We entered it, and
found the trap-door which led to the staircase, but we had great
difficulty in raising it, because the prince had fastened it down
underneath with the plaster he had brought with him.
My uncle went first, and I followed him. When we reached the
bottom of the stairs we stepped into a sort of ante-room, filled
with such a dense smoke that it was hardly possible to see
anything. However, we passed through the smoke into a large
chamber, which at first seemed quite empty. The room was
brilliantly lighted, and in another moment we perceived a sort of
platform at one end, on which were the bodies of the prince and a
lady, both half-burned, as if they had been dragged out of a fire
before it had quite consumed them.
This horrible sight turned me faint, but, to my surprise, my
uncle did not show so much surprise as anger.
"I knew," he said, "that my son was tenderly attached to this
lady, whom it was impossible he should ever marry. I tried to turn
his thoughts, and presented to him the most beautiful princesses,
but he cared for none of them, and, as you see, they have now been
united by a horrible death in an underground tomb." But, as he
spoke, his anger melted into tears, and again I wept with him.
When he recovered himself he drew me to him. "My dear nephew,"
he said, embracing me, "you have come to me to take his place, and
I will do my best to forget that I ever had a son who could act in
so wicked a manner." Then he turned and went up the stairs.
We reached the palace without anyone having noticed our absence,
when, shortly after, a clashing of drums, and cymbals, and the
blare of trumpets burst upon our astonished ears. At the same time
a thick cloud of dust on the horizon told of the approach of a
great army. My heart sank when I perceived that the commander was
the vizir who had dethroned my father, and was come to seize the
kingdom of my uncle.
The capital was utterly unprepared to stand a siege, and seeing
that resistance was useless, at once opened its gates. My uncle
fought hard for his life, but was soon overpowered, and when he
fell I managed to escape through a secret passage, and took refuge
with an officer whom I knew I could trust.
Persecuted by ill-fortune, and stricken with grief, there seemed
to be only one means of safety left to me. I shaved my beard and my
eyebrows, and put on the dress of a calender, in which it was easy
for me to travel without being known. I avoided the towns till I
reached the kingdom of the famous and powerful Caliph,
Haroun-al-Raschid, when I had no further reason to fear my enemies.
It was my intention to come to Bagdad and to throw myself at the
feet of his Highness, who would, I felt certain, be touched by my
sad story, and would grant me, besides, his help and
protection.
After a journey which lasted some months I arrived at length at
the gates of this city. It was sunset, and I paused for a little to
look about me, and to decide which way to turn my steps. I was
still debating on this subject when I was joined by this other
calender, who stopped to greet me. "You, like me, appear to be a
stranger," I said. He replied that I was right, and before he could
say more the third calender came up. He, also, was newly arrived in
Bagdad, and being brothers in misfortune, we resolved to cast in
our lots together, and to share whatever fate might have in
store.
By this time it had grown late, and we did not know where to
spend the night. But our lucky star having guided us to this door,
we took the liberty of knocking and of asking for shelter, which
was given to us at once with the best grace in the world.
This, madam, is my story.
"I am satisfied," replied Zobeida; "you can go when you
like."
The calender, however, begged leave to stay and to hear the
histories of his two friends and of the three other persons of the
company, which he was allowed to do.
The Story of the Second Calendar, Son of
a King
"Madam," said the young man, addressing Zobeida, "if you wish to
know how I lost my right eye, I shall have to tell you the story of
my whole life."
I was scarcely more than a baby, when the king my father,
finding me unusually quick and clever for my age, turned his
thoughts to my education. I was taught first to read and write, and
then to learn the Koran, which is the basis of our holy religion,
and the better to understand it, I read with my tutors the ablest
commentators on its teaching, and committed to memory all the
traditions respecting the Prophet, which have been gathered from
the mouth of those who were his friends. I also learnt history, and
was instructed in poetry, versification, geography, chronology, and
in all the outdoor exercises in which every prince should excel.
But what I liked best of all was writing Arabic characters, and in
this I soon surpassed my masters, and gained a reputation in this
branch of knowledge that reached as far as India itself.
Now the Sultan of the Indies, curious to see a young prince with
such strange tastes, sent an ambassador to my father, laden with
rich presents, and a warm invitation to visit his court. My father,
who was deeply anxious to secure the friendship of so powerful a
monarch, and held besides that a little travel would greatly
improve my manners and open my mind, accepted gladly, and in a
short time I had set out for India with the ambassador, attended
only by a small suite on account of the length of the journey, and
the badness of the roads. However, as was my duty, I took with me
ten camels, laden with rich presents for the Sultan.
We had been travelling for about a month, when one day we saw a
cloud of dust moving swiftly towards us; and as soon as it came
near, we found that the dust concealed a band of fifty robbers. Our
men barely numbered half, and as we were also hampered by the
camels, there was no use in fighting, so we tried to overawe them
by informing them who we were, and whither we were going. The
robbers, however, only laughed, and declared that was none of their
business, and, without more words, attacked us brutally. I defended
myself to the last, wounded though I was, but at length, seeing
that resistance was hopeless, and that the ambassador and all our
followers were made prisoners, I put spurs to my horse and rode
away as fast as I could, till the poor beast fell dead from a wound
in his side. I managed to jump off without any injury, and looked
about to see if I was pursued. But for the moment I was safe, for,
as I imagined, the robbers were all engaged in quarrelling over
their booty.
I found myself in a country that was quite new to me, and dared
not return to the main road lest I should again fall into the hands
of the robbers. Luckily my wound was only a slight one, and after
binding it up as well as I could, I walked on for the rest of the
day, till I reached a cave at the foot of a mountain, where I
passed the night in peace, making my supper off some fruits I had
gathered on the way.
I wandered about for a whole month without knowing where I was
going, till at length I found myself on the outskirts of a
beautiful city, watered by winding streams, which enjoyed an
eternal spring. My delight at the prospect of mixing once more with
human beings was somewhat damped at the thought of the miserable
object I must seem. My face and hands had been burned nearly black;
my clothes were all in rags, and my shoes were in such a state that
I had been forced to abandon them altogether.
I entered the town, and stopped at a tailor s shop to inquire
where I was. The man saw I was better than my condition, and begged
me to sit down, and in return I told him my whole story.
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