with the tillage of the earth and the building of
towns and other mechanical crafts and useful arts,
whilst the women govern and fill the great offices
of state and bear arms.” At this the youth
marvelled with exceeding marvel and, as they were
in discourse, behold, in came the Wazir who was a tall
gray-haired old woman of venerable semblance and majestic
aspect, and it was told him that this was the Minister.
Quoth the Queen to her, “Bring us the Kazi and
witnesses.” So she went out to do this,
and the Queen, turning to him, conversed with him in
friendly fashion, and enforced herself to reassure
his awe of her and do away his shame with speech blander
than the zephyr, saying, “Art thou content to
be to me baron and I to thee feme?” Thereupon
he arose and would have kissed ground between her
hands, but she forbade him and he replied, saying,
“O my lady, I am the least of thy slaves who
serve thee.” “Seest thou all these
servants and soldiers and riches and hoards and treasures?”
asked she, and he answered, “Yes!” Quoth
she, “All these are at thy commandment to dispose
of them and give and bestow as seemeth good to thee.”
Then she pointed to a closed door and said, “All
these things are at thy disposal, save yonder door;
that shalt thou not open, and if thou open it thou
shalt repent when repentance will avail thee naught.
So beware! and again I say, beware!” Hardly
had she made an end of speaking when the Waziress
entered followed by the Kazii and witnesses, all old
women, with their hair streaming over their shoulders
and of reverend and majestic presence; and the Queen
bade them draw up the contract of marriage between
herself and the young man. Accordingly, they
performed the marriage-ceremony and the Queen made
a great bride-feast, to which she bade all the troops;
and after they had eaten and drunken, he went in unto
his bride and found her a maid virginal. So he
did away her hymen and abode with her seven years
in all joyance and solace and delight of life, till,
one day of the days, he bethought himself of the forbidden
door and said in himself, “Except there were
therein treasures greater and grander than any I have
seen, she had not forbidden me therefrom.”
So he rose and opened the door, when, lo! behind it
was the very bird which had brought him from the sea-shore
to the island, and it said to him, “No welcome
to a face that shall never prosper!” When he
saw it and heard what it said, he fled from it; but
it followed him and seizing him in its talons, flew
with him an hour’s journey betwixt heaven and
earth, till it set him down in the place whence it
had first carried him off and flew away. When
he came to his senses, he remembered his late estate,
great, grand and glorious, and the troops which rode
before him and his lordly rule and all the honour
and fair fortune he had lost and fell to weeping and
wailing.[FN#200] He abode two months on the sea-shore,
where the bird had set him down, hoping yet to return
to his wife, till, as he sat one night wakeful, mourning


