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Then,
taking leave of his sovereign, he returned to his house, where he equipped
himself and his daughter and his adopted child Ajib with all things meet for a
long march, and set out and traveled the first day and the second and the third
and so forth till he arrived at Damascus city. The Wazir encamped on the open
space called AlHasa, and after pitching tents, said to his servants, "A
halt here for two days!" So they went into the city upon their several
occasions, this to sell and that to buy, this to go to the hammam and that to
visit the cathedral mosque of the Banu Umayyah, the Ommiades, whose like is not
in this world. Ajib also went, with his attendant eunuch, for solace and
diversion to the city, and the servant followed with a quarterstaff of almond
wood so heavy that if he struck a camel therewith the beast would never rise
again.
When
the people of Damascus saw Ajib's beauty and brilliancy and perfect grace and
symmetry (for he was a marvel of comeliness and winning loveliness, softer than
the cool breeze of the North, sweeter than limpid waters to man in drought, and
pleasanter than the health for which sick man sueth), a mighty many followed
him, whilst others ran on before and sat down on the road until he should come
up, that they might gaze on him, till, as Destiny stopped opposite the shop of
Ajib's father, Badr al-Din Hasan. Now his beard had grown long and thick and
his wits had ripened during the twelve years which had passed over him, and the
cook and ex-rogue having died, the so-called Hasan of Bassorah had succeeded to
his goods and shop, for that he had been formally adopted before the kazi and
witnesses. When his son and the eunuch stepped before him, he gazed on Ajib
and, seeing how very beautiful he was, his heart fluttered and throbbed, and
blood drew to blood and natural affection spake out and his bowels yearned over
him. He had just dressed a conserve of pomegranate grains with sugar, and
Heaven implanted love wrought within him, so he called to his son Ajib and
said: "O my lord, O thou who hast gotten the mastery of my heart and my
very vitals and to whom my bowels yearn, say me, wilt thou enter my house and
solace my soul by eating of my meat?"
Then
his eyes streamed with tears which he could not stay, for he bethought him of
what he had been and what he had become. When Ajib heard his father's words,
his heart also yearned himward, and he looked at the eunuch and said to him:
"Of a truth, O my good guard, my heart yearns to this cook. He is as one
that hath a son far away from him. So let us enter and gladden his heart by
tasting of his hospitality. Perchance for our so doing Allah may reunite me
with my father." When the eunuch heard these words, he cried: "A fine
thing this, by Allah! Shall the sons of Wazirs be seen eating in a common
cookshop? Indeed I keep off the folk from thee with this quarterstaff lest they
even look upon thee, and I dare not suffer thee to enter this shop at
all."
When
Hasan of Bassorah heard his speech he marveled and turned to the eunuch with
the tears pouring down his cheeks, and Ajib said, "Verily my heart loves
him!" But he answered: "Leave this talk. Thou shalt not go in."
Thereupon the father turned to the eunuch and said, "O worthy sir, why
wilt thou not gladden my soul by entering my shop? O thou who art like a
chestnut, dark without but white of heart within! O thou of the like, of whom a
certain poet said..." The eunuch burst out a-laughing and asked:
"Said what? Speak out, by Allah, and be quick about it." So Hasan the
Bassorite began reciting these couplets:
"If not master of manners or aught but discreet,
In the
household of kings no trust could he take,
And
then for the harem! What eunuch is he
Whom
angels would serve for his service' sake?"
The
eunuch marveled and was pleased at these words, so he took Ajib by the hand and
went into the cook's shop; whereupon Hasan the Bassorite ladled into a saucer
some conserve of pomegranate grains wonderfully good, dressed with almonds and
sugar, saying: "You have honored me with your company. Eat, then, and
health and happiness to you!" Thereupon Ajib said to his father, "Sit
thee down and eat with us, so perchance Allah may unite us with him we long
for." Quoth Hasan, "O my son, hast thou then been afflicted in thy
tender years with parting from those thou lovest?" Quoth Ajib: "Even
so, O nuncle mine. My heart burns for the loss of a beloved one who is none
other than my father, and indeed I come forth, I and my grandfather, to circle
and search the world for him. Oh, the pity of it, and how I long to meet
him!" Then he wept with exceeding weeping, and his father also wept seeing
him weep and for his own bereavement, which recalled to him his long separation
from dear friends and from his mother, and the eunuch was moved to pity for
him.
Then
they ate together till they were satisfied, and Ajib and the slave rose and
left the shop. Hereat Hasan the Bassorite felt as though his soul had departed
his body and had gone with them, for he could not lose sight of the boy during
the twinkling of an eye, albeit he knew not that Ajib was his son. So he locked
up his shop and hastened after them, and he walked so fast that he came up with
them before they had gone out of the western gate. The eunuch turned and asked
him, "What ails thee?" and Badr al-Din answered, "When ye went
from me, meseemed my soul had gone with you, and as I had business without the
city gate, I purposed to bear you company till my matter was ordered, and so
return." The eunuch was angered, and said to Ajib: "This is just what
I feared! We ate that unlucky mouthful (which we are bound to respect), and
here is the fellow following us from place to place, for the vulgar are ever
the vulgar."
Ajib,
turning and seeing the cook just behind him, was wroth, and his face reddened
with rage and he said to the servant: "Let him walk the highway of the
Moslems, but when we turn off it to our tents and find that he still follows
us, we will send him about his business with a flea in his ear." Then he
bowed his head and walked on, the eunuch walking behind him. But Hasan of
Bassorah followed them to the plain Al-Hasa, and as they drew near to the
tents, they turned round and saw him close on their heels, so Ajib was very
angry, fearing that the eunuch might tell his grandfather what had happened.
His indignation was the hotter for apprehension lest any say that after he had
entered a cookshop the cook had followed him. So he turned and looked at Hasan
of Bassorah and found his eyes fixed on his own, for the father had become a
body without a soul, and it seemed to Ajib that his eye was a treacherous eye
or that he was some lewd fellow.
So
his rage redoubled and, stooping down, he took up a stone weighing half a pound
and threw it at his father. It struck him on the forehead, cutting it open from
eyebrow to eyebrow and causing the blood to stream down, and Hasan fell to the
ground in a swoon whilst Ajib and the eunuch made for the tents. When the
father came to himself, he wiped away the blood and tore off a strip from his
turban and bound up his head, blaming himself the while, and saying, "I
wronged the lad by shutting up my shop and following, so that he thought I was
some evil-minded fellow." Then he returned to his place, where he busied
himself with the sale of his sweetmeats, and he yeamed after his mother at
Bassorah, and wept over her and broke out repeating:
"Unjust it were to bid the world be just
And
blame her not. She ne'er was made for justice.
Take
what she gives thee, leave all grief aside,
For
now to fair and then to foul her lust is."
So
Hasan of Bassorah set himself steadily to sell his sweetmeats, but the Wazir,
his uncle, halted in Damascus three days and then marched upon Emesa, and
passing through that town, he made inquiry there, and at every place where he
rested. Thence he fared on by way of Hamah and Aleppo and thence through Diyar
Bakr and Maridin and Mosul, still inquiring, till he arrived at Bassorah city.
Here, as soon as he had secured a lodging, he presented himself before the
Sultan, who entreated him with high honor and the respect due to his rank, and
asked the cause of his coming. The Wazir acquainted him with his history and
told him that the Minister Nur al-Din was his brother, whereupon the Sultan
exclaimed, "Allah have mercy upon him!" and added: "My good
Sahib, he was my Wazir for fifteen years and I loved him exceedingly. Then he
died leaving a son who abode only a single month after his father's death,
since which time he has disappeared and we could gain no tidings of him. But
his mother, who is the daughter of my former Minister, is still among us."
When
the Wazir Shams al-Din heard that his nephew's mother was alive and well, he
rejoiced and said, "O King, I much desire to meet her." The King on
the instant gave him leave to visit her, so he betook himself to the mansion of
his brother Nur al-Din and cast sorrowful glances on all things in and around
it and kissed the threshold. Then he bethought him of his brother Nur al-Din
Ali, and how he had died in a strange land far from kith and kin and friends,
and he wept and repeated these lines:
"I wander 'mid these walls, my Lavla's walls,
And kissing
this and other wall I roam.
'Tis
not the walls or roof my heart so loves,
But
those who in this house had made their home."
Then
he passed through the gate into a courtyard and found a vaulted doorway builded
of hardest syenite inlaid with sundry kinds of multicolored marble. Into this
he walked, and wandered about the house and, throwing many a glance around, saw
the name of his brother Nur al-Din written in gold wash upon the walls. So he
went up to the inscription and kissed it and wept and thought of how he had
been separated from his brother and had now lost him forever.
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