Page:Alaeddin and the Enchanted Lamp.djvu/204

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that dazzled the sight, and he was amazed at this marvel, so that he became as one dumb, unable to speak aught, of the excess of his wonderment; nay, his wit was the more perplexed, forasmuch as this had all been accomplished in an hour’s time. Then he bade carry the slave-girls and their burdens to the pavilion of the Lady Bedrulbudour; so the damsels took up the dishes and entered; whereupon Alaeddin’s mother came forward and said to the Sultan, “O my lord, this is no great matter for the Lady Bedrulbudour’s exalted rank; nay, she deserveth manifold this.” So the Sultan turned to the Vizier and said to him, “How sayst thou, O Vizier? He that can in so short a time avail unto riches like these, is he not worthy to be the Sultan’s son-in-law and to have his daughter to bride?” Now the Vizier marvelled at the greatness of these riches yet more than the Sultan, but envy was killing him and waxed on him more and more, when he saw that the Sultan was content with the bride-gift[1] and the dowry; withal he could not gainstand the [manifest] truth and say to the Sultan, “He is not worthy;” so he cast about to work upon him by practice, that he might hinder him from giving his daughter the Lady Bedrulbudour to

  1. Necd (lit. coin), a vulgar Syrian corruption of neket, customary gift of money or otherwhat to a bride on the marriage-day.