Know that at the foot of a lofty mountain
of the Caucasus there lieth a deep blue lake; near
to this lake a nest of serpents, wise and ancient.
Now, it was the habit of a damsel to pass by the lake
early at morn, on her way from the tents of her tribe
to the pastures of the flocks. As she pressed
the white arch of her feet on the soft green-mossed
grasses by the shore of the lake she would let loose
her hair, looking over into the water, and bind the
braid again round her temples and behind her ears,
as it had been in a lucent mirror: so doing she
would laugh. Her laughter was like the falls
of water at moonrise; her loveliness like the very
moonrise; and she was stately as a palm-tree standing
before the moon.
This was Bhanavar the Beautiful.
Now, the damsel was betrothed to the
son of a neighbouring Emir, a youth comely, well-fashioned,
skilled with the bow, apt in all exercises; one that
sat his mare firm as the trained falcon that fixeth
on the plunging bull of the plains; fair and terrible
in combat as the lightning that strideth the rolling
storm; and it is sung by the poet:
When on his desert mare
I see
My
prince of men,
I
think him then
As high above humanity
As he shines radiant
over me.
Lo! like a torrent he
doth bound,
Breasting
the shock
From
rock to rock:
A pillar of storm, he
shakes the ground,
His turban on his temples
wound.
Match me for worth to
be adored
A
youth like him
In
heart and limb!
Swift as his anger is
his sword;
Softer than woman his
true word.
Now, the love of this youth for the
damsel Bhanavar was a consuming passion, and the father
of the damsel and the father of the youth looked fairly
on the prospect of their union, which was near, and
was plighted as the union of the two tribes.
So they met, and there was no voice against their
meeting, and all the love that was in them they were
free to pour forth far from the hearing of men, even
where they would. Before the rising of the sun,
and ere his setting, the youth rode swiftly from the
green tents of the Emir his father, to waylay her by
the waters of the lake; and Bhanavar was there, bending
over the lake, her image in the lake glowing like
the fair fulness of the moon; and the youth leaned
to her from his steed, and sang to her verses of her
great loveliness ere she was wistful of him.
Then she turned to him, and laughed lightly a welcome
of sweetness, and shook the falls of her hair across
the blushes of her face and her bosom; and he folded
her to him, and those two would fondle together in
the fashion of the betrothed ones (the blessing of
Allah be on them all!), gazing on each other till their
eyes swam with tears, and they were nigh swooning
with the fulness of their bliss. Surely ’twas
an innocent and tender dalliance, and their prattle
was that of lovers till the time of parting, he showing
her how she looked best she him; and they
were forgetful of all else that is, in their sweet
interchange of flatteries; and the world was a
wilderness to them both when the youth parted with
Bhanavar by the brook which bounded the tents of her
tribe.
It was on a night when they were so
together, the damsel leaning on his arm, her eyes
toward the lake, and lo! what seemed the reflection
of a large star in the water; and there was darkness
in the sky above it, thick clouds, and no sight of
the heavens; so she held her face to him sideways
and said, ’What meaneth this, O my betrothed?
for there is reflected in yonder lake a light as of
a star, and there is no star visible this night.’
The youth trembled as one in trouble
of spirit, and exclaimed, ’Look not on it, O
my soul! It is of evil omen.’
But Bhanavar kept her gaze constantly
on the light, and the light increased in lustre; and
the light became, from a pale sad splendour, dazzling
in its brilliancy. Listening, they heard presently
a gurgling noise as of one deeply drinking. Then
the youth sighed a heavy sigh and said, ’This
is the Serpent of the Lake drinking of its waters,
as is her wont once every moon, and whoso heareth
her drink by the sheening of that light is under a
destiny dark and imminent; so know I my days are numbered,
and it was foretold of me, this!’ Now the youth
sought to dissuade Bhanavar from gazing on the light,
and he flung his whole body before her eyes, and clasped
her head upon his breast, and clung about her, caressing
her; yet she slipped from him, and she cried, ’Tell
me of this serpent, and of this light.’
So he said, ‘Seek not to hear of it, O my betrothed!’
Then she gazed at the light a moment
more intently, and turned her fair shape toward him,
and put up her long white fingers to his chin, and
smoothed him with their softness, whispering, ‘Tell
me of it, my life!’
And so it was that her winningness
melted him, and he said, ’Bhanavar! the serpent
is the Serpent of the Lake; old, wise, powerful; of
the brood of the sacred mountain, that lifteth by
day a peak of gold, and by night a point of solitary
silver. In her head, upon her forehead, between
her eyes, there is a Jewel, and it is this light.’
Then she said, ‘How came the
Jewel there, in such a place?’
He answered, ’’Tis the
growth of one thousand years in the head of the serpent.’
She cried, ‘Surely precious?’
He answered, ‘Beyond price!’
As he spake the tears streamed from
him, and he was shaken with grief, but she noted nought
of this, and watched the wonder of the light, and
its increasing, and quivering, and lengthening; and
the light was as an arrow of beams and as a globe
of radiance. Desire for the Jewel waxed in her,
and she had no sight but for it alone, crying, ’’Tis
a Jewel exceeding in preciousness all jewels that
are, and for the possessing it would I forfeit all
that is.’
So he said sorrowfully, ’Our
love, O Bhanavar? and our hopes of espousal?’
But she cried, ’No question
of that! Prove now thy passion for me, O warrior!
and win for me that Jewel.’
Then he pleaded with her, and exclaimed,
’Urge not this! The winning of the Jewel
is worth my life; and my life, O Bhanavar surely
its breath is but the love of thee.’
So she said, ‘Thou fearest a risk?’
And he replied, ’Little fear
I; my life is thine to cast away. This Jewel
it is evil to have, and evil followeth the soul that
hath it.’
Upon that she cried, ’A trick
to cheat me of the Jewel! thy love is wanting at the
proof.’
And she taunted the youth her betrothed,
and turned from him, and hardened at his tenderness,
and made her sweet shape as a thorn to his caressing,
and his heart was charged with anguish for her.
So at the last, when he had wept a space in silence,
he cried, ’Thou hast willed it; the Jewel shall
be thine, O my soul!’
Then said he, ’Thou hast willed
it, O Bhanavar! and my life is as a grain of sand
weighed against thy wishes; Allah is my witness!
Meet me therefore here, O my beloved, at the end of
one quarter-moon, even beneath the shadow of this
palm-tree, by the lake, and at this hour, and I will
deliver into thy hands the Jewel. So farewell!
Wind me once about with thine arms, that I may take
comfort from thee.’
When their kiss was over the youth
led her silently to the brook of their parting the
clear, cold, bubbling brook and passed from
her sight; and the damsel was exulting, and leapt
and made circles in her glee, and she danced and rioted
and sang, and clapped her hands, crying, ’If
I am now Bhanavar the Beautiful how shall I be when
that Jewel is upon me, the bright light which beameth
in the darkness, and needeth to light it no other
light? Surely there will be envy among the maidens
and the widows, and my name and the odour of my beauty
will travel to the courts of far kings.’
So was she jubilant; and her sisters
that met her marvelled at her and the deep glow that
was upon her, even as the glow of the Great Desert
when the sun has fallen; and they said among themselves,
’She is covered all over with the blush of one
that is a bride, and the bridegroom’s kiss yet
burneth upon Bhanavar!’
So they undressed her and she lay
among them, and was all night even as a bursting rose
in a vase filled with drooping lilies; and one of the
maidens that put her hand on the left breast of Bhanavar
felt it full, and the heart beneath it panting and
beating swifter than the ground is struck by hooves
of the chosen steed sent by the Chieftain to the city
of his people with news of victory and the summons
for rejoicing.
Now, the nights and the days of Bhanavar
were even as this night, and she was as an unquiet
soul till the appointed time for the meeting with her
lover had come. Then when the sun was lighting
with slant beam the green grass slope by the blue
brook before her, Bhanavar arrayed herself and went
forth gaily, as a martial queen to certain conquest;
and of all the flowers that nodded to the setting, yea,
the crimson, purple, pure white, streaked-yellow,
azure, and saffron, there was no flower fairer in
its hues than Bhanavar, nor bird of the heavens freer
in its glittering plumage, nor shape of loveliness
such as hers. Truly, when she had taken her place
under the palm by the waters of the lake, that was
no exaggeration of the poet, where he says:
Snows of the mountain-peaks
were mirror’d there
Beneath her feet,
not whiter than they were;
Not rosier in the white,
that falling flush
Broad on the wave,
than in her cheek the blush.
And again:
She draws the heavens down to
her,
So rare she is, so fair she is;
They flutter with a crown to her,
And lighten only where she is.
And he exclaims, in verse that applieth to her:
Exquisite slenderness!
Sleek little antelope!
Serpent of sweetness!
Eagle that soaringly
Wins me adoringly!
Teach me thy fleetness,
Vision of loveliness;
Turn to my tenderness!
Now, when the sun was lost to earth,
and all was darkness, Bhanavar fixed her eyes upon
an opening arch of foliage in the glade through which
the youth her lover should come to her, and clasped
both hands across her bosom, so shaken was she with
eager longing and expectation. In her hunger
for his approach, she would at whiles pluck up the
herbage about her by the roots, and toss handfuls
this way and that, chiding the peaceful song of the
nightbird in the leaves above her head; and she was
sinking with fretfulness, when lo! from the opening
arch of the glade a sudden light, and Bhanavar knew
it for the Jewel in the fingers of her betrothed,
by the strength of its effulgence. Then she called
to him joyfully a cry of welcome, and quickened his
coming with her calls, and the youth alighted from
his mare and left it to pasture, and advanced to her,
holding aloft the Jewel. And the Jewel was of
great size and purity, round, and all-luminous, throwing
rays and beams everywhere about it, a miracle to behold, the
light in it shining, and as the very life of the blood,
a sweet crimson, a ruby, a softer rose, an amethyst
of tender hues: it was a full globe of splendours,
showing like a very kingdom of the Blest; and blessed
was the eye beholding it! So when he was within
reach of her arm, the damsel sprang to him and caught
from his hand the Jewel, and held it before her eyes,
and danced with it, and pressed it on her bosom, and
was as a creature giddy with great joy in possessing
it. And she put the Jewel in her bosom, and looked
on the youth to thank him for the Jewel with all her
beauty; for the passion of a mighty pride in him who
had won for her the Jewel exalted Bhanavar, and she
said sweetly, ’Now hast thou proved to me thy
love of me, and I am thine, O my betrothed, wholly
thine. Kiss me, then, and cease not kissing me,
for bliss is in me.’
But the youth eyed her sorrowfully,
even as one that hath great yearning, and no power
to move or speak.
So she said again, in the low melody
of deep love-tones, ’Kiss me, O my lover! for
I desire thy kiss.’
Still he spake not, and was as a pillar of stone.
And she started, and cried, ‘Thou
art whole? without a hurt?’ Then sought she
to coax him to her with all the softness of her half-closed
eyes and budded lips, saying, ’’Twas an
idle fear! and I have thee, and thou art mine, and
I am thine; so speak to me, my lover! for there is
no music like the music of thy voice, and the absence
of it is the absence of all sweetness, and there is
no pleasure in life without it.’
So the tenderness of her fondling
melted the silence in him, and presently his tongue
was loosed, and he breathed in pain of spirit, and
his words were the words of the proverb:
He that fighteth with poison is
no match for the prick of a thorn.
And he said, ’Surely, O Bhanavar,
my love for thee surpasseth what is told of others
that have loved before us, and I count no loss a loss
that is for thy sake.’ And he sighed, and
sang:
Sadder than is the moon’s
lost light,
Lost ere the kindling
of dawn,
To travellers
journeying on,
The shutting of thy
fair face from my sight.
Might I look on
thee in death,
With bliss I would
yield my breath.
Oh! what warrior dies
With heaven in his eyes?
O Bhanavar! too rich
a prize!
The life of my
nostrils art thou,
The balm-dew on
my brow;
Thou art the perfume I meet as I
speed o’er the plains,
The strength of my arms, the blood
of my veins.
Then said he, ’I make nothing
matter of complaint, Allah witnesseth! not even the
long parting from her I love. What will be, will
be: so was it written! ’Tis but a
scratch, O my soul! yet am I of the dead and them
that are passed away. ‘Tis hard; but I smile
in the face of bitterness.’
Now, at his words the damsel clutched
him with both her hands, and the blood went from her,
and she was as a block of white marble, even as one
of those we meet in the desert, leaning together, marking
the wrath of the All-powerful on forgotten cities.
And the tongue of the damsel was dry, and she was
without speech, gazing at him with wide-open eyes,
like one in trance. Then she started as a dreamer
wakeneth, and flung herself quickly on the breast
of the youth, and put up the sleeve from his arm,
and beheld by the beams of the quarter-crescent that
had risen through the leaves, a small bite on the
arm of the youth her betrothed, spotted with seven
spots of blood in a crescent; so she knew that the
poison of the serpent had entered by that bite; and
she loosened herself to the violence of her anguish,
shrieking the shrieks of despair, so that the voice
of her lamentation was multiplied about and made many
voices in the night. Her spirit returned not
to her till the crescent of the moon was yellow to
its fall; and lo! the youth was sighing heavy sighs
and leaning to the ground on one elbow, and she flung
herself by him on the ground, seeking for herbs that
were antidotes to the poison of the serpent, grovelling
among the grasses and strewn leaves of the wood, peering
at them tearfully by the pale beams, and startling
the insects as she moved. When she had gathered
some, she pressed them and bruised them, and laid
them along his lips, that were white as the ball of
an eye; and she made him drink drops of the juices
of the herbs, wailing and swaying her body across
him, as one that seeketh vainly to give brightness
again to the flames of a dying fire. But now
his time was drawing nigh, and he was weak, and took
her hand in his and gazed on her face, sighing, and
said, ’There is nothing shall keep me by thee
now, O my betrothed, my beautiful! Weep not,
for it is the doing of fate, and not thy doing.
So ere I go, and the grave-cloth separates thy heart
from my heart, listen to me. Lo, that Jewel!
it is the giver of years and of powers, and of loveliness
beyond mortal, yet the wearing of it availeth not in
the pursuit of happiness. Now art thou Queen
over the serpents of this lake: it was the Queen-serpent
I slew, and her vengeance is on me here. Now art
thou mighty, O Bhanavar! and look to do well by thy
tribe, and that from which I spring, recompensing
my father for his loss, pouring ointment on his affliction,
for great is the grief of the old man, and he loveth
me, and is childless.’
Then the youth fell back and was still;
and Bhanavar put her ear to his mouth, and heard what
seemed an inner voice murmuring in him, and it was
of his infancy and his boyhood, and of his father the
Emir’s first gift to him, his horse Zoora,
in old times. Presently the youth revived somewhat,
and looked upon her; but his sight was glazed with
a film, and she sang her name to him ere he knew her,
and the sad sweetness of her name filled his soul,
and he replied to her with it weakly, like a far echo
that groweth fainter, ‘Bhanavar! Bhanavar!
Bhanavar!’ Then a change came over him, and
the pain of the poison and the passion of the death-throe,
and he was wistful of her no more; but she lay by him,
embracing him, and in the last violence of his anguish
he hugged her to his breast. Then it was over,
and he sank. And the twain were as a great wave
heaving upon the shore; lo, part is wasted where it
falleth; part draweth back into the waters. So
was it!
Now the chill of dawn breathed blue
on the lake and was astir among the dewy leaves of
the wood, when Bhanavar arose from the body of the
youth, and as she rose she saw that his mare Zoora,
his father’s first gift, was snuffing at the
ear of her dead master, and pawing him. At that
sight the tears poured from her eyelids, and she sobbed
out to the mare, ’O Zoora! never mare bore nobler
burden on her back than thou in Zurvan my betrothed.
Zoora! thou weepest, for death is first known to thee
in the dearest thing that was thine; as to me, in
the dearest that was mine! And O Zoora, steed
of Zurvan my betrothed, there’s no loveliness
for us in life, for the loveliest is gone; and let
us die, Zoora, mare of Zurvan my betrothed, for what
is dying to us, O Zoora, who cherish beyond all that
which death has taken?’
So spake she to Zoora the mare, kissing
her, and running her fingers through the long white
mane of the mare. Then she stooped to the body
of her betrothed, and toiled with it to lift it across
the crimson saddle-cloth that was on the back of Zoora;
and the mare knelt to her, that she might lay on her
back the body of Zurvan; when that was done, Bhanavar
paced beside Zoora the mare, weeping and caressing
her, reminding her of the deeds of Zurvan, and the
battles she had borne him to, and his greatness and
his gentleness. And the mare went without leading.
It was broad light when they had passed the glade and
the covert of the wood. Before them, between
great mountains, glimmered a space of rolling grass
fed to deep greenness by many brooks. The shadow
of a mountain was over it, and one slant of the rising
sun, down a glade of the mountain, touched the green
tent of the Emir, where it stood a little apart from
the others of his tribe. Goats and asses of the
tribe were pasturing in the quiet, but save them nothing
moved among the tents, and it was deep peacefulness.
Bhanavar led Zoora slowly before the tent of the Emir,
and disburdened Zoora of the helpless weight, and spread
the long fair limbs of the youth lengthwise across
the threshold of the Emir’s tent, sitting
away from it with clasped hands, regarding it.
Ere long the Emir came forth, and his foot was on
the body of his son, and he knew death on the chin
and the eyes of Zurvan, his sole son. Now the
Emir was old, and with the shock of that sight the
world darkened before him, and he gave forth a groan
and stumbled over the sunken breast of Zurvan, and
stretched over him as one without life. When Bhanavar
saw that old man stretched over the body of his son,
she sickened, and her ear was filled with the wailings
of grief that would arise, and she stood up and stole
away from the habitations of the tribe, stricken with
her guilt, and wandered beyond the mountains, knowing
not whither she went, looking on no living thing,
for the sight of a thing that moved was hateful to
her, and all sounds were sounds of lamentation for
a great loss.
Now, she had wandered on alone two
days and two nights, and nigh morn she was seized
with a swoon of weariness, and fell forward with her
face to the earth, and lay there prostrate, even as
one that is adoring the shrine; and it was on the
sands of the desert she was lying. It chanced
that the Chieftain of a desert tribe passed at midday
by the spot, and seeing the figure of a damsel unshaded’
by any shade of tree or herb or tent-covering, and
prostrate on the sands, he reined his steed and leaned
forward to her, and called to her. Then as she
answered nothing he dismounted, and thrust his arm
softly beneath her and lifted her gently; and her
swoon had the whiteness of death, so that he thought
her dead verily, and the marvel of her great loveliness
in death smote the heart on his ribs as with a blow,
and the powers of life went from him a moment as he
looked on her and the long dark wet lashes that clung
to her colourless face, as at night in groves where
the betrothed ones wander, the slender leaves of the
acacia spread darkly over the full moon. And he
cried, ’’Tis a loveliness that maketh the
soul yearn to the cold bosom of death, so lovely,
exceeding all that liveth, is she!’
After he had contemplated her longwhile,
he snatched his sight from her, and swung her swiftly
on the back of his mare, and leaned her on one arm,
and sped westward over the sands of the desert, halting
not till he was in the hum of many tents, and the
sun of that day hung a red half-circle across the
sand. He alighted before the tent of his mother,
and sent women in to her. When his mother came
forth to the greetings of her son, he said no word,
but pointed to the damsel where he had leaned her at
the threshold of her tent. His mother kissed
him on the forehead, and turned her shoulder to peer
upon the damsel. But when she had close view of
Bhanavar, she spat, and scattered her hair, and stamped,
and cried aloud, ’Away with her! this slut of
darkness! there’s poison on her very skirts,
and evil in the look of her.’
Then said he, ’O Rukrooth, my
mother! art thou lost to charity and the uses of kindliness
and the laws of hospitality, that thou talkest this
of the damsel, a stranger? Take her now in, and
if she be past help, as I fear; be it thy care to
give her decent burial; and if she live, O my mother,
tend her for the love of thy son, and for the love
of him be gentle with her.’
While he spake, Rukrooth his mother
knelt over the damsel, as a cat that sniffeth the
suspected dish; and she flashed her eyes back on him,
exclaiming scornfully, ’So art thou befooled,
and the poison is already in thee! But I will
not have her, O my son! and thou, Ruark, my son, neither
shalt thou have her. What! will I not die to save
thee from a harm? Surely thy frown is little
to me, my son, if I save thee from a harm; and the
damsel here is I shudder to think what;
but never lay shadow across my threshold dark as this!’
Now, Ruark gazed upon his mother,
and upon Bhanavar, and the face of Bhanavar was as
a babe in sleep, and his soul melted to the parted
sweetness of her soft little curved red lips and her
closed eyelids, and her innocent open hands, where
she lay at the threshold of the tent, unconscious
of hardness and the sayings of the unjust. So
he cried fiercely, ’No paltering, O Rukrooth,
my mother: and if not to thy tent, then to mine!’
When she heard him say that in the
voice of his anger, Rukrooth fixed her eyes on him
sorrowfully, and sighed, and went up to him and drew
his head once against her heart, and retreated into
the tent, bidding the women that were there bring
in the body of the damsel.
It was the morning of another day
when Bhanavar awoke; and she awoke in a dream of Zoora,
the mare of Zurvan her betrothed, that was dead, and
the name of Zoora was on her tongue as she started
up. She was on a couch of silk and leopard-skins;
at her feet a fair young girl with a fan of pheasant
feathers. She stared at the hangings of the tent,
which were richer than those of her own tribe; the
cloths, and the cushions, and the embroideries; and
the strangeness of all was pain to her, she knew not
why. Then wept she bitterly, and with her tears
the memory of what had been came back to her, and
she opened her arms to take into them the little girl
that fanned her, that she might love something and
be beloved awhile; and the child sobbed with her.
After a time Bhanavar said, ’Where am I, and
amongst whom, my child, my sister?’
And the child answered her, ’Surely
in the tent of the mother of Ruark, the chief, even
chief of the Beni-Asser, and he found thee in
the desert, nigh dead. ’Tis so; and this
morning will Ruark be gone to meet the challenge of
Ebn Asrac, and they will fight at the foot of the Snow
Mountains, and the shadow of yonder date-palm will
be over our tent here at the hour they fight, and
I shall sing for Ruark, and kneel here in the darkness
of the shadow.’
While the child was speaking there
entered to them a tall aged woman, with one swathe
of a turban across her long level brows; and she had
hard black eyes, and close lips and a square chin;
and it was the mother of Ruark. She strode forward
toward Bhanavar to greet her, and folded her legs
before the damsel. Presently she said, ’Tell
me thy story, and of thy coming into the hands of
Ruark my son.’
Bhanavar shuddered. So Rukrooth
dismissed the little maiden from the chamber of the
tent, and laid her left hand on one arm of Bhanavar,
and said, ’I would know whence comest thou,
that we may deal well by thee and thy people that
have lost thee.’
The touch of a hand was as the touch
of a corpse to Bhanavar, and the damsel was constrained
to speak by a power she knew not of, and she told
all to Rukrooth of what had been, the great misery,
and the wickedness that was hers. Then Ruark’s
mother took hold of Bhanavar a strong grasp, and eyed
her long, piteously, and with reproach, and rocked
forward and back, and kept rocking to and fro, crying
at intervals, ’O Ruark! my son! my son! this
feared I, and thou art not the first! and I saw it,
I saw it! Well-away! why came she in thy way,
why, Ruark, my son, my fire-eye? Canst thou be
saved by me, fated that thou art, thou fair-face?
And wilt thou be saved by me, my son, ere thy story
be told in tears as this one, that is as thine to
me? And thou wilt seize a jewel, Ruark, O thou
soul of wrath, my son, my dazzling Chief, and seize
it to wear it, and think it bliss, this lovely jewel;
but ’tis an anguish endless and for ever, my
son! Woe’s me! an anguish is she without
end.’
Rukrooth continued moaning, and the
thought that was in the mother of Ruark struck Bhanavar
like a light in the land of despair that darkly illumineth
the dreaded gulfs and abysses of the land, and she
knew herself black in evil; and the scourge of her
guilt was upon her, and she cursed herself before
Rukrooth, and fawned before her, abasing her body.
So Rukrooth was drawn to the damsel by the violence
of her self-accusing and her abandonment to grief,
and lifted her, and comforted her, and after awhile
they had gentle speech together, and the two women
opened their hearts and wept. Then it was agreed
between them that Bhanavar should depart from the
encampment of the tribe before the return of Ruark,
and seek shelter among her own people again, and aid
them and the tribe of Zurvan, her betrothed, by the
might of the Jewel which was hers, fulfilling the
desire of Zurvan. The mind of the damsel was lowly,
and her soul yearned for the blessing of Rukrooth.
Darkness hung over the tent from the
shadow of the date-palm when Bhanavar departed, and
the blessing of Rukrooth was on her head. She
went forth fairly mounted on a fresh steed; beside
her two warriors of them that were left to guard the
encampment of the tribe of Ruark in his absence; and
Rukrooth watched at the threshold of her tent for the
coming of Ruark.
When it was middle night, and the
splendour of the moon was beaming on the edge of the
desert, Bhanavar alighted to rest by the twigs of a
tamarisk that stood singly on the sands. The two
warriors tied the fetlocks of their steeds, and spread
shawls for her, and watched over her while she slept.
And the damsel dreamed, and the roaring of the lion
was hoarse in her dream, and it was to her as were
she the red whirlwind of the desert before whom all
bowed in terror, the Arab, the wild horsemen, and
the caravans of pilgrimage; and none could stay her,
neither could she stay herself, for the curse of Allah
was on men by reason of her guilt; and she went swinging
great folds of darkness across kingdoms and empires
of earth where joy was and peace of spirit; and in
her track amazement and calamity, and the whitened
bones of noble youths, valorous chieftains. In
that horror of her dream she stood up suddenly, and
thrust forth her hands as to avert an evil, and advanced
a step; and with the act her dream was cloven and
she awoke, and lo! it was sunrise; and where had been
two warriors of the Beni-Asser, were now five,
and besides her own steed five others, one the steed
of Ruark, and Ruark with them that watched over her:
pale was the visage of the Chief. Ruark eyed Bhanavar,
and signalled to his followers, and they, when they
had lifted the damsel to her steed and placed her
in their front, mounted likewise, and flourished their
lances with cries, and jerked their heels to the flanks
of their steeds, and stretched forward till their beards
were mixed with the tossing manes, and the dust rose
after them crimson in the sun. So they coursed
away, speeding behind their Chief and Bhanavar; sweet
were the desert herbs under their crushing hooves!
Ere the shadow of the acacia measured less than its
height they came upon a spring of silver water, and
Ruark leaped from his steed, and Bhanavar from hers,
and they performed their ablutions by that spring,
and ate and drank, and watered their steeds.
While they were there Bhanavar lifted her eyes to Ruark,
and said, ‘Whither takest thou me, O my Chief?’
His brow was stern, and he answered,
’Surely to the dwelling of thy tribe.’
Then she wept, and pulled her veil
close, murmuring, ‘’Tis well!’
They spake no further, and pursued
their journey toward the mountains and across the
desert that was as a sea asleep in the blazing heat,
and the sun till his setting threw no shade upon the
sands bigger than what was broad above them.
By the beams of the growing moon they entered the first
gorge of the mountains. Here they relaxed the
swiftness of their pace, picking their way over broken
rocks and stunted shrubs, and the mesh of spotted
creeping plants; all around them in shadow a freshness
of noisy rivulets and cool scents of flowers, asphodel
and rose blooming in plots from the crevices of the
crags. These, as the troop advanced, wound and
widened, gradually receding, and their summits, which
were silver in the moonlight, took in the distance
a robe of purple, and the sides of the mountains were
rounded away in purple beyond a space of emerald pasture.
Now, Ruark beheld the heaviness of Bhanavar, and that
she drooped in her seat, and he halted her by a cave
at the foot of the mountains, browed with white broom.
Before it, over grass and cresses, ran a rill, a branch
from others, larger ones, that went hurrying from the
heights to feed the meadows below, and Bhanavar dipped
her hand in the rill, and thought, ’I am no
more as thou, rill of the mountain, but a desert thing!
Thy way is forward, thy end before thee; but I go
this way and that; my end is dark to me; not a life
is mine that will have its close kissing the cold
cheeks of the saffron-crocus. Cold art thou, and
I flames! They that lean to thee are
refreshed, they that touch me perish.’ Then
she looked forth on the stars that were above the
purple heights, and the blushes of inner heaven that
streamed up the sky, and a fear of meeting the eyes
of her kindred possessed her, and she cried out to
Ruark, ’O Chief of the Beni-Asser, must
this be? and is there no help for it, but that I return
among them that look on me basely?’
Ruark stooped to her and said, ‘Tell me thy
name.’
She answered, ‘Bhanavar is my name with that
people.’
And he whispered, ’Surely when
they speak of thee they say not Bhanavar solely, but
Bhanavar the Beautiful?’
She started and sought the eye of
the Chief, and it was fixed on her face in a softened
light, as if his soul had said that thing. Then
she sighed, and exclaimed, ’Unhappy are the
beautiful! born to misery! Allah dressed them
in his grace and favour for their certain wretchedness!
Lo, their countenances are as the sun, their existence
as the desert; barren are they in fruits and waters,
a snare to themselves and to others!’
Now, the Chief leaned to her yet nearer,
saying, ‘Show me the Jewel.’
Bhanavar caught up her hands and clenched
them, and she cried bitterly, ‘’Tis known
to thee! She told thee, and there be none that
know it not!’
Arising, she thrust her hand into
her bosom, and held forth the Jewel in the palm of
her white hand. When Ruark beheld the marvel of
the Jewel, and the redness moving in it as of a panting
heart, and the flashing eye of fire that it was, and
all its glory, he cried, ’It was indeed a Jewel
for queens to covet from the Serpent, and a prize the
noblest might risk all to win as a gift for thee.’
Then she said, ’Thy voice is
friendly with me, O Ruark! and thou scornest not the
creature that I am. Counsel me as to my dealing
with the Jewel.’
Surely the eyes of the Chief met the
eyes of Bhanavar as when the brightest stars of midnight
are doubled in a clear dark lake, and he sang in measured
music:
’Shall I counsel
the moon in her ascending?
Stay under that tall palm-tree through
the night;
Rest on the mountain-slope
By the couching antelope,
O thou enthroned supremacy of light!
And for ever the lustre thou
art lending,
Lean on the fair long brook that
leaps and leaps,
Silvery leaps and falls.
Hang by the mountain
walls,
Moon! and arise no more to crown
the steeps,
For a danger and dolour is
thy wending!
And, O Bhanavar, Bhanavar the Beautiful!
shall I counsel thee, moon of loveliness, bright,
full, perfect moon! counsel thee not to
ascend and be seen and worshipped of men, sitting
above them in majesty, thou that art thyself the Jewel
beyond price? Wah! What if thou cast it from
thee? thy beauty remaineth!’
And Bhanavar smote her palms in the
moonlight, and exclaimed, ’How then shall I
escape this in me, which is a curse to them that approach
me?’
And he replied:
Long we the less for
the pearl of the sea
Because in its depths
there ’s the death we flee?
Long we the less, the
less, woe’s me!
Because thou art deathly, the
less for thee?
She sang aloud among the rocks and
the caves and the illumined waters:
Destiny! Destiny!
why am I so dark?
I that have beauty
and love to be fair.
Destiny! Destiny!
am I but a spark
Track’d
under heaven in flames and despair?
Destiny! Destiny!
why am I desired
Thus like a poisonous
fruit, deadly sweet?
Destiny! Destiny!
lo, my soul is tired,
Make me thy plaything
no more, I entreat!
Ruark laughed low, and said, ’What
is this dread of Rukrooth my mother which weigheth
on thee but silliness! For she saw thee willing
to do well by her; and thou with thy Jewel, O Bhanavar,
do thou but well by thyself, and there will be no
woman such as thou in power and excellence of endowments,
as there is nowhere one such as thou in beauty.’
Then he sighed to her, ‘Dare I look up to thee,
O my Queen of Serpents?’ And he breathed as
one that is losing breath, and the words came from
him, ’My soul is thine!’
When she heard him say this, great
trouble was on the damsel, for his voice was not the
voice of Zurvan her betrothed; and she remembered the
sorrow of Rukrooth. She would have fled from him,
but a dread of the displeasure of the Chief restrained
her, knowing Ruark a soul of wrath. Her eyelids
dropped and the Chief gazed on her eagerly, and sang
in a passion of praises of her; the fires of his love
had a tongue, his speech was a torrent of flame at
the feet of the damsel. And Bhanavar exclaimed,
’Oh, what am I, what am I, who have slain my
love, my lover! that one should love me
and call on me for love? My life is a long weeping
for him! Death is my wooer!’
Ruark still pleaded with her, and
she said in fair gentleness, ’Speak not of it
now in the freshness of my grief! Other times
and seasons are there. My soul is but newly widowed!’
Fierce was the eye of the Chief, and
he sprang up, crying, ’By the life of my head,
I know thy wiles and the reading of these delays:
but I’ll never leave thee, nor lose sight of
thee, Bhanavar! And think not to fly from me,
thou subtle, brilliant Serpent! for thy track is my
track, and thy condition my condition, and thy fate
my fate. By Allah! this is so.’
Then he strode from her swiftly, and
called to his Arabs. They had kindled a fire
to roast the flesh of a buffalo, slaughtered by them
from among a herd, and were laughing and singing beside
the flames of the fire. So by the direction of
their Chief the Arabs brought slices of sweet buffalo-flesh
to Bhanavar, with cakes of grain: and Bhanavar
ate alone, and drank from the waters before her.
Then they laid for her a couch within the cave, and
the aching of her spirit was lulled, and she slept
there a dreamless sleep till morning.
By the morning light Bhanavar looked
abroad for the Chief, and he was nowhere by.
A pang of violent hope struck through her, and she
pressed her bosom, praying he might have left her,
and climbed the clefts and ledges of the mountain
to search over the fair expanse of pasture beyond,
for a trace of him departing. The sun was on the
heads of the heavy flowers, and a flood of gold down
the gorges, and a delicate rose hue on the distant
peaks and upper dells of snow, which were as a crown
to the scene she surveyed; but no sight of Ruark had
she. And now she was beginning to rejoice, but
on a sudden her eye caught far to east a glimpse of
something in motion across an even slope of the lower
hills leaning to the valley; and it was a herd that
rushed forward, like a black torrent of the mountains
flinging foam this way and that, and after the herd
and at the sides of the herd she distinguished the
white cloaks and scarfs and glittering steel of the
Arabs of Ruark. Presently she saw a horseman
break from the rest, and race in a line toward her.
She knew this one for Ruark, and sighed and descended
slowly to meet him. The greeting of the Chief
was sharp, his manner wild, and he said little ere
he said, ’I will see thee under the light of
the Jewel, so tie it in a band and set it on thy brow,
Bhanavar!’
Her mouth was open to intercede with
his desire, but his forehead became black as night,
and he shouted in the thunder of his lion-voice, ’Do
this!’
She took the Jewel from its warm bed
in her bosom, and held it, and got together a band
of green weeds, and set it in the middle of the band,
and tied the band on her brow, and lifted her countenance
to the Chief. Ruark stood back from her and gazed
on her; and he would have veiled his sight from her,
but his hand fell. Then the might of her loveliness
seized Bhanavar likewise, and the full orbs of her
eyes glowed on the Chief as on a mirror, and she moved
her serpent figure scornfully, and smiled, saying,
‘Is it well?’
And he, when he could speak, replied,
’’Tis well! I have seen thee! for
now can I die this day, if it be that I am to die.
And well it is! for now know I there is truly no place
but the tomb can hold me from thee!’
Bhanavar put the Jewel from her brow
into her bosom, and questioned him, ‘What is
thy dread this day, O my Chief?’
He answered her gravely, ’I
have seen Rukrooth my mother while I slept; and she
was weeping, weeping by a stream, yea, a stream of
blood; and it was a stream that flowed in a hundred
gushes from her own veins. The sun of this dawn
now, seest thou not? ’tis overcrimson; the vulture
hangeth low down yonder valley.’ And he
cried to her, ’Haste! mount with me; for I have
told Rukrooth a thing; and I know that woman crafty
in the thwarting of schemes; such a fox is she where
aught accordeth not with her forecastings, and the
judgment of her love for me! By Allah! ’twere
well we clash not; for that I will do I do, and that
she will do doth she.’
So the twain mounted their steeds,
and Ruark gathered his Arabs and placed them, some
in advance, some on either side of Bhanavar; and they
rode forward to the head of the valley, and across
the meadows, through the blushing crowds of flowers,
baths of freshest scents, cool breezes that awoke
in the nostrils of the mares neighings of delight;
and these pranced and curvetted and swung their tails,
and gave expression to their joy in many graceful
fashions; but a gloom was on Ruark, and a quick fire
in his falcon-eye, and he rode with heels alert on
the flanks of his mare, dashing onward to right and
left, as do they that beat the jungle for the crouching
tiger. Once, when he was well-nigh half a league
in front, he wheeled his mare, and raced back full
on Bhanavar, grasping her bridle, and hissing between
his teeth, ’Not a soul shall have thee save
I: by the tomb of my fathers, never, while life
is with us!’
And he taunted her with bitter names,
and was as one in the madness of intoxication, drunken
with the aspect of her matchless beauty and with exceeding
love for her. And Bhanavar knew that the dread
of a mishap was on the mind of the Chief.
Now, the space of pasture was behind
them a broad lake of gold and jasper, and they entered
a region of hills, heights, and fastnesses, robed
in forests that rose in rounded swells of leafage,
each over each above all points of snow
that were as flickering silver flames in the farthest
blue. This was the country of Bhanavar, and she
gazed mournfully on the glades of golden green and
the glens of iron blackness, and the wild flowers,
wild blossoms, and weeds well known to her that would
not let her memory rest, and were wistful of what had
been. And she thought, ’My sisters tend
the flocks, my mother spinneth with the maidens of
the tribe, my father hunteth; how shall I come among
them but strange? Coldly will they regard me;
I shall feel them shudder when they take me to their
bosoms.’
She looked on Ruark to speak with
him, but the mouth of the Chief was set and white;
and even while she looked, cries of treason and battle
arose from the Arabs that were ahead, hidden by a
branching wind of the way round a mountain slant.
Then the eyes of the Chief reddened, his nostrils
grew wide, and the darkness of his face was as flame
mixed with smoke, and he seized Bhanavar and hastened
onward, and lo! yonder were his men overmatched, and
warriors of the mountains bursting on them from an
ambush on all sides. Ruark leapt in his seat,
and the light of combat was on him, and he dug his
knees into his mare, and shouted the war-cry of his
tribe, lifting his hands as it were to draw down wrath
from the very heavens, and rushed to the encounter.
Says the poet:
Hast thou seen the wild herd by
the jungle galloping close?
With a thunder of hooves they trample
what heads may oppose:
Terribly, crushingly, tempest-like,
onward they sweep:
But a spring from the reeds, and
the panther is sprawling in air,
And with muzzle to dust and black
beards foam-lash’d, here and there,
Scatter’d they fly, crimson-eyed,
track’d with blood to the deep.
Such was the onset of Ruark, his stroke
the stroke of death; and ere the echoes had ceased
rolling from that cry of his, the mountain-warriors
were scattered before him on the narrow way, hurled
down the scrub of the mountain, even as dead leaves
and loosened stones; so like an arm of lightning was
the Chief!
Now Ruark pursued them, and was lost
to Bhanavar round a slope of the mountain. She
quickened her pace to mark him in the glory of the
battle, and behold! a sudden darkness enveloped her,
and she felt herself in the swathe of tightened folds,
clasped in an arm, and borne rapidly she knew not
whither, for she could hear and see nothing. It
was to her as were she speeding constantly downward
in darkness to the lower realms of the Genii of the
Caucasus, and every sense, and even that of fear, was
stunned in her. How long an interval had elapsed
she knew not, when the folds were unwound; but it
was light of day, and the faces of men, and they were
warriors that were about her, warriors of the mountain;
but of Ruark and his Arabs no voice. So she said
to them, ‘What do ye with me?’
And one among them, that was a youth
of dignity and grace, and a countenance like morning
on the mountains, answered, ’The will of Rukrooth,
O lady! and it is the plight of him we bow to with
Rukrooth, mother of the Desert-Chief.’
She cried, ‘Is he here, the
Prince, that I may speak with him?’
The same young warrior made answer,
’Not so; forewarned was he, and well for him!’
Bhanavar drew her robe about her and
was mute. Ere the setting of the moon they journeyed
on with her; and continued so three days and nights
through the defiles and ravines and matted growths
of the mountains. On the fourth dawn they were
on the summit of a lofty mountain-rise; below them
the sun, shooting a current of gold across leagues
of sea. Then he that had spoken with Bhanavar
said, ‘A sail will come,’ and a sail came
from under the sun. Scarce had the ship grated
shore when the warriors lifted Bhanavar, and waded
through the water with her, and placed her unwetted
in the ship, and one, the fair youth among the warriors,
sprang on board with her, remaining by her. So
the captain pushed off, and the wind filled the sails,
and Bhanavar was borne over the lustre of the sea,
that was as a changing opal in its lustre, even as
a melted jewel flowing from the fingers of the maker,
the Almighty One. The ship ceased not sailing
till they came to a narrow strait, where the sea was
but a river between fair sloping hills alight with
towers and palaces, opening a way to a great city
that was in its radiance over the waters of the sea
as the aspect of myriad sheeny white doves breasting
the wave. Hitherto the young warrior had held
aloof in coldness of courtesy from Bhanavar; but now
he sat by her, and said, ’The bond between my
prince and Rukrooth is accomplished, and it was to
snatch thee from the Chief of the Beni-Asser
and bring thee even to this city.’
Bhanavar exclaimed, ’Allah be
praised in all things, and his will be done!’
The youth continued, ’Thou art
alone here, O lady, exposed to the perils of loneliness;
surely it were well if I linger with thee awhile, and
see to thy welfare in this city, even as a brother
with a sister; and I will deal honourably by thee.’
Bhanavar looked on the young warrior
and blushed at his exceeding sweetness with her; the
soft freshness of his voice was to her as the blossom-laden
breeze in the valleys of the mountains, and she breathed
low the words of her gratitude, saying, ’If I
am not a burden, let this be so.’
Then said he, ’Know me by my
name, which is Almeryl; and that we seem indeed of
one kin, make known unto me thine.’
She replied, ‘Ill-omened is it, this name of
Bhanavar!’
The youth among warriors gazed on
her a moment with the fluttering eye of bashfulness,
and said, ’Can they that have marked thee call
thee other than Bhanavar the Beautiful?’
She remembered that Ruark had spoken
in like manner, and the curse of her beauty smote
her, and she thought, ’This fair youth, he hath
not a mother to watch over him and ward off souls
of evil. I dread there will come a mishap to
him through me; Allah shield him from it!’ And
she sought to dissuade him from resting by her, but
he cried, ’’Tis but a choice to dwell
with thee or with the dogs in the street outside thy
door, O Bhanavar!’
Now, the ship sailed close up to the
quay, and cast anchor there in the midst of other
ships of merchandise. Almeryl then threw a robe
over his mountain dress and spoke with the captain
apart, and he and Bhanavar took leave of the captain,
and landed on the quay among the porters, and of these
one stepped forward to them and shouted cheerily, ’Where
be the burdens and the bales, O ye, fair couple fashioned
in the eye of elegant proportions? Ye twin palm-trees,
male and female! Wullahy! broad is the back of
your servant.’
Almeryl beckoned to him that he should
follow them, and he followed them, blessing the wind
that had brought them to that city and the day.
So they passed through the streets and lanes of the
city, and the porter pointed out this house and that
house wanting an occupant, and Almeryl fixed on one
in an open thoroughfare that had before it a grass-plot,
and behind a garden with fountains and flowers, and
grass-knolls shaded by trees; and he paid down the
half of its price, and had it furnished before nightfall
sumptuously, and women in it to wait on Bhanavar, and
stuffs and goods, and scents for the bath, all
luxuries whatsoever that tradesmen and merchants there
could give in exchange for gold. Then Almeryl
dismissed the porter in Allah’s name, and gladdened
his spirit with a gift over the due of his hire that
exalted him in the eyes of the porter, and the porter
went from him, exclaiming, ‘In extremity Ukleet
is thy slave!’ and he sang:
Shouldst thou see a slim youth with
a damsel arriving,
Be sure ’tis the hour when
thy fortune is thriving;
A generous fee makes the members
so supple
That over the world they could carry
this couple.
Now so it was that the youth Almeryl
and the damsel Bhanavar abode in the city they had
come to weeks and months, and life to either of them
as the flowing of a gentle stream, even as brother
and sister lived they, chastely, and with temperate
feasting. Surely the youth loved her with a great
love, and the heart of Bhanavar turned not from him,
and was won utterly by his gentleness and nobleness
and devotion; and they relied on each other’s
presence for any joy, and were desolate in absence,
as the poet says:
When
we must part, love,
Such
is my smart, love,
Sweetness
is savourless,
Fairness
is favourless!
But
when in sight, love,
We
two unite, love,
Earth
has no sour to me;
Life
is a flower to me!
And with the increase of every day
their passion increased, and the revealing light in
their eyes brightened and was humid, as is sung by
him that luted to the rage of hearts:
Evens star yonder
Comes like a crown on us,
Larger and fonder
Grows its orb down on us;
So, love, my love for thee
Blossoms increasingly;
So sinks it in the sea,
Waxing unceasingly.
On a night, when the singing-girls
had left them, the youth could contain himself no
more, and caught the two hands of Bhanavar in his,
saying, ’This that is in my soul for thee thou
knowest, O Bhanavar! and ’tis spoken when I
move and when I breathe, O my loved one! Tell
me then the cause of thy shunning me whenever I would
speak of it, and be plain with thee.’
For a moment Bhanavar sought to release
herself from his hold, but the love in his eyes entangled
her soul as in a net, and she sank forward to him,
and sighed under his chin, ’’Twas indeed
my very love of thee that made me.’
The twain embraced and kissed a long
kiss, and leaned sideways together, and Bhanavar said,
‘Hear me, what I am.’
Then she related the story of the
Serpent and the Jewel, and of the death of her betrothed.
When it was ended, Almeryl cried, ’And was this
all? this that severed us?’ And he
said, ‘Hear what I am.’
So he told Bhanavar how Rukrooth,
the mother of Ruark, had sent messengers to the Prince
his father, warning him of the passage of Ruark through
the mountains with one a Queen of Serpents, a sorceress,
that had bewitched him and enthralled him in a mighty
love for her, to the ruin of Ruark; and how the Chief
was on his way with her to demand her in marriage
at the hands of her parents; and the words of Rukrooth
were, ’By the service that was between thee
and my husband, and by the death he died, O Prince,
rescue the Chief my son from this damsel, and entrap
her from him, and have her sent even to the city of
the inland sea, for no less a distance than that keepeth
Ruark from her.’
And Almeryl continued, ’I questioned
the messengers myself, and they told me the marvel
of thy loveliness and the peril to him that looked
on it, so I swore there was no power should keep me
from a sight of thee, O my loved one! my prize! my
life! my sleek antelope of the hills! Surely when
my father appointed the warriors to lie in wait for
thy coming, I slipped among them, so that they thought
it ordered by him I should head them. The rest
is known to thee, O my fountain of blissfulness! but
the treachery to Ruark was the treachery of Ebn Asrac,
not of such warriors as we; and I would have fallen
on Ebn Asrac, had not Ruark so routed that man without
faith. ’Twas all as I have said, blessed
be Allah and his decrees!’
Bhanavar gazed on her beloved, and
the bridal dew overflowed her underlids, and she loosed
her hair to let it flow, part over her shoulders,
part over his, and in sighs that were the measure of
music she sang:
I thought not to love
again!
But now I love
as I loved not before;
I love not; I adore!
O my beloved, kiss, kiss me! waste
thy kisses like a rain.
Are not thy red lips
fain?
Oh, and so softly
they greet!
Am I not sweet?
Sweet must I be for thee,
or sweet in vain:
Sweet to thee only,
my dear love!
The lamps and censers sink,
but cannot cheat
These eyes of thine
that shoot above
Trembling lustres of
the dove!
A darkness drowns all lustres:
still I see
Thee, my love,
thee!
Thee, my glory of gold, from
head to feet!
Oh, how the lids of the world close
quite when our lips meet!
Almeryl strained her to him, and responded:
My life was midnight
on the mountain side;
Cold stars were
on the heights:
There, in my darkness,
I had lived and died,
Content with nameless
lights.
Sudden I saw the heavens
flush with a beam,
And I ascended
soon,
And evermore over mankind
supreme,
Stood silver in
the moon.
And he fell playfully into a new metre, singing:
Who will paint my beloved
In musical word
or colour?
Earth with an envy is
moved:
Sea-shells and
roses she brings,
Gems from the
green ocean-springs,
Fruits with the
fairy bloom-dews,
Feathers of Paradise
hues,
Waters with jewel-bright
falls,
Ore from the Genii-halls:
All in their splendour
approved;
All; but, match’d
with my beloved,
Darker, and denser,
and duller.
Then she kissed him for that song, and sang:
Once to be beautiful
was my pride,
And I blush’d
in love with my own bright brow:
Once, when a wooer was
by my side,
I worshipp’d
the object that had his vow:
Different, different,
different now,
Different now
is my beauty to me:
Different, different,
different now!
For I prize it
alone because prized by thee.
Almeryl stretched his arm to the lattice,
and drew it open, letting in the soft night wind,
and the sound of the fountain and the bulbul and the
beam of the stars, and versed to her in the languor
of deep love:
Whether we die or we
live,
Matters it now
no more:
Life has nought further
to give:
Love is its crown
and its core.
Come to us either, we’re
rife,
Death or life!
Death can take not away,
Darkness and light
are the same:
We are beyond the pale
ray,
Wrapt in a rosier
flame:
Welcome which will to
our breath;
Life or death!
So did these two lovers lute and sing
in the stillness of the night, pouring into each other’s
ears melodies from the new sea of fancy and feeling
that flowed through them.
Ere they ceased their sweet interchange
of tenderness, which was but one speech from one soul,
a glow of light ran up the sky, and the edge of a
cloud was fired; and in the blooming of dawn Almeryl
hung over Bhanavar, and his heart ached to see the
freshness of her wondrous loveliness; and he sang,
looking on her:
The rose is living in
her cheeks,
The lily in her
rounded chin;
She speaks but when
her whole soul speaks,
And then the two
flow out and in,
And mix their red and
white to make
The hue for which
I’d Paradise forsake.
Her brow from her black
falling hair
Ascends like morn:
her nose is clear
As morning hills, and
finely fair
With pearly nostrils
curving near
The red bow of her upper
lip;
Her bosom’s
the white wave beneath the ship.
The fair full earth,
the enraptured skies,
She images in
constant play:
Night and the stars
are in her eyes,
But her sweet
face is beaming day,
A bounteous interblush
of flowers:
A dewy brilliance
in a dale of bowers.
Then he said, ’And this morning
shall our contract of marriage be written and witnessed?’
She answered, ‘As my lord willeth; I am his.’
Said he, ‘And it is thy desire?’
She nestled to him and dinted his
bare arm with the pearls of her mouth for a reply.
So that morning their contract of
marriage was written, and witnessed by the legal number
of witnesses in the presence of the Cadi, with his
license on it endorsed; and Bhanavar was the bride
of Almeryl, he her husband. Never was youth blessed
in a bride like that youth!
Now, the twain lived together the
circle of a full year of delightful marriage, and
love lessened not in them, but was as the love of the
first day. Little cared they, having each other,
for the loneliness of their dwelling in that city,
where they knew none save the porter Ukleet, who went
about their commissions. Sometimes to amuse themselves
with his drolleries, they sent for him, and were bountiful
with him, and made him drink with them on the lawn
of their garden leaning to an inlet of the sea; and
then he would entertain them with all the scandal and
gossip of the city, and its little folk and great.
When he was outrageously extravagant in these stories
of his, Bhanavar exclaimed, ’Are such things,
now? can it be true?’
And he nodded in his conceit, and
replied loftily, ’’Tis certain, O my Prince
and Princess! ye be from the mountains, unused to the
follies and dissipations of men where they herd; and
ye know them not, men!’
The lamps being lit in the garden
to the edges of the water, where they lay one evening,
Ukleet, who had been in his briskest mood, became grave,
and put his forefinger to the side of his nose and
began, ’Hear ye aught of the great tidings?
Wullahy! no other than the departure of the wife of
Boolp, the broker, into darkness. ’Tis of
Boolp ye hire this house, and had ye a hundred houses
in this city ye might have had them from Boolp the
broker, he that’s rich; and glory to them whom
Allah prospereth, say I! And I mention this matter,
for ’tis certain now Boolp will take another
wife to him to comfort him, for there be two things
beloved of Boolp, and therein manifesteth he taste
and the discernment of excellence, and what is approved;
and of these two things let the love of his hoards
of the yellow-skinned treasure go first, and after
that attachment to the silver-skinned of creation,
the fair, the rapturous; even to them! So by
this see ye not Boolp will yearn in his soul for another
spouse? Now, O ye well-matched pair! what a chance
were this, knew ye but a damsel of the mountains,
exquisite in symmetry, a moon to enrapture the imagination
of Boolp, and in the nature of things herit his possessions!
for Boolp is an old man, even very old.’
They laughed, and cried, ’We
know not of such a damsel, and the broker must go
unmarried for us.’
When next Ukleet sat before them,
Almeryl took occasion to speak of Boolp again, and
said, ‘This broker, O Ukleet, is he also a lender
of money?’
Ukleet replied, ’O my Prince,
he is or he is not: ’tis of the maybes.
I wot truly Boolp is one that baiteth the hook of
an emergency.’
The brows of the Prince were downcast,
and he said no more; but on the following morning
he left Bhanavar early under a pretext, and sallied
forth from the house of their abode alone.
Since their union in that city they
had not been once apart, and Bhanavar grieved and
thought, ‘Waneth his love for me?’ and
she called her women to her, and dressed in this dress
and that dress, and was satisfied with none.
The dews of the bath stood cold upon her, and she trembled,
and fled from mirror to mirror, and in each she was
the same surpassing vision of loveliness. Then
her women held a glass to her, and she examined herself
closely, if there might be a fleck upon her anywhere,
and all was as the snow of the mountains on her round
limbs sloping in the curves of harmony, and the faint
rose of the dawn on slants of snow was their hue.
Twining her fingers and sighing, she thought, ’It
is not that! he cannot but think me beautiful.’
She smiled a melancholy smile at her image in the
glass, exclaiming, ’What availeth it, thy beauty?
for he is away and looketh not on thee, thou vain
thing! And what of thy loveliness if the light
illumine it not, for he is the light to thee, and
it is darkness when he’s away.’
Suddenly she thought, ’What’s
that which needeth to light it no other light?
I had well-nigh forgotten it in my bliss, the Jewel!’
Then she went to a case of ebony-wood, where she kept
the Jewel, and drew it forth, and shone in the beam
of a pleasant imagination, thinking, ’’Twill
surprise him!’ And she robed herself in a robe
of saffron, and set lesser gems of the diamond and
the emerald in the braid of her hair, and knotted
the Serpent Jewel firmly in a band of gold-threaded
tissue, and had it woven in her hair among the braids.
In this array she awaited his coming, and pleased
her mind with picturing his astonishment and the joy
that would be his. Mute were the women who waited
on her, for in their lives they had seen no such sight
as Bhanavar beneath the beams of the Jewel, and the
whole chamber was aglow with her.
Now, in her anxiety she sent them
one and one repeatedly to look forth at the window
for the coming of the Prince. So, when he came
not she went herself to look forth, and stretched
her white neck beyond the casement. While her
head was exposed, she heard a cry of some one from
the house in the street opposite, and Bhanavar beheld
in the house of the broker an old wrinkled fellow
that gesticulated to her in a frenzy. She snatched
her veil down and drew in her head in anger at him,
calling to her maids, ‘What is yonder hideous
old dotard?’
And they answered, laughing, ’’Tis
indeed Boolp the broker, O fair mistress and mighty!’
To divert herself she made them tell
her of Boolp, and they told her a thousand anecdotes
of the broker, and verses of him, and the constancy
of his amorous condition, and his greediness.
And Bhanavar was beguiled of her impatience till it
was evening, and the Prince returned to her. So
they embraced, and she greeted him as usual, waiting
what he would say, searching his countenance for a
token of wonderment; but the youth knew not that aught
was added to her beauty, for he looked nowhere save
in her eyes. Bhanavar was nigh weeping with vexation,
and pushed him from her, and chid him with lack of
love and weariness of her; and the eye of the Prince
rose to her brow to read it, and he saw the Jewel.
Almeryl clapped his hands, crying, ’Wondrous!
And this thy surprise for me, my fond one? beloved
of mine!’ Then he gazed on her a space, and said,
’Knowest thou, thou art terrible in thy beauty,
Bhanavar, and hast the face of lightning under that
Jewel of the Serpent?’
She kissed him, whispering, ’Not
lightning to thee! Yet lovest thou Bhanavar?’
He replied, ’Surely so; and
all save Bhanavar in this world is the darkness of
oblivion to me.’
When it was the next morning, Almeryl
rose to go forth again. Ere he had passed the
curtain of the chamber Bhanavar caught him by the arm,
and she was trembling violently. Her visage was
a wild inquiry: ’Thou goest? and
again? There is something hidden from me!’
Almeryl took her to his heart, and
caressed her with fond flatteries, saying, ’Ask
but what is beating under these two pomegranates, and
thou learnest all of me.’
But she stamped her foot, crying,
’No! no! I will hear it! There’s
a mystery.’
So he said, ’Well, then, it
is this only; small matter enough. I have a business
with the captain of the vessel that brought us hither,
and I must see him ere he setteth sail; no other than
that, thou jealous, watchful star! Pierce me
with thine eyes; it is no other than that.’
She levelled her lids at him till
her lustrous black eyelashes were as arrows, and mimicked
him softly, ‘No other than that?’
And he replied, ‘Even so.’
Then she clung to him like a hungry
creature, repeating, ‘Even so,’ and let
him go. Alone, she summoned a slave, a black,
and bade him fetch to her without delay Ukleet the
porter, and the porter was presently ushered in to
her, protesting service and devotion. So, she
questioned him of Almeryl, and the Prince’s
business abroad, what he knew of it. Ukleet commenced
reciting verses on the ills of jealousy, but Bhanavar
checked him with an eye that Ukleet had seen never
before in woman or in man, and he gaped at her helplessly,
as one that has swallowed a bone. She laughed,
crying, ‘Learn, O thou fellow, to answer my like
by the letter.’
Now, what she heard from Ukleet when
he had recovered his wits, was that the Prince had
a business with none save the lenders of money.
So she spake to Ukleet in a kindly tone, ‘Thou
art mine, to serve me?’
He was as one fascinated, and delivered
himself, ’Yea, O my mistress! with tongue-service,
toe-service, back-service, brain-service, whatso pleaseth
thy sweet presence.’
Said she, ‘Hie over to the broker
opposite, and bring him hither to me.’
Ukleet departed, saying, ‘To hear is to obey.’
She sat gazing on the Jewel and its
counterchanging splendours in her hand, and the thought
of Almeryl and his necessity was her only thought.
Not ten minutes of the hour had passed before the women
waiting on her announced Ukleet and the broker Boolp.
Bhanavar gave little heed to the old fellow’s
grimaces, and the compliments he addressed her, but
handed him the Jewel and desired his valuation of
its worth. The face of Boolp was a keen edge
when he regarded Bhanavar, but the sight of the Jewel
sharpened it tenfold, and he tossed his arms, exclaiming,
’A jewel, this!’
So Bhanavar cried to him, ‘Fix
a price for it, O thou broker!’
And Boolp, the old miser, debated, and began prating,
’O lady! the soul of thy slave
is abashed by a double beam, this the jewel of jewels,
thou truly of thy sex; and saving thee there’s
no jewel of worth like this one, and together ye be wullahy!
never felt I aught like this since my espousal of
Soolka that ’s gone, and ’twas nothing
like it then! Now, O my Princess, confess it freely this
is but a pretext, this valuation of the Jewel, and
Ukleet our go-between; and leave the rewarding of
him to me. Wullahy! I can be generous, and
my days of favour with fair ladies be not yet over.
Blessed be Allah for this day! And thinkest thou
those eyes fell on me with discriminating observation
ere my sense of perception was struck by thee?
Not so, for I had noted thee, O moon of hearts, from
my window yonder.’
In this fashion Boolp the broker went
on prating, and bowing, and screwing the corners of
his little acid eyes to wink the wink of common accord
between himself and Bhanavar. Meantime she had
spoken aside to one of her women, and a second black
slave entered the chamber, bearing in his hand a twisted
scourge, and that slave laid it on the back of Boolp
the broker, and by this means he was brought quickly
to the valuation of the Jewel. Then he named
a sum that was a great sum, but not the value of the
Jewel to the fiftieth part, nay nor the five-hundredth
part, of its value; and Ukleet remonstrated with him,
but he was resolute, saying, ‘Even that sum
leaves me a beggar.’
So Bhanavar said, ’My desire
is for immediate payment of the money, and the Jewel
is thine for that sum.’
Now the broker went to fetch the money,
and returned with it in bags of gold one-half the
amount, and bags of silver one-third, and the remainder
in writing made due at a certain period for payment.
And he groaned and handed her the money, and took
the Jewel in his hands; ejaculating, ’In the
name of Allah!’
That evening, when it was dark and
the lamps lit in the chamber, and the wine set and
the nosegay, Almeryl asked of Bhanavar to see her under
the light of the Jewel. She warded him with an
excuse, but he was earnest with her. So she feigned
that he teased her, saying, ’’Tis that
thou art no longer content with me as I am, O my husband!’
Then she said, ’Wert thou successful in thy
dealings this day?’
His arm slackened round her, and he
answered nothing. So she cried, ’Fie on
thee, thou foolish one! and what is thy need of running
over this city? Know I not thy case and thine
occasion, O my beloved? Surely I am Queen of
Serpents, a mistress of enchantments, a diviner of
things hidden, and I know thee. Here, then, is
what thou requirest, and conceal not from me thy necessity
another time, my husband!’
Upon that she pointed his eye to the
money-bags of gold and of silver. Almeryl was
amazed, and asked her, ’How came these? for I
was at the last extremity, without coin of any kind.’
She answered, ‘How, but by the Serpents!’
And he exclaimed, ’Would that
I might work as that porter worketh, rather than this!’
Now, seeing he bewailed her use of
the powers of the Jewel, Bhanavar fell between his
arms, and related to him her discovery of his condition,
and how she disposed of the Jewel to the broker, and
of the scourging of Boolp; and he praised her, and
clave to her, and they laughed and delighted their
souls in plenteousness, and bliss was their portion;
as the poet says,
Bliss that is born of
mutual esteem
And tried companionship,
I truly deem
A well-based palace,
wherein fountains rise
From springs that have
their sources in the skies.
So were they for awhile. It happened
that one day, that was the last day of the year since
her wearing of the Jewel, Ukleet said to them, ’Be
wary! the Vizier Aswarak hath his eye on you, and it
is no cool one. I say nothing: the wise
are discreet in their tellings of the great. ’Tis
certain the broker Boolp forgetteth not his treatment
here.’
They smiled, turning to each other,
and said, ’We live innocently, we harm no one,
what should we fear?’
During the night of that day Bhanavar
awoke and kissed the Prince; and lo! he shuddered
in his sleep as with the grave-cold. A second
time she was awakened on the breast of Almeryl by
a dream of the Serpents of the Lake Karatis the
lake of the Jewel; and she stood up, and there was
in the street a hum of voices, and she saw there before
the house armed men with naked steel in their hands.
Scarce had she called Almeryl to her, when the outer
door of their house was forced, and she shrieked to
him, ’’Tis thou they come for: fly,
O my Prince, my husband! the way of the garden is
clear.’
But he said sadly, ’Nay, what
am I? it is thou they would win from me. I’ll
leave thee not in this life.’
So she cried, ’O my soul, then
together! but I shall hinder thee, and be
a burden to thy flight.’
And she called on the All-powerful
for aid, and ran with him into the garden of the house,
and lo! by the water side at the end of the garden
a boat full of armed soldiers with scimitars.
So these fell upon them, and bound them, and haled
them into the house again, where was the dark Vizier
Aswarak, and certain officers of the night watch with
a force. The Vizier cried when he saw them, ’I
accuse thee, Prince Almeryl, of being here in the
city of our lord the King, to conspire against him
and his authority.’
Almeryl faced the Vizier firmly, and
replied, ’I knew not in my life I had made an
enemy; but there is one here who telleth that of me.’
The Vizier frowned, saying, ’Thou
deniest this? And thou here, and thy father at
war with the sovereignty of our lord the King!’
Almeryl beheld his danger, and he said, ‘Is
this so?’
Then cried the Vizier, ‘Hear
him! is not that a fair simulation?’ So he called
to the guard, ‘Shackle him!’ When that
was done, he ordered the house to be sacked, and the
women and the slaves he divided for a spoil, but he
reserved Bhanavar to himself: and lo! twice she
burst away from them that held her to hang upon the
lips of Almeryl, and twice was she torn from him as
a grape-bunch is torn from the streaming vine, and
the third time she swooned and the anguish of life
left her.
Now, Bhanavar was borne to the harem
of the Vizier, and for days she suffered no morsel
of food to enter her mouth, and was dying, had not
the Vizier in the cunning of his dissimulation fed
her with distant glimpses of Almeryl, to show her
he yet lived. Then she thought, ’While my
beloved liveth, life is due to me’; and she
ate and drank and reassumed her fair fulness and the
queenliness that was hers; but the Vizier had no love
of her, and respected her, considering in his mind,
’Time will exhaust the fury of this tigress,
and she is a fruit worth the waiting for. Wullahy!
I shall have possessed her ere the days of over-ripening.’
There was in the harem of the Vizier
a mountain-girl that had been brought there in her
childhood, and trained to play upon the lute and accompany
her voice with the instrument. To this little
damsel Bhanavar gave her heart, and would listen all
day, as in a trance, to her luting, till the desire
to escape from that bondage and gather tidings of Almeryl
mastered her, and she persuaded one of the blacks of
the harem with a bribe to procure her an interview
with the porter Ukleet. So at a certain hour
of the night Ukleet was introduced into the garden
of the harem, and he was in the darkness of that garden
a white-faced porter with knees that knocked the dread-march
together; but Bhanavar strengthened his soul, and
he said to her, ’’Twas the doing of Boolp
the broker: and he whispered the Vizier of thee
and thy beauty, O my mistress! Surely thy punishment
and this ruin is but part payment to Boolp of the price
of the Jewel, the great Jewel that’s in the
hands of the Vizier.’
Then she questioned him: ’And
Almeryl, the Prince, my husband, what of him?’
Ukleet was dumb, and Bhanavar asked
to hear no more. Surely she was at the gates
of pale spirits within an hour of her interview with
Ukleet, and there was no blessedness for her save
in death, the stiffer of ills, the drug that is infallible.
As is said:
Dark is that last stage
of sorrow
Which from Death alone
can borrow
Comfort:
Bhanavar would have died then, but
in a certain pause of her fever the Vizier stood by
her. She looked at him long as she lay, and the
life in her large eyes was ebbing away slowly; but
there seemed presently a check, as an eddy comes in
the stream, and the light of intelligence flowed like
a reviving fire into her eyes, and her heart quickened
with desire of life while she looked on the Vizier.
So she passed the pitch of that fever, and bloomed
anew in her beauty, and cherished it, for she had
a purpose.
Now, there was rejoicing in the harem
of the Vizier Aswarak when Bhanavar arose from the
couch; and the Vizier exulted, thinking, ’I have
tamed this wild beauty, or she had reached death in
that extremity.’ So he allowed Bhanavar
greater freedom and indulgences, and Bhanavar feigned
to give her soul to the pleasures women delight in,
and the Vizier buried her in gems and trinkets and
costly raiment, robes of exquisite silks, the choicest
of Samarcand and China; and he permitted her to make
purchases among certain of the warehouses of the city
and the shops of the tradesmen, jewellers and others,
so that she went about as she would, but for the slaves
that attended her and the overseer of the harem.
This continued, and Aswarak became urgent with her,
and to remove suspicion from him she named a day from
that period when she would be his. Meantime she
contrived to see Ukleet the porter frequently, and
within a week of her engagement with the Vizier she
gazed from a lattice-window of the harem, and beheld
in the garden, by the beams of the moon, Ukleet, and
he was looking as on the watch for her. So she
sent to him the little mountain-girl she loved, but
Ukleet would tell her nothing; then went she herself,
greeting him graciously, for his service was other
than that of self-seeking.
Ukleet said, ’O Lady, mistress
of hearts, moon of the tides of will! ’tis certain
I was thy slave from the hour I beheld thee first,
and of the Prince, thy husband; Allah rest his soul!
Now these be my tidings. Wullahy! the King is
one maddened with the reports I’ve spread about
of thy beauty, yea! raging. And I have a friend
in his palace, even an under-cook, acute in the interpreting
of wishes. There was he always gabbling of thy
case, O my Princess, till the head-cook seized hold
on it, and so it went to the chamberlain, thence to
the chief of the eunuchs, and from him in a natural
course, to the King. Now from the King the tracking
of this tale went to the under-cook down again, and
from him to me. So was I summoned to the King,
and the King discoursed with me I with
him, in fair fluency; he in ejaculations of desire
to have sight of thee, I in expatiation on that he
would see when he had his desire. Now in this
have I not done thee a service, O sovereign of fancies?’
Bhanavar mused and said, ’On
the after-morrow I pass through the city to make a
selection of goods, and I shall pass at noon by the
great mosque, on my way to the shop of Ebn Roulchook,
the King’s jeweller, beyond the meat-market.
Of a surety, I know not how my lord the King may see
me.’
Said the porter, ‘’Tis
enough! on my head be it.’ And he went from
her, singing the song:
How little a thing serves
Fortune’s turn
When she’s
intent on doing!
How easily the world
may burn
When kings come
out a-wooing!
Now, ere she set forth on the after-morrow
to make her purchases, Bhanavar sent word to the Vizier
Aswarak that she would see him, and he came to her
drunken with alacrity, for he augured favourably that
her reluctance was melting toward him: so she
said, ’O my master, my time of mourning is at
an end, and I would look well before thee, even as
one worthy of being thy bride; so bestow on me, I
pray thee, for my wearing that day, the jewels that
be in thy treasury, the brightest and clearest of
them, and the largest.’
The Vizier Aswarak replied, and he
was one in great satisfaction of soul, ’All
that I have are thine. Wullahy! and one, a marvel,
that I bought of Boolp the broker, that had it from
an African merchant.’ So he commanded the
box wherein he had deposited the Jewel to be brought
to him there in the chamber of Bhanavar, and took
forth the Serpent Jewel between his forefinger and
thumb, and laughed at the eager eyes of Bhanavar when
she beheld it, saying, ‘’Tis thine! thy
bridal gift the day I possess thee.’
Bhanavar trembled at the sight of
the Jewel, and its redness was to her as the blood
of Zurvan and Almeryl. She stretched her hand
out for it and cried, ‘This day, O my lord,
make it mine.’
So the Vizier said, ’Nay, what
I have spoken will I keep to; it has cost me much.’
Bhanavar looked at him, and uttered
in a soft tone, ’Truly it has cost thee much.’
Then she exclaimed, as in play, ‘See
me, how I look by its beam.’ And in her
guile she snatched the Jewel from him, and held it
to her brow. Then Aswarak started from her and
feared her, for the red light of the Jewel glowed,
and darkened the chamber with its beam, darkening all
save the lustre that was on the visage of Bhanavar.
He shouted, ’What’s this! Art thou
a sorceress?’
She removed the Jewel, and ceased
glaring on him, and said, ’Nothing but thy poor
slave!’
Then he coaxed her to give him the
Jewel, and she would not; he commanded her peremptorily,
and she hesitated; so he grasped her tightened hand,
and his face loured with wrath; yet she withheld the
Jewel from him laughing; and he was stirred to extreme
wrath, and drew from his girdle the naked scimitar,
and menaced her with it. And he looked mighty;
but she dreaded him little, and stood her full height
before him, daring him, and she was as the tigress
defending a cub from a wilder beast. Now when
he was about to call in the armed slaves of the palace,
she said, ’I warn thee, Vizier Aswarak! tempt
me not to match them that serve me with them that
serve thee.’
He ground his teeth in fury, crying,
’A conspiracy! and in the harem! Now, thou
traitress! the logic of the lash shall be tried upon
thee.’ And he roared, ‘Ho! ye without
there! ho!’
But ere the slaves had entered Bhanavar
rubbed the Jewel on her bosom, muttering, ’I
have forborne till now! Now will I have a sacrifice,
though I be it.’ And rubbing the Jewel,
she sang,
Hither! hither!
Come to your Queen;
Come through the grey
wall,
Come through the
green!
There was heard a noise like the noise
of a wind coming down a narrow gorge above falling
waters, a hissing and a rushing of wings, and behold!
Bhanavar was circled by rings and rings of serpent-folds
that glowed round her, twisted each in each, with
the fierceness of fire, she like a flame rising up
white in the midst of them. The black slaves,
when they had lifted the curtain of the harem-chamber,
shrieked to see her, and Aswarak crouched at her feet
with the aspect of an angry beast carved in stone.
Then Bhanavar loosed on either of the slaves a serpent,
saying, ‘What these have seen they shall not
say.’ And while the sweat dropped heavily
from the forehead of Aswarak, she stepped out of the
circle of serpents, singing,
Over! over!
Hie to the lake!
Sleep with the left eye,
Keep the right awake.
Then the serpents spread with a great
whirr, and flew through the high window and the walls
as they had come, and she said to the Vizier, ’What
now? Fearest thou? I have spared thee, thou
that madest me desolate! and thy slaves are a sacrifice
for thee. Now this I ask: Where lies my
beloved, the Prince my husband? Speak nothing
of him, save the place of his burial!’
So he told her, ‘In the burial-ground
of the great prison.’
She rolled her eyes on the Vizier
darkly, exclaiming, ’Even where the felons lie
entombed, he lieth!’ And she began to pant, pale
with what she had done, and leaned to the floor, and
called,
Yellow stripe, with
freckle red,
Coil and curl, and watch
by my head.
And a serpent with yellow stripes
and red freckles came like a javelin down to her,
and coiled and curled round her head, and she slept
an hour. When she arose the Vizier was yet there,
sitting with folded knees. So she sped the serpent
to the Lake Karatis, and called her women to her,
and went to an inner room, and drew an outer robe and
a vest over that she had on, and passed the Vizier,
and said, ’Art thou not rejoiced in thy bride,
O Aswarak? ’Twas a wondrous clemency, hers!
Now but four more days and thou claimest her.
Say nothing of what thou hast seen, or thou wilt shortly
see nothing further to say, my master.’
So she left the Vizier sitting still
in that chamber, and mounted a mule, attended by slaves
on foot before and behind her, and passed through the
streets till she came to the shop of Ebn Roulchook.
The King was in disguise at the extremity of the shop,
and while she examined this and that of the precious
stones, Bhanavar for a moment made bare the beauty,
of her face, and love’s fires took fast hold
of the King, and he cried, ‘I marvel not at
the eloquence of the porter.’
Now, she made Ebn Roulchook bring
to her a circlet of gold, with a hollow in the frontal
centre, and fit into that hollow the Serpent Jewel.
So, while she laughed and chatted with her women Bhanavar
lifted the circlet, and made her countenance wholly
bare even to the neck and the beginning slope of the
bosom, and fixed the circlet to her head with the Jewel
burning on her brow. Then when he beheld the glory
of excelling loveliness that she was, and the splendour
in her eyes under the Jewel, the King shouted and
parted with his disguise, and Ebn Roulchook and the
women and slaves with Bhanavar fled to the courtyard
that was behind the shop, leaving Bhanavar alone with
the King. Surely Bhanavar returned not to the
dwelling of the Vizier.
Now, the King Mashalleed espoused
Bhanavar, and she became his queen and ruled him,
and her word was the dictate of the land. Then
caused she the body of Almeryl, with the severed head
of the Prince, to be disinterred, and entombed secretly
in the palace; and she had lamps lit in the vault,
and the pall spread, and the readers of the Koran to
read by the tomb; and then she stole to the tomb hourly,
in the day and in the night, wailing of him and her
utter misery, repeating verses at the side of the
tomb, and they were,
Take
me to thee!
Like the
deep-rooted tree,
My life is half
in earth, and draws
Thence all sweetness;
oh may my being pause
Soon
beside thee!
Welcome
me soon!
As to the
queenly moon,
Man’s homage
to my beauty sets;
Yet am I a rose-shrub
budding regrets:
Welcome
me soon.
Soul
of my soul!
Have me
not half, but whole.
Dear dust, thou
art my eyes, my breath!
Draw me to thee down
the dark sea of death,
Soul
of my soul!
And she sang:
Sad are they who drink
life’s cup
Till they have
come to the bitter-sweet:
Better at once to toss
it up,
And trample it
beneath the feet;
For venom-charged as
serpents’ eggs
’Tis then,
and knows not other change.
Early, early, early, have
I reached the dregs
Of life, and loathe and love the
bittersweet, revenge!
Then turned she aside, and sang musingly:
I came to his arms like
the flower of the spring,
And he was my bird of
the radiant wing:
He flutter’d above
me a moment, and won
The bliss of my breast
as a beam of the sun,
Untouch’d and
untasted till then
The voice in her throat was like a
drowning creature, and she rose up, and chanted wildly:
I
weep again?
What play is this? for the
thing is dead in me long since:
Will all the reviving
rain
Of heaven bring me back my
Prince?
But I, when I weep,
when I weep,
Blood will
I weep!
And when
I weep,
Sons for fathers shall
weep;
Mothers for sons shall
weep;
Wives for husbands shall
weep!
Earth shall complain of floods
red and deep,
When
I weep!
Upon that she ran up a secret passage
to her chamber and rubbed the Jewel, and called the
serpents, to delight her soul with the sight of her
power, and rolled and sported madly among them, clutching
them by the necks till their thin little red tongues
hung out, and their eyes were as discoloured blisters
of venom. Then she arose, and her arms and neck
and lips were glazed with the slime of the serpents,
and she flung off her robes to the close-fitting silken
inner vest looped across her bosom with pearls, and
whirled in a mazy dance-measure among them, and sang
melancholy melodies, making them delirious, fascinating
them; and they followed her round and round, in twines
and twists and curves, with arched heads and stiffened
tails; and the chamber swam like an undulating sea
of shifting sapphire lit by the moon of midnight.
Not before the moon of midnight was in the sky ceased
Bhanavar sporting with the serpents, and she sank
to sleep exhausted in their midst.
Such was the occupation of the Queen
of Mashalleed when he came not to her. The women
and slaves of the palace dreaded her, and the King
himself was her very slave.
Meanwhile the plot of her unforgivingness
against Aswarak ripened: and the Vizier beholding
the bride he had lost Queen of Mashalleed his master,
it was as she conceived, that his heart was eaten with
jealousy and fierce rage. Bhanavar as she came
across him spake mildly, and gave him gentle looks,
sad glances, suffering not his fires to abate, the
torment of his love to cool. Each night he awoke
with a serpent in his bed; the beam of her beauty
was as the constant bite of a serpent, poisoning his
blood, and he deluded his soul with the belief that
Bhanavar loved him notwithstanding, and that she was
seized forcibly from him by the King. ‘Otherwise,’
thought he, ’why loosed she not a serpent from
the host to strangle me even as yonder black slaves?’
Bhanavar knew the mind of Aswarak, and considered,
’The King is cunning and weak, a slave to his
desires, and in the bondage of the jewel, my beauty.
The Vizier is unscrupulous, a hatcher of intrigues;
but that he dreads me and hopes a favour of me, he
would have wrought against me ere now. ’Tis
then a combat ’twixt him and me. O my soul,
art thou dreaming of a fair youth that was the bliss
of thy bosom night and day, night and day? The
Vizier shall die!’
One morning, and it was a year from
the day she had become Queen of Mashalleed, Bhanavar
sprang up quickly from the side of the King; and he
was gazing on her in amazement and loathing. She
flew to her chamber, chasing forth her women, and
ran to a mirror. Therein she saw three lines
that were on her brow, lines of age, and at the corners
of her mouth and about her throat a slackness of skin,
the skin no longer its soft rosy white, but withered
brown as leaves of the forest. She shrieked, and
fell back in a swoon of horror. When she recovered,
she ran to the mirror again, and it was the same sight.
And she rose from swooning a third time, and still
she beheld the visage of a hag; nothing of beauty there
save the hair and the brilliant eyes. Then summoned
she the serpents in a circle, and the number of them
was that of the days in the year: and she bared
her wrist and seized one, a gray-silver with sapphire
spots, and hissed at him till he hissed, and foam
whitened the lips of each. Thereupon she cried:
Treble-tongue
and throat of hell,
What
is come upon me, tell!
And the Serpent replied,
Jewel
Queen! beauty’s price!
’Tis
the time for sacrifice!
She grasped another, one of leaden
colour, with yellow bars and silver crescents, and
cried:
Treble-tongue
and throat of fire,
Name
the creature ye require!
And the Serpent replied:
Ruby
lip! poison tooth!
We
are hungry for a youth.
She grasped another that writhed in
her fingers like liquid emerald, and cried:
Treble-tongue
and throat of glue!
How
to know the one that’s due?
And the Serpent replied:
Breast
of snow! baleful bliss!
He
that wooing wins a kiss.
She clutched one at her elbow, a hairy
serpent with yellow languid eyes in flame-sockets
and livid-lustrous length a disease to look
on, and cried:
Treble-tongue
and throat of gall!
There’s
a youth beneath the pall.
And the Serpent replied:
Brilliant
eye! bloody tear!
He
has fed us for a year.
She squeezed that hairy serpent till
her finger-points whitened in his neck, and he dropped
lifelessly, crying:
Treble-tongues and things of
mud!
Sprang my beauty from his blood?
And the Serpents rose erect, replying:
Yearly one of us must die;
Yearly for us dieth one;
Else the Queen an ugly lie
Lives till all our lives be done!
Bhanavar stood up, and hurried them
to Karatis. When she was alone she fell toward
the floor, repeating, ‘’Tis the Curse!’
Suddenly she thought, ’Yet another year my beauty
shall be nourished by my vengeance, yet another!
And, O Vizier, the kiss shall be thine, the kiss of
doom; for I have doomed thee ere now. Thou, thou
shalt restore me to my beauty: that only love
I now my Prince is lost.’
So she veiled her face in the close
veil of the virtuous, and despatched Ukleet, whom
she exalted in the palace of the King, to the Vizier;
and Ukleet stood before Aswarak, and said, ’O
Vizier, my mistress truly is longing for you with
excessive longing, and in what she now undergoeth is
forgotten an evil done by you to her; and she bids
you come and concert with her a scheme deliberately
as to the getting rid of this tyrant who is an affliction
to her, and her life is lessened by him.’
The Vizier was deceived by his passion,
and he chuckled and exclaimed, ’My very dream!
and to mind me of her, then, she sent the serpents!
Wullahy, in the matter of women, wait! For, as
the poet declareth:
’Tis vanity our
souls for such to vex;
Patience is a harvest
of the sex.’’
And they fret themselves not overlong
for husbands that are gone, these young beauties.
I know them. Tell the Queen of Serpents I am even
hers to the sole of my foot.’
So it was understood between them
that the Vizier should be at the gate of the garden
of the palace that night, disguised; and the Vizier
rejoiced, thinking, ’If she have not the Jewel
with her, it shall go ill with me, and I foiled this
time!’
Ukleet then proceeded to the house
of Boolp the broker, fronting the gutted ruins where
Bhanavar had been happy in her innocence with Almeryl,
the mountain prince, her husband. Boolp was engaged
haggling with a slave-merchant the price of a fair
slave, and Ukleet said to him,’Yet awhile delay,
O Boolp, ere you expend a fraction of treasure, for
truly a mighty bargain of jewels is waiting for you
at the palace of my lord the King. So come thither
with all your money-bags of gold and silver, and your
securities, and your bonds and dues in writing, for
’tis the favourite of the King requireth you
to complete a bargain with her, and the price of her
jewels is the price of a kingdom.’
Said Boolp, ‘Hearing is compliance in such a
case.’
And Ukleet continued, ’What
a fortune is yours, O Boolp! truly the tide of fortune
setteth into your lap. Fail not, wullahy! to come
with all you possess, or if you have not enough when
she requireth it to complete the bargain, my mistress
will break off with you. I know not if she intend
even other game for you, O lucky one!’
Boolp hitched his girdle and shrugged,
saying, ’’Tis she will fail, I wot, she,
in having therewith to complete the bargain between
us. Wa! wa! there! I’ve
done this before now. Wullahy! if she have not
enough of her rubies and pearls to outweigh me and
my gold, go to, Boolp will school her! What says
the poet?
’’Earth and ocean search,
East, West, and North, to the South,
None will match the bright rubies
and pearls of her mouth.’’
’Aha! what? O Ukleet! And he says:
’’The
lovely ones a bargain made
With me, and I
renounced my trade,
Half-ruined; ‘Ah!’
said they, ’return and win!
To even scales ourselves
we will throw in!’’’
How so? But let discreetness
reign and security flourisheth!’
Ukleet nodded at him, and repeated the distich:
Men of worth and men
of wits
Shoot with two arrows,
and make two hits.
So he arranged with Boolp the same
appointment as with the Vizier, and returned to Queen
Bhanavar.
Now, in the dark of night Aswarak
stood within the gate of the palace-garden of Mashalleed
that was ajar, and a hand from a veiled figure reached
to him, and he caught it, in the fulness of his delusion,
crying, ‘Thou, my Queen?’ But the hand
signified silence, and drew him past the tank of the
garden and through a court of the palace into a passage
lit with lamps, and on into a close-curtained chamber,
and beyond a heavy curtain into another, a circular
passage descending between black hangings, and at
the bottom a square vault draped with black, and in
it precious woods burning, oils in censers, and the
odour of ambergris and myrrh and musk floating in
clouds, and the sight of the Vizier was for a time
obscured by the thickness of the incenses floating.
As he became familiar with the place, he saw marked
therein a board spread at one end with viands and
wines, and the nosegay in a water-vase, and cups of
gold and a service of gold, every preparation
for feasting mightily. So the soul of Aswarak
leapt, and he cried, ’Now unveil thyself, O moon
of our meeting, my mistress!’
The voice of Bhanavar answered him,
’Not till we have feasted and drunken, and it
seemeth little in our eyes. Surely the chamber
is secure: could I have chosen one better for
our meeting, O Aswarak?’
Upon that he entreated her to sit
with him to the feast, but she cried, ‘Nay!
delay till the other is come.’
Cried he, ‘Another?’
But she exclaimed, ‘Hush!’
and saying thus went forward to the foot of the passage,
and Boolp was there, following Ukleet, both of them
under a weight of bags and boxes. So she welcomed
the broker, and led him to the feast, he coughing
and wheezing and blinking, unwitting the vexation of
the Vizier, nor that one other than himself was there.
When Boolp heard the voice of the Vizier, in astonishment,
addressing him, he started back and fell upon his
bags, and the task of coaxing him to the board was
as that of haling a distempered beast to the water.
Then they sat and feasted together, and Ukleet with
them; and if Aswarak or Boolp waxed impatient of each
other’s presence, he whispered to them, ’Only
wait! see what she reserveth for you.’
And Bhanavar mused with herself, ’Truly that
reserved shall be not long coming!’ So they drank,
and wine got the mastery of Aswarak, so that he made
no secret of his passion, and began to lean to her
and verse extemporaneously in her ear; and she stinted
not in her replies, answering to his urgency in girlish
guise, sighing behind the veil, as if under love’s
influence. And the Vizier pressed close, and
sang:
’Tis said that love brings
beauty to the cheeks
Of them that love and meet,
but mine are pale;
For merciless disdain on me she
wreaks,
And hides her visage from
my passionate tale:
I have her only, only when she speaks.
Bhanavar,
unveil!
I have thee, and I have thee not!
Like one
Lifted by spirits to a shining
dale
In Paradise, who seeks to leap and
run
And clasp the beauty, but
his foot doth fail,
For he is blind: ah! then more
woful none!
Bhanavar,
unveil!
He thrust the wine-cup to her, and
she lifted it under her veil, and then sang, in answer
to him:
My beauty! for thy worth
Thank
the Vizier!
He gives thee second birth:
Thank
the Vizier!
His blooming form without a fault:
Thank
the Vizier!
Is at thy foot in this blest vault:
Thank
the Vizier!
He knoweth not he telleth such a
truth,
Thank
the Vizier!
That thou, thro’ him, spring’st
fresh in blushing youth:
Thank
the Vizier!
He knoweth little now, but he shall
soon be wise:
Thank
the Vizier!
This meeting bringeth bloom to cheeks
and lips and eyes:
Thank
the Vizier!
O my beloved in this blest vault,
if I love thee for aye,
Thank
the Vizier!
Thine am I, thine! and learns his
soul what it has taught to die,
Thank
the Vizier!
Now, Aswarak divined not her meaning,
and was enraptured with her, and cried, ’Wullahy!
so and such thy love! Thine am I, thine!
And what a music is thy voice, O my mistress!
’Twere a bliss to Eblis in his torment could
he hear it. Life of my head! and is thy beauty
increased by me? Nay, thou flatterer!’
Then he said to her, ’Away with these importunate
dogs! ’tis the very hour of tenderness!
Wullahy! they offend my nostril: stung am I at
the sight of them.’
She rejoined,
O
Aswarak! star of the morn!
Thou that wakenest my beauty from
night and scorn,
Thy
time is near, and when ’tis come,
Long will a jackal howl that this
thy request had been dumb.
O
Aswarak! star of the morn!
So the Vizier imaged in his mind the
neglect of Mashalleed from these words, and said,
’Leave the King to my care, O Queen of Serpents,
and expend no portion of thy power on him; but hasten
now the going of these fellows; my heart is straitened
by them, and I, wullahy! would gladly see a serpent
round the necks of either.’
She continued,
O Aswarak! star of the
morn!
Lo! the star must die when splendider
light is born;
In stronger floods the
beam will drown:
Shrink, thou puny orb, and dread
to bring me my crown,
O Aswarak! star of the
morn!
Then said she, ’Hark awhile
at those two! There’s a disputation between
them.’
So they hearkened, and Ukleet was
pledging Boolp, and passing the cup to him; but a
sullenness had seized the broker, and he refused it,
and Ukleet shouted, ’Out, boon-fellow! and what
a company art thou, that thou refusest the pledge
of friendliness? Plague on all sulkers!’
And the broker, the old miser, obstinate
as are the half-fuddled, began to mumble, ’I
came not here to drink, O Ukleet, but to make a bargain;
and my bags be here, and I like not yonder veil, nor
the presence of yonder Vizier, nor the secresy of
this. Now, by the Prophet and that interdict
of his, I’ll drink no further.’
And Ukleet said, ’Let her not
mark your want of fellowship, or ’twill go ill
with you. Here be fine wines, spirited wines!
choice flavours! and you drink not! Where’s
the soul in you, O Boolp, and where’s the life
in you, that you yield her to the Vizier utterly?
Surely she waiteth a gallant sign from you, so challenge
her cheerily.’
Quoth Boolp, ’I care not.
Shall I leave my wealth and all I possess void of
eyes? and she so that I recognise her not behind the
veil?’
Ukleet pushed the old miser jeeringly:
’You not recognise her? Oh, Boolp, a pretty
dissimulation! Pledge her now a cup to the snatching
of the veil, and bethink you of a fitting verse, a
seemly compliment, something sugary.’
Then Boolp smoothed his head, and
was bothered; and tapped it, and commenced repeating
to Bhanavar:
I saw the
moon behind a cloud,
And I was cold as one
that’s in his shroud:
And
I cried, Moon!
Ukleet chorused him, ‘Moon!’
and Boolp was deranged in what he had to say, and
gasped,
Moon! I cried,
Moon! and I cried, Moon!
Then the Vizier and Ukleet laughed
till they fell on their backs; so Bhanavar took up
his verse where he left it, singing,
And to
the cry
Moon did make fair the following reply:
’Dotard, be still! for thy desire
Is to embrace consuming fire.’
Then said Boolp, ’O my mistress,
the laws of conviviality have till now restrained
me; but my coming here was on business, and with me
my bags, in good faith. So let us transact this
matter of the jewels, and after that the song of
’’Thou and
I
A cup will try,’’
even as thou wilt.’
Bhanavar threw aside her outer robe
and veil, and appeared in a dress of sumptuous blue,
spotted with gold bees; her face veiled with a veil
of gauzy silver, and she was as the moon in summer
heavens, and strode mar jestically forward, saying,
’The jewels? ‘tis but one. Behold!’
The lamps were extinguished, and in
her hand was the glory of the Serpent Jewel, no other
light save it in the vaulted chamber.
So the old miser perked his chin and
brows, and cried wondering, ’I know it, this
Jewel, O my mistress.’
She turned to the Vizier, and said,
lifting the red gloom of the Jewel on him, ‘And
thou?’
Aswarak ate his under-lip.
Then she cried, ‘There’s much ye know
in common, ye two.’
Thereupon Bhanavar passed from the
feast on to the centre of the vault, and stood before
the tomb of Almeryl, and drew the cloth from it; and
they saw by the glow of the Jewel that it was a tomb.
When she had mounted some steps at the side of the
tomb, she beckoned them to come, crying, in a voice
of sobs, ‘This which is here, likewise ye may
know.’
So they came with the coldness of
a mystery in their blood, and looked as she looked
intently over a tomb. The lid was of glass, and
through the glass of the lid the Jewel flung a dark
rosy ray on the body of Almeryl lying beneath it.
Now, the miser was perplexed at the
sight; but Aswarak stepped backward in defiance, bellowing,
’’Twas for this I was tricked to come here!
Is ’t fooling me a second time? By Allah!
look to it; not a second time will Aswarak be fooled.’
Then she ran to him, and exclaimed,
‘Fooled? For what cam’st thou to me?’
And he, foaming and grinding his breath,
’Thou woman of wiles! thou serpent! but I’ll
be gone from here.’
So she faltered in sweetness, knowing
him doomed, and loving to dally with him in her wickedness,
‘Indeed if thou cam’st not for my kiss ’
Then said the Vizier, ’Yet a
further guile! Was’t not an outrage to bring
me here?’
She faltered again, leaning the fair
length of her limbs on a couch, ’’Tis
ill that we are not alone, else could these lips convince
thee well: else indeed!’
And the Vizier cried, ’Chase
then these intruders from us, O thou sorceress, and
above all serpents in power! for thou poisonest with
a touch; and the eye and the ear alike take in thy
poisons greedily. Thou overcomest the senses,
the reason, the judgment; yea, vindictiveness, wrath,
suspicions; leading the soul captive with a breath
of thine, as ‘twere a breeze from the gardens
of bliss.’
Bhanavar changed her manner a little,
lisping, ’And why that starting from the tomb
of a dead harmless youth? And that abuse of me?’
He peered at her inquiringly, echoing ‘Why?’
And she repeated, as a child might repeat it, ‘Why
that?’
Then the Vizier smote his forehead
in the madness of utter perplexity, changing his eye
from Bhanavar to the tomb of Almeryl, doubting her
truth, yet dreading to disbelieve it. So she saw
him fast enmeshed in her subtleties, and clapped her
hands crying, ’Come again with me to the tomb,
and note if there be aught I am to blame in, O Aswarak,
and plight thyself to me beside it.’
He did nothing save to widen his eye
at her somewhat; and she said, ’The two are
yonside the tomb, and they hear us not, and see us
not by this light of the Jewel; so come up to it boldly
with me; free thy mind of its doubt, and for a reconcilement
kiss me on the way.’
Aswarak moved not forward; but as
Bhanavar laid the Jewel in her bosom he tore the veil
from her darkened head, and caught her to him and kissed
her. Then Bhanavar laughed and shouted, ’How
is it with thee, Vizier Aswarak?’
He was tottering, and muttered, ’’Tis
a death-chill hath struck me even to my marrow.’
So she drew the Jewel forth once more,
and rubbed it ablaze, and the noise of the Serpents
neared; and they streamed into the vault and under
it in fiery jets, surrounding Bhanavar, and whizzing
about her till in their velocity they were indivisible;
and she stood as a fountain of fire clothed in flashes
of the underworld, the new loveliness of her face
growing vivid violet like an incessant lightning above
them. Then stretched she her two hands, and sang
to the Serpents:
Hither,
hither, to the feast!
Hither
to the sacrifice!
Virtue
for my sake hath ceased:
Now
to make an end of Vice!
Twisted-tail
and treble-tongue,
Swelling
length and greedy maw!
I
have had a horrid wrong;
Retribution
is the law!
Ye
that suck’d my youthful lord,
Now
shall make another meal:
Seize
the black Vizier abhorr’d;
Seize
him! seize him throat and heel!
Set
your serpent wits to find
Tortures
of a new device:
Have
him! have him heart and mind!
Hither
to the sacrifice’
Then she whirled with them round and
round as a tempest whirls; and when she had wound
them to a fury, lo, she burst from the hissing circle
and dragged Ukleet from the vault into the passage,
and blocked the entrance to the vault. So was
Queen Bhanavar avenged.
Now, she said to Ukleet, ’Ransom
presently the broker, him they will not
harm,’ and hastened to the King that he might
see her in her beauty. The King reclined on cushions
in the harem with a fair slave-girl, newly from the
mountains, toying with the pearls in her locks.
Then thought Bhanavar, ‘Let him not slight me!’
So she drew a rose-coloured veil over her face and
sat beside Mashalleed. The King continued his
fondling with the girl, saying to her, ’Was
there no destiny foretold of thy coming to the palace
of the King to rule it, O Nashta, starbeam in the waters!
and hadst thou no dream of it?’
Bhanavar struck the King’s arm,
but he noticed her not, and Nashta laughed. Then
Bhanavar controlled her trembling and said, ’A
word, O King! and vouchsafe me a hearing.’
The King replied languidly, still
looking on Nashta, ’’Tis a command that
the voice of none that are crabbed and hideous be heard
in the harem, and I find comfort in it, O Nashta!
but speak thou, my fountain of sweet-dropping lute-notes!’
Bhanavar caught the King’s hand
and said, ’I have to speak with thee; ‘tis
the Queen. Chase from us this little wax puppet
a space.’
The King disengaged his hand and leaned
it over to Nashta, who began playing with it, and
fitting on it a ring, giggling. Then, as he answered
nothing, Bhanavar came nearer and slapped him on the
cheek. Mashalleed started to his feet, and his
hand grasped his girdle; but that wrathfulness was
stayed when he beheld the veil slide from her visage.
So he cried, ‘My Queen! my soul!’
She pointed to Nashta, and the King
chid the girl, and sent her forth lean with his shifted
displeasure, as a kitten slinks wet from a fish-pond
where it had thought to catch a great fish. Then
Bhanavar exclaimed, ‘There was a change in thy
manner to me before that creature.’
He sought to dissimulate with her,
but at last he confessed, ’I was truly this
morning the victim of a sorcery.’
Thereupon she cried, ’And thou
went angered to find me not by thee on the couch,
but one in my place, a hag of ugliness. Hear then
the case, O Mashalleed! Surely that old crone
had a dream, and it was that if she slept one night
by the King she would arise fresh in health from her
ills, and with powers lasting a year to heal others
of all maladies with a touch. So she came to
me, petitioning me to bring this about. O my lord
the King, did I well in being privy to her desire?’
The King could not doubt this story
of Bhanavar, seeing her constant loveliness, and the
arch of her flashing brow, and the oval of her cheek
and chin smooth as milk. So he said, ’O
my Queen! I had thought to go, as I must, gladly;
but how shall I go, knowing thy truth, thy beauty
unchanged; thee faithful, a follower of the injunctions
of the Prophet in charitable deeds?’
Cried she, ‘And whither goeth
my lord, and on what errand?’
He answered, ’The people of
a province southward have raised the standard of revolt
and mocked my authority; they have been joined by certain
of the Arab chiefs subject to my dominion, and have
defeated my armies. ’Tis to subdue them
I go; yea, to crush them. Yet, wallaby! I
know not. Care I if kingdoms fall away, and nations,
so that I have thee? Nay, let all pass, so that
thou remain by me.’
Bhanavar paced from him to a mirror,
and frowned at the reflection of her fairness, thinking,
’Such had he spoken to the girl Nashta, or another,
this King!’ And she thought, ’I have been
beloved by the noblest three on earth; I will ask
no more of love; vengeance I have had. ’Tis
time that I demand of my beauty nothing save power,
and I will make this King my stepping-stone to power,
rejoicing my soul with the shock of armies.’
Now, she persuaded Mashalleed to take
her with him on his expedition against the Arabs;
and they set forth, heading a great assemblage of
warriors, southward to the land bordering the Desert.
The King credited the suggestions of Bhanavar, that
Aswarak had disappeared to join the rebels, and pressed
forward in his eagerness to inflict a chastisement
signal in swiftness upon them and that traitor; so
eagerly Mashalleed journeyed to his army in advance,
that the main body, with Bhanavar, was left by him
long behind. She had encouraged him, saying, ’I
shall love thee much if thou art speedy in winning
success.’ The Queen was housed on an elephant,
harnessed with gold, and with silken purple trappings;
from the rose-hued curtains of her palanquin she looked
on a mighty march of warriors, filling the extent
of the plains; all day she fed her sight on them.
Surely the story of her beauty became noised among
the guards of her person that rode and ran beneath
the royal elephant, till the soldiers of Mashalleed
spake but of the beauty of the Queen, and Bhanavar
was as a moon shining over that sea of men.
Now, they had passed the cultivated
fields, and were halting by the ford of a river bordering
the Desert, when lo! a warrior on the yonside, riding
in a cloud of dust, and his shout was, ’The King
Mashalleed is defeated, and flying.’ Then
the Captains of the host witnessed to the greatness
of Allah, and were troubled with a dread, fearing to
advance; but Bhanavar commanded a horse to be saddled
for her, and mounted it, and plunged through the ford
singly; so they followed her, and all day she rode
forward on horseback, touching neither food nor drink.
By night she was a league beyond the foremost of them,
and fell upon the King encamped in the Desert, with
the loose remnant of his forces. Mashalleed, when
he had looked on her, forgot his affliction, and stood
up to embrace her, but Bhanavar spurned him, crying,
’A time for this in the time of disgrace?’
Then she said, ‘How came it?’
He answered, ’There was a Chief
among the enemy, an Arab, before the terror of whom
my people fled.’
Cried she, ’Conquer him on the
morrow, and till then I eat not, drink not, sleep
not.’
On the morrow Mashalleed again encountered
the rebels, and Bhanavar, seated on her elephant,
from a sand-hillock under a palm, beheld the prowess
of the Arab Chief and the tempest of battle that he
was. She thought, ’I have seen but one
mighty in combat like that one, Ruark, the Chief of
the Beni-Asser.’ Thereupon she coursed
toward the King, even where the arrows gloomed like
locusts, thick and dark in the air aloof, and said,
’The victory is with yonder Chief! Hurl
on him three of thy sons of valour.’
The three were selected, and made
onslaught on this Chief, and perished under his arm.
Bhanavar saw them fall, and exclaimed,
’Another attack on him, and with thrice three!’
Her will was the mandate of Mashalleed,
and these likewise were ordered forth, and closed
on the Chief, but he darted from their toils and wheeled
about them, spearing them one by one till the nine
were in the dust. Bhanavar compressed her dry
lips and muttered to the King, ’Head thou a
body against him.’
Mashalleed gathered round his standard
the chosen of his warriors, and smoothed his beard,
and headed them. Then the Chief struck his lance
behind him, and stretched rapidly a half-circle across
the sand, and halted on a knoll. When they neared
him he retreated in a further half-circle, and continued
this wise, wasting the fury of Mashalleed, till he
stood among his followers. There, as the King
hesitated and prepared to retreat, he and the others
of the tribe levelled their lances and hung upon his
rear, fretting them, slaughtering captains of the
troop. When Mashalleed turned to face his pursuer,
the Chief was alone, immovable on his mare, fronting
the ranks. Then Bhanavar taunted the King, and
he essayed the capture of that Chief a second time
and a third, and it was each time as the first.
Bhanavar looked about her with rapid eyes, murmuring,
’Oh, what a Chief is he! Oh that a cloud
would fall, a smoke arise, to blind these hosts, that
I might sling my serpents on him unseen, for I will
not be vanquished, though it be by Ruark!’ So
she drew to the King, and the altercation between
them was fierce in the fury of the battle, he saying,
’’Tis a feint of the Chief, this challenge;
and I must succour the left of my army by the well,
that he is overmatching with numbers’; and she,
’If thou head them not, then will I, and thou
shalt behold a woman do what thou durst not, and lose
her love and win her scorn.’ While they
spake the Arabs they looked on seemed to flutter and
waver, and the Chief was backing to them, calling to
them as ’twere words of shame to rally them.
Seeing this, Mashalleed charged against the Chief
once more, and lo! the Arabs opened to receive him,
closing on his band of warriors like waters whitened
by the storm on a fleet of swift-scudding vessels:
and there was a dust and a tumult visible, such as
is seen in the darkness when a vessel struck by the
lightning-bolt is sinking flashes of steel,
lifting of hands, rolling of horsemen and horses.
Then Bhanavar groaned aloud, ’They are lost!
Shame to us! only one hope is left-that ‘tis
Ruark, this Chief!’ Now, the view of the plain
cleared, and with it she beheld the army of Mashalleed
broken, the King borne down by a dust of Arabs; so
she unveiled her face and rode on the host with the
horsemen that guarded her, glorious with a crown of
gold and the glowing Jewel on her brow. When
she was a javelin’s flight from them the Arabs
shouted and paused in terror, for the light of her
head was as the sun setting between clouds of thunder;
but that Chief dashed forward like a flame beaten
level by the wind, crying, ’Bhanavar; Bhanavar!’
and she knew the features of Ruark; so she said, ‘Even
I!’ And he cried again, ‘Bhanavar!
Bhanavar!’ and was as one stricken by a shaft.
Then Bhanavar threw on him certain of the horsemen
with her, and he suffered them without a sign to surround
him and grasp his mare by the bridle-rein, and bring
him, disarmed, before the Queen. At sight of Ruark
a captive the Arabs fell into confusion, and lost heart,
and were speedily chased and scattered from the scene
like a loose spray before the wind; but Mashalleed
the King rejoiced mightily and praised Bhanavar, and
the whole army of the King praised her, magnifying
her.
Now, with Ruark she interchanged no
syllable, and said not farewell to him when she departed
with Mashalleed, to encounter other tribes; and the
Chief was bound and conducted a prisoner to the city
of the inland sea, and cast into prison, in expectation
of Death the releaser, and continued there wellnigh
a year, eating the bitter bread of captivity.
In the evening of every seventh day there came to
him a little mountain girl, that sat by him and leaned
a lute to her bosom, singing of the mountain and the
desert, but he turned his face from her to the wall.
One day she sang of Death the releaser, and Ruark
thought, ’’Tis come! she warneth me!
Merciful is Allah!’ On the morning that followed
Ukleet entered the cell, and with him three slaves,
blacks, armed with scimitars. So Ruark stood
up and bore witness to his faith, saying, ‘Swift
with the stroke!’ but Ukleet exclaimed, ‘Fear
not! the end is not yet.’
Then said he, ’Peace with thee!
These slaves, O Chief, excelling in martial qualities!
surely they’re my retinue, and the retinue of
them of my rank in the palace; and where I go they
go; for the exalted have more shadows than one! yea,
three have they in my case, even very grimly black
shadows, whereon the idle expend not laughter, and
whoso joketh in their hearing, ’tis, wullahy!
the last joke of that person. In such-wise are
the powerful known among men, they that stand very
prominent in the beams of prosperity! Now this
of myself; but for thee of a surety the
Queen Bhanavar, my mistress, will be here by the time
of the rising of the moon. In the name of Allah!’
Saying that he departed in his greatness, and Ruark
watched for her that rose in his soul as the moon in
the heavens.
Meanwhile Bhanavar had mused, ’’Tis
this day, the day when the Serpents desire their due,
and the King Mashalleed they shall have; for what is
life to him but a treachery and a dalliance, and what
is my hold on him but this Jewel of the Serpents?
He has had the profit of beauty, and he shall yield
the penalty: my kiss is for him, my serpent-kiss.
And I will release Ruark, and espouse him, and war
with kings, sultans, emperors, infidels, subduing
them till they worship me.’
She flashed her figure in the glass,
and was lovely therein as one in the light of Paradise;
but ere she reached the King Mashalleed, lo! the hour
of the Serpents had struck, and her beauty melted from
her as snow melts from off the rock; and she was suddenly
haggard in utter uncomeliness, and knew it not, but
marched, smiling a grand smile, on to the King.
Now as Mashalleed lifted his eyes to her he started
amazed, crying, ’The hag again!’ and she
said, ‘What of the hag, O my lord the King?’
Thereat he was yet more amazed, and exclaimed, ’The
hag of ugliness with the voice of Bhanavar! Has
then the Queen lent that loathsomeness her voice also?’
Bhanavar chilled a moment, and looked
on the faces of the women present, and they were staring
at her, the younger ones tittering, and among them
Nashta, whom she hated. So she cried, ‘Away
with ye!’ But the King commanded them, ‘Stay!’
Then the Queen leaned to him, saying, ’I will
speak with my lord alone’; whereat he shrank
from her, and spat. Ice and flame shivered through
the blood of Bhanavar, yet such was her eagerness
to give the kiss to Mashalleed, that she leaned to
him, still wooing him to her with smiles. Then
the King seized her violently, and flung her over
the marble floor to the very basin of the fountain,
and the crown that was on her brow fell and rolled
to the feet of Nashta. The girl lifted it, laughing,
and was in the act of fitting it to her fair head
amid the chuckles of her companions, when a slap from
the hand of Bhanavar spun her twice round, and she
dropped to the marble insensible. The King bellowed
in wrath, and ran to Nashta, crying to the Queen,
‘Surrender that crown to her, foul hag!’
But Bhanavar had bent over the basin of the fountain,
and beheld the image of her change therein, and was
hurrying from the hall and down the corridors of the
palace to the private chamber. So he made bare
the steel by his side, and followed her with a number
of the harem guard, menacing her, and commanding her
to surrender the crown with the Jewel. Ere she
could lay hand on a veil, he was beside her, and she
was encompassed. In that extremity Bhanavar plucked
the Jewel from her crown, and rubbed it, calling the
Serpents to her. One came, one only, and that
one would not move from her to sling himself about
the neck of Mashalleed, but whirled round her, hissing:
Every
hour a serpent dies,
Till
we have the sacrifice:
Sweeten,
sweeten, with thy kiss,
Quick!
a soul for Karatis.
Surely the King bit his breath, marvelling,
and his fury became an awful fear, and he fell back
from her, molesting her no further. Then she
squeezed the serpent till his body writhed in knots,
and veiled herself, and sprang down a secret passage
to the garden, and it was the time of the rising of
the moon. Coolness and soothingness dropped on
her as a balm from the great light, and she gazed
on it murmuring, as in a memory:
Shall I counsel the
moon in her ascending?
Stay under that dark
palm-tree through the night,
Rest
on the mountain slope,
By
the couching antelope,
O thou enthroned supremacy
of light!
And for ever the
lustre thou art lending
Lean on the fair long
brook that leaps and leaps,
Silvery
leaps and falls:
Hang
by the mountain-walls,
Moon! and arise no more
to crown the steeps,
For a danger and
dolour is thy wending!
And she panted and sighed, and wept,
crying, ’Who, who will kiss me or have my kiss
now, that I may indeed be as yonder beam? Who,
that I may be avenged on this King? And who sang
that song of the ascending of the moon, that comes
to me as a part of me from old times?’ As she
gazed on the circled radiance swimming under a plume
of palm leaves, she exclaimed, ‘Ruark!
Ruark the Chief!’ So she clasped her hands to
her bosom, and crouched under the shadows of the garden,
and fled through the garden gates and the streets
of the city, heavily veiled, to the prison where Ruark
awaited her within the walls and Ukleet without.
The Governor of the prison had been warned by Ukleet
of her coming, and the doors and bars opened before
her unchallenged, till she stood in the cell of Ruark;
her eyes, that were alone unveiled, scanned the countenance
of the Chief, the fevered lustre-jet of his looks,
and by the little moonlight in the cell she saw with
a glance the straw-heap and the fetters, and the black-bread
and water untasted on the bench signs of
his misery and desire for her coming. So she
greeted him with the word of peace, and he replied
with the name of the All-Merciful. Then said she,
’O Ruark, of Rukrooth thy mother tell me somewhat.’
He answered, ’I know nought
of her since that day. Allah have her in his
keeping!’
So she cried, ’How? What
say’st thou, Ruark? ‘tis a riddle.’
Then he, ’The oath of Ruark
is no rope of sand! He swore to see her not till
he had set eyes on Bhanavar.’
She knelt by the Chief, saying in
a soft voice, ’Very greatly the Chief of the
Beni-Asser loved Bhanavar.’ And she
thought, ’Yea! greatly and verily love I him;
and he shall be no victim of the Serpents, for I defy
them and give them other prey.’ So she said
in deeper notes, ’Ruark! the Queen is come hither
to release thee. O my Chief! O thou soul
of wrath! Ruark, my fire-eye! my eagle of the
desert! where is one on earth beloved as thou art
by Bhanavar?’ The dark light in his eyes kindled
as light in the eyes of a lion, and she continued,
’Ruark, what a yoke is hers who weareth this
crown! He that is my lord, how am I mated to him
save in loathing? O my Chief, my lion! hadst
thou no dream of Bhanavar, that she would come hither
to unbind thee and lift thee beside her, and live with
thee in love and veilless loveliness, thine?
Yea! and in power over lands and nations and armies,
lording the infidel, taming them to submission, exulting
in defiance and assaults and victories and magnanimities thou
and she?’ Then while his breast heaved like a
broad wave, the Queen started to her feet, crying,
’Lo, she is here! and this she offereth thee,
Ruark!’
A shrill cry parted from her lips,
and to the clapping of her hands slaves entered the
cell with lamps, and instruments to strike off the
fetters from the Chief; and they released him, and
Ruark leaned on their shoulders to bear the weight
of a limb, so was he weakened by captivity; but Bhanavar
thrust them from the Chief, and took the pressure of
his elbow on her own shoulder, and walked with him
thus to the door of the cell, he sighing as one in
a dream that dreameth the bliss of bliss. Now
they had gone three paces onward, and were in the light
of many lamps, when behold! the veil of Bhanavar caught
in the sleeve of Ruark as he lifted it, and her visage
became bare. She shrieked, and caught up her
two hands to her brow, but the slaves had a glimpse
of her, and said among themselves, ‘This is
not the Queen.’ And they murmured, ’’Tis
an impostor! one in league with the Chief.’
Bhanavar heard them say, ’Arrest her with him
at the Governor’s gate,’ and summoned her
soul, thinking, ’He loveth me, the Chief! he
will look into my eyes and mark not the change.
What need I then to dread his scorn when I ask of him
the kiss: now must it be given, or we are lost,
both of us!’ and she raised her head on Ruark,
and said to him, ’my Chief, ere we leave these
walls and join our fates, wilt thou plight thyself
to me with a kiss?’
Ruark leapt to her like the bounding
leopard, and gave her the kiss, as were it his whole
soul he gave. Then in a moment Bhanavar felt the
blush of beauty burn over her, and drew the veil down
on her face, and suffered the slaves to arrest her
with Ruark, and bring her before the Governor, and
from the Governor to the King in his council-chamber,
with the Chief of the Beni-Asser.
Now, the King Mashalleed called to
her, ’Thou traitress! thou sorceress! thou serpent!’
And she answered under the veil, ’What,
O my lord the King! and wherefore these evil names
of me?’
Cried he, ’Thou thing of guile!
and thou hast pleaded with me for the life of the
Chief thus long to visit him in secret! Life of
my head I but Mashalleed is not one to be fooled.’
So she said, ‘’Tis Bhanavar! hast thou
forgotten her?’
Then he waxed white with rage, exclaiming,
’Yea, ’tis she! a serpent in the slough!
and Ukleet in the torture hath told of thee what is
known to him. Unveil! unveil!’
She threw the veil from her figure,
and smiled, for Mashalleed was mute, the torrent of
invective frozen on his mouth when he beheld the miracle
of beauty that she was, the splendid jewel of throbbing
loveliness. So to scourge him with the bitter
lash of jealousy, Bhanavar turned her eyes on Ruark,
and said sweetly, ’Yet shalt thou live to taste
again the bliss of the Desert. Pleasant was our
time in it, O my Chief!’ The King glared and
choked, and she said again, ’Nor he conquered
thee, but I; and I that conquered thee, little will
it be for me to conquer him: his threats are
the winds of idleness.’
Surely the world darkened before the
eyes of Mashalleed, and he arose and called to his
guard hoarsely, ‘Have off their heads!’
They hesitated, dreading the Queen, and he roared,
‘Slay them!’
Bhanavar beheld the winking of the
steel, but ere the scimitars descended, she seized
Ruark, and they stood in a whizzing ring of serpents,
the sound of whom was as the hum of a thousand wires
struck by storm-winds. Then she glowed, towering
over them with the Chief clasped to her, and crying:
King of vileness! match
thy slaves
With my creatures of
the caves.
And she sang to the Serpents:
Seize upon him! sting
him thro’!
Thrice this day shall
pay your due.
But they, instead of obeying her injunction,
made narrower their circle round Bhanavar and the
Chief. She yellowed, and took hold of the nearest
Serpent horribly, crying:
Dare
against me to rebel,
Ye,
the bitter brood of hell?
And the Serpent gasped in reply:
One
the kiss to us secures:
Give
us ours, and we are yours.
Thereupon another of the Serpents
swung on, the feet of Ruark, winding his length upward
round the body of the Chief; so she tugged at that
one, tearing it from him violently, and crying:
Him
ye shall not have, I swear!
Seize
the King that’s crouching there.
And that Serpent hissed:
This
is he the kiss ensures:
Give
us ours, and we are yours.
Another and another Serpent she flung
from the Chief, and they began to swarm venomously,
answering her no more. Then Ruark bore witness
to his faith, and folded his arms with the grave smile
she had known in the desert; and Bhanavar struggled
and tussled with the Serpents in fierceness, strangling
and tossing them to right and left. ’Great
is Allah!’ cried all present, and the King trembled,
for never was sight like that seen, the hall flashing
with the Serpents, and a woman-serpent, their Queen,
raging to save one from their fury, shrieking at intervals:
Never,
never shall ye fold,
Save
with me the man I hold.
But now the hiss and scream of the
Serpents and the noise of their circling was quickened
to a slurred savage sound and they closed on Ruark,
and she felt him stifling and that they were relentless.
So in the height of the tempest Bhanavar seized the
Jewel in the gold circlet on her brow and cast it
from her. Lo! the Serpents instantly abated their
frenzy, and flew all of them to pluck the Jewel, chasing
the one that had it in his fangs through the casement,
and the hall breathed empty of them. Then in
the silence that was, Bhanavar veiled her face and
said to the Chief, ’Pass from the hall while
they yet dread me. No longer am I Queen of Serpents.’
But he replied, ‘Nay! said I not my soul is
thine?’
She cried to him, ’Seest thou
not the change in me? I was bound to those Serpents
for my beauty, and ’tis gone! Now am I powerless,
hateful to look on, O Ruark my Chief!’
He remained still, saying, ‘What
thou hast been thou art.’
She exclaimed, ’O true soul,
the light is hateful to me as I to the light; but
I will yet save thee to comfort Rukrooth, thy mother.’
So she drew him with her swiftly from
the hall of the King ere the King had recovered his
voice of command; but now the wrath of the All-powerful
was upon her and him! Surely within an hour from
the flight of the Serpents, the slaves and soldiers
of Mashalleed laid at his feet two heads that were
the heads of Ruark and Bhanavar; and they said, ’O
great King, we tracked them to her chamber and through
to a passage and a vault hung with black, wherein
were two corpses, one in a tomb and one unburied,
and we slew them there, clasping each other, O King
of the age!’
Mashalleed gazed upon the head of
Bhanavar and sighed, for death had made the head again
fair with a wondrous beauty, a loveliness never before
seen on earth.