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When
the Wazir heard from his daughter these words, he related to her, from first to
last, all that had happened between him and the King. Thereupon said she:
"By Allah, O my father, how long shall this slaughter of women endure?
Shall I tell thee what is in my mind in order to save both sides from
destruction?" "Say on, O my daughter," quoth he, and quoth she:
"I wish thou wouldst give me in marriage to this King Shahryar. Either I
shall live or I shall be a ransom for the virgin daughters of Moslems and the
cause of their deliverance from his hands and thine." "Allah upon
thee!" cried he in wrath exceeding that lacked no feeding. "O scanty
of wit, expose not thy life to such peril! How durst thou address me in words
so wide from wisdom and unfar from foolishness? Know that one who lacketh
experience in worldly matters readily falleth into misfortune, and whoso
considereth not the end keepeth not the world to friend, and the vulgar say: 'I
was lying at mine ease. Naught but my officiousness brought me unease'."
"Needs must thou," she broke in, "make me a doer of this good
deed, and let him kill me an he will. I shall only die a ransom for
others." "O my daughter," asked he, "and how shall that
profit thee when thou shalt have thrown away thy life?" And she answered,
"O my father, it must be, come of it what will!" The Wazir was again
moved to fury and blamed and reproached her, ending with, "In very deed I
fear lest the same befall thee which befell the bull and the ass with the husbandman."
"And what," asked she, "befell them, O my father?"
Whereupon the Wazir began THE TALE
OF THE BULL AND THE ASS KNOW,
O my daughter, that there was once a merchant who owned much money and many
men, and who was rich in cattle and camels. He had also a wife and family, and
he dwelt in the country, being experienced in husbandry and devoted to
agriculture. Now Allah Most High had endowed him with understanding the tongues
of beasts and birds of every kind, but under pain of death if he divulged the
gift to any. So he kept it secret for very fear. He had in his cow house a bull
and an ass, each tethered in his own stall, one hard by the other. As the
merchant was sitting near-hand one day with his servans and his children were
playing about him, he heard and bull say to the ass: "Hail
and health to thee O Father of Waking! for that thou enjoyest rest and good
ministering. All under thee is clean-swept and fresh-sprinkled. Men wait upon
thee and feed thee, and thy provaunt is sifted barley and thy drink pure spring
water, while I (unhappy creature!) am led forth in the middle of the night,
when they set on my neck the plow and a something called yoke, and I tire at
cleaving the earth from dawn of day till set of sun. I am forced to do more
than I can and to bear all manner of ill-treatment from night to night. After
which they take me back with my sides torn, my neck flayed, my legs aching, and
mine eyelids sored with tears. Then they shut me up in the byre and throw me
beans and crushed straw mixed with dirt and chaff, and I lie in dung and filth
and foul stinks through the livelong night. But thou art ever in a place swept
and sprinkled and cleansed, and thou art always lying at ease, save when it
happens (and seldom enough!) that the master hath some business, when he mounts
thee and rides thee to town and returns with thee forthright. So it happens
that I am toiling and distrest while thou takest thine ease and thy rest. Thou
sleepest while I am sleepless, I hunger still while thou eatest thy fill, and I
win contempt while thou winnest goodwill." When
the bull ceased speaking, the ass turned toward him and said: "O
Broad-o'-Brow, O thou lost one! He lied not who dubbed thee bullhead, for thou,
O father of a bull, hast neither forethought nor contrivance. Thou art the
simplest of simpletons, and thou knowest naught of good advisers. Hast thou not
heard the saying of the wise? But
thou, O fool, art full of zeal, and thou toilest and moilest before the master,
and thou tearest and wearest and slayest thyself for the comfort of another.
Hast thou never heard the saw that saith 'None to guide and from the way go
wide'? Thou wendest forth at the call to dawn prayer and thou returnest not
till sundown, and through the livelong day thou endurest all manner hardships:
to wit, beating and belaboring and bad language. "Now
hearken to me, Sir Bull! When they tie thee to thy stinking manger, thou pawest
the ground with thy forehand and lashest out with thy hind hoofs and pushest
with thy horns and bellowest aloud, so they deem thee contented. And when they
throw thee thy fodder, thou fallest on it with greed and hastenest to line thy
fair fat paunch. But if thou accept any advice, it will be better for thee, and
thou wilt lead an easier life even than mine. When thou goest afield and they
lay the thing called yoke on thy neck, be down and rise not again, though haply
they swings thee. And if thou rise, lie down a second time. And when they bring
thee home and offer thee thy beans, fall backward and only sniff at thy meat
and withdraw thee and taste it not, and be satisfied with thy crushed straw and
chaff. And on this wise feign thou art sick, and cease not doing thus for a day
or two days or even three days; so shalt thou have rest from toil and moil."
When
the Bull heard these words, he knew the ass to be his friend and thanked him,
saying, "Right is thy rede," and prayed that all blessings might
requite him, and cried: "O Father Wakener! Thou hast made up for my
failings." (Now the merchant, O my daughter, understood all that passed
between them.) Next day the driver took the bull and, settling the plow on his
neck, made him work as wont. But the bull began to shirk his plowing, according
to the advice of the ass, and the plowman drubbed him till he broke the yoke
and made off. But the man caught him up and leathered him till he despaired of
his life. Not the less, however, would he do nothing but stand still and drop
down till the evening. Then the herd led him home and stabled him in his stall,
but he drew back from his manger and neither stamped nor ramped nor butted nor
bellowed as he was wont to do, whereat the man wondered. He brought him the
beans and husks, but he sniffed at them and left them and lay down as far from
them as he could and passed the whole night fasting. The peasant came next
morning and, seeing the manger full of beans, the crushed straw untasted, and
the ox lying on his back in sorriest plight, with legs outstretched and swollen
belly, he was concerned for him, and said to himself, "By Allah, he hath
assuredly sickened, and this is the cause why he would not plow
yesterday." Then
he went to the merchant and reported: "O my master, the bull is ailing. He
refused his fodder last night- nay, more, he hath not tasted a scrap of it this
morning." Now the merchant-farmer understood what all this meant, because
he had overheard the talk between the bull and the ass, so quoth he, "Take
that rascal donkey, and set the yoke on his neck, and bind him to the plow and
make him do bull's work." Thereupon the plowman took the ass, and worked
him through the livelong day at the bull's task. And when be failed for
weakness, he made him eat stick till his ribs were sore and his sides were
sunken and his neck was rayed by the yoke. And when he came home in the evening
he could hardly drag his limbs along, either forehand or hind legs. But as for
the bull, he had passed the day lying at full length, and had eaten his fodder
with an excellent appetite, and he ceased not calling down blessings on the ass
for his good advice, unknowing what had come to him on his account. So
when night set in and the ass returned to the byre, the bull rose up before him
in honor, and said: "May good tidings gladden thy heart, O Father Wakener!
Through thee I have rested all this day, and I have eaten my meat in peace and
quiet." But the ass returned no reply, for wrath and heartburning and
fatigue and the beating he had gotten. And he repented with the most grievous
of repentance, and quoth he to himself: "This cometh of my folly in giving
good counsel. As the saw saith, I was in joy and gladness, naught save my
officiousness brought me this sadness. And now I must take thought and put a
trick upon him and return him to his place, else I die." Then he went
aweary to his manger while the bull thanked him and blessed him. And
even so, O my daughter (said the Wazir) thou wilt die for lack of wits.
Therefore sit thee still and say naught and expose not thy life to such stress,
for, by Allah, I offer thee the best advice, which cometh of my affection and
kindly solicitude for thee. "O my father," she answered, "needs
must I go up to this King and be married to him." Quoth he, "Do not
this deed," and quoth she, "Of a truth I will." Whereat he
rejoined, "If thou be not silent and bide still, I will do with thee even
what the merchant did with his wife." "And what did be?" asked
she. |
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