The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night, vol 9 by Sir Richard Francis Burton (ebook reader library .TXT) ๐
The Book Of The THOUSAND NIGHTS AND A NIGHT
When it was the Eight Hundred and Eighty-ninth Night,
She pursued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that when Nur al-Din heard the voice singing th
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worth.โ[FN#235] So he gave him ten Nusfs worth of bread and ten in silver saying, โTake these ten Nusfs and cook thyself a mess of meat therewith; so wilt thou owe me twenty, for which bring me fish to-morrow; but, an thou catch nothing again, come and take thy bread and thy ten Nusfs, and I will have patience with thee till better luck betide thee,โโAnd Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
When it was the Nine Hundred and Forty-first Night, She pursued, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the baker said to the fisherman, โTake whatso thou needest and I will have patience with thee till better luck betide thee, after the which thou shalt bring me fish for all thou owest me.โ Said the fisherman, Almighty Allah reward thee, and requite thee for me with all good!โ Then he took the bread and the coins and went away, glad at heart, and buying what he could returned to his wife whom he found sitting up, soothing the children, who were weeping for hunger, and saying to them, โAt once your father will be here with what ye may eat.โ So he set the bread before them and they ate, whilst he told his wife what had befallen him, and she said, โAllah is bountiful.โ[FN#236] On the morrow, he shouldered his net and went forth of his house, saying, โI beseech thee, O Lord, to vouchsafe me this day that which shall whiten my face with the baker!โ[FN#237] When he came to the sea-shore, he proceeded to cast his net and pull it in; but there came up no fish therein; and he ceased not to toil thus till ended day but he caught nothing. Then he set out homewards, in great concern, and the way to his house lay past the bakerโs oven; so he said to himself, โHow shall I go home? But I will hasten my pace that the baker may not see me.โ When he reached the shop, he saw a crowd about it and walked the faster, being ashamed to face his creditor; but the baker raised his eyes to him and cried out to him, saying, โHo, fisherman! Come and take thy bread and spending-money. Meseems thou forgettest.โ Quoth Abdullah, โBy Allah, I had not forgotten; but I was ashamed to face thee, because I have caught no fish this day;โ and quoth the baker, โBe not ashamed. Said I not to thee, At thy leisure,[FN#238] till better luck betide thee?โ Then he gave him the bread and the ten Nusfs and he returned and told his wife, who said, โAllah is bountiful. Better luck shall yet betide thee and thou shalt give the baker his due, Inshallah.โ He ceased not doing on this wise forty days, betaking himself daily to the sea, from the rising of the sun to the going down thereof, and returning home without fish; and still he took bread and spending-money of the baker, who never once named the fish to him nor neglected him nor kept him waiting like the folk,[FN#239] but gave him the bread and the ten half-dirhams without delay.
Whenever the fisherman said to him, โO my brother, reckon with me,โ he would say, โBe off:[FN#240] this is no time for reckoning. Wait till better luck betide thee, and then I will reckon with thee.โ And the fisherman would bless him and go away thanking him. On the one-and-fortieth day, he said to his wife, โI have a mind to tear up the net and be quit of this life.โ She asked, โWhy wilt thou do this?โ; and he answered, โMeseems there is an end of my getting my daily bread from the waters. How long shall this last? By Allah, I burn with shame before the baker and I will go no more to the sea, so I may not pass by his oven, for I have none other way home; and every time I pass he calleth me and giveth me the bread and the ten silvers. How much longer shall I run in debt to him?โ The wife replied, โAlhamdolillahโ
lauded be the Lord, the Most High, who hath inclined his heart to thee, so that he giveth thee our daily bread! What dislikest thou in this?โ; and the husband rejoined, โI owe him now a mighty great sum of dirhams, and there is no doubt but that he will demand his due.โ โHath he vexed thee with words?โ โNo, on the contrary, he still refuseth to reckon with me, saying, โWait till better luck betide thee.โโ โIf he press thee, say to him, โWait till there come the good luck for which we hope, thou and I.โโ
โAnd when will the good luck come that we hope for?โ โAllah is bountiful.โ โSooth thou speakest!โ So saying he shouldered his net and went down to the sea-side, praying, โO Lord provide thou me, though but with one fish, that I may give it to the baker!โ
And he cast his net into the sea and pulling it in, found it heavy; so he tugged at it till he was tired with sore travail.
But when he got it ashore, he found in it a dead donkey swollen and stinking; whereat his senses sickened and he freed it from the net, saying, โThere is no Majesty and there is no Might save in Allah, the Glorious, the Great! Indeed, I can no more! I say to that wife of mine, โThere is no more provision for me in the waters; let me leave this craft.โ And she still answereth me, โAllah is bountiful: good will presently betide thee.โ Is this dead ass the good whereof she speaketh?โ And he grieved with the sorest grief. Then he turned to another place, so he might remove from the stench of the dead donkey, and cast his net there and waited a full hour: then he drew it in and found it heavy.
Thereupon quoth he, โGood; we are hauling up all the dead donkeys in the sea and ridding it of its rubbish.[FN#241]โ However he gave not over tugging at the net, till blood came from the palms of his hands, and when he got it ashore, he saw a man[FN#242] in it and took him for one of the Ifrits of the lord Solomon, whom he was wont to imprison in cucurbits of brass and cast him into the main, believing that the vessel had burst for length of years and that the Ifrit had come forth and fallen into the net; wherefore he fled from him, crying out and saying, โMercy, mercy, O Ifrit of Solomon!โ But the Adamite called out to him from within the net and said, โCome hither, O fisherman, and flee not from me; for I am human like thyself. Release me, so thou mayst get a recompense for me of Allah.โ Whenas he heard these words, the fisherman took heart and coming up to him, said to him, โArt thou not an Ifrit of the Jinn?โ; and replied the other, โNo: I am a mortal and a believer in Allah and His Apostle.โ Asked the fisherman, โWho threw thee into the sea?โ; and the other answered, โI am of the children of the sea, and was going about therein, when thou castest the net over me. We are people who obey Allahโs commandments and show loving-kindness unto the creatures of the Almighty, and but that I fear and dread to be of the disobedient, I had torn thy net; but I accept that which the Lord hath decreed unto me; wherefore by setting me free thou becomest my owner and I thy captive. Wilt thou then set me free for the love[FN#243] of Almighty Allah and make a covenant with me and become my comrade? I will come to thee every day in this place, and do thou come to me and bring me a gift of the fruits of the land. For with you are grapes and figs and water-melons and peaches and pomegranates and so forth, and all thou bringest me will be acceptable unto me. Moreover, with us are coral and pearls and chrysolites and emeralds and rubies and other gems, and I will fill thee the basket, wherein thou bringest me the fruit, with precious stones of the jewels of the sea.[FN#244]
What sayest thou to this, O my brother?โ Quoth the fisherman, โBe the Opening Chapter of the Koran between thee and me upon this!โ So they recited together the F๏ฟฝtihah, and the fisherman loosed the Merman from the net and asked him, โWhat is thy name?โ
He replied, โMy name is Abdullah of the sea; and if thou come hither and see me not, call out and say, โWhere are thou, O
Abdullah, O Merman?โ and I will be with thee.โโAnd Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
When it was the Nine Hundred and Forty-second Night, She resumed, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that Abdullah of the sea thus enjoined the other, โAn thou come hither and see me not, call out and say, โWhere art thou, O Abdullah, O Merman?โ
and I will be with thee forthwith. But thou, what is thy name?โ
Quoth the fisherman, โMy name also is Abdullah;โ and quoth the other, โThou art Abdullah of the land and I am Abdullah of the Sea; but tarry here till I go and fetch thee a present.โ And the fisherman repented him of having released him and said to himself, โHow know I that he will come back to me? Indeed, he beguiled me, so that I loosed him, and now he will laugh at me.[FN#245] Had I kept him, I might have made a show of him for the diversion of the city-folk and taken silver from all men and gone with him to the houses of the great.โ And he repented him of having set him free and said, โThou hast let thy prey from thy hand away.โ But, as he was thus bemoaning his folly in releasing the prisoner, behold, Abdullah the merman returned to him, with both hands full of pearls and coral and smaragds and rubies and other gems, and said to him, โTake these, O my brother, and excuse me; had I a fish-basket[FN#246] I would have filled it for thee.โ Abdullah the fisherman rejoiced and took the jewels from the Merman who said to him, โEvery day come hither, before sunrise,โ and farewelling him, went down into the sea; whilst the other returned to the city, rejoicing, and stayed not walking till he came to the bakerโs oven and said to him, โO
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