The Shaving of Shagpat by George Meredith (good books to read in english .TXT) π
Description
The Shaving of Shagpat isnβt just George Meredithβs first published novel, itβs also his only foray into fantasy literature. Shagpat sold poorly in its day despite good reviews, and after its disappointing sales Meredith pursed a career as a writer of romantic fiction instead. Despite its poor financial reception, Shagpat enjoys a good modern reputation and remains a classic of fantasy literature, with George Eliot going so far as to call it a βwork of genius.β
The book is set in the medieval fantasy-Persia of the Arabian Nights and other oriental romances. Shibli Bagarag, a poor but talented barber, encounters a mystical crone named Noorna. Together they embark on a quest to save the city of Shagpat from a tyrant who holds the city under his command by virtue of the powers of his magical hair. On the way they battle genies and afreets, save princesses, hunt for treasures, and so on.
Meredithβs language is purposefully florid, evoking the richness of the setting, and his frequent usage of quotations and aphorisms from βthe poetβ give the fantasy a decidedly literate air.
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- Author: George Meredith
Read book online Β«The Shaving of Shagpat by George Meredith (good books to read in english .TXT) πΒ». Author - George Meredith
βThe rose is living in her cheeks,
The lily in her rounded chin;
She speaks but when her whole soul speaks,
And then the two flow out and in,
And mix their red and white to make
The hue for which Iβd Paradise forsake.
Her brow from her black falling hair
Ascends like morn: her nose is clear
As morning hills, and finely fair
With pearly nostrils curving near
The red bow of her upper lip;
Her bosomβs the white wave beneath the ship.
The fair full Earth, the enraptured skies,
She images in constant play:
Night and the stars are in her eyes,
But her sweet face is beaming day,
A bounteous interblush of flowers:
A dewy brilliance in a dale of bowers.β
Then he said, βAnd this morning shall our contract of marriage be written and witnessed?β
She answered, βAs my lord willeth; I am his.β
Said he, βAnd it is thy desire?β
She nestled to him and dinted his bare arm with the pearls of her mouth for a reply.
So that morning their contract of marriage was written, and witnessed by the legal number of witnesses in the presence of the Qadi, with his license on it endorsed; and Bhanavar was the bride of Almeryl, he her husband. Never was youth blessed in a bride like that youth!
Now, the twain lived together the circle of a full year of delightful marriage, and love lessened not in them, but was as the love of the first day. Little cared they, having each other, for the loneliness of their dwelling in that city, where they knew none save the porter Ukleet, who went about their commissions. Sometimes to amuse themselves with his drolleries, they sent for him, and were bountiful with him, and made him drink with them on the lawn of their garden leaning to an inlet of the sea; and then he would entertain them with all the scandal and gossip of the city, and its little folk and great. When he was outrageously extravagant in these stories of his, Bhanavar exclaimed, βAre such things, now? can it be true?β
And he nodded in his conceit, and replied loftily, βββTis certain, O my Prince and Princess! ye be from the mountains, unused to the follies and dissipations of men where they herd; and ye know them not, men!β
The lamps being lit in the garden to the edges of the water, where they lay one evening, Ukleet, who had been in his briskest mood, became grave, and put his forefinger to the side of his nose and began, βHear ye aught of the great tidings? Wullahy! no other than the departure of the wife of Boolp, the broker, into darkness. βTis of Boolp ye hire this house, and had ye a hundred houses in this city ye might have had them from Boolp the broker, he thatβs rich; and glory to them whom Allah prospereth, say I! And I mention this matter, for βtis certain now Boolp will take another wife to him to comfort him, for there be two things beloved of Boolp, and therein manifesteth he taste and the discernment of excellence, and what is approved; and of these two things let the love of his hoards of the yellow-skinned treasure go first, and after that attachment to the silver-skinned of creation, the fair, the rapturous; even to them! So by this see ye not Boolp will yearn in his soul for another spouse? Now, O ye well-matched pair! what a chance were this, knew ye but a damsel of the mountains, exquisite in symmetry, a moon to enrapture the imagination of Boolp, and in the nature of things herit his possessions! for Boolp is an old man, even very old.β
They laughed, and cried, βWe know not of such a damsel, and the broker must go unmarried for us.β
When next Ukleet sat before them, Almeryl took occasion to speak of Boolp again, and said, βThis broker, O Ukleet, is he also a lender of money?β
Ukleet replied, βO my Prince, he is or he is not: βtis of the maybes. I wot truly Boolp is one that baiteth the hook of an emergency.β
The brows of the Prince were downcast, and he said no more; but on the following morning he left Bhanavar early under a pretext, and sallied forth from the house of their abode alone.
Since their union in that city they had not been once apart, and Bhanavar grieved and thought, βWaneth his love for me?β and she called her women to her, and dressed in this dress and that dress, and was satisfied with none. The dews of the bath stood cold upon her, and she trembled, and fled from mirror to mirror, and in each she was the same surpassing vision of loveliness. Then her women held a glass to her, and she examined herself closely, if there might be a fleck upon her anywhere, and all was as the snow of the mountains on her round limbs sloping in the curves of harmony, and the faint rose of the dawn on slants of snow was their hue. Twining her fingers and sighing, she thought, βIt is not that! he cannot but think me beautiful.β She smiled a melancholy smile at her image in the glass, exclaiming, βWhat availeth it, thy beauty? for he is away and looketh not on thee, thou vain thing! And what of thy loveliness if the light illumine it not, for he is the light to thee, and it is darkness when heβs away.β
Suddenly she thought, βWhatβs that which needeth to light it no other light? I had well-nigh forgotten it in my bliss, the Jewel!β Then she went to a case of ebony-wood, where she kept the
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