matter of espousals; but she ever opposed to him refusals,
till at last she turned upon him angrily and cried,
’O my father, if thou name matrimony to me once
more, I will go into my chamber and take a sword and,
fixing its hilt in the ground, will set its point
to my waist; then will I press upon it, till it come
forth from my back, and so slay myself.’
Now when the King heard these her words, the light
became darkness in his sight and his heart burned
for her as with a flame of fire, because he feared
lest she should kill herself; and he was filled with
perplexity concerning her affair and the kings her
suitors. So he said to her ’If thou be determined
not to marry and there be no help for it abstain from
going and coming in and out.’ Then he placed
her in a house and shut her up in a chamber, appointing
ten old women as duennas to guard her, and forbade
her to go forth to the Seven Palaces; moreover, he
made it appear that he was incensed against her, and
sent letters to all the kings, giving them to know
that she had been stricken with madness by the Jinns;
and it is now a year since she hath thus been secluded.”
Then continued the Ifrit Dahnash, addressing the Ifritah
Maymunah, “And I, O my lady go to her every night
and take my fill of feeding my sight on her face and
I kiss her between the eyes: yet, of my love
to her, I do her no hurt neither mount her, for that
her youth is fair and her grace surpassing: every
one who seeth her jealouseth himself for her.
I conjure thee, therefore, O my lady, to go back with
me and look on her beauty and loveliness and stature
and perfection of proportion; and after, if thou wilt,
chastise me or enslave me; and win to thy will, for
it is shine to bid and to forbid.” So saying,
the Ifrit Dahnash bowed his head towards the earth
and drooped his wings downward; but Maymunah laughed
at his words and spat in his face and answered, “What
is this girl of whom thou pratest but a potsherd wherewith
to wipe after making water?[FN#249] Faugh! Faugh!
By Allah, O accursed, I thought thou hadst some wondrous
tale to tell me or some marvellous news to give me.
How would it be if thou were to sight my beloved?
Verily, this night I have seen a young man, whom if
thou saw though but in a dream, thou wouldst be palsied
with admiration and spittle would flow from thy mouth.”
Asked the Ifrit, “And who and what is this youth?”;
and she answered, “Know, O Dahnash, that there
hath befallen the young man the like of what thou
tellest me befel thy mistress; for his father pressed
him again and again to marry, but he refused, till
at length his sire waxed wroth at being opposed and
imprisoned him in the tower where I dwell: and
I came up to-night and saw him.” Said Dahnash,
“O my lady, shew me this youth, that I may see
if he be indeed handsomer than my mistress, the Princess
Budur, or not; for I cannot believe that the like
of her liveth in this our age.” Rejoined
Maymunah, “Thou liest, O accursed, O most ill-omened
of Marids and vilest of Satans![FN#250] Sure am I
that the like of my beloved is not in this world.”—And
Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to
say her permitted say.