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one another, ‘This youth dishonours the Commander of the Faithful among Kings: but, if he reproved him, he would leave his present way of life.’ The Khalif heard what they said; so he bespoke his son of this, saying, ‘O my son, thou puttest me to shame by thy present way of life.’ The young man looked at him and made no reply: then he beckoned to a bird, that was perched on the battlements of the palace, and said to it, ‘O bird, I conjure thee, by Him who created thee, alight upon my hand.’ And straightway it flew down and perched on his hand. Quoth he, ‘Return to thy place;’ and it did so. Then he said, ‘Alight on the hand of the Commander of the Faithful;’ but it refused, and he said to his father, ‘It is thou that puttest me to shame, amongst the friends of God, by thy love of the world; and now I am resolved to depart from thee, never to return to thee, save in the world to come.’ Then he went down to Bassora, where he fell to working with those that wrought in mud,[1] taking, as his day’s hire, but a dirhem and a danic.[2] With the danic he fed himself and gave alms of the dirhem.
(Quoth Abou Aamir of Bassora), There fell down a wall in my house: so I went out to the station of the artisans, to find one who should set it up for me, and my eyes fell on a handsome youth of a radiant countenance. So I accosted him and said to him, “O my friend, dost thou seek work?” “Yes,” answered he; and I said, “Come with me and build a wall.” “On two conditions,” replied he. Quoth I, “What are they, O my friend?” “First,” said he, “that my hire be a dirhem and a danic, and secondly, that, when the Muezzin calls to prayer, thou shalt let me go pray with the congregation.” “It is well,” answered I and carried him to my house, where he fell to work, such work as I never saw the like of. Presently, I named to him the