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- Avt'handil's Departure
From P'hridon to Seek Nestan-Daredjan
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- 1023
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- THE knight speaks as he goes on his way like the full
- moon; there is the thought of T'hinat'hin to gladden his
- heart. He says: "I am far from thee; alas! the falseness of
- the cursed passing world! Thou hast the healing balsam for
- my wound.
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- 1024
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- "WHY doth the ardour of grief for the heroes continually
- burn me ? Why is my heart of rock and cliff become a hard
- rock? Even three lances cannot show a bruise on me. Thou
- art the cause that this world is thus envenomed for me."
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- 1025
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- AVT'HANDIL fares on alone to the seashore with the
- four slaves, with all his might he seeks balm for Tariel;
- weeping by day and night he pours forth pools of tears; all
- the world seems to him as straw, even as straw in weight.
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- 1026
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- WHEREVER he sees travellers walking by the shore he
- addresses them, he asks tidings of that sun. He roamed a
- hundred days. He went up a hill; camels loaded with stuff
- appeared; merchants distressed stood in perplexity on the
- shore.
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- 1027
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- A COUNTLESS caravan was there on the seashore, they
- were distressed, they were gloomy, they could neither stand
- nor go forward. The knight greeted them; they hailed him
- with praise. He asked: "Merchants, who are ye ?" They
- began to converse.
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- 1028
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- USAM was the chief of the caravan, a wise man. He uttered
- respectfully a perfect eulogy, he invoked blessings on
- Avt'handil and praised his manners; he said: "0 sun,
- thou art come as our life and comforter. Dismount; we will
- tell thee our story and business!"
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- 1029
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- HE dismounted. They said: "We are Bagdad merchants,
- holders of the faith of Mohammed; we never drink new
- wines; we haste to trade in the city of the Sea-King; we are
- rich in wholesale goods, we have no cut pieces of stuff.
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- 1030
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- "HERE on the seashore we found a man lying senseless;
- we succoured him till he could speak clearly with his tongue.
- We asked him: 'Who art thou, stranger? What business
- dost thou follow after ?' He said to us: 'If ye go on they
- will slay you. It is well that I still live!'
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- 1031
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- "HE said: 'From Egypt we set out with a caravan and a
- guard, we embarked upon the sea laden with many kinds of
- stuff, there pirates in ships with sharp iron-pointed wooden
- rams slew us. All was lost; I know not how I came hither."
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- 1032
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- "0 LION and sun, this is the reason of our standing here. If we
return, our loss will be a hundredfold; if we embark. alas! they may
slay us, we have no strength for battle. We cannot stay, we cannot go,
the power to maintain ourselves is gone from us."
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- 1033
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- THE knight said : "Whoever grieves is nought, and strives
- in vain; whatever conies from above, we cannot avoid its
- coming. I am surety for your blood, I take upon myself
- what you shall shed; whoever fights with you, my sword will
- wear itself out on your foes."
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- 1034
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- THEY of the caravan were filled with great joy; they
- said: "He is some knight, some hero, not timid like us, he
- has self-confidence, let us be calm in heart." They
- embarked, they went on board ship, they set out from the
- coast.
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- 1035
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- WITH pleasant weather they journeyed without hardship;
- their conveyer, Avt'handil, leads them with brave heart. A
- pirate ship appeared with an exceedingly long flag; that ship
- had an iron-shod ploughshare with beam of wood for
- shattering ships.
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- 1036
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- THE pirates yelled and came on, they shouted and
- trumpeted; the caravan was afraid of the multitude of
- those warriors. The knight spoke: "Fear not their hardihood;
- either I slay them all or this is the day of my death.
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- 1037
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- "NOUGHT undecreed can they do to me, even if all the
- hosts on earth engage me; if it be decreed, I shall not
- survive, the spears are ready for me, neither strongholds nor
- friends, not even brothers, can save me; who knows this
- is stout-hearted like me.
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- 1038
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- "YOU merchants are cowards, unskilled in war. Lest they
- slay you with the arrow from afar, shut the doors behind
- you. Behold me alone how I fight, how I use my lion-like
- arms; see how I make the blood of the corsair's crew flow."
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- 1039
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- WITH gesture like a swift tiger he clad his form in
- armour; in one hand he held an iron mace. He stood forth
- with dauntless heart in the front of the ship, and as he slew
- onlookers with his gaze, so he slew foes with his sword.
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- 1040
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- THOSE warriors yelled; their voices were uninterrupted.
- They thrust the beam upon which was the ploughshare.
- The knight stood fearless at the head of the ship, he
- trembled not; he struck with the mace, he broke the beam,
- the lion's arm swerved not.
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- 1041
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- THE beam was destroyed, and Avt'handil remained with
- ship unshattered. Those warriors feared, they sought a way
- to shelter, they could not contrive it in time; he leaped on
- his foes, threshing them down round about him; there was
- not left there living man unbacked by him.
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- 1042
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- WITH intrepid heart he slew those warriors like goats;
- some he threw down on the ship, some he cast into the sea;
- he threw one upon another, eight upon nine and nine upon
- eight; those who were left were hidden among the corpses,
- they stifled their cries.
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- 1043
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- AS much as his heart desired was he victorious in the
- fight with them. Some humbly adjured him: "Slay us not,
- by thy faith!" Those he slew not, he enslaved them,
- whoever survived his wounds. Truly saith the Apostle:
- "Fear makes love."
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- 1044
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- 0 MAN! boast not of thy strength, brag not drunken
- like! Might is of none avail if the power of the Lord aid
- thee not. A tiny spark overcomes, and burns up great trees,
- If God protect thee, it cuts alike well whether thou strike
- with a log or a sword.
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- 1045
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- THERE Avt'handil saw their great treasures. He grappled
- twin-like ship to ship. He called the caravan. Usam was merry when
he saw, he rejoiced, he lamented not, he spoke a eulogy in his praise,
he gave form to great imaginings.
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- 1046
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- PRAISERS ofAvl'handil need even a thousand tongues;
- even they could not tell how fair he appeared after the
- fight. The caravan shouted, saying: "Lord, thanks to Thee!
- The sun has shed down on us his beams; the dark night has
- broken into day for us."
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- 1047
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- THEY came up to him, they kissed his head, face, feet,
- hand; they spoke praise unstinted to the fair, the
- praiseworthy; the sight of him maddens the wise man as
- well as the fool! "We all are saved by thee in so hard a
- mischance."
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- 1048
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- THE knight said: "Thanks to God, the Creator, Maker of
- all, by whom the heavenly powers decree what is to be done
- here; 'tis they that do all deeds hidden and some revealed.
- It is necessary to everyone to believe; a wise man has faith
- in the future.
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- 1049
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- "GOD hath deigned to spare your blood, so many souls!
- I, alas! vain earth, what am I ? Of myself, what can I do ?
- Now I have slain your foes, I have fulfilled what I spoke;
- I have brought you the ship complete with its wealth as a
- gift."
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- 1050
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- PLEASANT it is when a good knight has won the battle,
- when he has surpassed his comrades who were with him.
- They congratulated him, they praised him, in this state they
- were ashamed. The wound becomes him well, but little
- was he hurt.
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- 1051
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- THAT day they looked at that ship of the corsairs, they
- put not off till the morrow. How could they count the
- quantity of treasure lying there! They conveyed it to
- their ship, they completely emptied the pirate ship; they
- smashed i.t up and burned some of it; the wood they
- bartered not for the drachma.
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- 1052
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- USAM conveyed to Avt'handil a message from the
- merchants: "We are strengthened by thee; we know our
- baseness. Whatever we have is thine, of this there can be
- no doubt; whatever thou givest us, let it be ours, we have
- made an assembly here."
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- 1053
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- THE knight announced: "0 brothers, but now ye heard it:
- the stream which flowed from your eyes has been perceived
- by God, He hath saved you alive. What am I? What joy,
- alas! have I given you ? What could I do with whatever
- you gave me ? I have myself and my horse!
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- 1054
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- "AS much treasure as I desired to amass I had of mine
- own, countless priceless coverlets of silk. What use could I
- make of yours? What do I want? I am but your companion.
- Moreover, I have some other dangerous business.
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- 1055
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- "NOW, of this countless treasure I have found here, take
- what you each wish; I shall be a claimant against none.
- One thing I entreat: grant my request, one not to be
- mistrusted; I have a certain matter to be kept hidden
- within you.
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- 1056
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- "TILL the time comes, speak not of me as if I were not
- your master. Say, 'He is our chief,' call me not knight.
- I will clothe myself as a merchant, I will begin chaffering;
- keep the secret, by the brotherhood between us."
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- 1057
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- THIS thing very greatly rejoiced the caravan; they came
- and saluted him, saying: "It is our hope-the very request
- we should have made to you, you yourself have made to
- us—that we may serve him whose face we acknowledge as
- the face of the sun."
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- 1058
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- THENCE they departed and travelled on, they wasted no
- time; they met fair weather, they sailed ever pleasantly;
- they delighted in Avt'handil, they sang his praises; they
- presented him with a pearl of the tint of the knight's
- teeth.
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