drank the choicest wines, and ate with relish sweet
conserves and dry fruit and a dessert of various delicacies.
At length, when they had their requirement of eating
and drinking, they retired into another room which
contained a raised dais of the grandest, bedecked
with gold-purfled cushions and pillows wrought with
seed-pearl and Achaemenian tapestries, whereupon they
took seat side by side for converse and solace.
Then came in a troop of Jinns and fairies who danced
and sang before them with wondrous grace and art;
and this pretty show pleased Peri-Banu and Prince
Ahmad, who watched the sports and displays with ever-renewed
delight. At last the newly wedded couple rose
and retired, weary of revelry, to another chamber,
wherein they found that the slaves had dispread the
genial bed, whose frame was gold studded with jewels
and whose furniture was of satin and sendal flowered
with the rarest embroidery. Here the guests who
attended at the marriage festival and the handmaids
of the palace, ranged in two lines, hailed the bride
and bridegroom as they went within; and then, craving
dismissal, they all departed leaving them to take
their joyance in bed. On such wise the marriage-festival
and nuptial merry-makings were kept up day after day,
with new dishes and novel sports, novel dances and
new music; and, had Prince Ahmad lived a thousand
years with mortal kind, never could he have seen such
revels or heard such strains or enjoyed such love-liesse.
Thus six months soon passed in the Fairy-land beside
Peri-Banu, whom he loved with a love so fond that he
would not lose her from his sight for a moment’s
space; but would feel restless and ill-at-ease whenas
he ceased to look upon her. In like manner Peri-Banu
was fulfilled with affection for him and strove to
please her bridegroom more and more every moment by
new arts of dalliance and fresh appliances of pleasure,
until so absorbing waxed his passion for her that
the thought of home and kindred, kith and kin, faded
from his thoughts and fled his mind. But after
a time his memory awoke from slumber and at times he
found himself longing to look upon his father, albeit
well did he wot that it were impossible to find out
how the far one fared unless he went himself to visit
him. So one day quoth he to Peri-Banu, “An
it be thy pleasure, I pray thee give me thy command
that I may leave thee for a few days to see my sire,
who doubtless grieveth at my long absence and suffereth
all the sorrows of separation from his son.”
Peri-Banu, hearing these words was dismayed with sore
dismay, for that she thought within herself that this
was only an excuse whereby he might escape and leave
her after enjoyment and possession had made her love
pall upon the palate of his mind. So quoth she
in reply, “Hast thou forgotten thy vows and
thy plighted troth, that thou wishest to leave me
now? Have love and longing ceased to stir thee,
whilst my heart always throbbeth in raptures as it
hath ever done at the very thought of thee?”