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Thousand Nights & One Night
Story of the Physician Douban
There was once in a city of Persia a powerful and wealthy king,
named Younan, who had guards and troops and auxiliaries of every
kind: but he was afflicted with a leprosy, which defied the efforts
of his physicians and wise men. He took potions and powders and used
ointments, but all to no avail, and not one of the doctors could
cure him. At last, there came to the King's capital city a great
physician, stricken in years, whose name was Douban: and he had
studied many books, Greek, ancient and modern, and Persian and
Turkish and Arabic and Syriac and Hebrew, and was skilled in
medicine and astrology, both theoretical and practical. Moreover he
was familiar with all plants and herbs and grasses, whether harmful
or beneficial, and was versed in the learning of the philosophers;
in brief, he had made himself master of all sciences, medical and
other. He had not been long in the town before he heard of the
leprosy with which God had afflicted the King, and of the failure of
the physicians and men of science to cure him; whereupon he passed
the night in study; and when the day broke and the morning appeared
and shone, he donned his richest apparel and went in to the King and
kissing the ground before him, wished him enduring honour and fair
fortune, in the choicest words at his command. Then he told him who
he was and said to him, "O King, I have learnt what has befallen
thee in thy person and how a multitude of physicians have failed to
find a means of ridding thee of it: but I will cure thee, O King,
and that without giving thee to drink of medicine or anointing thee
with ointment." When the King heard this, he wondered and said to
him, "How wilt thou do this? By Allah, if thou cure me, I will
enrich thee, even to thy children's children, and I will heap
favours on thee, and whatever thou desirest shalt be shine, and thou
shalt be my companion and my friend." Then he gave him a dress of
honour and made much of him, saying, "Wilt thou indeed cure me
without drugs or ointment?" "Yes," answered Douban, "I will cure
thee from without." Whereat the King marvelled exceedingly and said,
"O physician, when wilt thou do as thou hast said? Make haste, O my
son!" Quoth Douban, " I hear and obey: it shall be done tomorrow."
And he went down into the city and hired a house, in which he
deposited his books and medicines. Then he took certain drugs and
simples and fashioned them into a mall, which he hollowed out and
made thereto a handle and a ball, adapted to it by his art. Next
morning he presented himself before the King and kissing the ground
before him, ordered him to repair to the tilting ground and play at
mall there. So the King mounted and repaired thither with his amirs
and chamberlains and viziers, and hardly had he reached the
appointed place when the physician Douban came up and presented him
with the mall and ball he had prepared, saying, "Take this mall and
grip the handle thus and drive into the plain and stretch thyself
well and strike this ball till thy hand and thy body sweat, when the
drugs will penetrate thy hand and permeate thy body. When thou hast
done and the medicine has entered into thee, return to thy palace
and enter the bath and wash. Then sleep awhile and thou wilt awake
cured, and peace be on thee!" The King took the mall and mounting a
swift horse, threw the ball before him and drove after it with all
his might and smote it: and his hand gripped the mall firmly. And he
ceased not to drive after the bail and strike it, till his hand and
all his body sweated, and Douban knew that the drugs had taken
effect upon him and ordered him to return and enter the bath at
once. So the King returned immediately and ordered the bath to be
emptied for him. They turned the people out of the bath, and his
servants and attendants hastened thither and made him ready change
of linen and all that was necessary: and he went in and washed
himself well and put on his clothes. Then he came out of the bath
and went up to his palace and slept there. When he awoke, he looked
at his body and found it clean as virgin silver, having no trace
left of the leprosy: whereat he rejoiced exceedingly and his breast
expanded with gladness. Next morning, he repaired to the Divan and
sat down on his chair of estate, and the chamberlains and grandees
attended on him. Presently, the physician Douban presented himself
and kissed the earth before the king and repeated the following
verses:
The virtues all exalted are, when thou art styled their sire: None
else the title dares accept, of all that men admire.
Lord of the radiant brow, whose light dispels the mists of doubt
From every goal of high emprize whereunto folk aspire,
Ne'er may thy visage cease to shine with glory and with joy,
Although the face of Fate should gloom with unremitting ire!
Even as the clouds pour down their dews upon the thirsting hills,
Thy grace pours favour on my head, outrunning my desire.
With liberal hand thou casteth forth thy bounties far and nigh, And
so hast won those heights of fame thou soughtest to acquire.
The King rose to him in haste and
embraced him and made him sit down and clad him in a splendid dress
of honour. Then tables of rich food were brought in, and Douban ate
with the King and ceased not to bear him company all that day. When
it was night, the King gave him two thousand diners, besides other
presents, and mounted him on his own horse; and the physician
returned to his lodging, leaving the King astonished at his skill
and saying, "This man cured me from without, without using
ointments. By Allah, this is none other than consummate skill! And
it behoves me to honour and reward him and make him my companion and
bosom friend to the end of time." The King passed the night in great
content, rejoicing in the soundness of his body and his deliverance
from his malady. On the morrow, he went out and sat down on his
throne; and the grandees stood before him, whilst the amirs and
viziers sat on his right hand and on his left. Then he sent for the
physician, who came and kissed the ground before him, whereupon the
King rose to him and made him sit by his side and eat with him, and
ceased not to converse with him and make much of him till night;
when he commanded five dresses of honour and a thousand diners to be
given to him, and he returned to his house, well contented with the
King. Next morning, the King repaired as usual to his
council-chamber, and the amirs and viziers and chamberlains took
their places round him. Now he had among his viziers one who was
forbidding of aspect, sordid, avaricious and envious: a man of ill
omen, naturally inclined to malevolence: and when he saw the esteem
in which the King held Douban and the favours he bestowed on him, he
envied him and plotted evil against him; for, as says the byword,
"Nobody is free from envy "--and again -- "Tyranny is latent in the
soul: weakness hides it and strength reveals it." So he came to the
King and kissed the earth before him and said to him " O King of the
age, thou in whose bounties I have grown up, I have a grave warning
to give thee, which did I conceal from thee, I were a son of shame:
wherefore, if thou command me to impart it to thee, I will do so."
Quoth the King (and indeed the Vizier's words troubled him), "What
is thy warning?" "O illustrious King," answered the Vizier, "the
ancients have a saying, 'Whoso looks not to the issue of events,
fortune is no friend of his :' and indeed I see the King in other
than the right way, in that he favours his enemy, who seeks the
downfall of his kingdom, and makes much of him and honours him
exceedingly and is beyond measure familiar with him: and of a truth
I am fearful for the King." Quoth King Younan (and indeed he was
troubled and his colour changed), "Of whom dost thou speak?" The
Vizier answered, "If thou sleepest, awake. I mean the physician
Douban." "Out on thee! " said the King. "He is my true friend and
the dearest of all men to me; seeing that he medicined me by means
of a thing I held in my hand and cured me of my leprosy, which the
doctors were unable to cure; and there is not his like to be found
in this time, no, not in the whole world, East nor West; and it is
of him that thou speakest thus! But from to-day I will assign him
stipends and allowances and appoint him a thousand diners a month:
and if I should share my kingdom with him, it were but a little
thing. Methinks thou sayest this out of pure envy and wouldst have
me kill him and after repent, as King Sindbad repented the killing
of his falcon." "Pardon me, O King of the age," said the Vizier,
"but how was that! Quoth the King, "It is said that
King Sindbad and His Falcon
There was once a King of Persia, who
delighted in hunting; and he had reared a falcon, that left him not
day or night, but slept all night long, perched upon his hand.
Whenever he went out to hunt, he took the falcon with him; and he
let make for it a cup of gold to hang round its neck, that he might
give it to drink therein. One day, his chief falconer came in to him
and said, 'O King, now is the time to go a-hunting.' So the King
gave orders accordingly and took the falcon on his wrist and set
out, accompanied by his officers and attendants. They rode on till
they reached a valley, where they formed the circle of the chase,
and behold, a gazelle entered the ring; whereupon quoth the King,
'Whoso lets the gazelle spring over his head, I will kill him.' Then
they drew the ring closelier round her, and behold, she came to the
King's station and standing still, put her forelegs to her breast,
as if to kill the earth before him. He bowed to her, but she sprang
over his head and was off into the desert. The King saw his
attendants nodding and winking to one another about him and said to
his Vizier, 'O Vizier, what say my men?' ' They say,' answered the
Vizier, ' that thou didst threaten to kill him over whose head the
gazelle should spring.' 'As my head liveth,' rejoined the King, ' I
will follow her up, till I bring her back!' So he pricked on after
her and followed her till he came to a mountain and she made for her
lair; but the King cast off the falcon, which swooped down on her
and pecked at her eyes, till he blinded her and dazed her; whereupon
the King threw his mace at her and brought her down. Then he
alighted and cut her throat and skinned her and made her fast to his
saddle-bow. Now it was the hour of midday rest and the place, where
he was, was desert, and the King was athirst and so was his horse.
So he searched till he saw a tree, with water dripping slowly, like
oil, from its branches. Now the King's hands were gloved with
leather; so he took the cup from the falcon's neck and filled it
with the liquid and set it before himself, when behold, the falcon
smote the cup and overturned it. The King took it and refilled it
with the falling drops and set it before the bird, thinking that it
was athirst: but it smote it again and overturned it. At this, the
King was vexed with the falcon and rose and filled the cup a third
time and set it before the horse: but the falcon again overturned it
with its wing. Then said the King, 'God confound thee, thou most
mischievous of fowls, thou wilt neither drink thyself nor let me nor
the horse drink!' And he smote it with his sword and cut off its
wings: whereupon it erected its head and made signs as who should
say, 'Look what is at the top of the tree.' The King raised his eyes
and saw at the top of the tree a brood of snakes, and this was their
venom dripping, which he had taken for water. So he repented him of
having cut off the falcon's wings and mounting, rode on till he
reached his tents and gave the gazelle to the cook to roast. Then he
sat down on his chair, with the falcon on his wrist: and presently
the bird gasped and died: whereupon the King cried out in sorrow and
lament for having slain the bird that had saved him from death, and
repented him when repentance availed him not. This, then, is the
story of King Sindbad; and as for thee, O Vizier, envy hath entered
into thee, and thou wouldst have me kill the physician and after
repent, even as King Sindbad repented." "O mighty King," answered
the Vizier, "what harm has this physician done me that I should wish
his death? Indeed I only do this thing in compassion for thee and
that thou mayst know the truth of the matter: else may I perish as
perished the Vizier who plotted to destroy the king his master's
son." "How was that? asked the King, and the Vizier replied, "Know,
O King, that
The King's Son and the Ogress
There was once a King's son who was passionately fond of the chase;
and his father had charged one of his Viziers to attend him wherever
he went. One day, the prince went out to hunt, accompanied by the
Vizier, and as they were going along, they saw a great wild beast,
whereupon the Vizier said to the prince, 'Up and after yonder
beast!' So the prince rode after the beast and followed it, till he
was lost to sight. After awhile, the beast disappeared in the
desert, and the prince found himself alone, not knowing which way to
turn. Presently he came upon a damsel, weeping, and said to her,
'Who art thou?' ' Quoth she, 'I am the daughter of one of the Kings
of India, and I was journeying through this country, with a company
of people, when sleep overcame me and I fell from my horse, not
knowing what I did. My people did not note my fall and went on and
left me; and now I am alone and bewildered.' When the prince heard
this, he had pity on her case and took her up behind himself and
they rode on, till they came to some ruins; when she said to him, 'O
my lord, I wish to do an occasion here.' So he put her down, and she
entered the ruins and tarried there till he became impatient and
went in search of her; when he was ware that she was an ogress, and
heard her say to her children, 'O my children, I have brought you to
day a fat youth.' 'O mother,' answered they, 'bring him to us, that
we may browse on him our bellyful' When the prince heard this their
talk, he trembled in every nerve and made sure of destruction and
turned back. The ogress came out after him and finding him terrified
and trembling, said to him, 'Why dost thou fear?' Quoth he, 'I have
an enemy, of whom I am in fear.' 'Didst thou not say that thou wast
a King's son?' asked she, and he answered 'Yes.' 'Then,'said she,
'why dost thou not give thine enemy money and so appease him?' He
replied, 'Indeed he will not be satisfied with money nor with aught
but life; and I fear him and am an oppressed man.' 'If thou be
oppressed as thou sayst,' rejoined she, 'ask help of God; surely He
will protect thee from thine enemy and from the mischief thou
fearest from him.' So the prince raised his eyes to heaven and said,
'O Thou that answerest the prayer of the distressed, when they call
on Thee, and dispellest evil from them, O my God, succour me against
mine enemy and turn him back from me, for Thou indeed canst do
whatsoever Thou wilt.' When the ogress heard his prayer, she
departed from him and he resumed to the King his father and informed
him of the Vizier's conduct: whereupon the King sent for the latter
and put him to death. And thou, O King" (continued the envious
Vizier), "if thou put thy trust in this physician, he will kill thee
in the foulest fashion. He, verily, whom thou hast favoured and
admitted to thy friendship, plots thy destruction: for know that he
is a spy come from a far land with intent to destroy thee. Seest
thou not that he cured thee of thy distemper from without, by means
of a thing held in thy hand, and how canst thou be sure that he will
not kill thee by some like means?" "Thou speakest sooth, O Vizier of
good counsel!" said the King. "It must indeed be as thou sayst; this
physician doubtless comes as a spy, seeking to destroy me; and
indeed, if he could cure me by means of a handle held in my hand, he
can kill me by means of something I shall smell. But what is to be
done with him?" "Send after him at once," answered the Vizier,"and
when he comes, strike off his head and play him false, ere he play
thee false; and so shalt thou ward off his mischief and be at peace
from him." "Thou art right, O Vizier," rejoined the King and sent
for the physician, who came, rejoicing, for he knew not what the
Compassionate had decreed unto him. As the saying runs:
Thou that fearest ill fortune, be of good heart and hope! Trust
thine affairs to Him who fashioned the earth and sea!
What is decreed of God surely shall come to pass; That which is not
decreed never shall trouble thee.
When Douban entered, he recited the following verses:
If all the thanks I speak come short of that which is your due, Say
for whom else my verse and prose I make except for you?
You have indeed prevented me with many an unasked boon, Blest me,
unhindered of excuse, with favours not a few.
How then should I omit to give your praise its full desert And
celebrate with heart and voice your goodness ever new?
I will indeed proclaim aloud the boons I owe to you, Favours, that,
heavy to the hack, are light the thought unto.
And also the following:
Avert thy face from trouble and from care And trust in God to order
thine affair.
Rejoice in happy fortune near at hand, In which thou shalt forget
the woes that were.
Full many a weary and a troublous thing Is, in its issue, solaceful
and fair.
God orders all according to His will: Oppose Him not in what He doth
prepare.
And these also:
Trust thine affairs to the Subtle, to God that knoweth all, And rest
at peace from the world, for nothing shall thee appal.
Know that the things of the world not, as thou wilt, befall, But as
the Great God orders, to whom all kings are thrall!
And lastly these:
Take heart and rejoice and forget thine every woe, For even the wit
of the wise is eaten away by care.
What shall thought-taking profit a helpless, powerless slave? Leave
it and be at peace in joy enduring fore'er!
When he had finished, the King said to him, "Dost thou know why I
have sent for thee?" And the physician answered, "None knoweth the
hidden things save God the Most High." Quoth the King, "I have sent
for thee to kill thee and put an end to thy life." Douban wondered
greatly at these words and said, "O King, wherefore wilt thou kill
me and what offence have I committed?" "I am told," replied Younan,
"that thou art a spy and comest to kill me, but I will kill thee
first.'' Then he cried out to his swordbearer, saying, "Strike off
the head of this traitor and rid us of his mischief!" "Spare me,"
said Douban; "so may God spare thee; and kill me not, lest God kill
thee!" And he repeated these words to him, even as I did to thee, O
Afrit, and thou wouldst not spare me, but persistedst in thine
intent to put me to death. Then the King said to Douban, "Verily I
shall not be secure except I kill thee: for thou curedst me by means
of a handle I held in my hand, and I have no assurance but thou wilt
kill me by means of perfumes or otherwise." "O King," said Douban,
"is this my reward from thee? Thou returnest evil for good?" The
King replied, "It boots not: thou must die and that without delay."
When the physician saw that the King was irrevocably resolved to
kill him, he wept and lamented the good he had done to the
undeserving, blaming himself for having sown in an ungrateful soil
and repeating the following verses:
Maimouneh has no wit to guide her by, Although her sire among the
wise ranks high.
The man, who has no sense to rule his steps, Slips, he the ground he
treads on wet or dry.
Then the swordbearer came forward and bandaged his eyes and baring
his sword, said to the King, "Have I thy leave to strike?" Whereupon
the physician wept and said, "Spare me, so God may spare thee: and
kill me not, lest God kill thee!" And he recited the following
verses:
I acted in good faith and they betrayed: I came to nought: They
prospered, whilst my loyalty brought me to evil case.
If that I live, I will to none good counsel give again: And if I
die, good counsellors be curst of every race!
And he said to the King, " Is this my reward from thee? Thou givest
me the crocodile's recompense." Quoth the King, "What is the story
of the crocodile?"' " I cannot tell it," answered Douban, "and I in
this case; but, God on thee, spare me, so may He spare thee!" And he
wept sore. Then one of the King's chief officers rose and said, "O
King, grant me this man's life, for we see not that he has committed
any offence against thee nor that he has done aught but cure thee of
thy disorder, which baffled the doctors and sages." "Ye know not why
I put him to death," answered the King: "it is because I believe him
to be a spy, who hath been suborned to kill me and came hither with
that intent: and verily he who cured me by means of a handle held in
my hand can easily poison me in like manner. If I spare him, he will
infallibly destroy me: so needs must I kill him, and then I shall
feel myself safe." When the physician was convinced that there was
no hope for him, but that the King would indeed put him to death, he
said to the latter, "O King, if thou must indeed kill me, grant me a
respite, that I may go to my house and discharge my last duties and
dispose of my medical books and give my people and friends
directions for my burial. Among my books is one that is a rarity of
rarities, and I will make thee a present of it, that thou mayst lay
it up in thy treasury." "And what is in this book?" asked the King.
Quoth Douban, "It contains things without number: the least of its
secret virtues is that if, when thou hast cut off my head, thou open
the book, turn over six leaves and read three lines of the left-hand
page, my head will speak and answer whatever questions thou shalt
ask it." At this the King marvelled greatly and shook with delight
and said, "O physician, will thy head indeed speak to me, after it
is cut off?" And he answered, "Yes, O King." Quoth the King, "This
is indeed wonderful!" And sent him under guard to his house, where
Douban spent the remainder of the day in setting his affairs in
order. Next day, the amirs and viziers and chamberlains and all the
great officers and notables of the kingdom came to the court, and
the presence chamber was like a flower garden. Presently the
physician entered, bearing an old book and a small pot full of
powder; and sitting down, called for a dish. So they brought him a
dish, and he poured the powder therein and levelled it. Then he
said, "O King, take this book, but do not open it till my head has
been cut off, placed on this dish and pressed down on the powder,
when the blood will cease to flow: then open the book and do as I
have enjoined thee." The King took the book and gave the signal to
the headsman, who rose and struck off the physician's head and set
it on the dish, pressing it down upon the powder, when the blood
immediately ceased to flow, and the head unclosed its eyes and said,
"Open the book, O King!" Younan opened the book and found the leaves
stuck together; so he put his finger to his mouth and took of his
spittle and loosened them therewith and turned over the pages in
this manner, one after another, for the leaves would not come apart
but with difficulty, till he came to the seventh page, but found
nothing written thereon and said to the head, "O physician, there is
nothing here." Quoth the head, "Open more leaves." So the King
turned over more leaves in the same manner. Now the book was as
poisoned, and before long the poison began to work upon the King,
and he fell back in convulsions and cried out, "I am poisoned!"
Whereupon the head repeated the following verses:
Lo, these once were kings who governed with a harsh and haughty
sway! In a little, their dominion was as if it ne'er had been.
Had they swayed the sceptre justly, they had been repaid the like,
But they were unjust, and Fortune guerdoned them with dole and teen.
Now they're passed away, the moral of their case bespeaks them thus,
"This is what your sins have earnt you: Fate is not to blame, I ween"
No sooner had it done speaking, than the King fell down dead and the
head also ceased to live. And know, O Afrit (continued the
fisherman), that if King Younan had spared the physician Douban, God
would have spared him; but he refused and sought his death; so God
killed him. And thou, O Afrit, if thou hadst spared me, I would
spare thee; but nothing would serve thee but thou must put me to
death; so now I will kill thee by shutting thee up in this vessel
and throwing thee into the sea.' At this the Marid roared out and
said, 'God on thee, O fisherman, do not do that! Spare me and bear
me not malice for what I did, for men's wit is still better than
that of Jinn. If I did evil, do thou good, in accordance with the
adage, "O thou that dost good to him that does evil, the deed of the
evil-doer suffices him." Do not thou deal with me as did Umameh with
Aatikeh.' 'And what did Umameh with Aatikeh?' asked the fisherman.
But the Afrit answered, 'This is no time to tell stories, and I in
this duresse: let me out, and I will tell thee.' Quoth the
fisherman, 'Leave this talk: I must and will throw thee into the
sea, and thou shalt never win out again; for I besought thee and
humbled myself to thee, but nothing would serve thee but thou must
kill me, who had committed no offence against thee deserving this
nor done thee any ill, but only kindness, in that I delivered thee
from duresse. When thou didst thus by me, I knew thee for an
incorrigible evil-doer; and know that, when I have thrown thee back
into the sea, I will tell every one what happened between me and
thee and warn him, to the end that whoever fishes thee up may throw
thee in again; and thou shalt remain in the sea till the end of time
and suffer all manner of torments.' Quoth the Afrit, 'Let me out,
for this is the season of generosity; and I will make a compact with
thee never to do thee hurt and to help thee to what shall enrich
thee.' The fisherman accepted his proposal and unsealed the vessel,
after he had taken the Afrit's pledge and made him swear by the Most
High Name never to hurt him, but on the contrary to do him service.
Then the smoke ascended as before and gathered itself together and
became an Afrit, who gave the vessel a kick and sent it into the
sea. When the fisherman saw this, he let fly in his clothes and gave
himself up for lost, saying, 'This bodes no good.' But he took
courage and said to the Afrit, 'O Afrit, quoth God the Most High,
"Be ye faithful to your covenants, for they shall be enquired of:"
and verily thou madest a pact with me and sworest to me that thou
wouldst do me no hurt. So play me not false, lest God do the like
with thee: for indeed He is a jealous God, who delayeth to punish,
yet letteth not the evil-doer escape. And I say to thee, as said the
physician Douban to King Younan, "Spare me, so God may spare thee!"'
The Afrit laughed and started off inland, saying to the fisherman,
'Follow me.' So he followed him, trembling and not believing that he
should escape, and the Afrit led him to the backward of the town:
then crossing a hill, descended into a spacious plain, in the midst
of which was a lake of water surrounded by four little hills. He led
the fisherman into the midst of the lake, where he stood still and
bade him throw his net and fish. The fisherman looked into the water
and was astonished to see therein fish of four colours, white and
red and blue and yellow. Then he took out his net and cast and
drawing it in, found in it four fish, one of each colour. At this he
rejoiced, and the Afrit said to him, 'Carry them to the Sultan and
present them to him, and he will give thee what shall enrich thee.
And accept my excuse, for I know not any other way to fulfil my pro
mise to thee, having lain in yonder sea eighteen hundred years and
never seen the surface of the earth till this time. But do not fish
here more than once a day; and I commend thee to God's care!' So
saying, he struck the earth with his foot, and it opened and
swallowed him up, whilst the fisherman returned, wondering at all
that had befallen him, to his house, where he took a bowl of water
and laid therein the fish, which began to frisk about. Then he set
the bowl on his head and going up to the palace, as the Afrit had
bidden him, presented the fish to the King, who wondered at them
greatly, for that he had never seen their like, in shape or kind,
and said to his Vizier, 'Give these fish to the cookmaid that the
King of the Greeks sent us, and tell her to fry them.' Now this was
a damsel that he had received as a present from the King of the
Greeks three days before and of whom he had not yet made trial in
cookery. So the Vizier carried the fish to the cookmaid and said to
her, 'These fish have been brought as a present to the Sultan and he
says to thee, "O my tear, I have reserved thee against my stress!"
So do thou show us to-day thy skill and the excellence of thy
cookery.' Then he returned to the Sultan, who bade him give the
fisherman four hundred diners. So he gave them to him and he took
the money in his lap and set off home, running and stumbling and
falling and rising again and thinking that he was dreaming. And he
bought what was needful for his family and returned to his wife,
glad and happy. Meanwhile the cookmaid took the fish and cleaned
them and set the frying-pan on the fire. Then she poured in oil of
sesame and waited till it was hot, when she put in the fish. As soon
as one side was done, she fumed them, when lo, the wall of the
kitchen opened and out came a handsome and well-shaped young lady,
with smooth cheeks and liquid black eyes. She was clad in a tunic of
satin, yarded with spangles of Egyptian gold, and on her head she
had a silken kerchief, fringed with blue. She wore rings in her ears
and bracelets on her wrists and rings on her fingers, with beazels
of precious stones, and held in her hand a rod of Indian cane. She
came up to the brazier and thrust the rod into the frying-pan saying
'O fish, are you constant to your covenant?' And when the cookmaid
heard this she swooned away. Then the damsel repeated her question a
second and a third time; and the fish lifted up their heads and
cried out with one voice, 'Yes, yes:
Return, and we return: keep faith, and so will we: Or, if thou wilt,
forsake, and we'll do like to thee!'
With this the damsel overturned the frying-pan and went out by the
way she had come, and the wall closed up again as before. Presently
the cookmaid came to herself and seeing the four fish burnt black as
coal, said, 'My arms are broken in my first skirmish!' And fell down
again in a swoon. Whilst she was in this state, in came the Vizier,
to seek the fish, and found her insensible, not knowing Saturday
from Thursday. So he stirred her with his foot and she came to
herself and wept and told him what had passed. He marvelled and
said, 'This is indeed a strange thing !' Then he sent for the
fisherman and said to him, 'O fisherman, bring us four more fish of
the same kind.' So the fisherman repaired to the lake and cast his
net and hauling it in, found in it four fish like the first and
carried them to the Vizier, who took them to the cookmaid and said
to her, 'Come, fry them before me, that I may see what happens.' So
she cleaned the fish and setting the frying-pan on the fire, threw
them into it: and they had not lain long before the wall opened and
the damsel appeared, after the same fashion, and thrust the rod into
the pan, saying, 'O fish, O fish, are you constant to the old
covenant?' And behold the fish all lifted up their heads and cried
out as before, 'Yes, yes:
Return, and we return: keep faith, and so will we: Or, if thou wilt,
forsake, and we'll do like to thee!'
Then she overturned the pan and went out as she had come and the
wall closed up again. When the Vizier saw this, he said, 'This is a
thing that must not be kept from the King. So he went to him and
told him what he had witnessed; and the King said, 'I must see this
with my own eyes.' Then he sent for the fisherman and commanded him
to bring him other four fish like the first; and the fisherman went
down at once to the lake and casting his net, caught other four fish
and returned with them to the King, who ordered him other four
hundred diners and set a guard upon him till he should see what
happened. Then he turned to the Vizier and said to him, 'Come thou
and fry the fish before me.' Quoth the Vizier, 'I hear and obey.' So
he fetched the frying-pan and setting it on the fire, cleaned the
fish and threw them in: but hardly had he turned them, when the wall
opened, and out came a black slave, as he were a mountain or one of
the survivors of the tribe of Aad, with a branch of a green tree in
his hand: and he said, in a terrible voice, 'O fish, O fish, are you
constant to the old covenant?' Whereupon they lifted up their heads
and cried out' 'Yes, yes; we are constant:
Return, and we return: keep faith, and so will we: Or, if thou wilt,
forsake, and we'll do like to thee!'
Then the slave went up to the pan and overturning it with the
branch, went out as he had come, and the wall closed up as before.
The King looked at the fish and found them black as coal; whereat he
was bewildered and said to the Vizier, 'This is a thing about which
it is impossible to keep silence; and indeed there must be some
strange circumstance connected with these fish.' Then he sent for
the fisherman and said to him, 'Hark ye, sirrah, whence hadst thou
those fish?' ' From a lake between four hills,' answered he, 'on the
thither side of the mountain behind the city.' 'How many days'
journey hence?' asked the King; and the fisherman said, 'O my lord
Sultan, half an hour's journey.' At this the King was astonished and
ordering the troops to mount, set out at once, followed by his suite
and preceded by the fisherman, who began to curse the Afrit. They
rode on over the mountain and descended into a wide plain, that they
had never before set eyes on, whereat they were all amazed. Then
they fared on till they came to the lake lying between the four
hills and saw the fish therein of four colours, red and white and
yellow and blue. The King stood and wondered and said to his
attendants, 'Has any one of you ever seen this lake before?' But
they answered, ' Never did we set eyes on it in all our lives, O
King of the age.' Then he questioned those stricken in years, and
they made him the same answer. Quoth he, 'By Allah, I will not
return to my capital nor sit down on my chair of estate till I know
the secret of this pond and its fish!' Then he ordered his people to
encamp at the foot of the hills and called his Vizier, who was a man
of learning and experience, sagacious and skilful in business, and
said to him, 'I mean to go forth alone to-night and enquire into the
matter of the lake and these fish: wherefore do thou sit down at the
door of my pavilion and tell the amirs and viziers and chamberlains
and officers and all who ask after me that the Sultan is ailing and
hath ordered thee to admit no one, and do thou acquaint none with my
purpose.' The Vizier dared not oppose his design; so the King
disguised himself and girt on his sword and going forth privily,
took a path that led over one of the hills and fared on all that
night and the next day, till the heat overcame him and he paused to
rest. Then he set out again and fared on the rest of that day and
all the next night, till on the morning of the second day, he caught
sight of some black thing in the distance, whereat he rejoiced and
said, 'Belike I shall find some one who can tell me the secret of
the lake and the fish.' So he walked on, till he came to the black
object, when he found it a palace built of black stone, plated with
iron; and one leaf of its gate was open and the other shut. At this
the King rejoiced and went up to the gate and knocked lightly, but
heard no answer. So he knocked a second time and a third time, with
the same result. Then he knocked loudly, but still no one answered;
and he said to himself, 'It must be deserted.' So he took courage
and entering the vestibule, cried out, 'Ho, people of the palace! I
am a stranger and a wayfarer and hungry. Have ye any victual?' He
repeated these words a second and a third time, but none answered.
So he took heart and went on boldly into the interior of the palace,
which he found hung and furnished with silken stuffs, embroidered
with stars of gold, and curtains let down before the doors. In the
midst was a spacious courtyard, with four estrades, one on each
side, and a bench of stone. Midmost the courtyard was a great basin
of water, from which sprang a fountain, and at the corners stood
four lions of red gold, spouting forth water as it were pearls and
jewels; and the place was full of birds, which were hindered from
flying away by a network of gold stretched overhead. The King looked
right and left, but there was no one to be seen; whereat he
marvelled and was vexed to find none of whom he might enquire
concerning the lake and the fish and the palace itself. So he
returned to the vestibule and sitting down between the doors, fell
to musing upon what he had seen, when lo, he heard a moaning that
came from a sorrowful heart, and a voice chanted the following
verses:
I hid what I endured from thee: it came to light, And sleep was
changed to wake thenceforward to my sight.
O Fate, thou sparest not nor dost desist from me; Lo, for my heart
is racked with dolour and affright!
Have pity, lady mine, upon the great laid low, Upon the rich made
poor by love and its despite!
Once, jealous of the breeze that blew on thee, I was, Alas! on whom
Fate falls, his eyes are veiled with night.
What boots the archer's skill, if, when the foe draws near, His
bow-string snap and leave him helpless in the fight?
So when afflictions press upon the noble mind, Where shall a man
from Fate and Destiny take flight?
When the King heard this, he rose and followed the sound and found
that it came from behind a curtain let down before the doorway of a
sitting-chamber. So he raised the curtain and saw a young man seated
upon a couch raised a cubit from the ground. He was a handsome
well-shaped youth, with flower-white forehead and rosy cheeks and a
black mole, like a grain of ambergris, on the table of his cheek, as
says the poet:
The slender one! From his brow and the night of his jetty hair, The
world in alternate gloom and splendour of day doth fare.
Blame not the mole on his cheek. Is an anemone's cup Perfect, except
in its midst an eyelet of black it wear?
He was clad in a robe of silk, laced with Egyptian gold, and had on
his head a crown set with jewels, but his face bore traces of
affliction. The King rejoiced when he saw him and saluted him; and
the youth returned his salute in the most courteous wise, though
without rising, and said to him, 'O my lord, excuse me if I do not
rise to thee, as is thy due; indeed, I am unable to do so.' 'I hold
thee excused, O youth!' answered the King. 'I am thy guest and come
to thee on a pressing errand, beseeching thee to expound to me the
mystery of the lake and the fish and of this palace, and why thou
sittest here alone and weeping.' When the young man heard this, the
tears ran down his cheeks and he wept sore, till his breast was
drenched, and repeated the following verses:
Say unto those that grieve, at whom doth Fate her arrows cast, "How
many an one hath she raised up but to lay low at last!
Lo, if ye sleep, the eye of God is never closed in sleep. For whom
indeed is life serene, for whom is Fortune fast?"
Then he gave a heavy sigh and repeated the following:
Trust thine affair to the Ruler of all that be And put
thought-taking and trouble away from thee:
Say not of aught that is past, "How came it so?" All things depend
upon the Divine decree.
The King marvelled and said to him, 'What makes thee weep, O youth?'
' How should I not weep,' answered he 'being in such a plight? '
Then he put out his hand and lifted the skirt of his robe, and
behold, he was stone from the waist downward. When the King saw this
his condition, he grieved sore and lamented and cried out, 'Alas!
alas!' and said, 'Verily, O youth, thou addest trouble to my
trouble. I came to enquire concerning the fish; and now I am
concerned to know thy history also. But there is no power and no
virtue save in God the Most High, the Supreme! Hasten therefore, O
youth, and expound to me thy story.' Quoth the youth, 'Give me thine
ears and understanding:' and the King replied, 'I am all attention.'
Then said the youth, 'There hangs a strange story by these fish and
by myself, a story which, were it graven with needles on the corners
of the eye, would serve as a warning to those who can profit by
example. ' How so ?' asked the King and the youth replied, ' Know, O
my lord, that
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