It must be a marvel to you how, after
having five times met with shipwreck and unheard of
perils, I could again tempt fortune and risk fresh
trouble. I am even surprised myself when I look
back, but evidently it was my fate to rove, and after
a year of repose I prepared to make a sixth voyage,
regardless of the entreaties of my friends and relations,
who did all they could to keep me at home. Instead
of going by the Persian Gulf, I travelled a considerable
way overland, and finally embarked from a distant
Indian port with a captain who meant to make a long
voyage. And truly he did so, for we fell in with
stormy weather which drove us completely out of our
course, so that for many days neither captain nor
pilot knew where we were, nor where we were going.
When they did at last discover our position we had
small ground for rejoicing, for the captain, casting
his turban upon the deck and tearing his beard, declared
that we were in the most dangerous spot upon the whole
wide sea, and had been caught by a current which was
at that minute sweeping us to destruction. It
was too true! In spite of all the sailors could
do we were driven with frightful rapidity towards
the foot of a mountain, which rose sheer out of the
sea, and our vessel was dashed to pieces upon the
rocks at its base, not, however, until we had managed
to scramble on shore, carrying with us the most precious
of our possessions. When we had done this the
captain said to us:
“Now we are here we may as well
begin to dig our graves at once, since from this fatal
spot no shipwrecked mariner has ever returned.”
This speech discouraged us much, and
we began to lament over our sad fate.
The mountain formed the seaward boundary
of a large island, and the narrow strip of rocky shore
upon which we stood was strewn with the wreckage of
a thousand gallant ships, while the bones of the luckless
mariners shone white in the sunshine, and we shuddered
to think how soon our own would be added to the heap.
All around, too, lay vast quantities of the costliest
merchandise, and treasures were heaped in every cranny
of the rocks, but all these things only added to the
desolation of the scene. It struck me as a very
strange thing that a river of clear fresh water, which
gushed out from the mountain not far from where we
stood, instead of flowing into the sea as rivers generally
do, turned off sharply, and flowed out of sight under
a natural archway of rock, and when I went to examine
it more closely I found that inside the cave the walls
were thick with diamonds, and rubies, and masses of
crystal, and the floor was strewn with ambergris.
Here, then, upon this desolate shore we abandoned ourselves
to our fate, for there was no possibility of scaling
the mountain, and if a ship had appeared it could
only have shared our doom. The first thing our
captain did was to divide equally amongst us all the
food we possessed, and then the length of each man’s
life depended on the time he could make his portion
last. I myself could live upon very little.
Nevertheless, by the time I had buried
the last of my companions my stock of provisions was
so small that I hardly thought I should live long
enough to dig my own grave, which I set about doing,
while I regretted bitterly the roving disposition
which was always bringing me into such straits, and
thought longingly of all the comfort and luxury that
I had left. But luckily for me the fancy took
me to stand once more beside the river where it plunged
out of sight in the depths of the cavern, and as I
did so an idea struck me. This river which hid
itself underground doubtless emerged again at some
distant spot. Why should I not build a raft
and trust myself to its swiftly flowing waters?
If I perished before I could reach the light of day
once more I should be no worse off than I was now,
for death stared me in the face, while there was always
the possibility that, as I was born under a lucky
star, I might find myself safe and sound in some desirable
land. I decided at any rate to risk it, and speedily
built myself a stout raft of drift-wood with strong
cords, of which enough and to spare lay strewn upon
the beach. I then made up many packages of rubies,
emeralds, rock crystal, ambergris, and precious stuffs,
and bound them upon my raft, being careful to preserve
the balance, and then I seated myself upon it, having
two small oars that I had fashioned laid ready to
my hand, and loosed the cord which held it to the
bank. Once out in the current my raft flew swiftly
under the gloomy archway, and I found myself in total
darkness, carried smoothly forward by the rapid river.
On I went as it seemed to me for many nights and
days. Once the channel became so small that I
had a narrow escape of being crushed against the rocky
roof, and after that I took the precaution of lying
flat upon my precious bales. Though I only ate
what was absolutely necessary to keep myself alive,
the inevitable moment came when, after swallowing
my last morsel of food, I began to wonder if I must
after all die of hunger. Then, worn out with
anxiety and fatigue, I fell into a deep sleep, and
when I again opened my eyes I was once more in the
light of day; a beautiful country lay before me, and
my raft, which was tied to the river bank, was surrounded
by friendly looking black men. I rose and saluted
them, and they spoke to me in return, but I could
not understand a word of their language. Feeling
perfectly bewildered by my sudden return to life and
light, I murmured to myself in Arabic, “Close
thine eyes, and while thou sleepest Heaven will change
thy fortune from evil to good.”
One of the natives, who understood
this tongue, then came forward saying:
“My brother, be not surprised
to see us; this is our land, and as we came to get
water from the river we noticed your raft floating
down it, and one of us swam out and brought you to
the shore. We have waited for your awakening;
tell us now whence you come and where you were going
by that dangerous way?”
I replied that nothing would please
me better than to tell them, but that I was starving,
and would fain eat something first. I was soon
supplied with all I needed, and having satisfied my
hunger I told them faithfully all that had befallen
me. They were lost in wonder at my tale when
it was interpreted to them, and said that adventures
so surprising must be related to their king only by
the man to whom they had happened. So, procuring
a horse, they mounted me upon it, and we set out,
followed by several strong men carrying my raft just
as it was upon their shoulders. In this order
we marched into the city of Serendib, where the natives
presented me to their king, whom I saluted in the
Indian fashion, prostrating myself at his feet and
kissing the ground; but the monarch bade me rise and
sit beside him, asking first what was my name.
“I am Sindbad,” I replied,
“whom men call `the Sailor,’ for I have
voyaged much upon many seas.”
“And how come you here?” asked the king.
I told my story, concealing nothing,
and his surprise and delight were so great that he
ordered my adventures to be written in letters of gold
and laid up in the archives of his kingdom.
Presently my raft was brought in and
the bales opened in his presence, and the king declared
that in all his treasury there were no such rubies
and emeralds as those which lay in great heaps before
him. Seeing that he looked at them with interest,
I ventured to say that I myself and all that I had
were at his disposal, but he answered me smiling:
“Nay, Sindbad. Heaven
forbid that I should covet your riches; I will rather
add to them, for I desire that you shall not leave
my kingdom without some tokens of my good will.”
He then commanded his officers to provide me with
a suitable lodging at his expense, and sent slaves
to wait upon me and carry my raft and my bales to my
new dwelling place. You may imagine that I praised
his generosity and gave him grateful thanks, nor did
I fail to present myself daily in his audience chamber,
and for the rest of my time I amused myself in seeing
all that was most worthy of attention in the city.
The island of Serendib being situated on the equinoctial
line, the days and nights there are of equal length.
The chief city is placed at the end of a beautiful
valley, formed by the highest mountain in the world,
which is in the middle of the island. I had
the curiosity to ascend to its very summit, for this
was the place to which Adam was banished out of Paradise.
Here are found rubies and many precious things, and
rare plants grow abundantly, with cedar trees and
cocoa palms. On the seashore and at the mouths
of the rivers the divers seek for pearls, and in some
valleys diamonds are plentiful. After many days
I petitioned the king that I might return to my own
country, to which he graciously consented. Moreover,
he loaded me with rich gifts, and when I went to take
leave of him he entrusted me with a royal present and
a letter to the Commander of the Faithful, our sovereign
lord, saying, “I pray you give these to the
Caliph Haroun al Raschid, and assure him of my
friendship.”
I accepted the charge respectfully,
and soon embarked upon the vessel which the king himself
had chosen for me. The king’s letter was
written in blue characters upon a rare and precious
skin of yellowish colour, and these were the words
of it: “The King of the Indies, before
whom walk a thousand elephants, who lives in a palace,
of which the roof blazes with a hundred thousand rubies,
and whose treasure house contains twenty thousand
diamond crowns, to the Caliph Haroun al Raschid
sends greeting. Though the offering we present
to you is unworthy of your notice, we pray you to
accept it as a mark of the esteem and friendship which
we cherish for you, and of which we gladly send you
this token, and we ask of you a like regard if you
deem us worthy of it. Adieu, brother.”
The present consisted of a vase carved
from a single ruby, six inches high and as thick as
my finger; this was filled with the choicest pearls,
large, and of perfect shape and lustre; secondly, a
huge snake skin, with scales as large as a sequin,
which would preserve from sickness those who slept
upon it. Then quantities of aloes wood, camphor,
and pistachio-nuts; and lastly, a beautiful slave girl,
whose robes glittered with precious stones.
After a long and prosperous voyage
we landed at Balsora, and I made haste to reach Bagdad,
and taking the king’s letter I presented myself
at the palace gate, followed by the beautiful slave,
and various members of my own family, bearing the
treasure.
As soon as I had declared my errand
I was conducted into the presence of the Caliph, to
whom, after I had made my obeisance, I gave the letter
and the king’s gift, and when he had examined
them he demanded of me whether the Prince of Serendib
was really as rich and powerful as he claimed to be.
“Commander of the Faithful,”
I replied, again bowing humbly before him, “I
can assure your Majesty that he has in no way exaggerated
his wealth and grandeur. Nothing can equal the
magnificence of his palace. When he goes abroad
his throne is prepared upon the back of an elephant,
and on either side of him ride his ministers, his
favourites, and courtiers. On his elephant’s
neck sits an officer, his golden lance in his hand,
and behind him stands another bearing a pillar of gold,
at the top of which is an emerald as long as my hand.
A thousand men in cloth of gold, mounted upon richly
caparisoned elephants, go before him, and as the procession
moves onward the officer who guides his elephant cries
aloud, `Behold the mighty monarch, the powerful and
valiant Sultan of the Indies, whose palace is covered
with a hundred thousand rubies, who possesses twenty
thousand diamond crowns. Behold a monarch greater
than Solomon and Mihrage in all their glory!’”
“Then the one who stands behind
the throne answers: ’This king, so great
and powerful, must die, must die, must die!’”
“And the first takes up the
chant again, `All praise to Him who lives for evermore.’”
“Further, my lord, in Serendib
no judge is needed, for to the king himself his people
come for justice.”
The Caliph was well satisfied with my report.
“From the king’s letter,”
said he, “I judged that he was a wise man.
It seems that he is worthy of his people, and his people
of him.”
So saying he dismissed me with rich
presents, and I returned in peace to my own house.
When Sindbad had done speaking his
guests withdrew, Hindbad having first received a hundred
sequins, but all returned next day to hear the story
of the seventh voyage, Sindbad thus began.