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The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night - Vol 4 PDF

541 Pages·2016·2.59 MB·English
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The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night RENDERED INTO ENGLISH FROM THE LITERAL AND COMPLETE FRENCH TRANSLATION OF DR J.C.MARDRUS BY POWYS MATHERS Volume IV LONDON AND NEW YORK First published as a paperback in 1986 by Routledge & Kegan Paul plc This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005. “To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge’s collection of thousands of eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk.” All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. ISBN 0-203-35914-3 Master e-book ISBN ISBN 0-203-37170-4 (Adobe eReader Format) ISBN 0-415-04542-8 (vol. IV) ISBN 0-415-04543-6 (set) Contents of Volume IV THE TALE OF PEARL-HARVEST 1 THE TALE OF THE TWO LIVES OF SULTAN 15 MAHMUD THE TALE OF THE UNENDING TREASURE 21 THE ADVENTURES OF THE ROYAL BASTARD 35 containing The Tale of the Ape Youth 47 The First Madman’s Tale 56 The Second Madman’s Tale 63 The Third Madman’s Tale 75 WISDOM BELOW THE SEVERED HEADS 83 THE PERFIDY OF WIVES 91 containing The Pastrycook’s Tale 95 The Greengrocer’s Tale 97 The Butcher’s Tale 99 The First Clarinet’s Tale 101 THE TALE OF ALI BABA AND THE FORTY THIEVES 103 THE MEETINGS OF AL-RASHID ON THE BRIDGE OF 127 BAGHDAD containing The Master of the White Mare 130 v The Youth behind whom Indian and Chinese Airs were 142 Played The Generous Sheikh 149 The Split-Mouth Schoolmaster 163 The Blind Man who would be buffeted 166 THE TALE OF PRINCESS ZULAIKAH 173 SWEET TALES OF CARELESS YOUTH 189 containing Hard-Head and his Sister Little-Foot 189 The Anklet 193 The He-Goat and the King’s Daughter 196 The Prince and the Tortoise 203 The Chick-Pea Seller’s Daughter 210 The Looser 215 The Captain of Police 217 A Contest in Generosity 220 The Gelded Barber 223 Firuz and His Wife 227 The Mind and the Soil 230 THE TALE OF THE MAGIC BOOK 233 THE SPLENDID TALE OF PRINCE DIAMOND 259 SOME JESTS AND SUGGESTIONS OF THE MASTER 295 OF SHIFTS AND LAUGHTER THE TALE OF THE GIRL HEART’S-MIRACLE, 307 LIEUTENANT OF THE BIRDS THE TALE OF AL-MALIK BAIBARS AND HIS 341 CAPTAINS OF POLICE containing The First Captain’s Tale 342 vi The Second Captain’s Tale 351 The Third Captain’s Tale 354 The Fourth Captain’s Tale 360 The Fifth Captain’s Tale 365 The Sixth Captain’s Tale 372 The Seventh Captain’s Tale 381 The Eighth Captain’s Tale 381 The Ninth Captain’s Tale 388 The Tenth Captain’s Tale 392 The Eleventh Captain’s Tale 394 The Twelfth Captain’s Tale 397 THE TALE OF THE SEA ROSE OF THE GIRL OF 403 CHINA THE TALE OF THE HONEY CAKE AND THE 417 COBBLER’S CALAMITOUS WIFE WINDOWS ON THE GARDEN OF HISTORY 445 containing The Poet Duraid, His Generosity, and His Love for Tumadir 447 al-Khansah Ufairah the Suns, and Hudhailah the Moons, the Warrior 458 Daughters of the Poet Find The Love Story of Princess Fatimah and the Poet Murakkish 460 The Vengeance of King Hujr 463 Men in the Judgment of Their Wives 465 Tales of Umar ibn al-Khattab 468 Blue Salamah the Singer 475 The Tale of the Parasite 477 The Tale of the Slave of Destiny 479 vii The Tale of the Fatal Collar 484 Ishak of Mosul and the Lost Melody 487 The Two Dancers 491 The Pistachio Oil Cream, and the Legal Point 494 The Arab Girl at the Fountain 498 The Perils of Insistence 501 THE END OF JAFAR AND THE BARMAKIDS 505 THE TENDER TALE OF PRINCE JASMINE AND 517 PRINCESS ALMOND CONCLUSION 527 viii The Tale of Pearl-Harvest AND SHAHRAZAD SAID TO KING SHAHRYAR: IT is related in the writings of the wise past that the Commander of the Faithful, al-Mutasid Billah, sixth Khalifah in the line of Abbas, grandson of al-Mutawakkil, grandson of Harun al-Rashid, was a prince of lofty soul and fearless heart. He was noble and beautiful, royal and intelligent, he had the courage and strength of lions, and a genius which made him the greatest poet of his time. He kept sixty zealous wazirs about him in Baghdad to watch day and night over the welfare of his people; so that no trifle escaped him in all his mighty empire, from the desert of Sham to the Moorish confines, from the mountains of Khurasan and the western sea to the furthest bounds of India and Afghanistan. One day, as the Khalifah was walking with Ahmad ibn Hamdun, his intimate friend and chosen cup-companion (to whom we owe the oral transmission of the fairest tales and verses of our ancestors), he came to a lordly dwelling folded pleasantly among gardens. Its harmonious architecture said more of its owner’s fine taste than the tongue of an eager friend, and to a man of the Khalifah’s subtle and attentive soul seemed eloquence itself. As the two men sat down on a marble bench which faced the gate, to rest from their walking and breathe an air laden with the souls of jasmine and lily, they saw two youths of moon-like beauty coming towards them out of the shades of the garden. One was saying to the other: ‘Would that heaven might send some chance guests to our master on this delightful day. He is sad when he has to eat alone.’ ‘This is the first time that such a thing has happened,’ answered the second youth. ‘It is strange that no citizen has walked out to see our gardens on this fair Spring day.’

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