|
Then
said he, "O my brother, cut me up a watermelon, and sweeten it with a little
sugar candy." So I went to the storeroom and bringing out a fine
watermelon, I found there, set it on a platter and laid it before him saying,
"O my master, hast thou not a knife?" "Here it is,"
answered he, "over my head upon the high shelf." So I got up in haste
and, and, taking the knife, drew it from its sheath, but my foot slipped in
stepping down and I fell heavily upon the youth holding in my hand the knife,
which hastened to fulfill what had been written on the Day that decided the
destinies of man, and buried itself, as if planted, in the youth's heart. He
died on the instant. When I saw that he was slain and knew that I had slain
him, mauger myself I cried out with an exceeding loud and bitter cry and beat
my face and rent my raiment and said: "Verily we be Allah's and unto Him
we be returning, O Moslems! O folk fain of Allah! There remained for this youth
but one day of the forty dangerous days which the astrologers and the learned
had foretold for him, and the predestined death of this beautiful one was to be
at my hand. Would Heaven I had not tried to cut the watermelon! What dire
misfortune is this I must bear, lief or loath? What a disaster! What an
affliction! O Allah mine, I implore thy pardon and declare to Thee my innocence
of his death. But what God willeth, let that come to pass."
When
I was certified that I had slain him, I arose and, ascending the stairs,
replaced the trapdoor and covered it with earth as before. Then I looked out
seaward and saw the ship cleaving the waters and making for the island,
wherefore I was afeard and said, "The moment they come and see the youth
done to death, they will know 'twas I who slew him and will slay me without
respite." So I climbed up into a high tree and concealed myself among its
leaves, and hardly had I done so when the ship anchored and the slaves landed
with the ancient man, the youth's father, and made direct for the place, and
when they removed the earth they were surprised to see it soft. Then they
raised the trapdoor and went down and found the youth lying at full length,
clothed in fair new garments, with a face beaming after the bath, and the knife
deep in his heart. At the sight they shrieked and wept and beat their faces,
loudly cursing the murderer, whilst a swoon came over the Sheikh so that the
slaves deemed him dead, unable to survive his son. At last they wrapped the
slain youth in his clothes and carried him up and laid him on the ground,
covering him with a shroud of silk.
Whilst
they were making for the ship the old man revived, and, gazing on his son who
was stretched out, fell on the ground and strewed dust over his head and smote
his face and plucked out his beard, and his weeping redoubled as he thought of
his murdered son and he swooned away once more. After a while a slave went and
fetched a strip of silk whereupon they lay the old man and sat down at his
head. All this took place and I was on the tree above them watching everything
that came to pass, and my heart became hoary before my head waxed gray, for the
hard lot which was mine, and for the distress and anguish I had undergone, and
I fell to reciting:
"How many a joy by Allah's will hath fled
With
flight escaping sight of wisest head!
How
many a sadness shall begin the day,
Yet
grow right gladsome ere the day is sped!
How
many a weal trips on the heels of ill,
Causing the mourner's heart with joy to thrill!"
But
the old man, O my lady, ceased not from his swoon till near sunset, when he
came to himself and, looking upon his dead son, he recalled what had happened,
and how what he had dreaded had come to pass, and he beat his face and head.
Then he sobbed a single sob and his soul fled his flesh. The slaves shrieked
aloud, "Alas, our lord!" and showered dust on their heads and
redoubled their weeping and wailing. Presently they carried their dead master
to the ship side by side with his dead son and, having transported all the
stuff from the dwelling to the vessel, set sail and disappeared from mine eyes.
I descended from the tree and, raising the trapdoor, went down into the
underground dwelling, where everything reminded me of the youth, and I looked
upon the poor remains of him and began repeating these verses:
"Their tracks I see, and pine with pain and pang,
And on
deserted hearths I weep and yearn.
And
Him I pray who doomed them depart
Some
day vouchsafe the boon of safe return."
Then,
O my lady, I went up again by the trapdoor, and every day I used to wander
round about the island and every night I returned to the underground hall. Thus
I lived for a month, till at last, looking at the western side of the island, I
observed that every day the tide ebbed, leaving shallow water for which the
flow did not compensate, and by the end of the month the sea showed dry land in
that direction. At this I rejoiced, making certain of my safety, so I arose
and, fording what little was left of the water, got me to the mainland, where I
fell in with great heaps of loose sand in which even a camel's hoof would sink
up to the knee. However, I emboldened my soul and, wading through the sand,
behold, a fire shone from afar burning with a blazing light. So I made for it
hoping haply to find succor and broke out into these verses:
"Belike my Fortune may her bridle turn
And
Time bring weal although he's jealous hight,
Forward my hopes, and further all my needs,
And
passed ills with present weals requite."
And
when I drew near the fire aforesaid, lo! it was a palace with gates of copper
burnished red which, when the rising sun shone thereon, gleamed and glistened from
afar, showing what had seemed to me a fire. I rejoiced in the sight, and sat
down over against the gate, but I was hardly settled in my seat before there
met me ten young men clothed in sumptuous gear, and all were blind of the left
eye, which appeared as plucked out. They were accompanied by a Sheikh, an old,
old man, and much I marveled at their appearance, and their all being blind in
the same eye. When they saw me, they saluted me with the salaam and asked me of
my case and my history, whereupon I related to them all what had befallen me
and what full measure of misfortune was mine. Marveling at my tale, they took
me to the mansion, where I saw ranged round the hall ten couches each with its
blue bedding and coverlet of blue stuff and a-middlemost stood a smaller couch
furnished like them with blue and nothing else.
As
we entered each of the youths took his seat on his own couch and the old man
seated himself upon the smaller one in the middle, saying to me, "O youth,
sit thee down on the floor, and ask not of our case nor of the loss of our
eyes." Presently he rose up and set before each young man some meat in a
charger and drink in a larger mazer, treating me in like manner, and after that
they sat questioning me concerning my adventures and what had betided me. And I
kept telling them my tale till the night was far spent. Then said the young
men: "O our Sheikh, wilt not thou set before us our ordinary? The time is
come." He replied, "With love and gladness," and rose and, entering
a closet, disappeared, but presently returned bearing on his head ten trays
each covered with a strip of blue stuff. He set a tray before each youth and,
lighting ten wax candles, he stuck one upon each tray, and drew off the covers
and lo! under them was naught but ashes and powdered charcoal and kettle soot.
Then all the young men tucked up their sleeves to the elbows and fell a-weeping
and wailing and they blackened their faces and smeared their clothes and
buffeted their brows and beat their breasts, continually exclaiming, "We
were sitting at our ease, but our frowardness brought us unease!" They
ceased not to do thus till dawn drew nigh, when the old man rose and heated
water for them, and they washed their face and donned other and clean clothes.
Now
when I saw this, O my lady, for very wonderment my senses left me and my wits
went wild and heart and head were full of thought, till I forgot what had
betided me and I could not keep silence, feeling I fain must speak out and
question them of these strangenesses. So I said to them: "How come ye to
do this after we have been so openhearted and frolicsome? Thanks be to Allah,
ye be all sound and sane, yet actions such as these befit none but madmen or
those possessed of an evil spirit. I conjure you by all that is dearest to you,
why stint ye to tell me your history, and the cause of your losing your eyes
and your blackening your faces with ashes and soot?" Hereupon they turned
to me and said, "O young man, hearken not to thy youthtide's suggestions,
and question us no questions." Then they slept and I with them, and when
they awoke the old man brought us somewhat oi food. And after we had eaten and
the plates and goblets had been removed, they sat conversing till nightfall,
when the old man rose and lit the wax candles and lamps and set meat and drink
before us.
|