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I
entreated her with all kindliness and she abode with me a whole year, during
which our thoughts and fancies were always full of our other sister. Shortly
after she too came home in yet fouler and sorrier plight than that of my eldest
sister, and I dealt by her still more honorably than I had done by the first,
and each of them had a share of my substance. After a time they said to me,
"O our sister, we desire to marry again, for indeed we have not patience
to drag on our days without husbands and to lead the lives of widows
bewitched," and I replied: "O eyes of me! Ye have hitherto seen
scanty weal in wedlock, for nowadays good men and true are become rareties and
curiosities, nor do I deem your projects advisable, as ye have already made
trial of matrimony and have failed." But they would not accept my advice,
and married without my consent. Nevertheless I gave them outfit and dowries out
of my money, and they fared forth with their mates.
In
a mighty little time their husbands played them false and, taking whatever they
could lay hands upon, levanted and left them in the lurch. Thereupon they came
to me ashamed and in abject case and made their excuses to me, saying:
"Pardon our fault and be not wroth with us, for although thou art younger
in years yet art thou older in wit. Henceforth we will never make mention of
marriage, so take us back as thy handmaidens that we may eat our mouthful."
Quoth I, "Welcome to you, O my sisters, there is naught dearer to me than
you." And I took them in and redoubled my kindness to them. We ceased not
to live after this loving fashion for a full year, when I resolved to sell my
wares abroad and first to fit me a conveyance for Bassorah. So I equipped a
large ship, and loaded her with merchandise and valuable goods for traffic and
with provaunt and all needful for a voyage, and said to my sisters, "Will
ye abide at home whilst I travel, or would ye prefer to accompany me on the
voyage?" "We will travel with thee," answered they, "for we
cannot bear to be parted from thee." So I divided my moneys into two
parts, one to accompany me and the other to be left in charge of a trusty
person, for, as I said to myself, "Haply some accident may happen to the
ship and yet we remain alive, in which case we shall find on our return what
may stand us in good stead."
I
took my two sisters and we went a-voyaging some days and nights, but the master
was careless enough to miss his course, and the ship went astray with us and
entered a sea other than the sea we sought. For a time we knew naught of this,
and the wind blew fair for us ten days, after which the lookout man went aloft
to see about him and cried, "Good news!" Then he came down rejoicing
and said, "I have seen what seemeth to be a city as 'twere a pigeon."
Hereat we rejoiced, and ere an hour of the day had passed, the buildings showed
plain in the offing, and we asked the Captain, "What is the name of yonder
city?" and he answered: "By Allah, I wot not, for I never saw it
before and never sailed these seas in my life. But since our troubles have
ended in safety, remains for you only to land where with your merchandise, and
if you find selling profitable, sell and make your market of what is there, and
if not, we will rest here two days and provision ourselves and fare away."
So
we entered the port and the Captain went up town and was absent awhile, after
which he returned to us and said, "Arise, go up into the city and marvel
at the works of Allah with His creatures, and pray to be preserved from His
righteous wrath!" So we landed, and going up into the city, saw at the
gate men hending staves in hand, but when we drew near them, behold, they had
been translated by the anger of Allah and had become stones. Then we entered
the city and found all who therein woned into black stones enstoned. Not an
inhabited house appeared to the espier, nor was there a blower of fire. We were
awe-struck at the sight, and threaded the market streets, where we found the
goods and gold and silver left lying in their places, and we were glad and
said, "Doubtless there is some mystery in all this."
Then
we dispersed about the thoroughfares and each busied himself with collecting
the wealth and money and rich stuffs, taking scanty heed of friend or comrade.
As
for myself, I went up to the castle, which was strongly fortified, and,
entering the King's palace by its gate of red gold, found all the vaiselle of
gold and silver, and the King himself seated in the midst of his chamberlains
and nabobs and emirs and wazirs, an clad in raiment which confounded man's art.
I drew nearer and saw him sitting on a throne encrusted and inlaid with pearls
and gems, and his robes were of gold cloth adorned with jewels of every kind,
each one flashing like a star. Around him stood fifty Mamelukes, white slaves,
clothed in silks of divers sorts, holding their drawn swords in their hands.
But when I drew near to them, lo! all were black stones. My understanding was
confounded at the sight, but I walked on and entered the great hall of the
harem, whose walls I found hung with tapestries of gold-striped silk, and
spread with silken carpets embroidered with golden flowers. Here I saw the
Queen lying at full length arrayed in robes purfled with fresh young pearls. On
her head was a diadem set with many sorts of gems each fit for a ring, and
around her neck hung collars and necklaces. All her raiment and her ornaments
were in natural state, but she had been turned into a black stone by Allah's
wrath.
Presently
I espied an open door, for which I made straight, and found leading to it a
flight of seven steps. So I walked up and came upon a place pargeted with
marble and spread and hung with gold-worked carpets and tapestry, a-middlemost
of which stood a throne of juniper wood inlaid with pearls and precious stones
and set with bosses of emeralds. In the further wall was an alcove whose
curtains, bestrung with pearls, were let down and I saw a light issuing
therefrom, so I drew near and perceived that the light came from a precious
stone as big as an ostrich egg, set at the upper end of the alcove upon a
little chryselephantine couch of ivory and gold. And this jewel, blazing like
the sun, cast its rays wide and side. The couch also was spread with all manner
of silken stuffs amazing the gazer with their richness and beauty. I marveled
much at all this, especially when seeing in that place candies ready lighted,
and I said in my mind, "Needs must someone have lighted these candles."
Then I went forth and came to the kitchen and thence to the buttery and the
King's treasure chambers, and continued to explore the palace and to pace from
place to place. I forgot myself in my awe and marvel at these matters and I was
drowned in thought till the night came on.
Then
I would have gone forth, but knowing not the gate, I lost my way, so I returned
to the alcove whither the lighted candles directed me and sat down upon the
couch, and wrapping myself in a coverlet, after I had repeated somewhat from
the Koran, I would have slept but could not, for restlessness possessed me.
When night was at its noon I heard a voice chanting the Koran in sweetest
accents, but the tone thereof was weak. So I rose, glad to hear the silence
broken, and followed the sound until I reached a closet whose door stood ajar.
Then, peeping through a chink, I considered the place and lo! it was an oratory
wherein was a prayer niche with two wax candles burning and lamps hanging from
the ceiling. In it too was spread a prayer carpet whereupon sat a youth fair to
see, and before him on its stand was a copy of the Koran, from which he was
reading. I marveled to see him alone alive amongst the people of the city and
entering, saluted him. Whereupon he raised his eyes and returned my salaam.
Quoth I, "Now by the truth of what thou readest in Allah's Holy Book, I
conjure thee to answer my question." He looked upon me with a smile and
said: "O handmaid of Allah, first tell me the cause of thy coming hither,
and I in turn will tell what hath befallen both me and the people of this city,
and what was the reason of my escaping their doom." So I told him my
story, whereat he wondered, and I questioned him of the people of the city,
when he replied, "Have patience with me for awhile, O my sister!"
and, reverently closing the Holy Book, he laid it up in a satin bag. Then he
seated me by his side, and I looked at him and behold, he was as the moon at
its full, fair of face and rare of form, soft-sided and slight, of
well-proportioned height, and cheek smoothly bright and diffusing light. I
glanced at him with one glance of eyes which caused me a thousand sighs, and my
heart was at once taken captive-wise, so I asked him, "O my lord and my
love, tell me that whereof I questioned thee," and he answered:
"Hearing
is obeying! Know, O handmaid of Allah, that this city was the capital of my
father who is the King thou sawest on the throne transfigured by Allah's wrath
to a black stone, and the Queen thou foundest in the alcove is my mother. They
and all the people of the city were Magians who fire adored in lieu of the
Omnipotent Lord and were wont to swear by lowe and heat and shade and light,
and the spheres revolving day and night. My father had ne'er a son till he was
blest with me near the last of his days, and he reared me till I grew up and
prosperity anticipated me in all things. Now it is fortuned there was with us
an old woman well stricken in years, a Moslemah who, inwardly believing in
Allah and His Apostle, conformed outwardly with the religion of my people. And
my father placed thorough confidence in her for that he knew her to be
trustworthy and virtuous, and he treated her with ever-increasing kindness,
believing her to be of his own belief.
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