Page:The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Vol 1.djvu/224

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

202

and squeaked and grew to a buffalo and spoke to me words that entered my ears. Then he left me here and went away, accursed be the bride and he who married me to her!” The Vizier went up to him and set him on his feet; and he went out, running, not crediting that the sun had risen, and repaired to the Sultan, to whom he related what had befallen him with the Afrit. Meanwhile, the Vizier returned to the bride’s chamber, troubled in mind about his daughter, and said to her, “O my daughter, expound thy case to me.” “O my father,” answered she, “what more can I tell thee? Indeed, the bridegroom, he before whom they displayed me yesterday, lay with me all night and took my virginity, and I am with child by him. If thou believe me not, there is his turban, just as he left it, on the settle, and his trousers under the bed, with I know not what wrapped up in them.” When her father heard this, he entered the alcove and found Bedreddin’s turban; so he took it up and turning it about, said, “This is a Vizier’s turban, except that it is of the Mosul cut.[1]” Then he perceived an amulet sewn in the cap of the turban so he unsewed the lining and took it out; then took the trousers, in which was the purse of a thousand dinars. In the latter he found the duplicate of Bedreddin’s docket of sale to the Jew, naming him as Bedreddin Hassan, son of Noureddin Ali of Cairo. No sooner had he read this, than he cried out and fell down in a swoon; and when he revived, he wondered and said, “There is no god but God the Omnipotent! O my daughter, dost thou know who took thy maidenhead?” “No,” answered she; and he said, “It was thy cousin, my brother’s son, and

  1. Mosul is a town of Mesopotamia, some two hundred miles N.E. of Baghdad. It is celebrated for its silk and muslin manufactories. The Mosulis doubtless set the fashion in turbans to the inhabitants of Baghdad and Bassora, and it would appear from the Vizier’s remark that this fashion was notably different from that followed at Cairo.