Page:The Book of the Thousand Nights and One Night, Vol 4.djvu/353

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Sultan who ruleth over you and is tyrannical in his rule and under whose hand you are, who, if one of you commit a fault, taketh his goods and undoth him and who, when he will, turneth you out of your houses and uprooteth you, stock and branch?’ ‘Indeed, that may be,’ answered the man. ‘Then, by Allah,’ rejoined she, ‘these your delicious viands and dainty life and pleasant estate, with tyranny and oppression, are but a corroding poison, in comparison wherewith, our food and fashion, with freedom and safety, are a healthful medicine. Hast thou not heard that the best of all boons, after the true Faith, are health and security?’

Now these[1] [quoth he who tells the tale] may be by the just rule of the Sultan, the Vicar of God in His earth, and the goodness of his policy. The Sultan of times past needed but little awfulness, for that, when the people saw him, they feared him; but the Sultan of these days hath need of the most accomplished policy and the utmost majesty, for that men are not as men of time past and this our age is one of folk depraved and greatly calamitous, noted for folly and hardness of heart and inclined to hatred and enmity. If, therefore, the Sultan that is set over them be (which God the Most High forfend) weak or lack of policy and majesty, without doubt, this will be the cause of the ruin of the land. Quoth the proverb, ‘A hundred years of the Sultan’s tyranny, rather than one of the tyranny of the people, one over another.’ When the people oppress one another, God setteth over them a tyrannical Sultan and a despotic King. Thus it is told in history that there was, one day, presented to El Hejjaj ben Yousuf[2] a docket, in which was written, ‘Fear God and oppress not His servants with all manner of oppression.’ When he read this, he mounted the pulpit, (for he was ready of speech,) and said, ‘O folk, God the Most High

  1. i.e. health and security.
  2. See Vol. III. p. 225, note 1.