For indeed Thou appointest unto Thy creatures that
which Thou wilt and that which Thou hast foreordained unto
them; wherefore are some weary and others are at rest, and some
enjoy fair fortune and affluence whilst others suffer the extreme
of travail and misery, even as I do.
which Thou wilt and that which Thou hast foreordained unto
them; wherefore are some weary and others are at rest, and some
enjoy fair fortune and affluence whilst others suffer the extreme
of travail and misery, even as I do.
Warner - World's Best Literature - v02 - Aqu to Bag
635 (#45) #############################################
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
635
be exalted! ) whereupon God averted from me the influence of
those damsels' artifice, and they departed from me; therefore I
cast not myself down, and God repelled from me the effect of
their artifice and enchantment. There is no doubt that this is
an enchantment and an artifice which the people of this city
contrived in order to repel from it every one who should desire
to look down upon it, and wish to obtain access to it; and these
our companions are laid dead.
He then walked along the wall till he came to the two towers
of brass, when he saw that they had two gates of gold, without
locks upon them, or any sign of the means of opening them.
Therefore the sheykh paused as long as God willed, and looking
attentively, he saw in the middle of one of the gates a figure of
a horseman of brass, having one hand extended, as though he
were pointing with it, and on it was an inscription, which the
sheykh read, and lo, it contained these words:-Turn the pin
that is in the middle of the front of the horseman's body twelve
times, and then the gate will open. So he examined the horse-
man, and in the middle of the front of his body was a pin,
strong, firm, well fixed; and he turned it twelve times; where-
upon the gate opened immediately, with a noise like thunder;
and the sheykh 'Abd-Es-Samad entered. He was a learned man,
acquainted with all languages and characters. And he walked
on until he entered a long passage, whence he descended some
steps, and he found a place with handsome wooden benches,
on which were people dead, and over their heads were elegant
shields, and keen swords, and strung bows, and notched arrows.
And behind the [next] gate were a bar of iron, and barricades
of wood, and locks of delicate fabric, and strong apparatus.
Upon this, the sheykh said within himself, Perhaps the keys are
with these people. Then he looked, and lo, there was a sheykh
who appeared to be the oldest of them, and he was upon a high
wooden bench among the dead men. So the sheykh 'Abd-Es-
Samad said, May not the keys of the city be with this sheykh?
Perhaps he was the gate-keeper of the city, and these were
under his authority. He therefore drew near to him, and lifted
up his garments, and lo, the keys were hung to his waist. At
the sight of them, the sheykh 'Abd-Es-Samad rejoiced exceed-
ingly; his reason almost fled from him in consequence of his joy:
and he took the keys, approached the gate, opened the locks,
and pulled the gate and the barricades and other apparatus
## p. 636 (#46) #############################################
636
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
which opened, and the gate also opened, with a noise like thun-
der, by reason of its greatness and terribleness, and the enor-
mousness of its apparatus. Upon this, the sheykh exclaimed,
God is most great! -and the people made the same exclama-
tion with him, rejoicing at the event. The Emeer Moosà also
rejoiced at the safety of the sheykh 'Abd-Es-Samad, and at the
opening of the gate of the city; the people thanked the sheykh
for that which he had done, and all the troops hastened to enter
the gate.
But the Emeer Moosà cried out to them, saying to
them, O people, if all of us enter, we shall not be secure from
some accident that may happen. Half shall enter, and half shall
remain behind.
The Emeer Moosà then entered the gate, and with him half
of the people, who bore their weapons of war.
And the party
saw their companions lying dead: so they buried them. They
saw also the gate-keepers and servants and chamberlains and
lieutenants lying upon beds of silk, all of them dead.
And they
entered the market of the city, and beheld a great market, with
lofty buildings, none of which projected beyond another: the
shops were open, and the scales hung up, and the utensils of
brass ranged in order, and the kháns were full of all kinds of
goods. And they saw the merchants dead in their shops: their
skins were dried, and their bones were carious, and they had
become examples to him who would be admonished. They saw
likewise four markets of particular shops filled with wealth. And
they left this place, and passed on to the silk-market, in which.
silks and brocades interwoven with red gold and white sil-
ver upon various colours, and the owners were dead, lying upon
skins, and appearing almost as though they would speak. Leav-
ing these, they went on to the market of jewels and pearls and
jacinths; and they left it, and passed on to the market of the
money-changers, whom they found dead, with varieties of silks.
beneath them, and their shops were filled with gold and silver.
These they left, and they proceeded to the market of the per-
fumers; and lo, their shops were filled with varieties of perfumes,
and bags of musk, and ambergris, and aloes-wood, and nedd, and
camphor, and other things; and the owners were all dead, not
having with them any food. And when they went forth from
the market of the perfumers, they found near unto it a palace,
decorated, and strongly constructed; and they entered it, and
found banners unfurled, and drawn swords, and strung bows,
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THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
637
and shields hung up by chains of gold and silver, and helmets
gilded with red gold. And in the passages of that palace were
benches of ivory, ornamented with plates of brilliant gold, and
with silk, on which were men whose skins had dried upon the
bones: the ignorant would imagine them to be sleeping; but,
from the want of food, they had died, and tasted mortality.
Upon this, the Emeer Moosà paused, extolling the perfection of
God (whose name be exalted! ) and his holiness, and contem-
plating the beauty of that palace.
[They find the palace a marvel of splendor, but as awfully silent and
mausoleum-like as the rest of the city; and soon reach a magnificent hall in
which lies the dead body of "Jedmur, the Daughter of the King of the Ama-
lekites," magnificently laid in state, and magically preserved and protected.
Tálib unwisely and covetously attempts to rob the corpse of jewels; and is
instantly beheaded by its enchanted guards. The Emeer Moosà and the sage
'Abd-Es-Samad, however, leave the place in safety, return to Upper Egypt
and Syria by way of the Country of the Blacks, succeed in securing twelve
of the wonderful bottles containing Jinn,-and the tale concludes with the
Emeer Moosà's resignation of his throne that he may die in Jerusalem, so
profoundly has he been affected by the adventure. ]
"
FROM THE HISTORY OF KING OMAR BEN ENNUMAN, AND
HIS SONS SHERKAN AND ZOULMEKAN›
Nights 15, 16, 17, and 18: Translation of Professor John Payne
THE MEETING OF PRINCE SHERKAN AND PRINCESS ABRIZEH
TH
HERE reigned once in the City of Peace [Bagdad], before the
Khalifate of Abdulmelik ben Merwan, a king called Omar
ben Ennuman, who was of the mighty giants, and had
subdued the kings of Persia and the emperors of the East, for
none could warm himself at his fire nor cope with him in battle;
and when he was angry there came sparks out of his nostrils.
He had gotten him dominion over all countries, and God had
subjected unto him all creatures; his commands were obeyed in
all the great cities, and his armies penetrated the most distant.
lands: the East and West came under his rule, with the regions
between them, Hind and Sind and China and Hejaz and Yemen
and the islands of India and China, Syria and Mesopotamia and
the lands of the blacks and the islands of the ocean, and all the
famous rivers of the earth, Jaxartes and Bactrus and Nile and
Euphrates. He sent his ambassadors to the farthest parts of the
## p. 638 (#48) #############################################
638
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
earth to fetch him true report, and they returned with tidings.
of justice and peace, bringing him assurance of loyalty and
obedience, and invocations of blessings on his head; for he was
a right noble king, and there came to him gifts and tribute
from all parts of the world. He had a son called Sherkan, who
was one of the prodigies of the age and the likest of all men to
his father, who loved him with an exceeding love and had
appointed him to be king after him. The prince grew up till
he reached man's estate, and was twenty years old, and God
subjected all men to him, for he was gifted with great might
and prowess in battle, humbling the champions and destroying
all who made head against him. So, before long, this Sherkan
became famous in all quarters of the world, and his father
rejoiced in him; and his might waxed till he passed all bounds,
and magnified himself, taking by storm the citadels and strong
places.
[The Prince being sent to assist King Afridoun, of the Greeks, against an
enemy, is intrusted with an army of ten thousand soldiers, and leaves Bag-
dad in military state. ]
Then they loaded the beasts and beat the drums and blew
the clarions and unfurled the banners and the standards, whilst
Sherkan mounted, with the Vizier Dendan by his side, and the
standards waving over them; and the army set out and fared on
with the [Greek] ambassadors in the van till the day departed
and the night came, when they halted and encamped for the
night. On the
On the morrow, as soon as God brought in the day,
they took horse and continued their march, nor did they cease
to press onward, guided by the ambassadors, for the space of
twenty days. On the twenty-first day, at nightfall, they came
to a wide and fertile valley whose sides were thickly wooded
and covered with grass, and there Sherkan called a three-days'
halt. So they dismounted and pitched their tents, dispersing
right and left in the valley, whilst the Vizier Dendan and the
ambassadors alighted in the midst.
As for Sherkan, when he had seen the tents pitched and the
troops dispersed on either side, and had commanded his officers
and attendants to camp beside the Vizier Dendan, he gave reins
to his horse, being minded to explore the valley, and himself to
mount guard over the army, having regard to his father's injunc
tions and to the fact that they had reached the frontier of the
## p. 639 (#49) #############################################
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
639
Land of Roum and were now in the enemy's country. So he
rode on alone, along the valley, till a fourth part of the night was
past, when he grew weary and sleep overcame him so that he
could no longer spur his horse. Now he was used to sleep on
horseback; so when drowsiness got the better of him, he fell
asleep, and the horse paced on with him half the night and
entered a forest: but Sherkan awoke not till the steed smote the
earth with his hoof. Then he started from sleep and found him-
self among trees: and the moon arose and lighted the two horizons.
He was troubled at finding himself alone in this place, and spoke
the words which whoso says shall never be confounded — that is
to say,
"There is no power and no virtue but in GOD, the most
High, the Supreme! " But as he rode on, in fear of the wild
beasts, behold the trees thinned out, and the moon shone out upon
a meadow as it were one of the meads of paradise, and he heard
therein the noise of talk and pleasant laughter, such as ravishes
the wit of men. So King Sherkan dismounted, and tying his
horse to a tree, fared on a little further, till he espied a stream
of running water, and heard a woman talking and saying in
Arabic, "By the virtue of the Messiah, this is not handsome of
you! But whoso speaks the word I will throw her down and
bind her with her girdle! " He followed in the direction of the
voice, and saw gazelles frisking and wild cattle pasturing, and
birds in their various voices expressing joy and gladness; and the
earth was embroidered with all manner flowers and green herbs,
even as says of it the poet, in the following verses:
Earth has no fairer sight to show than this its
blossom-time, With all the gently running streams
that wander o'er its face,
It is indeed the handiwork of God Omnipotent, The
Lord of every noble gift, and Giver of all grace!
Midmost the meadow stood a monastery, and within the in-
closure a citadel that rose high into the air in the light of the
The stream passed through the midst of the monastery;
and therenigh sat ten damsels like moons, high-bosomed maids.
clad in dresses and ornaments that dazzled the eyes, as says of
them the poet:-
moon.
The meadow glitters with the troops Of lovely ones
that wander there;
Its grace and beauty doubled are By these that are
so passing fair;
## p. 640 (#50) #############################################
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THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
Virgins, that with their swimming gait, The hearts of
all that see ensnare,
Along whose necks, like trails of grapes, Stream down
the tresses of their hair;
Proudly they walk, with eyes that dart The shafts and
arrows of despair,
And all the champions of the world Are slain by
their seductive air.
Sherkan looked at the ten girls, and saw in their midst a lady
like the moon at its full, with ringleted and shining forehead,
great black eyes and curling brow-locks, perfect in person and
attributes, as says the poet:-
―――――――
Her beauty beamed on me with glances wonder-bright: The
slender Syrian spears are not so straight and slight:
She laid her veil aside, and, lo, her cheeks rose-red! All man-
ner of loveliness was in their sweetest sight
The locks that o'er her brow fell down, were like the night,
From out of which there shines a morning of delight.
•
>>
Then Sherkan heard her say to the girls, "Come on, that I
may wrestle with you, ere the moon set and the dawn come.
So they came up to her, one after another, and she overthrew
them, one by one, and bound their hands behind them, with their
girdles. When she had thrown them all, there turned to her an
old woman who was before her, and said, as if she were wroth
with her, "O shameless! dost thou glory in overthrowing these
girls? Behold, I am an old woman, yet have I thrown them forty
times! So what hast thou to boast of? But if thou have strength
to wrestle with me, stand up that I may grip thee, and put thy
head between thy feet. " The young lady smiled at her words,
although her heart was full of anger against her, and said, "O
my lady Dhat ed Dewahi, wilt indeed wrestle with me- or dost
thou jest with me? " "I mean to wrestle with thee in very
deed," replied she. "Stand up to me then," said the damsel, "if
thou have strength to do so! " When the old woman heard this
she was sore enraged, and her hair stood on end like that of a
hedgehog. Then she sprang up, whilst the damsel confronted
and they took hold of one another, whilst Sherkan
raised his eyes to heaven and prayed to God that the damsel
might conquer the old hag. Presently
the old woman
strove to free herself, and in the struggle wriggled out of the
girl's hands and fell on her back
. . and behold the young
her
## p. 641 (#51) #############################################
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
641
lady
throwing over her a veil of fine silk, helped her to
dress herself, making excuses to her and saying, “O my lady
Dhat ed Dewahi, I did not mean to throw thee so roughly, but
thou wriggledst out of my hands; so praised be God for safety. "
She returned her no answer, but rose in her confusion and walked
away out of sight, leaving the young lady standing alone, by the
other girls thrown down and bound.
Then said Sherkan, "To every fortune there is a cause. Sleep
fell not on me, nor did the steed bear me hither but for my good
fortune; for of a surety this damsel and what is with her shall
be my prize. " So he turned back and mounted, and drew his
scimitar; then he gave his horse the spur and he started off with
him like an arrow from a bow, whilst he brandished his naked
blade and cried out, "God is most great! " When the damsel saw
him she sprang to her feet, and running to the bank of the river,
which was there six cubits wide, made a spring and landed on
the other side, where she turned, and standing cried out in a
loud voice, "Who art thou, sirrah, that breakest in on our past-
ure as if thou wert charging an army? Whence comest thou and
whither art thou bound? Speak the truth and it shall profit thee,
and do not lie, for lying is of the losel's fashion. Doubtless
thou hast strayed this night from thy road, that thou hast hap-
pened on this place. So tell me what thou seekest: if thou
wouldst have us set thee in the right road, we will do so; or if
thou seek help we will help thee. "
When Sherkan heard her words he replied, "I am a stranger
of the Muslims, who am come out by myself in quest of booty,
and I have found no fairer purchase this moonlit night than
these ten damsels; so I will take them and rejoin my comrades
with them. " Quoth she, "I would have thee to know that thou
hast not yet come at the booty; and as for these ten damsels, by
Allah, they are no purchase for thee! Indeed the fairest pur-
chase thou canst look for is to win free of this place: for thou
art in a mead, where, if we gave one cry, there would be with
us anon four thousand knights. Did I not tell thee that lying is
shameful? " And he said, "The fortunate man is he to whom
God sufficeth, and who hath no need of other than him. " "By
the virtue of the Messiah," replied she, “did I not fear to have thy
death at my hand, I would give a cry that would fill the meadow
on thee, with horse and foot! but I have pity on the stranger;
so, if thou seek booty, I require of thee that thou dismount from
II-41
## p. 642 (#52) #############################################
642
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
thy horse, and swear to me by thy faith that thou wilt not
approach me with aught of arms, and we will wrestle I and
thou. If thou throw me, lay me on thy horse and take all of
us to thy booty; and if I throw thee, thou shalt be at my com-
mandment. Swear this to me; for I fear thy perfidy, since expe-
rience has it that as long as perfidy is in men's natures, to trust
in every one is weakness. But if thou wilt swear I will come
over to thee. " Quoth Sherkan, "Impose on me whatever oath
thou deemest binding, and I will swear not to draw near thee
until thou hast made thy preparations, and sayest 'Come wrestle
with me. ' If thou throw me I have wealth wherewith to ransom
myself, and if I throw thee I shall get fine purchase. " Then
said she, "Swear to me by Him who hath lodged the soul in the
body and given laws to mankind that thou wilt not hurt me with
aught of violence save in the way of wrestling-else mayest thou
die out of the pale of Islam. " "By Allah," exclaimed Sherkan,
"if a Cadi should swear me, though he were Cadi of the Cadis,
he would not impose on me the like of this oath! " Then he
took the oath she required, and tied his horse to a tree, sunken
in the sea of reverie, and saying in himself, "Glory to Him who
fashioned her! " Then he girt himself, and made ready for wres-
tling, and said to her, "Cross the stream to me. " Quoth she, “It
is not for me to come to thee: if thou wilt, do thou cross over to
me. "
"I cannot do that," replied he; and she said, "O boy! I
will come to thee. So she gathered her skirts, and making a
spring landed on the other side of the river by him; whereupon
he drew near to her, wondering at her beauty and grace, and saw
a form that the hand of Omnipotence had turned with the leaves.
of Jinn, and which had been fostered by divine solicitude, a form
on which the zephyrs of fair fortune had blown, and over whose
creation favorable planets had presided. Then she called out to
him saying, “O Muslim, come and wrestle before the daybreak! »
and tucked up her sleeves, showing a fore-arm like fresh curd;
the whole place was lighted up by its whiteness and Sherkan was
dazzled by it. Then he bent forward and clapped his hands, and
she did the like, and they took hold and gripped each other. He
laid his hands on her slender waist
and fell a trembling
like the Persian reed in the hurricane. So she lifted him up, and
throwing him to the ground sat down on his breast. Then she
said to him, "O Muslim, it is lawful among you to kill Christ-
ians: what sayest thou to my killing thee? " "O my lady,"
·
-
## p. 643 (#53) #############################################
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
643
>>>
replied he, "as for killing me, it is unlawful; for our Prophet
(whom God bless and preserve! ) hath forbidden the slaying of
women and children and old men and monks. ' "Since this was
revealed unto your prophet," rejoined she, "it behooves us to be
even with him therein; so rise: I give thee thy life, for benefi-
cence is not lost upon men. " Then she got up, and he rose and
brushed the earth from his head, and she said to him, "Be not
abashed; but indeed one who enters the land of the Greeks in
quest of booty and to succor kings against kings, how comes it
that there is no strength in him to defend himself against a
woman? " "It was not lack of strength in me," replied he, "nor
was it thy strength that overthrew me, but thy beauty; so if
thou wilt, grant me another bout, it will be of thy favor. " She
laughed and said, "I grant thee this: but these damsels have
been long bound, and their arms and shoulders are weary, and it
were fitting I should loose them, since this next bout may perad-
venture be a long one. " Then she went up to the girls, and un-
binding them said to them in the Greek tongue, "Go and put
yourselves in safety, till I have brought to naught this Muslim. »
So they went away, whilst Sherkan looked at them, and they
gazed at him and the young lady. Then he and she drew near
again and set to.
But [again by admiration of her
beauty] his strength failed him, and she feeling this, lifted him
in her hands swifter than the blinding lightning and threw him
to the ground. He fell on his back, and she said to him, "Rise:
I give thee thy life a second time. I spared thee before for the
sake of thy prophet, for that he forbade the killing of women,
and I do so this second time because of thy weakness and tender
age, and strangerhood: but I charge thee, if there be in the army
sent by King Omar ben Ennuman a stronger than thou, send
him hither and tell him of me. " "By Allah, O my lady," replied
Sherkan (and indeed he was greatly incensed against her), "it
was not by thy strength that thou overthrewest me, but by [thy
beauty], so that nor wit nor foresight was left in me.
if thou have a mind to try another fall with me, with my wits
about me, I have a right to this one bout more by the rules of
the game, for my presence of mind has now returned to me. "
"Hast thou not had enough of wrestling, O conquered one? "
rejoined she. "However, come, if thou wilt: but know that this
bout must be the last. " Then they took hold of each other, and
he set to in earnest and warded himself against being thrown
But now,
## p. 644 (#54) #############################################
644
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
down: so they wrestled awhile and the damsel found in him
strength such as she had not before observed, and said to him,
"O Muslim, thou art on thy guard! " "Yes," replied he, "thou
knowest that there remaineth but this bout, and after each of us
will go his own way. " She laughed and he laughed too: then she
seized the opportunity to bore in upon him unawares, and grip-
ping him by the thigh, threw him to the ground, so that he fell
on his back. She laughed at him and said, "Thou art surely an
eater of bran: for thou art like a Bedouin bonnet that falls off
at a touch, or a child's toy that a puff of air overturns. Out on
thee, thou poor creature! Go back to the army of the Muslims
and send us other than thyself, for thou lackest thews; and cry
as among the Arabs and Persians and Turks and Medes, 'Whoso
has might in him let him come to us! " Then she made a
spring and landed on the other side of the stream and said to
Sherkan laughing, "It goes to my heart to part with thee! get
thee to thy friends, O my lord, before the morning, lest the
knights come upon thee and take thee on the points of their
lances. Thou hast not strength enough to defend thee against
women; so how couldst thou make head against men and cava-
liers! " And she turned to go back to the monastery. Sherkan
was confounded, and called out to her, saying "O my lady! Wilt
thou go away, and leave the wretched stranger, the broken-hearted
slave of love? " So she turned to him laughing, and said, "What
wouldst thou? I grant thy prayer. " "Have I set foot in thy
country and tasted the sweetness of thy favors,” replied Sherkan,
"and shall I return without eating of thy victual and tasting of
thy hospitality? Indeed, I am become one of thy servitors. "
Quoth she, "None but the base refuses hospitality: on my head
and eyes be it! Do me the favor to mount and ride along the
stream, abreast of me, for thou art my guest. " At this Sher-
kan rejoiced, and hastening back to his horse, mounted and rode
along the river-bank, keeping abreast of her, till he came to a
drawbridge that hung by pulleys and chains of steel, made fast
with hooks and padlocks. Here stood the ten damsels awaiting
the lady, who spoke to one of them in the Greek tongue and said
to her, "Go to him; take his horse's rein and bring him over
into the monastery. "
They went on till they reached a
vaulted gate, arched over with marble. This she opened, and
entered with Sherkan into a long vestibule, vaulted with ten
arches, from each of which hung a lamp of crystal, shining like
## p. 645 (#55) #############################################
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
645
་
the rays of the sun. The damsels met her at the end of the
vestibule, bearing perfumed flambeaux and having on their heads
kerchiefs embroidered with all manner of jewels, and went on
before her, till they came to the inward of the monastery, where
Sherkan saw couches set up all around, facing one another and
overhung with curtains spangled with gold. The floor was paved
with all kinds of variegated marbles, and in the midst was a basin.
of water with four and twenty spouts of gold around it from
which issued water like liquid silver; whilst at the upper end
stood a throne covered with silks of royal purple. Then said the
damsel, "O my lord, mount this throne. " So he seated himself
on it, and she withdrew: and when she had been absent awhile,
he asked the servants of her, and they said, "She hath gone to
her sleeping-chamber; but we will serve thee as thou shalt order. "
So they set before him rare meats, and he ate till he was satis-
fied, when they brought him a basin of gold and an ewer of
silver and he washed his hands. Then his mind reverted to his
troops, and he was troubled, knowing not what had befallen them.
in his absence and thinking how he had forgotten his father's
injunctions, so that he abode, oppressed with anxiety and repent-
ing of what he had done, till the dawn broke and the day ap-
peared, when he lamented and sighed and became drowned in
the sea of melancholy, repeating the following verses: -
"I lack not of prudence, and yet in this case, I've been fooled;
so what shift shall avail unto me?
If any could ease me of love and its stress, Of my might and
my virtue I'd set myself free.
But alas! my heart's lost in maze of desire, And no helper save
God in my strait can I see.
Hardly had he finished when up came more than twenty
damsels like moons, encompassing the young lady, who appeared
among them as the full moon among stars. She was clad in
royal brocade, and girt with a woven girdle set with various
kinds of jewels that straitly clasped her waist.
On her
head she wore a network of pearls, gemmed with various kinds
of jewels, and she moved with a coquettish, swimming gait,
swaying wonder-gracefully, whilst the damsels held up her skirts.
She fixed her eyes on him, and considered him awhile,
till she was assured of him, when she came up to him and said,
«
Indeed the place is honored and illumined with thy presence, O
## p. 646 (#56) #############################################
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THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
Sherkan! How didst thou pass the night, O hero, after we went
away and left thee? Verily, lying is a defect and a reproach in
kings; especially in great kings: and thou art Sherkan, son of
King Omar ben Ennuman; so henceforth tell me naught but
truth, and strive not to keep the secret of thy condition, for
falsehood engenders hatred and enmity. The arrow of destiny
hath fallen upon thee, and it behooves thee to show resignation
and submission. " When Sherkan heard what she said, he saw
nothing for it but to tell her the truth: so he said, "I am indeed
Sherkan, son of Omar ben Ennuman; whom fortune hath afflicted
and cast into this place: so now do whatsoever thou wilt. ”
FROM SINDBAD THE SEAMAN AND SINDBAD THE LANDSMAN ›
Portions of Nights 536 to 542, presenting the Introduction and the first of the
seven Voyages': Translation of Captain Sir Richard Burton
THE
HERE lived in the city of Bagdad, during the reign of the
Commander of the Faithful, Harun al-Rashid, a man named
Sindbad the Hammal [Porter], one in poor case, who bore
burdens on his head for hire. It happened to him one day
of great heat that whilst he was carrying a heavy load, he
became exceeding weary and sweated profusely; the heat and the
weight alike oppressing him. Presently, as he was passing the
gate of a merchant's house, before which the ground was swept
and watered, and where the air was temperate, he sighted a
broad bench beside the door; so he set his load thereon, to take
rest and smell the air.
And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying
her permitted say.
NOW WHEN IT WAS THE FIVE HUNDRED AND THIRTY-SEVENTH NIGHT,
She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the
Hammal set his load upon the bench to take rest and smell
the air, there came out upon him from the court-door a pleasant
breeze and a delicious fragrance. He sat down on the edge
of the bench, and at once heard from within the melodious
sound of lutes and other stringed instruments, and mirth-exciting
voices singing and reciting, together with the song of birds
warbling and glorifying Almighty Allah in various tunes and
tongues; turtles, mockingbirds, merles, nightingales, cushats, and
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647
stone-curlews: whereat he marveled in himself and was moved
to mighty joy and solace. Then he went up to the gate and
saw within a great flower-garden wherein were pages and black
slaves, and such a train of servants and attendants and so forth
as is found only with Kings and Sultans; and his nostrils were
greeted with the savory odors of all manner meats rich and
delicate, and delicious and generous wines. So he raised his
eyes heavenwards and said, "Glory to Thee, O Lord, O Creator
and Provider, who providest whomso Thou wilt without count
or stint! Omine Holy One, I cry Thee pardon for all sins
and turn to Thee repenting of all offenses! O Lord, there is
no gainsaying Thee in Thine ordinance and Thy dominion,
neither wilt Thou be questioned of that Thou dost, for Thou
indeed over all things art Almighty! Extolled be Thy per-
fection: whom Thou wilt Thou makest poor and whom Thou
wilt Thou makest rich! Whom Thou wilt Thou exaltest and
whom Thou wilt Thou abasest, and there is no god but Thou!
How mighty is Thy majesty and how enduring Thy dominion
and how excellent Thy government! Verily, Thou favorest
whom Thou wilt of Thy servants, whereby the owner of this
place abideth in all joyance of life and delighteth himself with
pleasant scents and delicious meats and exquisite wines of all
kinds.
For indeed Thou appointest unto Thy creatures that
which Thou wilt and that which Thou hast foreordained unto
them; wherefore are some weary and others are at rest, and some
enjoy fair fortune and affluence whilst others suffer the extreme
of travail and misery, even as I do. " And he fell to reciting:
How many by my labors, that evermore endure, All goods of
life enjoy and in cooly shade recline?
Each morn that dawns I wake in travail and in woe, And
strange is my condition and my burden gars me pine:
Many others are in luck and from miseries are free, And For-
tune never loads them with loads the like o' mine:
They live their happy days in all solace and delight; Eat, drink,
and dwell in honor 'mid the noble and the digne:
All living things were made of a little drop of sperm, Thine
origin is mine and my provenance is thine;
Yet the difference and distance 'twixt the twain of us are far As
the difference of savor 'twixt vinegar and wine:
But at Thee, O God All-wise! I venture not to rail Whose ordi-
nance is just and whose justice cannot fail.
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THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
When Sindbad the Porter had made an end of reciting his
verses, he bore up his burden and was about to fare on, when
there came forth to him from the gate a little foot-page, fair of
face and shapely of shape and dainty of dress, who caught him
by the hand, saying, "Come in and speak with my lord, for he
calleth for thee. " The Porter would have excused himself to the
page, but the lad would take no refusal; so he left his load with
the doorkeeper in the vestibule and followed the boy into the
house, which he found to be a goodly mansion, radiant and full
of majesty, till he brought him to a grand sitting-room wherein
he saw
a company of nobles and great lords, seated at tables
garnished with all manner of flowers and sweet-scented herbs,
besides great plenty of dainty viands and fruits dried and fresh
and confections and wines of the choicest vintages. There also
were instruments of music and mirth, and lovely slave-girls play-
ing and singing. All the company was ranged according to
rank, and in the highest place sat a man of worshipful and noble
aspect, whose beard-sides hoariness had stricken; and he was
stately of stature and fair of favor, agreeable of aspect and full
of gravity and dignity and majesty. So Sindbad the Porter was
confounded at that which he beheld, and said in himself, "By
Allah, this must be either a piece of Paradise or some king's
palace! " Then he saluted the company with much respect, pray-
ing for their prosperity; and kissing ground before them, stood
with his head bowed down in humble attitude. -
And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say
her permitted say.
NOW WHEN IT WAS THE FIVE HUNDRED AND THIRTY-EIGHTH NIGHT,
She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Sindbad
the Porter, after kissing ground between their hands, stood with
his head bowed down in humble attitude. The master of the
house bade him draw near and be seated and bespoke him kindly,
bidding him welcome. Then he set before him various kinds of
viands, rich and delicious, and the Porter, after saying his Bis-
millah, fell to and ate his fill, after which he exclaimed, "Praised
be Allah whatso be our case! " and washing his hands, returned
thanks to the company for his entertainment. Quoth the host,
"Thou art welcome and thy day is a-blessed. But what are thy
name and calling? " Quoth the other, "O my lord, my name is
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THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
649
Sindbad the Hammal, and I carry folk's goods on my head for
hire. " The house-master smiled and rejoined, "Know, O Porter,
that thy name is even as mine, for I am Sindbad the Seaman;
and now, O Porter, I would have thee let me hear the couplets.
thou recitedst at the gate anon. " The Porter was abashed and
replied, "Allah upon thee! Excuse me, for toil and travail and.
lack of luck when the hand is empty teach a man ill manners
and boorish ways. " Said the host, "Be not ashamed; thou art
become my brother: but repeat to me the verses, for they pleased
me whenas I heard thee recite them at the gate. " Hereupon the
Porter repeated the couplets, and they delighted the merchant,
who said to him:-
Know, O Hammal, that my story is a wonderful one, and
thou shalt hear all that befell me and all I underwent ere
I rose to this state of prosperity and became the lord of this
place wherein thou seest me; for I came not to this high estate
save after travail sore and perils galore, and how much toil
and trouble have I not suffered in days of yore! I have made
seven voyages, by each of which hangeth a marvelous tale, such
as confoundeth the reason, and all this came to pass by doom of
fortune and fate; for from what destiny doth write there is neither
refuge nor flight.
Know then, good my lords (continued he), that I am about to
relate the
FIRST VOYAGE OF SINDBAD HIGHT THE SEAMAN
MY FATHER was a merchant, one of the notables of my native
place, a moneyed man and ample of means, who died whilst
I was yet a child, leaving me much wealth in money and lands,
and farmhouses. When I grew up I laid hands on the whole
and ate of the best and drank freely and wore rich clothes and
lived lavishly, companioning and consorting with youths of my
own age, and considering that this course of life would con
tinue for ever and ken no change. Thus did I for a long time,
but at last I awoke from my heedlessness, and returning to my
senses, I found my wealth had become unwealth and my condi-
tion ill-conditioned, and all I once hent had left my hand. And
recovering my reason I was stricken with dismay and confusion,
and bethought me of a saying of our lord Solomon, son of David,
(upon whom be Peace! ) which I had heard aforetime from my
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THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
father, "Three things are better than other three: the day of
death is better than the day of birth, a live dog is better than
a dead lion, and the grave is better than want. "
Then I got
together my remains of estates and property and sold all, even
my clothes, for three thousand dirhams, with which I resolved
to travel to foreign parts, remembering the saying of the poet:-
By means of toil man shall scale the height; Who to fame
aspires mustn't sleep o' night:
Who seeketh pearl in the deep must dive, Winning weal and
wealth by his main and might:
And who seeketh Fame without toil and strife Th' impossible
seeketh and wasteth life.
So taking heart I bought me goods, merchandise, and all needed
for a voyage, and, impatient to be at sea, I embarked, with a
company of merchants, on board a ship bound for Bassorah.
There we again embarked and sailed many days and nights, and
we passed from isle to isle and sea to sea and shore to shore,
buying and selling and bartering everywhere the ship touched,
and continued our course till we came to an island as it were a
garth of the garden of Paradise. Here the captain cast anchor,
and making fast to the shore, put out the landing planks. So
all on board landed and made furnaces, and lighting fires therein,
busied themselves in various ways, some cooking and some wash-
ing, whilst other some walked about the island for solace, and
the crew fell to eating and drinking and playing and sporting.
I was one of the walkers; but as we were thus engaged, behold
the master, who was standing on the gunwale, cried out to us
at the top of his voice, saying, "Ho there! passengers, run for
your lives and hasten back to the ship and leave your gear and
save yourselves from destruction, Allah preserve you! For this
island whereon ye stand is no true island, but a great fish sta-
tionary a-middlemost of the sea, whereon the sand hath settled.
and trees have sprung up of old time, so that it is become like
unto an island; but when ye lighted fires on it, it felt the heat
and moved; and in a moment it will sink with you into the sea
and ye will all be drowned. So leave your gear and seek your
safety ere ye die. "-
And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying
her permitted say.
―――――
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651
NOW WHEN IT WAS THE FIVE HUNDRED AND THIRTY-NINTH NIGHT,
She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the
ship-master cried to the passengers, "Leave your gear and seek
safety ere ye die," all who heard him left gear and goods,
clothes washed and unwashed, fire-pots and brass cooking-pots,
and fled back to the ship for their lives, and some reached it
while others (among whom was I) did not, for suddenly the
island shook and sank into the abysses of the deep, with all that
were thereon, and the dashing sea surged over it with clashing
waves. I sank with the others down, down into the deep, but
Almighty Allah preserved me from drowning and threw in my
way a great wooden tub of those that had served the ship's com-
pany for tubbing. I gripped it for the sweetness of life, and
bestriding it like one riding, paddled with my feet like oars,
whilst the waves tossed me as in sport right and left. Mean-
while, the captain made sail and departed with those who had
reached the ship, regardless of the drowning and the drowned;
and I ceased not following the vessel with my eyes, till she was
hid from sight and I made sure of death. Darkness closed in
upon me while in this plight, and the winds and waves bore me
on all that night and the next day, till the tub brought to with
me under the lee of a lofty island, with trees overhanging the
tide. I caught hold of a branch and by its aid clambered up on
to the land, after coming nigh upon death; but when I reached
the shore, I found my legs cramped and numbed, and my feet
bore traces of the nibbling of fish upon their soles; withal I had
felt nothing for excess of anguish and fatigue. I threw myself
down on the island-ground, like a dead man, and drowned in
desolation swooned away, nor did I return to my senses till next
morning, when the sun rose and revived me. But I found my
feet swollen, so made shift to move by shuffling on my breech
and crawling on my knees, for in that island were found store of
fruit and springs of sweet water. I ate of the fruits, which
strengthened me; and thus I abode days and nights, till my life
seemed to return and my spirits began to revive and I was
better able to move about. So after due consideration I fell to
exploring the island and diverting myself with gazing upon all
things that Allah Almighty had created there; and rested under
the trees, from one of which I cut me a staff to lean upon. One
day as I walked along the marge, I caught sight of some object
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THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
in the distance, and thought it a wild beast or one of the mon-
ster creatures of the sea; but as I drew near it, looking hard
the while, I saw that it was a noble mare, tethered on the beach.
Presently I went up to her, but she cried out against me with a
great cry, so that I trembled for fear and turned to go away,
when there came forth a man from under the earth and followed
me, crying out and saying, "Who and whence art thou, and what
caused thee to come hither? " "O my lord," answered I, “I am
in very sooth a waif, a stranger, and was left to drown with
sundry others by the ship we voyaged in; but Allah graciously
sent me a wooden tub, so I saved myself thereon, and it floated
with me till the waves cast me up on this island. ” When he
heard this he took my hand, and saying "Come with me," carried
me into a great Sardáb, or underground chamber, which was
spacious as a saloon. He made me sit down at its upper end;
then he brought me somewhat of food, and, being anhungered, I
ate till I was satisfied and refreshed. And when he had put me
at mine ease he questioned me of myself, and I told him all that
had befallen me from first to last. And as he wondered at my
adventure, I said, "By Allah, O my lord, excuse me; I have
told thee the truth of my case and the accident which betided
me. And now I desire that thou tell me who thou art, and why
thou abidest here under the earth, and why thou hast tethered
yonder mare on the brink of the sea. " Answered he, "Know
that I am one of the several who are stationed in different parts
of this island, and we are of the grooms of King Mihrján, and
under our hand are all his horses.
And Inshallah! I
will bear thee to King Mihrján — »
And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say
her permitted say.
NOW WHEN IT WAS THE FIVE HUNDRED AND FORTIETH NIGHT,
She continued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the
Syce said to Sindbad the Seaman, "I will bear thee to King
Mihrján and show thee our country. And know that hadst thou
not happened on us, thou hadst perished miserably and none
had known of thee; but I will be the means of the saving of
thy life and of thy return to thine own land. " I called down
blessings on him and thanked him for his kindness and courtesy.
After this, we sat awhile, till the rest of the grooms
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653
came up, each leading a mare, and seeing me with their fellow-
Syce questioned me of my case, and I repeated my story to
them. Thereupon they drew near me, and spreading the table,
ate and invited me to eat; so I ate with them, after which they
took horse, and mounting me on one of the mares, set out with
me and fared on without ceasing, till we came to the capital
city of King Mihrján, and going in to him acquainted him with
my story. Then he sent for me, and when they set me before
him and salams had been exchanged, he gave me a cordial wel-
come and wishing me long life bade me tell him my tale. So I
related to him all that I had seen and all that had befallen me
from first to last, whereat he marveled and said to me, "By
Allah, O my son, thou hast indeed been miraculously preserved!
Were not the term of thy life a long one, thou hadst not escaped
from these straits; but praised be Allah for safety! " Then he
spoke cheerily to me and entreated me with kindness and con-
sideration; moreover, he made me his agent for the port and
registrar of all ships that entered the harbor. I attended him
regularly, to receive his commandments, and he favored me
and did me all manner of kindness and invested me with costly
and splendid robes. Indeed, I was high in credit with him, as
an intercessor for the folk and an intermediary between them.
and him, when they wanted aught of him. I abode thus a great
while, and as often as I passed through the city to the port, I
questioned the merchants and travelers and sailors of the city
of Baghdad; so haply I might hear of an occasion to return to
my native land, but could find none who knew it or knew any
who resorted thither. At this I was chagrined, for I was weary
of long strangerhood; and my disappointment endured for a
time till one day, going in to King Mihrján, I found with him
a company of Indians.
I saluted them and they returned my
salam; and politely welcomed me and asked me of my country-
And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased say-
ing her permitted say.
·
NOW WHEN IT WAS THE FIVE HUNDRED AND FORTY-FIRST NIGHT,
She continued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that
Sindbad the Seaman said:
When they asked me of my country
I questioned them of theirs, and they told me that they were of
various castes, some being called Shakiriyah, who are the noblest
-:
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THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
of their castes and neither oppress nor offer violence to any, and
other Brahmans, a folk who abstain from wine, but live in de-
light and solace and merriment, and own camels and horses and
cattle. Moreover, they told me that the people of India are
divided into two-and-seventy castes, and I marveled at this with
exceeding marvel. Amongst other things that I saw in King
Mihrján's dominions was an island called Kásil, wherein all night
is heard the beating of drums and tabrets; but we were told by
the neighboring islanders and by travelers that the inhabitants
are people of diligence and judgment. In this sea I saw also a
fish two hundred cubits long, and the fishermen fear it; so they
strike together pieces of wood and put it to flight.
I also saw
another fish, with a head like that of an owl, besides many other
wonders and rarities, which it would be tedious to recount. I
occupied myself thus in visiting the islands, till one day, as I
stood in the port, with a staff in my hand, according to my
custom, behold, a great ship, wherein were many merchants, came
sailing for the harbor. When it reached the small inner port
where ships anchor under the city, the master furled his sails.
and making fast to the shore, put out the landing-planks, where-
upon the crew fell to breaking bulk and landing cargo whilst I
stood by, taking written note of them. They were long in
bringing the goods ashore, so I asked the master, "Is there
aught left in thy ship? " and he answered, "O my lord, there
are divers bales of merchandise in the hold, whose owner was
drowned from amongst us at one of the islands on our course;
so his goods remained in our charge by way of trust, and we
propose to sell them and note their price, that we may convey
it to his people in the city of Baghdad, the Home of Peace. "
"What was the merchant's name? " quoth I, and quoth he,
"Sindbad the Seaman "; whereupon I straitly considered him and
knowing him, cried out to him with a great cry, saying, "O
captain, I am that Sindbad the Seaman who traveled with other
merchants; and when the fish heaved and thou calledst to us,
some saved themselves and others sank, I being one of them.
But Allah Almighty threw in my way a great tub of wood, of
those the crew had used to wash withal, and the winds and
waves carried me to this island, where by Allah's grace I fell in
with King Mihrján's grooms and they brought me hither to the
King their master. When I told him my story he entreated me
with favor and made me his harbor-master, and I have prospered
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THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
655
in his service and found acceptance with him. These bales, there-
fore, are mine, the goods which God hath given me-"
And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say
her permitted say.
NOW WHEN IT WAS THE FIVE HUNDRED AND FORTY-SECOND Night,
She continued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that
when Sindbad the Seaman said to the captain, "These bales are
mine, the goods which Allah hath given me," the other ex-
claimed, "There is no Majesty and there is no Might save in
Allah, the Glorious, the Great! Verily, there is neither con-
science nor good faith left among men! " Said I, "O Rais, what
mean these words, seeing that I have told thee my case? " And
he answered, “Because thou heardest me say that I had with
me goods whose owner was drowned, thou thinkest to take them
without right; but this is forbidden by law to thee, for we saw
him drown before our eyes, together with many other passen-
gers, nor was one of them saved. So how canst thou pretend
that thou art the owner of the goods? " "O captain," said I,
"listen to my story and give heed to my words, and my truth
will be manifest to thee; for lying and leasing are the letter-
marks of the hypocrites. " Then I recounted to him all that had
befallen me since I sailed from Baghdad with him to the time
when we came to the fish-island where we were nearly drowned;
and I reminded him of certain matters which had passed be-
tween us; whereupon both he and the merchants were certified
of the truth of my story and recognized me and gave me joy of
my deliverance, saying, "By Allah, we thought not that thou
hadst escaped drowning! But the Lord hath granted thee new
life. " Then they delivered my bales to me, and I found my
name written thereon, nor was aught thereof lacking. So I
opened them, and making up a present for King Mihrján of the
finest and costliest of the contents, caused the sailors to carry it
up to the palace, where I went in to the King and laid my
present at his feet acquainting him with what had happened,
especially concerning the ship and my goods; whereat he won-
dered with exceeding wonder and the truth of all that I had
told him was made manifest to him. His affection for me
redoubled after that, and he showed me exceeding honor and
bestowed on me a great present in return for mine. Then I
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THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
sold my bales and what other matters I owned, making a great
profit on them, and bought me other goods and gear of the
growth and fashion of the island-city. When the merchants
were about to start on their homeward voyage, I embarked on
board the ship all that I possessed, and going in to the King,
thanked him for all his favors and friendship, and craved his
leave to return to my own land and friends. He farewelled
me and bestowed upon me great store of the country-stuffs and
produce; and I took leave of him and embarked. Then we set
sail and fared on nights and days, by the permission of Allah
Almighty; and Fortune served us and Fate favored us, so that
we arrived in safety at Bassorah-city where I landed rejoiced at
my safe return to my natal soil. After a short stay, I set out
for Baghdad, the House of Peace, with store of goods and com-
modities of great price. Reaching the city in due time, I went
straight to my own quarter and entered my house, where all my
friends and kinsfolk came to greet me. Then I bought me
eunuchs and concubines, servants and negro slaves, till I had a
large establishment, and I bought me houses, and lands and
gardens, till I was richer and in better case than before, and
returned to enjoy the society of my friends and familiars more
assiduously than ever, forgetting all I had suffered of fatigue
and hardship and strangerhood and every peril of travel; and I
applied myself to all manner joys and solaces and delights, eat-
ing the daintiest viands and drinking the deliciousest wines, and
my wealth allowed this state of things to endure. This, then, is
the story of my first voyage, and to-morrow, Inshallah! I will
tell you the tale of the second of my seven voyages. Saith he
who telleth the tale: Then Sindbad the Seaman made Sindbad
the Landsman sup with him and bade give him an hundred gold
pieces, saying, "Thou hast cheered us with thy company this
day. " The Porter thanked him, and taking the gift, went his
way, pondering that which he had heard and marveling mightily
at what things betide mankind.
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657
CONCLUSION OF THE THOUSAND NIGHTS AND A NIGHT›
Translation of Captain Sir Richard F. Burton
NOW
Jow during this time Shahrazad had borne the King three boy
children; so, when she had made an end of the story of
Ma'aruf, she rose to her feet and kissing ground before
him, said, "O King of the time and unique one of the age and
the tide, I am thine handmaid, and these thousand nights and a
night have I entertained thee with stories of folk gone before
and admonitory instances of the men of yore. May I then make
bold to crave a boon of thy highness? " He replied, "Ask, O
Shahrazad, and it shall be granted to thee. " Whereupon she
cried out to the nurses and the eunuchs, saying, "Bring me my
children. " So they brought them to her in haste, and they were
three boy children, one walking, one crawling, and one sucking.
She took them, and setting them before the King, again kissed
ground and said, "O King of the Age, these are thy children and
I crave that thou release me from the doom of death, as a dole
to these infants; for, an thou kill me, they will become mother-
less and will find none among women to rear them as they should
be reared. " When the King heard this, he wept and straining
the boys to his bosom, said, “By Allah, O Shahrazad, I pardoned
thee before the coming of these children, for that I found thee
chaste, pure, ingenuous, and pious! Allah bless thee and thy
father and thy mother and thy root and thy branch! I take the
Almighty to witness against me that I exempt thee from aught
that can harm thee. "
So she kissed his hands and feet and rejoiced with exceeding
joy, saying, "The Lord make thy life long and increase thee in
dignity and majesty! " presently adding, "Thou marveledst at
which befell thee on the part of women; yet there betided the
Kings of the Chosroës before thee greater mishaps and more
grievous than that which hath befallen thee, and indeed I have
set forth unto thee that which happened to Caliphs and Kings
and others with their women, but the relation is longsome, and
hearkening groweth tedious, and in this is all-sufficient warning
for the man of wits and admonishment for the wise. " Then she
ceased to speak, and when King Shahryar heard her speech and
profited by that which she had said, he summoned up his reasoning
powers and cleansed his heart and caused his understanding to
11-42
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THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
revert, and turned to Allah Almighty and said to himself, "Since
there befell the Kings of the Chosroës more than that which hath
befallen me, never whilst I live shall I cease to blame myself
for the past. As for this Shahrazad, her like is not found in the
lands; so praise be to Him Who appointed her a means for deliv-
ering His creatures from oppression and slaughter! " Then he
arose from his séance and kissed her head, whereat she rejoiced,
she and her sister Dunyazad, with exceeding joy.
When the morning morrowed the King went forth, and sit-
ting down on the throne of the Kingship, summoned the Lords
of his land; whereupon the Chamberlains and Nabobs and Cap-
tains of the host went in to him and kissed ground before him.
He distinguished the Wazir, Shahrazad's sire, with special favor
and bestowed on him a costly and splendid robe of honor, and
entreated him with the utmost kindness, and said to him, “Allah
protect thee for that thou gavest me to wife thy noble daughter,
who hath been the means of my repentance from slaying the
daughters of folk. Indeed, I have found her pure and pious,
chaste and ingenuous, and Allah hath vouchsafed me by her
three boy children; wherefore praised be He for His passing
favor. " Then he bestowed robes of honor upon his Wazirs
and Emirs and Chief Officers and he set forth to them briefly
that which had betided him with Shahrazad, and how he had
turned from his former ways and repented him of what he had
done, and proposed to take the Wazir's daughter Shahrazad to
wife, and let draw up the marriage-contract with her. When
those who were present heard this, they kissed ground before
him and blessed him and his betrothed Shahrazad, and the Wazir
thanked her.
"
Then Shahryar made an end of his sitting in all weal, where-
upon the folk dispersed to their dwelling-places, and the news
was bruited abroad that the King proposed to marry the Wazir's
daughter, Shahrazad. Then he proceeded to make ready the
wedding gear, and presently he sent after his brother, King Shah
Zaman, who came, and King Shahryar went forth to meet him
with the troops. Furthermore, they decorated the city after the
goodliest fashion and diffused scents from censers and burnt
aloes-wood and other perfumes in all the markets and thorough-
fares and rubbed themselves with saffron, what while the drums
beat and the flutes and pipes sounded and mimes and mounte-
banks played and plied their arts, and the King lavished on
## p. 659 (#69) #############################################
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
659
them gifts and largesse, and in very deed it was a notable day.
When they came to the palace, King Shahryar commanded to
spread the table with beasts roasted whole, and sweetmeats, and
all manner of viands, and bade the crier cry to the folk that they
should come up to the Diwan and eat and drink, and that this
should be a means of reconciliation between him and them.
high and low, great and small, came up unto him, and they abode
on that wise, eating and drinking, seven days with their nights.
So
Then the King shut himself up with his brother, and related
to him that which had betided him with the Wazir's daughter
Shahrazad during the past three years, and told him what he
had heard from her of proverbs and parables, chronicles and
pleasantries, quips and jests, stories and anecdotes, dialogues and
histories, and elegies and other verses; whereat King Shah Zaman
marveled with the utmost marvel and said, "Fain would I take
her younger sister to wife, so we may be two brothers-german
to two sisters-german, and they on like wise be sisters to us; for
that the calamity which befell me was the cause of our discover-
ing that which befell thee, and all this time of three years past
I have taken no delight in woman; but now I desire to marry
thy wife's sister Dunyazad. "
When King Shahryar heard his brother's words, he rejoiced
with joy exceeding, and arising forthright, went in to his wife
Shahrazad and acquainted her with that which his brother pur-
posed, namely, that he sought her sister Dunyazad in wedlock;
whereupon she answered, "O King of the Age, we seek of him
one condition, to wit, that he take up his abode with us, for that
I cannot brook to be parted from my sister an hour, because we
were brought up together, and may not endure separation each
from another. If he accept this pact, she is his handmaid. " King
Shahryar returned to his brother and acquainted him with that
which Shahrazad had said; and he replied, "Indeed, this is what
was in my mind, for that I desire nevermore to be parted from
thee one hour. As for the kingdom, Allah the Most High shall
send to it whomso He chooseth, for that I have no longer a
desire for the kingship. "
When King Shahryar heard his brother's words, he rejoiced
exceedingly and said, "Verily, this is what I wished, O my
brother. So Alhamdolillah-Praised be Allah! - who hath brought
about union between us. " Then he sent after the Kazis and
Olema, Captains and Notables, and they married the two brothers
## p. 660 (#70) #############################################
660
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
to the two sisters. The contracts were written out, and the two
Kings bestowed robes of honor of silk and satin on those who
were present, whilst the city was decorated and the rejoicings
were renewed. The King commanded each Emir and Wazir and
Chamberlain and Nabob to decorate his palace, and the folk of
the city were gladdened by the presage of happiness and content-
ment. King Shahryar also bade slaughter sheep, and set up
kitchens and made bride-feasts and fed all comers, high and low;
and he gave alms to the poor and needy and extended his bounty
to great and small.
Then the eunuchs went forth that they might perfume the
Hammam for the brides; so they scented it with rosewater and
willow-flower water and pods of musk, and fumigated it with
Kákilí eaglewood and ambergris. Then Shahrazad entered, she
and her sister Dunyazad, and they cleansed their heads and
clipped their hair. When they came forth of the Hammam-bath,
they donned raiment and ornaments, such as men were wont pre-
pare for the Kings of the Chosroës; and among Shahrazad's
apparel was a dress purfled with red gold and wrought with
counterfeit presentments of birds and beasts. And the two
sisters encircled their necks with necklaces of jewels of price, in
the like whereof Iskander rejoiced not, for therein were great
jewels such as amazed the wit and dazzled the eye; and the
imagination was bewildered at their charms, for indeed each of
them was brighter than the sun and the moon. Before them
they lighted brilliant flambeaux of wax in candelabra of gold,
but their faces outshone the flambeaux, for that they had eyes
sharper than unsheathed swords and the lashes of their eyelids
bewitched all hearts. Their cheeks were rosy red, and their
necks and shapes gracefully swayed, and their eyes wantoned
like the gazelle's; and the slave-girls came to meet them with
instruments of music.
Then the two Kings entered the Hammam-bath, and when
they came forth they sat down on a couch set with pearls and
gems, whereupon the two sisters came up to them and stood
between their hands, as they were moons, bending and leaning
from side to side in their beauty and loveliness. Presently they
brought forward Shahrazad and displayed her, for the first dress,
in a red suit; whereupon King Shahryar rose to look upon her,
and the wits of all present, men and women, were bewitched for
that she was even as saith of her one of her describers:
·-
## p. 661 (#71) #############################################
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
661
A sun on wand in knoll of sand she showed, Clad in her
cramoisy-hued chemisette:
Of her lips' honey-dew she gave me drink * And with her rosy
cheeks quencht fire she set.
Then they attired Dunyazad in a dress of blue brocade, and she
became as she were the full moon when it shineth forth. So
they displayed her in this, for the first dress, before King Shah
Zaman, who rejoiced in her and well-nigh swooned away for
love-longing and amorous desire; yea, he was distraught with
passion for her, whenas he saw her, because she was as saith of
her one of her describers in these couplets:-
She comes appareled in an azure vest* Ultramarine as skies
are deckt and dight:
I view'd th' unparall'd sight, which showed my eyes * A
Summer-moon upon a Winter-night.
-
Then they returned to Shahrazad and displayed her in the second
dress, a suit of surpassing goodliness, and veiled her face with
her hair like a chin-veil. Moreover, they let down her side-
locks, and she was even as saith of her one of her describers in
these couplets:-
O hail to him whose locks his cheeks o'ershade, * Who slew
my life by cruel hard despight:
Said I, "Hast veiled the Morn in Night? " He said, * «Nay, I
but veil the Moon in hue of Night. "
Then they displayed Dunyazad in a second and a third and a
fourth dress, and she paced forward like the rising sun, and
swayed to and fro in the insolence of her beauty; and she was
even as saith the poet of her in these couplets: -
The sun of beauty she to all appears * And, lovely coy, she
mocks all loveliness:
And when he fronts her favor and her smile* A-morn, the
sun of day in clouds must dress.
Then they displayed Shahrazad in the third dress and the fourth
and the fifth, and she became as she were a Bán-branch snell of
a thirsting gazelle, lovely of face and perfect in attributes of
grace, even as saith of her one in these couplets:
## p. 662 (#72) #############################################
662
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
She comes like fullest moon on happy night, Taper of waist
with shape of magic might;
She hath an eye whose glances quell mankind, * And ruby on
her cheeks reflects his light;
Enveils her hips the blackness of her hair; * Beware of curls
that bite with viper-bite!
Her sides are silken-soft, what while the heart * Mere rock
behind that surface 'scapes our sight;
From the fringed curtains of her eyne she shoots* Shafts that
at furthest range on mark alight.
Then they returned to Dunyazad and displayed her in the fifth
dress and in the sixth, which was green, when she surpassed
with her loveliness the fair of the four quarters of the world, and
outvied, with the brightness of her countenance, the full moon
at rising tide; for she was even as saith of her the poet in these
couplets:-
A damsel 'twas the tirer's art had decked with snare and sleight,
* And robed with rays as though the sun from her had borrowed
light;
She came before us wondrous clad in chemisette of green,
veiled by his leafy screen Pomegranate hides from sight;
And when he said, "How callest thou the fashion of thy dress? "
*She answered us in pleasant way, with double meaning dight,
"We call this garment crève-cœur; and rightly is it hight, * For
many a heart wi' this we brake and harried many a sprite. "
* As
Then they displayed Shahrazad in the sixth and seventh dresses
and clad her in youth's clothing, whereupon she came forward
swaying from side to side, and coquettishly moving, and indeed
she ravished wits and hearts and ensorcelled all eyes with her
glances. She shook her sides and swayed her haunches, then
put her hair on sword-hilt and went up to King Shahryar, who
embraced her as hospitable host embraceth guest, and threatened
her in her ear with the taking of the sword; and she was even
as saith of her the poet in these words:
Were not the Murk of gender male, * Than feminines surpassing fair,
Tire-women they had grudged the bride, * Who made her beard
and whiskers wear!
Thus also they did with her sister Dunyazad; and when they
had made an end of the display, the King bestowed robes of
## p. 663 (#73) #############################################
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
663
honor on all who were present, and sent the brides to their own
apartments. Then Shahrazad went in to King Shahryar and
Dunyazad to King Shah Zaman, and each of them solaced him-
self with the company of his beloved consort, and the hearts of
the folk were comforted. When morning morrowed, the Wazir
came in to the two Kings and kissed ground before them;
wherefore they thanked him and were large of bounty to him.
Presently they went forth and sat down upon couches of king-
ship, whilst all the Wazirs and Emirs and Grandees and Lords
of the land presented themselves and kissed ground. King
Shahryar ordered them dresses of honor and largesse, and they
prayed for the permanence and prosperity of the King and his
brother. Then the two Sovrans appointed their sire-in-law the
Wazir to be Viceroy in Samarcand, and assigned him five of
the Chief Emirs to accompany him, charging them attend him
and do him service. The Minister kissed ground and prayed
that they might be vouchsafed length of life: then he went in
to his daughters, whilst the Eunuchs and Ushers walked before
him, and saluted them and farewelled them. They kissed his
hands and gave him joy of the kingship and bestowed on him
immense treasures; after which he took leave of them, and set-
ting out, fared days and nights, till he came near Samarcand,
where the townspeople met him at a distance of three marches
and rejoiced in him with exceeding joy. So he entered the
city, and they decorated the houses and it was a notable day.
He sat down on the throne of his kingship, and the Wazirs did
him homage and the Grandees and Emirs of Samarcand, and
all prayed that he might be vouchsafed justice and victory and
length of continuance. So he bestowed on them robes of honor
and entreated them with distinction, and they made him Sultan
over them. As soon as his father-in-law had departed for
Samarcand, King Shahryar summoned the Grandees of his realm
and made them a stupendous banquet of all manner of delicious
meats and exquisite sweetmeats. He also bestowed on them
robes of honor and guerdoned them, and divided the kingdoms
between himself and his brother in their presence, whereat the
folk rejoiced.
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
635
be exalted! ) whereupon God averted from me the influence of
those damsels' artifice, and they departed from me; therefore I
cast not myself down, and God repelled from me the effect of
their artifice and enchantment. There is no doubt that this is
an enchantment and an artifice which the people of this city
contrived in order to repel from it every one who should desire
to look down upon it, and wish to obtain access to it; and these
our companions are laid dead.
He then walked along the wall till he came to the two towers
of brass, when he saw that they had two gates of gold, without
locks upon them, or any sign of the means of opening them.
Therefore the sheykh paused as long as God willed, and looking
attentively, he saw in the middle of one of the gates a figure of
a horseman of brass, having one hand extended, as though he
were pointing with it, and on it was an inscription, which the
sheykh read, and lo, it contained these words:-Turn the pin
that is in the middle of the front of the horseman's body twelve
times, and then the gate will open. So he examined the horse-
man, and in the middle of the front of his body was a pin,
strong, firm, well fixed; and he turned it twelve times; where-
upon the gate opened immediately, with a noise like thunder;
and the sheykh 'Abd-Es-Samad entered. He was a learned man,
acquainted with all languages and characters. And he walked
on until he entered a long passage, whence he descended some
steps, and he found a place with handsome wooden benches,
on which were people dead, and over their heads were elegant
shields, and keen swords, and strung bows, and notched arrows.
And behind the [next] gate were a bar of iron, and barricades
of wood, and locks of delicate fabric, and strong apparatus.
Upon this, the sheykh said within himself, Perhaps the keys are
with these people. Then he looked, and lo, there was a sheykh
who appeared to be the oldest of them, and he was upon a high
wooden bench among the dead men. So the sheykh 'Abd-Es-
Samad said, May not the keys of the city be with this sheykh?
Perhaps he was the gate-keeper of the city, and these were
under his authority. He therefore drew near to him, and lifted
up his garments, and lo, the keys were hung to his waist. At
the sight of them, the sheykh 'Abd-Es-Samad rejoiced exceed-
ingly; his reason almost fled from him in consequence of his joy:
and he took the keys, approached the gate, opened the locks,
and pulled the gate and the barricades and other apparatus
## p. 636 (#46) #############################################
636
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
which opened, and the gate also opened, with a noise like thun-
der, by reason of its greatness and terribleness, and the enor-
mousness of its apparatus. Upon this, the sheykh exclaimed,
God is most great! -and the people made the same exclama-
tion with him, rejoicing at the event. The Emeer Moosà also
rejoiced at the safety of the sheykh 'Abd-Es-Samad, and at the
opening of the gate of the city; the people thanked the sheykh
for that which he had done, and all the troops hastened to enter
the gate.
But the Emeer Moosà cried out to them, saying to
them, O people, if all of us enter, we shall not be secure from
some accident that may happen. Half shall enter, and half shall
remain behind.
The Emeer Moosà then entered the gate, and with him half
of the people, who bore their weapons of war.
And the party
saw their companions lying dead: so they buried them. They
saw also the gate-keepers and servants and chamberlains and
lieutenants lying upon beds of silk, all of them dead.
And they
entered the market of the city, and beheld a great market, with
lofty buildings, none of which projected beyond another: the
shops were open, and the scales hung up, and the utensils of
brass ranged in order, and the kháns were full of all kinds of
goods. And they saw the merchants dead in their shops: their
skins were dried, and their bones were carious, and they had
become examples to him who would be admonished. They saw
likewise four markets of particular shops filled with wealth. And
they left this place, and passed on to the silk-market, in which.
silks and brocades interwoven with red gold and white sil-
ver upon various colours, and the owners were dead, lying upon
skins, and appearing almost as though they would speak. Leav-
ing these, they went on to the market of jewels and pearls and
jacinths; and they left it, and passed on to the market of the
money-changers, whom they found dead, with varieties of silks.
beneath them, and their shops were filled with gold and silver.
These they left, and they proceeded to the market of the per-
fumers; and lo, their shops were filled with varieties of perfumes,
and bags of musk, and ambergris, and aloes-wood, and nedd, and
camphor, and other things; and the owners were all dead, not
having with them any food. And when they went forth from
the market of the perfumers, they found near unto it a palace,
decorated, and strongly constructed; and they entered it, and
found banners unfurled, and drawn swords, and strung bows,
## p. 637 (#47) #############################################
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
637
and shields hung up by chains of gold and silver, and helmets
gilded with red gold. And in the passages of that palace were
benches of ivory, ornamented with plates of brilliant gold, and
with silk, on which were men whose skins had dried upon the
bones: the ignorant would imagine them to be sleeping; but,
from the want of food, they had died, and tasted mortality.
Upon this, the Emeer Moosà paused, extolling the perfection of
God (whose name be exalted! ) and his holiness, and contem-
plating the beauty of that palace.
[They find the palace a marvel of splendor, but as awfully silent and
mausoleum-like as the rest of the city; and soon reach a magnificent hall in
which lies the dead body of "Jedmur, the Daughter of the King of the Ama-
lekites," magnificently laid in state, and magically preserved and protected.
Tálib unwisely and covetously attempts to rob the corpse of jewels; and is
instantly beheaded by its enchanted guards. The Emeer Moosà and the sage
'Abd-Es-Samad, however, leave the place in safety, return to Upper Egypt
and Syria by way of the Country of the Blacks, succeed in securing twelve
of the wonderful bottles containing Jinn,-and the tale concludes with the
Emeer Moosà's resignation of his throne that he may die in Jerusalem, so
profoundly has he been affected by the adventure. ]
"
FROM THE HISTORY OF KING OMAR BEN ENNUMAN, AND
HIS SONS SHERKAN AND ZOULMEKAN›
Nights 15, 16, 17, and 18: Translation of Professor John Payne
THE MEETING OF PRINCE SHERKAN AND PRINCESS ABRIZEH
TH
HERE reigned once in the City of Peace [Bagdad], before the
Khalifate of Abdulmelik ben Merwan, a king called Omar
ben Ennuman, who was of the mighty giants, and had
subdued the kings of Persia and the emperors of the East, for
none could warm himself at his fire nor cope with him in battle;
and when he was angry there came sparks out of his nostrils.
He had gotten him dominion over all countries, and God had
subjected unto him all creatures; his commands were obeyed in
all the great cities, and his armies penetrated the most distant.
lands: the East and West came under his rule, with the regions
between them, Hind and Sind and China and Hejaz and Yemen
and the islands of India and China, Syria and Mesopotamia and
the lands of the blacks and the islands of the ocean, and all the
famous rivers of the earth, Jaxartes and Bactrus and Nile and
Euphrates. He sent his ambassadors to the farthest parts of the
## p. 638 (#48) #############################################
638
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
earth to fetch him true report, and they returned with tidings.
of justice and peace, bringing him assurance of loyalty and
obedience, and invocations of blessings on his head; for he was
a right noble king, and there came to him gifts and tribute
from all parts of the world. He had a son called Sherkan, who
was one of the prodigies of the age and the likest of all men to
his father, who loved him with an exceeding love and had
appointed him to be king after him. The prince grew up till
he reached man's estate, and was twenty years old, and God
subjected all men to him, for he was gifted with great might
and prowess in battle, humbling the champions and destroying
all who made head against him. So, before long, this Sherkan
became famous in all quarters of the world, and his father
rejoiced in him; and his might waxed till he passed all bounds,
and magnified himself, taking by storm the citadels and strong
places.
[The Prince being sent to assist King Afridoun, of the Greeks, against an
enemy, is intrusted with an army of ten thousand soldiers, and leaves Bag-
dad in military state. ]
Then they loaded the beasts and beat the drums and blew
the clarions and unfurled the banners and the standards, whilst
Sherkan mounted, with the Vizier Dendan by his side, and the
standards waving over them; and the army set out and fared on
with the [Greek] ambassadors in the van till the day departed
and the night came, when they halted and encamped for the
night. On the
On the morrow, as soon as God brought in the day,
they took horse and continued their march, nor did they cease
to press onward, guided by the ambassadors, for the space of
twenty days. On the twenty-first day, at nightfall, they came
to a wide and fertile valley whose sides were thickly wooded
and covered with grass, and there Sherkan called a three-days'
halt. So they dismounted and pitched their tents, dispersing
right and left in the valley, whilst the Vizier Dendan and the
ambassadors alighted in the midst.
As for Sherkan, when he had seen the tents pitched and the
troops dispersed on either side, and had commanded his officers
and attendants to camp beside the Vizier Dendan, he gave reins
to his horse, being minded to explore the valley, and himself to
mount guard over the army, having regard to his father's injunc
tions and to the fact that they had reached the frontier of the
## p. 639 (#49) #############################################
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
639
Land of Roum and were now in the enemy's country. So he
rode on alone, along the valley, till a fourth part of the night was
past, when he grew weary and sleep overcame him so that he
could no longer spur his horse. Now he was used to sleep on
horseback; so when drowsiness got the better of him, he fell
asleep, and the horse paced on with him half the night and
entered a forest: but Sherkan awoke not till the steed smote the
earth with his hoof. Then he started from sleep and found him-
self among trees: and the moon arose and lighted the two horizons.
He was troubled at finding himself alone in this place, and spoke
the words which whoso says shall never be confounded — that is
to say,
"There is no power and no virtue but in GOD, the most
High, the Supreme! " But as he rode on, in fear of the wild
beasts, behold the trees thinned out, and the moon shone out upon
a meadow as it were one of the meads of paradise, and he heard
therein the noise of talk and pleasant laughter, such as ravishes
the wit of men. So King Sherkan dismounted, and tying his
horse to a tree, fared on a little further, till he espied a stream
of running water, and heard a woman talking and saying in
Arabic, "By the virtue of the Messiah, this is not handsome of
you! But whoso speaks the word I will throw her down and
bind her with her girdle! " He followed in the direction of the
voice, and saw gazelles frisking and wild cattle pasturing, and
birds in their various voices expressing joy and gladness; and the
earth was embroidered with all manner flowers and green herbs,
even as says of it the poet, in the following verses:
Earth has no fairer sight to show than this its
blossom-time, With all the gently running streams
that wander o'er its face,
It is indeed the handiwork of God Omnipotent, The
Lord of every noble gift, and Giver of all grace!
Midmost the meadow stood a monastery, and within the in-
closure a citadel that rose high into the air in the light of the
The stream passed through the midst of the monastery;
and therenigh sat ten damsels like moons, high-bosomed maids.
clad in dresses and ornaments that dazzled the eyes, as says of
them the poet:-
moon.
The meadow glitters with the troops Of lovely ones
that wander there;
Its grace and beauty doubled are By these that are
so passing fair;
## p. 640 (#50) #############################################
640
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
Virgins, that with their swimming gait, The hearts of
all that see ensnare,
Along whose necks, like trails of grapes, Stream down
the tresses of their hair;
Proudly they walk, with eyes that dart The shafts and
arrows of despair,
And all the champions of the world Are slain by
their seductive air.
Sherkan looked at the ten girls, and saw in their midst a lady
like the moon at its full, with ringleted and shining forehead,
great black eyes and curling brow-locks, perfect in person and
attributes, as says the poet:-
―――――――
Her beauty beamed on me with glances wonder-bright: The
slender Syrian spears are not so straight and slight:
She laid her veil aside, and, lo, her cheeks rose-red! All man-
ner of loveliness was in their sweetest sight
The locks that o'er her brow fell down, were like the night,
From out of which there shines a morning of delight.
•
>>
Then Sherkan heard her say to the girls, "Come on, that I
may wrestle with you, ere the moon set and the dawn come.
So they came up to her, one after another, and she overthrew
them, one by one, and bound their hands behind them, with their
girdles. When she had thrown them all, there turned to her an
old woman who was before her, and said, as if she were wroth
with her, "O shameless! dost thou glory in overthrowing these
girls? Behold, I am an old woman, yet have I thrown them forty
times! So what hast thou to boast of? But if thou have strength
to wrestle with me, stand up that I may grip thee, and put thy
head between thy feet. " The young lady smiled at her words,
although her heart was full of anger against her, and said, "O
my lady Dhat ed Dewahi, wilt indeed wrestle with me- or dost
thou jest with me? " "I mean to wrestle with thee in very
deed," replied she. "Stand up to me then," said the damsel, "if
thou have strength to do so! " When the old woman heard this
she was sore enraged, and her hair stood on end like that of a
hedgehog. Then she sprang up, whilst the damsel confronted
and they took hold of one another, whilst Sherkan
raised his eyes to heaven and prayed to God that the damsel
might conquer the old hag. Presently
the old woman
strove to free herself, and in the struggle wriggled out of the
girl's hands and fell on her back
. . and behold the young
her
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lady
throwing over her a veil of fine silk, helped her to
dress herself, making excuses to her and saying, “O my lady
Dhat ed Dewahi, I did not mean to throw thee so roughly, but
thou wriggledst out of my hands; so praised be God for safety. "
She returned her no answer, but rose in her confusion and walked
away out of sight, leaving the young lady standing alone, by the
other girls thrown down and bound.
Then said Sherkan, "To every fortune there is a cause. Sleep
fell not on me, nor did the steed bear me hither but for my good
fortune; for of a surety this damsel and what is with her shall
be my prize. " So he turned back and mounted, and drew his
scimitar; then he gave his horse the spur and he started off with
him like an arrow from a bow, whilst he brandished his naked
blade and cried out, "God is most great! " When the damsel saw
him she sprang to her feet, and running to the bank of the river,
which was there six cubits wide, made a spring and landed on
the other side, where she turned, and standing cried out in a
loud voice, "Who art thou, sirrah, that breakest in on our past-
ure as if thou wert charging an army? Whence comest thou and
whither art thou bound? Speak the truth and it shall profit thee,
and do not lie, for lying is of the losel's fashion. Doubtless
thou hast strayed this night from thy road, that thou hast hap-
pened on this place. So tell me what thou seekest: if thou
wouldst have us set thee in the right road, we will do so; or if
thou seek help we will help thee. "
When Sherkan heard her words he replied, "I am a stranger
of the Muslims, who am come out by myself in quest of booty,
and I have found no fairer purchase this moonlit night than
these ten damsels; so I will take them and rejoin my comrades
with them. " Quoth she, "I would have thee to know that thou
hast not yet come at the booty; and as for these ten damsels, by
Allah, they are no purchase for thee! Indeed the fairest pur-
chase thou canst look for is to win free of this place: for thou
art in a mead, where, if we gave one cry, there would be with
us anon four thousand knights. Did I not tell thee that lying is
shameful? " And he said, "The fortunate man is he to whom
God sufficeth, and who hath no need of other than him. " "By
the virtue of the Messiah," replied she, “did I not fear to have thy
death at my hand, I would give a cry that would fill the meadow
on thee, with horse and foot! but I have pity on the stranger;
so, if thou seek booty, I require of thee that thou dismount from
II-41
## p. 642 (#52) #############################################
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THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
thy horse, and swear to me by thy faith that thou wilt not
approach me with aught of arms, and we will wrestle I and
thou. If thou throw me, lay me on thy horse and take all of
us to thy booty; and if I throw thee, thou shalt be at my com-
mandment. Swear this to me; for I fear thy perfidy, since expe-
rience has it that as long as perfidy is in men's natures, to trust
in every one is weakness. But if thou wilt swear I will come
over to thee. " Quoth Sherkan, "Impose on me whatever oath
thou deemest binding, and I will swear not to draw near thee
until thou hast made thy preparations, and sayest 'Come wrestle
with me. ' If thou throw me I have wealth wherewith to ransom
myself, and if I throw thee I shall get fine purchase. " Then
said she, "Swear to me by Him who hath lodged the soul in the
body and given laws to mankind that thou wilt not hurt me with
aught of violence save in the way of wrestling-else mayest thou
die out of the pale of Islam. " "By Allah," exclaimed Sherkan,
"if a Cadi should swear me, though he were Cadi of the Cadis,
he would not impose on me the like of this oath! " Then he
took the oath she required, and tied his horse to a tree, sunken
in the sea of reverie, and saying in himself, "Glory to Him who
fashioned her! " Then he girt himself, and made ready for wres-
tling, and said to her, "Cross the stream to me. " Quoth she, “It
is not for me to come to thee: if thou wilt, do thou cross over to
me. "
"I cannot do that," replied he; and she said, "O boy! I
will come to thee. So she gathered her skirts, and making a
spring landed on the other side of the river by him; whereupon
he drew near to her, wondering at her beauty and grace, and saw
a form that the hand of Omnipotence had turned with the leaves.
of Jinn, and which had been fostered by divine solicitude, a form
on which the zephyrs of fair fortune had blown, and over whose
creation favorable planets had presided. Then she called out to
him saying, “O Muslim, come and wrestle before the daybreak! »
and tucked up her sleeves, showing a fore-arm like fresh curd;
the whole place was lighted up by its whiteness and Sherkan was
dazzled by it. Then he bent forward and clapped his hands, and
she did the like, and they took hold and gripped each other. He
laid his hands on her slender waist
and fell a trembling
like the Persian reed in the hurricane. So she lifted him up, and
throwing him to the ground sat down on his breast. Then she
said to him, "O Muslim, it is lawful among you to kill Christ-
ians: what sayest thou to my killing thee? " "O my lady,"
·
-
## p. 643 (#53) #############################################
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>>>
replied he, "as for killing me, it is unlawful; for our Prophet
(whom God bless and preserve! ) hath forbidden the slaying of
women and children and old men and monks. ' "Since this was
revealed unto your prophet," rejoined she, "it behooves us to be
even with him therein; so rise: I give thee thy life, for benefi-
cence is not lost upon men. " Then she got up, and he rose and
brushed the earth from his head, and she said to him, "Be not
abashed; but indeed one who enters the land of the Greeks in
quest of booty and to succor kings against kings, how comes it
that there is no strength in him to defend himself against a
woman? " "It was not lack of strength in me," replied he, "nor
was it thy strength that overthrew me, but thy beauty; so if
thou wilt, grant me another bout, it will be of thy favor. " She
laughed and said, "I grant thee this: but these damsels have
been long bound, and their arms and shoulders are weary, and it
were fitting I should loose them, since this next bout may perad-
venture be a long one. " Then she went up to the girls, and un-
binding them said to them in the Greek tongue, "Go and put
yourselves in safety, till I have brought to naught this Muslim. »
So they went away, whilst Sherkan looked at them, and they
gazed at him and the young lady. Then he and she drew near
again and set to.
But [again by admiration of her
beauty] his strength failed him, and she feeling this, lifted him
in her hands swifter than the blinding lightning and threw him
to the ground. He fell on his back, and she said to him, "Rise:
I give thee thy life a second time. I spared thee before for the
sake of thy prophet, for that he forbade the killing of women,
and I do so this second time because of thy weakness and tender
age, and strangerhood: but I charge thee, if there be in the army
sent by King Omar ben Ennuman a stronger than thou, send
him hither and tell him of me. " "By Allah, O my lady," replied
Sherkan (and indeed he was greatly incensed against her), "it
was not by thy strength that thou overthrewest me, but by [thy
beauty], so that nor wit nor foresight was left in me.
if thou have a mind to try another fall with me, with my wits
about me, I have a right to this one bout more by the rules of
the game, for my presence of mind has now returned to me. "
"Hast thou not had enough of wrestling, O conquered one? "
rejoined she. "However, come, if thou wilt: but know that this
bout must be the last. " Then they took hold of each other, and
he set to in earnest and warded himself against being thrown
But now,
## p. 644 (#54) #############################################
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THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
down: so they wrestled awhile and the damsel found in him
strength such as she had not before observed, and said to him,
"O Muslim, thou art on thy guard! " "Yes," replied he, "thou
knowest that there remaineth but this bout, and after each of us
will go his own way. " She laughed and he laughed too: then she
seized the opportunity to bore in upon him unawares, and grip-
ping him by the thigh, threw him to the ground, so that he fell
on his back. She laughed at him and said, "Thou art surely an
eater of bran: for thou art like a Bedouin bonnet that falls off
at a touch, or a child's toy that a puff of air overturns. Out on
thee, thou poor creature! Go back to the army of the Muslims
and send us other than thyself, for thou lackest thews; and cry
as among the Arabs and Persians and Turks and Medes, 'Whoso
has might in him let him come to us! " Then she made a
spring and landed on the other side of the stream and said to
Sherkan laughing, "It goes to my heart to part with thee! get
thee to thy friends, O my lord, before the morning, lest the
knights come upon thee and take thee on the points of their
lances. Thou hast not strength enough to defend thee against
women; so how couldst thou make head against men and cava-
liers! " And she turned to go back to the monastery. Sherkan
was confounded, and called out to her, saying "O my lady! Wilt
thou go away, and leave the wretched stranger, the broken-hearted
slave of love? " So she turned to him laughing, and said, "What
wouldst thou? I grant thy prayer. " "Have I set foot in thy
country and tasted the sweetness of thy favors,” replied Sherkan,
"and shall I return without eating of thy victual and tasting of
thy hospitality? Indeed, I am become one of thy servitors. "
Quoth she, "None but the base refuses hospitality: on my head
and eyes be it! Do me the favor to mount and ride along the
stream, abreast of me, for thou art my guest. " At this Sher-
kan rejoiced, and hastening back to his horse, mounted and rode
along the river-bank, keeping abreast of her, till he came to a
drawbridge that hung by pulleys and chains of steel, made fast
with hooks and padlocks. Here stood the ten damsels awaiting
the lady, who spoke to one of them in the Greek tongue and said
to her, "Go to him; take his horse's rein and bring him over
into the monastery. "
They went on till they reached a
vaulted gate, arched over with marble. This she opened, and
entered with Sherkan into a long vestibule, vaulted with ten
arches, from each of which hung a lamp of crystal, shining like
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645
་
the rays of the sun. The damsels met her at the end of the
vestibule, bearing perfumed flambeaux and having on their heads
kerchiefs embroidered with all manner of jewels, and went on
before her, till they came to the inward of the monastery, where
Sherkan saw couches set up all around, facing one another and
overhung with curtains spangled with gold. The floor was paved
with all kinds of variegated marbles, and in the midst was a basin.
of water with four and twenty spouts of gold around it from
which issued water like liquid silver; whilst at the upper end
stood a throne covered with silks of royal purple. Then said the
damsel, "O my lord, mount this throne. " So he seated himself
on it, and she withdrew: and when she had been absent awhile,
he asked the servants of her, and they said, "She hath gone to
her sleeping-chamber; but we will serve thee as thou shalt order. "
So they set before him rare meats, and he ate till he was satis-
fied, when they brought him a basin of gold and an ewer of
silver and he washed his hands. Then his mind reverted to his
troops, and he was troubled, knowing not what had befallen them.
in his absence and thinking how he had forgotten his father's
injunctions, so that he abode, oppressed with anxiety and repent-
ing of what he had done, till the dawn broke and the day ap-
peared, when he lamented and sighed and became drowned in
the sea of melancholy, repeating the following verses: -
"I lack not of prudence, and yet in this case, I've been fooled;
so what shift shall avail unto me?
If any could ease me of love and its stress, Of my might and
my virtue I'd set myself free.
But alas! my heart's lost in maze of desire, And no helper save
God in my strait can I see.
Hardly had he finished when up came more than twenty
damsels like moons, encompassing the young lady, who appeared
among them as the full moon among stars. She was clad in
royal brocade, and girt with a woven girdle set with various
kinds of jewels that straitly clasped her waist.
On her
head she wore a network of pearls, gemmed with various kinds
of jewels, and she moved with a coquettish, swimming gait,
swaying wonder-gracefully, whilst the damsels held up her skirts.
She fixed her eyes on him, and considered him awhile,
till she was assured of him, when she came up to him and said,
«
Indeed the place is honored and illumined with thy presence, O
## p. 646 (#56) #############################################
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THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
Sherkan! How didst thou pass the night, O hero, after we went
away and left thee? Verily, lying is a defect and a reproach in
kings; especially in great kings: and thou art Sherkan, son of
King Omar ben Ennuman; so henceforth tell me naught but
truth, and strive not to keep the secret of thy condition, for
falsehood engenders hatred and enmity. The arrow of destiny
hath fallen upon thee, and it behooves thee to show resignation
and submission. " When Sherkan heard what she said, he saw
nothing for it but to tell her the truth: so he said, "I am indeed
Sherkan, son of Omar ben Ennuman; whom fortune hath afflicted
and cast into this place: so now do whatsoever thou wilt. ”
FROM SINDBAD THE SEAMAN AND SINDBAD THE LANDSMAN ›
Portions of Nights 536 to 542, presenting the Introduction and the first of the
seven Voyages': Translation of Captain Sir Richard Burton
THE
HERE lived in the city of Bagdad, during the reign of the
Commander of the Faithful, Harun al-Rashid, a man named
Sindbad the Hammal [Porter], one in poor case, who bore
burdens on his head for hire. It happened to him one day
of great heat that whilst he was carrying a heavy load, he
became exceeding weary and sweated profusely; the heat and the
weight alike oppressing him. Presently, as he was passing the
gate of a merchant's house, before which the ground was swept
and watered, and where the air was temperate, he sighted a
broad bench beside the door; so he set his load thereon, to take
rest and smell the air.
And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying
her permitted say.
NOW WHEN IT WAS THE FIVE HUNDRED AND THIRTY-SEVENTH NIGHT,
She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the
Hammal set his load upon the bench to take rest and smell
the air, there came out upon him from the court-door a pleasant
breeze and a delicious fragrance. He sat down on the edge
of the bench, and at once heard from within the melodious
sound of lutes and other stringed instruments, and mirth-exciting
voices singing and reciting, together with the song of birds
warbling and glorifying Almighty Allah in various tunes and
tongues; turtles, mockingbirds, merles, nightingales, cushats, and
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647
stone-curlews: whereat he marveled in himself and was moved
to mighty joy and solace. Then he went up to the gate and
saw within a great flower-garden wherein were pages and black
slaves, and such a train of servants and attendants and so forth
as is found only with Kings and Sultans; and his nostrils were
greeted with the savory odors of all manner meats rich and
delicate, and delicious and generous wines. So he raised his
eyes heavenwards and said, "Glory to Thee, O Lord, O Creator
and Provider, who providest whomso Thou wilt without count
or stint! Omine Holy One, I cry Thee pardon for all sins
and turn to Thee repenting of all offenses! O Lord, there is
no gainsaying Thee in Thine ordinance and Thy dominion,
neither wilt Thou be questioned of that Thou dost, for Thou
indeed over all things art Almighty! Extolled be Thy per-
fection: whom Thou wilt Thou makest poor and whom Thou
wilt Thou makest rich! Whom Thou wilt Thou exaltest and
whom Thou wilt Thou abasest, and there is no god but Thou!
How mighty is Thy majesty and how enduring Thy dominion
and how excellent Thy government! Verily, Thou favorest
whom Thou wilt of Thy servants, whereby the owner of this
place abideth in all joyance of life and delighteth himself with
pleasant scents and delicious meats and exquisite wines of all
kinds.
For indeed Thou appointest unto Thy creatures that
which Thou wilt and that which Thou hast foreordained unto
them; wherefore are some weary and others are at rest, and some
enjoy fair fortune and affluence whilst others suffer the extreme
of travail and misery, even as I do. " And he fell to reciting:
How many by my labors, that evermore endure, All goods of
life enjoy and in cooly shade recline?
Each morn that dawns I wake in travail and in woe, And
strange is my condition and my burden gars me pine:
Many others are in luck and from miseries are free, And For-
tune never loads them with loads the like o' mine:
They live their happy days in all solace and delight; Eat, drink,
and dwell in honor 'mid the noble and the digne:
All living things were made of a little drop of sperm, Thine
origin is mine and my provenance is thine;
Yet the difference and distance 'twixt the twain of us are far As
the difference of savor 'twixt vinegar and wine:
But at Thee, O God All-wise! I venture not to rail Whose ordi-
nance is just and whose justice cannot fail.
## p. 648 (#58) #############################################
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THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
When Sindbad the Porter had made an end of reciting his
verses, he bore up his burden and was about to fare on, when
there came forth to him from the gate a little foot-page, fair of
face and shapely of shape and dainty of dress, who caught him
by the hand, saying, "Come in and speak with my lord, for he
calleth for thee. " The Porter would have excused himself to the
page, but the lad would take no refusal; so he left his load with
the doorkeeper in the vestibule and followed the boy into the
house, which he found to be a goodly mansion, radiant and full
of majesty, till he brought him to a grand sitting-room wherein
he saw
a company of nobles and great lords, seated at tables
garnished with all manner of flowers and sweet-scented herbs,
besides great plenty of dainty viands and fruits dried and fresh
and confections and wines of the choicest vintages. There also
were instruments of music and mirth, and lovely slave-girls play-
ing and singing. All the company was ranged according to
rank, and in the highest place sat a man of worshipful and noble
aspect, whose beard-sides hoariness had stricken; and he was
stately of stature and fair of favor, agreeable of aspect and full
of gravity and dignity and majesty. So Sindbad the Porter was
confounded at that which he beheld, and said in himself, "By
Allah, this must be either a piece of Paradise or some king's
palace! " Then he saluted the company with much respect, pray-
ing for their prosperity; and kissing ground before them, stood
with his head bowed down in humble attitude. -
And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say
her permitted say.
NOW WHEN IT WAS THE FIVE HUNDRED AND THIRTY-EIGHTH NIGHT,
She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Sindbad
the Porter, after kissing ground between their hands, stood with
his head bowed down in humble attitude. The master of the
house bade him draw near and be seated and bespoke him kindly,
bidding him welcome. Then he set before him various kinds of
viands, rich and delicious, and the Porter, after saying his Bis-
millah, fell to and ate his fill, after which he exclaimed, "Praised
be Allah whatso be our case! " and washing his hands, returned
thanks to the company for his entertainment. Quoth the host,
"Thou art welcome and thy day is a-blessed. But what are thy
name and calling? " Quoth the other, "O my lord, my name is
## p. 649 (#59) #############################################
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649
Sindbad the Hammal, and I carry folk's goods on my head for
hire. " The house-master smiled and rejoined, "Know, O Porter,
that thy name is even as mine, for I am Sindbad the Seaman;
and now, O Porter, I would have thee let me hear the couplets.
thou recitedst at the gate anon. " The Porter was abashed and
replied, "Allah upon thee! Excuse me, for toil and travail and.
lack of luck when the hand is empty teach a man ill manners
and boorish ways. " Said the host, "Be not ashamed; thou art
become my brother: but repeat to me the verses, for they pleased
me whenas I heard thee recite them at the gate. " Hereupon the
Porter repeated the couplets, and they delighted the merchant,
who said to him:-
Know, O Hammal, that my story is a wonderful one, and
thou shalt hear all that befell me and all I underwent ere
I rose to this state of prosperity and became the lord of this
place wherein thou seest me; for I came not to this high estate
save after travail sore and perils galore, and how much toil
and trouble have I not suffered in days of yore! I have made
seven voyages, by each of which hangeth a marvelous tale, such
as confoundeth the reason, and all this came to pass by doom of
fortune and fate; for from what destiny doth write there is neither
refuge nor flight.
Know then, good my lords (continued he), that I am about to
relate the
FIRST VOYAGE OF SINDBAD HIGHT THE SEAMAN
MY FATHER was a merchant, one of the notables of my native
place, a moneyed man and ample of means, who died whilst
I was yet a child, leaving me much wealth in money and lands,
and farmhouses. When I grew up I laid hands on the whole
and ate of the best and drank freely and wore rich clothes and
lived lavishly, companioning and consorting with youths of my
own age, and considering that this course of life would con
tinue for ever and ken no change. Thus did I for a long time,
but at last I awoke from my heedlessness, and returning to my
senses, I found my wealth had become unwealth and my condi-
tion ill-conditioned, and all I once hent had left my hand. And
recovering my reason I was stricken with dismay and confusion,
and bethought me of a saying of our lord Solomon, son of David,
(upon whom be Peace! ) which I had heard aforetime from my
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THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
father, "Three things are better than other three: the day of
death is better than the day of birth, a live dog is better than
a dead lion, and the grave is better than want. "
Then I got
together my remains of estates and property and sold all, even
my clothes, for three thousand dirhams, with which I resolved
to travel to foreign parts, remembering the saying of the poet:-
By means of toil man shall scale the height; Who to fame
aspires mustn't sleep o' night:
Who seeketh pearl in the deep must dive, Winning weal and
wealth by his main and might:
And who seeketh Fame without toil and strife Th' impossible
seeketh and wasteth life.
So taking heart I bought me goods, merchandise, and all needed
for a voyage, and, impatient to be at sea, I embarked, with a
company of merchants, on board a ship bound for Bassorah.
There we again embarked and sailed many days and nights, and
we passed from isle to isle and sea to sea and shore to shore,
buying and selling and bartering everywhere the ship touched,
and continued our course till we came to an island as it were a
garth of the garden of Paradise. Here the captain cast anchor,
and making fast to the shore, put out the landing planks. So
all on board landed and made furnaces, and lighting fires therein,
busied themselves in various ways, some cooking and some wash-
ing, whilst other some walked about the island for solace, and
the crew fell to eating and drinking and playing and sporting.
I was one of the walkers; but as we were thus engaged, behold
the master, who was standing on the gunwale, cried out to us
at the top of his voice, saying, "Ho there! passengers, run for
your lives and hasten back to the ship and leave your gear and
save yourselves from destruction, Allah preserve you! For this
island whereon ye stand is no true island, but a great fish sta-
tionary a-middlemost of the sea, whereon the sand hath settled.
and trees have sprung up of old time, so that it is become like
unto an island; but when ye lighted fires on it, it felt the heat
and moved; and in a moment it will sink with you into the sea
and ye will all be drowned. So leave your gear and seek your
safety ere ye die. "-
And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying
her permitted say.
―――――
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651
NOW WHEN IT WAS THE FIVE HUNDRED AND THIRTY-NINTH NIGHT,
She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when the
ship-master cried to the passengers, "Leave your gear and seek
safety ere ye die," all who heard him left gear and goods,
clothes washed and unwashed, fire-pots and brass cooking-pots,
and fled back to the ship for their lives, and some reached it
while others (among whom was I) did not, for suddenly the
island shook and sank into the abysses of the deep, with all that
were thereon, and the dashing sea surged over it with clashing
waves. I sank with the others down, down into the deep, but
Almighty Allah preserved me from drowning and threw in my
way a great wooden tub of those that had served the ship's com-
pany for tubbing. I gripped it for the sweetness of life, and
bestriding it like one riding, paddled with my feet like oars,
whilst the waves tossed me as in sport right and left. Mean-
while, the captain made sail and departed with those who had
reached the ship, regardless of the drowning and the drowned;
and I ceased not following the vessel with my eyes, till she was
hid from sight and I made sure of death. Darkness closed in
upon me while in this plight, and the winds and waves bore me
on all that night and the next day, till the tub brought to with
me under the lee of a lofty island, with trees overhanging the
tide. I caught hold of a branch and by its aid clambered up on
to the land, after coming nigh upon death; but when I reached
the shore, I found my legs cramped and numbed, and my feet
bore traces of the nibbling of fish upon their soles; withal I had
felt nothing for excess of anguish and fatigue. I threw myself
down on the island-ground, like a dead man, and drowned in
desolation swooned away, nor did I return to my senses till next
morning, when the sun rose and revived me. But I found my
feet swollen, so made shift to move by shuffling on my breech
and crawling on my knees, for in that island were found store of
fruit and springs of sweet water. I ate of the fruits, which
strengthened me; and thus I abode days and nights, till my life
seemed to return and my spirits began to revive and I was
better able to move about. So after due consideration I fell to
exploring the island and diverting myself with gazing upon all
things that Allah Almighty had created there; and rested under
the trees, from one of which I cut me a staff to lean upon. One
day as I walked along the marge, I caught sight of some object
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THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
in the distance, and thought it a wild beast or one of the mon-
ster creatures of the sea; but as I drew near it, looking hard
the while, I saw that it was a noble mare, tethered on the beach.
Presently I went up to her, but she cried out against me with a
great cry, so that I trembled for fear and turned to go away,
when there came forth a man from under the earth and followed
me, crying out and saying, "Who and whence art thou, and what
caused thee to come hither? " "O my lord," answered I, “I am
in very sooth a waif, a stranger, and was left to drown with
sundry others by the ship we voyaged in; but Allah graciously
sent me a wooden tub, so I saved myself thereon, and it floated
with me till the waves cast me up on this island. ” When he
heard this he took my hand, and saying "Come with me," carried
me into a great Sardáb, or underground chamber, which was
spacious as a saloon. He made me sit down at its upper end;
then he brought me somewhat of food, and, being anhungered, I
ate till I was satisfied and refreshed. And when he had put me
at mine ease he questioned me of myself, and I told him all that
had befallen me from first to last. And as he wondered at my
adventure, I said, "By Allah, O my lord, excuse me; I have
told thee the truth of my case and the accident which betided
me. And now I desire that thou tell me who thou art, and why
thou abidest here under the earth, and why thou hast tethered
yonder mare on the brink of the sea. " Answered he, "Know
that I am one of the several who are stationed in different parts
of this island, and we are of the grooms of King Mihrján, and
under our hand are all his horses.
And Inshallah! I
will bear thee to King Mihrján — »
And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say
her permitted say.
NOW WHEN IT WAS THE FIVE HUNDRED AND FORTIETH NIGHT,
She continued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the
Syce said to Sindbad the Seaman, "I will bear thee to King
Mihrján and show thee our country. And know that hadst thou
not happened on us, thou hadst perished miserably and none
had known of thee; but I will be the means of the saving of
thy life and of thy return to thine own land. " I called down
blessings on him and thanked him for his kindness and courtesy.
After this, we sat awhile, till the rest of the grooms
## p. 653 (#63) #############################################
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
653
came up, each leading a mare, and seeing me with their fellow-
Syce questioned me of my case, and I repeated my story to
them. Thereupon they drew near me, and spreading the table,
ate and invited me to eat; so I ate with them, after which they
took horse, and mounting me on one of the mares, set out with
me and fared on without ceasing, till we came to the capital
city of King Mihrján, and going in to him acquainted him with
my story. Then he sent for me, and when they set me before
him and salams had been exchanged, he gave me a cordial wel-
come and wishing me long life bade me tell him my tale. So I
related to him all that I had seen and all that had befallen me
from first to last, whereat he marveled and said to me, "By
Allah, O my son, thou hast indeed been miraculously preserved!
Were not the term of thy life a long one, thou hadst not escaped
from these straits; but praised be Allah for safety! " Then he
spoke cheerily to me and entreated me with kindness and con-
sideration; moreover, he made me his agent for the port and
registrar of all ships that entered the harbor. I attended him
regularly, to receive his commandments, and he favored me
and did me all manner of kindness and invested me with costly
and splendid robes. Indeed, I was high in credit with him, as
an intercessor for the folk and an intermediary between them.
and him, when they wanted aught of him. I abode thus a great
while, and as often as I passed through the city to the port, I
questioned the merchants and travelers and sailors of the city
of Baghdad; so haply I might hear of an occasion to return to
my native land, but could find none who knew it or knew any
who resorted thither. At this I was chagrined, for I was weary
of long strangerhood; and my disappointment endured for a
time till one day, going in to King Mihrján, I found with him
a company of Indians.
I saluted them and they returned my
salam; and politely welcomed me and asked me of my country-
And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased say-
ing her permitted say.
·
NOW WHEN IT WAS THE FIVE HUNDRED AND FORTY-FIRST NIGHT,
She continued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that
Sindbad the Seaman said:
When they asked me of my country
I questioned them of theirs, and they told me that they were of
various castes, some being called Shakiriyah, who are the noblest
-:
## p. 654 (#64) #############################################
654
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
of their castes and neither oppress nor offer violence to any, and
other Brahmans, a folk who abstain from wine, but live in de-
light and solace and merriment, and own camels and horses and
cattle. Moreover, they told me that the people of India are
divided into two-and-seventy castes, and I marveled at this with
exceeding marvel. Amongst other things that I saw in King
Mihrján's dominions was an island called Kásil, wherein all night
is heard the beating of drums and tabrets; but we were told by
the neighboring islanders and by travelers that the inhabitants
are people of diligence and judgment. In this sea I saw also a
fish two hundred cubits long, and the fishermen fear it; so they
strike together pieces of wood and put it to flight.
I also saw
another fish, with a head like that of an owl, besides many other
wonders and rarities, which it would be tedious to recount. I
occupied myself thus in visiting the islands, till one day, as I
stood in the port, with a staff in my hand, according to my
custom, behold, a great ship, wherein were many merchants, came
sailing for the harbor. When it reached the small inner port
where ships anchor under the city, the master furled his sails.
and making fast to the shore, put out the landing-planks, where-
upon the crew fell to breaking bulk and landing cargo whilst I
stood by, taking written note of them. They were long in
bringing the goods ashore, so I asked the master, "Is there
aught left in thy ship? " and he answered, "O my lord, there
are divers bales of merchandise in the hold, whose owner was
drowned from amongst us at one of the islands on our course;
so his goods remained in our charge by way of trust, and we
propose to sell them and note their price, that we may convey
it to his people in the city of Baghdad, the Home of Peace. "
"What was the merchant's name? " quoth I, and quoth he,
"Sindbad the Seaman "; whereupon I straitly considered him and
knowing him, cried out to him with a great cry, saying, "O
captain, I am that Sindbad the Seaman who traveled with other
merchants; and when the fish heaved and thou calledst to us,
some saved themselves and others sank, I being one of them.
But Allah Almighty threw in my way a great tub of wood, of
those the crew had used to wash withal, and the winds and
waves carried me to this island, where by Allah's grace I fell in
with King Mihrján's grooms and they brought me hither to the
King their master. When I told him my story he entreated me
with favor and made me his harbor-master, and I have prospered
## p. 655 (#65) #############################################
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
655
in his service and found acceptance with him. These bales, there-
fore, are mine, the goods which God hath given me-"
And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say
her permitted say.
NOW WHEN IT WAS THE FIVE HUNDRED AND FORTY-SECOND Night,
She continued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that
when Sindbad the Seaman said to the captain, "These bales are
mine, the goods which Allah hath given me," the other ex-
claimed, "There is no Majesty and there is no Might save in
Allah, the Glorious, the Great! Verily, there is neither con-
science nor good faith left among men! " Said I, "O Rais, what
mean these words, seeing that I have told thee my case? " And
he answered, “Because thou heardest me say that I had with
me goods whose owner was drowned, thou thinkest to take them
without right; but this is forbidden by law to thee, for we saw
him drown before our eyes, together with many other passen-
gers, nor was one of them saved. So how canst thou pretend
that thou art the owner of the goods? " "O captain," said I,
"listen to my story and give heed to my words, and my truth
will be manifest to thee; for lying and leasing are the letter-
marks of the hypocrites. " Then I recounted to him all that had
befallen me since I sailed from Baghdad with him to the time
when we came to the fish-island where we were nearly drowned;
and I reminded him of certain matters which had passed be-
tween us; whereupon both he and the merchants were certified
of the truth of my story and recognized me and gave me joy of
my deliverance, saying, "By Allah, we thought not that thou
hadst escaped drowning! But the Lord hath granted thee new
life. " Then they delivered my bales to me, and I found my
name written thereon, nor was aught thereof lacking. So I
opened them, and making up a present for King Mihrján of the
finest and costliest of the contents, caused the sailors to carry it
up to the palace, where I went in to the King and laid my
present at his feet acquainting him with what had happened,
especially concerning the ship and my goods; whereat he won-
dered with exceeding wonder and the truth of all that I had
told him was made manifest to him. His affection for me
redoubled after that, and he showed me exceeding honor and
bestowed on me a great present in return for mine. Then I
## p. 656 (#66) #############################################
656
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
sold my bales and what other matters I owned, making a great
profit on them, and bought me other goods and gear of the
growth and fashion of the island-city. When the merchants
were about to start on their homeward voyage, I embarked on
board the ship all that I possessed, and going in to the King,
thanked him for all his favors and friendship, and craved his
leave to return to my own land and friends. He farewelled
me and bestowed upon me great store of the country-stuffs and
produce; and I took leave of him and embarked. Then we set
sail and fared on nights and days, by the permission of Allah
Almighty; and Fortune served us and Fate favored us, so that
we arrived in safety at Bassorah-city where I landed rejoiced at
my safe return to my natal soil. After a short stay, I set out
for Baghdad, the House of Peace, with store of goods and com-
modities of great price. Reaching the city in due time, I went
straight to my own quarter and entered my house, where all my
friends and kinsfolk came to greet me. Then I bought me
eunuchs and concubines, servants and negro slaves, till I had a
large establishment, and I bought me houses, and lands and
gardens, till I was richer and in better case than before, and
returned to enjoy the society of my friends and familiars more
assiduously than ever, forgetting all I had suffered of fatigue
and hardship and strangerhood and every peril of travel; and I
applied myself to all manner joys and solaces and delights, eat-
ing the daintiest viands and drinking the deliciousest wines, and
my wealth allowed this state of things to endure. This, then, is
the story of my first voyage, and to-morrow, Inshallah! I will
tell you the tale of the second of my seven voyages. Saith he
who telleth the tale: Then Sindbad the Seaman made Sindbad
the Landsman sup with him and bade give him an hundred gold
pieces, saying, "Thou hast cheered us with thy company this
day. " The Porter thanked him, and taking the gift, went his
way, pondering that which he had heard and marveling mightily
at what things betide mankind.
## p. 657 (#67) #############################################
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
657
CONCLUSION OF THE THOUSAND NIGHTS AND A NIGHT›
Translation of Captain Sir Richard F. Burton
NOW
Jow during this time Shahrazad had borne the King three boy
children; so, when she had made an end of the story of
Ma'aruf, she rose to her feet and kissing ground before
him, said, "O King of the time and unique one of the age and
the tide, I am thine handmaid, and these thousand nights and a
night have I entertained thee with stories of folk gone before
and admonitory instances of the men of yore. May I then make
bold to crave a boon of thy highness? " He replied, "Ask, O
Shahrazad, and it shall be granted to thee. " Whereupon she
cried out to the nurses and the eunuchs, saying, "Bring me my
children. " So they brought them to her in haste, and they were
three boy children, one walking, one crawling, and one sucking.
She took them, and setting them before the King, again kissed
ground and said, "O King of the Age, these are thy children and
I crave that thou release me from the doom of death, as a dole
to these infants; for, an thou kill me, they will become mother-
less and will find none among women to rear them as they should
be reared. " When the King heard this, he wept and straining
the boys to his bosom, said, “By Allah, O Shahrazad, I pardoned
thee before the coming of these children, for that I found thee
chaste, pure, ingenuous, and pious! Allah bless thee and thy
father and thy mother and thy root and thy branch! I take the
Almighty to witness against me that I exempt thee from aught
that can harm thee. "
So she kissed his hands and feet and rejoiced with exceeding
joy, saying, "The Lord make thy life long and increase thee in
dignity and majesty! " presently adding, "Thou marveledst at
which befell thee on the part of women; yet there betided the
Kings of the Chosroës before thee greater mishaps and more
grievous than that which hath befallen thee, and indeed I have
set forth unto thee that which happened to Caliphs and Kings
and others with their women, but the relation is longsome, and
hearkening groweth tedious, and in this is all-sufficient warning
for the man of wits and admonishment for the wise. " Then she
ceased to speak, and when King Shahryar heard her speech and
profited by that which she had said, he summoned up his reasoning
powers and cleansed his heart and caused his understanding to
11-42
## p. 658 (#68) #############################################
658
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
revert, and turned to Allah Almighty and said to himself, "Since
there befell the Kings of the Chosroës more than that which hath
befallen me, never whilst I live shall I cease to blame myself
for the past. As for this Shahrazad, her like is not found in the
lands; so praise be to Him Who appointed her a means for deliv-
ering His creatures from oppression and slaughter! " Then he
arose from his séance and kissed her head, whereat she rejoiced,
she and her sister Dunyazad, with exceeding joy.
When the morning morrowed the King went forth, and sit-
ting down on the throne of the Kingship, summoned the Lords
of his land; whereupon the Chamberlains and Nabobs and Cap-
tains of the host went in to him and kissed ground before him.
He distinguished the Wazir, Shahrazad's sire, with special favor
and bestowed on him a costly and splendid robe of honor, and
entreated him with the utmost kindness, and said to him, “Allah
protect thee for that thou gavest me to wife thy noble daughter,
who hath been the means of my repentance from slaying the
daughters of folk. Indeed, I have found her pure and pious,
chaste and ingenuous, and Allah hath vouchsafed me by her
three boy children; wherefore praised be He for His passing
favor. " Then he bestowed robes of honor upon his Wazirs
and Emirs and Chief Officers and he set forth to them briefly
that which had betided him with Shahrazad, and how he had
turned from his former ways and repented him of what he had
done, and proposed to take the Wazir's daughter Shahrazad to
wife, and let draw up the marriage-contract with her. When
those who were present heard this, they kissed ground before
him and blessed him and his betrothed Shahrazad, and the Wazir
thanked her.
"
Then Shahryar made an end of his sitting in all weal, where-
upon the folk dispersed to their dwelling-places, and the news
was bruited abroad that the King proposed to marry the Wazir's
daughter, Shahrazad. Then he proceeded to make ready the
wedding gear, and presently he sent after his brother, King Shah
Zaman, who came, and King Shahryar went forth to meet him
with the troops. Furthermore, they decorated the city after the
goodliest fashion and diffused scents from censers and burnt
aloes-wood and other perfumes in all the markets and thorough-
fares and rubbed themselves with saffron, what while the drums
beat and the flutes and pipes sounded and mimes and mounte-
banks played and plied their arts, and the King lavished on
## p. 659 (#69) #############################################
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
659
them gifts and largesse, and in very deed it was a notable day.
When they came to the palace, King Shahryar commanded to
spread the table with beasts roasted whole, and sweetmeats, and
all manner of viands, and bade the crier cry to the folk that they
should come up to the Diwan and eat and drink, and that this
should be a means of reconciliation between him and them.
high and low, great and small, came up unto him, and they abode
on that wise, eating and drinking, seven days with their nights.
So
Then the King shut himself up with his brother, and related
to him that which had betided him with the Wazir's daughter
Shahrazad during the past three years, and told him what he
had heard from her of proverbs and parables, chronicles and
pleasantries, quips and jests, stories and anecdotes, dialogues and
histories, and elegies and other verses; whereat King Shah Zaman
marveled with the utmost marvel and said, "Fain would I take
her younger sister to wife, so we may be two brothers-german
to two sisters-german, and they on like wise be sisters to us; for
that the calamity which befell me was the cause of our discover-
ing that which befell thee, and all this time of three years past
I have taken no delight in woman; but now I desire to marry
thy wife's sister Dunyazad. "
When King Shahryar heard his brother's words, he rejoiced
with joy exceeding, and arising forthright, went in to his wife
Shahrazad and acquainted her with that which his brother pur-
posed, namely, that he sought her sister Dunyazad in wedlock;
whereupon she answered, "O King of the Age, we seek of him
one condition, to wit, that he take up his abode with us, for that
I cannot brook to be parted from my sister an hour, because we
were brought up together, and may not endure separation each
from another. If he accept this pact, she is his handmaid. " King
Shahryar returned to his brother and acquainted him with that
which Shahrazad had said; and he replied, "Indeed, this is what
was in my mind, for that I desire nevermore to be parted from
thee one hour. As for the kingdom, Allah the Most High shall
send to it whomso He chooseth, for that I have no longer a
desire for the kingship. "
When King Shahryar heard his brother's words, he rejoiced
exceedingly and said, "Verily, this is what I wished, O my
brother. So Alhamdolillah-Praised be Allah! - who hath brought
about union between us. " Then he sent after the Kazis and
Olema, Captains and Notables, and they married the two brothers
## p. 660 (#70) #############################################
660
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
to the two sisters. The contracts were written out, and the two
Kings bestowed robes of honor of silk and satin on those who
were present, whilst the city was decorated and the rejoicings
were renewed. The King commanded each Emir and Wazir and
Chamberlain and Nabob to decorate his palace, and the folk of
the city were gladdened by the presage of happiness and content-
ment. King Shahryar also bade slaughter sheep, and set up
kitchens and made bride-feasts and fed all comers, high and low;
and he gave alms to the poor and needy and extended his bounty
to great and small.
Then the eunuchs went forth that they might perfume the
Hammam for the brides; so they scented it with rosewater and
willow-flower water and pods of musk, and fumigated it with
Kákilí eaglewood and ambergris. Then Shahrazad entered, she
and her sister Dunyazad, and they cleansed their heads and
clipped their hair. When they came forth of the Hammam-bath,
they donned raiment and ornaments, such as men were wont pre-
pare for the Kings of the Chosroës; and among Shahrazad's
apparel was a dress purfled with red gold and wrought with
counterfeit presentments of birds and beasts. And the two
sisters encircled their necks with necklaces of jewels of price, in
the like whereof Iskander rejoiced not, for therein were great
jewels such as amazed the wit and dazzled the eye; and the
imagination was bewildered at their charms, for indeed each of
them was brighter than the sun and the moon. Before them
they lighted brilliant flambeaux of wax in candelabra of gold,
but their faces outshone the flambeaux, for that they had eyes
sharper than unsheathed swords and the lashes of their eyelids
bewitched all hearts. Their cheeks were rosy red, and their
necks and shapes gracefully swayed, and their eyes wantoned
like the gazelle's; and the slave-girls came to meet them with
instruments of music.
Then the two Kings entered the Hammam-bath, and when
they came forth they sat down on a couch set with pearls and
gems, whereupon the two sisters came up to them and stood
between their hands, as they were moons, bending and leaning
from side to side in their beauty and loveliness. Presently they
brought forward Shahrazad and displayed her, for the first dress,
in a red suit; whereupon King Shahryar rose to look upon her,
and the wits of all present, men and women, were bewitched for
that she was even as saith of her one of her describers:
·-
## p. 661 (#71) #############################################
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
661
A sun on wand in knoll of sand she showed, Clad in her
cramoisy-hued chemisette:
Of her lips' honey-dew she gave me drink * And with her rosy
cheeks quencht fire she set.
Then they attired Dunyazad in a dress of blue brocade, and she
became as she were the full moon when it shineth forth. So
they displayed her in this, for the first dress, before King Shah
Zaman, who rejoiced in her and well-nigh swooned away for
love-longing and amorous desire; yea, he was distraught with
passion for her, whenas he saw her, because she was as saith of
her one of her describers in these couplets:-
She comes appareled in an azure vest* Ultramarine as skies
are deckt and dight:
I view'd th' unparall'd sight, which showed my eyes * A
Summer-moon upon a Winter-night.
-
Then they returned to Shahrazad and displayed her in the second
dress, a suit of surpassing goodliness, and veiled her face with
her hair like a chin-veil. Moreover, they let down her side-
locks, and she was even as saith of her one of her describers in
these couplets:-
O hail to him whose locks his cheeks o'ershade, * Who slew
my life by cruel hard despight:
Said I, "Hast veiled the Morn in Night? " He said, * «Nay, I
but veil the Moon in hue of Night. "
Then they displayed Dunyazad in a second and a third and a
fourth dress, and she paced forward like the rising sun, and
swayed to and fro in the insolence of her beauty; and she was
even as saith the poet of her in these couplets: -
The sun of beauty she to all appears * And, lovely coy, she
mocks all loveliness:
And when he fronts her favor and her smile* A-morn, the
sun of day in clouds must dress.
Then they displayed Shahrazad in the third dress and the fourth
and the fifth, and she became as she were a Bán-branch snell of
a thirsting gazelle, lovely of face and perfect in attributes of
grace, even as saith of her one in these couplets:
## p. 662 (#72) #############################################
662
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
She comes like fullest moon on happy night, Taper of waist
with shape of magic might;
She hath an eye whose glances quell mankind, * And ruby on
her cheeks reflects his light;
Enveils her hips the blackness of her hair; * Beware of curls
that bite with viper-bite!
Her sides are silken-soft, what while the heart * Mere rock
behind that surface 'scapes our sight;
From the fringed curtains of her eyne she shoots* Shafts that
at furthest range on mark alight.
Then they returned to Dunyazad and displayed her in the fifth
dress and in the sixth, which was green, when she surpassed
with her loveliness the fair of the four quarters of the world, and
outvied, with the brightness of her countenance, the full moon
at rising tide; for she was even as saith of her the poet in these
couplets:-
A damsel 'twas the tirer's art had decked with snare and sleight,
* And robed with rays as though the sun from her had borrowed
light;
She came before us wondrous clad in chemisette of green,
veiled by his leafy screen Pomegranate hides from sight;
And when he said, "How callest thou the fashion of thy dress? "
*She answered us in pleasant way, with double meaning dight,
"We call this garment crève-cœur; and rightly is it hight, * For
many a heart wi' this we brake and harried many a sprite. "
* As
Then they displayed Shahrazad in the sixth and seventh dresses
and clad her in youth's clothing, whereupon she came forward
swaying from side to side, and coquettishly moving, and indeed
she ravished wits and hearts and ensorcelled all eyes with her
glances. She shook her sides and swayed her haunches, then
put her hair on sword-hilt and went up to King Shahryar, who
embraced her as hospitable host embraceth guest, and threatened
her in her ear with the taking of the sword; and she was even
as saith of her the poet in these words:
Were not the Murk of gender male, * Than feminines surpassing fair,
Tire-women they had grudged the bride, * Who made her beard
and whiskers wear!
Thus also they did with her sister Dunyazad; and when they
had made an end of the display, the King bestowed robes of
## p. 663 (#73) #############################################
THE ARABIAN NIGHTS
663
honor on all who were present, and sent the brides to their own
apartments. Then Shahrazad went in to King Shahryar and
Dunyazad to King Shah Zaman, and each of them solaced him-
self with the company of his beloved consort, and the hearts of
the folk were comforted. When morning morrowed, the Wazir
came in to the two Kings and kissed ground before them;
wherefore they thanked him and were large of bounty to him.
Presently they went forth and sat down upon couches of king-
ship, whilst all the Wazirs and Emirs and Grandees and Lords
of the land presented themselves and kissed ground. King
Shahryar ordered them dresses of honor and largesse, and they
prayed for the permanence and prosperity of the King and his
brother. Then the two Sovrans appointed their sire-in-law the
Wazir to be Viceroy in Samarcand, and assigned him five of
the Chief Emirs to accompany him, charging them attend him
and do him service. The Minister kissed ground and prayed
that they might be vouchsafed length of life: then he went in
to his daughters, whilst the Eunuchs and Ushers walked before
him, and saluted them and farewelled them. They kissed his
hands and gave him joy of the kingship and bestowed on him
immense treasures; after which he took leave of them, and set-
ting out, fared days and nights, till he came near Samarcand,
where the townspeople met him at a distance of three marches
and rejoiced in him with exceeding joy. So he entered the
city, and they decorated the houses and it was a notable day.
He sat down on the throne of his kingship, and the Wazirs did
him homage and the Grandees and Emirs of Samarcand, and
all prayed that he might be vouchsafed justice and victory and
length of continuance. So he bestowed on them robes of honor
and entreated them with distinction, and they made him Sultan
over them. As soon as his father-in-law had departed for
Samarcand, King Shahryar summoned the Grandees of his realm
and made them a stupendous banquet of all manner of delicious
meats and exquisite sweetmeats. He also bestowed on them
robes of honor and guerdoned them, and divided the kingdoms
between himself and his brother in their presence, whereat the
folk rejoiced.
