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I
heard her verse but paid no heed to her words- nay, I raised my foot and
administered to the alcove a mighty kick, and behold, the air starkened and
darkened and thundered and lightened, the earth trembled and quaked, and the
world became invisible. At once the fumes of wine left my head. I cried to her,
"What is the matter?" and she replied: "The Ifrit is upon us!
Did I not warn thee of this? By Allah, thou hast brought ruin upon me, but fly for
thy life and go up by the way thou camest down!" So I fled up the
staircase, but in the excess of my fear I forgot sandals and hatchet. And when
I had mounted two steps I turned to look for them, and lo! I saw the earth
cleave asunder, and there arose from it an Ifrit, a monster of hideousness, who
said to the damsel: "What trouble and pother be this wherewith thou
disturbest me? What mishap hath betided thee?" "No mishap hath
befallen me," she answered, "save that my breast was straitened and
my heart heavy with sadness. So I drank a little wine to broaden it and to
hearten myself, then I rose to obey a call of nature, but the wine had gotten
into my head and I fell against the alcove." "Thou liest, like the
whore thou art!" shrieked the Ifrit, and he looked around the hall right
and left till he caught sight of my ax and sandals and said to her, "What
be these but the belongings of some mortal who hath been in thy society?"
She answered: "I never set eyes upon them till this moment. They must have
been brought by thee hither cleaving to thy garments." Quoth the Ifrit,
"These words are absurd, thou harlot! thou strumpet!"
Then
he stripped her stark-naked and, stretching her upon the floor, bound her hands
and feet to four stakes, like one crucified, and set about torturing and trying
to make her confess. I could not bear to stand listening to her cries and
groans, so I climbed the stair on the quake with fear, and when I reached the
top I replaced the trapdoor and covered it with earth. Then repented I of what
I had done with penitence exceeding, and thought of the lady and her beauty and
loveliness, and the tortures she was suffering at the hands of the accursed
Ifrit, after her quiet life of five-and-twenty years, and how all that had
happened to her was for cause of me. I bethought me of my father and his kingly
estate and how I had become a woodcutter, and how, after my time had been
awhile serene, the world had again waxed turbid and troubled to me. So I wept
bitterly and repeated this couplet:
"What time Fate's tyranny shall most oppress thee
Perpend! One day shall joy thee, one distress thee!"
Then
I walked till I reached the home of my friend the tailor, whom I found most
anxiously expecting me. Indeed he was, as the saying goes, on coals of fire for
my account. And when he saw me he said: "All night long my heart hath been
heavy, fearing for thee from wild beasts or other mischances. Now praise be to
Allah for thy safety!" I thanked him for his friendly solicitude and,
retiring to my corner, sat pondering and musing on what had befallen me, and I
blamed and chided myself for my meddlesome folly and my frowardness in kicking
the alcove. I was calling myself to account when behold, my friend the tailor
came to me and said: "O youth, in the shop there is an old man, a Persian,
who seeketh thee. He hath thy hatchet and thy sandals, which he had taken to
the woodcutters, saying, I was going out at what time the muezzin began the
call to dawn prayer, when I chanced upon these things and know not whose they
are, so direct me to their owner. Tie woodcutters recognized thy hatchet and
directed him to thee. He is sitting in my shop, so fare forth to him and thank
him and take thine ax and sandals."
When
I heard these words I turned yellow with fear and felt stunned as by a blow,
and before I could recover myself, lo! the floor of my private room clove
asunder, and out of it rose the Persian, who was the Ifrit. He had tortured the
lady with exceeding tortures, natheless she would not confess to him aught, so
he took the hatchet and sandals and said to her, "As surely as I am Jirjis
of the seed of Iblis, I will bring thee back the owner of this and these!"
Then he went to the woodcutters with the pretense aforesaid and, being directed
to me, after waiting a while in the shop till the fact was confirmed, he
suddenly snatched me up as a hawk snatcheth a mouse and flew high in air, but
presently descended and plunged with me under the earth (I being a-swoon the
while), and lastly set me down in the subterranean palace wherein I had passed
that blissful night.
And
there I saw the lady stripped to the skin, her limbs bound to four stakes and
blood welling from her sides. At the sight my eyes ran over with tears, but the
Ifrit covered her person and said, "O wanton, is not this man thy
lover?" She looked upon me and replied, "I wot him not, nor have I
ever seen him before this hour!" Quoth the Ifrit, "What! This torture
and yet no confessing?" And quoth she, "I never saw this man in my
born days, and it is not lawful in Allah's sight to tell lies on him."
"If thou know him not," said the Ifrit to her, "take this sword
and strike off his head." She hent the sword in hand and came close up to
me, and I signaled to her with my eyebrows, my tears the while flowing a-down
my cheeks. She understood me and made answer, also by signs, "How couldest
thou bring all this evil upon me?" And I rejoined after the same fashion,
"This is the time for mercy and forgiveness." And the mute tongue of
my case spake aloud saying:
Mine
eyes were dragomans for my tongue betied,
And
told full clear the love I fain would hide.
When
last we met and tears in torrents railed,
For
tongue struck dumb my glances testified.
She
signed with eye glance while her lips were mute,
I
signed with fingers and she kenned th'implied.
Our
eyebrows did all duty 'twixt us twain,
And we
being speechless, Love spake loud and plain.
Then,
O my mistress, the lady threw away the sword and said: "How shall I strike
the neck of one I wot not, and who hath done me no evil? Such deed were not
lawful in my law!" and she held her hand. Said the Ifrit: "'Tis
grievous to thee to slay thy lover, and, because he hath lain with thee, thou
endurest these torments and obstinately refusest to confess. After this it is
clear to me that only like loveth and pitieth Eke." Then he turned to me
and asked me, "O man, haply thou also dost not know this woman,"
whereto I answered: "And pray who may she be? Assuredly I never saw her
till this instant." "Then take the sword," said he, "and
strike off her head and I will believe that thou wettest her not and will leave
thee free to go, and will not deal hardly with thee." I replied,
"That will I do," and, taking the sword, went forward sharply and
raised my hand to smite. But she signed to me with her eyebrows, "Have I
failed thee in aught of love, and is it thus that thou requitest me?" I
understood what her looks implied and answered her with an eye glance, "I
will sacrifice my soul for thee." And the tongue of the case wrote in our
hearts these lines:
How
many a lover with his eyebrows speaketh
To his
beloved, as his passion pleadeth.
With
flashing eyne his passion he inspireth
And
well she seeth what his pleading needeth.
How
sweet the look when each on other gazeth,
And
with what swiftness and how sure it speedeth.
And
this with eyebrows all his passion writeth,
And
that with eyeballs all his passion readeth.
Then
my eyes filled with tears to overflowing and I cast the sword from my hand,
saying: "O mighty Ifrit and hero, if a woman lacking wits and faith deem
it unlawful to strike off my head, how can it be lawful for me, a man, to smite
her neck whom I never saw in my whole life? I cannot do such misdeed, though
thou cause me drink the cup of death and perdition." Then said the Ifrit,
"Ye twain show the good understanding between you, but I will let you see
how such doings end." He took the sword and struck off the lady's hands
first, with four strokes, and then her feet, whilst I looked on and made sure
of death and she farewelled me with her dying eyes. So the Ifrit cried at her,
"Thou whorest and makest me a wittol with thine eyes," and struck her
so that her head went flying. Then turned he to me and said: "O mortal, we
have it in our law that when the wife committeth advowtry, it is lawful for us
to slay her. As for this damsel, I snatched her away on her bride night when
she was a girl of twelve and she knew no one but myself. I used to come to her
once in every ten days and lie with her the night, under the semblance of a
man, a Persian, and when I was well assured that she had cuckolded me, I slew
her. But as for thee, I am not well satisfied that thou hast wronged me in her.
Nevertheless I must not let thee go unharmed, so ask a boon of me and I will
grant it."
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