Page:The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Vol 9.djvu/273

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239

We tread the steps to us of destiny forewrit; For he to whom a way is decreed must needs submit
To walk therein, and he whose death is fore-ordained To be in such a land shall die in none but it.

And how excellent is the saying of the poet:

When to a land I fare in quest of good, perdie, I know not, of the twain, which fortune mine shall be;
Whether the good ’twill prove, whereafter I do seek, Or else the evil hap that seeketh after me.

After this, he sent for the husbandman, whose guest he had been, when he was a fugitive, and made him his Vizier of the Right and his chief counsellor. Then, learning that he had a daughter of surpassing beauty and grace, of noble parts and high of worth and birth, he took her to wife; and in due time he married his son. So they abode awhile in all delight and solace of life and their days were serene and their joys untroubled, till there came to them the Destroyer of Delights and the Sunderer of Companies, he who layeth waste flourishing houses and orphaneth sons and daughters. And glory be to the [Ever-]Living One who dieth not and in whose hand are the keys of the Seen and the Unseen!”


Now, during this time, Shehrzad had borne the King three male children: so, when she had made an end of the story of Marouf, she rose to her feet and kissing the earth before him, said, “O king of the age and unique pearl of the time and the day, I am thine handmaid and these thousand nights and one have I entertained thee with stories of foregone peoples and admonitory instances of the ancients. May I then make bold to crave a boon of Thy Majesty?” “Ask, O Shehrzad,” answered he, “and