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new him not said; 'Harkye; how much a pound? e; sell to me。' And he answered; saying; 'Wait till I e back to thee;' for that he would not vex any。
Then he fared on till he came to the seashore and foregathered with his friend the merman; to whom he delivered the fruit; receiving jewels in return。 As he passed by the shop of the baker; on his return; he saw it closed; and thus he did ten days; during which time the shop abode shut and he saw nothing of the baker。 So he said in himself; 'This is a strange thing! I wonder what is e of the baker!' Then he enquired of his neighbour; saying; 'O my brother; where is thy neighbour the baker and what hath God done with him?' 'O my lord;' answered he; 'he is sick and eth not forth of his house。' 'Where is his house?' asked Abdallah; and the other replied; 'In such a quarter。'
So he ; but; when he knocked at the door; the baker looked out of window and seeing his friend the fisherman; with a full basket on his head; came down and opened the door to him。 Abdallah entered and throwing himself on the baker; embraced him and wept; saying; 'How dost thou; O my friend? Every day; I pass by thy shop and see it closed; so I asked thy neighbour; who told me that thou wast sick; and I enquired for thy house; that I might see thee。' 'God requite thee for me with all good!' answered the baker。 'Nothing ails me; but it was told me that the king had taken thee; for that certain of the folk had lied against thee and accused thee of being a thief; wherefore I feared and shut my shop and hid myself' 'It is well;' said Abdallah and told him all that had befallen him with the king and the Syndic of the jewellers; adding; 'Moreover; the king hath given me his daughter to wife and made me his vizier: so do thou take what is in this basket to thy share and fear nothing。'
Then he left him; after having done away his fear from him; and returned with the empty basket to the king; who said to him; 'O my soninlaw; it would seem thou hast not foregathered with thy friend the merman today。' 'I went to him;' replied Abdallah; 'but that which I got of him I gave to my friend the baker; to whom I owe kindness。' 'Who is this baker?' asked the king; and the fisherman answered; 'He is a benevolent man; who did with me thus and thus in the days of my poverty and never neglected me a single day nor vexed my spirit。' Quoth the king; 'What is his name?' ' His name is Abdallah the baker;' replied the fisherman; 'and my name is Abdallah of the land and that of my friend the merman Abdallah of the sea。' 'And my name; also; is Abdallah;' rejoined the king; and the servants of God (201) are all brethren。 So send and fetch thy friend the baker that I may make him my vizier of the left。'
So he sent for the baker and the king invested him with the vizier's habit and made him vizier of the left; making Abdallah of the land his vizier of the right。 On this wise the fisherman abode a whole year; every day carrying the merman the basket full of fruit and receiving it back; full of jewels; and when fruit failed from the gardens; he carried him raisins and almonds and hazelnuts and walnuts and figs and so forth; and all that he brought him the merman accepted and returned him the basket full of jewels; as of wont。
It chanced one day that he carried him the basket; full of dry (202) fruits; according to custom; and his friend took them from him。 Then they sat down to converse; the fisherman on the beach and the merman in the water; near the shore; and conversed; and the talk went round between them; till it fell upon the subject of tombs; y brother; they say that the Prophet (whom God bless and preserve!) is buried with you on the land。 Knowest thou his tomb?' 'Yes;' answered Abdallah。 'It lies in a city called Yethrib。' (203) 'And do the people of the land visit it?' asked the merman。 'Yes;' replied the fisherman; and the other said; 'I give you joy; O people of the land; of visiting 'the tomb of' that noble and passionate prophet; which whoso visits merits his intercession! Hast thou visited it; O my brother?' 'No;' answered the fisherman; 'for I was poor and had not what to spend by the way; nor have I been at my ease but since I knew thee and thou bestowedst on me this good fortune。 But it behoves me to visit it; after I have made the pilgrimage to the Holy House of God; (204) and nought withholds me therefrom but my love for thee; for I cannot leave thee for one day。'
'And dost thou set the love of me;' rejoined the merman; 'before the visitation of the tomb of Mohammed (whom God bless and preserve!); who shall intercede for thee on the day of appearance before God and shall save thee from the fire and through whose intercession thou shalt enter Paradise? And dost thou; for the love of the world; leave to visit the tomb of thy Prophet Mohammed; whom God bless and preserve?' 'No; by Allah;' replied Abdallah。 'I set the visitation of the Prophet's tomb above all else; and I crave thy leave to visit it this year。' 'I grant thee leave;' answered the merman; 'but I have a trust to give thee; so e thou with me into the sea; that I may carry thee to my city and my house and entertain thee there and give thee a deposit; and when thou standest by the Prophet's tomb; do thou lay it thereon; saying; 〃O apostle of God; Ahdallah the merman salutes thee and sends thee this present; imploring thine intercession to save him from the fire。〃' 'O my brother;' said the fisherman; 'thou wast created in the water and it is thine abidingplace and doth thee no hurt; but; if thou shouldst e forth to the land; would any harm betide thee?' ' Yes;' answered the merman; 'my body would dry up and the breezes of the land would blow upon me and I should die。' 'And I; in like manner;' rejoined the fisherman; 'was created on the land and it is my abidingplace; but; if I went down into the sea; the water would enter my belly and choke me and I should die。' 'Have no fear for that; replied the other; 'for I will bring thee an ointment; wherewith when thou hast anointed thy body; the water will do thee no hurt; though thou shouldst pass the rest of thy life going about in the sea; and thou shalt lie down and rise up in the sea and nought shall harm thee。' 'If the case be so;' said the fisherman; 'well and good; but bring me the ointment; so I may make proof of it。' 'So be it;' answered the merman and taking the basket; disappeared in the sea。
After awhile; he returned with an ointment; as it were the fat of oxen; yellow as gold and sweet of savour。 'What is this; O my brother?' asked the fisherman。 'It is the liverfat of a kind of fish called the dendan;' (205) answered the merman; 'which is the biggest of all fish and the fiercest of our foes。 Its bulk is greater than that of any beast of the land; and were it to meet a camel or an elephant; it would swallow it at one mouthful。' 'O my brother;' asked Abdallah; 'what eateth this baleful 'beast'?' 'It eateth of the beasts of the sea;' replied the merman。 'Hast thou not heard the byword; 〃Like the fishes of the sea: the strong eateth the weak?〃'
'True;' answered the fisherman; 'but have you many of these dendans in the sea?' And the other said; 'Yes; there be many of them with us。 None can tell their tale save God the Most High。' Quoth Abdallah; 'Verily; I fear lest; if I go down with thee into the sea; one of these beasts fall in with me and devour me。' 'Have no fear;' replied the merman。 'When it sees thee; it will know thee for a son of Adam and will fear thee and flee。 It feareth none in the sea as it feareth a son of Adam; for that; if it eat him; it dieth forthright; because his flesh is a deadly poison to this kind of creature; nor do we gather its liverfat save by means of a man; when he falleth into the sea and is drowned; for that his favour beeth changed and ofttimes his flesh is torn; so the dendan eateth him; deeming him of the beasts of the sea; and dieth。 Then we light upon it dead and take the fat of its liver。 Moreover; wherever there is a son of Adam; though there be in that place a hundred or two hundred or a thousand or more of these beasts; if they but hear him cry once; they all die forthwith and not one of them can avail to remove from its place; wherefore; whenas a son of Adam falleth into the sea; we take him 'ere he can drown' and anoint him with this fat and go round about the sea with him; and whenever we see a dendan or two or three or more; we bid him cry out and they all die forthright for his once crying。'
Quoth the fisherman; 'I put my trust in God;' and putting off his clothes; buried them in a hole; which he dug in the beach; after which he rubbed his body from top to toe with the ointment。 Then he descended into the water and diving; opened his eyes and the water did him no hurt。 So he walked right and left; and if he would; he rose 'to the surface' and if he would; he sank to the bottom。 And he saw the water of the sea vaulted over him; as it were a tent; yet it did him no hurt。 Then said the merman to him; 'What seest thou; O my brother?' 'O my brother;' answered Abdallah; 'I see 'that which is' good; and indeed thou spokest truth in that which thou saidst to me; for the water doth me no hurt。' Quoth the merman; 'Follow me。'
So he followed him and they fared on from pla