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4457-4506

  • (But) if you will come to my private house, O cypress-slender one, and describe to me the injurious behaviour of your husband”—
  • “In thy house,” she replied, “there will be a (constant) coming and going of every sort of people, good and bad, for the purpose of making complaints.”
  • (If) the house of the head be wholly filled with a mad passion, the breast will be full of anxiety and commotion.
  • The rest of the (bodily) members are undisturbed by thinking, while those breasts are consumed by thoughts that return. 4460
  • Take refuge in the autumn gale of fear of God: let last year's flowers be shed;
  • (For) these flowers prevent the new buds (from blossoming), and it is (only) for the sake of their growth that the tree of the heart exists.
  • Put thyself to sleep (and escape) from this (vain) thinking: (then) lift up thy head from sleep into (spiritual) wakefulness.
  • Like the Men of the Cave (the Seven Sleepers), pass quickly, O Khwája, into (the state of those who are) awake, though thou wouldst deem them asleep.
  • “O adorable one,” said the cadi, “what can be contrived?” She answered, “This (thy) handmaid's house is quite empty. 4465
  • The enemy has gone into the country, and the caretaker is not there either: it is a very good place for meeting in private.
  • Come there to-night if possible: what one does by night is (done) without (the intention of) making (people) hear of it or see it;
  • (At that time) all the spies are intoxicated with the wine of sleep: all have been beheaded (and left as though lifeless) by the negro, Night.”
  • The sugar-lipped (damsel) chanted wondrous spells over the cadi—and then with what (bewitching) lips!
  • How often did Iblís palaver with Adam!—but when Eve told him to eat, then (and not till then) did he eat. 4470
  • The first blood (shed) in this world of iniquity and justice was shed by Qábíl (Cain) for the sake of a woman.
  • Whenever Noah was frying meat in the frying-pan, Wáhila (his wife) would throw stones at the frying-pan,
  • And his wife's plotting would defeat his (missionary) work, (so that) the clear water of his exhortation would become turbid;
  • (For) she used to send secret messages to the (unbelieving) folk, saying, “Preserve your religion from (being corrupted by) these erring men!”
  • How the cadi went to the house of Júhí's wife, and how Júhí knocked angrily at the door, and how the cadi took refuge in a chest, etc.
  • The guile of woman is infinite. The sagacious cadi went at night to the wife ut cum ea coiret. [The guile of woman is infinite. The sagacious cadi went at night to the wife (of Júhí) for sexual intercourse.] 4475
  • The wife set two (lighted) candles and the dessert for his entertainment. “(I can do) without this drink,” said he: “I am intoxicated (with love).”
  • At that moment Júhí came and knocked at the door: the cadi looked for a place into which he could slink for refuge.
  • He saw no hiding-place but a chest: in his fright the man went into the chest.
  • (Then) Júhí came in and said (to his wife), “O spouse, O thou who art my plague (both) in spring and autumn,
  • What do I possess that is not sacrificed to thee: (why, then, is it) that thou art always crying out at me? 4480
  • Thou hast let loose thy tongue at my dry crusts: now thou callest me ‘pauper,’ now ‘cuckold.’
  • If, my dear, I suffer from these two maladies, one (the latter) comes from thee and the other from God.
  • What do I possess but that chest, which is a source of suspicion and a ground for (evil) surmise?
  • People think I keep gold in it, and because of these (false) opinions charity is withheld from me.
  • The appearance of the chest is very pleasing, but it is quite empty of goods and silver and gold. 4485
  • (’Tis) like the person of a hypocrite, (one who is) handsome and dignified; (but) in the basket you will find nothing except a snake.
  • To-morrow I will take the chest into the street and burn it in the midst of the market at the cross-ways,
  • That true believer and Zoroastrian and Jew may see there was nothing in this chest but (cause for) cursing.”
  • “O husband,” cried the woman, “come now, give up this (idea)!” (However), he swore several times that he would do just as he had said.
  • Early (next morning) he (went) like the wind, fetched a porter, and immediately put the chest on his back. 4490
  • (He set off with it, while) the cadi inside the chest shouted in an agony (of terror), “O porter! O porter!”
  • The porter looked to the right and the left to see from what direction the shouts and warnings were coming.
  • “I wonder,” said he, “is it a hátif, this voice which is calling me, or is it a peri (jinní) summoning me mysteriously?”
  • When the shouts followed one another in succession and increased, he said, “’Tis not a hátif,” and recovered himself.
  • At last he perceived that the shouts and cries for help came from the chest and that somebody was concealed in it. 4495
  • The lover who has fallen passionately in love with an (earthly) object of affection has gone into the chest, though (in appearance) he is outside.
  • He has spent (wasted) his life in the chest on account of (worldly) cares: he can see nothing of the world except a chest.
  • The head that is not (raised) above the sky—know that it is (confined) in that chest by its vain desires.
  • When he (such an one) goes forth from the chest of the body, he will (only) go from one tomb to another tomb.
  • This topic is endless. The cadi said to him, “O porter, O carrier of the chest, 4500
  • Give news of me to my deputy at the court of justice and acquaint him with all (the details of) this (affair) as quickly as possible,
  • In order that he may buy this (chest) with gold from this witless fellow and take it fastened, just as it is, to my house.”
  • O Lord, appoint a spiritually endowed company to redeem us from the chest of the body!
  • Who but the prophets and apostles can redeem the people from confinement in the chest of guile?
  • Among thousands there is (only) one person of comely aspect, who knows that he is inside the chest. 4505
  • He must formerly have beheld the (spiritual) world, so that by means of that contrary this contrary should be made evident to him.