reap the recompense of thy goodness to me, even as
the mouse reaped the reward of her kindness to the flea; for see how
he repaid her and requited her with the goodliest of requitals.'
Quoth the crow, 'It lies with the benefactor to show benevolence or
not; nor is it incumbent on us to behave kindly to whoso seeks an
impossible connection. If I show thee favour, who art by nature my
enemy, I am the cause of my own destruction, and thou, O fox, art
full of craft and cunning. Now those, whose characteristics these
are, are not to be trusted upon oath, and he who is not to be
trusted upon oath, there is no good faith in him. I heard but late
of thy perfidious dealing with thy comrade the wolf and how thou
leddest him into destruction by thy perfidy and guile, and this
though he was of thine own kind and thou hadst long companied with
him; yet didst thou not spare him; and if thou didst thus with thy
fellow, that was of thine own kind, how can I have confidence in thy
fidelity and what would be thy dealing with thine enemy of other
than thy kind? Nor can I liken thee and me but to the Falcon and the
Birds.' 'How so?' asked the fox. 'They say,' answered the crow,
'that
The Falcon and the Birds
There was once a falcon who was a cruel tyrant in the days of his
youth, so that the beasts of prey of the air and of the earth feared
him and none was safe from his mischief; and many were the instances
of his tyranny, for he did nothing but oppress and injure all the
other birds. As the years passed over him, he grew weak and his
strength failed, so that he was oppressed with hunger; but his
cunning increased with the waning of his strength and he redoubled
in his endeavour and determined to go to the general rendezvous of
the birds, that he might eat their leavings, and in this manner he
gained his living by cunning, whenas he could do so no longer by
strength and violence. And thou, O fox, art like this: if thy
strength fail thee, thy cunning fails not; and I doubt not that thy
seeking my friendship is a device to get thy subsistence; but I am
none of those who put themselves at thy mercy, for God hath given me
strength in my wings and caution in my heart and sight in my eyes,
and I know that he who apeth a stronger than he, wearieth himself
and is often destroyed, wherefore I fear for thee lest, if thou ape
a stronger than thou, there befall thee what befell the sparrow.'
'What befell the sparrow?' asked the fox. 'I conjure thee, by Allah,
to tell me his story.' 'I have heard,' replied the crow, 'that
The Sparrow and the Eagle
A sparrow was once hovering over a sheep-fold, when he saw a great
eagle swoop down upon a lamb and carry it off in his claws.
Thereupon the sparrow clapped his wings and said, "I will do even as
the eagle hath done;" and he conceited himself and aped a greater
than he. So he flew down forthright and lighted on the back of a fat
ram, with a thick fleece that was become matted, by his lying in his
dung and stale, till it was like felt. As soon as the sparrow
lighted on the sheep's back, he clapped his wings and would have
flown away, but his feet became tangled in the wool and he could not
win free. All this while the shepherd was looking on, having seen as
well what happened with the eagle as with the sparrow; so he came up
to the latter in a rage and seized him. Then he plucked out his
wing-feathers and tying his feet with a twine, carried him to his
children and threw him to them. "What is this?" asked they and he
answered, "This is one that aped a greater than himself and came to
grief." Now thou, O fox,' continued the crow, 'art like this and I
would have thee beware of aping a greater than thou, lest thou
perish. This is all I have to say to thee; so go from me in peace.'
When the fox despaired of the crow's friendship, he turned away,
groaning and gnashing his teeth for sorrow and disappointment, which
when the crow heard, he said to him, 'O fox, why dost thou gnash thy
teeth?' 'Because I find thee wilier than myself,' answered the fox
and made off to his den."
"O Shehrzad," said the Sultan, "how excellent and delightful are
these thy stories! Hast thou more of the like edifying tales?" "It
is said," answered she, "that
|