Tales from the Arabic — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 791 pages of information about Tales from the Arabic — Complete.

Tales from the Arabic — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 791 pages of information about Tales from the Arabic — Complete.

Now there was in the camp a wise woman,[FN#11] and she questioned him of the new-born child, if it was male or female.  Quoth he, ‘It is a girl;’ and she said, ’She shall do whoredom with a hundred men and a journeyman shall marry her and a spider shall slay her.’  When the journeyman heard this, he returned upon his steps and going in to the woman, took the child from her by wile and slit its paunch.  Then he fled forth into the desert at a venture and abode in strangerhood what [while] God willed.

He gained him wealth and returning to his native land, after twenty years’ absence, alighted in the neighbourhood of an old woman, whom he bespoke fair and entreated with liberality, requiring of her a wench whom he might lie withal.  Quoth she, ’I know none but a certain fair woman, who is renowned for this fashion.’[FN#12] Then she described her charms to him and made him lust after her, and he said, ’Hasten to her forthright and lavish unto her that which she asketh, [in exchange for her favours].’  So the old woman betook herself to the damsel and discovered to her the man’s wishes and bade her to him; but she answered, saying, ’It is true that I was on this [fashion of] whoredom [aforetime]; but now I have repented to God the Most High and hanker no more after this; nay, I desire lawful marriage; so, if he be content with that which is lawful, I am at his service.’

The old woman returned to the man and told him what the damsel said; and he lusted after her, by reason of her beauty and her repentance; so he took her to wife, and when he went in to her, he loved her and she also loved him.  On this wise they abode a great while, till one day he questioned her of the cause of a mark[FN#13] he espied on her body, and she said, ’I know nought thereof save that my mother told me a marvellous thing concerning it.’  ‘What was that?’ asked he, and she answered, ’She avouched that she gave birth to me one night of the nights of the winter and despatched a hired man, who was with us, in quest of fire for her.  He was absent a little while and presently returning, took me and slit my belly and fled.  When my mother saw this, affliction overcame her and compassion possessed her; so she sewed up my belly and tended me till, by the ordinance of God (to whom belong might and majesty), the wound healed up.”

When her husband heard this, he said to her, ’What is thy name and what are the names of thy father and mother?’ She told him their names and her own, whereby he knew that it was she whose belly he had slit and said to her, ’And where are thy father and mother?’ ‘They are both dead,’ answered she, and he said, ’I am that journeyman who slit thy belly.’  Quoth she, ’Why didst thou that?’ And he replied, ’Because of a saying I heard from the wise woman.’  ‘What was it?’ asked his wife, and he said, ’She avouched that thou wouldst play the harlot with a hundied men and that I should after take thee to wife.’  Quoth she, ’Ay, I have whored it with a hundred men, no more and no less, and behold, thou hast married me.’  ‘Moreover,’ continued her husband, ’the wise woman foresaid, also, that thou shouldst die, at the last of thy life, of the bite of a spider.  Indeed, her saying hath been verified of the harlotry and the marriage, and I fear lest her word come true no less in the matter of thy death.’

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Tales from the Arabic — Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.