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"So
when I was well-nigh grown up my father committed me to her charge saying:
'Take him and educate him and teach him the rules of our faith. Let him have
the best instructions and cease not thy fostering care of him.' So she took me
and taught me the tenets of Al-Islam with the divine ordinances of the wuzu
ablution and the five daily prayers and she made me learn the Koran by rote,
often repeating, 'Serve none save Allah Almighty!' When I had mastered this
much of knowledge, she said to me, 'O my son, keep this matter concealed from
thy sire and reveal naught to him, lest he slay thee." So I hid it from
him, and I abode on this wise for a term of days, when the old woman died, and
the people of the city redoubled in their impiety and arrogance and the error
of their ways.
"One
day while they were as wont, behold, they heard a loud and terrible sound and a
crier crying out with a voice like roaring thunder so every ear could hear, far
and near: 'O folk of this city, leave ye your fire-worshiping and adore Allah
the All-compassionate King!" At this, fear and terror fell upon the
citizens and they crowded to my father (he being King of the city) and asked
him: 'What is this awesome voice we have heard; for it hath confounded us with
the excess of its terror?' And he answered: 'Let not a voice fright you nor
shake your steadfast sprite nor turn you back from the faith which is right.'
Their hearts inclined to his words and they ceased not to worship the fire and
they persisted in rebellion for a full year from the time they heard the first
voice. And on the anniversary came a second cry, and a third at the head of the
third year, each year once.
Still
they persisted in their malpractices till one day at break of dawn, judgment
and the wrath of Heaven descended upon them with all suddenness, and by the
visitation of Allah all were metamorphosed into black stones, they and their
beasts and their cattle, and none was saved save myself, who at the time was
engaged in my devotions. From that day to this I am in the case thou seest,
constant in prayer and fasting and reading and reciting the Koran, but I am
indeed grown weary by reason of my loneliness, having none to bear me
company."
Then
said I to him (for in very sooth he had won my heart and was the lord of my
life and soul): "O youth, wilt thou fare with me to Baghdad city and visit
the Ulema and men teamed in the law and doctors of divinity and get thee
increase of wisdom and understanding and theology? And know that she who
standeth in thy presence will be thy handmaid, albeit she be head of her family
and mistress over men and eunuchs and servants and slaves. Indeed my life was
no life before it fell in with thy youth. I have here a ship laden with
merchandise, and in very truth Destiny drove me to this city that I might come
to the knowledge of these matters, for it was fated that we should meet."
And I ceased not to persuade him and speak him fair and use every art till he
consented. I slept that night at his feet and hardly knowing where I was for
excess of joy.
As
soon as the next morning dawned (she pursued, addressing the Caliph), I arose
and we entered the treasuries and took thence whatever was light in weight and
great in worth. Then we went down side by side from the castle to the city,
where we were met by the Captain and my sisters and slaves, who had been
seeking for me. When they saw me, they rejoiced and asked what had stayed me,
and I told them all I had seen and related to them the story of the young
Prince and the transformation wherewith the citizens had been justly visited.
Hereat all marveled, but when my two sisters (these two bitches, O Commander of
the Faithful!) saw me by the side of my young lover, they jaloused me on his
account and were wroth and plotted mischief against me. We awaited a fair wind
and went on board rejoicing and ready to fly for joy by reason of the goods we
had gotten, but my own greatest joyance was in the youth. And we waited awhile
till the wind blew fair for us and then we set sail and fared forth.
Now
as we sat talking, my sisters asked me, "And what wilt thou do with this
handsome young man?" and I answered, "I purpose to make him my
husband!" Then I turned to him and said: "O my lord, I have that to
propose to thee wherein thou must not cross me, and this it is that, when we
reach Baghdad, my native city, I offer thee my life as thy handmaiden in holy
matrimony, and thou shalt be to me baron and I will be femme to thee." He
answered, "I hear and I obey! Thou art my lady and my mistress and whatso
thou doest I will not gainsay." Then I turned to my sisters and said:
"This is my gain. I content me with this youth and those who have gotten
aught of my property, let them keep it as their gain with my goodwill."
"Thou sayest and doest well," answered the twain, but they imagined
mischief against me.
We
ceased not spooning before a fair wind till we had exchanged the sea of peril
for the seas of safety, and in a few days we made Bassorah city, whose
buildings loomed clear before us as evening fell. But after we had retired to
rest and were sound asleep, my two sisters arose and took me up, bed and all,
and threw me into the sea. They did the same with the young Prince, who, as he
could not swim, sank and was drowned, and Allah enrolled him in the noble army
of martyrs. As for me, would Heaven I had been drowned with him, but Allah
deemed that I should be of the saved, so when I awoke and found myself in the
sea and saw the ship making off like a flash of lightning, He threw in my way a
piece of timber, which I bestrided, and the waves tossed me to and fro till
they cast me upon an island coast, a high land and an uninhabited. I landed and
walked about the island the rest of the night, and when morning dawned, I saw a
rough track barely fit for child of Adam to tread, leading to what proved a
shallow ford connecting island and mainland.
As
soon as the sun had risen I spread my garments to dry in its rays, and ate of
the fruits of the island and drank of its waters. Then I set out along the foot
track and ceased not walking till I reached the mainland. Now when there remained
between me and the city but a two hours' journey, behold, a great serpent, the
bigness of a date palm, came fleeing toward me in all haste, gliding along now
to the right, then to the left, till she was close upon me, whilst her tongue
lolled groundward a span long and swept the dust as she went. She was pursued
by a dragon who was not longer than two lances, and of slender build about the
bulk of a spear, and although her terror lent her speed and she kept wriggling
from side to side, he overtook her and seized her by the tail, whereat her
tears streamed down and her tongue was thrust out in her agony. I took pity on
her and, picking up a stone and calling upon Allah for aid, threw it at the
dragon's head with such force that he died then and there, and the serpent,
opening a pair of wings, flew into the lift and disappeared from before my
eyes.
I
sat down marveling over that adventure, but I was weary and, drowsiness
overcoming me, I slept where I was for a while. When I awoke I found a
jet-black damsel sitting at my feet shampooing them, and by her side stood two
black bitches (my sisters, O Commander of the Faithful!). I was ashamed before
her and, sitting up, asked her, "O my sister, who and what art thou?"
and she answered: "How soon hast thou forgotten me! I am she for whom thou
wroughtest a good deed and sowedest the seed of gratitude and slewest her foe,
for I am the serpent whom by Allah's aidance thou didst just now deliver from
the dragon. I am a Jinniyah and he was a Jinn who hated me, and none saved my
life from him save thou. As soon as thou freedest me from him I flew on the
wind to the ship whence thy sisters threw thee, and removed all that was
therein to thy house. Then I ordered my attendant Marids to sink the ship, and
I transformed thy two sisters into these black bitches, for I know all that
hath passed between them and thee. But as for the youth, of a truth he is
drowned."
So
saying, she flew up with me and the bitches, and presently set us down on the
terrace roof of my house, wherein I found ready stored the whole of what
property was in my ship, nor was aught of it missing. "Now (continued the
serpent that was), I swear by all engraven on the seal ring of Solomon (with
whom be peace!) unless thou deal to each of these bitches three hundred stripes
every day I will come and imprison thee forever under the earth." I
answered, "Hearkening and obedience!" and away she flew. But before
going she again charged me saying, "I again swear by Him who made the two
seas flow (and this be my second oath), if thou gainsay me I will come and
transform thee like thy sisters." Since then I have never failed, O
Commander of the Faithful, to beat them with that number of blows till their
blood flows with my tears, I pitying them the while, and well they wot that
their being scourged is no fault of mine and they accept my excuses. And this
is my tale and my history!
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