Sa di

Ch 02 The Morals Of Dervishes Story 32

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Ch 02 The Morals Of Dervishes Story 32

Having become tired of my friends in Damascus, I went into the desert of Jerusalem and associated with animals till the time when I became a prisoner of the Franks, who put me to work with infidels in digging the earth of a moat in Tarapolis, when one of the chiefs of Aleppo, with whom I had formerly been acquainted, recognized me and said: ‘What state is this? ’ I recited: ‘I fled from men to mountain and desert Wishing to attend upon no one but God. Imagine what my state at present is When I must be satisfied in a stable of wretches. The feet in chains with friends Is better than to be with strangers in a garden. ’ He took pity on my state and ransomed me for ten dinars from the captivity of the Franks, taking me to Aleppo where he had a daughter and married me to her with a dowry of one hundred dinars. After some time had elapsed, she turned out to be ill-humoured, quarrelsome, disobedient, abusive in her tongue and embittering my life: A bad wife in a good man’s house Is his hell in this world already. Alas for a bad consort, alas! Preserve us, O Lord from the punishment of fire. Once she lengthened her tongue of reproach and said: ‘Art thou not the man whom my father purchased from the Franks for ten dinars? ’ I replied: ‘Yes, he bought me for ten dinars and sold me into thy hands for one hundred dinars. ’ I heard that a sheep had by a great man Been rescued from the jaws and the power of a wolf. In the evening he stroked her throat with a knife Whereon the soul of the sheep complained thus: 'Thou hast snatched me away from the claws of a wolf, But at last I see thou art thyself a wolf. ’ THE GULISTAN OF SA'DI Translated by Richard Francis Burton (1821-1890)