登陆注册
19000800000030

第30章

There was once--the date is of no moment--a Sultan, and he had a Vizier named Ashimullah. This minister was a wise man, much trusted by his master; but he was held in some suspicion and dislike at the court because he had been born--or, if that be doubtful, had at least been bred--a Christian, and had been originally a prisoner of the Sultan's armies.

But Ashimullah, for reasons which intimately concerned his own head, but need not concern anybody else's, promptly found the true path; and, having professed a ready conversion to the tenets of Islam, rose rapidly to a high place in the service of the Sultan, so that his promotion never ceased until he was installed in the office of Grand Vizier. Yet, remembering his discreditable past, the Sultan was accustomed to exact from him the fullest and most minute observance of his religious duties.

To such observance Ashimullah submitted, comforting himself with the example of Naaman the Syrian; for Ashimullah was still, in secret, a Christian, and his adherence to Islam was only a polite concession to public feeling. But there was one point on which his conscience struck him sorely, and this was no other than the question of wives. Ashimullah had one wife, a lady of great beauty and remarkable accomplishments, and for the life of him he could not see how, consistently with the religion which he held in his heart and with the honor that he owed to the lady, he could take any other wife. Such an act appeared to him to be a deadly sin, for it was most plainly held and laid down by the rules of his religion, and had moreover been amply proved by experience, that one wife was enough for any man. Therefore when the Sultan, hearing that Ashimullah had but one wife, and considering the thing very suspicious and unnatural, sent for him, and required him to order his establishment on a scale more befitting his present exalted position, Ashimullah was in sad perplexity. To obey was to sin, to refuse was likely to cost him his life; for if his master suspected the sincerity of his conversion, his shrift would be short. In this quandary Ashimullah sought about for excuses.

"O Commander of the Faithful, I am a poor man, and wives are sources of expense," said Ashimullah.

"My treasury is open to the most faithful of my servants," said the Sultan.

"A multitude of women in a house breeds strife," urged Ashimullah.

"He who governs an empire should be able to govern his own house," remarked the Sultan.

"I have no pleasure in the society of women," pleaded Ashimullah.

"It is not a question of pleasure," said the Sultan solemnly, and Ashimullah thought that he saw signs of suspicion on his master's august face. Therefore he prostrated himself, crying that he submitted to the imperial will, and would straightway take another wife.

"I do not love a grudging obedience," said the Sultan.

"I will take two!" cried Ashimullah.

"Take three," said the Sultan; and with this he dismissed Ashimullah, giving him the space of a week in which to fulfill the command laid upon him.

"Surely I am a most unhappy man," mused Ashimullah. "For if I do not obey, I shall be put to death; and if I do obey, I fear greatly that I shall be damned." And he went home looking so sorrowful and perplexed that all men conceived that he was out of favor with the Sultan.

Now Ashimullah, being come to his house, went immediately to his wife, and told her of the Sultan's commands, adding that the matter was a sore grief to him, and not less on her account than on his own. "For you know well, Star of my Heart," said he, "that I desire no wife but you!""I know it well, Ashimullah," answered Lallakalla tenderly.

"Moreover, I fear that I shall be damned," whispered Ashimullah.

"I'm sure you would," said Lallakalla.

Three days later it was reported through all the city, on the authority of Hassan, the chief and confidential servant of the Vizier, that Ashimullah, having procured three slaves of great beauty at an immense cost, had wedded them all, and thus completed the number of wives allowed to him by the Law of the Prophet. The first was rosy-cheeked with golden hair; the second's complexion was olive, and her locks black as night;the third had a wonderful pallor, and tresses like burnished gold.

"Thus," added Hassan, "since my lady Lallakalla's hair is brown, his Highness the Vizier enjoys, as is his most just due, all varieties of beauty."When these things came to the ears of the Sultan, he was greatly pleased with the prompt obedience of Ashimullah, and sent him a large sum of money and his own miniature, magnificently set in diamonds. Moreover, he approved highly of the taste that Ashimullah had displayed in his choice, and regretted very deeply that he could not behold the charms of the wives of the Vizier.

Nay, so great was his anxiety concerning them that he determined to send one of his Sultanas to pay a visit to the harem of Ashimullah, in order that, while seeming to render honor to Ashimullah, she might report to him of the beauty of Ashimullah's wives.

"We must make ready for the visit of the Sultana," observed Lallakalla, with a smile.

When the Sultana returned from her visit, the Sultan came to her without delay, and she said:

"O Most Translucent Majesty, wonderful indeed are the wives of Ashimullah! For as they came before me, one after another, I did not know which of them to call most beautiful; for the brown hair, the golden, the black, and the ruddy are all most fair to see. I would that your Majesty could behold them!""I would that I could!" said the Sultan, stroking his beard.

"Yet, O Sultan, since all men are mortal, and it is not given to any to be perfectly happy in this world, know that there is an alloy in the happiness of Ashimullah the Vizier. For these most lovely ladies have, each and all of them, so strong and vehement a temper and so great a reciprocal hatred, that Ashimullah is compelled to keep them apart, each in her own chamber, and by no means can they be allowed to come together for an instant.

同类推荐
  • La Grande Breteche

    La Grande Breteche

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 毗尼母经

    毗尼母经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 六十种曲义侠记

    六十种曲义侠记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 神相铁关刀

    神相铁关刀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 重编天台诸文类集

    重编天台诸文类集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 皮之骨相

    皮之骨相

    世人只知皮相,未识骨相。他说,他爱我,却从未入骨。我的玉珩哥哥,早在十年前就死了,现在站在我面前的,只是楚君沛。若生迷局之中,怎堪自身之祸。
  • 重生之铁骨凰后

    重生之铁骨凰后

    他自诩为神。前世,她为他倾尽所有,助他称帝,功成之时却被他亲手推入地狱。这一世,她绝情绝爱,誓要将他拉下神坛。她联手神所不容的幽魅王爷,与他并肩作战,出生入死,不离不弃。她拯救沦为奴隶的皇子,助他换天逆世,给了他新生与未来。然而,他们最想要的却是她的心,而她唯独不能给的,便是她的心。漫长的厮杀过后,神的帝国灰飞烟灭,而她,却还是动了凡心。然而,在经历一次次的阴谋与背叛、血与泪的洗礼后,她还能相信谁?等着她的,会是重蹈覆辙,还是修成正果?
  • 流氓千金求爱记

    流氓千金求爱记

    从天而降的命运让我遇见了你!袁芬芬:陆远泽,被我喜欢是你的命,你就乖乖束手就擒吧!陆远泽:你喜欢我我就得成为你的男朋友?那喜欢我的人那么多,我难道都要成为其男朋友?李浩宇:我爱你,只要你幸福,我甘愿穷其一生!一边是一见钟情,一边是日久生情,无论哪一种选择都无法抗拒命运无形的操控!最后,不管爱或者被爱,我终将离你远去!
  • 虚无之虚无

    虚无之虚无

    寒风凛冽着,在塞星某处不起眼的小石头墩子后面,一个冻死的老人手里紧紧地,静静地捏着一把雪,不,准确的说,雪在老人冰冷的手掌里被攥成了一坨冰。老人,累了……孩子不卑不亢,冰蓝的瞳中尽数疑惑……很多年以后,孩子重新经过那个地方,殊不知脚下踏着的,便是老人尸骨与那块曾经包裹过孩子的破布化成的石头墩子。
  • 海外摸金

    海外摸金

    这个故事便是由一次盗墓式的取剑,挖掘了不被人知晓的秘事,放出了封印地底的强悍凶灵,从而拉开了:人与人、人与鬼、鬼与鬼的惊世大战序幕。
  • 《四分之一夏沫恋》

    《四分之一夏沫恋》

    四姐妹的爱情之旅,十个人的爱恨情仇。如果爱她,请相信她。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。初写还望给力
  • 一纸婚约预定你:痞女逗夫

    一纸婚约预定你:痞女逗夫

    【本故事纯属虚构】她,被一枚诡异的戒指带到一个神奇的国度。因一纸婚约,逃了;又因一纸婚约,被套牢了。赫连绝:我们有婚约你是我的!向纪御璃:小东西,我们有诺言,你敢反悔?萧飞羽:我只想守在你身边而已,不会为难的。错位的时空,痞女与妖孽冤家聚首,碰撞出绚烂的火花。神马美人妒妃,神马痴情军神,神马狡诈国君,都挥一挥衣袖,不带走一片云彩。
  • MENO II

    MENO II

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 使命未名

    使命未名

    麒麟,身负使命,与我们一同成长,且看他们会经历怎样的怪诞传奇
  • 做最好的执行者

    做最好的执行者

    本书兼具实用性和指导性。书中的每一个细节都来源于众多优秀员工实际工作经验的总结和提炼,并精选了大量经典、实用的案例,理论联系实际,对一般员工在实际工作中遇到的各种棘手问题都提供了具体的、可供操作性的解决方法和技巧。本书将帮助你成为一个优秀的执行者,助你尽快迈上一个新台阶,实现自己的人生飞跃。