madman, but the Commander of the Faithful." And the
superintendentanswered him,
saying, "None lieth but thou, O foulest of the
Jinn-maddened!" Then he stripped him of his clothes, and clapping on
his neck a heavy chain, bound him to a high lattice and fell to
beating him two bouts a day and two a-nights, and he ceased not
abiding on this wise the space of ten days. Then his mother came to
him and said: "O my son, O Abu al-Hasan, return to thy right reason,
for this is the Devil's doing." Quoth he: "Thou sayest sooth, O my
mother, and bear thou
witness of me that I repeat me of that talk
and turn me from my
madness. So do thou deliver me, for I am nigh upon
death." Accordingly his mother went out to the
superintendent and
procured his
release, and he returned to his own house.
Now this was at the
beginning of the month, and when it ended, Abu
al-Hasan longed to drink
liquor and, returning to his former habit,
furnished his
saloon and made ready food and bade bring wine. Then,
going forth to the
bridge, he sat there, expecting one whom he
should
converse and carouse with, according to his custom. As he sat
thus, behold, up came the Caliph and Masrur to him, but Abu al-Hasan
saluted them not and said to Al-Rashid, "No friendly
welcome to
thee, O King of the Jann!" Quoth Al-Rashid, "What have I done to
thee?" and quoth Abu al-Hasan, "What more
couldst thou do than what
thou hast done to me, O foulest of the Jann? I have been
beaten and
thrown into bedlam, where all said I was Jinn-mad, and this was caused
by none save thyself. I brought thee to my house and fed thee with
my best, after which thou dist
empower thy Satans and Marids to
disport themselves with my wits from morning to evening. So avaunt and
aroynt thee and wend thy ways!"
The Caliph smiled and, seating himself by his side, said to him,
"O my brother, did I not tell thee that I would return to thee?" Quoth
Abu al-Hasan, "I have no need of thee, and as the byword sayeth in
verse:
"Fro' my friend, 'twere meeter and wiser to part,
For what eye sees not born shall ne'er sorrow heart."
And indeed, O my brother, the night thou camest to me and we
conversed
and caroused together, I and thou, 'twas as if the Devil came to me
and troubled me that night." Asked the Caliph, "And who is he, the
Devil?" and answered Abu al-Hasan, "He is none other than thou."
Whereat the Caliph laughed and coaxed him and spake him fair,
saying: "O my brother, when I went out from thee, I forgot the door
and left it open, and perhaps Satan came in to thee." Quoth Abu
al-Hasan: "Ask me not of that which hath betided me. What possessed
thee to leave the door open, so that the Devil came in to me and there
befell me with him this and that?" And he
related to him all that
had betided him, first and last (and in
repetition is no fruition),
what while the Caliph laughed and hid his
laughter.
Then said he to Abu al-Hasan: "Praised be Allah who hath done away
from thee whatso irked thee, and that I see thee once more in weal!"
And Abu al-Hasan said: "Never again will I take thee to cup
companion or sitting comrade, for the
proverb saith, 'Whoso
stumbleth on a stone and
thereto returneth, upon him be blame and
reproach.' And thou, O my brother, nevermore will I
entertain thee nor
company with thee, for that I have not found thy heel propitious to
me." But the Caliph coaxed him and said, "I have been the means of thy
winning to thy wish anent the imam and the Sheikhs." Abu al-Hasan
replied, "Thou hast," and Al-Rashid continued, "And haply somewhat may
betide which shall gladden thy heart yet more." Abu al-Hasan asked,
"What dost thou require of me?" and the Commander of the Faithful
answered: "Verily, I am thy guest. Reject not the guest." Quoth Abu
al-Hasan: "On condition that thou swear to me by the characts on the
seal of Solomon, David's son (on the twain be the peace!) that thou
wilt not suffer thine Ifrits to make fun of me." He replied, "To
hear is to obey!"
Whereupon the wag took him and brought him into the
saloon and set
food before him and entreated him with friendly speech. Then he told
him all that had
befallen him,
whilst the Caliph was like to die of
stifled
laughter. After which Abu al-Hasan removed the tray of food,
and bringing the wine service, filled a cup and
cracked it three
times, then gave it to the Caliph,
saying: "O boon
companion mine, I
am thy slave, and let not that which I am about to say
offend thee,
and be thou not vexed, neither do thou vex me." And he recited these
verses:
"Hear one that wills thee well! Lips none shall bless
Save those who drink for drunk and all transgress.
Ne'er will I cease to swill while night falls dark
Till lout my
forehead low upon my tass.
In wine like
liquid sun is my delight
Which clears all care and gladdens allegresse."
When the Caliph heard these his verses and saw how apt he was at
couplets, he was
delighted with
exceeding delight, and
taking the cup,
drank it off, and the twain ceased not to
converse and carouse till
the wine rose to their heads. Then quoth Abu al-Hasan to the Caliph:
"O boon
companion mine, of a truth I am perplexed
concerning my
affair, for meseemed I was Commander of the Faithful and ruled and
gave gifts and largess, and in very deed, O my brother, it was not a
dream." Quoth the Caliph, "These were the imbroglios of sleep," and
crumbling a bit of bhang into the cup, said to him, "By my life, do
thou drink this cup," and said Abu al-Hasan, "Surely I will drink it
from thy hand." Then he took the cup and drank it off, and no sooner
had it settled in his
stomach than his head fell to the ground
before his feet. Now his manners and fashions pleased the Caliph,
and the
excellence of his
composition and his
frankness, and he said
in himself, "I will
assuredly make him my cup
companion and sitting
comrade." So he rose forthright, and
saying to Masrur, "Take him
up," returned to the palace.
Accordingly, the
eunuch took up Abu al-Hasan, and carrying him to
the palace of the caliphate, set him down before Al-Rashid, who bade
the slaves and slave girls
compass him about,
whilst he himself hid in
a place where Abu al-Hasan could not see him. Then he commanded one of
the handmaidens to take the lute and strike it over the wag's head,
whilst the rest smote upon their instruments. So they played and sang,
till Abu al-Hasan awoke at the last of the night and heard the
symphony of lutes and tambourines and the sound of the flutes and
the singing of the slave girls,
whereupon he opened eyes, and
finding himself in the palace, with the handmaids and
eunuchs about
him, exclaimed: "There is no Majesty and there is no Might save in
Allah, the Glorious, the Great! Come to my help this night, which
meseems more
unlucky than the former! Verily, I am
fearful of the
madhouse and of that which I suffered
therein the first time, and I
doubt not but the Devil is come to me again, as before. O Allah, my
Lord, put thou Satan to shame!" Then he shut his eyes and laid his
head in his
sleeve, and fell to laughing
softly and raising his head
betimes, but still found the
apartment lighted and the girls singing.
Presently one of the
eunuchs sat down at his head and said to him,
"Sit up, O Prince of True Believers, and look on thy palace and thy
slave girls." Said Abu al-Hasan: "Under the veil of Allah, am I in
truth Commander of the Faithful, and dost thou not lie? Yesterday I
rode not forth, neither ruled, but drank and slept, and this
eunuchcometh to make me rise." Then he sat up and recalled to thought that
which had betided him with his mother and how he had
beaten her and
entered the bedlam, and he saw the marks of the
beating wherewith
the superintendant had
beaten him, and was perplexed
concerning his
affair and pondered in himself,
saying, "By Allah, I know not how my
case is nor what is this that betideth me!" Then, gazing at the
scene around him, he said privily, "All these are of the Jann in human
shape, and I
commit my case to Allah."
Presently he turned to one of the damsels and said to her, "Who am
I?" Quoth she, "Thou art the Commander of the Faithful," and quoth he: