near him and asked him,
saying: "O my son, an thou sense aught of pain
or suchlike, let me know, that I may fare forth and fetch thee the
physician. And today there be in this our city a leech from the land
of the Arabs whom the Sultan hath sent to
summon, and the bruit abroad
reporteth him to be
skillfulexceedingly. So, an be thou ill, let me
go and bring him to thee." Aladdin,
hearing his parent's offer to
summon the mediciner, said: "O my mother, I am well in body and on
no wise ill. But I ever thought that all women resembled thee until
yesterday, when I
beheld the Lady Badr al-Budur, daughter of the
Sultan, as she was faring for the baths."
Then he
related to her all and everything that had happened to
him, adding: "Haply thou also hast heard the crier a-crying: 'Let no
man open shop or stand in street that the Lady Badr al-Budur may
repair to the hammam without eye
seeing her.' But I have looked upon
her even as she is, for she raised her veil at the door, and when I
viewed her favor and
beheld that noble work of the Creator, a sore fit
of
ecstasy, O my mother, fell upon me for love of her, and firm
resolve to win her hath opened its way into every limb of me, nor is
repose possible for me except I win her. Wherefor I purpose asking her
to wife from the Sultan, her sire, in
lawful wedlock." When
Aladdin's mother heard her son's words, she belittled his wits and
cried: "O my child, the name of Allah upon thee! Meseemeth thou hast
lost thy senses. But be thou
rightly guided, O my son, nor be thou
as the men Jinn-maddened!" He replied: "Nay, O mother of mine, I am
not out of my mind, nor am I of the maniacs, nor shall this thy
sayingalter one jot of what is in my thoughts. For rest is impossible to
me until I shall have won the dearling of my heart's core, the
beautiful Lady Badr al-Budur. And now I am
resolved to ask her of
her sire the Sultan."
She rejoined: "O my son, by my life upon thee, speak not such
speech, lest any
overhear thee and say thou be
insane. So cast away
from thee such nonsense! Who shall
undertake a matter like this, or
make such request to the King? Indeed, I know not how, supposing thy
speech to be soothfast, thou shalt manage to crave such grace of the
Sultan, or through whom thou desirest to propose it." He retorted:
"Through whom shall I ask it, O my mother, when thou art present?
And who is there fonder and more
faithful to me than thyself? So my
design is that thou thyself shalt
proffer this my petition." Quoth
she: "O my son, Allah remove me far therefrom! What! Have I lost my
wits, like thyself? Cast the thought away, and a long way, from thy
heart. Remember whose son thou art, O my child, the
orphan boy of a
tailor, the poorest and meanest of the tailors toiling in this city;
and I, thy mother, am also come of pauper folk and indigent. How
then durst thou ask to wife the daughter of the Sultan, whose sire
would not deign marry her with the sons of the kings and the
sovereigns, except they were his peers in honor and
grandeur and
majesty, and were they but one degree lower, he would refuse his
daughter to them." Aladdin took
patience until his parent had said her
say, when quoth he: "O my mother, everything thou hast called to
mind is known to me. Moreover, 'tis
thoroughly well known to me that I
am the child of pauper parents,
withal do not these words of thee
divert me from my design at all, at all. Nor the less do I hope of
thee, an I be thy son and thou truly love me, that thou grant me
this favor. Otherwise thou wilt destroy me, and present death hovereth
over my head except I win my will of heart's dearling. And I, O my
mother, am in every case thy child."
Hearing these words, his parent wept of her sorrow for him and said:
"O my child! Yes, in very deed I am thy mother, nor have I any son
or life's blood of my liver except thyself, and the end of my wishes
is to give thee a wife and
rejoice in thee. But suppose that I would
seek a bride of our likes and equals, her people will at once ask an
thou have any land or garden,
merchandise or handicraft, wherewith
thou canst support her, and what is the reply I can return? Then, if I
cannot possibly answer the poor like ourselves, how shall I be bold
enough, O my son, to ask for the daughter of the Sultan of China land,
who hath no peer or behind or before him? Therefore do thou weigh this
matter in thy mind. Also who shall ask her to wife for the son of a
snip? Well indeed I wot that my
saying aught of this kind will but
increase our misfortunes, for that it may be the cause of our
incurring
mortal danger from the Sultan- perad
venture even death for
thee and me.
"And, as concerneth myself, how shall I
venture upon such rash
deed and
perilous, O my son? And in what way shall I ask the Sultan
for his daughter to be thy wife, and indeed how ever shall I even
get
access to him? And should I succeed
therein, what is to be my
answer an they ask me
touching thy means? Haply the King will hold
me to be a madwoman. And
lastly, suppose that I
obtainaudience of the
Sultan, what
offering is there I can
submit to the King's
majesty?
'Tis true, O my child, that the Sultan is mild and
merciful, never
rejecting any who approach him to require justice or ruth or
protection, nor any who pray him for a present, for he is liberal
and lavisheth favor upon near and far. But he dealeth his boons to
those deserving them, to men who have done some derring-do in battle
under his eyes or have rendered as civilians great service to his
estate. But thou! Do thou tell me what feat thou hast performed in his
presence or before the public that thou meritest from him such
grace? And
secondly, this boon thou ambitionest is not for one of
our condition, nor is it possible that the King grant to thee the
bourne of thine
aspiration. For whoso goeth to the Sultan and
craveth of him a favor, him it besitteth to take in hand somewhat that
suiteth the royal
majesty, as indeed I warned thee aforetime. How,
then, shalt thou risk thyself to stand before the Sultan and ask his
daughter in marriage when thou hast with thee
naught to offer him of
that which beseemeth his exalted station?"
Hereto Aladdin replied: "O my mother, thou speakest to the point and
hast reminded me aright, and 'tis meet that I
revolve in mind the
whole of thy remindings. But, O my mother, the love of Princess Badr
al-Budur hath entered into the core of my heart, nor can I rest
without I win her. However, thou hast also recalled to me a matter
which I forgot, and 'tis this emboldeneth me to ask his daughter of
the King. Albeit thou, O my mother, declarest that I have no gift
which I can
submit to the Sultan, as is the wont of the world, yet
in very sooth I have an
offering and a present whose equal, O my
mother, I hold none of the kings to possess- no, even aught like it.
Because
verily that which I deemed glass or
crystal was nothing but
precious stones, and I hold that all the kings of the world have never
possessed anything like one of the smallest thereof. For by
frequenting the
jeweler folk I have
learned that they are the
costliest gems, and these are what I brought in my pockets from the
hoard,
whereupon, an thou please,
compose thy mind.
"We have in our house a bowl of China
porcelain, so arise thou and
fetch it, that I may fill it with these jewels, which thou shalt carry
as a gift to the King, and thou shalt stand in his presence and
solicit him for my
requirement. I am certified that by such means
the matter will become easy to thee, and if thou be
unwilling, O my
mother, to
strive for the
winning of my wish as regards the Lady
Badr al-Budur, know thou that surely I shall die. Nor do thou
imagine that this gift is of aught save the costliest of stones, and
be
assured, O my mother, that in my many visits to the
jewelers'
bazaar I have observed the merchants selling for sums man's judgment
may not determine jewels whose beauty is not worth one quarter-carat
of what we possess,
seeing which I was certified that ours are
beyond all price. So arise, O my mother, as I bade thee, and bring
me the
porcelain bowl aforesaid, that I may arrange
therein some of
these gems, and we will see what
semblance they show."
So she brought him the china bowl,
saying in herself, "I shall
know what to do when I find out if the words of my child
concerningthese jewels be soothfast or not." And she set it before her son,
who pulled the stones out of his pockets and disposed them in the
bowl, and ceased not arranging
therein gems of sorts till such time as
he had filled it. And when it was brimful, she could not fix her