584 lines
40 KiB
Plaintext
584 lines
40 KiB
Plaintext
THE SEVEN VOYAGES OF SINBAD THE SAILOR
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Once upon a time years and years ago in Baghdad there lived a porter called
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Sinbad. As he was passing a palace one day, he saw a bench in the great
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doorway and thought he would rest on it. So he put down his load, and was
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about to sit down when curiosity got the better of him and, slipping through
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the entrance he went into the gardens. To Sinbad it was like heaven.
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Everywhere there were flower beds, gushing fountains and palm trees, in
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whose shade many gentlemen were strolling. while pages served them with cakes
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and drinks. Sinbad couldn't help exclaiming aloud:
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"Well I never! Here I am, worked to the bone, poor and always hungry while
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other lucky men never carry burdens, but enjoy good food and drink. And yet,
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we're all Allah's sons! What a world of difference between me and the people
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who live here." Sinbad had barely stopped speaking when one of the pages came
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across to him and said:
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"Come with me. My master wishes to speak to you." Rather alarmed, Sinbad
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followed the lad into a hall where the owner of the house was seated amongst
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his guests.
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"Come in," he said. "What's your name?"
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"Sinbad, the Porter."
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"My name is Sinbad too. Sinbad the Sailor. I hear you've been complaining,
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but I'd like you to know that I became rich only by working hard and taking
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dreadful risks. All this during seven amazing but adventurous voyages. I
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haven't had an easy life, you know. Sit down and I'll tell you my story."
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"My father," began Sinbad the Sailor, "was a merchant. When he died, he
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left me a fortune. I was young then and foolish, and I started to squander my
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riches until one day, I discovered my money had gone. I didn't lose heart,
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however, for I decided to become a merchant like my father. With the money I
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earned from selling my furniture and carpets I bought all the goods I could
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and set out. I boarded a ship at Bassora with other traders and began to trade
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in every port. One day, the captain dropped anchor near a beautiful island and
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we went ashore. We had hardly lit the fires to cook our meal when the captain
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suddenly shouted;
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'Quick! Get away! This is no island. It's a huge fish that's been sleeping
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on the waves so long that trees have grown on it. The heat from the fires is
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wakening it. It will dive to the deep any minute now. Back to the ship! Drop
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everything!'
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Many managed to climb aboard again, but I was too far away and ended up in
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the sea. Luckily I found a floating empty barrel. Clinging to this and
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drifting with the winds and currents, I reached an island. As I came ashore, I
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saw a mare tethered to a stump. Then a man appeared and asked me:
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'Who are you? Where have you come from?'
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'I've been shipwrecked,' I said. The man went on:
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'Follow me,' he said and took me to a cave, where he offered me some food.
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I told him of my adventure and he listened in amazement. I was dying to know
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why he kept his horse tethered at the shore.
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'I used to be one of King Mihragian's grooms' he replied. 'When the moon is
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full, we tether the mares on the beach so they can meet with the sea horses.
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The foals that are born are so beautiful there are none like them in the whole
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world. This is the time of the new moon and the sea stallions arrive. When
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it's all over, I'll take you to the king. You're very lucky, you know, for
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you'd have died of hunger on this desert island if you hadn't met me.'
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My rescuer introduced me to his friends and they gave me a friendly
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welcome. Later, back in the city the grooms told the king about my adventure.
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'It was Allah's will that you should be saved,' the ruler told me after
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listening carefully. 'It's your destiny to live a long life.' Because he felt
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I was under the protection of Allah himself, he showered me with gifts and
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favours. I was appointed harbourmaster; it was my job to keep a register of
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all freight in transit and so I found myself in an excellent post.
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Just the same, I felt homesick, and every time a ship came in, I asked the
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captain if he was bound for Baghdad, for I intended to ask him for a passage
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home. One day, however, as I took a note of the cargo on a ship that had just
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tied up, I asked:
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'Anything else on board?'
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'Yes,' replied the captain. 'There's still a certain quantity of goods
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aboard. The owner was lost at sea and must have drowned. I'm going to see if I
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can sell them and take the money back to his family in Baghdad.'
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'What was the name of the man who was lost?' I enquired.
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'Sinbad the Sailor.' I let out a shout.
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'I am Sinbad the Sailor! I clung to a barrel that saved my life and drifted
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ashore on an island. There, thanks be to Allah, I met the royal grooms. And it
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was the king himself who made me harbourmaster. The goods you're carrying on
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board your ship belong to me.'
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'Well, what a story! I've never heard anything like it!' exclaimed the
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captain. 'Isn't there an honest soul left in the world?'
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'Captain!' I gasped. 'Why won't you believe what I say?'
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'Because it's perfectly obvious,' he replied, 'that you heard the trader
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had drowned and now, by inventing a ridiculous adventure, you hope to lay
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hands on his property!' At that point, I described to the captain every single
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thing that had taken place on board his ship since the moment it had weighed
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anchor. He was forced to believe I was telling the truth.
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'Good gracious!' everyone gasped. 'We certainly never dreamt that you were
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safe and sound.'
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I got my trading goods back and immediately thought of something precious
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to give to the king. He was astounded at what had happened, but everyone
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assured him that every word was true. He too gave me a gift and allowed me to
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leave with all my belongings. I went aboard. Some days later, I was at
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Bassora and then back to Baghdad. I had grown far richer than before and
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quickly forgot all my past suffering."
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When Sinbad the Sailor had ended his tale, he gave Sinbad the Porter three
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gold coins and told him to return the next day.
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The following day, after providing the porter and the other guests with a
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delicious meal, Sinbad the Sailor again began to speak.
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"One day, I again had a great desire to travel. I decided to invest some of
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my money in trading goods and went on board ship at Bassora for my second
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voyage. To begin with, it was a pleasant journey. Then one day, we reached a
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strange desert island. Many of the passengers decided to go ashore and I sat
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down on the bank of a river and fell fast asleep. When I awoke there was not a
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soul in sight. The ship had sailed, for the captain had forgot all about me.
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However, I decided to climb a tree and survey the island. It was then that
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I discovered a great white dome.
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Full of hope, I marched in the direction of the dome. but as I drew near, I
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realised it had no doors. The sun had not yet set and the sky was a fiery
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pink. Suddenly, everything went dark, as though night had fallen. I looked up
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and saw an enormous bird with outstretch wings, shutting out the sunlight. I
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remembered then of hearing about a bird so huge it fed its nestlings
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elephants. The bird's name was Rukh. Just then I realised that the dome was
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really one of Rukh's eggs. Indeed, the great bird settled on top of the egg
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and dropped of t6o sleep. I unwound my turban and twisted it to make a rope. I
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tied the end of it round the bird's leg so that it would carry me away with
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it. At the first light of dawn, the bird woke, spread its immense wings and
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took flight. So high did it rise into the sky that the earth almost vanished
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from sight, but it landed on a plateau. I undid the knot. Rukh floated down
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into the valley below and when he returned, it was with a large snake in his
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beak. Nobody lived on this plateau and, on the other side of the valley lay a
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mountain far too high for anyone ever to climb.
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All I could do was clamber down into the valley. When I got there, I saw
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the ground was littered with diamonds and full of terrible snakes. I couldn't
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help shuddering. Luckily, the snakes were not moving about that day, for fear
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of Rukh, but darkness was about to fall. I found a cave and blocked the
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entrance with a rock.
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In the morning, I left the cave and started to roam the valley searching
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for a way out. Suddenly I came upon the carcass of an animal. Just then I
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remembered once hearing the story of a doomed valley, into which diamond
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hunters would throw a large dead animal. The precious gems stuck to the
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carcass and the hunters would then wait for a vulture or eagle to appear. The
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bird of prey would swoop down on the meat and carry it away in its talons to
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the plateau above. There, the diamond hunters, shouting and yelling, forced
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the bird to give up its prey. With this tale in mind, I filled my pockets with
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diamonds then roped myself to the dead animal.
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A little later, a huge eagle carried the carcass and me to the plateau. It
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was just about to tear into the flesh with its beak, when some men appeared,
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shouting loudly. The eagle flapped away and, though my clothes were
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bloodstained, I was alive!
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I told the diamond hunters about my adventure and gave some diamonds to the
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man who had thrown the carcass into the valley. They all told me I was under
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Allah's own protection. I had come out alive from the valley of the snakes;
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something nobody else had ever done before. Next day, I set off homewards. I
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bartered some of the diamonds for goods to sell and became richer than ever.
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When I arrived in Baghdad, my friends and relations welcomed me with delight
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and, again forgetting all my trials and troubles, I went back to an easy life.
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And that's the tale of my second voyage.
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I'll tell you about the third tomorrow. It's time to eat now," ended Sinbad
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the Sailor.
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Sinbad the bearer of burdens had, like all those present, listened
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wide-eyed to this story, and again that evening, he found himself gifted
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another three gold coins. Of course, next day, he hurried back to the sailor's
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home. He sat at his side till the rich man's friends came, then they sat down
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to a cheerful feast. When the meal was over, Sinbad the Sailor told the tale
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of his third voyage.
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"Rich as I was, I wanted to become even richer. So I got a passage again at
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Bassora, on a fine vessel, together with other merchants.
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One day, we ran into a fierce storm and the captain began to cry:
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'The ship is out of control! The sails are in tatters! Let's hope we can
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find shelter in the lee of Monkey Mountain. Though the monkeys are dangerous
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beasts!`
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Shortly after this, the ship ran aground on the shore of a strange island
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and, in next to no time. we were surrounded by a tribe of monkeys. About the
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height of a child, hairy and smelly, they rushed about as we stood there
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without moving a muscle, afraid of what they might do. All we could do was
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stand aside and watch them swarm up the masts and tear the rubber lifeboats
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with their sharp teeth.
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Soon after, a giant wave swept the vessel out to sea, with the horrid
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creatures still aboard, together with all our cargo. As we wandered over the
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island, we caught sight of a huge castle-like building. Though very much
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afraid, we ventured through the gateway. The castle looked deserted, but
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somebody certainly lived there for, in the middle of the courtyard stood a
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large bench and a bonfire of logs was ablaze.
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We all sank on to the bench and, overcome by fatigue, fell fast asleep. As
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evening came the ground began to tremble. A terrifying creature was
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approaching us. It was a real ogre, gigantic with fierce red eyes, long fangs
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like those of a wild pig, a great mouth and huge ears. The ogre grabbed me and
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started to prod me with his enormous hands. Luckily I was too skinny for his
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taste, so he picked out the plumpest of my companions, killed and made a meal
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of him. After this meal, he stretched out on the bench and slept whiie we
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shrank trembling in a corner, unable to sleep a wink. Next morning, the giant
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went off after locking the door behind him. For us it was a day of terror and
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the giant, when he returned, picked out another of our little band and made a
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meal of him too. As soon as he had fallen asleep, we came to a decision:
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'We must kill him while he's asleep!' So we put two long sticks into the
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coals and when they were burning hot, thrust them into the giant's eyes. The
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ogre leapt to his feet with a scream, knocking us over as he did. Now blinded,
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he was quite unable to catch us. He fumbled his way to the door and stumbled
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out, screaming horribly as he went. We ran as fast as we could down to the sea
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and hastily made a raft out of pieces of driftwood. The raft was barely in the
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water when we saw the giant coming, with an even more horrible-looking
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giantess.
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They started to hurl great rocks at us, and we were hit more than once.
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Before we could escape their reach, they had managed to kill all my companions
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except two. Though by now the raft was scarcely afloat, it carried all three
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of us to another island. Not knowing where we were, we roamed all day, meeting
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no-one at all, and fell sound asleep when night fell.
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It was not a peaceful night, however. A giant snake crept up and gobbled
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down one of my friends. Then it curled up and went to sleep. Shaking with
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terror, my remaining companion and I climbed a tree. Thinking he was sure to
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be safe there, my friend settled down in the lowest forked branch. This was to
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save my life. For the snake later finding the poor man an easy victim, ate him
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up rather than climb to the top of the tree for me. I didn't see how I could
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ever get away from this place alive. However, I had an idea. Picking up the
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planks lying round about, I tied one under my feet, another on each side, one
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along my stomach, another at my back and the last as a roof over my head. This
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gave me a sort of armour. When, late that night, the snake did its best to
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devour me, it could not, no matter how hard it tried. My wooden armour
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withstood the crushing. The reptile squeezed and squeezed till dawn. but as
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the sun came up, it wearily gave up and slithered away. I untied the planks
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and set off in search of food. My wanderings took me to the tip of the island,
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high above the sea. As I sat there, downhearted, staring at the water, I saw a
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ship sail past only a few hundred yards from the shore. The crew heard my
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cries and I was safe at last. I was hoisted aboard, fed and clothed and later
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I told them my amazing tale, which naturally astonished those who heard it. A
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fair wind swept us safely into the port of Salahita.
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The captain then said to me:
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'You're a poor unfortunate stranger here, but I'd like to give you another
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chance. This ship is carrying a batch of goods belonging to one of the
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passengers who vanished on a desert island. Nothing has ever been heard of him
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again. I'm going to sell these articles and take the money back to his family.
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If you like, you can try selling them. I'll give you a commission on what you
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manage to sell.'
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I thanked the captain for his kindness; I was desperately in need. However,
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the bosun who was busy listing the cargo, asked a question:
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'Captain,' he said, 'what name do I put on these goods?'
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'Mark them as Sinbad the Sailor's. That's the name of the man who
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disappeared. '
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'But I'm Sinbad the Sailor!' I exclaimed. 'And I didn't disappear at all. I
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fell asleep on the island and when I awoke, you had all gone. These are my
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goods. The diamond hunters I met on the mountain, to whom I told my tale, will
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vouch for all this.'
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The crowd of seamen and merchants that had clustered round to listen, began
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to murmur amongst themselves. Some believed my words, others swore I was a
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liar. Suddenly, however, on hearing the words 'diamond hunters', one of the
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merchants came up to me and, after a good stare, exclaimed:
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'Do you remember when I told you all about the man roped to the carcass I
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threw into Diamond Valley? Well, this is him! I know his face. Everything he
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says is true.' At that, the captain sharply demanded:
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'What marks do your goods have on them? Which are they?' I told him and he
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too realised that I was none other than Sinbad. That's how I got my belongings
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back and was able to go on trading as though nothing had happened. When I
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returned home, I saw that I was even richer than before. That's all I have to
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tell about my third voyage," Sinbad said, "but if you come back tomorrow, I'll
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describe the fourth one."
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Thus saying, he ordered that the bearer of burdens should be given three
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gold coins. Next morning, Sinbad the Porter hurried back to his rich friend.
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They enjoyed a meal and waited till all the other guests had appeared. Then
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Sinbad the Sailor started to tell the story of his fourth adventure.
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"As in the past, I began to feel the urge to travel, and I knew I had to go
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back to sea. I bought a great quantity of goods, said goodbye and went to
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Bassora to find a ship. To begin with, the voyage was all plain sailing. Till
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the day a hurricane ripped the sails and broke up the ship. We all ended in
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the sea, though most of us were able to cling to bits of wreckage and keep
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afloat. Then the waters grew calm again and the waves washed us ashore on an
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island. Our first thought was to look for food and as we did so, we came upon
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a building. A band of naked men rushed out, without uttering a sound and shut
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us up in a large pen. They brought us such strange food that I, who did not
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trust them, refused to eat. But, overcome by hunger, my friends gobbled it
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down. This was to lead to their ruin, for the more they ate, as though by
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magic, the hungrier they felt.
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In horror, I realised that the naked men were the subjects of an ogre. They
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caught shipwrecked sailors, fattened them up with special food and then when
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they were nice and plump, strangled and roasted them. While my friends,
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already out of their minds, were led to pasture just like farm animals, I
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began to starve. By the time I was nothing but skin and bone, nobody was
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paying the slightest attention to me and I took the opportunity to run away.
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For seven days and seven nights I walked without stopping. At dawn on the
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eighth day, in the distance I could see folk picking peppers. They took pity
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on me and led me to their king. I told His Majesty everything that had
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happened since the day I left Baghdad, and feeling sorry for me, the king
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presented me with a silver coin. I decided to stay in that hospitable city. It
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was easy to make friends with the citizens, and they soon had great respect
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for me. One day, I noticed that everyone the rich and the poor, always rode
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bareback. Surprised at this I mentioned it to the king and he asked
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'What is a saddle like?'
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'Have I your permission to make one?' I asked him.
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'If you wish,' he replied, ordering his servants to provide me with
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everything I required. A skilled carpenter built the wooden shape, stuffed it
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with wool and covered it with leather. A blacksmith forged the stirrups. Then
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I strapped the saddle on a horse's back and persuaded the king to try riding
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it. He was so delighted that he gave me a generous reward for my work. A few
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days later, I had a visit from the Prime Minister. He too wanted a saddle, and
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in the end, so did many other important officials at Court. I set to work at
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making saddles for them all and quickly became wealthy.
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As time went by, my reputation grew, and the king sent for me one day.
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'You are now highly respected and well loved by all here. But what you need
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is a wife. I wish you to marry the young lady I've chosen for you.' And this I
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did willingly, for she was rich and beautiful. I was perfectly happy with my
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wife and lived in peace.
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'If I ever go home,' I said to myself, 'I'll take her with me.' But a man's
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fate is always a mystery.
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A little time later, I went to visit one of my neighbours. His wife had
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died and he was desperate.
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'My good friend,' I consoled him, 'don't torment yourself like this. You've
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still a life to live. Maybe you'll get married again and find a wife that is
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even better than your first one!'
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'How do you expect me to remarry,' the man replied, 'when I've only one
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more day to live!'
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'What? But you're perfectly healthy! '
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'I know,' he said, 'but I shall be buried along with my wife today. That's
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our custom.' And as we were speaking, in came the man's friends and relations.
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The dead woman was gently laid in her coffin and carried to the foot of a hill
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by the sea shore. There the gravediggers lifted up a great stone, revealing a
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deep pit. Once the coffin had been lowered into the pit, the widower was
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obliged to follow it down, taking with him nothing but a jug of water and
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seven pieces of bread. I cried,
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'That's a fate worse than death,` I hurried straight to the king. 'How can
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anyone be so cruel as to bury the living with the dead?' I asked him.
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'It isn't cruel,' he replied. 'This custom has been followed since the dawn
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of time.'
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'Do strangers suffer the same fate?' I asked him.
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'Yes. It touches all who live in this land and have married here.'
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I was aghast. This meant that my life would be linked to my wife's, and if
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she were to die, I would be buried with her. By sheer ill luck wife did fall
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ill some time after and died only a few days later. Her relatives arrived,
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dressed her, adorning her with all her jewellery, then laid her in her coffin.
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They firmly gripped me and though I struggled and protested, I was lowered
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into the pit. The stone clanged back into place over my head. Wild with
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terror, I fainted. When I came to my senses I could see, with the aid of a
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feeble light filtering from a tiny crack, that I was in a vast cavern. All
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around, amongst broken coffins, lay skeletons covered with jewels. Horror gave
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way to madness. I started to gather up the precious stones, without thinking
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that I would never be able to take them out, for this place was to be my own
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tomb. Overcome by desperation, I screamed, wept and swore, before dropping
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exhausted by the wall of the cavern.
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The days passed. I had carefully rationed my bread and water to make it
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last. I soon lost all notion of time and had no idea how long I had been down
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this pit. Yet a small ray of hope shone within me. I had survived so many
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other adventures and trials that it seemed impossible that I should die now.
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One day, the noise of rolling stones wakened me from sleep. I leapt to my feet
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and rushed towards the spot the sound seemed to come from. There I saw a huge
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badger which, alarmed at my sudden arrival, fled along a tunnel. I followed it
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and after crawling for what seemed an eternity, caught sight of light: it was
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the hole in the rock through which the badger had entered.
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In the open air again, I found myself halfway up the hillside. Fresh air at
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last! I felt as though I had been given a new lease of life. However, I went
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back along the tunnel to the cavern and stripped the dead of the jewels they
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would never need again.
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On the shore I managed to catch some lobsters and other molluscs. The days
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went by, and at last I saw a ship. I rushed to the top of the hill and waved a
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white cloth. Luckily someone saw it and a lifeboat was lowered into the water.
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I was soon aboard, safe and sound. The ship continued on its way. It was an
|
|
uneventful voyage, and some days later, I returned to Baghdad and my family
|
|
and friends. And that," said Sinbad, "is what happened to me on my fourth sea
|
|
voyage."
|
|
With that, the sailor fell silent and his guests remarked in tones of
|
|
wonder about their host's adventures. It was late when the porter rose to his
|
|
feet to leave, and again he found three gold coins slipped into his hand.
|
|
At the first light of dawn next day, Sinbad the Porter went to the house of
|
|
Sinbad the Sailor, who began to tell another tale.
|
|
"I was as good as dead more than once during my fourth voyage, but I soon
|
|
forgot the risks I had run. I began to feel the wanderlust again. This time I
|
|
bought a ship, signed on a captain and loaded it with cargo. We sailed and
|
|
traded from one island to another, till one day, we dropped anchor in a bay of
|
|
a desert island. Far in the distance I could see a white dome. It was a huge
|
|
egg. That's when I knew I had landed on Rukh's island. Though I warned the
|
|
merchants not to, they broke the egg and took out the chick. Just as they were
|
|
about to cook it, the sky grew very dark. Rukh's wings had blotted out the
|
|
sun. We all ran back to the ship and I shouted to cast off immediately. When
|
|
Rukh saw that the egg was broken, off he flew in search of his mate.
|
|
In a very short time, the two great birds came back, circled above the ship
|
|
for a moment or two, then flapped away. We were well out to sea when we
|
|
spotted the birds, each gripping a boulder in its talons. The captain managed
|
|
to swerve and avoid Rukh's rock, but the second boulder scored a direct hit
|
|
on the prow, smashing it to bits. The ship sank like a stone.
|
|
As luck would have it, fate floated a spar towards me and clinging to this,
|
|
I was washed by the tide onto an island beach. I found myself in an immense
|
|
garden of Eden, thickly planted with fruit trees and full of sparkling
|
|
streams. After wandering through this garden for a while, I came upon an old
|
|
man dressed in leaves, beside a spring. Thinking he must be another
|
|
shipwrecked sailor, I went over to him.
|
|
Without saying a word, the old man gestured that he wanted to go into the
|
|
nearby forest, but was unable to walk. So I hoisted him onto my shoulders.
|
|
However, when we reached the spot I thought he had pointed to, he refused to
|
|
get down. What's more, as I tried to shrug him off my back, he squeezed his
|
|
legs so tightly round my neck, I almost choked. I fell to the ground and the
|
|
stranger began to kick me with an energy that was amazing in one so old and so
|
|
small. Then I realised I was at his mercy. Indeed, by dint of kicking, he made
|
|
me carry him here and there, without a moments rest. The only time I got any
|
|
rest was when he fell asleep. But these breaks were very short, for the old
|
|
fellow would not let me be. Dazed by his blows, I was furious at being so
|
|
ill-rewarded for my kindness in helping him in the first place.
|
|
As I was wandering about one day with the old man on my back, I saw some
|
|
large water melons in a field. Close by was a vineyard, the vines laden with
|
|
grapes. I decided I could easily make some wine. The old man said he did not
|
|
mind and let me get on with the job. Several days later, the grapes had
|
|
fermented and when the old fellow saw me happily tasting the wine, he snatched
|
|
the gourd from my hands and drained it dry. A little later, he was flat on the
|
|
ground, helplessly drunk. I kicked him then as hard as I could and ran off.
|
|
A few days after this, a storm drove a ship into the bay, where she dropped
|
|
anchor. I was taken aboard, given fresh clothes and a meal. When the storm had
|
|
passed, the ship set sail and some weeks later we reached the monkey town.
|
|
This strange town got its name from the ferocious monkeys that invaded it
|
|
every evening. Towards sundown, the citizens were obliged to leave the town,
|
|
take refuge on ships and other craft and stay away from the shore. Anyone
|
|
remaining in the town would be killed by these fearsome creatures. Here too I
|
|
had another stroke of bad luck.
|
|
Having left the ship and gone to visit the town, I lingered at the market
|
|
and my ship left without me. I was roaming about feeling very frightened, for
|
|
it was almost evening, when a man came over to me.
|
|
'Come with me,' he said, 'or the monkeys will get you!' So I went aboard
|
|
his boat and spent the night out at sea, returning with the rest of the people
|
|
in the morning. And for the rest of the time I passed on the island, I spent
|
|
the night on this man's boat. The owner became a friend and he said to me:
|
|
'What's your job? What skills do you have?'
|
|
'I'm a merchant,' I replied, 'but I can't trade, for I've lost all I had.'
|
|
'Take this sack then,' he said 'fill it with stones. Go with these men and
|
|
do as they do! Maybe you'll manage to make some money.' So I filled the sack
|
|
with stones and went with the other men to a palm grove on the outskirts of
|
|
the town, the home of a tribe of monkeys. The men started to throw the stones
|
|
at the beasts, and from their perches in the treetops, the monkeys threw
|
|
coconuts. Whether this was in imitation of the men or in self defence, I do
|
|
not know. But when we had thrown all our stones, we filled the sacks with
|
|
coconuts. Back in the town, I took my coconut harvest to my friend.
|
|
'Sell as many as you need to and store the rest in my warehouse.' I could
|
|
not thank him enough for his help. Every day I went to the palm grove and came
|
|
back laden with coconuts. I sold some and stored the rest in the warehouse.
|
|
Then one fine day, a ship sailed in. Now was my chance to go home again. I
|
|
agreed a price with the captain for taking me and my load of coconuts. We set
|
|
sail immediately, calling at islands and ports, and at all of them I bartered
|
|
coconuts. On Cinnamon Island I bought cinnamon, on Pepper Island I got a large
|
|
quantity of pepper. Then we landed on an island where the aloe trees grew. The
|
|
wood of this tree is the best in the world and I bought a large number of
|
|
planks. Later, we came to the Pearl Sea. I called the fishermen and promised
|
|
them many coconuts is they would fish pearls for me. This they did, and they
|
|
brought me lots of big pearls.
|
|
'You have a great fortune there, Sir,' the fishermen exclaimed. Never
|
|
before had they found so many big pearls all at the one time. With the
|
|
blessing of Allah, we had an easy trip to Bassora, where I stopped for some
|
|
time before going on to Baghdad. There I found my home, family and all my
|
|
friends again. I gave generously, especially to widows and orphans, as I
|
|
always did. When all was said and done, I had succeeded in gaining nearly four
|
|
times the amount I had lost. That helped me to quickly forget all my
|
|
misadventures and I soon dropped back into a carefree, happy-go-lucky life.
|
|
"Go now!" said Sinbad the Sailor, "but return tomorrow, and I'll tell you
|
|
what happened during my sixth voyage."
|
|
Sinbad the Porter received his usual three gold coins and went off home.
|
|
Next morning, he returned, and was greeted with Sinbad the Sailor's usual
|
|
kindliness. When the other guests arrived, there was a cheerful feast and all
|
|
those present praised the sailor's generosity. After the meal, Sinbad began to
|
|
tell tale.
|
|
"Well, friends, I was so delighted to be back that my life was a round of
|
|
parties and festivities. Once more I forgot all my past suffering, fears and
|
|
brushes with death. One day, certain merchants who had just returned from a
|
|
long cruise, came to see me, and I was seized with the longing to set out on
|
|
my travels. So I bought new goods and took a passage on a large ship. It was a
|
|
peaceful voyage till the day the captain announced in frightened tones:
|
|
'The wind has blown us into unknown waters. Anything can happen now, for I
|
|
have no idea if there are reefs and rocks. I have no charts that show these
|
|
seas. All we can do is pray to Allah!' Still greatly alarmed, he set the sails
|
|
to quickly leave behind the uncharted waters. But the wind suddenly veered, so
|
|
violently that the rudder split apart, leaving us at the mercy of the waves, a
|
|
short distance from an island surrounded by terrifying rocks.
|
|
'There's no hope for us at all!' cried the captain. And a second later, the
|
|
ship crashed onto the rocks, smashing into a thousand splinters. With one or
|
|
two others, I managed to cling to a rock. We came later to a wide beach,
|
|
encircled by a steep mountain. Wreckage from many a shipwreck lay scattered on
|
|
the shore. Beside the beach, a river flowed for a short distance before
|
|
disappearing into an opening in the rock. We quickly discovered that things of
|
|
value were to be found amongst the wrecks and we picked up rubies, pearls,
|
|
emeralds and diamonds.
|
|
Our great fear, however, was of dying of hunger for, though there were a
|
|
few trees, not one bore any signs of fruit or even a berry to eat. And so,
|
|
within a few days, everyone had died but myself, and I knew that I could not
|
|
last long. I decided to dig my own grave.
|
|
'If I should feel too weak,' I told myself, 'I shall lay myself down in my
|
|
coffin and wait for death. Then the wind will blow sand over me and I too will
|
|
have a proper burial.' I dug the hole, then sat down to await the end, on the
|
|
bank of the river, cursing my craze for travel. As I gazed at the running
|
|
water, I suddenly realised that it must be flowing somewhere, perhaps even to
|
|
a place where people were living. I had to make a raft. With that thought, I
|
|
set to work using driftwood from the beach. Now, in order to float through the
|
|
entrance to the rock the raft would have to be short and narrow, so I made it
|
|
the same length as my own height and found two short sticks as oars. I loaded
|
|
all the gems I had found and my remaining items of food. Then I shoved it into
|
|
the water and lay down on it.
|
|
The current swept me under the shadow of the rock and into darkness. The
|
|
raft floated along, brushing the walls of the underground passageway, ready to
|
|
capsize from one minute to the next. Then the tunnel widened and the raft
|
|
glided so smoothly and so gently that I fell asleep.
|
|
When I awoke, I was back in the open air, lying on the grassy river bank
|
|
and surrounded by men. Their friendly looks quickly calmed my fears.
|
|
'Welcome, brother,' said one of the men as I opened my eyes. 'Where have
|
|
you come from? Who are you?' I almost shouted at him:
|
|
'In the name of all-holy Allah! Give me a bite of food. Then I'll answer
|
|
all your questions.' At once the kindly people brought me food and drink, and
|
|
as I gobbled it hungrily, I told them my tale.
|
|
'We must take you to our king,' said the men. 'This is an extraordinary
|
|
story. He'll be interested to hear it.' A few hours later, we were in the
|
|
city. My new friends had brought the raft too, with its load. The king gave me
|
|
a splendid welcome, listened to my tale and said how glad he was I had scraped
|
|
through. Being curious to hear about life in my own land, he asked me to stay
|
|
as his guest.
|
|
'I've learned a lot from you,' he told me. 'The Caliph of Baghdad seems to
|
|
be a wise ruler. I wish to send him a gift as a token of friendship and
|
|
respect. I'd like you to take it to him when you return to your own city.'
|
|
Not long after, a group of merchants engaged a ship to sail to Bassora.
|
|
This was my chance. I went to the king and told him I wanted to leave. And
|
|
with great courtesy, since I was to take his gift to the Caliph of Baghdad, he
|
|
paid all my travelling expenses.
|
|
The moment I reached Baghdad, I called on the Caliph with the gift. He was
|
|
amazed and wondered why an unknown king should be so generous. So I told him
|
|
what had happened. I spent almost a whole week at the Caliph's court, for the
|
|
ruler never tired of hearing me repeat my story. At long last, I was free to
|
|
return home, and I carefully laid my treasure in my strong boxes. And this is
|
|
the adventure of the sixth voyage," ended Sinbad the Sailor. The porter was
|
|
handed his three gold coins and off he went. Back he came at sunrise next day,
|
|
and again Sinbad the Sailor began to recount.
|
|
"As before, I craved to travel after a while. For a long time, we had fair
|
|
winds. Then one day, a storm blew up, bringing driving rain, like nothing we
|
|
had ever seen before. But this was not all, for a little later, the captain
|
|
began to tear his hair in desperation as he cried:
|
|
'Pray Allah if we're to be saved! This is the sea of the doomed, from which
|
|
there is no return.' Then he took a fistful of earth from a box, dampened it
|
|
with seawater, sniffed it and went on to say:
|
|
'Men, this is a strange part of the world we're in, with evil forces. We've
|
|
no hope of escape. We are close to the land where King Solomon is buried, and
|
|
the home of huge deadly snakes. Ships here are swallowed by monster fish!'
|
|
Hardly had the captain said these words than there was a terrible roar, like
|
|
the sound of a thousand tempests. In a flash a giant fish rose from the deep
|
|
and swam towards us. We had barely set eyes on this, when a second and then
|
|
another even more gigantic fish broke the surface of the sea. All three
|
|
splashed round and round us, then the biggest hurled itself at our ship, its
|
|
jaws gaping wide to swallow us. At that very instant, a great wave heaved the
|
|
ship into the air and threw it against the rocks. Everyone on board was
|
|
knocked into the sea. Gasping for breath, I managed to grab a plank. Then I
|
|
found I was alone, for all the others had drowned.
|
|
'If I get out of here alive,' I cried, 'I swear to Allah that I'll never
|
|
again leave Baghdad.' For two days and nights I floated in the sea, but on the
|
|
third day, my feet located dry land. I was on an island, and as I explored it,
|
|
I came to a river that reminded me of my previous voyage. Perhaps this river
|
|
too would carry me to safety.
|
|
Again I needed a raft, and set about finding suitable bits of wood.
|
|
Luckily, I laid hands on some precious sandalwood, which is light and floats
|
|
well. The raft was soon ready and I set off down the river. For two days,
|
|
everything went smoothly, but on the third day, the current dragged me in the
|
|
direction of a cave. Terror-stricken, I tried in vain to pole the raft to the
|
|
bank, but the river carried me into the heart of the mountain. This time the
|
|
tunnel was not very long, but a series of waterfalls boomed and echoed like
|
|
thunder and I was battered and beaten by the rushing waters. At long last,
|
|
after running the risk of being smashed to pieces against the rocks, the river
|
|
again flowed calmly and carried me along till I came to a city.
|
|
By that time I was half dead from hunger and terror. An old man with a
|
|
white beard took me home and gave me shelter. Some days later, he said to me.
|
|
'Come with me, my son, to the market and sell your goods.' I could not
|
|
understand what he meant. What goods? But I said nothing. Then I discovered
|
|
that the sandalwood, of which the raft was made, was valuable in that country.
|
|
And so, I again became rich. The old man grew so fond of me he wanted me to
|
|
marry his only daughter. I had no choice but to agree. In any case, his
|
|
daughter was kind and beautiful, as well as rich. Time passed and the old man
|
|
died. I inherited his worldly goods and also his position as chief of the
|
|
merchants.
|
|
But I quickly made an amazing discovery about some of the inhabitants of
|
|
the city: on the first day of each month, certain men grew wings, rose into
|
|
the air and flew far out of sight. The next day, they went back to everyday
|
|
life.
|
|
The first day of the next month, I approached one of the winged men and
|
|
jumped on his back. Off we flew, higher and higher into the sky, almost
|
|
touching the vaults of heaven, and I thought I heard the angels sing. Overcome
|
|
by emotion, I couldn't help calling out:
|
|
'Praise and Glory be to Allah!' I had hardly said the last word when a
|
|
giant tongue of fire leapt from the sky, just missing us by inches. We dived
|
|
down to the peak of a high mountain and the winged man yelled at me in rage:
|
|
'You spoiled everything, praising Allah while we were flying!'
|
|
'I never dreamt that it would do any harm,' I replied. 'I'm very sorry.
|
|
Please take me back to the city.' The man agreed, on condition that I made no
|
|
mention of Allah while on his back. He took me straight home where my wife,
|
|
worried at my absence, was delighted to see me. When I told her what had
|
|
happened, she said:
|
|
'You were naive. You mustn't go near these folk. They're brothers to the
|
|
Devil and hate the name of Allah.'
|
|
'What about your father?' I asked.
|
|
'My father never had anything to do with them, and never did anything
|
|
wrong. He wanted me to marry you so there would be no danger of my becoming
|
|
the wife of a winged man. Why don't you sell everything and let's go together
|
|
to Baghdad?' I took her advice and some months later, we came home. Here I saw
|
|
friends and relatives who had given up all hope of ever setting eyes on me
|
|
again, and they gave us a great homecoming.
|
|
Everyone was astonished to hear my story, but all were overjoyed when I
|
|
swore that I had been on my last voyage. And this was also my last adventure,"
|
|
concluded the host.
|
|
"Please excuse me for my complaints when I didn't know you and had no idea
|
|
how much you had gone through to become rich," said Sinbad the Porter. Sinbad
|
|
the Sailor hugged him and asked him to remain in his house as a guest. And
|
|
from that day on, Sinbad the Sailor and Sinbad the Porter lived together as
|
|
brothers.
|
|
|