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Now
when the King heard these words, his wrath cooled, and he raised the curtain
little by little and looking in, saw sitting at talk with his daughter a Prince
of the goodliest, with a face like the full moon for sheen. At this sight he
could not contain himself, of his jealousy for his daughter's honor, and
putting aside the curtain, rushed in upon them drawn sword in hand like a
furious Ghul. Now when the Prince saw him he asked the Princess, "Is this
thy sire?" and she answered, "Yes." Whereupon he sprang, to his
feet and, seizing his sword, cried out at the King with so terrible a cry that
he was confounded. Then the youth would have fallen on him with the sword, but
the King, seeing that the Prince was doughtier than he, sheathed his scimitar
and stood till the young man came up to him, when he accosted him courteously
and said to him, "O youth, art thou a man or a Jinni?" Quoth the
Prince: "Did I not respect thy right as mine host and thy daughter's
honor, I would spill thy blood! How darest thou fellow me with devils, me that
am a Prince of the sons of the royal Chosroes, who, had they wished to take thy
kingdom, could shake thee like an earthquake from thy glory and thy dominions,
and spoil thee of all thy possessions?"
Now
when the King heard his words, he was confounded with awe and bodily fear of
him and rejoined: "If thou indeed be of the sons of the Kings, as thou
pretendest, how cometh it that thou enterest my palace without my permission, and
smirchest mine honor, making thy way to my daughter and feigning that thou art
her husband and claiming that I have given her to thee to wife, I that have
slain kings and king's sons who sought her of me in marriage? And now who shall
save thee from my might and majesty when, if I cried out to my slaves and
servants and bade them put thee to the vilest of deaths, they would slay thee
forthright? Who shall deliver thee out of my hand?"
When
the Prince heard this speech of the King, he answered: "Verily, I wonder
at thee and at the shortness and denseness of thy wit! Say me, canst covet for
thy daughter a mate comelier than myself, and hast ever seen a stouter-hearted
man or one better fitted for a Sultan or a more glorious in rank and dominion
than I?" Rejoined the King: "Nay, by Allah! But I would have had
thee, O youth, act after the custom of kings and demand her from me to wife
before witnesses, that I might have married her to thee publicly. And now, even
were I to marry her to thee privily, yet hast thou dishonored me in her
person." Rejoined the Prince: "Thou sayest sooth, O King, but if thou
summon thy slaves and thy soldiers and they fall upon me and slay me, as thou
pretendest, thou wouldst but publish thine own disgrace, and the folk would be
divided between belief in thee and disbelief in thee. Wherefore, O King, thou
wilt do well, meseemeth, to turn from this thought to that which I shall
counsel thee." Quoth the King, "Let me hear what thou hast to
advise," and quoth the Prince:
"What
I have to propose to thee is this: Either do thou meet me in combat singular, I
and thou, and he who slayeth his adversary shall be held the worthier and
having a better title to the kingdom; or else let me be this night, and whenas
dawns the morn, draw out against me thy horsemen and footmen and servants, but
first tell me their number." Said the King, "They are forty thousand
horse, besides my own slaves and their followers, who are the like of them in
number." Thereupon said the Prince: "When the day shall break, do
thou array them against me and say to them: 'This man is a suitor to me for my
daughter's hand, on condition that he shall do battle singlehanded against you
all; for he pretendeth that he will overcome you and put you to the rout, and
indeed that ye cannot prevail against him.' After which, leave me to do battle
with them. If they slay me, then is thy secret the surer guarded and thine
honor the better warded, and if I overcome them and see their backs, then is it
the like of me a king should covet to his son-in-law."
So
the King approved of his opinion and accepted his proposition, despite his awe
at the boldness of his speech and amaze at the pretensions of the Prince to
meet in fight his whole host, such as he had described it to him, being at heart
assured that he would perish in the fray and so he should be quit of him and
freed from the fear of dishonor. Thereupon he called the eunuch and bade him go
to his Wazir without stay and delay and command him to assemble the whole of
the army and cause them don their arms and armor and mount their steeds. So the
eunuch carried the King's order to the Minister, who straightway summoned the
captains of the host and the lords of the realm and bade them don their harness
of derring-do and mount horse and sally forth in battle array.
Such
was their case, but as regards the King, he sat a long while conversing with
the young Prince, being pleased with his wise speech and good sense and fine
breeding. And when it was daybreak, he returned to his palace and, seating
himself on his throne, commanded his merry men to mount, and bade them saddle
one of the best of the royal steeds with handsome selle and housings and
trappings and bring it to the Prince. But the youth said, "O King, I will
not mount horse till I come in view of the troops and review them."
"Be it as thou wilt," replied the King. Then the two repaired to the
parade ground where the troops were drawn up, and the young Prince looked upon
them and noted their great number. After which the King cried out to them,
saying: "Ho, all ye men, there is come to me a youth who seeketh my
daughter in marriage, and in very sooth never have I seen a goodlier than he-
no, nor a stouter of heart nor a doughtier of arm, for he pretendeth that he
can overcome you singlehanded, and force you to flight and that, were ye a
hundred thousand in number, yet for him would ye be but few. Now when he
chargeth down on you, do ye receive him upon point of pike and sharp of saber,
for indeed he hath undertaken a mighty matter."
Then
quoth the King to the Prince, "Up, O my son, and do thy devoir on
them." Answered he: "O King, thou dealest not justly and fairly by
me. How shall I go forth against them, seeing that I am afoot and the men be
mounted?" The King retorted, "I bade thee mount, and thou refusedst,
but choose thou which of my horses thou wilt." Then he said, "Not one
of thy horses pleaseth me, and I will ride none but that on which I came."
Asked the King, "And where is thy horse?" "Atop of thy
palace." "In what part of my palace?" "On the roof."
Now when the King heard these words, he cried: "Out on thee! This is the
first sip thou hast given of madness. How can the horse be on the roof.? But we
shall at once see if thou speak truth or lies." Then he turned to one of
his chief officers and said to him, "Go to my palace and bring me what
thou findest on the roof." So all the people marveled at the young
Prince's words, saying one to other, "How can a horse come down the steps
from the roof.? Verily this is a thing whose like we never heard."
In
the meantime the King's messenger repaired to the palace and, mounting to the
roof, found the horse standing there, and never had he looked on a handsomer.
But when he drew near and examined it, he saw that it was made of ebony and
ivory. Now the officer was accompanied by other high officers, who also looked
on, and they laughed to one another, saying: "Was it of the like of this
horse that the youth spake? We cannot deem him other than mad. However, we
shall soon see the truth of his case. Peradventure herein is some mighty
matter, and he is a man of high degree." Then they lifted up the horse
bodily, carrying it to the King, set it down before him. And all the lieges
flocked round to look at it, marveling at the beauty of its proportions and the
richness of its saddle and bridle. The King also admired it, and wondered at it
with extreme wonder, and he asked the Prince, "O youth, is this thy
horse?" He answered, "Yes, O King, this is my horse, and thou shalt
soon see the marvel it showeth." Rejoined the King, "Then take and
mount it," and the Prince retorted, "I will not mount till the troops
withdraw afar from it."
So
the King bade them retire a bowshot from the horse, whereupon quoth its owner:
"O King, see thou, I am about to mount my horse and charge upon thy host
and scatter them right and left and split their hearts asunder." Said the
King, "Do as thou wilt, and spare not their lives, for they will not spare
thine." Then the Prince mounted, whilst the troops ranged themselves in
ranks before him, and one said to another, "When the youth cometh between
the ranks, we will take him on the points of our pikes and the sharps of our
sabers." Quoth another: "By Allah, this is a mere misfortune. How
shall we slay a youth so comely of face and shapely of form?" And a third
continued: "Ye will have hard work to get the better of him, for the youth
had not done this but for what he knew of his own prowess and pre-eminence of valor."
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