Tales from the Arabic/Contents

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Tales from the Arabic (1901)
by unknown author, translated by John Payne
Full Contents
Unknown2283484Tales from the Arabic — Full Contents1901John Payne

Breslau Text.

  1. Asleep and Awake
  2. The Khalif Omar Ben Abdulaziz and the Poets
  3. El Hejjaj and the Three Young Men
  4. Haroun er Reshid and the Woman of the Barmecides
  5. The Ten Viziers; or the History of King Azadbekht and His Son
    Of the Uselessness of Endeavour Against Persistent Ill Fortune
    1. Story of the Unlucky Merchant

    Of Looking to the Issues of Affairs

    1. Story of the Merchant and His Sons

    Of the Advantages of Patience

    1. Story of Abou Sabir

    Of the Ill Effects of Precipitation

    1. Story of Prince Bihzad

    Of the Issues of Good and Evil Actions

    1. Story of King Dadbin and His Viziers

    Of Trust in God

    1. Story of King Bekhtzeman

    Of Clemency

    1. Story of King Bihkerd

    Of Envy and Malice

    1. Story of Ilan Shah and Abou Temam

    Of Destiny or That Which Is Written on the Forehead

    1. Story of King Ibrahim and His Son

    Of the Appointed Term, Which, If It Be Advanced, May Not Be Deferred and If It Be Deferred, May Not Be Advanced

    1. Story of King Suleiman Shah and His Sons

    Of the Speedy Relief of God

    1. Story of the Prisoner and How God Gave Him Relief
  6. Jaafer Ben Yehya and Abdulmelik Ben Salih the Abbaside
  7. Er Reshid and the Barmecides
  8. Ibn es Semmak and Er Reshid
  9. El Mamoun and Zubeideh
  10. En Numan and the Arab of the Benou Tai
  11. Firouz and His Wife
  12. King Shah Bekht and His Vizier Er Rehwan
    1. Story of the Man of Khorassan, His Son and His Governor
    2. Story of the Singer and the Druggist
    3. Story of the King Who Knew the Quintessence of Things
    4. Story of the Rich Man Who Gave His Fair Daughter in Marriage to the Poor Old Man
    5. Story of the Rich Man and His Wasteful Son
    6. The King’s Son Who Fell in Love with the Picture
    7. Story of the Fuller and His Wife
    8. Story of the Old Woman, the Merchant and the King
    9. Story of the Credulous Husband
    10. Story of the Unjust King and the Tither
    11. Story of the Thief and the Woman
    12. Story of the Three Men and Our Lord Jesus
    13. Story of the Dethroned King Whose Kingdom and Good Were Restored to Him
    14. Story of the Man Whose Caution Was the Cause of His Death
    15. Story of the Man Who Was Lavish of His House and His Victual to One Whom He Knew Not
    16. Story of the Idiot and the Sharper
    17. Story of Khelbes and His Wife and the Learned Man
    18. Story of the Pious Woman Accused of Lewdness
    19. Story of the Journeyman and the Girl
    20. Story of the Weaver Who Became a Physician by His Wife’s Commandment
    21. Story of the Two Sharpers Who Cheated Each His Fellow
    22. Story of the Sharpers with the Money-Changer and the Ass
    23. Story of the Sharper and the Merchants
    24. Story of the King and His Chamberlain’s Wife
    25. Story of the Foul-Favoured Man and His Fair Wife
    26. Story of the King Who Lost Kingdom and Wife and Wealth and God Restored Them to Him
    27. Story of Selim and Selma
    28. Story of the King of Hind and His Vizier
  13. Shehrzad and Shehriyar[1]

  14. El Melik ez Zahir Rukneddin Bibers el Bunducdari and the Sixteen Officers of Police
  15. Abdallah Ben Nafi and the King’s Son of Cashghar
  16. Noureddin Ali of Damascus and the Damsel Sitt el Milah
  17. El Abbas and the King’s Daughter of Baghdad
  18. Shehrzad and Shehriyar[2]
  19. The Two Kings and the Vizier’s Daughters
  20. The Favourite and Her Lover
  21. The Merchant of Cairo and the Favourite of the Khalif El Mamoun el Hakim bi Amrillah
  22. (Conclusion)

Calcutta (1814–18) Text.

  1. Women’s Craft
  2. Sindbad the Sailor and Hindbad the Porter

Note

Table of Contents of the Calcutta (1839–42) and Boulac Editions

Table of Contents of the Breslau Edition

Table of Contents of the Calcutta (1814–18) Edition

Alphabetical Table of the First Lines of the Verse in the “Tales from the Arabic”

Index to the Names of the “Tales from the Arabic”

  1. There is another fragment with the same title in Volume 3. (Wikisource contributor note)
  2. There is another fragment with the same title in Volume 2. (Wikisource contributor note)

 This work is a translation and has a separate copyright status to the applicable copyright protections of the original content.

Original:

This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse

Translation:

This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse