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JOHN

Well, what is it you are worrying about? Who is it you are afraid of?


DAOUD

Hafiz el Alcolahn.


JOHN

O, Hafiz. I have no fears of Hafiz. Lately I ordered my spies to watch him no longer. Why does he hate me?


DAOUD

Because, most excellent master, you slew Hussein.


JOHN

Slew Hussein? What is that to do with him? May I not slay whom I please?


DAOUD

Even so, master. Even so. But he was Hussein's enemy.


JOHN

His enemy, eh?


DAOUD

For years he had dreamed of the joy of killing Hussein.


JOHN

Well, he should have done it before I came. We don't hang over things and brood over them for years where I come from. If a thing's to be done, it's done.


DAOUD

Even so, master. Hafiz had laid his plans for years. He would have killed him and got his substance; and then, when the hour drew near, you came, and Hussein died, swiftly, not as Hafiz would have had him die; and lo! thou art the lord of the pass, and Hafiz is no more than a beetle that runs about in the dirt.


JOHN

Well, so you fear Hafiz?


DAOUD

Not for himself, master. Nay, I fear not Hafiz. But, master, hast thou seen when the thunder is coming, but no rumble is heard and the sky is scarce yet black, how little winds run in the grass and sigh and die; and the flower beckons a moment with its head; all the world full of whispers, master, all saying nothing; then the lightning, master, and the anger of God; and men say it came without warning? [Simply.] I hear those things coming, master.


JOHN

Well?


DAOUD

Master, it is all silent in the market. Once, when the price of turquoises was high, men abused the Shereef. When the merchant men could not sell their pomegranates for silver they abused the Shereef. It is men's way, master, men's way. Now it is all silent in the market. It is like the grasses with the idle winds, that whisper and sigh and die away; like the flowers beckoning to nothing. And so, master, and so....


JOHN

I see, you fear some danger.


DAOUD

I fear it, master.


JOHN

What danger, Daoud?


DAOUD

Master, I know not.


JOHN

From what quarter, Daoud?


DAOUD

O master, O sole Lord of Al Shaldomir, named the elect, from that quarter.


JOHN

That quarter? Why, that is the gracious lady's innermost chamber.


DAOUD

From that quarter, great master, O Lord of the Pass.


JOHN

Daoud, I have cast men into prison for saying less than this. Men have been flogged on the feet for less than this.


DAOUD

Slay me, master, but hear my words.


JOHN

I will not slay you. You are mistaken, Daoud. You have made a great mistake. The thing is absurd. Why, the gracious lady has scarcely seen Hafiz. She knows nothing of the talk of the market. Who could tell her? No one comes here. It is absurd. Only the other day she said to me... But it is absurd, it is absurd, Daoud. Besides, the people would never rebel against me. Do I not govern them well?


DAOUD

Even so, master.


JOHN

Why should they rebel, then?


DAOUD

They think of the old times, master.


JOHN

The old times? Why, their lives weren't safe. The robbers came down from the mountains and robbed the market whenever they had a mind.


DAOUD

Master, men were content in the old times.


JOHN

But were the merchants content?


DAOUD

Those that loved merchandise were content, master. Those that loved it not went into the mountains.


JOHN

But were they content when they were robbed?


DAOUD

They soon recovered their losses, master. Their prices were unjust and they loved usury.


JOHN

And were the people content with unjust prices?


DAOUD

Some were, master, as men have to be in all countries. The others went into the mountains and robbed the merchants.


JOHN

I see.


DAOUD

But now, master, a man robs a merchant and he is cast into prison. Now a man is slain in the market and his son, his own son, master, may not follow after the aggressor and slay him and burn his house. They are ill-content, master. No man robs the merchants, no man slays them, and the merchants' hearts are hardened and they oppress all men.


JOHN

I see. They don't like good government?


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