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When
the Prince heard these words, he drew near to the merchant and began
questioning him discreetly and courteously touching the name of the city and of
its King, which when he knew, he passed the night full of joy. And as soon as
dawned the day he set out and traveled sans surcease till he reached that city.
But when he would have entered, the gatekeepers laid hands on him, that they
might bring him before the King to question him of his condition and the craft
in which he skilled and the cause of his coming thither- such being the usage
and custom of their ruler. Now it was suppertime when he entered the city, and
it was then impossible to go in to the King or take counsel with him respecting
the stranger. So the guards carried him to the jail, thinking to lay him by the
heels there for the night. But when the warders saw his beauty and loveliness,
they could not find it in their hearts to imprison him. They made him sit with
them without the walls, and when food came to them, he ate with them what
sufficed him.
As
soon as they had made an end of eating, they turned to the Prince and said,
"What countryman art thou?" "I come from Fars," answered
he, "the land of the Chosroes." When they heard this, they laughed
and one of them said: "O Chosroan, I have heard the talk of men and their
histories and I have looked into their conditions, but never saw I or heard I a
bigger liar than the Chosroan which is with us in the jail." Quoth
another, "And never did I see aught fouler than his favor or more hideous
than his visnomy." Asked the Prince, "What have ye seen of his
lying?" and they answered: "He pretendeth that he is one of the wise!
Now the King came upon him as he went a-hunting, and found with him a most
beautiful woman and a horse of the blackest ebony- never saw I a handsomer. As
for the damsel, she is with the King, who is enamored of her and would fain
marry her. But she is mad, and were this man a leech, as he claimeth to be, he
would have healed her, for the King doth his utmost to discover a cure for her
case and a remedy for her disease, and this whole year past hath he spent
treasures upon physicians and astrologers on her account, but none can avail to
cure her. As for the horse, it is in the royal hoard house, and the ugly man is
here with us in prison, and as soon as night falleth, he weepeth and bemoaneth
himself and will not let us sleep."
When
the warders had recounted the case of the Persian egromancer they held in
prison and his weeping and wailing, the Prince at once devised a device whereby
he might compass his desire, and presently the guards of the gate, being minded
to sleep, led him into the jail and locked the door. So he overheard the
Persian weeping and bemoaning himself in his own tongue, and saying:
"Alack, and alas for my sin, that I sinned against myself and against the
King's son, in that which I did with the damsel, for I neither left her nor won
my will of her! All this cometh of my lack of sense, in that I sought for
myself that which I deserved not and which befitted not the like of me. For
whoso seeketh what suiteth him not at all, falleth with the like of my
fall." Now when the King's son heard this, he accosted him in Persian,
saying: "How long will this weeping and wailing last? Say me, thinkest
thou that hath befallen thee that which never befell other than thou?"
Now
when the Persian heard this, he made friends with him and began to complain to
him of his case and misfortunes. And as soon as the morning morrowed, the
warders took the Prince and carried him before their King, informing him that
he had entered the city on the previous night, at a time when audience was impossible.
Quoth the King to the Prince, "Whence comest thou, and what is thy name
and trade, and why hast thou traveled hither?" He replied: "As to my
name, I am called in Persian Harjah. As to my country, I come from the land of
Fars, and I am of the men of art and especially of the art of medicine and
healing the sick and those whom the Jinns drive mad. For this I go round about
all countries and cities, to profit by adding knowledge to my knowledge, and
whenever I see a patient I heal him, and this is my craft." Now when the
King heard this, he rejoiced with exceeding joy and said, "O excellent
sage, thou hast indeed come to us at a time when we need thee." Then he
acquainted him with the case of the Princess, adding, "If thou cure her
and recover her from her madness, thou shalt have of me everything thou
seekest." Replied the Prince, "Allah save and favor the King.
Describe to me all thou hast seen of her insanity, and tell me how long it is
since the access attacked her, also how thou camest by her and the horse and
the sage."
So
the King told him the whole story, from first to last, adding, "The sage
is in jail." Quoth the Prince, "O auspicious King, and what hast thou
done with the horse?" Quoth the King, "O youth, it is with me yet,
laid up in one of my treasure chambers." Whereupon said the Prince within
himself: "The best thing I can do is first to see the horse and assure
myself of its condition. If it be whole and sound, all will be well and end
well. But if its motor works be destroyed, I must find some other way of
delivering my beloved." Thereupon he turned to the King and said to him:
"O King, I must see the horse in question. Haply I may find in it somewhat
that will serve me for the recovery of the damsel." "With all my heart,"
replied the King, and taking him by the hand, showed him into the place where
the horse was. The Prince went round about it, examining its condition, and
found it whole and sound, whereat he rejoiced greatly and said to the King:
"Allah save and exalt the King! I would fain go in to the damsel, that I
may see how it is with her, for I hope in Allah to heal her by my healing hand
through means of the horse." Then he bade them take care of the horse and
the King carried him to the Princess's apartment, where her lover found her
wringing her hands and writhing and beating herself against the ground, and
tearing her garments to tatters as was her wont. But there was no madness of
Jinn in her, and she did this but that none might approach her.
When
the Prince saw her thus, he said to her, "No harm shall betide thee, O
ravishment of the Three Worlds," and went on to soothe her and speak her
fair, till he managed to whisper, "I am Kamar al-Akmar," whereupon
she cried out with a loud cry and fell down fainting for excess of joy. But the
King thought this was epilepsy brought on by her fear of him, and by her
suddenly being startled. Then the Prince put his mouth to her ear and said to
her: "O Shams al-Nahar, O seduction of the universe, have a care for thy
life and mine and be patient and constant; for this our position needeth
sufferance and skillful contrivance to make shift for our delivery from this
tyrannical King. My first move will be now to go out to him and tell him that
thou art possessed of a Jinn and hence thy madness, but that I will engage to
heal thee and drive away the evil spirit if he will at once unbind thy bonds.
So when he cometh in to thee, do thou speak him smooth words, that he may think
I have cured thee, and all will be done for us as we desire." Quoth she,
"Hearkening and obedience," and he went out to the King in joy and
gladness, and said to him: "O august King, I have, by thy good fortune,
discovered her disease and its remedy, and have cured her for thee. So now do
thou go in to and speak her softly and treat her kindly, and promise her what
thou desirest of her be accomplished to thee."
Thereupon
the King went in to her, and when she saw him, she rose and kissing the ground
before him, bade him welcome and said, "I admire how thou hast come to
visit thy handmaid this day." Whereat he was ready to fly for joy and bade
the waiting women and the eunuchs attend her and carry her to the hammam and
make ready for her dresses and adornment. So they went in to her and saluted
her, and she returned their salaams with the goodliest language and after the
pleasantest fashion. Whereupon they clad her in royal apparel and, clasping a
collar of jewels about her neck, carried her to the bath and served her there.
Then they brought her forth as she were the full moon, and when she came into
the King's presence, she saluted him and kissed ground before him. Whereupon he
joyed in her with joy exceeding and said to the Prince: "O Sage, O
Philosopher, all this is of thy blessing. Allah increase to us the benefit of
thy healing breath!" The Prince replied: "O King, for the completion
of her cure it behooveth that thou go forth, thou and all thy troops and
guards, to the place where thou foundest her, not forgetting the beast of black
wood which was with her. For therein is a devil, and unless I exorcise him, he
will return to her and afflict her at the head of every month." "With
love and gladness," cried the King, "O thou Prince of all
philosophers and most learned of all who see the light of day."
Then
he brought out the ebony horse to the meadow in question and rode thither with
all his troops and the Princess, little weeting the purpose of the Prince. Now
when they came to the appointed place, the Prince, still habited as a leech,
bade them set the Princess and the steed as far as eye could reach from the
King and his troops, and said to him: "With thy leave, and at thy word, I
will now proceed to the fumigations and conjurations, and here imprison the
adversary of mankind, that he may never more return to her. After this, I shall
mount this wooden horse, which seemeth to be made of ebony, and take the damsel
up behind me, whereupon it will shake and sway to and fro and fare forward till
it come to thee, when the affair will be at an end. And after this thou mayest
do with her as thou wilt." When the King heard his words, he rejoiced with
extreme joy, so the Prince mounted the horse, and taking the damsel up behind
him, whilst the King and his troops watched him, bound her fast to him. Then he
turned the ascending pin and the horse took flight and soared with them high in
air, till they disappeared from every eye.
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