When it was the Eight Hundred and Eighth Night; She said,It hath reached me,O auspicious King,that when the old woman said to Hasan,'By Allah,O my son,hearken to my words! Choose thee one of these girls in lieu of thy wife and presently return to thy country in safety,'he hung down his head and recited the couplets quoted above.Then he wept till he swooned away and Shawahl sprinkled water on his face till he revived,when she addressed him,'O my lord,I have no shift left;because if I carry thee to the city thy life is lost and mine also: for,when the Queen cometh to know of this,she will blame me for admitting thee into her lands and islands,whereto none of Adam's sons hath access,and will slay me for bringing thee with me and for suffering mortal to look upon the virgins seen by thee in the sea,whom ne'er touched male,neither approached mate.'And Hasan sware that he had never looked on them with evil of eye.She resumed,'O my son,hearken to me and return to thy country and I will give thee wealth and treasures and things of price,such as shall suffice thee for all the women in the world.Moreover,I will give thee a girl of the best of them,so lend an ear to my words and return presently and imperil not thyself;indeed I counsel thee with good counsel.'But he wept and rubbed both cheeks against her feet,saying,'O my lady and mistress and coolth of mine eyes,how can I turn back now that I have made my way hither,without the sight of those I
desire,and now that I have come near the beloved's site,hoping for meeting forthright,so haply there may be a portion in reunion to my plight?' And he improvised these couplets;'O Kings of beauty,grace to prisoner ta'en * Of eyelids fit to rule the Chosro‰s' reign:
Ye pass the wafts of musk in perfumed breath;* Your cheeks the charms of blooming rose disdain.
The softest Zephyr breathes where pitch ye camp * And thence far-scattered sweetness fills the plain: