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take our ship and slay us to the last man. Yet needs must we put in here to rest [and refit].’ Quoth Behram, ‘Let us clothe this Muslim we have with us in a slave’s habit and carry him ashore with us, so that, when the queen sees him, she will think and say, “This is a slave.” As for me, I will tell her that I am a dealer in white slaves and that I had with me many, but have sold all but this one, whom I have retained to keep my accounts, for he can read and write.’ And the captain said, ‘This device should serve well.’ Presently they reached the city and slackening sail, cast anchor; when, behold, Queen Merjaneh came down to them, attended by her guards, and halting before the ship, called out to the captain, who landed and kissed the earth before her. Quoth she, ‘What is the lading of thy ship and whom hast thou with thee?’ ‘O queen of the age,’ answered he, ‘I have with me a merchant who deals in slaves.’ And she said, ‘Bring him to me;’ whereupon Behram came ashore to her, followed by Asaad in a slave’s habit, and kissed the earth before her. ‘What is thy condition?’ asked the queen; and Behram answered, ‘I am a slave-dealer.’ Then she looked at Asaad and taking him for a slave, said to him, ‘What is thy name?’ Quoth he, ‘Dost thou ask my present or my former name?’ ‘Hast thou then two names?’ asked she, and he answered (and indeed his voice was choked with tears), ‘Yes; my name aforetime was Asaad,[1] but now it is Muterr.’[2] Her heart inclined to him and she said, ‘Canst thou write?’ ‘Yes,’ answered he; and she gave him inkhorn and pen and paper and said to him, ‘Write somewhat, that I may see it.’ So he wrote the following verses:
Harkye, O thou that judgest, what can a mortal do, When fate, in all conditions, doth him to death ensue?
It casts him in the ocean, bound hand and foot, and says, “Beware lest with the water you wet yourself, look you!”