ALI BABA AND THE FORTY THIEVES
IN days of yore and in times and tides long gone before, there dwelt
in a certain town of Persia two brothers, one named Kasim and the
other Ali Baba, who at their father's demise had divided the little
wealth he had left to them with equitable division, and had lost no
time in
wasting and spending it all. The elder, however,
presentlytook to himself a wife, the daughter of an opulent merchant, so that
when his father-in-law fared to the mercy of Almighty Allah, he became
owner of a large shop filled with rare goods and
costly wares and of a
storehouse stocked with precious stuffs,
likewise of much gold that
was buried in the ground. Thus was he known throughout the city as a
substantial man. But the woman whom Ali Baba had married was poor
and needy. They lived,
therefore, in a mean hovel, and Ali Baba eked
out a
scantylivelihood by the sale of fuel which he daily collected
in the
jungle and carried about the town to the bazaar upon his
three asses.
Now it chanced one day that Ali Baba had cut dead branches and dry
fuel sufficient for his need, and had placed the load upon his beasts,
when suddenly he espied a dust cloud spiring high in air to his
right and moving rapidly toward him, and when he closely considered
it, he descried a troop of horsemen riding on amain and about to reach
him. At this sight he was sore alarmed, and fearing lest
perchancethey were a band of bandits who would slay him and drive off his
donkeys, in his
affright he began to run. But forasmuch as they were
near-hand and he could not escape from out the forest, he drove his
animals laden with the fuel into a byway of the bushes and swarmed
up a thick trunk of a huge tree to hide himself
therein. And he sat
upon a branch
whence he could
descry everything beneath him
whilstnone below could catch a
glimpse of him above, and that tree grew
close beside a rock which towered high abovehead.
The horsemen, young, active, and doughty riders, came close up to
the rock face and all dismounted,
whereat Ali Baba took good note of
them, and soon he was fully persuaded by their mien and demeanor
that they were a troop of highwaymen who, having fallen upon a
caravan, had despoiled it and carried off the spoil and brought
their booty to this place with
intent of concealing it
safely in
some cache. Moreover, he observed that they were forty in number.
Ali Baba saw the
robbers, as soon as they came under the tree, each
unbridle his horse and
hobble it. Then all took off their
saddlebags, which proved to he full of gold and silver. The man who
seemed to he the captain
presently pushed forward, load on shoulder,
through thorns and thickets, till he came up to a certain spot,
where he uttered these strange words: "Open, Sesame!" And
forthwithappeared a wide
doorway in the face of the rock. The
robbers went
in, and last of all their chief, and then the
portal shut of itself.
Long while they stayed within the cave
whilst Ali Baba was
constrained to abide perched upon the tree, reflecting that if he came
down, peradventure the band might issue forth that very moment and
seize him and slay him. At last he had determined to mount one of
the horses and driving on his asses, to return townward, when suddenly
the
portal flew open. The
robber chief was first to issue forth, then,
standing at the entrance, he saw and counted his men as they came out,
and
lastly he spake the
magical words, "Shut, Sesame!"
whereat the
door closed of itself. When all had passed
muster and
review, each
slung on his saddlebags and bridled his own horse, and as soon as
ready they rode off, led by the leader, in the direction
whence they
came. Ali Baba remained still perched on the tree and watched their
departure, nor would he
descend until what time they were clean gone
out of sight, lest
perchance one of them return and look around and
descry him.
Then he thought within himself: "I too will try the
virtue of
those
magical words and see if at my bidding the door will open and
close." So he called out aloud, "Open, Sesame!" And no sooner had he
spoken than
straightway the
portal flew open and he entered within. He
saw a large
cavern and a vaulted, in
height equaling the
stature of
a full-grown man, and it was hewn in the live stone and, lighted up
with light that came through air holes and bull's-eyes in the upper
surface of the rock which formed the roof. He had expected to find
naught save outer gloom in this
robbers' den, and he was surprised
to see the whole room filled with bales of all manner stuffs, and
heaped up from sole to ceiling with camelloads of silks and brocades
and embroidered cloths and mounds on mounds of varicolored carpetings.
Besides which, he espied coins golden and silvern without
measure or
account, some piled upon the ground and others bound in learthern bags
and sacks. Seeing these goods and moneys in such
abundance, Ali Bab
determined in his mind that not during a few years only but for many
generations
thieves must have stored their gains and spoils in this
place.
When he stood within the cave, its door had closed upon him, yet
he was not dismayed, since he had kept in memory the
magical words,
and he took no heed of the precious stuffs around him, but applied
himself only and
wholly to the sacks of ashrafis. Of these he
carried out as many as he judged sufficient burthen for the beasts,
then he loaded them upon his animals, and covered his
plunder with
sticks and fuel, so none might
discern the bags but might think that
he was carrying home his usual ware. Lastly he called out, "Shut,
Sesame!" and
forthwith the door closed, for the spell so wrought
that whensoever any entered the cave, its
portal shut of itself behind
him, and as he issued therefrom, the same would neither open nor close
again till he had
pronounced the words "Shut, Sesame!" Presently,
having laden his asses, Ali Baba urged them before him with all
speed to the city and reaching home, he drove them into the yard, and,
shutting close the outer door, took down first the sticks and fuel and
after the bags of gold, which he carried in to his wife.
She felt them, and
finding them full of coin, suspected that Ali
Baba had been robbing, and fell to berating and blaming him for that
he should do so ill a thing. Quoth Ali Baba to his wife, "Indeed I
am no
robber, and rather do thou
rejoice with me at our good fortune."
Hereupon he told her of his adventure, and began to pour the gold from
the bags in heaps before her, and her sight was dazzled by the sheen
and her heart
delighted at his
recital and adventures. Then she
began counting the gold,
whereat quoth Ali Baba: "O silly woman, how
long wilt thou continue turning over the coin? Now let me dig a hole
wherein to hide this treasure, that none may know its secret." Quoth
she: "Right is thy rede! Still would I weigh the moneys and have
some inkling of their amount," and he replied, "As thou pleasest,
but see thou tell no man." So she went off in haste to Kasim's home to
borrow weights and scales
wherewith she might balance the ashrafis and
make some
reckoning of their value. And when she could not find Kasim,
she said to his wife, "Lend me, I pray thee, thy scales for a moment."
Replied her sister-in-law, "Hast thou need of the bigger balance or
the smaller?" and the other rejoined, "I need not the large scales,
give me the little," and her sister-in-law cried, "Stay here a
moment
whilst I look about and find thy want."
With this pretext Kasim's wife went aside and
secretly smeared wax
and suet over the pan of the balance, that she might know what thing
it was Ali Baba's wife would weigh, for she made sure that whatso it
be, some bit thereof would stick to the wax and fat. So the woman took
this opportunity to satisfy her
curiosity, and Ali Baba's wife,
suspecting
naught thereof, carried home the scales and began to
weigh the gold,
whilst Ali Baba ceased not digging. And when the money
was weighed, they twain stowed it into the hole, which they
carefully filled up with earth. Then the good wife took back the
scales to her kinswoman, all unknowing that an ashrafi had adhered
to the cup of the scales. But when Kasim's wife espied the gold
coin, she fumed with envy and wrath,
saying to herself: "So ho! They
borrowed my balance to weigh out ashrafis?" And she marveled greatly
whence so poor a man as Ali Baba had
gotten such store of
wealththat he should he obliged to weigh it with a pair of scales.
Now after long pondering the matter, when her husband returned