There once lived a poor tailor, who
had a son called Aladdin, a careless, idle boy who would do nothing but
play all day long in the streets with little idle boys like himself.
This so grieved the father that he died; yet, in spite of his mother's
tears and prayers, Aladdin did not mend his ways. One day, when he
was playing in the streets as usual, a stranger asked him his age, and
if he were not the son of Mustapha the tailor.
"I am, sir," replied Aladdin; "but
he died a long while ago."
On this the stranger, who was a famous
African magician, fell on his neck and kissed him, saying: "I am
your uncle, and knew you from your likeness to my brother. Go to
your mother and tell her I am coming."
Aladdin ran home, and told his mother
of his newly found uncle.
"Indeed, child," she said, "your
father had a brother, but I always thought he was dead."
However, she prepared supper, and
bade Aladdin seek his uncle, who came laden with wine and fruit.
He presently fell down and kissed the place where Mustapha used to sit,
bidding Aladdin's mother not to be surprised at not having seen him before,
as he had been forty years out of the country. He then turned to
Aladdin, and asked him his trade, at which the boy hung his head, while
his mother burst into tears. On learning that Aladdin was idle and
would learn no trade, he offered to take a shop for him and stock it with
merchandise. Next day he bought Aladdin a fine suit of clothes, and took
him all over the city, showing him the sights, and brought him home at
nightfall to his mother, who was overjoyed to see her son so fine.
Next day the magician led Aladdin
into some beautiful gardens a long way outside the city gates. They
sat down by a fountain, and the magician pulled a cake from his girdle,
which he divided between them. They then journeyed onwards till they
almost reached the mountains. Aladdin was so tired that he begged
to go back, but the magician beguiled him with pleasant stories, and led
him on in spite of himself.
At last they came to two mountains
divided by a narrow valley.
"We will go no farther," said the
false uncle. "I will show you something wonderful; only do you gather
up sticks while I kindle a fire."
When it was lit the magician threw
on it a powder he had about him, at the same time saying some magical words.
The earth trembled a little and opened in front of them, disclosing a square
flat stone with a brass ring in the middle to raise it by. Aladdin
tried to run away, but the magician caught him and
gave him a blow that knocked him down.
"What have I done, uncle?" he said
piteously; whereupon the magician said more kindly: "Fear nothing,
but obey me. Beneath this stone lies a treasure which is to be yours,
and no one else may touch it, so you must do exactly as I tell you."
At the word treasure, Aladdin forgot
his fears, and grasped the ring as he was told, saying the names of his
father and grandfather. The stone came up quite easily and some steps appeared.
"Go down," said the magician; "at
the foot of those steps you will find an open door leading into three large
halls. Tuck up your gown and go through them without touching anything,
or you will die instantly. These halls lead into a garden of fine fruit
trees. Walk on till you come to a niche in a terrace where stands
a lighted lamp. Pour out the oil it contains and bring it to me."
He drew a ring from his finger and
gave it to Aladdin, bidding him prosper.
Aladdin found everything as the magician
had said, gathered some fruit off the trees, and, having got the lamp,
arrived at the mouth of the cave. The magician cried out in a great
hurry:
"Make haste and give me the lamp."
This Aladdin refused to do until he was out of the cave. The magician
flew into a terrible passion, and throwing some more powder on the fire,
he said something, and the stone rolled back into its place.
The magician left Persia for ever,
which plainly showed that he was no uncle of Aladdin's, but a cunning magician
who had read in his magic books of a wonderful lamp, which would make him
the most powerful man in the world. Though he alone knew where to
find it, he could only receive it from the hand of another. He had
picked out the foolish Aladdin for this purpose, intending to get the lamp
and kill him afterwards.
For two days Aladdin remained in
the dark, crying and lamenting. At last he clasped his hands in prayer,
and in so doing rubbed the ring, which the magician had forgotten to take
from him. Immediately an enormous and frightful genie rose out of
the earth, saying:
"What wouldst thou with me?
I am the Slave of the Ring, and will obey thee in all things."
Aladdin fearlessly replied:
"Deliver me from this place!" whereupon the earth opened, and he found
himself outside. As soon as his eyes could bear the light he went home,
but fainted on the threshold. When he
came to himself he told his mother what had passed, and showed her the
lamp and the fruits he had gathered in the garden, which were in reality
precious stones. He then asked for some food.
"Alas! child," she said, "I have
nothing in the house, but I have spun a little cotton and will go and sell
it."
Aladdin bade her keep her cotton,
for he would sell the lamp instead. As it was very dirty she began to rub
it, that it might fetch a higher price. Instantly a hideous genie
appeared, and asked what she would have. She fainted away, but Aladdin,
snatching the lamp, said boldly:
"Fetch me something to eat!"
The genie returned with a silver
bowl, twelve silver plates containing rich meats, two silver cups, and
two bottles of wine. Aladdin's mother, when she came to herself, said:
"Whence comes this splendid feast?"
"Ask not, but eat," replied Aladdin.
So they sat at breakfast till it
was dinner-time, and Aladdin told his mother about the lamp. She
begged him to sell it, and have nothing to do with devils.
"No," said Aladdin, "since chance
has made us aware of its virtues, we will use it and the ring likewise,
which I shall always wear on my finger." When they had eaten all
the genie had brought, Aladdin sold one of the silver plates, and so on
till none were left. He then had recourse to the genie, who gave him another
set of plates, and thus they lived for many years.
One day Aladdin heard an order from
the Sultan proclaimed that everyone was to stay at home and close his shutters
while the princess, his daughter, went to and from the bath. Aladdin
was seized by a desire to see her face, which was very difficult, as she
always went veiled. He hid himself behind the door of
the bath, and peeped through a chink. The princess lifted her veil
as she went in, and looked so beautiful that Aladdin fell in love with
her at first sight. He went home so changed that his
mother was frightened. He told her he loved the princess so deeply
that he could not live without her, and meant to ask her in marriage of
her father. His mother, on hearing this, burst out laughing, but
Aladdin at last prevailed upon her to go before the Sultan and carry his
request. She fetched a napkin and laid in it the magic fruits from
the enchanted garden, which sparkled and shone like the most beautiful
jewels. She took these with her to please the Sultan, and set out,
trusting in the lamp. The grand-vizir and the lords of council had just
gone in as she entered the hall and placed herself in front of the Sultan.
He, however, took no notice of her.
She went every day for a week, and stood in the same place.
When the council broke up on the
sixth day the Sultan said to his vizir: "I see a certain woman in
the audience-chamber every day carrying something in a napkin. Call
her next time, that I may find out what she wants."
Next day, at a sign from the vizir,
she went up to the foot of the throne, and remained kneeling till the Sultan
said to her: "Rise, good woman, and tell me what you want."
She hesitated, so the Sultan sent
away all but the vizir, and bade her speak freely, promising to forgive
her beforehand for anything she might say. She then told him of her
son's violent love for the princess.
"I prayed him to forget her," she
said, "but in vain; he threatened to do some desperate deed if I refused
to go and ask your Majesty for the hand of the princess. Now I pray
you to forgive not me alone, but my son Aladdin."
The Sultan asked her kindly what
she had in the napkin, whereupon she unfolded the jewels and presented
them.
He was thunderstruck, and turning
to the vizir said: "What sayest thou? Ought I not to bestow the princess
on one who values her at such a price?"
The vizir, who wanted her for his
own son, begged the Sultan to withhold her for three months, in the
course of which he hoped his son would contrive to make him a richer present.
The Sultan granted this, and told Aladdin's mother that, though he consented
to the marriage,
she must not appear before him again
for three months.
Aladdin waited patiently for nearly
three months, but after two had elapsed his mother, going into the city
to buy oil, found everyone rejoicing, and asked what was going on.
"Do you not know," was the answer,
"that the son of the grand-vizir is to marry the Sultan's daughter to-night?"
Breathless, she ran and told Aladdin,
who was overwhelmed at first, but presently bethought him of the lamp.
He rubbed it, and the genie appeared, saying: "What is thy will?"
Aladdin replied: "The Sultan,
as thou knowest, has broken his promise to me, and the vizir's son is to
have the princess. My command is that to-night you bring hither the bride
and bridegroom."
"Master, I obey," said the genie.
Aladdin then went to his chamber,
where, sure enough at midnight the genie transported the bed containing
the vizir's son and the princess.
"Take this new-married man," he said,
"and put him outside in the cold, and return at daybreak."
Whereupon the genie took the vizir's
son out of bed, leaving Aladdin with the princess.
"Fear nothing," Aladdin said to her;
"you are my wife, promised to me by your unjust father, and no harm shall
come to you."
The princess was too frightened to
speak, and passed the most miserable night of her life, while Aladdin lay
down beside her and slept soundly. At the appointed hour the genie fetched
in the shivering bridegroom, laid him in his place, and transported the
bed back to the palace.
Presently the Sultan came to wish
his daughter good-morning. The unhappy vizir's son jumped up and hid himself,
while the princess would not say a word, and was very sorrowful.
The Sultan sent her mother to her,
who said: "How comes it, child, that you will not speak to your father?
What has happened?"
The princess sighed deeply, and at
last told her mother how, during the night, the bed had been carried into
some strange house, and what had passed there. Her mother did not
believe her in the least, but bade her rise and consider it an idle dream.
The following night exactly the same
thing happened, and next morning, on the princess's refusing to speak,
the Sultan threatened to cut off her head. She then confessed all,
bidding him ask the vizir's son if it were not so. The Sultan told
the vizir to ask his son, who owned the truth, adding that, dearly as he
loved the princess, he had rather die than go through another such fearful
night, and wished to be separated from her. His wish was granted,
and there
was an end of feasting and rejoicing.
When the three months were over,
Aladdin sent his mother to remind the Sultan of his promise. She
stood in the same place as before, and the Sultan, who had forgotten Aladdin,
at once remembered him, and sent for her. On seeing her poverty the
Sultan felt less inclined than ever to keep his word, and asked the vizir's
advice, who counselled him to set so high a value on the princess that
no man living could come up to it.
The Sultan then turned to Aladdin's
mother, saying: "Good woman, a Sultan must remember his promises,
and I will remember mine, but your son must first send me forty basins
of gold brimful
of jewels, carried by forty black
slaves, led by as many white ones, splendidly dressed. Tell him that
I await his answer." The mother of Aladdin bowed low and went home,
thinking all was lost.
She gave Aladdin the message, adding:
"He may wait long enough for your answer!"
"Not so long, mother, as you think,"
her son replied "I would do a great deal more than that for the princess."
He summoned the genie, and in a few
moments the eighty slaves arrived, and filled up the small house and garden.
Aladdin made them set out to the
palace, two and two, followed by his mother. They were so richly
dressed, with such splendid jewels in their girdles, that everyone crowded
to see them and the basins of gold they carried on their heads.
They entered the palace, and, after
kneeling before the Sultan, stood in a half-circle round the throne with
their arms crossed, while Aladdin's mother presented them to the Sultan.
He hesitated no longer, but said:
"Good woman, return and tell your son that I wait for him with open arms."
She lost no time in telling Aladdin,
bidding him make haste. But Aladdin first called the genie.
"I want a scented bath," he said,
"a richly embroidered habit, a horse surpassing the Sultan's, and twenty
slaves to attend me. Besides this, six slaves, beautifully dressed, to
wait on my mother; and lastly, ten thousand pieces of gold in ten purses."
No sooner said than done. Aladdin
mounted his horse and passed through the streets, the slaves strewing gold
as they went. Those who had played with him in his childhood knew him not,
he had grown so handsome.
When the Sultan saw him he came down
from his throne, embraced him, and led him into a hall where a feast was
spread, intending to marry him to the princess that very day.
But Aladdin refused, saying, "I must
build a palace fit for her," and took his leave.
Once home he said to the genie:
"Build me a palace of the finest marble, set with jasper, agate, and other
precious stones. In the middle you shall build me a large hall with a dome,
its four walls of massy gold and silver, each side having six windows,
whose lattices, all except one, which is to be left unfinished, must be
set with diamonds and rubies. There must be stables and horses and
grooms and slaves; go and see about it!"
The palace was finished by next day,
and the genie carried him there and showed him all his orders faithfully
carried out, even to the laying of a velvet carpet from Aladdin's palace
to the
Sultan's. Aladdin's mother then
dressed herself carefully, and walked to the palace with her slaves, while
he followed her on horseback. The Sultan sent musicians with trumpets and
cymbals to meet them, so that the air resounded with music and cheers.
She was taken
to the princess, who saluted her
and treated her with great honour. At night the princess said good-bye
to her father, and set out on the carpet for Aladdin's palace, with his
mother at her side, and followed by the hundred slaves. She was charmed
at the sight of Aladdin, who ran to receive her.
"Princess," he said, "blame your
beauty for my boldness if I have displeased you."
She told him that, having seen him,
she willingly obeyed her father in this matter. After the wedding
had taken place Aladdin led her into the hall, where a feast was spread,
and she supped with him, after which they danced till midnight.
Next day Aladdin invited the Sultan
to see the palace. On entering the hall with the four-and-twenty
windows, with their rubies, diamonds, and emeralds, he cried:
"It is a world's wonder! There
is only one thing that surprises me. Was it by accident that one window
was left unfinished?"
"No, sir, by design," returned Aladdin.
"I wished your Majesty to have the glory of finishing this palace."
The Sultan was pleased, and sent
for the best jewelers in the city. He showed them the unfinished window,
and bade them fit it up like the others.
"Sir," replied their spokesman, "we
cannot find jewels enough."
The Sultan had his own fetched, which
they soon used, but to no purpose, for in a month's time the work was not
half done. Aladdin, knowing that their task was vain, bade them undo their
work and carry the jewels back, and the genie finished the window at his
command. The Sultan was surprised to receive his jewels again and
visited Aladdin, who showed him the window finished. The Sultan embraced
him, the envious vizir meanwhile hinting
that it was the work of enchantment.
Aladdin had won the hearts of the
people by his gentle bearing. He was made captain of the Sultan's armies,
and won several battles for him, but remained modest and courteous as before,
and lived thus in peace and content for several years.
But far away in Africa the magician
remembered Aladdin, and by his magic arts discovered that Aladdin, instead
of perishing miserably in the cave, had escaped, and had married a princess,
with whom he was living in great honour and wealth. He knew that
the poor tailor's son could only have accomplished this by means of the
lamp, and travelled night and day till he reached the capital of China,
bent on Aladdin's ruin. As he passed through the town he heard people
talking everywhere about a marvellous palace.
"Forgive my ignorance," he asked,
"what is this palace you speak of?"
"Have you not heard of Prince Aladdin's
palace," was the reply, "the greatest wonder of the world? I will
direct you if you have a mind to see it."
The magician thanked him who spoke,
and having seen the palace knew that it had been raised by the genie of
the lamp, and became half mad with rage. He determined to get hold
of the lamp, and again plunge Aladdin into the deepest poverty.
Unluckily, Aladdin had gone a-hunting
for eight days, which gave the magician plenty of time. He bought
a dozen copper lamps, put them into a basket, and went to the palace, crying:
"New lamps for old!" followed by a jeering crowd.
The princess, sitting in the hall
of four-and-twenty windows, sent a slave to find out what the noise was
about, who came back laughing, so that the princess scolded her.
"Madam," replied the slave, "who
can help laughing to see an old fool offering to exchange fine new lamps
for old ones?"
Another slave, hearing this, said:
"There is an old one on the cornice there which he can have."
Now this was the magic lamp, which
Aladdin had left there, as he could not take it out hunting with him.
The princess, not knowing its value, laughingly bade the slave take it
and make the exchange.
She went and said to the magician:
"Give me a new lamp for this."
He snatched it and bade the slave
take her choice, amid the jeers of the crowd. Little he cared, but
left off crying his lamps, and went out of the city gates to a lonely place,
where he remained till nightfall, when he pulled out the lamp and rubbed
it. The genie appeared, and at the magician's command carried him, together
with the palace and the princess in it, to a lonely place in Africa.
Next morning the Sultan looked out
of the window towards Aladdin's palace and rubbed his eyes, for it was
gone. He sent for the vizir, and asked what had become of the palace.
The vizir looked out too, and was lost in astonishment. He again
put it down to enchantment,
and this time the Sultan believed
him, and sent thirty men on horseback to fetch Aladdin in chains.
They met him riding home, bound him, and forced him to go with them on
foot. The people, however, who loved him, followed, armed, to see
that he came to no harm.
He was carried before the Sultan,
who ordered the executioner to cut off his head. The executioner
made Aladdin kneel down, bandaged his eyes, and raised his scimitar to
strike.
At that instant the vizir, who saw
that the crowd had forced their way into the courtyard and were scaling
the walls to rescue Aladdin, called to the executioner to stay his hand.
The people, indeed, looked so threatening that the Sultan gave way and
ordered Aladdin to be unbound, and pardoned him in the sight of the crowd.
Aladdin now begged to know what he
had done.
"False wretch!" said the Sultan,
"come hither," and showed him from the window the place where his palace
had stood.
Aladdin was so amazed that he could
not say a word.
"Where is my palace and my daughter?"
demanded the Sultan. "For the first I am not so deeply concerned, but my
daughter I must have, and you must find her or lose your head."
Aladdin begged for forty days in
which to find her, promising if he failed to return and suffer death at
the Sultan's pleasure. His prayer was granted, and he went forth
sadly from the Sultan's presence. For three days he wandered about like
a madman, asking everyone
what had become of his palace, but
they only laughed and pitied him. He came to the banks of a river, and
knelt down to say his prayers before throwing himself in. In so doing
he rubbed the magic ring he still wore.
The genie he had seen in the cave
appeared, and asked his will.
"Save my life, genie," said Aladdin,
"and bring my palace back."
"That is not in my power," said the
genie; "I am only the slave of the ring; you must ask the slave of the
lamp."
"Even so," said Aladdin "but thou
canst take me to the palace, and set me down under my dear wife's window."
He at once found himself in Africa, under the window of the princess, and
fell asleep out of sheer weariness.
He was awakened by the singing of
the birds, and his heart was lighter. He saw plainly that all his misfortunes
were owing to the loss of the lamp, and vainly wondered who had robbed
him of it.
That morning the princess rose earlier
than she had done since she had been carried into Africa by the magician,
whose company she was forced to endure once a day. She, however,
treated him so harshly that he dared not live there altogether. As
she was dressing, one of her women looked out and saw Aladdin. The
princess ran and opened the window, and at the noise she made Aladdin looked
up. She called to him to come to her, and great was the joy of these
lovers at seeing each other again.
After he had kissed her Aladdin said:
"I beg of you, Princess, in God's name, before we speak of anything else,
for your own sake and mine, tell me what has become of an old lamp I left
on the
cornice in the hall of four-and-twenty
windows, when I went a-hunting."
"Alas!" she said "I am the innocent
cause of our sorrows," and told him of the exchange of the lamp.
"Now I know," cried Aladdin, "that
we have to thank the African magician for this! Where is the lamp?"
"He carries it about with him," said
the princess, "I know, for he pulled it out of his breast to show me.
He wishes me to break my faith with you and marry him, saying that you
were beheaded by my father's command. He is forever speaking ill
of you, but I only reply by my tears. If I persist, I doubt not that
he will use violence."
Aladdin comforted her, and left her
for a while. He changed clothes with the first person he met in the
town, and having bought a certain powder returned to the princess, who
let him in by a little side door.
"Put on your most beautiful dress,"
he said to her, "and receive the magician with smiles, leading him to believe
that you have forgotten me. Invite him to sup with you, and say you
wish to taste the wine of his country.
He will go for some, and while he is gone I will tell you what to do."
She listened carefully to Aladdin,
and when he left her arrayed herself gaily for the first time since she
left China. She put on a girdle and head-dress of diamonds, and seeing
in a glass
that she looked more beautiful than
ever, received the magician, saying to his great amazement: "I have
made up my mind that Aladdin is dead, and that all my tears will not bring
him back to me, so I am resolved to mourn no more, and have therefore invited
you to sup with me; but I am tired of the wines of China, and would fain
taste those of Africa."
The magician flew to his cellar,
and the princess put the powder Aladdin had given her in her cup.
When he returned she asked him to drink her health in the wine of Africa,
handing him her cup in exchange for his as a sign she was reconciled to
him.
Before drinking the magician made
her a speech in praise of her beauty, but the princess cut him short saying:
"Let me drink first, and you shall
say what you will afterwards." She set her cup to her lips and kept it
there, while the magician drained his to the dregs and fell back lifeless.
The princess then opened the door
to Aladdin, and flung her arms round his neck, but Aladdin put her away,
bidding her to leave him, as he had more to do. He then went to the
dead magician, took the lamp out of his vest, and bade the genie carry
the palace and all in it back to China. This was done, and the princess
in her chamber only felt two little shocks, and little thought she was
at home again.
The Sultan, who was sitting in his
closet, mourning for his lost daughter, happened to look up, and rubbed
his eyes, for there stood the palace as before! He hastened thither,
and Aladdin received him in the hall of the four-and-twenty windows, with
the princess at his side. Aladdin told him what had happened, and
showed him the dead body of the magician, that he might believe. A ten
days' feast was proclaimed, and it seemed as if Aladdin might now live
the rest of his life in peace; but it was not to be.
The African magician had a younger
brother, who was, if possible, more wicked and more cunning than himself.
He travelled to China to avenge his brother's death, and went to visit
a pious woman called Fatima, thinking she might be of use to him.
He entered her cell and clapped a dagger to her breast, telling her to
rise and do his bidding on pain of death. He changed clothes with
her, coloured his face like hers, put on her veil and murdered her, that
she might tell no tales. Then he went towards the palace of Aladdin,
and all the people thinking he was the holy woman, gathered round him,
kissing his hands and begging his blessing. When he got to the palace there
was such a noise going on round him that the princess bade her slave look
out of the window and ask what was the matter. The slave said it
was the holy woman, curing people by her touch of their ailments, whereupon
the princess, who had long
desired to see Fatima, sent for
her. On coming to the princess the magician offered up a prayer for
her health and prosperity. When he had done the princess made him sit by
her, and begged him to stay with her always. The false Fatima, who
wished for nothing better, consented, but kept his veil down for fear of
discovery. The princess showed him the hall, and asked him what he thought
of it.
"It is truly beautiful," said the
false Fatima. "In my mind it wants but one thing."
"And what is that?" said the princess.
"If only a roc's egg," replied he,
"were hung up from the middle of this dome, it would be the wonder of the
world."
After this the princess could think
of nothing but a roc's egg, and when Aladdin returned from hunting he found
her in a very ill humour. He begged to know what was amiss, and she
told
him that all her pleasure in the
hall was spoilt for the want of a roc's egg hanging from the dome.
"It that is all," replied Aladdin,
"you shall soon be happy."
He left her and rubbed the lamp,
and when the genie appeared commanded him to bring a roc's egg. The
genie gave such a loud and terrible shriek that the hall shook.
"Wretch!" he cried, "is it not enough
that I have done everything for you, but you must command me to bring my
master and hang him up in the midst of this dome? You and your wife
and your palace deserve to be burnt to ashes; but this request does not
come
from you,
but from the brother of the African
magician whom you destroyed. He is now in your palace disguised as the
holy woman--whom he murdered. He it was who put that wish into your wife's
head. Take care of yourself, for he means to kill you." So
saying the genie disappeared.
Aladdin went back to the princess,
saying his head ached, and requesting that the holy Fatima should be fetched
to lay her hands on it. But when the magician came near, Aladdin, seizing
his dagger, pierced him to the heart.
"What have you done?" cried the princess.
"You have killed the holy woman!"
"Not so," replied Aladdin, "but a
wicked magician," and told her of how she had been deceived.
After this Aladdin and his wife lived
in peace. He succeeded the Sultan when he died, and reigned for many
years, leaving behind him a long line of kings.