Awhile
ago, I was sore wakeful one night and thought the dawn would
never break: so, as soon as it was day, I rose and girding on my
sword, mounted my steed and set my lance in rest. Then I rode
out to hunt, and as I went along, a company of men accosted me
and asked me whither I went. I told them, and they said, 'We
will bear thee company.' So we all fared on together, and
presently we saw an ostrich and gave chase; but it evaded us and
spreading its wings, fled before us and drew us on after it,
till it brought us to a desert, wherein there was neither grass
nor water, nor was aught to be heard there save the hissing of
serpents, the wailing of Jinn and the howling of ghouls.
Here we lost sight of the ostrich, nor could we
tell whether it had flown up into the sky or sunk into the
ground. Then we turned our horses' heads and thought to go back;
but found that our return would be toilsome and dangerous at
that time of exceeding heat; for the heat was grievous to us, so
that we were sore athirst and our horses stood still. So we made
sure of death; but as we were in this case, we espied a spacious
meadow afar off, wherein were gazelles frisking. There was a
tent pitched and by the tent-side a horse tethered and a spear
stuck in the earth, whose head glittered in the sun. When we saw
this, our hearts revived, after we had despaired, and we turned
our horses' heads towards the meadow and rode on, till we came
to a spring, where we alighted and drank and watered our beasts.
Then I was seized with a frenzy of curiosity and
went up to the door of the tent, where I saw a young man like
the new moon, without hair on his cheeks, and on his right hand
a slender damsel, as she were a willow wand. No sooner did I set
eyes on the girl, than love of her got hold upon my heart and I
saluted the young man, who returned my greeting. Then said I to
him, 'O brother of the Arabs, tell me who thou art and what is
this damsel to thee?' With this, he bent down his head awhile,
then raised it and replied, 'Tell me first who thou art and what
are these horsemen with thee.' 'I am Hemmad, son of El Fezari,'
answered I, 'the renowned cavalier, who is reckoned as five
hundred horse among the Arabs.
We went forth this morning to hunt and were
overcome by thirst; so I came to the door of this tent, thinking
to get of thee a draught of water.' When he heard this, he
turned to the fair maiden and said to her, 'Bring this man water
and what there is of food.' So she went in, trailing her skirts,
whilst her feet stumbled in her long hair and the golden bangles
tinkled on her ankles, and returned after a little, bearing in
her right hand a silver vessel of cold water and in her left a
bowl full of milk and dates and flesh of wild cattle. But, of
the excess of my passion for her, I could take of her nor meat
nor drink, and I recited to her the following verses, applying
them to her:
The dye of the
henna upon her hand doth show, As 'twere a raven new lighted on
fresh-fall'n snow; And see the full moon and the sun beside her
face, This dim and the other fearful for shame and woe.
Then, after I had
eaten and drunk, I said to the youth, 'O chief of the Arabs, I
have told thee truly who and what I am, and now I would fain
have thee do the like by me and tell me the truth of thy case.'
'As for this damsel,' replied he, 'she is my sister.' Quoth I,
'It is my desire that thou give her to me to wife of free will:
else will I slay thee and take her by force.' With this, he
bowed his head awhile, then raised his eyes to me and answered,
'Thou sayest sooth in avouching thyself a renowned cavalier and
a famous champion and the lion of the desert; but if ye all
attack me treacherously and slay me and take my sister by force,
it will be a stain upon your honour. If ye be, as thou sayest,
cavaliers that are counted among the champions and fear not the
shock of battle, give me time to don my armour and gird on my
sword and set my lance in rest and mount my horse. Then will we
go forth into the field and fight; and if I conquer you, I will
kill you, every man of you; and if you overcome me and slay me,
this damsel my sister is thine.' 'This is but just,' answered I,
'and we oppose it not.' Then I turned my horse's head, mad for
love of the damsel, and rode back to my companions, to whom I
set forth her beauty and grace, as also the comeliness of the
young man and his valour and strength of soul and how he
avouched himself a match for a thousand horse.
Moreover, I
described to them the tent and all the riches and rarities it
contained and said to them, 'Be sure that this youth would not
have taken up his abode alone in this desert place, were he not
a man of great prowess: so I propose that whoso slays him shall
take his sister.' And they agreed to this. Then we armed
ourselves and mounting, rode to the tent, where we found the
young man armed and mounted; but his sister ran up to him, with
her veil drenched with tears, and laying hold of his stirrup,
cried out, saying, 'Alas!' and 'Woe worth the day!' in her fear
for her brother, and recited the following verses:
To God above I
make my moan of sorrow and affright. Mayhap, the empyrean's Lord
will smite them with dismay. They fain would kill thee, brother
mine, with malice aforethought, Though never cause of anger was
nor fault forewent the fray. Yet for a champion art thou known
among the men of war, The doughtiest knight that East or West
goes camping by the way. Thou wilt thy sister's honour guard,
whose might is small, for thou Her brother art and she for thee
unto the Lord doth pray Let not the foe possess my soul nor
seize on me perforce And work their cruel will on me, without my
yea or nay. By God His truth, I'll never live in any land where
thou Art not albeit all the goods of plenty it display! But I
will slay myself for love and yearning for thy sake And in the
darksome tomb I'll make my bed upon the clay.
When he heard her
words, he wept sore and turning his horse's head towards her,
made answer with the following verses:
Stand by and see
the wondrous deeds that I will do this day, Whenas we meet and I
on them rain blows in the mellay. E'en though the lion of the
war, the captain of the host, The stoutest champion of them all,
spur out into the fray, I'll deal a Thaalebiyan blow at him and
in his heart I'll let my spear, even to the shaft, its thirst
for blood allay. If I defend thee not from all that seek thee,
sister mine, May I be slaughtered and my corse given to the
birds of prey! Ay, I will battle for thy sake, with all the
might I may, And books shall story after me the marvels of this
day.
Then said he, 'O
my sister, give ear to what I shall enjoin on thee.' And she
answered, 'I hear and obey.' Quoth he, 'If I fall, let none
possess thee;' and she buffeted her face and said, 'God forbid,
O my brother, that I should see thee laid low and yield myself
to thine enemies!' With this he put out his hand to her and drew
aside her veil, whereupon her face shone forth, like the sun
from out clouds. Then he kissed her between the eyes and bade
her farewell; after which he turned to us and said, 'Ho,
cavaliers! Come ye as guests or are you minded to cut and
thrust? If ye come as guests, rejoice in hospitality; and if ye
covet the shining moon, come out against me, one by one, and
fight.' Then came out to him a sturdy horseman, and the young
man said to him, 'Tell me thy name and thy father's name, for I
have sworn to fight with none whose name and whose father's name
tally with mine and my father's, and if it be thus with thee, I
will give thee up the girl.' 'My name is Bilal,' answered the
other; and the young man repeated the following verses:
Thou liest when
thou talkest of "benefits"; for lo, Thou comest with mischief
and malice and woe! So, an thou be doughty, heed well what I
say: I'm he who the braver in the battle lays low With a
keen-cutting sword, like the horn of the moon; So look (and
beware) for a hill-shaking blow!
Then they ran at
one another, and the youth smote his adversary in the breast,
that the lance-head issued from his back. With this, another
came out, and the youth repeated the following verses:
O dog, that art
noisome of stench and of sight, What is there of worth that to
come by is light? 'Tis only the lion, of race and of might Right
noble, recks little of life in the fight.
Nor was it long
before he left him also drowned in his blood and cried out, 'Who
will come out to me?' So a third horseman pricked out, reciting
the following verses:
I come to thee,
with a fire in my breast that blazes free, And call on my
comrades all to the fight to follow me. Though thou hast slain
the chiefs of the Arabs, yet, perdie, Thou shalt not 'scape this
day from those that follow thee!
When the youth
heard this, he answered him, saying:
Thou com'st, like
theright evil fiend that thou art, With a lie on thy lips and a
fraud at thy heart; This day shalt thou taste of a death-dealing
dart And a spear that shall rid thee of life with its smart.
Then he smote him
on the breast, that the spear-point issued from his back, and
cried out, saying, 'Will another come out?' So a fourth came out
and the youth asked him his name. He replied, 'My name is Hilal.'
And the youth repeated these verses:
Thou err'st, that
wouldst plunge in my sea of affray And thinkest to daunt me with
lies and dismay. Lo, I, to whose chant thou hast hearkened this
day, Thy soul, ere thou know'st it, will ravish away!
Then they drove
at one another and exchanged blows; but the youth's stroke
forewent that of his adversary and slew him: and thus he went on
to kill all who sallied out against him. When I saw my comrades
slain, I said in myself, 'If I fight with him, I shall not be
able to withstand him, and if I flee, I shall become a byword
among the Arabs.' However, the youth gave me no time to think,
but ran at me and laying hold of me, dragged me from my saddle.
I swooned away and he raised his sword to cut off my head; but I
clung to his skirts and he lifted me in his hand, as I were a
sparrow [in the clutches of a hawk]. When the maiden saw this,
she rejoiced in her brother's prowess and coming up to him,
kissed him between the eyes. Then he delivered me to her,
saying, 'Take him and entreat him well, for he is come under our
rule.' So she took hold of the collars of my coat-of-arms and
led me away by them as one would lead a dog. Then she did off
her brother's armour and clad him in a robe, after which she
brought him a stool of ivory, on which he sat down, and said to
him, 'May God whiten thine honour and make thee to be as a
provision against the shifts of fortune!' And he answered her
with the following verses:
My sister said,
(who saw my lustrous forehead blaze Midmost the war, as shine
the sun's meridian rays) "God bless thee for a brave, to whom,
when he falls on, The desert lions bow in terror and amaze!"
"Question the men of war," I answered her, "of me, Whenas the
champions flee before my flashing gaze. I am the world-renowned
for fortune and for might, Whose prowess I uplift to what a
height of praise! O Hemmad, thou hast roused a lion, who shall
show Thee death that comes as swift as vipers in the ways."
When I heard what
he said, I was perplexed about my affair, and considering my
condition and how I was become a captive, I was lessened in my
own esteem. Then I looked at the damsel and said to myself, 'It
is she who is the cause of all this trouble;' and I fell a-marvelling
at her beauty and grace, till the tears streamed from my eyes
and I recited the following verses:
Reproach me not,
O friend, nor chide me for the past, For I will pay no heed to
chiding and dispraise. Lo, I am clean distraught for one, whom
when I saw, Fate in my breast forthright the love of her did
raise. Her brother was my foe and rival in her love, A man of
mickle might and dreadful in affrays.
Then the maiden
set food before her brother, and he bade me eat with him,
whereat I rejoiced and felt assured of my life. When he had made
an end of eating, she brought him a flagon of wine and he drank,
till the fumes of the wine mounted to his head and his face
flushed. Then he turned to me and said, 'Harkye, Hemmad, dost
thou know me?' 'By thy life,' answered I, 'I am rich in nought
but ignorance!' Said he, 'I am Ibad ben Temim ben Thaalebeh, and
indeed God giveth thee thy liberty and spareth thee confusion.'
Then he drank to my health and gave me a cup of wine and I drank
it off. Then he filled me a second and a third and a fourth, and
I drank them all; and he made merry with me and took an oath of
me that I would never betray him. So I swore to him a thousand
oaths that I would never deal perfidiously with him, but would
be a friend and a helper to him.
Then he bade his
sister bring me ten dresses of silk; so she brought them and
laid them on me, and this gown I have on my body is one of them.
Moreover, he made her bring one of the best of the riding
camels, laden with stuffs and victual, and a sorrel horse, and
gave the whole to me. I abode with them three days, eating and
drinking, and what he gave me is with me to this day. At the end
of this time, he said to me, 'O Hemmad, O my brother, I would
fain sleep awhile and rest myself. I trust myself to thee; but
if thou see horsemen making hither, fear not, for they are of
the Beni Thaalebeh, seeking to wage war on me.' Then he laid his
sword under his head and slept; and when he was drowned in
slumber, the devil prompted me to kill him; so I rose, and
drawing the sword from under his head, dealt him a blow that
severed his head from his body. His sister heard what I had
done, and rushing out from within the tent, threw herself on his
body, tearing her clothes and repeating the following verses:
Carry the tidings
to the folk, the saddest news can be; But man from God His
ordinance no whither hath to flee. Now art thou slaughtered,
brother mine, laid prostrate on the earth, Thou whose bright
face was as the round of the full moon to see. Indeed, an evil
day it was, the day thou mettest them, And after many a fight,
thy spear is shivered, woe is me! No rider, now that thou art
dead, in horses shall delight Nor evermore shall woman bear a
male to match with thee. Hemmad this day hath played thee false
and foully done to death; Unto his oath and plighted faith a
traitor base is he. He deemeth thus to have his will and compass
his desire; But Satan lieth to his dupes in all he doth decree.
When she had
ended, she turned to me and said, 'O man of accursed lineage,
wherefore didst thou play my brother false and slay him, whenas
he purposed to send thee back to thy country with gifts and
victual and it was his intent also to marry thee to me at the
first of the month?' Then she drew a sword she had with her, and
planting it in the ground, with the point set to her breast,
threw herself thereon and pressed upon it, till the blade issued
from her back and she fell to the ground, dead. I mourned for
her and wept and repented when repentance availed me nothing.
Then I went in haste to the tent and taking whatever was light
of carriage and great of worth, went my way: but in my haste and
fear, I took no heed of my (dead) comrades, nor did I bury the
maiden and the youth. This, then, is my story, and it is still
more extraordinary than that of the serving-maid I kidnapped in
Jerusalem." |