Page:Tales from the Arabic, Vol 2.djvu/192

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THE TENTH OFFICER’S STORY.

‘A great theft had been committed in the city and I was cited,[1] I and my fellows. Now it was a matter of considerable value and they[2] pressed hard upon us; but we obtained of them some days’ grace and dispersed in quest of the stolen goods. As for me, I sallied forth with five men and went round about the city that day; and on the morrow we fared forth [into the suburbs]. When we came a parasang or two parasangs’ distance from the city, we were athirst; and presently we came to a garden. So I went in and going up to the water-wheel,[3] entered it and drank and made the ablution and prayed. Presently up came the keeper of the garden and said to me, “Out on thee! Who brought thee into this water-wheel?” And he cuffed me and squeezed my ribs till I was like to die. Then he bound me with one of his bulls and made me turn in the water-wheel, flogging me the while with a cattle whip he had with

  1. i.e. required to find the thief or make good the loss.
  2. i.e. the parties aggrieved.
  3. Or irrigation-work, usually a bucket-wheel, worked by oxen.