'Hearkening and obedience,'answered Amjad whereupon the King bestowed magnificent dresses of honour on him and Bahadur and gave him a handsome house,with eunuchs and officers and all things needful,appointing him stipends and allowances and bidding him make search for his brother As'ad. So Amjad sat down in the seat of the Wazirate and governed and did justice and invested and deposed and took and gave. Moreover,he sent out a crier to cry his brother throughout the city,and for many days made proclamation in the main streets and marketstreets,but heard no news of As'ad nor happened on any trace of him. Such was his case;but as regards his brother,the Magi ceased not to torture As'ad night and day and eve and morn for a whole year's space,till their festival drew near,when the old man Bahram[392] made ready for the voyage and fitted out a ship for himself.And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.
When it was the Two Hundred and Thirtyfourth Night,She said,It hath reached me,O auspicious King,that Bahram,the Magian,having fitted out a ship for the voyage,took As'ad and put him in a chest which he locked and had it transported on board. Now it so came to pass that,at the very time of shipping it,Amjad was standing to divert himself by looking upon the sea;and when he saw the men carrying the gear and shipping it,his heart throbbed and he called to his pages to bring him his beast.
Then,mounting with a company of his officers,he rode down to the seaside and halted before the Magian's ship,which he commended his men to board and search. They did his bidding,and boarded the vessel and rummaged in every part,but found nothing;so they returned and told Amjad,who mounted again and rode back.
But he felt troubled in mind;and when he reached his place and entered his palace,he cast his eyes on the wall and saw written thereon two lines which were these couplets,'My friends! if ye are banisht from mine eyes,From heart and mind ye ne'er go wandering: