Page:The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Vol 3.djvu/118

100  tomb; after which I went my way and awaited the coming of Ali ben Bekkar’s funeral. When it arrived, the people of Baghdad went forth to meet it and I with them; and I saw the damsel among the women and she the loudest of them in lamentation, crying out and wailing with a voice that rent the vitals and made the heart ache. Never was seen in Baghdad a greater funeral than his and we ceased not to follow in crowds, till we reached the cemetery and buried him to the mercy of God the most High; nor from that time to this have I ceased to visit his tomb and that of Shemsennehar.”’ [sic] This, then, is their story, and may God the Most High have mercy upon them! KEMEREZZEMAN AND BUDOUR.

There was once, of old time, a king called Shehriman, who was lord of many troops and guards and officers and reigned over certain islands, known as the Khalidan Islands, on the borders of the land of the Persians; but he was grown old and decrepit, without having been blessed with a son, albeit he had four wives, daughters of kings, and threescore concubines, with each of whom he was wont to lie one night in turn. This preyed upon his mind and disquieted him, so that he complained thereof to one of his Viziers, saying, ‘I fear lest my kingdom be lost, when I die, for that I have no son to take it after me.’ ‘O King,’ answered the Vizier, ‘peradventure God shall yet provide for this; do thou put thy trust in Him and be constant in supplication to Him.’ So the King rose and making his ablutions, prayed a two-bow prayer with a believing heart; after which he called one of his wives to bed and lay with her forthright. By God’s grace, she conceived by him and when her months were accomplished, she bore a male child, like the moon on the night of its full. The King