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On
the fourth day the Sheikh, my host, came in to me and said: "Thou cheerest
us with thy company, O my son, and praised be Allah for thy safety! Say, wilt
thou now come down with me to the beach and the bazaar and sell thy goods and
take their price? Belike thou mayest buy thee wherewithal to traffic. I have
ordered my servants to remove thy stock in trade from the sea, and they have
piled it on the shore." I was silent awhile and said to myself, "What
mean these words, and what goods have I?" Then said he: "O my son, be
not troubled nor careful, but come with me to the market, and if any offer for
thy goods what price contenteth thee, take it. But an thou be not satisfied, I
lay em up for thee in my warehouse, against a fitting occasion for sale."
So I bethought me of my case and said to myself, "Do his bidding and see
what are these goods!" and I said to him: "O my nuncle the Sheikh I
hear and obey. I may not gainsay thee in aught, for Allah's blessing is on all
thou dost."
Accordingly
he guided me to the market street, where I found that he had taken in pieces
the raft which carried me and which was of sandalwood, and I heard the broker
crying it for sale. Then the merchants came and opened the gate of bidding for
the wood and bid against one another till its price reached a thousand dinars,
when they left bidding and my host said to me: "Hear, O my son, this is
the current price of thy goods in hard times like these. Wilt thou sell them
for this, or shall I lay them up for thee in my storehouses till such time as
prices rise?" "O my lord," answered I, "the business is in
thy hands. Do as thou wilt." Then asked he: "Wilt thou sell the wood
to me, O my son, for a hundred gold pieces over and above what the merchants
have bidden for it?" and I answered, "Yes, I have sold it to thee for
monies received." So he bade his servants transport the wood to his
storehouses, and, carrying me back to his house, seated me, and counted out to
me the purchase money. After which he laid it in bags and, setting them in a
privy place, locked them up with an iron padlock and gave me its key.
Some
days after this the Sheikh said to me, "O my son, I have somewhat to
propose to thee, wherein I trust thou wilt do my bidding." Quoth I,
"What is it?" Quoth he: "I am a very old man, and have no son,
but I have a daughter who is young in years and fair of favor and endowed with
abounding wealth and beauty. Now I have a mind to marry her to thee, that thou
mayest abide with her in this our country. And I will make, thee master of all
I have in hand, for I am an old man and thou shalt stand in my stead." I
was silent for shame and made him no answer, whereupon he continued: "Do
my desire in this, O my son, for I wish but thy weal. And if thou wilt but as I
say, thou shalt have her at once and be as my son, and all that is under my
hand or that cometh to me shall be thine. If thou have a mind to traffic and
travel to thy native land, none shall hinder thee, and thy property will be at
thy sole disposal. So do as thou wilt." "By Allah, O my uncle,"
replied I, "thou art become to me even as my father, and I am a stranger
and have undergone many hardships, while for stress of that which I have
suffered naught of judgment or knowledge is left to me. It is for thee,
therefore, to decide what I shall do."
Hereupon
he sent his servants for the kazi and the witnesses and married me to his
daughter, making for us a noble marriage feast and high festival. When I went
in to her, I found her perfect in beauty and loveliness and symmetry and grace,
clad in rich raiment and covered with a profusion of ornaments and necklaces
and other trinkets of gold and silver and precious stones, worth a mint of
money, a price none could pay. She pleased me, and we loved each other, and I
abode with her in all solace and delight of life till her father was taken to
the mercy of Allah Almighty. So we shrouded him and buried him, and I laid
hands on the whole of his property and all his servants and slaves became mine.
Moreover, the merchants installed me in his office, for he was their sheikh and
their chief, and none of them purchased aught but with his knowledge and by his
leave. And now his rank passed on to me.
When
I became acquainted with the townsfolk, I found that at the beginning of each
month they were transformed, in that their faces changed and they became like
unto birds and they put forth wings wherewith they flew unto the upper regions
of the firmament; and none remained in the city save the women and children.
And I said in my mind, "When the first of the month cometh, I will ask one
of them to carry me with them, whither they go." So when the time came and
their complexion changed and their forms altered, I went in to one of the
townsfolk and said to him: "Allah upon thee! Carry me with thee, that I
might divert myself with the rest and return with you." "This may not
be," answered he. But I ceased not to solicit him, and I importuned him
till he consented. Then I went out in his company, without telling any of my
family or servants or friends, and he took me on his back and flew up with me
so high in air that I heard the angels glorifying God in the heavenly dome,
whereat I wondered and exclaimed: "Praised be Allah! Extolled be the
perfection of Allah!"
Hardly
had I made an end of pronouncing the tasbih- praised be Allah!- when there came
out a fire from Heaven and all but consumed the company. Whereupon they fied
from it and descended with curses upon me and, casting me down on a high
mountain, went away exceeding wroth with me, and left me there alone. As I
found myself in this plight, I repented of what I had done and reproached
myself for having undertaken that for which I was unable, saying: "There
is no Majesty and there is no Might save in Allah, the Glorious, the Great! No
sooner am I delivered from one affliction than I fall into a worse." And I
continued in this case, knowing not whither I should go, when lo! there came up
two young men, as they were moons, each using as a staff a rod of red gold. So
I approached them and saluted them; and when they returned my salaam, I said to
them: Allah upon you twain. Who are ye, and what are ye?" Quoth they,
"We are of the servants of the Most High Allah, abiding in this
mountain," and giving me a rod of red gold they had with them, went their
ways and left me.
I
walked on along the mountain ridge, staying my steps with the staff and
pondering the case of the two youths, when behold, a serpent came forth from
under the mountain, with a man in her jaws whom she had swallowed even to below
his navel, and he was crying out and saying, "Whoso delivereth me, Allah
will deliver him from all adversity!" So I went up to the the serpent and
smote her on the head with the golden staff, whereupon she cast the man forth
of her mouth. Then I smote her a second time, and she turned and fled,
whereupon he came up to me and said, "Since my deliverance from yonder
serpent hath been at thy hands I will never leave thee, and thou shalt be my
comrade on this mountain." "And welcome," answered I. So we
fared on along the mountain till we fell in with a company of folk, and I
looked and saw amongst them the very man who had carried me and cast me down
there. I went up to him and spake him fair, excusing to him and saying, "O
my comrade, it is not thus that friend should deal with friend." Quoth he,
"It was thou who well-nigh destroyed us by thy tasbih and thy glorifying
God on my back." Quoth I, "Pardon me, for I had no knowledge of this
matter, but if thou wilt take me with thee, I swear not to say a word."
So
he relented and consented to carry me with him, but he made an express
condition that so long as I abode on his back, I should abstain from
pronouncing the tasbih or otherwise glorifying God. Then I gave the wand of
gold to him whom I had delivered from the serpent and bade him farewell, and my
friend took me on his back and flew with me as before, till he brought me to
the city and set me down in my own house. My wife came to meet me and, saluting
me, gave me joy of my safety and then said: "Beware of going forth
hereafter with yonder folk, neither consort with them, for they are brethren of
the devils, and know not how to mention the name of Allah Almighty, neither
worship they Him." "And how did thy father with them?" asked I,
and she answered: "My father was not of them, neither did he as they. And
as now he is dead, methinks thou hadst better sell all we have and with the
price buy merchandise and journey to thine own country and people, and I with
thee; for I care not to tarry in this city, my father and my mother being
dead." So I sold all the Sheikh's property piecemeal, and looked for one
who should be journeying thence to Bassorah that I might join myself to him.
And
while thus doing I heard of a company of townsfolk who had a mind to make the
voyage but could not find them a ship, so they bought wood and built them a
great ship, wherein I took passage with them, and paid them all the hire. Then
we embarked, I and my wife, with all our movables, leaving our houses and
domains and so forth, and set sail, and ceased not sailing from island to
island and from sea to sea, with a fair wind and a favoring, till we arrived at
Bassorah safe and sound. I made no stay there, but freighted another vessel
and, transferring my goods to her, set out forthright for Baghdad city, where I
arrived in safety, and entering my quarter and repairing to my house,
forgathered with my family and friends and familiars and laid up my goods in my
warehouses.
When
my people, who, reckoning the period of my absence on this my seventh voyage,
had found it to be seven and twenty years and had given up all hope of me,
heard of my return, they came to welcome me and to give me joy of my safety.
And I related to them all that had befallen me, whereat they marveled with
exceeding marvel. Then I foreswore travel and vowed to Allah the Most High I
would venture no more by land or sea, for that this seventh and last voyage had
surfeited me of travel and adventure, and I thanked the Lord (be He praised and
glorified!), and blessed Him for having restored me to my kith and kin and
country and home. "Consider, therefore, O Sindbad, O Landsman,"
continued Sindbad the Seaman, "what sufferings I have undergone and what
perils and hardships I have endured before coming to my present state."
"Allah upon thee, O my Lord!" answered Sindbad the, Landsman.
"Pardon me the wrong I did thee." And they ceased not from friendship
and fellowship, abiding in all cheer and pleasures and solace of life till
there came to them the Destroyer of delights and the Sunderer of Societies, and
the Shatterer of palaces and the Caterer for Cemeteries; to wit, the Cup of
Death, and glory be to the Living One who dieth not! And there is a tale
touching
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