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Story I

a Pâdshâh giving orders to kill a prisoner. The helpless fellow began to insult the King on that occasion of despair, with the tongue he had, and to use foul expressions according to the saying: ‘Who washes his hands of life, says whatever he has in his heart.’ When a man is in despair his tongue becomes long, and he is like a vanquished cat assailing a dog. In time of need, when flight is no more possible, the hand grasps the point of the sharp sword.

When the King asked what he was saying, a good-natured vizier replied: “My lord, he says, ‘Those who bridle their anger and forgive men; for Allah loveth the beneficent.

The King, moved with pity, forbore taking his life; but another vizier, the antagonist of the former, said: “Men of our rank ought to speak nothing but the truth in the presence of Pâdshâhs. This fellow has insulted the King and spoken unbecomingly.”

The King, being displeased with these words, said: “That lie was more acceptable to me than this truth thou hast uttered, because the former proceeded from a conciliatory disposition, and the latter from malignity; and wise men have said, ‘a falsehood resulting in conciliation is better than a truth producing trouble.

He whom the Shâh follows in what he says, it is a pity if he speaks anything but what is good.