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Now
after the King my master had married me to this choice wife, he also gave me a
great and goodly house standing alone, together with slaves and officers, and
assigned me pay and allowances. So I became in all ease and contentment and
delight and forgot everything which had befallen me of weariness and trouble
and hardship. For I loved my wife with fondest love and she loved me no less,
and we were as one, and abode in the utmost comfort of life and in its
happiness. And I said in myself, "When I return to my native land, I will
carry her with me." But whatso is predestined to a man, that needs must
be, and none knoweth what shall befall him. We lived thus a great while, till
Almighty Allah bereft one of my neighbors of his wife. Now he was a gossip of
mine, so hearing the cry of the keeners, I went in to condole him on his loss
and found him in very ill plight, full of trouble and weary of soul and mind. I
condoled with him and comforted him, saying: "Mourn not for thy wife, who
hath now found the mercy of Allah. The Lord will surely give thee a better in
her stead, and thy name shall be great and thy life shall be long in the land,
Inshallah!"
But
he wept bitter tears and replied: "O my friend, how can I marry another
wife, and how shall Allah replace her to me with a better than she, whenas I
have but one day left to live?" "O my brother," said I,
"return to thy senses and announce not glad tidings of thine own death,
for thou art well, sound, and in good case." "By thy life, O my
friend," rejoined he, "tomorrow thou wilt lose me, and wilt never see
me again till the Day of Resurrection." I asked, "How so?" and
he answered: "This very day they bury my wife, and they bury me with her
in one tomb. For it is the custom with us, if the wife die first, to bury the
husband alive with her, and in like manner the wife if the husband die first,
so that neither may enjoy life after losing his or her mate." "By
Allah," cried I, "this is a most vile, lewd custom, and not to be
endured of any!" Meanwhile, behold, the most part of the townsfolk came in
and fell to condoling with my gossip for his wife and for himself.
Presently
they laid the dead woman out, as was their wont, and setting her on a bier,
carried her and her husband without the city till they came to a place in the
side of a mountain at the end of the island by the sea. And here they raised a
great rock and discovered the mouth of a stone-riveted pit or well, leading
down into a vast underground cavern that ran beneath the mountain. Into this
pit they threw the corpse, then, tying a rope of palm fibers under the
husband's armpits, they let him down into the cavern, and with him a great
pitcher of fresh water and seven scones by way of viaticum. When he came to the
bottom, he loosed himself from the rope and they drew it up, and stopping the
mouth of the pit with the great stone, they returned to the city, leaving my
friend in the cavern with his dead wife. When I saw this, I said to myself,
"By Allah, this fashion of death is more grievous than the first!"
And I went in to the King and said to him, "O my lord, why do ye bury the
quick with the dead?" Quoth he: "It hath been the custom, thou must
know, of our forebears and our olden kings from time immemorial, if the husband
die first, to bury his wife with him, and the like with the wife, so we may not
sever them, alive or dead." I asked, "O King of the Age, if the wife
of a foreigner like myself die among you, deal ye with him as with yonder
man?" and he answered, "Assuredly we do with him even as thou hast
seen." When I heard this, my gall bladder was like to burst, for the
violence of my dismay and concern for myself. My wit became dazed, I felt as if
in a vile dungeon, and hated their society, for I went about in fear lest my
wife should die before me and they bury me alive with her. However, after a
while I comforted myself, saying, "Haply I shall predecease her, or shall
have returned to my own land before she die, for none knoweth which shall go
first and which shall go last."
Then
I applied myself to diverting my mind from this thought with various
occupations, but it was not long before my wife sickened and complained and
took to her pillow and fared after a few days to the mercy of Allah. And the
King and the rest of the folk came, as was their wont, to condole with me and
her family and to console us for her loss, and not less to condole with me for
myself. Then the women washed her, and arraying her in her richest raiment and
golden ornaments, necklaces, and jewelry, laid her on the bier and bore her to
the mountain aforesaid, where they lifted the cover of the pit and cast her in.
After which all my intimates and acquaintances and my wife's kith and kin came
round me, to farewell me in my lifetime and console me for my own death, whilst
I cried out among them, saying: "Almighty Allah never made it lawful to
bury the quick with the dead! I am a stranger, not one of your kind, and I
cannot abear your custom, and had I known it I never would have wedded among
you!" They heard me not and paid no heed to my words, but laying hold of
me, bound me by force and let me down. into the cavern, with a large gugglet of
sweet water and seven cakes of bread, according to their custom. When I came to
the bottom, they called out to me to cast myself loose from the cords, but I
refused to do so, so they threw them down on me and, closing the mouth of the
pit with the stones aforesaid, went their ways.
I
looked about me and found myself in a vast cave full of dead bodies that
exhaled a fulsome and loathsome smell, and the air was heavy with the groans of
the dying. Thereupon I fell to blaming myself for what I had done, saying:
"By Allah, I deserve all that hath befallen me and all that shall befall
me! What curse was upon me to take a wife in this city? There is no Majesty and
there is no Might save in Allah, the Glorious, the Great! As often as I say I
have escaped from one calamity, I fall into a worse. By Allah, this is an
abominable death to die! Would Heaven I had died a decent death and been washed
and shrouded like a man and a Moslem. Would I had been drowned at sea, or
perished in the mountains! It were better than to die this miserable
death!" And on such wise I kept blaming my own folly and greed of gain in
that black hole, knowing not night from day, and I ceased not to ban the Foul
Fiend and to bless the Almighty Friend. Then I threw myself down on the bones
of the dead and lay there, imploring Allah's help, and in the violence of my
despair invoking death, which came not to me, till the fire of hunger burned my
stomach and thirst set my throat aflame, when I sat up and feeling for the
bread, ate a morsel and upon it swallowed a mouthful of water.
After
this, the worst night I ever knew, I arose, and exploring the, cavern, found
that it extended a long way with hollows in its sides, and its floor was strewn
with dead bodies and rotten bones that had lain there from olden time. So I
made myself a place in a cavity of the cavern, afar from the corpses lately
thrown down, and there slept. I abode thus a long while, till my provision was
like to give out, and yet I ate not save once every day or second day, nor did
I drink more than an occasional draught, for fear my victual should fail me
before my death. And I said to myself: "Eat little and drink little.
Belike the Lord shall vouchsafe deliverance to thee!" One day as I sat
thus, pondering my case and bethinking me how I should do when my bread and
water should be exhausted, behold, the stone that covered the opening was
suddenly rolled away and the light streamed down upon me. Quoth I: "I
wonder what is the matter. Haply they have brought another corpse." Then I
espied folk standing about the mouth of the pit, who presently let down a dead
man and a live woman, weeping and bemoaning herself, and with her an ampler
supply of bread and water than usual. I saw her and she was a beautiful woman,
but she saw me not. And they closed up the opening and went away. Then I took
the leg bone of a dead man and, going up to the woman, smote her on the crown
of the head, and she cried one cry and fell down in a swoon. I smote her a
second and a third time, till she was dead, when I laid hands on her bread and
water and found on her great plenty of ornaments and rich apparel, necklaces,
jewels and gold trinkets, for it was their custom to bury women in all their
finery. I carried the vivers to my sleeping place in the cavern side and ate
and drank of them sparingly, no more than sufficed to keep the life in me, lest
the provaunt come speedily to an end and I perish of hunger and thirst.
Yet
did I never wholly lose hope in Almighty Allah. I abode thus a great while,
killing all the live folk they let down into the cavern and taking their
provisions of meat and drink, till one day, as I slept, I was awakened by
something scratching and burrowing among the bodies in a corner of the cave and
said, "What can this be?" fearing wolves or hyenas. So I sprang up,
and seizing the leg bone aforesaid, made for the noise. As soon as the thing
was ware of me, it fled from me into the inward of the cavern, and lo! it was a
wild beast. However, I followed it to the further end, till I saw afar off a point
of light not bigger than a star, now appearing and then disappearing. So I made
for it, and as I drew near, it grew larger and brighter, till I was certified
that it was a crevice in the rock, leading to the open country, and I said to
myself: "There must be some reason for this opening. Either it is the
mouth of a second pit such as that by which they let me down, or else it is a
natural fissure in the stonery." So I bethought me awhile, and nearing the
light, found that it came from a breach in the back side of the mountain, which
the wild beasts had enlarged by burrowing, that they might enter and devour the
dead and freely go to and from. When I saw this, my spirits revived and hope
came back to me and I made sure of life, after having died a death. So I went
on, as in a dream, and making shift to scramble through the breach, found
myself on the slope of a high mountain overlooking the salt sea and cutting off
all access thereto from the island, so that none could come at that part of the
beach from the city. I praised my Lord and thanked Him, rejoicing greatly and
heartening myself with the prospect of deliverance.
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