they were seasoned. While they were eating, the
slave who brought them in waited upon them; she took
particular care to invite them to eat of what she knew
to be the greatest dainties. The other slaves
brought them excellent wine after they had eaten.
When they had done, there was presented to each of
them a gold basin full of water to wash their hands;
after which, they brought them a golden pot full of
the wood of aloes, with which they perfumed their
beards and clothes. Odoriferous water was not
forgotten, but served in a golden vessel enriched
with diamonds and rubies, and it was thrown upon their
beards and faces according to custom; they then resumed
their places, but had scarcely sat down, when the slave
entreated them to arise and follow her. She opened
a door, and conducted them into a large saloon of
wonderful structure. It was a dome of the most
agreeable form, supported by a hundred pillars of
marble, white as alabaster. The bases and chapiters
of the pillars were adorned with four-footed beasts,
and birds of various sorts, gilded. The carpet
of this noble saloon consisted of one piece of cloth
of gold, embroidered with bunches of roses in red
and white silk; and the dome painted in the same manner,
after the Arabian fashion, presented to the mind one
of the most charming objects. In every space
between the columns was a little sofa adorned in the
same manner, and great vessels of china, crystal,
jasper, jet, porphyry, agate, and other precious materials,
garnished with gold and jewels; in these spaces were
also so many large windows, with balconies projecting
breast high, fitted up as the sofas, and looking out
into the most delicious garden; the walks were of
little pebbles of different colours, of the same pattern
as the carpet of the saloon; so that, looking upon
the carpet within and without it seemed as if the
dome and the garden with all its ornaments had been
upon the same carpet. The prospect was, at the
end of the walks, terminated by two canals of clear
water, of the same circular figure as the dome, one
of which being higher than the other, emptied its
water into the lowermost, in form of a sheet; and
curious pots of gilt brass, with flowers and shrubs,
were set upon the banks of the canals at equal distances.
Those walks lay betwixt great plots of ground planted
with straight and bushy trees, where a thousand birds
formed a melodious concert, and diverted the eye by
flying about, and playing together, or fighting in
the air.
The prince of Persia and Ebn Thaher were a long time engaged in viewing the magnificence of the place, and expressed their surprise at every thing thing saw, especially the prince, who had never beheld any thing like it. Ebn Thaher, though he had been several times in that delicious place, could not but observe many new beauties, In a word they never grew weary in admiring so many singularities, and were thus agreeably employed, when they perceived a company of ladies richly appareled sitting without, at some