Tales from the Arabic — Volume 02 by John Payne
page 42 of 254 (16%)
page 42 of 254 (16%)
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Almighty's will; we most submit.
Nor," added the vizier, "is this, O king of the age, more extraordinary or stranger than the story of the king and his chamberlain's wife; nay, the latter is rarer than this and more delightsome." When the king heard this story, he was fortified in his resolve to spare the vizier and to leave haste in an affair whereof he was not assured; so he comforted him and bade him withdraw to his lodging. The Twenty-Fourth Night of the Month. When it was night, the king summoned the vizier and sought of him the hearing of the [promised] story. "Hearkening and obedience," replied Er Rehwan, "Know, O august king, that STORY OF THE KING AND HIS CHAMBERLAIN'S WIFE. There was once, of old days and in bygone ages and times, a king of the kings of the Persians, who was passionately addicted to the love of women. His courtiers bespoke him of the wife of a |
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