Page:The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Vol 1.djvu/289

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looked at me and said, ‘O my son, speak the truth and tell me how thou camest by the necklet.’ And he repeated the following verse:

To tell the whole truth is thy duty, although It bring thee to burn on the brasier of woe!

‘By Allah, O my lord,’ answered I, ‘such is my intent!’ And I told him all that had passed between me and the first lady and how she had brought the second one to me and had slain her out of jealousy. When he heard my story, he shook his head and beat hand upon hand; then putting his handkerchief to his eyes, wept awhile and repeated the following verses:

I see that Fortune’s maladies are many upon me, For, every dweller in the world, sick unto death is he.
To every gathering of friends there comes a parting day: And few indeed on earth are those that are from parting free?

Then he turned to me and said, ‘Know, O my son, that she who first came to thee was my eldest daughter. I brought her up in strict seclusion and when she came to womanhood, I sent her to Cairo and married her to my brother’s son. After awhile, he died and she came back to me: but she had learnt profligate habits from the natives of Cairo: so she visited thee four times and at last brought her younger sister. Now they were sisters by the same mother and much attached to each other; and when this happened to the elder, she let her sister into her secret, and she desired to go out with her. So she asked thy leave and carried her to thee; after which she returned alone, and I questioned her of her sister, finding her weeping for her; but she said, “I know nothing of her.” However, after this, she told her mother privily what had happened and how she had killed her sister; and her mother told me. Then she ceased not to weep and say, “By Allah, I will never leave weeping for her,