One Thousand and One Nights

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One Thousand and One Nights Page 161

by Richard Burton


  Return, and we return: keep faith, and so will we: Or, if thou wilt, forsake, and we’ll do like to thee!’

  With this the damsel overturned the frying-pan and went out by the way she had come, and the wall closed up again as before. Presently the cookmaid came to herself and seeing the four fish burnt black as coal, said, ‘My arms are broken in my first skirmish!’ And fell down again in a swoon. Whilst she was in this state, in came the Vizier, to seek the fish, and found her insensible, not knowing Saturday from Thursday. So he stirred her with his foot and she came to herself and wept and told him what had passed. He marvelled and said, ‘This is indeed a strange thing !’ Then he sent for the fisherman and said to him, ‘O fisherman, bring us four more fish of the same kind.’ So the fisherman repaired to the lake and cast his net and hauling it in, found in it four fish like the first and carried them to the Vizier, who took them to the cookmaid and said to her, ‘Come, fry them before me, that I may see what happens.’ So she cleaned the fish and setting the frying-pan on the fire, threw them into it: and they had not lain long before the wall opened and the damsel appeared, after the same fashion, and thrust the rod into the pan, saying, ‘O fish, O fish, are you constant to the old covenant?’ And behold the fish all lifted up their heads and cried out as before, ‘Yes, yes:

  Return, and we return: keep faith, and so will we: Or, if thou wilt, forsake, and we’ll do like to thee!’

  Then she overturned the pan and went out as she had come and the wall closed up again. When the Vizier saw this, he said, ‘This is a thing that must not be kept from the King. So he went to him and told him what he had witnessed; and the King said, ‘I must see this with my own eyes.’ Then he sent for the fisherman and commanded him to bring him other four fish like the first; and the fisherman went down at once to the lake and casting his net, caught other four fish and returned with them to the King, who ordered him other four hundred diners and set a guard upon him till he should see what happened. Then he turned to the Vizier and said to him, ‘Come thou and fry the fish before me.’ Quoth the Vizier, ‘I hear and obey.’ So he fetched the frying-pan and setting it on the fire, cleaned the fish and threw them in: but hardly had he turned them, when the wall opened, and out came a black slave, as he were a mountain or one of the survivors of the tribe of Aad, with a branch of a green tree in his hand: and he said, in a terrible voice, ‘O fish, O fish, are you constant to the old covenant?’ Whereupon they lifted up their heads and cried out’ ‘Yes, yes; we are constant:

  Return, and we return: keep faith, and so will we: Or, if thou wilt, forsake, and we’ll do like to thee!’

  Then the slave went up to the pan and overturning it with the branch, went out as he had come, and the wall closed up as before. The King looked at the fish and found them black as coal; whereat he was bewildered and said to the Vizier, ‘This is a thing about which it is impossible to keep silence; and indeed there must be some strange circumstance connected with these fish.’ Then he sent for the fisherman and said to him, ‘Hark ye, sirrah, whence hadst thou those fish?’ ‘From a lake between four hills,’ answered he, ‘on the thither side of the mountain behind the city.’ ‘How many days’ journey hence?’ asked the King; and the fisherman said, ‘O my lord Sultan, half an hour’s journey.’ At this the King was astonished and ordering the troops to mount, set out at once, followed by his suite and preceded by the fisherman, who began to curse the Afrit. They rode on over the mountain and descended into a wide plain, that they had never before set eyes on, whereat they were all amazed. Then they fared on till they came to the lake lying between the four hills and saw the fish therein of four colours, red and white and yellow and blue. The King stood and wondered and said to his attendants, ‘Has any one of you ever seen this lake before?’ But they answered, ‘Never did we set eyes on it in all our lives, O King of the age.’ Then he questioned those stricken in years, and they made him the same answer. Quoth he, ‘By Allah, I will not return to my capital nor sit down on my chair of estate till I know the secret of this pond and its fish!’ Then he ordered his people to encamp at the foot of the hills and called his Vizier, who was a man of learning and experience, sagacious and skilful in business, and said to him, ‘I mean to go forth alone to-night and enquire into the matter of the lake and these fish: wherefore do thou sit down at the door of my pavilion and tell the amirs and viziers and chamberlains and officers and all who ask after me that the Sultan is ailing and hath ordered thee to admit no one, and do thou acquaint none with my purpose.’ The Vizier dared not oppose his design; so the King disguised himself and girt on his sword and going forth privily, took a path that led over one of the hills and fared on all that night and the next day, till the heat overcame him and he paused to rest. Then he set out again and fared on the rest of that day and all the next night, till on the morning of the second day, he caught sight of some black thing in the distance, whereat he rejoiced and said, ‘Belike I shall find some one who can tell me the secret of the lake and the fish.’ So he walked on, till he came to the black object, when he found it a palace built of black stone, plated with iron; and one leaf of its gate was open and the other shut. At this the King rejoiced and went up to the gate and knocked lightly, but heard no answer. So he knocked a second time and a third time, with the same result. Then he knocked loudly, but still no one answered; and he said to himself, ‘It must be deserted.’ So he took courage and entering the vestibule, cried out, ‘Ho, people of the palace! I am a stranger and a wayfarer and hungry. Have ye any victual?’ He repeated these words a second and a third time, but none answered. So he took heart and went on boldly into the interior of the palace, which he found hung and furnished with silken stuffs, embroidered with stars of gold, and curtains let down before the doors. In the midst was a spacious courtyard, with four estrades, one on each side, and a bench of stone. Midmost the courtyard was a great basin of water, from which sprang a fountain, and at the corners stood four lions of red gold, spouting forth water as it were pearls and jewels; and the place was full of birds, which were hindered from flying away by a network of gold stretched overhead. The King looked right and left, but there was no one to be seen; whereat he marvelled and was vexed to find none of whom he might enquire concerning the lake and the fish and the palace itself. So he returned to the vestibule and sitting down between the doors, fell to musing upon what he had seen, when lo, he heard a moaning that came from a sorrowful heart, and a voice chanted the following verses:

  I hid what I endured from thee: it came to light, And sleep was

  changed to wake thenceforward to my sight.

  O Fate, thou sparest not nor dost desist from me; Lo, for my

  heart is racked with dolour and affright!

  Have pity, lady mine, upon the great laid low, Upon the rich made

  poor by love and its despite!

  Once, jealous of the breeze that blew on thee, I was, Alas! on

  whom Fate falls, his eyes are veiled with night.

  What boots the archer’s skill, if, when the foe draws near, His

  bow-string snap and leave him helpless in the fight?

  So when afflictions press upon the noble mind, Where shall a man

  from Fate and Destiny take flight?

  When the King heard this, he rose and followed the sound and found that it came from behind a curtain let down before the doorway of a sitting-chamber. So he raised the curtain and saw a young man seated upon a couch raised a cubit from the ground. He was a handsome well-shaped youth, with flower-white forehead and rosy cheeks and a black mole, like a grain of ambergris, on the table of his cheek, as says the poet:

  The slender one! From his brow and the night of his jetty hair,

  The world in alternate gloom and splendour of day doth fare.

  Blame not the mole on his cheek. Is an anemone’s cup Perfect,

  except in its midst an eyelet of black it wear?

  He was clad in a robe of silk, laced with Egyptian gold, and had on his head a crown set with
jewels, but his face bore traces of affliction. The King rejoiced when he saw him and saluted him; and the youth returned his salute in the most courteous wise, though without rising, and said to him, ‘O my lord, excuse me if I do not rise to thee, as is thy due; indeed, I am unable to do so.’ ‘I hold thee excused, O youth!’ answered the King. ‘I am thy guest and come to thee on a pressing errand, beseeching thee to expound to me the mystery of the lake and the fish and of this palace, and why thou sittest here alone and weeping.’ When the young man heard this, the tears ran down his cheeks and he wept sore, till his breast was drenched, and repeated the following verses:

  Say unto those that grieve, at whom doth Fate her arrows cast,

  “How many an one hath she raised up but to lay low at last!

  Lo, if ye sleep, the eye of God is never closed in sleep. For

  whom indeed is life serene, for whom is Fortune fast?”

  Then he gave a heavy sigh and repeated the following:

  Trust thine affair to the Ruler of all that be

  And put thought-taking and trouble away from thee:

  Say not of aught that is past, “How came it so?”

  All things depend upon the Divine decree.

  The King marvelled and said to him, ‘What makes thee weep, O youth?’ ‘How should I not weep,’ answered he ‘being in such a plight?’ Then he put out his hand and lifted the skirt of his robe, and behold, he was stone from the waist downward. When the King saw this his condition, he grieved sore and lamented and cried out, ‘Alas! alas!’ and said, ‘Verily, O youth, thou addest trouble to my trouble. I came to enquire concerning the fish; and now I am concerned to know thy history also. But there is no power and no virtue save in God the Most High, the Supreme! Hasten therefore, O youth, and expound to me thy story.’ Quoth the youth, ‘Give me thine ears and understanding:’ and the King replied, ‘I am all attention.’ Then said the youth, ‘There hangs a strange story by these fish and by myself, a story which, were it graven with needles on the corners of the eye, would serve as a warning to those who can profit by example. ‘How so ?’ asked the King and the youth replied, ‘Know, O my lord, that

  John Payne’s translation: detailed table of contents

  Story of the Enchanted Youth.

  My father was King of the city that stood in this place, and his name was Mohammed, Lord of the Black Islands, which are no other than the four hills of which thou wottest. He reigned seventy years, at the end of which time God took him to Himself, and I succeeded to his throne and took to wife the daughter of my father’s brother, who loved me with an exceeding love, so that, whenever I was absent from her, she would neither eat nor drink till she saw me again. With her I lived for five years, till one day she went out to go to the bath, and I bade the cook hasten supper for us against her return. Then I entered the palace and lay down on the bed where we were wont to lie and ordered two slave-girls to sit, one at my head and the other at my feet, and fan me. Now I was disturbed at my wife’s absence and could not sleep, but remained awake, although my eyes were closed. Presently I heard the damsel at my head say to the other one, “O Mesoudeh, how unhappy is our lord and how wretched is his youth, and oh, the pity of him with our accursed harlot of a mistress!” “Yes, indeed,” replied Mesoudeh; “may God curse all unfaithful women and adulteresses! Indeed, it befits not that the like of our lord should waste his youth with this harlot, who lies abroad every night.” Quoth the other, “Is our lord then a fool, that, when he wakes in the night and finds her not by his side, he makes no enquiry after her?” “Out on thee,” rejoined Mesoudeh; “has our lord any knowledge of this or does she leave him any choice? Does she not drug him every night in the cup of drink she gives him before he sleeps, in which she puts henbane? So he sleeps like a dead man and knows nothing of what happens. Then she dresses and scents herself and goes forth and is absent till daybreak, when she returns and burns a perfume under his nose and he awakes.” When I heard the girls’ talk, the light in my eyes became darkness, and I thought the night would never come. Presently, my wife returned from the bath, and they served up supper and we ate and sat awhile drinking and talking as usual. Then she called for my sleeping-draught and gave me the cup: and I feigned to drink it, but made shift to pour it into my bosom and lay down at once and began to snore as if I slept. Then said she, “Sleep out thy night and never rise again! By Allah, I hate thee and I hate thy person; I am sick of thy company and I know not when God will take away thy life!” Then she rose and donned her richest clothes and perfumed herself and girt on my sword and opened the palace gate and went out. I rose and followed her, and she passed through the streets of the city, till she came to the gate, when she muttered words I understood not: and straight-way the locks fell off and the gate opened. She went forth and fared on among the rubbish heaps, I still following her without her knowledge, till she came to a reed fence, within which was a hut of brick. She entered the hut and I climbed up on the roof and looking down, saw my wife standing by a scurvy black slave, with blubber lips, one of which overlapped the other, like a coverlet, and swept up the sand from the gravel floor, lying upon a bed of sugar-cane refuse and wrapped in an old cloak and a few rags. She kissed the earth before him, and he raised his head to her and said, “Out on thee! why hast thou tarried till now? There have been some of my kinsmen the blacks here, drinking; and they have gone away, each with his wench; but I refused to drink on account of thine absence.” “O my lord and my love and solace of my eyes,” answered she, “dost thou not know that I am married to my cousin, and that I hate to look upon him and abhor myself in his company. Did I not fear for thy sake, I would not let the sun rise again till his city was a heap of ruins wherein the owl and the raven should hoot and wolves and foxes harbour; and I would transport its stones behind the mountain Caf.” “Thou liest, O accursed one!” said the black, “and I swear by the valour of the blacks (else may our manhood be as that of the whites!) that if thou tarry again till this hour, I will no longer keep thee company nor join my body to thine! O accursed one, wilt thou play fast and loose with us at thy pleasure, O stinkard, O bitch, O vilest of whites?” When I heard and saw what passed between them, the world grew dark in my eyes and I knew not where I was; whilst my wife stood weeping and humbling herself to him and saying, “O my love and fruit of my heart, if thou be angry with me, who is left me, and if thou reject me, who shall shelter me, O my beloved and light of mine eyes?” And she ceased not to weep and implore him till he forgave her. Then she was glad and rose and putting off her clothes, said to the slave, “O my lord, hast thou aught here for thy handmaid to eat?” “Take the cover off yonder basin,” answered he; “thou wilt find under it cooked rats’ bones, and there is a little millet beer left in this pot. Eat and drink.” So she ate and drank and washed her hands and mouth; then lay down, naked, upon the rushes, beside the slave, and covered herself with the rags. When I saw this, I became as one distraught and coming down from the roof, went in by the door. Then I took the sword she had brought and drew it, thinking to kill them both. I struck first at the slave’s neck and thought I had made an end of him; but the blow only severed the flesh and the gullet, without dividing the jugulars. He gave a loud gurgling groan and roused my wife, whereupon I drew back, after I had restored the sword to its place, and resuming to the palace, lay down on my bed till morning, when my wife came and awoke me, and I saw that she had cut off her hair and put on mourning garments. “O my cousin,” said she, “do not blame me for this I have done; for I have news that my mother is dead, that my father has fallen in battle and that both my brothers are dead also, one of a snake-bite and the other of a fall from a precipice, so that I have good reason to weep and lament.” When I heard this, I did not reproach her, but said to her, “Do what thou wilt: I will not baulk thee.” She ceased not to mourn and lament for a whole year, at the end of which time she said to me, “I wish to build me in thy palace a tomb with a cupola and set it apart for mourning and call it House of Lamentations.” Quoth
I, “Do what seemeth good to thee.” So she built herself a house of mourning, roofed with a dome, and a monument in the midst like the tomb of a saint. Thither she transported the slave and lodged him in the tomb. He was exceeding weak and from the day I wounded him he had remained unable to do her any service or to speak or do aught but drink; but he was still alive, because his hour was not yet come. She used to visit him morning and evening in the mausoleum and carry him wine and broths to drink and weep and make moan over him; and thus she did for another year, whilst I ceased not to have patience with her and pay no heed to her doings, till one day I came upon her unawares and found her weeping and saying, “Why art thou absent from my sight, O delight of my heart? Speak to me, O my life! speak to me, O my love!” And she recited the following verses:

 

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