Page:Tales from the Arabic, Vol 2.djvu/324

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of the Apostle of God,[1] nor is it seemly that his daughter be in the power of a man who is an ape-dancer, a minstrel.’ And do thou rejoin, ‘Nay, O Effendi, she is my lawful wife and every hair of her is worth a thousand lives, and I will not let her go, though I be given the kingship of the world.’ Then be thou persuaded to speak the word of divorce and so shall the marriage be dissolved and ye be delivered from each other.”

Quoth Alaeddin, “Thou counsellest well,” and locking up his shop, betook himself to the place before the citadel, where he foregathered with the drummers and pipers and instructed them how they should do, [even as his mistress had counselled him,] promising them a handsome reward. So they answered him with “Hearkening and obedience” and on the morrow, after the morning-prayer, he betook himself to the presence of the Cadi, who received him with obsequious courtesy and seated him beside himself. Then he turned to him and fell to conversing with him and questioning him of matters of selling and buying and of the price current of the various commodities that were exported

  1. Apparently the Cadi was or claimed to be a seyyid, i.e. descendant of Mohammed, through his daughter Fatmeh.