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بس که غدر درزیان را ذکر کرد ** حیف آمد ترک را و خشم و درد
- When he (the story-teller) had related many instances of the perfidy of tailors, the Turk became annoyed and angry and aggrieved,
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گفت ای قصاص در شهر شما ** کیست استاتر درین مکر و دغا
- And said, ‘O story-teller, in your city who is the greatest expert in this (kind of) deceit and fraud?’
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دعوی کردن ترک و گرو بستن او کی درزی از من چیزی نتواند بردن
- [How the Turk boasted and wagered that the tailor would not be able to steal anything from him.]
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گفت خیاطیست نامش پور شش ** اندرین چستی و دزدی خلقکش
- He replied, ‘There is a tailor named Pír-i Shush who beats (all other) folk in light-fingeredness and thievery.’
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گفت من ضامن که با صد اضطراب ** او نیارد برد پیشم رشتهتاب
- ‘I warrant,’ said he (the Turk), ‘that (even) with a hundred efforts he will not be able to take away a coil of thread in my presence.’
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پس بگفتندش که از تو چستتر ** مات او گشتند در دعوی مپر 1675
- Then they told him, ‘Cleverer persons than you have been checkmated by him: do not soar (too high) in your pretensions.
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رو به عقل خود چنین غره مباش ** که شوی یاوه تو در تزویرهاش
- Go to, be not so deluded by your intelligence, else you will be lost in his wiles.’
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گرمتر شد ترک و بست آنجا گرو ** که نیارد برد نی کهنه نی نو
- The Turk became (still) hotter and made a wager there (and then) that he (the tailor) would not be able to rob (him of anything) either old or new.
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مطمعانش گرمتر کردند زود ** او گرو بست و رهان را بر گشود
- Those who flattered his hopes made him hotter (than before): immediately he wagered and declared the stakes,
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که گرو این مرکب تازی من ** بدهم ار دزدد قماشم او به فن
- Saying, ‘I will pay this Arab horse of mine as a forfeit if he artfully steals my stuff;
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ور نتواند برد اسپی از شما ** وا ستانم بهر رهن مبتدا 1680
- And if he cannot rob (me) I shall receive a horse from you (as an equivalent) for the first stake.’