Once upon a time there lived a man
whose name was Abu Nowas, and he was a great favourite
with the Sultan of the country, who had a palace in
the same town where Abu Nowas dwelt.
One day Abu Nowas came weeping into
the hall of the palace where the Sultan was sitting,
and said to him: ’Oh, mighty Sultan, my
wife is dead.’
‘That is bad news,’ replied
the Sultan; ‘I must get you another wife.’
And he bade his Grand Vizir send for the Sultana.
‘This poor Abu Nowas has lost
his wife,’ said he, when she entered the hall.
‘Oh, then we must get him another,’
answered the Sultana; ’I have a girl that will
suit him exactly,’ and clapped her hands loudly.
At this signal a maiden appeared and stood before
her.
‘I have got a husband for you,’ said the
Sultana.
‘Who is he?’ asked the girl.
‘Abu Nowas, the jester,’ replied the Sultana.
‘I will take him,’ answered
the maiden; and as Abu Nowas made no objection, it
was all arranged. The Sultana had the most beautiful
clothes made for the bride, and the Sultan gave the
bridegroom his wedding suit, and a thousand gold pieces
into the bargain, and soft carpets for the house.
So Abu Nowas took his wife home, and
for some time they were very happy, and spent the
money freely which the Sultan had given them, never
thinking what they should do for more when that was
gone. But come to an end it did, and they had
to sell their fine things one by one, till at length
nothing was left but a cloak apiece, and one blanket
to cover them. ‘We have run through our
fortune,’ said Abu Nowas, ’what are we
to do now? I am afraid to go back to the Sultan,
for he will command his servants to turn me from the
door. But you shall return to your mistress,
and throw yourself at her feet and weep, and perhaps
she will help us.’
‘Oh, you had much better go,’
said the wife. ’I shall not know what to
say.’
‘Well, then, stay at home, if
you like,’ answered Abu Nowas, ’and I will
ask to be admitted to the Sultan’s presence,
and will tell him, with sobs, that my wife is dead,
and that I have no money for her burial. When
he hears that perhaps he will give us something.’
‘Yes, that is a good plan,’
said the wife; and Abu Nowas set out.
The Sultan was sitting in the hall
of justice when Abu Nowas entered, his eyes streaming
with tears, for he had rubbed some pepper into them.
They smarted dreadfully, and he could hardly see to
walk straight, and everyone wondered what was the
matter with him.
‘Abu Nowas! What has happened?’ cried
the Sultan.
‘Oh, noble Sultan, my wife is dead,’ wept
he.
‘We must all die,’ answered
the Sultan; but this was not the reply for which Abu
Nowas had hoped.
’True, O Sultan, but I have
neither shroud to wrap her in, nor money to bury her
with,’ went on Abu Nowas, in no wise abashed
by the way the Sultan had received his news.
‘Well, give him a hundred pieces
of gold,’ said the Sultan, turning to the Grand
Vizir. And when the money was counted out
Abu Nowas bowed low, and left the hall, his tears
still flowing, but with joy in his heart.
‘Have you got anything?’
cried his wife, who was waiting for him anxiously.
‘Yes, a hundred gold pieces,’
said he, throwing down the bag, ’but that will
not last us any time. Now you must go to the Sultana,
clothed in sackcloth and robes of mourning, and tell
her that your husband, Abu Nowas, is dead, and you
have no money for his burial. When she hears
that, she will be sure to ask you what has become of
the money and the fine clothes she gave us on our
marriage, and you will answer, “before he died
he sold everything."’
The wife did as she was told, and
wrapping herself in sackcloth went up to the Sultana’s
own palace, and as she was known to have been one of
Subida’s favourite attendants, she was taken
without difficulty into the private apartments.
‘What is the matter?’
inquired the Sultana, at the sight of the dismal figure.
’My husband lies dead at home,
and he has spent all our money, and sold everything,
and I have nothing left to bury him with,’ sobbed
the wife.
Then Subida took up a purse containing
two hundred gold pieces, and said: ’Your
husband served us long and faithfully. You must
see that he has a fine funeral.’
The wife took the money, and, kissing
the feet of the Sultana, she joyfully hastened home.
They spent some happy hours planning how they should
spend it, and thinking how clever they had been.
’When the Sultan goes this evening to Subida’s
palace,’ said Abu Nowas, ’she will be sure
to tell him that Abu Nowas is dead. “Not
Abu Nowas, it is his wife,” he will reply, and
they will quarrel over it, and all the time we shall
be sitting here enjoying ourselves. Oh, if they
only knew, how angry they would be!’
As Abu Nowas had foreseen, the Sultan
went, in the evening after his business was over,
to pay his usual visit to the Sultana.
‘Poor Abu Nowas is dead!’
said Subida when he entered the room.
‘It is not Abu Nowas, but his
wife who is dead,’ answered the Sultan.
’No; really you are quite wrong.
She came to tell me herself only a couple of hours
ago,’ replied Subida, ’and as he had spent
all their money, I gave her something to bury him
with.’
‘You must be dreaming,’
exclaimed the Sultan. ’Soon after midday
Abu Nowas came into the hall, his eyes streaming with
tears, and when I asked him the reason he answered
that his wife was dead, and they had sold everything
they had, and he had nothing left, not so much as would
buy her a shroud, far less for her burial.’
For a long time they talked, and neither
would listen to the other, till the Sultan sent for
the door-keeper and bade him go instantly to the house
of Abu Nowas and see if it was the man or his wife
who was dead. But Abu Nowas happened to be sitting
with his wife behind the latticed window, which looked
on the street, and he saw the man coming, and sprang
up at once. ’There is the Sultan’s
door-keeper! They have sent him here to find
out the truth. Quick! throw yourself on the bed
and pretend that you are dead.’ And in
a moment the wife was stretched out stiffly, with
a linen sheet spread across her, like a corpse.
She was only just in time, for the
sheet was hardly drawn across her when the door opened
and the porter came in. ‘Has anything happened?’
asked he.
‘My poor wife is dead,’
replied Abu Nowas. ‘Look! she is laid out
here.’ And the porter approached the bed,
which was in a corner of the room, and saw the stiff
form lying underneath.
‘We must all die,’ said he, and went back
to the Sultan.
‘Well, have you found out which of them is dead?’
asked the Sultan.
‘Yes, noble Sultan; it is the wife,’ replied
the porter.
‘He only says that to please
you,’ cried Subida in a rage; and calling to
her chamberlain, she ordered him to go at once to the
dwelling of Abu Nowas and see which of the two was
dead. ’And be sure you tell the truth about
it,’ added she, ‘or it will be the worse
for you.’
As her chamberlain drew near the house,
Abu Nowas caught sight of him. ‘There is
the Sultana’s chamberlain,’ he exclaimed
in a fright. ’Now it is my turn to die.
Be quick and spread the sheet over me.’
And he laid himself on the bed, and held his breath
when the chamberlain came in. ‘What are
you weeping for?’ asked the man, finding the
wife in tears.
‘My husband is dead,’
answered she, pointing to the bed; and the chamberlain
drew back the sheet and beheld Abu Nowas lying stiff
and motionless. Then he gently replaced the sheet
and returned to the palace.
‘Well, have you found out this time?’
asked the Sultan.
‘My lord, it is the husband who is dead.’
‘But I tell you he was with
me only a few hours ago,’ cried the Sultan angrily.
’I must get to the bottom of this before I sleep!
Let my golden coach be brought round at once.’
The coach was before the door in another
five minutes, and the Sultan and Sultana both got
in. Abu Nowas had ceased being a dead man, and
was looking into the street when he saw the coach
coming. ‘Quick! quick!’ he called
to his wife. ’The Sultan will be here directly,
and we must both be dead to receive him.’
So they laid themselves down, and spread the sheet
over them, and held their breath. At that instant
the Sultan entered, followed by the Sultana and the
chamberlain, and he went up to the bed and found the
corpses stiff and motionless. ’I would give
a thousand gold pieces to anyone who would tell me
the truth about this,’ cried he, and at the
words Abu Nowas sat up. ‘Give them to me,
then,’ said he, holding out his hand. ’You
cannot give them to anyone who needs them more.’
‘Oh, Abu Nowas, you impudent
dog!’ exclaimed the Sultan, bursting into a
laugh, in which the Sultana joined. ’I might
have known it was one of your tricks!’ But he
sent Abu Nowas the gold he had promised, and let us
hope that it did not fly so fast as the last had done.
[From Tunische Mahrchen.]