THE SIXTH VOYAGE OF SINDBAD THE SEAMAN
KNOW, O my brothers and friends and companions all, that I abode
some time, after my return from my fifth
voyage, in great
solace and
satisfaction and mirth and
merriment, joyance and
enjoyment, and I
forgot what I had suffered,
seeing the great gain and profit I had
made, till one day as I sat making merry and enjoying myself with my
friends, there came in to me a company of merchants whose case told
tales of travel, and talked with me of
voyage and adventure and
greatness of pelf and lucre. Hereupon I remembered the days of my
return
abroad, and my joy at once more
seeing my native land and
forgathering with my family and friends, and my soul yearned for
travel and
traffic. So, compelled by Fate and Fortune, I
resolved to
undertake another
voyage, and, buying me fine and
costlymerchandisemeet for foreign trade, made it up into bales, with which I
journeyed from Baghdad to Bassorah.
Here I found a great ship ready for sea and full of merchants and
notables, who had with them goods of price, so I embarked my bales
therein. And we left Bassorah in safety and good spirits under the
safeguard of the King, the Preserver, and continued our
voyage from
place to place and from city to city, buying and selling and profiting
and diverting ourselves with the sight of countries where strange folk
dwell. And Fortune and the
voyage smiled upon us till one day, as we
went along, behold, the captain suddenly cried with a great cry and
cast his
turban on the deck. Then he buffeted his face like a woman
and plucked out his beard and fell down in the waist of the ship
well-nigh fainting for
stress of grief and rage, and crying, "Oh,
and alas for the ruin of my house and the orphanship of my poor
children!" So all the merchants and sailors came round about him and
asked him, "O master, what is the matter?" For the light had become
night before, their sight. And he answered,
saying: "Know, O folk,
that we have wandered from our course and left the sea whose ways we
wot, and come into a sea whose ways I know not, and unless Allah
vouchsafe us a means of escape, we are all dead men. Wherefore pray ye
to the Most High that He deliver us from this
strait. Haply
amongstyou is one
righteous whose prayers the Lord will accept." Then he
arose and clomb the mast to see an there were any escape from that
strait. And he would have loosed the sails, but the wind redoubled
upon the ship and whirled her round
thrice and drave her backward,
whereupon her
rudder brake and she fell off toward a high mountain.
With this the captain came down from the mast,
saying: "There is
no Majesty and there is no Might save in Allah, the Glorious, the
Great, nor can man prevent that which is foreordained of Fate! By
Allah, we are fallen on a place of sure
destruction, and there is no
way of escape for us, nor can any of us be saved!" Then we all fill
a-weeping over ourselves and bidding one another
farewell for that our
days were come to an end, and we had lost an hopes of life.
Presently the ship struck the mountain and broke up, and all and
everything on board of her were plunged into the sea. Some of the
merchants were drowned and others made shift to reach the shore and
save themselves upon the mountain, I
amongst the number. And when we
got
ashore, we found a great island, or rather
peninsula, whose base
was
strewn with wreckage and crafts and goods and gear cast up by
the sea from broken ships whose passengers had been drowned, and the
quantity confounded count and
calculation. So I climbed the cliffs
into the
inward of the isle and walked on
inland till I came to a
stream of sweet water that welled up at the nearest foot of the
mountains and disappeared in the earth under the range of hills on the
opposite side. But all the other passengers went over the mountains to
the inner tracts, and, dispersing
hither and t
hither, were
confounded at what they saw and became like madmen at the sight of the
wealth and treasures
wherewith the shores were
strewn.
As for me, I looked into the bed of the
stream aforesaid and saw
therein great plenty of rubies, and great royal pearls and all kinds
of jewels and precious stones, which were as
gravel in the bed of
the rivulets that ran through the fields, and the sands sparkled and
glittered with gems and precious ores. Moreover, we found in the
island
abundance of the finest lign aloes, both Chinese and Comorin.
And there also is a spring of crude ambergris, which floweth like
wax or gum over the
stream banks, for the great heat of the sun, and
runneth down to the se
ashore, where the monsters of the deep come up
and, swallowing it, return into the sea. But it burneth in their
bellies, so they cast it up again and it congealeth on the surface
of the water,
whereby its color and quantities are changed, and at
last the waves cast it
ashore, and the travelers and merchants who
know it collect it and sell it. But as to the raw ambergris which is
not swallowed, it floweth over the
channel and congealeth on the
banks, and when the sun shineth on it, it melteth and scenteth the
whole
valley with a musk-like
fragrance. Then when the sun ceaseth
from it, it congealeth again. But none can get to this place where
is the crude ambergris, because of the mountains which
enclose the
island on all sides and which foot of man cannot ascend.
We continued thus to
explore the island, marveling at the
wonderful works of Allah and the
riches we found there, but sore
troubled for our own case, and dismayed at our prospects. Now we had
picked up on the beach some small matter of
victual from the wreck and
husbanded it carefully eating but once every day or two, in our fear
lest it should fail us and we die
miserably of
famine and affright.
Moreover, we were weak for colic brought on by seasickness and low
diet, and my companions deceased, one after other, till there was
but a small company of us left. Each that died we washed and
shrouded in some of the clothes and linen cast
ashore by the tides,
and after a little, the rest of my fellows
perished one by one, till I
had buried the last of the party and abode alone on the island, with
but a little
vision" target="_blank" title="n.供应;规定;条款">
provision left, I who was wont to have so much. And I
wept over myself,
saying: "Would Heaven I had died before my
companions and they had washed me and buried me! It had been better
than I should
perish and none wash me and
shroud me and bury me. But
there is no Majesty and there is no Might save in Allah, the
glorious,
the Great!" Now after I had buried the last of my party and abode
alone on the island, I arose and dug me a deep grave on the
se
ashore,
saying to myself: "Whenas I grow weak and know that death
cometh to me, I will cast myself into the grave and die there, so
the wind may drift the sand over me and cover me and I be buried
therein."
Then I fell to reproaching myself for my little wit in leaving my
native land and betaking me again to travel after all I had suffered
during my first five
voyages, and when I had not made a single one
without
suffering more
horrible perils and more terrible hardships
than in its forerunners, and having no hope of escape from my
present
stress. And I repented me of my folly and bemoaned myself,
especially as I had no need of money,
seeing that I had enough and
could not spend what I had- no, nor a half of it in all my life.
However, after a while Allah sent me a thought, and I said to
myself: "By God, needs must this
stream have an end as well as a
beginning, ergo an issue somewhere, and belike its course may lead
to some inhabited place. So my best plan is to make me a little boat
big enough to sit in, and carry it and, launching it on the river,
embark
therein and drop down the
stream. If I escape, I escape, by
God's leave, and if I
perish, better die in the river than here."
Then, sighing for myself, I set to work collecting a number of
pieces of Chinese and Comorin aloes wood and I bound them together
with ropes from the wreckage. Then I chose out from the broken-up
ships straight planks of even size and fixed them
firmly upon the
aloes wood, making me a boat raft a little narrower than the
channelof the
stream, and I tied it
tightly and
firmly as though it were
nailed. Then I loaded it with the goods, precious ores and jewels, and
the union pearls which were like
gravel, and the best of the ambergris
crude and pure, together with what I had collected on the island and
what was left me of
victual and wild herbs. Lastly I lashed a piece of