Love at my door
Knocked and I gave him bed.
When sleep saw this
He took offence and fled.
‘Give me back sleep;
Where has he gone?’ I said.
They said: ‘Our friend
That kept the sure straight way,
Who has done this
To send you so astray,
To lead you blind
Into the sand?’ said they.
The King was in no way averse to listening to the tale of Shahrazad by Eric Fraser From the Folio Society edition of 1958 |
I said: ‘Not I,
But she must answer make.
I could but cry:
My blood, which is hers to take,
Lies heavily
Not spilled yet for her sake.
I chose a girl
To put my thought in her;
She is my thought,
My thought’s her imager;
Now she is gone
Fire is my comforter.
See for yourselves!
Even Allah like a lover
From molten threads
Of the syrup of life wove her;
Then made all gems
And fruits with what was over.’
But they said: ‘Fool,
Small joy and, for the rest,
Torture and tears
And hugging to the breast
Shades on a pool.
The first drink is the best.’
‘If I am drunk
I came not so by drinking,
It was enough
To see the ruby winking
There in the glass—
Sleep saw it too, I’m thinking.
It’s not that time
Has passed, but that so has she,
It’s not that love
Won’t last, but that nor will she,
Not that life’s gone,
But that she’s gone from me.
My soul is bound
By the scents of her body,
Jasmine and musk
And rose of her body,
Amber and nard.
The scents of her body.’
Anonymous (pre 9th cenury) Iraq (ancient Persia)
Translated by Dr J. C. Mardrus (into French) and Powys Mathers (from the French into English)
Source: The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Volume I, Dorset Press, 1987
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