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mouth of a cavern by the Putrid Sea, and dragged me into a cavern greatly illuminated, hung like a palace chamber, and supported on pillars of shining jasper. Then I fell upon the floor in a swoon, and awaking saw Kadrab no longer, but in his place a genie. O my soul, thou halt seen him!โ โ€”I thought at once, โ€œโ€Šโ€™tis Karaz!โ€ and when he said to me, โ€œThis is thy abode, O lady! and I he that have sworn to possess thee from the hour I saw thee in the chamber of Goorelka,โ€ then was I certain โ€™twas Karaz. So, collecting the strength of my soul, I said, in the words of the poet:

โ€œWoo not a heart preoccupied!
What thorn is like a loathing bride?
Mark ye the shrubs how they turn from the sea,
The seaโ€™s rough whispers shun?
But like the sun of heaven be,
And every flower will open wide.
Woo with the shining patience we
Beheld in heavenโ€™s sun.โ€

Then he sang:

โ€œExquisite lady! name the smart
That fills thy heart.
Thou art the foot and I the worm:
Prescribe the Term.โ€

Finding him compliant, I said, โ€œO great genie, truly the search of my life has been to discover him that is, my father, and how I was left in the wilderness. Thereโ€™s no peace for me, nor understanding the word of love, till I hear by whom I was left a babe on the bosom of a dead mother.โ€

He exclaimed, and his eyes twinkled, โ€œโ€Šโ€™Tis that? that shalt thou know in a span of time. O my mistress, hast thou seen the birds of Goorelka? Thy father Feshnavat is among them, perched like a bird.โ€

So I cried, โ€œAnd tell me how he may be disenchanted.โ€

He said, โ€œSwear first to be mine unreluctantly.โ€

Then I said, โ€œWhat is thy oath?โ€

He answered, โ€œI swear, when I swear, by the Identical.โ€

Thereupon I questioned him concerning the Identical, what it was; and he, not suspecting, revealed to me the mighty hair in his head now in the head of Shagpat, even that. So I swore by that to give myself to the possessor of the Identical, and flattered him. Then said he, โ€œO lovely damsel, I am truly one of the most powerful of the genii; yet am I in bondage to that sorceress Goorelka by reason of a ring she holdeth; and could I get that ring from her and be slave to nothing mortal an hour, I could light creation as a torch, and broil the inhabitants of Earth at one fire.โ€

I thought, โ€œThat ring is known to me!โ€ And he continued, โ€œSurely I cannot assist thee in this work other than by revealing the means of disenchantment, and it is to keep the birds laughing uninterruptedly an hour; then are they men again, and take the forms of men that are laughersโ โ€”I know not why.โ€

So I cried, โ€œโ€Šโ€™Tis well! carry me back to Oolb.โ€

Then the genie lifted me into the air, and ceased not speeding rapidly through it, till I was on the roof of the house of Ravaloke. O sweet youth! moon of my soul! from that time to the disenchantment of Feshnavat, I pored over my books, trying experiments in magic, dreadful ones, hunting for talismans to countervail Goorelka; but her power was great, and โ€™twas not in me to get her away from the birds one hour to free them. On a certain occasion I had stolen to them, and kept them laughing with stories of man to within an instant of the hour; and they were laughing exultingly with the easy happy laugh of them that perceive deliverance sure, when she burst in and beat them even to the door of death. I saw too in her eyes, that glowed like the eyes of wild cats in the dark, she suspected me, and I called Allah to aid the just cause against the sinful, and prepared to war with her.

Now, my desire, which was to liberate my father and his fellows in tribulation, I knew pure, and had no fear of the sequel, as is declared:

โ€œFear nought so much as Fear itself; for armโ€™d with Fear the Foe
Finds passage to the vital part, and strikes a double blow.โ€

So one day as I leaned from my casement looking on the garden seaward, I saw a strange red and yellow-feathered bird that flew to the branch of a citron-tree opposite, with a ring in its beak; and the bird was singing, and with every note the ring dropped from its bill, and it descended swiftly in an arrowy slant downward, and seized it ere it reached the ground, and commenced singing afresh. When I had marked this to happen many times, I thought, โ€œHow like is this bird to an innocent soul possessed of magic and using its powers! Lo, it seeketh still to sing as one of the careless, and cannot relinquish the ring and be as the careless, and between the two there is neither peace for it nor pleasure.โ€ Now, while my eyes were on the pretty bird, dwelling on it, I saw it struck suddenly by an arrow beneath the left wing, and the bird fluttered to my bosom and dropped in it the ring from its beak. Then it sprang weakly, and sought to fly and soar, and fluttered; but a blue film lodged over its eyes, and its panting was quickly ended. So I looked at the ring and knew it for that one I had noted on the finger of Goorelka. Red blushed my bliss, and โ€™twas revealed to me that the bird was of the birds of the Princess that had escaped from her with the ring. I buried the bird, weeping for it, and flew to my books, and as I read a glow stole over me. O my betrothed, eyes of my soul! I read that the possessor of that ring was mistress of the marvellous hair which is a magnet to the homage of men, so that they crowd

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