Page:The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Vol 6.djvu/261

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

233

EL MELIK EN NASIR AND HIS VIZIER.

There was given to Abou Aamir ben Merwan, Vizier [to El Melik en Nasir of Egypt],[1] a boy of the Christians, than whom never fell eyes on a handsomer. En Nasir saw him and said to the Vizier, ‘Whence comes this boy?’ ‘From God,’ answered Abou Aamir; whereupon, ‘Wilt thou fright us with stars,’ quoth the King, ‘and captive us with moons?’ Abou Aamir excused himself to him and making up a present, sent it to him with the boy, to whom he said, ‘Be thou part of the present: were it not of necessity, my soul had not consented to give thee away.’ And he wrote with him these verses:

Behold the full moon, O my lord, that cometh to thy sky; For none, that heaven than earth of moons is worthier, may deny.
My soul, to pleasure thee, I give, nor ever yet of one, His soul to pleasure one who gave, before myself, heard I.

The thing pleased En Nasir and he requited him with much treasure and the Vizier became high in favour with him. After this, a slave-girl, one of the loveliest women in the world, was presented to the Vizier, and he feared lest this should come to the King’s ears and he desire her, and the like should happen as with the boy. So he made up a present still costlier than the first Night dcxcviii.and sent it with her to the King, together with these verses:

My lord, the very sun is this; the moon thou hadst before: So now these planets twain shall meet and glitter side by side;
A combination presaging fair fortune to my life. Do thou with them in all delight of Paradise abide;
For they, by Allah, have no third in beauty nor hast thou A second dominion in all the world so wide.

Wherefore his credit redoubled with En Nasir; but after awhile, one of his enemies maligned him to the King, alleging that there still lurked in him desire for the boy