Page:The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Vol 4.djvu/207

177 secret, till I have proved her.’ Then said the nurse, ‘O my lady, I saw in my sleep as though one came to me and said, “Thy mistress and Uns el Wujoud love one another; so do thou serve their loves by carrying their messages and doing their need and keeping their secrets; and much good shall befall thee.” So now I have told thee my dream, and it is thine to decide.’ ‘O my nurse,’ quoth Rose-in-bud, ‘canst thou keep secrets?’ ‘And how should I not keep secrets,’ answered the nurse, ‘I that am of the flower of the free-born?’ Then Rose-in-bud pulled out the scroll, on which she had written the verses afore said,aforesaid, [sic] and said to her, ‘Carry this my letter to Uns el Wujoud and bring me his answer.’

So the nurse took the letter and repairing to Uns el Wujoud, kissed his hands and saluted him right courteously, then gave him the letter; and he read it and wrote on the back the following verses:

Then he folded the letter and kissing it, gave it to the nurse and said to her, ‘O nurse, incline thy lady’s heart to

VOL. IV.