Читать книгу One Thousand and One Nights (Complete Annotated Edition) - Richard Francis Burton - Страница 172

When it was the One Hundred and Twenty-seventh Night,

Оглавление

Table of Contents

She said, It hath reached me, O auspicious King, that the Wazir Dandan pursued to King Zau al-Makan, The youth Aziz thus continued his story to Taj al-Muluk: When I awoke and found myself thrown down at the garden gate, I rose, groaning for pain and misery, and made my way to our home and entering, I came upon my mother weeping for me, and saying, “Would I knew, O my son, in what land art thou?” So I drew near and threw myself upon her, and when she looked at me and felt me, she knew that I was ill; for my face was coloured black and tan. Then I thought of my cousin and all the kind offices she had been wont to do me, and I learned when too late that she had truly loved me; so I wept for her and my mother wept also Presently she said to me, “O my son, thy sire is dead.” At this my fury against Fate redoubled, and I cried till I fell into a fit. When I came to myself, I looked at the place where my cousin Azizah had been used to sit and shed tears anew, till I all but fainted once more for excess of weeping; and I ceased not to cry and sob and wail till midnight, when my mother said to me, “Thy father hath been dead these ten days.” “I shall never think of any one but my cousin Azizah,” replied I; “and indeed I deserve all that hath befallen me, for that I neglected her who loved me with love so dear.” Asked she, “What hath befallen thee?” So I told her all that had happened and she wept awhile, then she rose and set some matter of meat and drink before me. I ate a little and drank, after which I repeated my story to her, and told her the whole occurrence; whereupon she exclaimed, “Praised be Allah, that she did but this to thee and forbore to slaughter thee!” Then she nursed me and medicined me till I regained my health; and, when my recovery was complete, she said to me, “O my son, I will now bring out to thee that which thy cousin committed to me in trust for thee; for it is thine. She swore me not to give it thee, till I should see thee recalling her to mind and weeping over her and thy connection severed from other than herself; and now I know that these conditions are fulfilled in thee.” So she arose, and opening a chest, took out this piece of linen, with the figures of gazelles worked thereon, which I had given to Azizah in time past; and taking it I found written therein these couplets,

“Lady of beauty, say, who taught thee hard and harsh design,

To slay with longing Love’s excess this hapless lover thine?

An thou fain disremember me beyond our parting day,

Allah will know, that thee and thee my memory never shall tyne.

Thou blamest me with bitter speech yet sweetest ’tis to me;

Wilt generous be and deign one day to show of love a sign?

I had not reckoned Love contained so much of pine and pain;

And soul distress until I came for thee to pain and pine

Never my heart knew weariness, until that eve I fell

In love wi’ thee, and prostrate fell before those glancing eyne!

My very foes have mercy on my case and moan therefor;

But thou, O heart of Indian steel, all mercy dost decline.

No, never will I be consoled, by Allah, an I die,

Nor yet forget the love of thee though life in ruins lie!”

When I read these couplets, I wept with sore weeping and buffeted my face; then I unfolded the scroll, and there fell from it an other paper. I opened it and behold, I found written therein, ‘Know, O son of my uncle, that I acquit thee of my blood and I beseech Allah to make accord between thee and her whom thou lovest; but if aught befal thee through the daughter of Dalilah the Wily, return thou not to her neither resort to any other woman and patiently bear thine affliction, for were not thy fated life tide a long life, thou hadst perished long ago; but praised be Allah who hath appointed my death day before thine! My peace be upon thee; preserve this cloth with the gazelles herein figured and let it not leave thee, for it was my companion when thou was absent from me;”— And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.

One Thousand and One Nights (Complete Annotated Edition)

Подняться наверх