The Arabian Nights (New Deluxe Edition) (14 page)

BOOK: The Arabian Nights (New Deluxe Edition)
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T
HE
S
EVENTEENTH
N
IGHT

The following night Dinarzad said to her sister Shahrazad, “Please, sister, if you are not sleepy, tell us one of your lovely little tales to while away the night.” The king added, “Let it be the rest of the story of the sage and the king and of the fisherman and the demon.” Shahrazad replied, “Very well, with the greatest pleasure”:

I heard, O King, that when the sage Duban saw that the drug had spread through the king's body and that the king was heaving and swaying, he began to recite the following verses:

For long they ruled us arbitrarily,

But suddenly vanished their powerful rule.

Had they been just, they would have happily

Lived, but they oppressed, and punishing fate

Afflicted them with ruin deservedly,

And on the morrow the world taunted them,

“'Tis tit for tat; blame not just destiny.”

As the sage's head finished reciting the verses, the king fell dead, and at that very moment the head too succumbed to death. Demon, consider this story.

But morning overtook Shahrazad, and she lapsed into silence. Then her sister Dinarzad said, “Sister, what an entertaining story!” Shahrazad replied, “What is this compared with what I shall tell you tomorrow night if I live!”

T
HE
E
IGHTEENTH
N
IGHT

The following night, Dinarzad said to her sister Shahrazad, “Please, sister, if you are not sleepy, tell us one of your lovely little tales to while away the night.” The king added, “Let it be the rest of the story of the fisherman and the demon.” Shahrazad replied, “With the greatest pleasure”:

I heard, O King, that the fisherman said to the demon, “Had the king spared the sage, God would have spared him and he would have lived, but he refused and insisted on destroying the sage, and the Almighty God destroyed him. You too, demon, had you from the beginning agreed to spare me, I would have spared you, but you refused and insisted on killing me; therefore, I shall punish you by keeping you in this jar and throwing you into the bottom of the sea.” The demon cried out, “Fisherman, don't do it. Spare me and save me and don't blame me for my action and my offense against you. If I did ill, you should do good. As the saying goes, ‘Be kind to him who wrongs you.' Don't do what Imama did to 'Atika.” The fisherman asked, “What did Imama do to 'Atika?” The demon replied, “This is no time and this narrow prison is no place to tell a story, but I shall tell it to you after you release me.” The fisherman said, “I must throw you into the sea. There is no way I would let you out and set you free, for I kept imploring you and calling on you, but you refused and insisted on killing me, without any offense or injury that merits punishment, except that I had set you free. When you treated me in this way, I realized that you were unclean from birth, that you were ill-natured, and that you were one who rewards good with ill. After I throw you into the sea, I shall build me a hut here and live in it for your sake, so that if anyone pulls you out, I shall acquaint him with what I suffered at your hands and shall advise him to throw you back into the sea and let you perish or languish there to the end of time, you the dirtiest of demons.” The demon replied, “Set me free this time, and I pledge never to bother you or harm you, but to make you rich.” When he heard this, the fisherman made the demon pledge and covenant that if the fisherman released him and let him out, he would not harm him but would serve him and be good to him.

After the fisherman secured the demon's pledge, by making him swear by the Almighty Name, he opened the seal of the jar, and the smoke began to rise. When the smoke was completely out of the jar, it gathered and turned again into a full-fledged demon, who kicked the jar away and sent it flying to the middle of the sea. When the fisherman saw what the demon had done, sure that he was going to meet with disaster and death, he wet himself and said, “This is a bad omen.” Then he summoned his courage and cried out, “Demon, you have sworn and given me your pledge. Don't betray me. Come back, lest the Almighty God punish you for your betrayal. Demon, I repeat to you what the sage Duban said to King Yunan, ‘Spare me, and God will spare you; destroy me, and God will destroy you.'” When the demon heard what the fisherman said, he laughed, and when the fisherman cried out again, “Demon, spare me,” he replied, “Fisherman, follow me,” and the fisherman followed him, hardly believing in his escape, until they came to a mountain outside the city. They climbed over to the other side and came to a vast wilderness, in the middle of which stood a lake surrounded by four hills.

The demon halted by the lake and ordered the fisherman to cast his net and fish. The fisherman looked at the lake and marveled as he saw fish in many colors, white, red, blue, and yellow. He cast his net, and when he pulled, he found four fish inside, one red, one white, one blue, and one yellow. When he saw them, he was full of admiration and delight. The demon said to him, “Take them to the king of your city and offer them to him, and he will give you enough to make you rich. Please excuse me, for I know no other way to make you rich. But don't fish here more than once a day.” Then, saying, “I shall miss you,” the demon kicked the ground with his foot, and it opened and swallowed him. The fisherman, O King, returned to the city, still marveling at his encounter with the demon and at the colored fish. He entered the royal palace, and when he offered the fish to the king, the king looked at them . . .

But morning overtook Shahrazad, and she lapsed into silence. Then Dinarzad said, “Sister, what an amazing and entertaining story!” Shahrazad replied, “What is this compared with what I shall tell you tomorrow night if the king spares me and lets me live!”

T
HE
N
INETEENTH
N
IGHT

The following night Dinarzad said to her sister Shahrazad, “Sister, tell us the rest of the story and what happened to the fisherman.” Shahrazad replied, “With the greatest pleasure”:

I heard, O King, that when the fisherman presented the fish to the king, and the king looked at them and saw that they were colored, he took one of them in his hand and looked at it with great amazement. Then he said to his vizier, “Take them to the cook whom the emperor of Byzantium has given us as a present.” The vizier took the fish and brought them to the girl and said to her, “Girl, as the saying goes, ‘I save my tears for the time of trial.' The king has been presented these four fish, and he bids you fry them well.” Then the vizier went back to report to the king, and the king ordered him to give the fisherman four hundred dirhams.
5
The vizier gave the money to the fisherman, who, receiving it, gathered it in the folds of his robe and went away, running, and as he ran, he stumbled and kept falling and getting up, thinking that he was in a dream. Then he stopped and bought some provisions for his family.

So far for the fisherman, O King. In the meantime the girl scaled the fish, cleaned them, and cut them into pieces. Then she placed the frying pan on the fire and poured in the sesame oil, and when it began to boil, she placed the fish in the frying pan. When the pieces were done on one side, she turned them over, but no sooner had she done this than the kitchen wall split open and there emerged a maiden with a beautiful figure, smooth cheeks, perfect features, and dark eyes. She wore a short-sleeved silk shirt in the Egyptian style, embroidered all around with lace and gold spangles. In her ears she wore dangling earrings; on her wrists she wore bracelets; and in her hand she held a bamboo wand. She thrust the wand into the frying pan and said in clear Arabic, “O fish, O fish, have you kept the pledge?” When the cook saw what had happened, she fainted. Then the maiden repeated what she had said, and the fish raised their heads from the frying pan and replied in clear Arabic, “Yes, yes. If you return, we shall return; if you keep your vow, we shall keep ours; and if you forsake us, we shall be even.” At that moment the maiden overturned the frying pan and disappeared as she had come, and the kitchen wall closed behind her.

When the cook came to herself, she found the four fish charred, and she felt sorry for herself and afraid of the king, saying to herself, “‘He broke his lance on his very first raid.'” While she remonstrated with herself, the vizier suddenly stood before her, saying, “Give me the fish, for we have set the table before the king, and he is waiting for them.” The girl wept and told the vizier what she had seen and witnessed and what had happened to the fish. The vizier was astonished and said, “This is very strange.” Then he sent an officer after the fisherman, and he returned a while later with the fisherman. The vizier shouted at him, saying, “Bring us at once four more fish like the ones you brought us before, for we have had an accident with them.” When he followed with threats, the fisherman went home and, taking his fishing gear, went outside the city, climbed the mountain, and descended to the wilderness on the other side. When he came to the lake, he cast his net, and when he pulled up, he found inside four fish, as he had done the first time. Then he brought them back to the vizier, who took them to the girl and said, “Fry them in front of me, so that I can see for myself.” The girl prepared the fish at once, placed the frying pan over the fire, and threw them in. When the fish were done, the wall split open, and the maiden appeared in her elegant clothes, wearing necklaces and other jewelry and holding in her hand the bamboo wand. Again she thrust the wand into the frying pan and said in clear Arabic, “O fish, have you kept the pledge?” and again the fish raised their heads and replied, “Yes, yes. If you return, we shall return; if you keep your vow, we shall keep ours; and if you forsake us, we shall be even.”

But morning overtook Shahrazad, and she lapsed into silence. Then Dinarzad said, “What an entertaining story!” Shahrazad replied, “What is this compared with what I shall tell you tomorrow night if I live, the Almighty God willing!”

T
HE
T
WENTIETH
N
IGHT

The following night Dinarzad said to her sister Shahrazad, “Please, sister, if you are not sleepy, tell us one of your lovely little tales to while away the night.” Shahrazad replied, “With the greatest pleasure”:

I heard, O happy King, that after the fish spoke, the maiden overturned the frying pan with the wand and disappeared into the opening from which she had emerged, and the wall closed behind her. The vizier said to himself, “I can no longer hide this affair from the king,” and he went to him and told him what had happened to the fish before his very eyes.

The king was exceedingly amazed and said, “I wish to see this with my own eyes.” Then he sent for the fisherman, who came after a little while, and the king said to him, “I want you to bring me at once four more fish like the ones you brought before. Hurry!” Then he assigned three officers to guard the fisherman and sent him away. The fisherman disappeared for a while and returned with four fish, one red, one white, one blue, and one yellow. The king commanded, “Give him four hundred dirhams,” and the fisherman, receiving the money, gathered it in the folds of his robe and went away. Then the king said to the vizier, “Fry the fish here in my presence.” The vizier replied, “I hear and obey,” and he called for a stove and a frying pan and sat to clean the fish. Then he lit the fire and, pouring the sesame oil, placed the fish in the frying pan.

BOOK: The Arabian Nights (New Deluxe Edition)
13.9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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