Indian Fairy Tales 26
The Ivory city and it's fairy princess
One day a young prince was out practising
archery with the son of his father's chief vizier, when one of the
arrows accidentally struck the wife of a merchant, who was walking
about in an upper room of a house close by. The prince aimed at a bird
that was perched on the window- sill of that room, and had not the
slightest idea that anybody was at hand, or he would not have shot in
that direction. Consequently, not knowing what had happened, he and the
vizier's son walked away, the vizier's son chaffing him because he had
missed the bird.
Presently the merchant went to ask his wife
about something, and found her lying, to all appearance, dead in the
middle of the room, and an arrow fixed in the ground within half a yard
of her head. Supposing that she was dead, he rushed to the window and
shrieked, "Thieves thieves! They have killed my wife." The neighbours
quickly gathered, and the servants came running upstairs to see what
was the matter. It happened that the woman had fainted, and that there
was only a very slight wound in her breast where the arrow had grazed.
As soon as the woman recovered her senses she
told them that two young men had passed by the place with their bows
and arrows, and that one of them had most deliberately aimed at her as
she stood by the window.
On hearing this the merchant went to the king,
and told him what had taken place. His Majesty was much enraged at
such audacious wickedness, and swore that most terrible punishment
should be visited on the offender if he could be discovered. He ordered
the merchant to go back and ascertain whether his wife could recognise
the young men if she saw them again.
"Oh yes," replied the woman, "I should know them again among all the people in the city."
"Then," said the king, when the merchant
brought back this reply, "to- morrow I will cause all the male
inhabitants of this city to pass before your house, and your wife will
stand at the window and watch for the man who did this wanton deed."
A royal proclamation was issued to this
effect. So the next day all the men and boys of the city, from the age
of ten years upwards, assembled and marched by the house of the
merchant. By chance (for they both had been excused from obeying this
order) the king's son and the vizier's son were also in the company,
and passed by in the crowd. They came to see the tamasha.
As soon as these two appeared in front of the
merchant's window they were recognised by the merchant's wife, and at
once reported to the king.
"My own son and the son of my chief vizier!"
exclaimed the king, who had been present from the commencement. "What
examples for the people! Let them both be executed."
"Not so, your Majesty," said the vizier, "I
beseech you Let the facts of the case be thoroughly investigated. How
is it?" he continued, turning to the two young men. "Why have you done
this cruel thing?"
"I shot an arrow at a bird that was sitting on
the sill of an open window in yonder house, and missed," answered the
prince. "I suppose the arrow struck the merchant's wife. Had I known
that she or anybody had been near I should not have shot in that
direction."
"We will speak of this later on," said the
king, on hearing this answer. "Dismiss the people. Their presence is no
longer needed."
In the evening his Majesty and the vizier had a
long and earnest talk about their two sons. The king wished both of
them to be executed; but the vizier suggested that the prince should be
banished from the country. This was finally agreed to.
Accordingly, on the following morning, a
little company of soldiers escorted the prince out of the city. When
they reached the last custom- house the vizier's son overtook them. He
had come with all haste, bringing with him four bags of muhrs on four
horses. "I am come," he said, throwing his arms round the prince's
neck, "because I cannot let you go alone. We have lived together, we
will be exiled together, and we will die together. Turn me not back, if
you love me."
"Consider," the prince answered, "what you are
doing. All kinds of trial may be before me. Why should you leave your
home and country to be with me?"
"Because I love you," he said, "and shall never be happy without you."
So the two friends walked along hand in hand
as fast as they could to get out of the country, and behind them
marched the soldiers and the horses with their valuable burdens. On
reaching a place on the borders of the king's dominions the prince gave
the soldiers some gold, and ordered them to return. The soldiers took
the money and left; they did not, however, go very far, but hid
themselves behind rocks and stones, and waited till they were quite
sure that the prince did not intend to come back.
On and on the exiles walked, till they arrived
at a certain village, where they determined to spend the night under
one of the big trees of the place. The prince made preparations for a
fire, and arranged the few articles of bedding that they had with them,
while the vizier's son went to the baniya and the baker and the
butcher to get something for their dinner. For some reason he was
delayed; perhaps the tsut was not quite ready, or the baniya had not
got all the spices prepared. After waiting half an hour the prince
became impatient, and rose up and walked about.
He saw a pretty, clear little brook running
along not far from their resting-place, and hearing that its source was
not far distant, he started off to find it. The source was a beautiful
lake, which at that time was covered with the magnificent lotus flower
and other water plants. The prince sat down on the bank, and being
thirsty took up some of the water in his hand. Fortunately he looked
into his hand before drinking, and there, to his great astonishment, he
saw reflected whole and clear the image of a beautiful fairy. He
looked round, hoping to see the reality; but seeing no person, he drank
the water, and put out his hand to take some more. Again he saw the
reflection in the water which was in his palm. He looked around as
before, and this time discovered a fairy sitting by the bank on the
opposite side of the lake. On seeing her he fell so madly in love with
her that he dropped down in a swoon.
When the vizier's son returned, and found the
fire lighted, the horses securely fastened, and the bags of muhrs lying
altogether in a heap, but no prince, he did not know what to think. He
waited a little while, and then shouted; but not getting any reply, he
got up and went to the brook. There he came across the footmarks of
his friend. Seeing these, he went back at once for the money and the
horses, and bringing them with him, he tracked the prince to the lake,
where he found him lying to all appearance dead.
"Alas! alas!" he cried, and lifting up the
prince, he poured some water over his head and face. "Alas! my brother,
what is this? Oh! do not die and leave me thus. Speak, speak! I cannot
bear this!"
In a few minutes the prince, revived by the water, opened his eyes, and looked about wildly.
"Thank God!" exclaimed the vizier's son. "But what is the matter, brother?"
"Go away," replied the prince. "I don't want to say anything to you, or to see you. Go away."
"Come, come; let us leave this place. Look, I
have brought some food for you, and horses, and everything. Let us eat
and depart."
"Go alone," replied the prince.
"Never," said the vizier's son. "What has
happened to suddenly estrange you from me? A little while ago we were
brethren, but now you detest the sight of me."
"I have looked upon a fairy," the prince said.
"But a moment I saw her face; for when she noticed that I was looking
at her she covered her face with lotus petals. Oh, how beautiful she
was! And while I gazed she took out of her bosom an ivory box, and held
it up to me. Then I fainted. Oh! if you can get me that fairy for my
wife, I will go anywhere with you."
"Oh, brother," said the vizier's son, "you
have indeed seen a fairy. She is a fairy of the fairies. This is none
other than Gulizar of the Ivory City. I know this from the signs that
she gave you. From her covering her face with lotus petals I learn her
name, and from her showing you the ivory box I learn where she lives.
Be patient, and rest assured that I will arrange your marriage with
her."
When the prince heard these encouraging words
he felt much comforted, rose up, and ate, and then went away gladly
with his friend.
On the way they met two men. These two men
belonged to a family of robbers. There were eleven of them altogether.
One, an elder sister, stayed at home and cooked the food, and the other
ten—all brothers— went out, two and two, and walked about the four
different ways that ran through that part of the country, robbing those
travellers who could not resist them, and inviting others, who were
too powerful for two of them to manage, to come and rest at their
house, where the whole family attacked them and stole their goods.
These thieves lived in a kind of tower, which had several strong-rooms
in it, and under it was a great pit, wherein they threw the corpses of
the poor unfortunates who chanced to fall into their power.
The two men came forward, and, politely
accosting them, begged them to come and stay at their house for the
night. "It is late," they said, "and there is not another village
within several miles."
"Shall we accept this good man's invitation, brother?" asked the prince.
The vizier's son frowned slightly in token of
disapproval; but the prince was tired, and thinking that it was only a
whim of his friend's, he said to the men, "Very well. It is very kind
of you to ask us."
So they all four went to the robbers' tower.
Seated in a room, with the door fastened on the outside, the two travellers bemoaned their fate.
"It is no good groaning," said the vizier's
son. "I will climb to the window, and see whether there are any means
of escape. Yes! yes!" he whispered, when he had reached the
window-hole. "Below there is a ditch surrounded by a high wall. I will
jump down and reconnoitre. You stay here, and wait till I return."
Presently he came back and told the prince
that he had seen a most ugly woman, whom he supposed was the robbers'
housekeeper. She had agreed to release them on the promise of her
marriage with the prince.
So the woman led the way out of the enclosure by a secret door.
"But where are the horses and the goods?" the vizier's son inquired.
"You cannot bring them," the woman said. "To go out by any other way would be to thrust oneself into the grave."
"All right, then; they also shall go out by
this door. I have a charm, whereby I can make them thin or fat." So the
vizier's son fetched the horses without any person knowing it, and
repeating the charm, he made them pass through the narrow doorway like
pieces of cloth, and when they were all outside restored them to their
former condition. He at once mounted his horse and laid hold of the
halter of one of the other horses, and then beckoning to the prince to
do likewise, he rode off. The prince saw his opportunity, and in a
moment was riding after him, having the woman behind him.
Now the robbers heard the galloping of the
horses, and ran out and shot their arrows at the prince and his
companions. And one of the arrows killed the woman, so they had to
leave her behind.
On, on they rode, until they reached a village
where they stayed the night. The following morning they were off
again, and asked for Ivory City from every passer-by. At length they
came to this famous city, and put up at a little hut that belonged to
an old woman, from whom they feared no harm, and with whom, therefore,
they could abide in peace and comfort. At first the old woman did not
like the idea of these travellers staying in her house, but the sight
of a muhr, which the prince dropped in the bottom of a cup in which she
had given him water, and a present of another muhr from the vizier's
son, quickly made her change her mind. She agreed to let them stay
there for a few days.
As soon as her work was over the old woman
came and sat down with her lodgers. The vizier's son pretended to be
utterly ignorant of the place and people. "Has this city a name?" he
asked the old woman.
"Of course it has, you stupid. Every little village, much more a city, and such a city as this, has a name."
"What is the name of this city?"
"Ivory City. Don't you know that? I thought the name was known all over the world."
On the mention of the name Ivory City the
prince gave a deep sigh. The vizier's son looked as much as to say
"Keep quiet, or you'll discover the secret."
"Is there a king of this country?" continued the vizier's son.
"Of course there is, and a queen, and a princess."
"What are their names?"
"The name of the princess is Gulizar, and the name of the queen——"
The vizier's son interrupted the old woman by
turning to look at the prince, who was staring like a madman. "Yes," he
said to him afterwards, "we are in the right country. We shall see the
beautiful princess."
One morning the two travellers noticed the old
woman's most careful toilette: how careful she was in the arrangement
of her hair and the set of her kasabah and puts.
"Who is coming?" said the vizier's son.
"Nobody," the old woman replied.
"Then where are you going?"
"I am going to see my daughter, who is a
servant of the Princess Gulizar. I see her and the princess every day. I
should have gone yesterday, if you had not been here and taken up all
my time."
"Ah-h-h! Be careful not to say anything about
us in the hearing of the princess." The vizier's son asked her not to
speak about them at the palace, hoping that, because she had been told
not to do so, she would mention their arrival, and thus the princess
would be informed of their coming.
On seeing her mother the girl pretended to be very angry. "Why have you not been for two days?" she asked.
"Because, my dear," the old woman answered,
"two young travellers, a prince and the son of some great vizier, have
taken up their abode in my hut, and demand so much of my attention. It
is nothing but cooking and cleaning, and cleaning and cooking, all day
long. I can't understand the men," she added; "one of them especially
appears very stupid. He asked me the name of this country and the name
of the king. Now where can these men have come from, that they do not
know these things? However, they are very great and very rich. They
each give me a muhr every morning and every evening."
After this the old woman went and repeated
almost the same words to the princess, on the hearing of which the
princess beat her severely; and threatened her with a severer
punishment if she ever again spoke of the strangers before her.
In the evening, when the old woman had
returned to her hut, she told the vizier's son how sorry she was that
she could not help breaking her promise, and how the princess had
struck her because she mentioned their coming and all about them.
"Alas! alas!" said the prince, who had eagerly listened to every word.
"What, then, will be her anger at the sight of a man?"
"What, then, will be her anger at the sight of a man?"
"Anger?" said the vizier's son, with an
astonished air. "She would be exceedingly glad to see one man. I know
this. In this treatment of the old woman I see her request that you
will go and see her during the coming dark fortnight."
"Heaven be praised!" the prince exclaimed.
The next time the old woman went to the palace
Gulizar called one of her servants and ordered her to rush into the
room while she was conversing with the old woman; and if the old woman
asked what was the matter, she was to say that the king's elephants had
gone mad, and were rushing about the city and bazaar in every
direction, and destroying everything in their way.
The servant obeyed, and the old woman, fearing
lest the elephants should go and push down her hut and kill the prince
and his friend, begged the princess to let her depart. Now Gulizar had
obtained a charmed swing, that landed whoever sat on it at the place
wherever they wished to be. "Get the swing," she said to one of the
servants standing by. When it was brought she bade the old woman step
into it and desire to be at home.
The old woman did so, and was at once carried
through the air quickly and safely to her hut, where she found her two
lodgers safe and sound. "Oh!" she cried, "I thought that both of you
would be killed by this time. The royal elephants have got loose and
are running about wildly. When I heard this I was anxious about you. So
the princess gave me this charmed swing to return in. But come, let us
get outside before the elephants arrive and batter down the place."
"Don't believe this," said the vizier's son. "It is a mere hoax. They have been playing tricks with you."
"You will soon have your heart's desire," he whispered aside to the prince. "These things are signs."
Two days of the dark fortnight had elapsed,
when the prince and the vizier's son seated themselves in the swing,
and wished themselves within the grounds of the palace. In a moment
they were there, and there too was the object of their search standing
by one of the palace gates, and longing to see the prince quite as much
as he was longing to see her.
Oh, what a happy meeting it was!
"At last," said Gulizar, "I have seen my beloved, my husband."
"A thousand thanks to Heaven for bringing me to you," said the prince.
Then the prince and Gulizar betrothed
themselves to one another and parted, the one for the hut and the other
for the palace, both of them feeling happier than they had ever been
before.
Henceforth the prince visited Gulizar every
day and returned to the hut every night. One morning Gulizar begged him
to stay with her always. She was constantly afraid of some evil
happening to him—perhaps robbers would slay him, or sickness attack
him, and then she would be deprived of him. She could not live without
seeing him. The prince showed her that there was no real cause for
fear, and said that he felt he ought to return to his friend at night,
because he had left his home and country and risked his life for him;
and, moreover, if it had not been for his friend's help he would never
have met with her.
Gulizar for the time assented, but she
determined in her heart to get rid of the vizier's son as soon as
possible. A few days after this conversation she ordered one of her
maids to make a pilaw. She gave special directions that a certain
poison was to be mixed into it while cooking, and as soon as it was
ready the cover was to be placed on the saucepan, so that the poisonous
steam might not escape. When the pilaw was ready she sent it at once
by the hand of a servant to the vizier's son with this message
"Gulizar, the princess, sends you an offering in the name of her dead
uncle."
On receiving the present the vizier's son
thought that the prince had spoken gratefully of him to the princess,
and therefore she had thus remembered him. Accordingly he sent back his
salam and expressions of thankfulness.
When it was dinner-time he took the saucepan
of pilaw and went out to eat it by the stream. Taking off the lid, he
threw it aside on the grass and then washed his hands. During the
minute or so that he was performing these ablutions, the green grass
under the cover of the saucepan turned quite yellow. He was astonished,
and suspecting that there was poison in the pilaw, he took a little
and threw it to some crows that were hopping about. The moment the
crows ate what was thrown to them they fell down dead.
"Heaven be praised," exclaimed the vizier's son, "who has preserved me from death at this time!"
On the return of the prince that evening the
vizier's son was very reticent and depressed. The prince noticed this
change in him, and asked what was the reason. "Is it because I am away
so much at the palace?" The vizier's son saw that the prince had
nothing to do with the sending of the pilaw, and therefore told him
everything.
"Look here," he said, "in this handkerchief is
some pilaw that the princess sent me this morning in the name of her
deceased uncle. It is saturated with poison. Thank Heaven, I discovered
it in time!"
"Oh, brother! who could have done this thing? Who is there that entertains enmity against you?"
"The Princess Gulizar. Listen. The next time
you go to see her, I entreat you to take some snow with you; and just
before seeing the princess put a little of it into both your eyes. It
will provoke tears, and Gulizar will ask you why you are crying. Tell
her that you weep for the loss of your friend, who died suddenly this
morning. Look! take, too, this wine and this shovel, and when you have
feigned intense grief at the death of your friend, bid the princess to
drink a little of the wine. It is strong, and will immediately send her
into a deep sleep. Then, while she is asleep, heat the shovel and mark
her back with it. Remember to bring back the shovel again, and also to
take her pearl necklace. This done, return. Now fear not to execute
these instructions, because on the fulfilment of them depends your
fortune and happiness. I will arrange that your marriage with the
princess shall be accepted by the king, her father, and all the court."
The prince promised that he would do everything as the vizier's son had advised him; and he kept his promise.
The following night, on the return of the
prince from his visit to Gulizar, he and the vizier's son, taking the
horses and bags of muhrs, went to a graveyard about a mile or so
distant. It was arranged that the vizier's son should act the part of a
fakir and the prince the part of the fakir's disciple and servant.
In the morning, when Gulizar had returned to
her senses, she felt a smarting pain in her back, and noticed that her
pearl necklace was gone. She went at once and informed the king of the
loss of her necklace, but said nothing to him about the pain in her
back.
The king was very angry when he heard of the
theft, and caused proclamation concerning it to be made throughout all
the city and surrounding country.
"It is well," said the vizier's son, when he
heard of this proclamation. "Fear not, my brother, but go and take this
necklace, and try to sell it in the bazaar."
The prince took it to a goldsmith and asked him to buy it.
"How much do you want for it?" asked the man.
"Fifty thousand rupees," the prince replied.
"All right," said the man; "wait here while I go and fetch the money."
The prince waited and waited, till at last the
goldsmith returned, and with him the kotwal, who at once took the
prince into custody on the charge of stealing the princess's necklace.
"How did you get the necklace?" the kotwal asked.
"A fakir, whose servant I am, gave it to me to
sell in the bazaar," the prince replied. "Permit me, and I will show
you where he is."
The prince directed the kotwal and the
policeman to the place where he had left the vizier's son, and there
they found the fakir with his eyes shut and engaged in prayer.
Presently, when he had finished his devotions, the kotwal asked him to
explain how he had obtained possession of the princess's necklace.
"Call the king hither," he replied, "and then I will tell his Majesty face to face."
On this some men went to the king and told him
what the fakir had said. His Majesty came, and seeing the fakir so
solemn and earnest in his devotions, he was afraid to rouse his anger,
lest peradventure the displeasure of Heaven should descend on him, and
so he placed his hands together in the attitude of a supplicant, and
asked, "How did you get my daughter's necklace?"
"Last night," replied the fakir, "we were
sitting here by this tomb worshipping Khuda, when a ghoul, dressed as a
princess, came and exhumed a body that had been buried a few days ago,
and began to eat it. On seeing this I was filled with anger, and beat
her back with a shovel, which lay on the fire at the time. While
running away from me her necklace got loose and dropped. You wonder at
these words, but they are not difficult to prove. Examine your
daughter, and you will find the marks of the burn on her back. Go, and
if it is as I say, send the princess to me, and I will punish her."
The king went back to the palace, and at once ordered the princess's back to be examined.
"It is so," said the maid-servant; "the burn is there."
"Then let the girl be slain immediately," the king shouted.
"No, no, your Majesty," they replied. "Let us
send her to the fakir who discovered this thing, that he may do
whatever he wishes with her."
The king agreed, and so the princess was taken to the graveyard.
"Let her be shut up in a cage, and be kept near the grave whence she took out the corpse," said the fakir.
This was done, and in a little while the fakir
and his disciple and the princess were left alone in the graveyard.
Night had not long cast its dark mantle over the scene when the fakir
and his disciple threw off their disguise, and taking their horses and
luggage, appeared before the cage. They released the princess, rubbed
some ointment over the scars on her back, and then sat her upon one of
their horses behind the prince. Away they rode fast and far, and by the
morning were able to rest and talk over their plans in safety. The
vizier's son showed the princess some of the poisoned pilaw that she
had sent him, and asked whether she had repented of her ingratitude.
The princess wept, and acknowledged that he was her greatest helper and
friend.
A letter was sent to the chief vizier telling
him of all that had happened to the prince and the vizier's son since
they had left their country. When the vizier read the letter he went
and informed the king. The king caused a reply to be sent to the two
exiles, in which he ordered them not to return, but to send a letter to
Gulizar's father, and inform him of everything. Accordingly they did
this; the prince wrote the letter at the vizier's son's dictation.
On reading the letter Gulizar's father was
much enraged with his viziers and other officials for not discovering
the presence in his country of these illustrious visitors, as he was
especially anxious to ingratiate himself in the favour of the prince
and the vizier's son. He ordered the execution of some of the viziers
on a certain date.
"Come," he wrote back to the vizier's son,
"and stay at the palace. And if the prince desires it, I will arrange
for his marriage with Gulizar as soon as possible."
The prince and the vizier's son most gladly
accepted the invitation, and received a right noble welcome from the
king. The marriage soon took place, and then after a few weeks the king
gave them presents of horses and elephants, and jewels and rich
cloths, and bade them start for their own land; for he was sure that
the king would now receive them. The night before they left the viziers
and others, whom the king intended to have executed as soon as his
visitors had left, came and besought the vizier's son to plead for
them, and promised that they each would give him a daughter in
marriage. He agreed to do so, and succeeded in obtaining their pardon.
Then the prince, with his beautiful bride
Gulizar, and the vizier's son, attended by a troop of soldiers, and a
large number of camels and horses bearing very much treasure, left for
their own land. In the midst of the way they passed the tower of the
robbers, and with the help of the soldiers they razed it to the ground,
slew all its inmates, and seized the treasure which they had been
amassing there for several years.
At length they reached their own country, and
when the king saw his son's beautiful wife and his magnificent retinue
he was at once reconciled, and ordered him to enter the city and take
up his abode there.
Henceforth all was sunshine on the path of the
prince. He became a great favourite, and in due time succeeded to the
throne, and ruled the country for many, many years in peace and
happiness.
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