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Thereupon
the lad mustered up strength and girt the loins of resolution and did as the
Moroccan had bidden him, and hove up the slab with all ease when he pronounced
his name and the names of his parents, even as the magician had bidden him. And
as soon as the stone was raised he threw it aside, and there appeared before
him a sardab, a souterrain, whereunto led a case of some twelve stairs, and the
Maghrabi said: "O Aladdin, collect thy thoughts and do whatso I bid thee
to the minutest detail, nor fail in aught thereof. Go down with all care into
yonder vault until thou reach the bottom, and there shalt thou find a space
divided into four halls, and in each of these thou shalt see four golden jars
and others of virgin or and silver. Beware, however, lest thou take aught
therefrom or touch them, nor allow thy gown or its skirts even to brush the
jars or the walls. Leave them and fare forward until thou reach the fourth
hall, without lingering for a single moment on the way. And if thou do aught
contrary thereto, thou wilt at once be transformed and become a black stone.
When reaching the fourth hall, thou wilt find therein a door, which do thou
open, and pronouncing the names thou spakest over the slab, enter therethrough
into a garden adorned everywhere with fruit-bearing trees. This thou must
traverse by a path thou wilt see in front of thee measuring some fifty cubits
long beyond which thou wilt come upon an open saloon, and herein a ladder of
some thirty rungs. Thou shalt there find a lamp hanging from its ceiling, so
mount the ladder and take that lamp and place it in thy breast pocket after
pouring out its contents. Nor fear evil from it for thy clothes, because its
contents are not common oil. And on return thou art allowed to pluck from the
trees whoso thou pleasest, for all is thine so long as the lamp is in thy
hand."
Now
when the Moorman ended his charge to Aladdin, he drew off a seal ring and put
it upon the lad's forefinger, saying: "O my son, verily this signet shall
free thee from all hurt and fear which may threaten thee, but only on condition
that thou bear in mind all I have told thee. So arise straightway and go down
the stairs, strengthening thy purpose and girding the loins of resolution.
Moreover, fear not, for thou art now a man and no longer a child. And in
shortest time, O my son, thou shalt will thee immense riches and thou shalt
become the wealthiest of the world."
Accordingly,
Aladdin arose and descended into the souterrain, where he found the four jars,
each containing four jars of gold, and these he passed by as the Moroccan had
bidden him, with the utmost care and caution. Thence he fared into the garden
and walked along its length until he entered the saloon, where he mounted the
ladder and took the lamp, which he extinguished, pouring out the oil which was
therein, and placed it in his breast pocket. Presently, descending the ladder,
he returned to the garden, where he fell to gazing at the trees, whereupon sat
birds glorifying with loud voices their Great Creator. Now he had not observed
them as he went in, but all these trees bare for fruitage costly gems.
Moreover, each had its own kind of growth and jewels of its peculiar sort and
these were of every color, green and white, yellow, red, and other such brilliant
hues, and the radiance flashing from these gems paled the rays of the sun in
forenoon sheen. Furthermore the size of each stone so far surpassed description
that no King of the Kings of the World owned a single gem equal to the larger
sort, nor could boast of even one half the size of the smaller kind of them.
Aladdin walked amongst the trees and gazed upon them and other things which
surprised the sight and bewildered the wits, and as he considered them, he saw
that in lieu of common fruits the produce was of mighty fine jewels and
precious stones, such as emeralds and diamonds, rubies, spinels, and balases,
pearls and similar gems, astounding the mental vision of man.
And
forasmuch as the lad had never beheld things like these during his born days,
nor had reached those years of discretion which would teach him the worth of
such valuables (he being still but a little lad), he fancied that all these
jewels were of glass or crystal. So he collected them until he had filled his
breast pockets, and began to certify himself if they were or were not common
fruits, such as grapes, figs, and suchlike edibles. But seeing them of glassy
substance, he, in his ignorance of precious stones and their prices, gathered
into his breast pockets every kind of growth the trees afforded, and having
failed of his purpose in finding them food, he said in his mind, "I will
collect a portion of these glass fruits for playthings at home." So he
fell to plucking them in quantities and cramming them in his pokes and breast
pockets till these were stuffed full. After which he picked others which he
placed in his waist shawl and then, girding himself therewith, carried off all
he availed to, purposing to place them in the house by way of ornaments and, as
hath been mentioned, never imagining that they were other than glass.
Then
he hurried his pace in fear of his uncle, the Maghrabi, until he had passed
through the four halls and lastly on his return reached the souterrain, where
he cast not a look at the jars of gold, albeit he was able and allowed to take
of the contents on his way back. But when he came to the souterrain stairs and
clomb the steps till naught remained but the last, and finding this higher than
an the others, he was unable alone and unassisted, burthened moreover as he was,
to mount it. So he said to the Maghrabi, "O my uncle, lend me thy hand and
aid me to climb." But the Moorman answered: "O my son, give me the
lamp and lighten thy load. Belike 'tis that weighteth thee down." The lad
rejoined: "O my uncle, 'tis not the lamp downweigheth me at all, but do
thou lend me a hand, and as soon as I reached ground I will give it to
thee." Hereat the Moroccan, the magician, whose only object was the lamp
and none other, began to insist upon Aladdin giving it to him at once. But the
lad (forasmuch as he had placed it at the bottom of his breast pocket and his
other pouches, being full of gems, bulged outward) could not reach it with his
fingers to hand it over, so the wizard after much vain persistency in requiring
what his nephew was unable to give fell to raging with furious rage and to
demanding the lamp, whilst Aladdin could not get at it. Yet had the lad
promised truthfully that he would give it up as soon as he might reach ground,
without lying thought or ill intent. But when the Moorman saw that he would not
hand it over, he waxed wroth with wrath exceeding and cut off all his hopes of
winning it. So he conjured and adjured and cast incense a-middlemost the fire,
when forthright the slab made a cover of itself, and by the might of magic
lidded the entrance. The earth buried the stone as it was aforetime, and
Aladdin, unable to issue forth, remained underground.
Now
the sorcerer was a stranger and, as we have mentioned, no uncle of Aladdin's,
and he had misrepresented himself and preferred a lying claim, to the end that
he might obtain the lamp by means of the lad for whom this hoard had been
upstored. So the accursed heaped the earth over him and left him to die of
hunger. For this Maghrabi was an African of Afrikiyah proper, born in the inner
Sunset Land, and from his earliest age upward he had been addicted to
witchcraft and had studied and practiced every manner of occult science, for
which unholy lore the city of Africa is notorious. And he ceased not to read
and hear lectures until he had become a past master in all such knowledge. And
of the abounding skill in spells and conjurations which he had acquired by the
perusing and the lessoning of forty years, one day of the days he discovered by
devilish inspiration that there lay in an extreme city of the cities of China,
named Al-Kal'as, an immense hoard, the like whereof none of the kings in this
world had ever accumulated. Moreover, that the most marvelous article in this
enchanted treasure was a wonderful lamp, which whoso possessed could not
possibly be surpassed by any man upon earth, either in high degree or in wealth
and opulence, nor could the mightiest monarch of the universe attain to the
all-sufficiency of this lamp with its might of magical means. When the Maghrabi
assured himself by his science and saw that this hoard could be opened only by
the presence of a lad named Aladdin, of pauper family and abiding in that very
city, and learnt how taking it would be easy and without hardships, he
straightway and without stay or delay equipped himself for a voyage to China
(as we have already told), and be did what he did with Aladdin fancying that he
would become Lord of the Lamp. But his attempt and his hopes were baffled and
his work was clean wasted. Whereupon, determining to do the lad die, he heaped
up the earth over him by gramarye to the end that the unfortunate might perish,
reflecting that "The live man hath no murtherer." Secondly, he did so
with the design that, as Aladdin could not come forth from underground, he would
also be impotent to bring out the lamp from the souterrain. So presently he
wended his ways and retired to his own land, Africa, a sadder man and
disappointed of all his expectations.
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