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- Avt’handil's Letter in
Answer to P'hatman's
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- 1093
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- "THOU hast written to me; I have read thy letter in
- praise of me. Thou hast anticipated me, but the burning of
- the fire of love afflicts me more lhan thee. Thou wishest,
- I too want thy company uninterrupted. Our union is agreed
- since it is the desire of both."
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- 1094
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- I CANNOT tell thee how P'hatman's pleasure increased.
- She wrote: "The tears I, absent from thee, have
shed
- suffice. Now I shall be unaccompanied, here shalt thou
- find me alone; hasten my union with thee, to-night when
- evening falls. Come!"
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- 1095
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- THAT very night when the letter of invitation was
- presented to the knight, when twilight was falling and he
- was going, another slave met him on the way with the
- message: "Come not to-night; thou shalt find me unready
- for thee." This vexed him, he turned not back, he said:
- "What sort of thing is this ?"
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- 1096
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- THE invited guest went not back again on the withdrawal
- of his invitation. P'hatman sits troubled. Avt'handil the
- tree-like went in alone. He perceived the woman's
- uneasiness, he saw it forthwith on his going in; she could
- not reveal it from fear, and also out of complaisance for
- him.
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- 1097
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- THEY sat down together and began to kiss, to sport
- pleasantly, when a certain elegant youth of graceful mien
- appeared standing in the doorway. He entered; close
- behind followed a slave with sword and shield. When he
- saw Avt'handil he felt afraid as before a rocky road.
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- 1098
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- WHEN P'hatman saw, she was afraid, she shook and fell
- a-trembling. The stranger gazed with wonder at them lying
- caressing; he said: "I will not hinder, 0 woman ... but
- when day breaks I shall cause thee to repent that thou hast
- had this youth.
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- 1099
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- "THOU hast shamed me, 0 wicked woman, and made me
- to be despised, but to-morrow thou shalt know the answer
- to be paid for this deed; I shall make thee to devour thy
- children with thy teeth; if fail to do this, spit upon my
- beard, let me run mad in the fields!"
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- 1100
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- THUS he spake, and the man touched his beard and went
- out of the door, P'hatman began to beat her head, her
- cheeks were scratched, the gurgling of her tears flowing like
- a fountain was heard. She said: "Come, stone me with stone,
- let the throwers approach!"
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- 1101
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- SHE laments: "I have, alas! slain my husband, I have
- killed off my little children, I have given away as loot our
- possessions, the peerless cut gems! I am separated from my
- dear ones! Alas! the upbringer! Alas! the upbrought! I have
- made an end of myself; shameful are my words!"
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- 1102
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- AVT'HANDIL hearkened to all this in perplexity. He said:
- "What troubles thee, what say'st thou, why dost thou thus
- lament, why did that youth threaten thee, what fault found
- he in thee ? Be calm; tell me who he was and on what errand
- he roved!"
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- 1103
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- THE woman replied: "0 lion! I am mad with the flow of
- tears; ask me no more tidings, nought can I tell thee with
- my tongue. I have slain my children with mine own hand,
- therefore can I no more be gay; impatient for thy love
- I have slain myself.
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- 1104
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- "THIS kind of thing certainly should happen to the utterer
- of idle words, the chatterer who cannot hide a secret, the
- witless, mad, raving. 'Help me with your lamentations!'
- This will I say to all who see me. A physician cannot cure
- one who drinks his own blood!
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- 1105
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- "DO one thing of two: desire nothing more than this: If
- thou canst kill that man, go, slay him secretly by night:
- thus shalt thou save me and all my house from slaughter:
- return, I will tell thee all, the reason why I shed tears.
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- 1106
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- "IF not, take away thy loads on asses this very night,
- escape from my neighbourhood, gather everything for
- flight. I doubt my sins will fill thee too with woe. If that
- knight go to court he will make me eat my children with my
- mouth."
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- 1107
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- WHEN Avt'handil, the proud, gifted with bold resolve
- heard this, he arose and took a mace-how fair, how hold is
- he! "To ignore this matter would be remissness on my
- part!" said he. Think not any living is his like; there is none
- other like unto him!
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- 1108
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- TO P'hatman he said: "Give me a man as instructor, as
- guide, let him show me the road truly, else I want no helper;
- I cannot look on that man as a warrior and mine equal.
- What I do I shall tell thee; wait for me, be calm!"
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- 1109
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- THE woman gave him a slave as guide and leader. Again
- she cried out: "Inasmuch as the hot fire is to be cooled, if
- thou slay that knight to assuage the irritation of my heart,
- he has my ring, I entreat thee to bring it hither."
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- 1110
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- AVT'HANDIL of the peerless form passed the city. On the
- seashore stood a building of red-green stone; in the lower
- part fair palaces, then above terrace upon terrace, vast,
- beautiful, numerous, hanging one over the other.
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- 1111
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- THITHER is the sun-faced Avt'handil led by his guide,
- who says to him in a low voice: "This is the palace of him
- thou seekest." He shows it to him, and says: "Seest thou
- him standing on yonder terraced roof? Know this, there he
- lie? to sleep; or thou shalt find him sitting."
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- 1112
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- . BEFORE the door of that luckless youth lay two guards.
- Avt'handil passed, he stole in without making a sound; he
- put a hand on each of their throats, forthwith he slew them,
- he struck head upon head, brain and hair were mingled.
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