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his men somewhat to give the damsels; but they had no money; so he gave each girl ten golden-headed arrows from his quiver. Whereupon quoth one of them to her mates, ‘Harkye! These fashions pertain to none but Maan ben Zaïdeh; so let each of us recite somewhat of verse in his praise.’ Then said the first:
He heads his shafts with gold and shooting at his foes, Dispenses thus largesse and bounties far and wide,
Giving the wounded man wherewith to get him cure And grave-clothes unto him must in the tombs abide.
And the second:
A warrior, for the great excess of his magnificence, Both friends and foes enjoy the goods his liberal hands dispense.
His arrowheads are forged of gold, that so his very wars May not estop his generous soul from its munificence.
And the third:
With arrows he shoots at his foes, of his generosity, Whose heads are fashioned and forged of virgin gold, in steel’s room;
That those whom he wounds may spend the price of the gold for their cure And those that are slain of his shafts may buy them the wede of the tomb.
MAAN BEN ZAÏDEH AND THE BEDOUIN.
It is told also of Maan ben Zaïdeh that he went forth one day to the chase with his company, and they came upon a herd of gazelles. So they separated in pursuit of them and Maan was left alone in chase of one of the gazelles. When he had made prize of it, he alighted and slaughtered it; and as he was thus engaged, he espied a man coming towards him on an ass. So he remounted and riding up to the new-comer, saluted him and asked him whence he came. Quoth he, ‘I come from the land of Cuzaäh, where we have had a two years’ dearth; but this year it was a season of plenty and I sowed cucumbers. They came up