Page:The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Vol 4.djvu/224

194 And eke I ventured my life against her grace And deemed the venture would bring me interest. For law of lovers it is that whoso buys His love’s possession with life, he profits best.

Then he moored his boat to the shore and bade her embark, saying, ‘I will carry thee whither thou wilt.’ So she embarked and he put off with her; but they had not gone far, before there came out a stern-wind upon the boat and drove it swiftly out of sight of land. The fisherman knew not whither he went, and the wind blew without ceasing three days, at the end of which time it fell, by leave of God the Most High, and they sailed on, till they came in sight of a city builded upon the seashore, and the fisherman set about making fast to the land.

Now the King of the city, a very powerful prince called Dirbas, was at that moment sitting, with his son, at a window in the palace giving upon the sea, and chancing to look out to sea-ward, they saw the fishing-boat enter the harbour. They observed it narrowly and espied therein a young lady, as she were the full moon in the mid-heaven, with pendants in her ears of fine balass rubies and a collar of precious stones about her neck. So the King knew that this must be the daughter of some king or great noble, and going forth of the sea-gate of the palace, went down to the boat, where he found the lady asleep and the fisherman busied in making fast to the shore. He went up to her and aroused her, whereupon she awoke, weeping; and he said to her, ‘Whence comest thou and whose daughter art thou and what brings thee hither?’ ‘I am the daughter of Ibrahim, Vizier to King Shamikh,’ answered she; ‘and the manner of my coming hither is strange and the cause thereof extraordinary.’ And she told him her whole story, hiding nought from him; then she sighed deeply and recited the following verses: