Page:The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Vol 1.djvu/71

53 her fingers, with beazels of precious stones, and held in her hand a rod of Indian cane. She came up to the brazier and thrust the rod into the frying-pan saying, ‘O fish, are you constant to your covenant?’ And when the cookmaid heard this she swooned away. Then the damsel repeated her question a second and a third time; and the fish lifted up their heads and cried out with one voice, ‘Yes, yes:

With this the damsel overturned the frying-pan and went out by the way she had come, and the wall closed up again as before. Presently the cookmaid came to herself and seeing the four fish burnt black as coal, said, ‘My arms are broken in my first skirmish!’ And fell down again in a swoon. Whilst she was in this state, in came the Vizier, to seek the fish, and found her insensible, not knowing Saturday from Thursday. So he stirred her with his foot and she came to herself and wept and told him what had passed. He marvelled and said, ‘This is indeed a strange thing!’ Then he sent for the fisherman and said to him, ‘O fisherman, bring us four more fish of the same kind.’ So the fisherman repaired to the lake and cast his net and hauling it in, found in it four fish like the first and carried them to the Vizier, who took them to the cookmaid and said to her, ‘Come, fry them before me, that I may see what happens.’ So she cleaned the fish and setting the frying-pan on the fire, threw them into it: and they had not lain long before the wall opened and the damsel appeared, after the same fashion, and thrust the rod into the pan, saying, ‘O fish, O fish, are you constant to the old covenant?’ And behold the fish all lifted up their heads and cried out as before, ‘Yes, yes: