Page:The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Vol 3.djvu/301

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

275

and they have given me ten days’ time.’ ‘Have no care and think nought but good,’ said one of the dervishes; ‘for I am head of the convent and have forty dervishes under my hand. I will gather thee from them the ten thousand dinars and thou shalt pay thy father-in-law the dowry. But now bid thy wife make us music, that we may be heartened and solaced, for to some music is food, to others medicine and to others refreshment.’[1] Now these four dervishes were none other than the Khalif Haroun er Reshid and his Vizier Jaafer the Barmecide and Abou Nuwas ben Hani[2] and Mesrour the headsman; and the reason of their coming thither was that the Khalif, being heavy at heart, had called his Vizier and signified to him his wish to go forth and walk about the city, to divert himself. So they all four donned dervish habits and went out and walked about, till they came to Zubeideh’s house and hearing music, were minded to know the cause. They spent the night in mirth and harmony and discourse, till the morning, when the Khalif laid a hundred dinars under the prayer-carpet and taking leave of Alaeddin, went his way, he and his companions. Presently, Zubeideh lifted the carpet and finding the hundred dinars, gave them to her husband, saying, ‘Take these hundred dinars that I have found under the prayer-carpet; the dervishes must have laid them there, without our knowledge.’ So he took the money and repairing to the market, bought meat and rice and butter and so forth. When it was night, he lighted the candles and said to Zubeideh, ‘The dervishes have not brought the ten thousand dinars that they promised me: but indeed they are poor men.’ As they were talking, the dervishes knocked at the door and she said, ‘Go down

  1. Lit. a fan.
  2. One of the most celebrated, as well as the most witty and licentious, of Arab poets. He was one of Haroun er Reshid’s boon-companions and died early in the ninth century.