The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night — Volume 12 [Supplement] eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 236 pages of information about The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night — Volume 12 [Supplement].

The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night — Volume 12 [Supplement] eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 236 pages of information about The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night — Volume 12 [Supplement].

The kazi lost no time in sending for the dyer, and, after complimenting him upon his reputation for piety, said to him, “I am informed that behind the curtain of chastity you have a daughter ripe for marriage.  Is not this true?” Replied the dyer, “My lord, you have been rightly informed.  I have a daughter who is indeed fully ripe for marriage, or she is more than thirty years of age, but the poor creature is not fit to be a wife to any man.  She is very ugly, lame, leprous, and foolish.  In short, she is such a monster that I am obliged to keep her out of all people’s sight.”  “Ha!” exclaimed the kazi, “you can’t impose on me with such a tale.  I was prepared for it.  But let me tell you that I myself am ready and willing to marry that same ugly and leprous daughter of yours, with all her defects.”  When the dyer heard this, he looked the kazi full in the face and said, “My lord, you are welcome to divert yourself by making a jest of my daughter.”  No,” replied the kazi “I am quite in earnest.  I demand your daughter in marriage.”  The dyer broke into laughter, saying, ’By Allah, some one has meant to play you a trick, my lord.  I forewarn you that she is ugly, lame, and leprous.”  “True,” responded the kazi, with a knowing smile; “I know her by these tokens.  I shall take her notwithstanding.”  The dyer, seeing him determined to marry his daughter, and being now convinced that he had been imposed upon by some ill-wisher, thought to himself, “I must demand of him a round sum of money which may cause him to cease troubling me any further about my poor daughter.”  So he said to the kazi, “My lord, I am ready to obey your command; but I will not part with my daughter unless you pay me beforehand a dowry of a thousand sequins.”  Replied the kazi, “Although, methinks, your demand is somewhat exorbitant, yet I will pay you the money at once.” which having done, he ordered the contract to be drawn up.  But when it came to be signed the dyer declared that he would not sign save in the presence of a hundred men of the law.  “Thou art very distrustful,” said the kazi, “but I will comply in everything, for I am resolved to make sure of thy daughter.”  So he sent for all the men of law in the city, and when they were assembled at the house of the kazi, the dyer said that he was now willing to sign the contract; “But I declare,” he added, “in the presence of these honourable witnesses, that I do so on the condition that if my daughter should not prove to your liking when you have seen her, and you should determine to divorce her, you shall oblige yourself to give her a thousand sequins of gold in addition to the same amount which I have already received from you.  “Agreed,” said the kazi, “I oblige myself to it, and call this whole assembly to be witnesses.  Art thou now satisfied?” “I am,” replied the dyer, who then went his way, saying that he would at once send him his bride.

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The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night — Volume 12 [Supplement] from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.