The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night, vol 1 by Sir Richard Francis Burton (classic literature list TXT) ๐
- Introduction
- Story Of King Shahryar and His Brother
- a. Tale of the Bull and the Ass
- 1. Tale of the Trader and the Jinni
- a. The First Shaykh's Story
- b. The Second Shaykh's Story
- c. The Third Shaykh's Story
- 2. The Fisherman and the Jinni
- a. Tale of the Wazir and the Sage Duban
- ab. Story of King Sindibad and His Falcon
- ac. Tale of the Husband and the Parrot
- ad. Tale of the Prince and the Ogress
- b. Tale of the Ensorcelled Prince
- a. Tale of the Wazir and the Sage Duban
- 3. The Porter and the Three Ladies of Baghdad
- a. The First Kalandar's Tale
- b. The Second Kalandar's Tale
- ba. Tale of the Envier and the Envied
- c. The Third Kalandar's Tale
- d. The Eldest Lady's Tale
- e. Tale of the Portress
- Conclusion of the Story of the Porter and the Three Ladies
- 4. Tale of the Three Apples
- 5. Tale of Nur Al-din Ali and his Son
- 6. The Hunchback's Tale
- a. The Nazarene Broker's Story
- b. The Reeve's Tale
- c. Tale of the Jewish Doctor
- d. Tale of the Tailor
- e. The Barber's Tale of Himself
- ea. The Barber's Tale of his First Brother
- eb. The Barber's Tale of his Second Brother
- ec. The Barber's Tale of his Third Brother
- ed. The Barber's Tale of his Fourth Brother
- ee. The Barber's Tale of his Fifth Brother
- ef. The Barber's Tale of his Sixth Brother
- The End of the Tailor's Tale
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- Author: Sir Richard Francis Burton
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O Thou who fearest Fate, confiding fare * Trust all to Him who built the world and wait:
What Fate saith โBeโ perforce must be, my lord! * And safe art thou from th undecreed of Fate.
As Duban the physician entered he addressed the King in these lines:โ
An fail I of my thanks to thee nor thank thee day by day * For whom com posed I prose and verse, for whom my say and lay?
Thou lavishedst thy generous gifts ere they were craved by me *
Thou lavishedst thy boons unsought sans pretext or delay: How shall I stint my praise of thee, how shall I cease to laud *
The grace of thee in secresy and patentest display?
Nay; I will thank thy benefits, for aye thy favours lie * Light on my thought and tongue, though heavy on my back they weigh.
And he said further on the same theme:โ
Turn thee from grief nor care a jot! * Commit thy needs to Fate and Lot!
Enjoy the Present passing well And let the Past be clean forgot For whatso haply seemeth worse Shall work thy weal as Allah wot
Allah shall do whateโer He wills * And in His will oppose Him not.
And further still.โ
To thโ All wise Subtle One trust worldly things * Rest thee from all whereto the worldling clings: Learn wisely well naught cometh by thy will * But eโen as willeth Allah, King of Kings.
And lastly.โ
Gladsome and gay forget shine every grief * Full often grief the wisest hearts outwore:
Thought is but folly in the feeble slave * Shun it and so be saved evermore.
Said the King for sole return, โKnowest thou why I have summoned thee?โ and the Sage replied, โAllah Most Highest alone kenneth hidden things!โ But the King rejoined, โI summoned thee only to take thy life and utterly to destroy thee.โ Duban the Wise wondered at this strange address with exceeding wonder and asked, โO King, and wherefore wouldest thou slay me, and what ill have I done thee?โ and the King answered, โMen tell me thou art a spy sent hither with intent to slay me; and lo! I will kill thee ere I be killed by thee;โ then he called to his Sworder, and said, โStrike me off the head of this traitor and deliver us from his evil practices.โ Quoth the Sage, โSpare me and Allah will spare thee; slay me not or Allah shall slay thee.โ And he repeated to him these very words, even as I to thee, O Ifrit, and yet thou wouldst not let me go, being bent upon my death. King Yunan only rejoined, โI shall not be safe without slaying thee; for, as thou healedst me by something held in hand, so am I not secure against thy killing me by something given me to smell or otherwise.โ Said the physician, โThis then, O King, is thy requital and reward; thou returnest only evil for good.โ The King replied, โThere is no help for it; die thou must and without delay.โ Now when the physician was certified that the King would slay him without waiting, he wept and regretted the good he had done to other than the good. As one hath said on this subject:โ
Of wit and wisdom is Maymunah[FN#98] bare * Whose sire in wisdom all the wits outstrippeth: Man may not tread on mud or dust or clay * Save by good sense, else trippeth he and slippeth.
Hereupon the Sworder stepped forward and bound the Sage Dubanโs eyes and bared his blade, saying to the King, โBy thy leave;โ
while the physician wept and cried, โSpare me and Allah will spare thee, and slay me not or Allah shall slay thee,โ and began repeating:โ
I was kind and โscaped not, they were cruel and escaped; * And my kindness only led me to Ruination Hall, If I live Iโll neโer be kind; if I die, then all be damned * Who follow me, and curses their kindliness befal.
โIs this,โ continued Duban, โthe return I meet from thee? Thou givest me, meseems, but crocodile boon.โ Quoth the King,โWhat is the tale of the crocodile?โ, and quoth the physician, โImpossible for me to tell it in this my state; Allah upon thee, spare me, as thou hopest Allah shall spare thee.โ And he wept with ex ceeding weeping. Then one of the Kingโs favourites stood up and said, โO
King! grant me the blood of this physician; we have never seen him sin against thee, or doing aught save healing thee from a disease which baffled every leach and man of science.โ Said the King, โYe wot not the cause of my putting to death this physician, and this it is. If I spare him, I doom myself to certain death; for one who healed me of such a malady by something held in my hand, surely can slay me by something held to my nose; and I fear lest he kill me for a price, since haply he is some spy whose sole purpose in coming hither was to compass my destruction. So there is no help for it; die he must, and then only shall I be sure of my own life.โ Again cried Duban, โSpare me and Allah shall spare thee; and slay me not or Allah shall slay thee.โ But it was in vain. Now when the physician, O Ifrit, knew for certain that the King would kill him, he said, โO King, if there be no help but I must die, grant me some little delay that I may go down to my house and release myself from mine obligations and direct my folk and my neighbours where to bury me and distribute my books of medicine. Amongst these I have one, the rarest of rarities, which I would present to thee as an offering: keep it as a treasure in thy treasury.โ โAnd what is in the book?โ asked the King and the Sage answered, โThings beyond compt; and the least of secrets is that if, directly after thou hast cut off my head, thou open three leaves and read three lines of the page to thy left hand, my head shall speak and answer every question thou deignest ask of it.โ The King wondered with exceeding wonder and shaking[FN#99] with delight at the novelty, said, โO physician, cost thou really tell me that when I cut off thy head it will speak to me?โ He replied, โYes, O King!โ Quoth the King, โThis is indeed a strange matter!โ and forthwith sent him closely guarded to his house, and Duban then and there settled all his obligations. Next day he went up to the Kingโs audience hall, where Emirs and Wazirs, Chamberlains and Nabobs, Grandees and Lords of Estate were gathered together, making the presence chamber gay as a garden of flower beds. And lo! the physician came up and stood before the King, bearing a worn old volume and a little etui of metal full of powder, like that used for the eyes.[FN#100] Then he sat down and said, โGive me a tray.โ So they brought him one and he poured the powder upon it and levelled it and lastly spake as follows: โO King, take this book but do not open it till my head falls; then set it upon this tray, and bid press it down upon the powder, when forthright the blood will cease flowing. That is the time to open the book.โ The King thereupon took the book and made a sign to the Sworder, who arose and struck off the physicianโs head, and placing it on the middle of the tray, pressed it down upon the powder. The blood stopped flowing, and the Sage Duban unclosed his eyes and said, โNow open the book, O King!โ The King opened the book, and found the leaves stuck together; so he put his finger to his mouth and, by moistening it, he easily turned over the first leaf, and in like way the second, and the third, each leaf opening with much trouble; and when he had un stuck six leaves he looked over them and, finding nothing written thereon, said, โO physician, there is no writing here!โ Duban re plied, โTurn over yet more;โ and he turned over three others in the same way. Now the book was poisoned; and before long the venom penetrated his system, and he fell into strong convulsions and he cried out, โThe poison hath done its work!โ Whereupon the Sage Dubanโs head began to improvise:โ
There be rulers who have ruled with a foul tyrannic sway *
But they soon became as though they had never, never been: Just, they had won justice: they oppressed and were oppress *
By Fortune, who requited them with ban and bane and teen: So they faded like the morn, and the tongue of things repeats *
โTake this far that, nor vent upon Fortuneโs ways thy spleen.โ
No sooner had the head ceased speaking than the King rolled over dead. Now I would have thee know, O Ifrit, that if King Yunan had spared the Sage Duban, Allah would have spared him, but he refused so to do and decreed to do him dead, wherefore Allah slew him; and thou too, O Ifrit, if thou hadst spared me, Allah would have spared thee. And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say: then quoth Dunyazad, โO my sister, how pleasant is thy tale, and how tasteful; how sweet, and how grateful!โ She replied, โAnd where is this compared with what I could tell thee this coming night, if I live and the King spare me?โ Said the King in himself, โBy Allah, I will not slay her
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