Page:The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Vol 4.djvu/86

62 eyes! What is thy name and why comest thou hither?’ But the accursed fellow miscalled himself, having a white turban, and answered, ‘O King, my name is Ali; I am a weaver and came hither to trade.’ ‘Bring me a table of sand and a pen of brass,’ quoth Zumurrud, and they brought her what she sought. She levelled the sand and taking the pen, drew a geomantic figure, in the likeness of an ape; then, raising her head, she considered Bersoum straitly and said to him, ‘O dog, how darest thou lie to kings? Art thou not a Nazarene, Bersoum by name, and comest thou not hither in quest of somewhat? Speak the truth, or, by the splendour of the Deity, I will strike off thy head?’ At this, Bersoum was confounded and the Amirs and bystanders said, ‘Verily, the King understands geomancy: blessed be He who hath gifted him!’ Then Zumurrud cried out upon Bersoum and said, ‘Tell me the truth, or I will make an end of thee!’ ‘Pardon, O King of the age,’ replied Bersoum; ‘the table hath told thee aright; thy slave is indeed a Nazarene.’ Whereupon all present wondered at the King’s skill in geomancy, saying, ‘Verily, the King is a diviner, whose like there is not in the world.’

Then Zumurrud bade flay the Christian and stuff his skin with straw and hang it over the gate of the tilting-ground. Moreover, she commanded to dig a pit without the city and burn his flesh and bones therein and throw over his ashes offal and rubbish. ‘We hear and obey,’ answered they and did with him as she bade. When the people saw what had befallen the Christian, they said, ‘He hath his deserts; but what an unlucky mouthful was that for him!’ And another said, ‘Be my wife triply divorced if ever I eat of sweet rice as long as I live!’ ‘Praised be God,’ quoth the hashish-eater, ‘who saved me from this fellow’s fate by hindering me from eating of