the Wuzu ablution, prayed the mid afternoon prayer;
after which Abd al-Samad replaced the ewer and the
two caskets in the saddle bags and throwing them over
the mule’s back, mounted and cried “Up
with thee and let us be off,” presently adding,
“O Judar, knowest thou how far we have come
since we left Cairo?” “Not I, by Allah,”
replied he, and Abd al-Samad, “We have come a
whole month’s journey.” Asked Judar,
“And how is that?”; and the Moor answered,
“Know, O Judar, that this mule under us is a
Marid of the Jinn who every day performeth a year’s
journey; but, for thy sake, she hath gone an easier
pace.” Then they set out again and fared
on westwards till nightfall, when they halted and
the Maghribi brought out supper from the saddle bags,
and in like manner, in the morning, he took forth
wherewithal to break their fast. So they rode
on four days, journeying till midnight and then alighting
and sleeping until morning, when they fared on again;
and all that Judar had a mind to, he sought of the
Moor, who brought it out of the saddle bags.
On the fifth day, they arrived at Fez and Mequinez
and entered the city, where all who met the Maghribi
saluted him and kissed his hands; and he continued
riding through the streets, till he came to a certain
door, at which he knocked, whereupon it opened and
out came a girl like the moon, to whom said he, “O
my daughter, O Rahmah,[FN#275] open us the upper chamber.”
“On my head and eyes, O my papa!” replied
she and went in, swaying her hips to and fro with a
graceful and swimming gait like a thirsting gazelle,
movements that ravished Judar’s reason, and
he said, “This is none other than a King’s
daughter.” So she opened the upper chamber,
and the Moor, taking the saddle bags from the mule’s
back, said, “Go, and God bless thee!”
when lo! the earth clove asunder and swallowing the
mule, closed up again as before. And Judar said,
“O Protector! praised be Allah, who hath kept
us in safety on her back!” Quoth the Maghribi,
“Marvel not, O Judar. I told thee that the
mule was an Ifrit; but come with us into the upper
chamber.” So they went up into it, and
Judar was amazed at the profusion of rich furniture
and pendants of gold and silver and jewels and other
rare and precious things which he saw there.
As soon as they were seated, the Moor bade Rahmah
bring him a certain bundle[FN#276] and opening it,
drew out a dress worth a thousand diners, which he
gave to Judar, saying, “Don this dress, O Judar,
and welcome to thee!” So Judar put it on and
became a fair en sample of the Kings of the West.
Then the Maghribi laid the saddle bags before him,
and, putting in his hand, pulled out dish after dish,
till they had before them a tray of forty kinds of
meat, when he said to Judar, “Come near, O my
master! eat and excuse us”—And Shahrazad
perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted
say,
When it was the Six Hundred and Thirteenth Night,