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a vessel.’ ‘Come with me thither,’ said the merchant. So the camel-driver carried him to the wharf and showed him the barque and her owner. Quoth the merchant to the latter, ‘Whither didst thou carry the merchant and the stuff?’ ‘To such a place,’ answered the master, ‘where he fetched a camel-driver and setting the bales on the camel, went I know not whither.’ ‘Fetch me the camel-driver,’ said the merchant; so he fetched him and the merchant said to him, ‘Whither didst thou carry the bales of stuffs from the ship?’ ‘To such a khan,’ answered he. ‘Come thither with me and show it to me,’ said the merchant.
So the camel-driver went with him to a khan at a distance from the shore, where he had set down the stuffs, and showed him the mock merchant’s magazine, which he opened and found therein his four bales untouched and unopened. The thief had laid his mantle over them; so the merchant took the bales and the cloak and delivered them to the camel-driver, who laid them on his camel; after which the merchant locked the magazine and went away with the camel-driver. On the way, he met the thief, who followed him, till he had shipped the bales, when he said to him, ‘O my brother (God have thee in His keeping!), thou hast recovered thy goods, and nought of them is lost; so give me back my cloak.’ The merchant laughed and giving him back his cloak, let him go unhindered.
MESROUR THE EUNUCH AND IBN EL CARIBI.
The Khalif Haroun er Reshid was very restless one night; so he said to his Vizier Jaafer, ‘I am sleepless to-night and my heart is oppressed and I know not what to do.’ Now his henchman Mesrour was standing before him, and he laughed. Quoth the Khalif, ‘Dost thou laugh