Page:Tales from the Arabic, Vol 2.djvu/96

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76

puissance and victory over[1] him who had wronged him and thanking Him who had reunited him with his family.

When the morning morrowed, he assembled the cadis and judges and assessors and sending for the Magian and the two youths and their mother, questioned them of their case, whereupon the two young men began and said, ‘We are the sons of the king Such-an-one and enemies and wicked men got the mastery of our realm; so our father fled forth with us and wandered at a venture, for fear of the enemies.’ [And they recounted to him all that had betided them, from beginning to end.] Quoth he, ‘Ye tell a marvellous story; but what hath [Fate] done with your father?’ ‘We know not how fortune dealt with him after our loss,’ answered they; and he was silent.

Then he turned to the woman and said to her, ‘And thou, what sayst thou?’ So she expounded to him her case and recounted to him all that had betided her and her husband, first and last, up to the time when they took up their abode with the old man and woman who dwelt on the sea-shore. Then she set out that which the Magian had practised on her of knavery and how he had carried her off in the ship and all that had betided her of humiliation and torment, what while the cadis and judges and deputies hearkened to her speech. When the king heard the last of his wife’s story, he said, ‘Verily, there hath betided thee a grievous matter; but hast thou knowledge of what thy husband did and what came of his affair?’ ‘Nay, by Allah,’ answered she; ‘I have no knowledge

  1. Or “getting hold of.”