Page:The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Vol 1.djvu/56

38 person and how a multitude of physicians have failed to find a means of ridding thee of it: but I will cure thee, O King, and that without giving thee to drink of medicine or anointing thee with ointment.” When the King heard this, he wondered and said to him, “How wilt thou do this? By Allah, if thou cure me, I will enrich thee, even to thy children’s children, and I will heap favours on thee, and whatever thou desirest shalt be thine, and thou shalt be my companion and my friend.” Then he gave him a dress of honour and made much of him, saying, “Wilt thou indeed cure me without drugs or ointment?” “Yes,” answered Douban, “I will cure thee from without.” Whereat the King marvelled exceedingly and said, “O physician, when wilt thou do as thou hast said? Make haste, O my son!” Quoth Douban, “I hear and obey: it shall be done to-morrow.” And he went down into the city and hired a house, in which he deposited his books and medicines. Then he took certain drugs and simples and fashioned them into a mall, which he hollowed out and made thereto a handle and a ball, adapted to it by his art. Next morning he presented himself before the King and kissing the ground before him, ordered him to repair to the tilting ground and play at mall there. So the King mounted and repaired thither with his amirs and chamberlains and viziers, and hardly had he reached the appointed place when the physician Douban came up and presented him with the mall and ball he had prepared, saying, “Take this mall and grip the handle thus and drive into the plain and stretch thyself well and strike this ball till thy hand and thy body sweat, when the drugs will penetrate thy hand and permeate thy body. When thou hast done and the medicine has entered into thee, return to thy palace and enter the bath and wash. Then sleep awhile and thou wilt awake cured, and peace be on thee!” The King took the mall and mounting a swift horse, threw