Page:The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Vol 4.djvu/150

126 at his generosity and was ashamed to foregather with her in his house; so I said, “Equip her and send her to my house.” And by thy life, O Commander of the Faithful, he sent me such an equipage with her, that my house was too strait to hold it, for all its greatness! And I begot on her this boy that stands before thee.’

The Khalif marvelled at the merchant’s generosity and said, ‘Gifted of God is he! Never heard I of his like.’ And he bade Ibrahim bring him to court, that he might see him. So he brought him and the Khalif conversed with him; and his wit and good breeding so pleased him, that he made him one of his chief officers. THE WOMAN WHOSE HANDS WERE CUT OFF FOR THAT SHE GAVE ALMS TO THE POOR.

A certain King once made proclamation to the people of his realm, saying, ‘If any of you give alms of aught, I will assuredly cut off his hand;’ wherefore all the people abstained from alms-giving, and none could give to any.

One day a beggar accosted a certain woman (and indeed hunger was sore upon him) and said to her, ‘Give me an alms.’ ‘How can I give thee aught,’ answered she, ‘when the King cutteth off the hands of all who give alms?’ But he said, ‘I conjure thee by God the Most High, give me an alms.’ So, when he adjured her by God, she had compassion on him and gave him two cakes of bread. The King heard of this; so he called her before him and cut off her hands, after which she returned to her house.

A while after, the King said to his mother, ‘I have a mind to take a wife; so do thou marry me to a fair woman.’ Quoth she, ‘There is among our female slaves one who is unsurpassed in beauty; but she hath a grievous blemish.’ ‘What is that?’ asked the King; and his