173 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
173 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
ALI BABA AND THE FORTY THIEVES
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Once upon a time . . . in a distant Persian city lived two brothers called
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Ali Baba and Kasim. Ali Baba was terribly poor, and he lived with his wife in
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a mud hut. He picked up sticks in the woods and sold them in bundles at the
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market.
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Kasim, however, had a rich wife, and he lived in a big fine house and sold
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carpets. He became richer than ever. One day, as Ali Baba was gathering sticks
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in a wood some way from the city he heard a band of horsemen gallop towards
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him. Scared that he might be in trouble for stealing wood, he scrambled up a
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tree and hid amongst the foliage, seconds before the men, armed to the teeth,
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rode underneath.
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They were robbers, no doubt about that. Ali could tell by their evil looks,
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rough beards and bad language. But what made it perfectly clear to him was the
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booty they unloaded from their horses, obviously plundered in a raid. Their
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leader was a grim wicked-looking man. Followed by his men, he strode towards
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a rocky mountain nearby. Throwing wide his arms suddenly shouted:
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"Open sesame!"
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Ali Baba could hardly believe his eyes. For at the robber's words, the rock
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face swung open to become the entrance to a deep, dark cave. The robbers
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trooped inside, dragging their sacks. Ali Baba was struck dumb by this
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amazing sight, and he crouched in his tree, without moving a muscle. He could
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cahear the robbers' voices echo in the cave, then out they came. Again
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opening his arms, the leader exclaimed loudly:
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"Close sesame!" And the rock swung tightly shut, as they leapt onto their
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horses and galloped away. Trembling with fear, Ali Baba climbed down the tree.
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He had just had the biggest shock of his life. Hardly aware of what he was
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doing, he muttered:
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"Open sesame," But the mountain stood still. Ali Baba said the words again,
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but this time he shouted them. Suddenly, the rock began to move. Ali Baba lit
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a flare and entered the cave. In front of his bulging eyes lay vast piles of
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treasure: pots of silver gold, precious vases, weapons studded with rubbies
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and emeralds, diadems, carved plates and carpets, all heaped together.
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The poveryt-striken stick-gatherer rubbed his eyes in disbelief. His hand
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was shaking like a leaf, as he picked up a gold coin.
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"It's real!" he said in awe. Jabbering with excitement and stunned at the
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sight of such untold wealth, he told himself:
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"I'll take some coins. Nobody will ever know!" And he filled four bags
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full. The second he reached home, Ali Baba locked the door and emptied the
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sacks in front of his astounded wife.
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"Count them," he ordered her triumphantly, before telling her what had
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happened. But there were far too many coins for these poor people to count.
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"We can't count them all. Run to my brother's house and ask him for a corn
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measure. We'll use that," said Ali Baba. When Kasim's wife heard this strange
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request, her curiosity was aroused.
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"][ wonder what they want to measure. It can't be corn, they're far too
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poor." And she quickly brushed a touch of tar across the bottom of the
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measuring pail. And when she got the pail back there was something stuck to it
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- as the clever woman had known there would be. It was a gold coin.
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"A gold coin. Where did that come from? They're the poorest of the poor!"
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And she rushed off to tell her husband. Kasim was most annoyed.
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"How dare my brother have gold coins without telling me about it," he
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snapped. And off he marched to ask Ali Baba for an explanation. Ali Baba
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innocently told Kasim his strange story, but asked him to keep it a secret. Of
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course, Kasim promised, but he quickly told his wife about it and ordered the
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servants to saddle ten sturdy mules for next morning.
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"I'll be richer than ever. Incredibly rich!" he said to himself as he went
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to bed. But he didn't sleep a wink for thinking of the treasure. It was still
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dark when Kasim and his mule train set out. When he reached the mountain,
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beyond the forest, he pronounced the magic words and entered the cave. With a
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beating heart, he crammed as much as he could into the saddle bags. But
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Kasim's greed led to his downfall, for the bags were so stuffed with treasure
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that they became too heavy to lift. Kasim realised, with a sinking feeling,
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that he would have to leave behind some of his precious burden. But it took
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him a long time, and he was still picking over what to keep and what to
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abandon, when . . .
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. . . as fate would have it, the robber band returned. When they saw that
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the entrance to the cave was open, they rushed inside with drawn swords.
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Unlucky Kasim was quickly discovered and killed. And the robbers were so
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fierce that they chopped hlm into four and left the pieces at the entrance.
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"That will warn any other snooper of the end that awaits him!" shouted the
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leader.
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Kasim's wife waited in vain for two days, then in desperation, she ran to
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Ali Baba and told him where her husband had gone, asking for help. Ali Baba
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was dismayed.
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"He promised he would never . ." However, Ali Baba was fond of his brother,
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so he saddled a mule and rode to the mountain. When he saw, to his horror, the
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remains of Kasim, he broke down and wept. Then he plucked up enough courage to
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wrap them in a rug, which he tied to the mule's back. But Kasim's wife, when
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she saw what had happened to her husband, died of a broken heart. Ali Baba and
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his family went to live in Kasim's palace. There he met Morgantina, a clever
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young slave girl who had long been a servant in the palace. It was she who
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told Ali Baba that his brother's remains could be put together again before
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being buried. Mustapha, the cobbler, would do the job, for a good reward.
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"I have to blindfold you," Morgantina told the cobbler, "so you can't see
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where you're going, then there won't be any gossip." The cobbler did his work
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well and was led, still blindfolded, back to his shop, with a bag of gold for
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his trouble.
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In the meantime, when the robber leader saw that the body had been removed,
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he knew that someone else had found the treasure trove. Angry and alarmed, he
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ordered one of his men to sneak into the city and find out what he could.
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Well, by sheer chance, the spy had a hole in the sole of his boot and he went
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into the cbobblers. Mustapha was bursting to tell someone all about his luck...
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"...and they gave me a bag of gold for stitching the body together again."
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"If you take me to the place, I'll give you another bag of gold," said the
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robber immediately. The robber nearly danced for joy. Then his heart sank. How
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was he to find the house he had never seen.
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"I'll blindfold you again," said the robber, "then you take your time and
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try to remember which way you went!" As it turned out the robber was lucky, for
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Mustapha had an exxcelent sense of direction. What's more, he had counted his
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footsteps. So he counted them ahain.
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"...five hundred and ten, five hundred and eleven, five hundred and twelve.
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Here!" The cobbler wrenched the cloth from his eyes and found himself in front
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of Ali Baba's palace. The robber handed over the bag of gold and, unseen, drew
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a red cross on the door. Then he hurried away to give his leader the news.
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Dusk fell and, as Morgantina was about to enter the palace, she noticed the
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strange mark. Her suspicions aroused, she quickly drew red cross on all the
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other doors in the street. At dead of night the wicked band arrived to take
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revenge, but at the sight of all the red crosses, they stopped in their tracks.
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Which was the right door? Morgantina had unknowingly saved her master from
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death, and the leader of the gang put his man to the sword for giving him a
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false lead.
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"You fools. Can't you do anything properly? I'll go to the city myself."
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Disguised as a merchant, he went to Mustapha. Delighted at the idea of
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earning more money, the cobbler took the robber to Ali Baba's palace. And the
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wicked man fixed in his mind the exact place and street. Back in his hideout,
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he ordered two of his men to buy a cart and thirty nine giant jars. Now, after
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the murder of the messenger, there were only thirty eight robbers left, and
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each one hid in a jar. The last jar was fi!led with oil, and loaded with the
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others onto the cart pulled by four horses. The robbers set off for the city.
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It was late when they reached the palace and Ali Baba himself caame out.
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"What can I da for you?" he said.
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"I'm an oil merchant," replied the leader, "and I must be at market
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tomorrow. It's late an we're weary. Can you give us a bed for the night?"
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Pleased at being able to help, Ali Baba, who had known what it meant to be
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poor, warmly welcomed the merchant and his men and had the cart taken into the
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courtyard.
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After a good meal, the leader of the band went back to the courtyard. He
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said he was going to make sure than none of the jars had been damaged during
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the journey, but in fact, he warned his men to be ready, at a signal, to leap
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from the jars and kill everyone in the palace. As the household slept,
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Morgantina lingered in the kitchen to tidy up. Suddenly, she thought she would
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have a sip of the merchant's oil to see if it was as tasty as her own. But
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when she lifted the lid from the first jar, to her horror, a gruff voice
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growled:
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<20> "Is it time?"
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"No, not yet," muttered Morgantina hastily. At every jar, exactly the same
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thing happened, but the last one was filled with oil, which she dragged back
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into the kitchen. She then tipped the contents into a huge cauldron and heated
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it over the fire. Then, taking a jugful of boiling oil, Morgantina poured it
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over the head of a robber. She then poured the oil over every one of the
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robbers and, in this way, wiped out the whole band. Then she hid in a corner.
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A little later, the leader of the robber band hurried into the courtyard to
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give the signal to attack. But when he raised the lids, he found to his terror
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that every one of his men was dead. Horrified, he could not fathorn what trap
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he had fallen into. The robber fled into the night.
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Next morning, Morgantina told Ali Baba of her adventure.
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"I'll never be able to thank you enough!" exclaimed Ali Baba. "You are an
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amazing girl. From this second you are no longer a slave, but a free member of
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this household." The dead men were buried under cover of darkness, and Ali
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Baba was sure he had nothing more to fear. The leader of the robber band,
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however, had recovered from his shock and was eager for revenge. So he shaved
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off his beard, changed his looks and disguised himself as a carpet seller. At
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the market, he met Tabit, Ali Baba s son, who took a llklng to him.
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"Sooner or later this silly chap will invite me home," said the false
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carpet seller, "then I can murder them all."
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"That merchant has sold you some fine carpets very cheaply, remarked Ali
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Baba to his son. "Ask him to come to the house." When Morgantina saw the
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guest, she felt sure his face was familiar. Then she remembered. The carpet
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seller and the leader of the band were one and the same person. Without saying
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a word, she went back to the kitchen, but later she asked All Baba if she
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might dance for the guest.
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"If you like," said Ali Baba. When coffee was served, Morgantina entered in
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D a swirl ofF veils to the beat of her tambourine. In her right hand she held
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a knife. As she stopped dancing, she thrust the knife into the carpet seller's
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heart.
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"He's one of the robbers!" she cried. "I know his face. He would have
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killed us all." Morgantina had once more saved their lives! Tabit hugged her,
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little knowing that his joy would soon turn to love and that they would marry.
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Ali Baba was the only person left who knew the secret of the treasure. He made
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wise use of it for many years, but he never told anyone the magic words that
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would open the cave of the Forty Thieves.
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