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After, if he please, he shall abide with me, or if he please, he shall return with his wife to his father.” The guests replied, “It is well seen of thee.” And they looked at Noureddin and were pleased with him. So the Vizier sent for Cadis and witnesses, and they drew up the marriage contract, after which the servants perfumed the guests with incense and sprinkled rose-water on them, and they drank sherbet of sugar and went away. Then the Vizier bade his servants take Noureddin to the bath and sent him a suit of the best of his own clothes, besides cups and napkins and perfume-burners and all else that he required. So he went to the bath, and when he came out and put on the suit, he was like the moon on the night of her full. Then he mounted his mule and returning to the Vizier’s palace, went in to the latter and kissed his hands. The Vizier welcomed him and said to him, “Arise, go in to thy wife this night, and to-morrow I will carry thee to the Sultan; and I pray God to bless thee with all manner of good!”Night xxi. So Noureddin left him and went in to his wife, the Vizier’s daughter.
To return to his brother Shemseddin. When he came back to Cairo, after having been absent awhile with the Sultan, he missed his brother and enquired of his servants, who said, “On the day of thy departure with the Sultan, thy brother mounted his mule, caparisoned as for state, saying, ‘I am going towards El Kelyoubiyeh and shall be absent a day or two, for I am heavy of heart; and let none follow me.’ Then he rode away, and from that time to this we have heard nothing of him.” Shemseddin was concerned at his brother’s absence and became exceedingly uneasy, when he found that he did not return, and said to himself, “This is because I spoke harshly to him that night, and he has taken it to heart and gone away; but I must send after him.” Then he went in to the King and acquainted him with what had happened, and he wrote letters and despatched couriers to his deputies in every