Page:Tales from the Arabic, Vol 2.djvu/320

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a foul face and a blameworthy aspect; yea, he beheld somewhat the like whereof may God not show thee! loathly, dispensing from description, inasmuch as there were reckoned in her all legal defects.[1] So he repented, whenas repentance availed him not, and knew that the girl had cheated him. However, he lay with the bride, against his will, and abode that night sore troubled in mind, as he were in the prison of Ed Dilem.[2] Hardly had the day dawned when he arose from her and betaking himself to one of the baths, dozed there awhile, after which he made the ablution of defilement[3] and washed his clothes. Then he went out to the coffee-house and drank a cup of coffee; after which he returned to his shop and opening the door, sat down, with discomfiture and chagrin written on his face.

Presently, his friends and acquaintances among the merchants and people of the market began to come up to him, by ones and twos, to give him joy, and said

  1. i.e. all defects for which a man is by law entitled to return a slave-girl to her seller.
  2. Ed Dilem is the ancient Media. The allusion to its prison or prisons I do not understand.
  3. i.e. the complete ablution prescribed by the Mohammedan law after sexual intercourse.