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THE TALE OF TWO
HASHISH-EATERS (Traditional)
From 1001 Arabian
Nights
There was once,
my lord and crown upon my head, a man in a certain city, who was a fisherman
by trade and a hashish-eater by occupation. When he had earned his daily
wage, he would spend a little of it on food and the rest on a sufficiency
of that hilarious herb. He took his hashish three times a day: once
in the morning on an empty stomach, once at noon, and once at sundown.
Thus he was never lacking in extravagent gaity. Yet he worked hard enough
at his fishing, though sometimes in a very extravagent fashion.
On a certain evening,
for instance, when he had taken a larger dose of his favorite drug than
usual, he lit a tallow candle and sat in front of it, asking himself
eager questions and answering with obliging wit. After some hours of
this delight, he became aware of the cool silence of the night about
him and the clear light of a full moon abouve his head, and exclaimed
affably to himself: "Dear friend, the silent streets and the cool
of the moon invite us to a walk. Let us go forth, while all the world
is in bed and none may mar our solitary exaltation." Speaking in
this way to himself, the fisherman left his house and began to walk
towards the river; but, as he went, he saw the light of the full moon
lying in the roadway and took it to be the water of the river. "My
dear old friend the fisherman," he said, "get your line and
take the best of the fishing, while your rivals are indoors." So
he ran back and fetched his hook and line, and cast into the glittering
patch of moonlight on the road.
Soon an enormous
dog, tempted by the smell of the bait, swallowed the hook greedily and
then, feeling the barb, made desperate efforts to get loose. The fisherman
struggled for some time against this enormous fish, but at last he was
pulled over and rolled into the moonlight. Even then he would not let
go his line, but held on grimly, uttering frightened cries. "Help,
help, good Mussulmans!" he shouted. "Help me to secure this
mighty fish, for he is dragging me into the deeps! Help, help, good
friends, for I am drowning!" The guards of that quarter ran up
at the noise and began laughing at the fisherman's antics; but when
he yelled: "Allah curse you, O sons of bitches! Is it a time to
laugh when I am drowning?" they grew angry and, after giving him
a sound beating, dragged him into the presence of the kadi.
At this point Shahrazad
saw the approach of morning and discreetly fell silent.
BUT WHEN THE SEVEN-HUNDRED-AND-NINETY-EIGHTH
NIGHT HAD COME SHE said:
Allah had willed
that the kadi should also be addicted to the use of hashish; recognizing
that the prisoner was under that jocund influence, he rated the guards
soundly and dismissed them. Then he handed over the fisherman to his
slaves that they might give him a bed for calm sleep. After a pleasant
night and a day given up to the consumption of excellent food, the fisherman
was called to the kadi in the evening and received by him like a brother.
His host supped with him; and then the two sat opposite the lighted
candles and each swallowed enough hashish to destroy a hundred-year-old
elephant. When the drug exalted their natural dispositions, they undressed
completely and began to dance about, singing and committing a thousand
extravagances.
Now it happened
that the Sultan and his wazir were walking through the city, disguised
as merchants, and heard a strange noise rising from the kadi's house.
They entered through the unlatched door and found two naked men, who
stopped dancing at their entrance and welcomed them without the least
embarrassment. The Sultan sat down to watch his venerable kadi dance
again; but when he saw that the other man had a dark and lively zabb,
so long that the eye might not carry to the end of it, he whispered
in his wazir's startled ear: "As Allah lives, our kadi is not as
well hung as his guest!" "What are you whispering about?"
cried the fisherman. "I am the Sultan of this city and I order
you to watch my dance respectfully, otherwise I will have your head
cut off. I am the Sultan, this is my wazir; I hold the whole world like
a fish in the palm of my right hand." The Sultan and his wazir
realized that they were in the presence of two hashish-eaters, and the
wazir, to amuse his master, addressed the fisherman, saying: "How
long have you been Sultan, dear master, and can you tell me what has
happened to your predecessor?" "I deposed the fellow,"
answered the fisherman. "I said: 'Go Away!' and he went away."
"Did he not
protest?" asked the wazir.
"Not at all,"
replied the fisherman. "He was delighted to be relased from the
burden of kingship. He abdicated with such good grace that I keep him
by me as a servant. He is an excellent dancer. When he pines for his
throne, I tell him stories. Now I want to piss." So saying, he
lifted up his interminable tool and, walking over to the Sultan, seemed
to be about to discharge upon him.
"I also want
to piss," exclaimed the kadi, and took up the same threatening
position in front of the wazir. The two victims shouted with laughter
and fled from that house, crying over their shoulders: "God's curse
on all hashish-eaters!"
Next morning, that
the jest might be complete, the Sultan called the kadi and his guest
before him. "O discreet pillar of our law," he said, "I
have called you to me because I wish to learn the most convenient manner
of pissing. Should one squat and carefully lift the robe, as religion
prescribes? Should one stand up, as is the unclean habit of unbelievers?
Or should one undress completely and piss against one's friends, as
is the custom of two hashish-eaters of my acquaintance?"
Knowing that the
Sultan used to walk about the city in disguise, the kadi realized in
a flash the identity of his last night's visitors, and fell on his knees,
crying: "My lord, my lord, the hashish spake in these indelicacies,
not I!"
But the fisherman,
who by his careful daily taking of the drug was always under its effect,
called somewhat sharply: "And what of it? You are in your palace
this morning, we were in our palace last night."
"O sweetest
noise in all our kingdom," answered the delighted King, "as
we are both Sultans of this city, I think you had better henceforth
stay with me in my palace. If you can tell stories, I trust that you
will at once sweeten our hearing with a chosen one."
"I will do
so gladly, as soon as you have pardoned my wazir," replied the
fisherman; so the Sultan bade the kadi rise and sent him back forgiven
to his duties.
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