Moorish Literature eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 393 pages of information about Moorish Literature.

Moorish Literature eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 393 pages of information about Moorish Literature.

“Lord,” they said, “the royal granaries are all empty, and yet we have not been able to fill the feed-bag of the saint’s mule.”

The donkey-drivers came from Fas and from all countries, bringing wheat on mules and camels.  The people asked them,

“Why do you bring this wheat?”

“It is the wheat of Sidi Mahomet Adjille that we are taking.”  The news came to the King, who said to the saint, “Why do you act so, now that the royal granaries are empty?” Then he called together the members of his council and wanted to have Sidi Mahomet’s head cut off.  “Go out,” he said to him.

“Wait till I make my ablutions” [for prayer], answered the saint.

The people of the makhzen who surrounded him watched him among them, waiting until he had finished his ablutions, to take him to the council of the King and cut off his head.  When Sidi Mahomet had finished washing, he lifted his eyes to heaven, got into the tub where was washing, and vanished completely from sight.  When the guardians saw that he was no longer there, they went vainly to continue the search at his house at Tagountaft.

* * * * *

THE HAUNTED GARDEN

A man who possessed much money had two daughters.  The son of the caliph of the King asked for one of them, and the son of the cadi asked for the other, but their father would not let them marry, although they desired it.  He had a garden near his house.  When it was night, the young girls went there, the young men came to meet them, and they passed the night in conversation.  One night their father saw them.  The next morning he killed his daughters, buried them in his garden, and went on a pilgrimage.

That lasted so until one night the son of the cadi and the son of the caliph went to a young man who knew how to play on the flute and the rebab.  “Come with us,” they said to him, “into the garden of the man who will not give us his daughters in marriage.  You shall play for us on your instruments.”  They agreed to meet there that night.  The musician went to the garden, but the two young men did not go.  The musician remained and played his music alone.  In the middle of the night two lamps appeared, and the two young girls came out of the ground under the lamps.  They said to the musician:  “We are two sisters, daughters of the owner of the garden.  Our father killed us and buried us here.  You, you are our brother for this night.  We will give you the money which our father has hidden in three pots.  Dig here,” they added.  He obeyed, found the three pots, took them away, and became rich, while the two girls returned to their graves.

* * * * *

THE WOMAN AND THE FAIRY

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Moorish Literature from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.