Page:Alaeddin and the Enchanted Lamp.djvu/138

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

96

promises he made me that he would do me all manner of good[1] and the love he professed to me, and how he did all this that he might accomplish his purpose; nay, his intent was to kill me, and praised be God for my deliverance! Hearken, O my mother, and learn what this accursed one did.”

Then he told her all that had befallen him from the time of his leaving her, weeping the while for excess of joy; how the Maugrabin brought him to the hill, wherein was the treasure, and how he conjured and fumigated. “And indeed. O my mother,” said he, “there overcame me exceeding fear, whenas the hill clove in sunder and the earth opened before me by his enchantments; and I quaked with terror at the voice of the thunder which I heard and the darkness which befell of his spells and fumigations, and of my dismay at these portents, I would have fled. When he saw me offer to flee, he reviled me and smote me, dealing me a buffet which caused me swoon for pain[2] but, inasmuch as the treasure was

  1. Lit. “see the accursed his duplicity and his promises that he promised me withal in that he would do all good with me.” Burton, “see how the dammed villain broke every promise he made, certifying that he would soon work all good with me.”
  2. Lit. “on account of my pain therefrom when I was absent from the world.”