American library books ยป Fantasy ยป The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night, vol 8 by Sir Richard Francis Burton (great books for teens TXT) ๐Ÿ“•

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When the old woman Shawahi saw this, she fled forth from the Queenโ€™s presence, weeping and cursing her; but Nur al-Huda cried out to her eunuchs, saying, โ€œFetch her to me!โ€ So they ran after her and seizing her, brought her back to the Queen, who bade throw her on the ground and making them lay hold of her, rose and took the whip, with which she beat her, till she swooned away, when she said to her waiting-women, โ€œDrag this ill-omened beldam forth on her face and put her out.โ€ And they did as she bade them. So far concerning them; but as regards Hasan, he walked on beside the river, in the direction of the desert, distracted, troubled, and despairing of life; and indeed he was dazed and knew not night from day for stress of affliction. He ceased not faring on thus, till he came to a tree whereto he saw a scroll hanging: so he took it and found written thereon these couplets, โ€œWhen in thy motherโ€™s womb thou wast, * I cast thy case the bestest best;

And turned her heart to thee, so she * Foster๏ฟฝd thee on fondest breast.

We will suffice thee in whateโ€™er * Shall cause thee trouble or unrest;

Weโ€™ll aid thee in thine enterprise * So rise and bow to our behest.โ€

 

When he had ended reading this scroll, he made sure of deliverance from trouble and of winning reunion with those he loved. Then he walked forward a few steps and found himself alone in a wild and perilous wold wherein there was none to company with him; upon which his heart sank within him for horror and loneliness and his side-muscles trembled, for that fearsome place, and he recited these couplets,

 

โ€œO Zephyr of Morn, an thou pass where the dear ones dwell, * Bear greeting of lover who ever in love-longing wones!

And tell them Iโ€™m pledged to yearning and pawned to pine * And the might of my passion all passion of lovers unthrones.

Their sympathies haply shall breathe in a Breeze like thee * And quicken forthright this framework of rotting bones.โ€[FN#161]

 

โ€”And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.

 

When it was the Eight Hundred and Twenty-first Night, She resumed, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when Hasan read the scroll he was certified of deliverance from his trouble and made sure of winning reunion with those he loved.

Then he walked forward a couple of steps and stopped finding himself alone in a wild and perilous wold wherein was none to company with him, so he wept sore and recited the verses before mentioned. Then he walked on a few steps farther beside the river, till he came upon two little boys of the sons of the sorcerers, before whom lay a rod of copper graven with talismans, and beside it a skull-cap[FN#162] of leather, made of three gores and wroughten in steel with names and characts. The cap and rod were upon the ground and the boys were disputing and beating each other, till the blood ran down between them; whilst each cried, โ€œNone shall take the wand but I.โ€ So Hasan interposed and parted them, saying, โ€œWhat is the cause of your contention?โ€ and they replied, โ€œO uncle, be thou judge of our case, for Allah the Most High hath surely sent thee to do justice between us.โ€ Quoth Hasan, โ€œTell me your case, and I will judge between you;โ€ and quoth one of them, โ€œWe twain are brothers-german and our sire was a mighty magician, who dwelt in a cave on yonder mountain. He died and left us this cap and rod; and my brother saith, โ€˜None shall have the rod but I,โ€™ whilst I say the like; so be thou judge between us and deliver us each from other.โ€ Hasan asked, โ€œWhat is the difference between the rod and the cap and what is their value? The rod appears to be worth six coppers[FN#163] and the cap three;โ€ whereto they answered, โ€œThou knowest not their properties.โ€ โ€œAnd what are their properties?โ€ โ€œEach of them hath a wonderful secret virtue, wherefore the rod is worth the revenue of all the Islands of Wak and their provinces and dependencies, and the cap the like!โ€ โ€œBy Allah, O my sons, discover to me their secret virtues.โ€ So they said, โ€œO uncle, they are extraordinary; for our father wrought an hundred and thirty and five years at their contrivance, till he brought them to perfection and ingrafted them with secret attributes which might serve him extraordinary services and engraved them after the likeness of the revolving sphere, and by their aid he dissolved all spells; and when he had made an end of their fashion, Death, which all needs must suffer, overtook him. Now the hidden virtue of the cap is, that whoso setteth it on his head is concealed from all folksโ€™ eyes, nor can any see him, whilst it remaineth on his head; and that of the rod is that whoso owneth it hath authority over seven tribes of the Jinn, who all serve the order and ordinance of the rod; and whenever he who possesseth it smiteth therewith on the ground, their Kings come to do him homage, and all the Jinn are at his service.โ€ Now when Hasan heard these words, he bowed his head groundwards awhile, then said in himself, โ€œBy Allah, I shall conquer every foe by means of this rod and cap, Inshallah! and I am worthier of them both than these two boys. So I will go about forthright to get them from the twain by craft, that I may use them to free myself and my wife and children from yonder tyrannical Queen, and then we will depart from this dismal stead, whence there is no deliverance for mortal man nor flight. Doubtless, Allah caused me not to fall in with these two lads, but that I might get the rod and cap from them.โ€ Then he raised his head and said to the two boys, โ€œIf ye would have me decide the case, I will make trial of you and see what each of you deserveth. He who overcometh his brother shall have the rod and he who faileth shall have the cap.โ€ They replied,โ€œโ€˜O uncle, we depute thee to make trial of us and do thou decide between us as thou deems fit.โ€ Hasan asked, โ€œWill ye hearken to me and have regard to my words?โ€; and they answered, โ€œYes.โ€ Then said he, โ€œI will take a stone and throw it and he who outrunneth his brother thereto and picketh it up shall take the rod, and the other who is outraced shall take the cap.โ€ And they said, โ€œWe accept and consent to this thy proposal.โ€ Then Hasan took a stone and threw it with his might, so that it disappeared from sight. The two boys ran under and after it and when they were at a distance, he donned the cap and hending the rod in hand, removed from his place that he might prove the truth of that which the boys had said, with regard to their scant properties. The younger outran the elder and coming first to the stone, took it and returned with it to the place where they had left Hasan, but found no signs of him. So he called to his brother, saying, โ€œWhere is the man who was to be umpire between us?โ€ Quoth the other, โ€œI espy him not neither wot I whether he hath flown up to heaven above or sunk into earth beneath.โ€ Then they sought for him, but saw him not, though all the while he was standing in his stead hard by them. So they abused each other, saying, โ€œRod and Cap are both gone; they are neither mine nor thine: and indeed our father warned us of this very thing; but we forgot whatso he said.โ€ Then they retraced their steps and Hasan also entered the city, wearing the cap and bearing the rod; and none saw him. Now when he was thus certified of the truth of their speech, he rejoiced with exceeding joy and making the palace, went up into the lodging of Shawahi, who saw him not, because of the cap. Then he walked up to a shelf[FN#164] over her head upon which were vessels of glass and chinaware, and shook it with his hand, so that what was thereon fell to the ground. The old woman cried out and beat her face; then she rose and restored the fallen things to their places,[FN#165] saying in herself, โ€œBy Allah, methinks Queen Nur al-Huda hath sent a Satan to torment me, and he hath tricked me this trick! I beg Allah Almighty, deliver me from her and preserve me from her wrath, for, O Lord, if she deal thus abominably with her half-sister, beating and hanging her, dear as she is to her sire, how will she do with a stranger like myself, against whom she is incensed?โ€โ€”And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.

 

When it was the Eight Hundred and Twenty-second Night, She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the ancient Lady of Calamities cried, โ€œWhen Queen Nur al-Huda doeth such misdeed to her sister, what will she do to a stranger like myself, against whom she is incensed?โ€ Then said she, โ€œI conjure thee, O devil, by the Most Compassionate, the Bountiful-great, the High of Estate, of Dominion Elate who man and Jinn did create, and by the writing upon the seal of Solomon David-son (on both be the Peace!) speak to me and answer me;โ€ Quoth Hasan, โ€œI am no devil; I am Hasan, the afflicted, the distraught.โ€ Then he raised the cap from his head and appeared to the old woman, who knew him and taking him apart, said to him, โ€œWhat is come to thy reason, that thou returnest hither? Go hide thee; for, if this wicked woman have tormented thy wife with such torments, and she her sister, what will she do, an she light on thee?โ€ Then she told him all that had befallen his spouse and that wherein she was of travail and torment and tribulation, and straitly described all the pains she endured adding, โ€œAnd indeed the Queen repenteth her of having let thee go and hath sent one after thee, promising him an hundred-weight of gold and my rank in her service; and she hath sworn that, if he bring thee back, she will do thee and thy wife and children dead.โ€ And she shed tears and discovered to Hasan what the Queen had done with herself, whereat he wept and said, โ€œO my lady, how shall I do to escape from this land and deliver myself and my wife and children from this tyrannical Queen and how devise to return with them in safety to my own country?โ€ Replied the old woman, โ€œWoe to thee! Save thyself.โ€ Quoth he, โ€œThere is no help but I deliver her and my children from the Queen perforce and in her despite;โ€ and quoth Shawahi, โ€œHow canst thou forcibly rescue them from her? Go and hide thyself, O my son, till Allah Almighty empower thee.โ€ Then Hasan showed her the rod and the cap, whereat she rejoiced with joy exceeding and cried, โ€œGlory be to Him who quickeneth the bones, though they be rotten! By Allah, O my son, thou and thy wife were but of lost folk; now, however, thou art saved, thou and thy wife and children! For I know the rod and I know its maker, who was my Shaykh in the science of Gramarye. He was a mighty magician and spent an hundred and thirty and five years working at this rod and cap, till he brought them to perfection, when Death

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