The tailor
listened with attention, but his reply, instead of giving me
consolation, only increased my trouble.
"Beware," he said, "of telling any one what you have told me,
for the prince who governs the kingdom is your father's greatest
enemy, and he will be rejoiced to find you in his power."
I thanked the tailor for his counsel, and said I would do
whatever he advised; then, being very hungry, I gladly ate of the
food he put before me, and accepted his offer of a lodging in his
house.
In a few days I had quite recovered from the hardships I had
undergone, and then the tailor, knowing that it was the custom for
the princes of our religion to learn a trade or profession so as to
provide for themselves in times of ill-fortune, inquired if there
was anything I could do for my living. I replied that I had been
educated as a grammarian and a poet, but that my great gift was
writing.
"All that is of no use here," said the tailor. "Take my advice,
put on a short coat, and as you seem hardy and strong, go into the
woods and cut firewood, which you will sell in the streets. By this
means you will earn your living, and be able to wait till better
times come. The hatchet and the cord shall be my present."
This counsel was very distasteful to me, but I thought I could
not do otherwise than adopt it. So the next morning I set out with
a company of poor wood-cutters, to whom the tailor had introduced
me. Even on the first day I cut enough wood to sell for a tolerable
sum, and very soon I became more expert, and had made enough money
to repay the tailor all he had lent me.
I had been a wood-cutter for more than a year, when one day I
wandered further into the forest than I had ever done before, and
reached a delicious green glade, where I began to cut wood. I was
hacking at the root of a tree, when I beheld an iron ring fastened
to a trapdoor of the same metal. I soon cleared away the earth, and
pulling up the door, found a staircase, which I hastily made up my
mind to go down, carrying my hatchet with me by way of protection.
When I reached the bottom I discovered that I was in a huge palace,
as brilliantly lighted as any palace above ground that I had ever
seen, with a long gallery supported by pillars of jasper,
ornamented with capitals of gold. Down this gallery a lady came to
meet me, of such beauty that I forgot everything else, and thought
only of her.
To save her all the trouble possible, I hastened towards her,
and bowed low.
"Who are you? Who are you?" she said. "A man or a genius?"
"A man, madam," I replied; "I have nothing to do with
genii."
"By what accident do you come here?" she asked again with a
sigh. "I have been in this place now for five and twenty years, and
you are the first man who has visited me."
Emboldened by her beauty and gentleness, I ventured to reply,
"Before, madam, I answer your question, allow me to say how
grateful I am for this meeting, which is not only a consolation to
me in my own heavy sorrow, but may perhaps enable me to render your
lot happier," and then I told her who I was, and how I had come
there.
"Alas, prince," she said, with a deeper sigh than before, "you
have guessed rightly in supposing me an unwilling prisoner in this
gorgeous place. I am the daughter of the king of the Ebony Isle, of
whose fame you surely must have heard. At my father's desire I was
married to a prince who was my own cousin; but on my very wedding
day, I was snatched up by a genius, and brought here in a faint.
For a long while I did nothing but weep, and would not suffer the
genius to come near me; but time teaches us submission, and I have
now got accustomed to his presence, and if clothes and jewels could
content me, I have them in plenty. Every tenth day, for five and
twenty years, I have received a visit from him, but in case I
should need his help at any other time, I have only to touch a
talisman that stands at the entrance of my chamber. It wants still
five days to his next visit, and I hope that during that time you
will do me the honour to be my guest."
I was too much dazzled by her beauty to dream of refusing her
offer, and accordingly the princess had me conducted to the bath,
and a rich dress befitting my rank was provided for me. Then a
feast of the most delicate dishes was served in a room hung with
embroidered Indian fabrics.
Next day, when we were at dinner, I could maintain my patience
no longer, and implored the princess to break her bonds, and return
with me to the world which was lighted by the sun.
"What you ask is impossible," she answered; "but stay here with
me instead, and we can be happy, and all you will have to do is to
betake yourself to the forest every tenth day, when I am expecting
my master the genius. He is very jealous, as you know, and will not
suffer a man to come near me."
"Princess," I replied, "I see it is only fear of the genius that
makes you act like this. For myself, I dread him so little that I
mean to break his talisman in pieces! Awful though you think him,
he shall feel the weight of my arm, and I herewith take a solemn
vow to stamp out the whole race."
The princess, who realized the consequences of such audacity,
entreated me not to touch the talisman. "If you do, it will be the
ruin of both of us," said she; "I know genii much better than you."
But the wine I had drunk had confused my brain; I gave one kick to
the talisman, and it fell into a thousand pieces.
Hardly had my foot touched the talisman when the air became as
dark as night, a fearful noise was heard, and the palace shook to
its very foundations. In an instant I was sobered, and understood
what I had done. "Princess!" I cried, "what is happening?"
"Alas!" she exclaimed, forgetting all her own terrors in anxiety
for me, "fly, or you are lost."
I followed her advice and dashed up the staircase, leaving my
hatchet behind me. But I was too late. The palace opened and the
genius appeared, who, turning angrily to the princess, asked
indignantly,
"What is the matter, that you have sent for me like this?"
"A pain in my heart," she replied hastily, "obliged me to seek
the aid of this little bottle. Feeling faint, I slipped and fell
against the talisman, which broke. That is really all."
"You are an impudent liar!" cried the genius. "How did this
hatchet and those shoes get here?"
"I never saw them before," she answered, "and you came in such a
hurry that you may have picked them up on the road without knowing
it." To this the genius only replied by insults and blows. I could
hear the shrieks and groans of the princess, and having by this
time taken off my rich garments and put on those in which I had
arrived the previous day, I lifted the trap, found myself once more
in the forest, and returned to my friend the tailor, with a light
load of wood and a heart full of shame and sorrow.
The tailor, who had been uneasy at my long absence, was,
delighted to see me; but I kept silence about my adventure, and as
soon as possible retired to my room to lament in secret over my
folly. While I was thus indulging my grief my host entered, and
said, "There is an old man downstairs who has brought your hatchet
and slippers, which he picked up on the road, and now restores to
you, as he found out from one of your comrades where you lived. You
had better come down and speak to him yourself." At this speech I
changed colour, and my legs trembled under me.
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