the dress, and ran forth to tell Ravaloke. As
I ran by a window looking on the inner court, I saw
below a crowd of all the slaves of Ravaloke round
one that was seeking to escape from them, and ’twas
Kadrab with a camel’s hump on his back, and
a broad brown plaister over it, the wretch howling,
peering across his shoulder, and trying to bolt from
his burden, as a horse that would run from his rider.
Then I saw that Kadrab also had his wish, his camel’s
hump, and thought, ’The old beggar, what was
he but a Genie?’ Surely Ravaloke caressed me
when he heard of the adventure, and what had befallen
Kadrab was the jest of the city; but for me I spared
little time away from that book, and studied in it
incessantly the ways and windings of magic, till I
could hold communication with Genii, and wield charms
to summon them, and utter spells that subdue them,
discovering the haunts of talismans that enthral Afrites
and are powerful among men. There was that Kadrab
coming to me daily to call out in the air for the
old beggarman to rid him of his hump; and he would
waste hours looking up into the sky moodily for him,
and cursing the five toes of his foot, for he doubted
not the two beggars were one, and that he was punished
for the kick, and lamented it direly, saying in the
thick of his whimperings, ’I’d give the
foot that did it to be released from my hump, O my
fair mistress.’ So I pitied him, and made
a powder and a spell, and my first experiment in magic
was to relieve Kadrab of his hump, and I succeeded
in loosening it, and it came away from him, and sank
into the ground of the garden where we stood.
So I told Kadrab to say nothing of this, but the
idle-pated fellow blabbed it over the city, and it
came to the ears of Goorelka. Then she sent
for me to visit her, and by the advice of Ravaloke
I went, and she fondled me, and sought to get at the
depth of my knowledge by a spell that tieth every faculty
save the tongue, and it is the spell of vain longing.
Now, because I baffled her arts she knew me more
cunning than I seemed, and as night advanced she affected
to be possessed with pleasure in me, and took me in
her arms and sought to fascinate me, and I heard her
mutter once, ’Shall I doubt the warning of Karaz?’
So presently she said, ‘Come with me’;
and I went with her under the curtain of that apartment
into another, a long saloon, wherein were couches
round a fountain, and beyond it an aviary lit with
lamps: when we were there she whistled, and immediately
there was a concert of birds, a wondrous accord of
exquisite piping, and she leaned on a couch and took
me by her to listen; sweet and passionate was the
harmony of the birds; but I let not my faculties lull,
and observed that round the throat of every bird was
a ringed mark of gold and stamps of divers gems similar
in colour to a ring on the forefinger of her right
hand, which she dazzled my sight with as she flashed
it. When we had listened a long hour to this
music, the Princess gazed on me as if to mark the