Page:The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Vol 1.djvu/420

390 told the chief of the market what she sought and gave him money, saying, ‘Bestow this in alms on strangers.’ The following week she took other thousand dinars and going to the market of the goldsmiths and jewellers, called the syndic and gave him the money, saying, ‘Bestow this in alms on strangers.’ The syndic, who was none other than Ghanim’s benefactor, looked at her and said, ‘O my lady, wilt thou go to my house and look upon a strange youth I have there and see how goodly and elegant he is?’ (Now this stranger was Ghanim, but the syndic had no knowledge of him and thought him to be some unfortunate debtor, who had been despoiled of his property, or a lover parted from his beloved.) When she heard his words, her heart fluttered and her bowels yearned, and she said to him, ‘Send with me some one who shall bring me to thy house.’ So he sent a little boy, who led her thither and she thanked him for this. When she reached the house, she went in and saluted the syndic’s wife, who rose and kissed the ground before her, knowing her. Then said Cout el Culoub, ‘Where is the sick man who is with thee?’ ‘O my lady,’ replied she, weeping, ‘here he is, lying on this bed. By Allah, he is a man of condition and bears traces of gentle breeding!’ So Cout el Culoub turned and looked at him, but he was as if disguised in her eyes, being worn and wasted till he was become as thin as a skewer, so that his case was doubtful to her and she was not certain that it was he. Nevertheless, she was moved to compassion for him and wept, saying, ‘Verily, strangers are unhappy, though they be princes in their own land!’ And his case was grievous to her and her heart ached for him, though she knew him not to be Ghanim. Then she appointed him wine and medicines and sat by his head awhile, after which she mounted and returned to her palace and continued to make the round of the bazaars in search of Ghanim.