Disturb her temper and her mind obscure,Patient I'll bear them;e'en as generous youth his case to cure.'' Beareth the burn of brand his case to cure.'[70]
And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased saying her permitted say.
When it was the One Hundred and Thirtyninth Night,She said,It hath reached me,O auspicious King,that when the Grand Chamberlain became Sultan they named him King Sasan;and after he had assumed the throne he governed the people in righteous way.Now as he was giving audience one day,Kanmakan's verses came to his knowledge.Thereupon he repented him of the past and going in to his wife Nuzhat alZaman,said to her,'Verily,to join Halfah grass and fire,[71] is the greatest of risks,and man may not be trusted with woman,so long as eye glanceth and eyelid quivereth.Now thy brother's son,Kanmakan,is come to man's estate and it behoveth us to forbid him access to the rooms where anklets trinkle,and it is yet more needful to forbid thy daughter the company of men,for the like of her should be kept in the Harim.'Replied she,'Thou sayest sooth,O
wise King!'Next day came Kanmakan according to his wont;and,going in to his aunt saluted her.She returned his salutation and said to him,'O my son! I have some what to say to thee which I would fain leave unsaid;yet I must tell it thee despite my inclination.'Quoth he,'Speak;'and quoth she,Know then that thy sire the Chamberlain,the father of Kuzia Fakan,hath heard of the verses thou madest anent her,and hath ordered that she be kept in the Harim and out of thy reach;if therefore,O my son,thou want anything from us,I will send it to thee from behind the door;and thou shalt not look upon Kuzia Fakan nor shalt thou return hither from this day forth.'When he heard this he arose and withdrew with out speaking a single word;and,betaking himself to his mother related what his aunt had said.She observed,'This all cometh of thine overtalking.Thou knowest that the news of thy passion for Kuzia Fakan is noised abroad and the tattle hath spread everywhere how thou eatest their food and thereafter thou courtest their daughter.'Rejoined he,'And who should have her but I?She is the daughter of my father's brother and I have the best of rights to her.'Retorted his mother,'These are idle words.Be silent,lest haply thy talk come to King Sasan's ears and it prove the cause of thy losing her and the reason of thy ruin and increase of thine affliction.