Though the night was far advanced,
yet the eyes of HAMET were strangers to sleep:
his fancy incessantly repeated the events that had
just happened; the image of Almeida was ever
before him; and his breast throbbed with a disquietude,
which, though it prevented rest, he did not wish to
lose.
ALMORAN, in the mean time, was slumbering
away the effects of his intemperance; and in the morning,
when he was told what had happened, he expressed no
passion but curiosity: he went hastily into the
garden; but when he had gazed upon the ruins, and
enquired how the fire began, and what it had consumed,
he thought of it no more.
But HAMET suffered nothing that regarded
himself, to exclude others from his attention:
he went again to the ruins, not to gratify his curiosity,
but to see what might yet be done to alleviate the
misery of the sufferers, and secure for their use
what had been preserved from the flames. He found
that no life had been lost, but that many persons had
been hurt; to these he sent the physicians of his own
houshold: and having rewarded those who had assisted
them in their distress, not forgetting even the soldiers
who had only fulfilled his own orders, he returned,
and applied himself to dispatch the public business
in the chamber of council, with the same patient and
diligent attention as if nothing had happened.
He had, indeed, ordered enquiry to be made after Almeida;
and when he returned to his apartment, he found Abdallah
waiting to express his gratitude for the obligations
he had received.
HAMET accepted his acknowledgements
with a peculiar pleasure, for they had some connexion
with Almeida; after whom he again enquired, with
an ardour uncommon even to the benevolence of HAMET.
When all his questions had been asked and answered,
he appeared still unwilling to dismiss Abdallah, though
he seemed at a loss how to detain him; he wanted to
know, whether his daughter had yet received an offer
of marriage, though he was unwilling to discover his
desire by a direct enquiry: but he soon found,
that nothing could be known, which was not directly
asked, from a man whom reverence and humility kept
silent before him, except when something was said
which amounted to a command to speak. At length,
however, he said, not without some hesitation, ’Is
there no one, Abdallah, who will thank me for the
preservation of thy daughter, with a zeal equal to
thy own?’ ‘Yes,’ replied Abdallah,
’that daughter whom thou hast preserved.’
This reply, though it was unexpected was pleasing:
for HAMET was not only gratified to hear, that Almeida
had expressed herself warmly in his behalf, at least
as a benefactor; but he judged, that if any man had
been interested in her life as a lover, the answer
which Abdallah had given him would not so readily have
occurred to his mind.
As this reflection kept HAMET a few
moments silent, Abdallah withdrew; and HAMET, as he
observed some marks of haste and confusion in his
countenance, was unwilling longer to continue him in
a situation, which he had now reason to think gave
him pain. But Abdallah, who had conceived a sudden
thought that HAMET’S question was an indirect
reproach of Almeida, for not having herself solicited
admission to his presence; went in haste to her apartment,
and ordered her immediately to make ready to attend
him to the king.
Almeida, from whose mind the
image of HAMET had not been absent a moment since
she first saw him, received this order with a mixture
of pain and pleasure; of wishes, hopes, and apprehensions,
that filled her bosom with emotion, and covered her
face with blushes. She had not courage to ask
the reason of the command, which she instantly prepared
to obey; but the tenderness of Abdallah, who perceived
and pitied her distress, anticipated her wish.
In a short time, therefore, he returned to the chamber
of presence, and having received permission, he entered
with Almeida in his hand. HAMET rose in
haste to receive her, with a glow of pleasure and
impatience in his countenance; and having raised her
from the ground, supported her in his arms, waiting
to hear her voice; but though she made many attempts,
she could not speak. HAMET, who knew not to what
he owed this sudden and unexpected interview, which,
though he wished, he could contrive no means to obtain;
imagined that Almeida had some request, and therefore
urged her tenderly to make it: but as she still
remained silent, he looked at Abdallah, as expecting
to hear it from him. ‘We have no wish,’
said Abdallah, ’but to atone for our offence;
nor any request, but that my lord would now accept
the thanks of Almeida for the life which he has
preserved, and impute the delay, not to ingratitude,
but inadvertence: let me now take her back, as
thy gift; and let the light of thy favour be upon
us.’ ‘Take her then,’ said
HAMET; ‘for I would give her only to thee.’
These words of HAMET did not escape
the notice either of Abdallah or Almeida; but
neither of them mentioned their conjectures to the
other. Almeida, who was inclined to judge
of HAMET’S situation by her own, and who recollected
many little incidents, known only to herself, which
favoured her wishes; indulged the hope, that she should
again hear of HAMET, with more confidence than her
father; nor were her expectations disappointed.
HAMET reflected with pleasure, that he had prepared
the way for a more explicit declaration; and as his
impatience increased with his passion every hour,
he sent for Abdallah the next morning, and told him,
that he wished to be more acquainted with his daughter,
with a view to make her his wife: ’As neither
you nor your daughter are my subjects,’ says
HAMET, ’I cannot command you; and if you were,
upon this occasion I would not. I do not want
a slave, but a friend; not merely a woman, but a wife.
If I find Almeida such as my fancy has feigned
her; if her mind corresponds with her form; and if
I have reason to think, that she can give her heart
to HAMET, and not merely her hand to the king; I shall
be happy.’ To this declaration, Abdallah
replied with expressions of the profoundest submission
and gratitude; and HAMET dismissed him, to prepare
Almeida to receive him in the afternoon of the
same day.