The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night — Volume 11 [Supplement] eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 426 pages of information about The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night — Volume 11 [Supplement].

The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night — Volume 11 [Supplement] eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 426 pages of information about The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night — Volume 11 [Supplement].
here and worship Allah with thee in this waste.”  When she found this earnestness in him, she fell in with his wishes, and said, “O king, I will consent to that which thou desirest and will be to thee a wife, but on condition that thou bring me Dadbin the king and his Wazir Kardan and his Chamberlain the chief Eunuch, and that they be present in thine assembly, so I may speak a word with them in thy presence, to the intent that thou mayst redouble in affection for me.”  Quoth Kisra, “And what is thy want unto this?” So she related to him her story from first to last, how she was the wife of Dadbin the king and how the Wazir Kardan had misspoken of her honour.  When King Kisra heard this, he redoubled in love-longing for her and affection and said to her, “Do whatso thou willest:”  then he let bring a litter[FN#195] and carrying her therein to his dwelling-place, entreated her with the utmost honour and espoused her.  Presently he sent a great army to King Dadbin and fetching him and his Wazir Kardan and the Eunuch-chamberlain, caused bring them before him, they unknowing the while what he might purpose to do with them.  Moreover, he caused set up for Arwa a pavilion[FN#196] in the courtyard of his palace, and she entered it and let down the curtain before herself.  When the servants had set their seats and they had seated themselves, Arwa raised a corner of the curtain and said, “O Kardan, rise to thy feet, for it befitteth not that thou sit in the like of this assembly, before this mighty King Kisra.”  When the Wazir heard these words, his heart fluttered and his joints were loosened and he rose to his feet of his fear.  Then said she to him, “By the virtue of Him who hath made thee stand up to judgment in this standing-stead, and thou abject and humiliated, I conjure thee speak the truth and say what egged thee on to lie against me and drive me from my home and from the land of my husband and made thee practise thus against a man and a Moslem so as to slay him.[FN#197] This is no place wherein lying availeth nor may artifice be herein.”  When the Wazir was ’ware that she was Arwa and heard her speech, he knew that it behoved him not to lie and that naught would avail him save truth; so he bowed his head groundwards and wept and said, “Whoso doth evil, needs must he incur it, albe his day be prolonged.  By Allah, I am he who hath sinned and transgressed, and naught prompted me unto this but fear and overmastering desire and the misery writ upon my brow.[FN#198] And indeed this woman is pure and chaste and free from all fault.”  When King Dadbin heard this, he beat his face and said to Kardan, his Wazir, “Allah slay thee![FN#199] ’Tis thou that hast parted me and my wife and wronged me!” But Kisra the king said to him, “Allah shall assuredly slay thee, because thou hastenedst and lookedst not into thine affair, and knewest not the guilty from the guiltless.  Hadst thou wrought deliberately, the unright had been made manifest to thee from the right; so when this villain
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The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night — Volume 11 [Supplement] from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.