-
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- The
Going of Tariel to the King of the Seas
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- 1426
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- TO the presence of the King of the Seas he
sent a messenger
- of good tidings; he bade him announce:
"I, Tariel, come,
- vanquisher of foes, their destroyer and
slayer; from
- Kadjet'hi I bring my sun, piercer of me with
lances; I
- desire to see thee with honour, as father and
parent.
|
- 1427
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- "NOW I have the land of the Kadjis and
their hoards. O
- king, all that is good hath happened to me
from you: my sun
- was freed by P'hatman, she was a mother and a
sister to
- her. What can I give thee in return for this?
I hate vain
- promises.
|
- 1428
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- "COME, see us before we have passed thy
land. I present
- to thee outright the kingdom of the Kadjis,
accept it from
- me; let thy men be posted there, hold castle
strongly. I am
- in haste, I cannot come to see thee, come
thou forth, wend
- towards me.
|
- 1429
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- "ON my behalf tell Usen, P'hatman's
husband, to send her,
- the sight of her will please her she freed;
whom else can she
- desire to see more than her who is brighter
than the sun,
- even as a crystal is brighter than
pitch!"
|
- 1430
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- WHEN Tariel’s man was received by the ruler
of the
- seas-it is the custom that the heart is
agitated by startling
- tidings-he gave thanks and glory to God the
Just Judge.
- Straightway he mounted; he needed no other
messenger.
|
- 1431
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- HE loaded baggage, he appointed the making of
their
- wedding, he takes a number of pretty things,
a great
- quantity of jet. He has P'hatman with him,
they made a
- journey of ten days: the sight of the lion
and the sun, the
- light of the lands, rejoices him.
|
- 1432
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- AFAR off the three met the great King of the
Seas,
- they dismounted, he humbly kissed them, they
were encompassed
- by a host of troops; they rendered praise to
Tariel, he gave
- a thousand thanks, when they saw the damsel
the King of
- the Seas was fascinated by her crystal-halo
rays.
|
- 1433
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- SLOW fire consumed Dame P'hatman at the sight
of her,
- she embraced her, she covered with kisses her
hand, foot,
- face, neck; she said: "O God, I will
serve Thee, since my
- darkness is lightened for me; I recognize the
shortness of
- evil, Thy goodness is everlasting."
|
- 1434
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- THE maiden embraced P'hatman; sweetly she
speaks, not
- angry; "God hath enlightened my rent,
faded heart; now
- am I as full as formerly I was waning; the
sun hath shed
- his beams upon me, therefore I appear a rose
unfrozen."
|
- 1435
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- THE King of the Seas celebrated there an
exceeding great
- wedding; he thanked Tariel too for Kadjet'hi;
he would not
- let them go for seven days; generously he
dispensed gifts,.
- the treasure he had loaded; they wore out by
treading upon
- it the scattered gold coin as if it were a
bridge.
|
- 1436
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- THERE stood a heap of silk, brocade and
satin. He gave
- to Tariel a crown, a price could not be set
on it, of a whole
- jacinth, yellow, exceeding pure, likewise a
throne of gold,
- red, refined.
|
- 1437
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- HE presented to Nestan-Daredjan a mantle
adorned with
- gems, red jacinths, rubies of Badakhshan and
rubies; they
- both sat, the maid and the youth, with faces
flashing
- lightning; they that looked on them burned
with new fire.
|
- 1438
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- HE presented to Avt'handil and P'hridon
measureless great
- gifts, a valuable saddle, an excellent horse,
to each a
- jewelled coat shedding rare-hued rays; they
said: "What
- thanks can we utter! Prosperous be your
state!"
|
- 1439
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- TARIEL rendered thanks with his tongue in
fair words:
- "Greatly have I been pleased, O king;
first at seeing you,
- then you have filled us with many fair kinds
of gifts; I wot
- we did well not to pass by afar off from
you."
|
- 1440
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- THE King of the Seas says: "O king,
lion, valorous, life
- of those near you, slayer from afar of those
that cannot look
- on you, what can I give you
like unto yourself, O fair to
- look upon! When I am away from you what shall
avail me,
- O desirable to be gazed on !"
|
- 1441
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- TARIEL said to P'hatman: "I adopt thee
as my sister.
- O sister, great is mine unpayable debt to thy
heart! Now
- whatever treasure of the Kadjis I have
brought with me
- from Kadjet'hi I give it to thee, take it, I
sell it not."
|
- 1442
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- DAME P'hatman made obeisance, she proffered
exceeding
- great thanks: "O king, thy sight burns
me with
- unquenchable fire. When I shall be away from
thee what
- shall I do! Thou wilt leave me like one
bereft of sense. Ah,
- blessed are those near thee; woe to him that
cannot gaze on
- you."
|
- 1443
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- THE three radiant ones spoke to the King of
the Seas;
- their teeth were crystals, their lips as
pearl-shells. "When
- we are deprived of you we desire not
merrymakings, flutes,
- harps and kettledrums. But give us leave, it
is time, let us
- depart, we are in haste.
|
- 1444
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- "BE our father, parent and hope! But
this indeed we
- beseech of thee: grant us a ship!" The
king said: "T grudge
- not to give myself to earth for yon; since
thou art in haste,
- what can I say to thee! Go! Thine arm be thy
guide!"
|
- 1445
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- THE king fitted out a ship on the shore.
Tariel set out;
- those who were parted shed tears, they beat
their heads,
- they tore their hair and beards and cast them
away.
- P'hatman's tears in their flow even augmented
the sea.
|
- 1446
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- THE three sworn brothers crossed the seas
together,
- again they confirmed by their word what they
formerly
- affirmed; singing and laughter were beseeming
to them,
- who were not ignorant thereof; the ray from
their lips shone
- upon the planks of crystal.
|
- 1447
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- THENCE they sent a man to Asmat'h as a
messenger of
- good tidings; also to P'hridon's chief to
tell them of the
- fight: "He comes hither, as the sun he
rises high, reinforcing
- the planets; we erstwhile frozen shall be
frozen now no
- more."
|
- 1448
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- THEY seated that sun in a palanquin; they
wended their
- way along the coast. They sported like
children; the passing
- away of woe gladdened them. They came where
was the
- land of the hero Nuradin, they were met, they
heard the
- sound of frequent song.
|
- 1449
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- THERE all P'hridon's lords met them. Asmat'h,
full of
- joy, whose wounds no longer appeared, was
riveted to
- Nestan-Daredjan so that axes could not
unloose them.
- Now she had ended all her faithful services.
|
- 1450
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- NESTAN-DAREDJAN embraces her, kisses her face
with
- her mouth. She said: "Mine own, woe is
me, I have filled
- thee too with grief. Now God hath granted us
grace, I
- acknowledge His boundless bounty. I know not
with what
- I can repay so great a heart as thine!"
|
- 1451
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- ASMAT'H said : "Thanks be to God, I have
seen the roses
- unfrozen. At length understanding hath thus
revealed things
- hidden. Death itself seems to me life when I
see you happy.
- Better than all friends are suzerain and
vassal? that love one another!"
|
- 1452
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- THE lords did homage, they rendered great
praise: "Since
- God hath caused us to rejoice, blessed is His
divinity; He
- hat shown us your face, no longer doth the
burning of fires
- consume us; even He that gave the wound. He
hath the
- power to heal it."
|
- 1453
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- THEY came and put their mouths on their
hands; thus
- they kissed them. The king Tariel said:
"For our sake have
- your brethren sacrificed themselves. They
have found joy in
- eternity, a reality and no dream. They have
attained
- communion with the One; their glories are
increased a
- hundred-and-twenty-fold.
|
- 1454
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- "THOUGH their death is sore to me and
grievous, yet the
- great immortal gift hath there fallen to
their lot." This he
- spake, gently he wept, and the rain of tears
was mingled
- with the snow. Boreas blows from the
narcissi; January
- freezes the rose.
|
- 1455
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- THERE all wept when they saw him in tears;
whoever had
- lost any kinsman moaned, weeping and sobbing.
All were
- hushed. Then they said respectfully to
Tariel: "Since sages
- liken thee to the sun, it befits them that
look upon you to
- be merry; wherefore should they lament!
|
- 1456
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- "WHO is worthy of your so great weeping
and sorrow ?
- Death for your sake is far better than
walking upon the
- earth!" Then P'hridon said to the king:
"Make not
- bitterness to thyself from aught. May God in
return render
- to thee a thousand joys!"
|
- 1457
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- AVTHANDIL also sympathized; he speaks with
great
- sorrow. They rendered praise, and said:
"Let us now yield
- ourselves to smiling; since the lost lion has
found the
- vanished sun, no more will we weep what is
deplorable, no
- longer will we set canals in our eyes."
|
- 1458
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- THITHER they went where is the great city
Mulghazanzar.
- They played trumpet and kettledrum, there was
trampling
- and uproar; the sound of drum and copper drum
blended
- fairly; the burgesses crowded round, they
left the bazaar.
|
- 1459
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- THE merchants came from their rows, on all
sides there is
- a host of onlookers; the officers kept a wide
space round
- them, they had arms in their hands; families
came crowding
- in, causing trouble to the officers; their
entreaty is to be
- allowed there to look upon them.
|
- 1460
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- AT P'hridon's they alighted, they saw a
pleasing palace,
- many slaves with golden girdles met them,
they have
- nought but gold brocade as a carpet for their
feet; they
- threw up gold above their heads, the crowd
marching there
- picked it up in heaps.
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