Once there was a king called King Dantal, who had a great
many rupees and soldiers and horses. He had also an only son called Prince
Majnun, who was a handsome boy with white teeth, red lips, blue eyes, red
cheeks, red hair, and a white skin. This boy was very fond of playing with the
Wazirs son, Husain Mahamat, in King Dantals garden, which was very large and
full of delicious fruits, and flowers, and trees. They used to take their
little knives there and cut the fruits and eat them. King Dantal had a teacher
for them to teach them to read and write.
One day, when they were grown to two fine young men, Prince
Majnun said to his father, Husain Mahamat and I should like to go and hunt.
His father said they might go, so they got ready their horses and all else they
wanted for their hunting, and went to the Phalana country, hunting all the way,
but they only founds jackals and birds.
The Raja of the Phalana country was called Munsuk Raja,
and he had a daughter named Laili, who was very beautiful; she had brown eyes
and black hair.
One night, some time before Prince Majnun came to her
fathers kingdom, as she slept, Khuda sent to her an angel in the form of a man
who told her that she should marry Prince Majnun and no one else, and that this
was Khudas command to her. When Laili woke she told her father of the angels
visit to her as she slept; but her father paid no attention to her story. From
that time she began repeating, Majnun, Majnun; I want Majnun, and would say
nothing else. Even as she sat and ate her food she kept saying, Majnun,
Majnun; I want Majnun. Her father used to get quite vexed with her. Who is
this Majnun? who ever heard of this Majnun? he would say.
He is the man I am to marry, said Laili. Khuda has
ordered me to marry no one but Majnun. And she was half mad.
Meanwhile, Majnun and Husain Mahamat came to hunt in the
Phalana country; and as they were riding about, Laili came out on her horse to
eat the air, and rode behind them. All the time she kept saying, "Majnun,
Majnun; I want Majnun. The prince heard her, and turned round. Who is calling
me? he asked. At this Laili looked at him, and the moment she saw him she fell
deeply in love with him, and she said to herself, I am sure that is the Prince
Majnun that Khuda says I am to marry. And she went home to her father and
said, Father, I wish to marry the prince who has come to your kingdom; for I
know he is the Prince Majnun I am to marry.
Very well, you shall have him for your husband, said
Munsuk Raja. We will ask him to-morrow. Laili consented to wait, although she
was very impatient. As it happened, the prince left the Phalana kingdom that
night, and when Laili heard he was gone, she went quite mad. She would not
listen to a word her father, or her mother, or her servants said to her, but
went off into the jungle, and wandered from jungle to jungle, till she got
farther and farther away from her own country. All the time she kept saying,
Majnun, Majnun; I want Majnun; and so she wandered about for twelve years.
At the end of the twelve years she met a fakirhe was
really an angel, but she did not know thiswho asked her, Why do you always
say, Majnun, Majnun; I want Majnun? She answered, I am the daughter of the
king of the Phalana country, and I want to find Prince Majnun; tell me where
his kingdom is.
I think you will never get there, said the fakir, for
it is very far from hence, and you have to cross many rivers to reach it. But
Laili said she did not care; she must see Prince Majnun. Well, said the
fakir, when you come to the Bhagirathi river you will see a big fish, a Rohu;
and you must get him to carry you to Prince Majnuns country, or you will never
reach it.
She went on and on, and at last she came to the
Bhagirathi river. There was a great big fish called the Rohu fish. It was
yawning just as she got up to it, and she instantly jumped down its throat into
its stomach. All the time she kept saying, Majnun, Majnun. At this the Rohu
fish was greatly alarmed and swam down the river as fast as he could. By
degrees he got tired and went slower, and a crow came and perched on his back,
and said Caw, caw. Oh, Mr. Crow, said the poor fish do see what is in my
stomach that makes such a noise.Very well, said the crow, open your mouth wide, and
Ill fly down and see.So the Rohu opened his jaws and the crow flew down, but
he came up again very quickly. You have a Rakshas in your stomach, said the
crow, and he flew away.
This news did not comfort the poor Rohu, and he swam on
and on till he came to Prince Majnuns country. There he stopped. And a jackal
came down to the river to drink. Oh, jackal, said the Rohu do tell me what I
have inside me.How can I tell? said the jackal. I cannot see unless I
go inside you. So the Rohu opened his mouth wide, and the jackal jumped down
his throat; but he came up very quickly, looking much frightened and saying,
You have a Rakshas in your stomach, and if I dont run away quickly, I am
afraid it will eat me. So off he ran. After the jackal came an enormous snake.
Oh, says the fish, do tell me what I have in my stomach, for it rattles
about so, and keeps saying, Majnun, Majnun; I want Majnun.The snake said, Open your mouth wide, and Ill go down
and see what it is. The snake went down: when he returned he said, You have a
Rakshas in your stomach, but if you will let me cut you open, it will come out
of you. If you do that, I shall die, said the Rohu. Oh, no, said the
snake, you will not, for I will give you a medicine that will make you quite
well again. So the fish agreed, and the snake got a knife and cut him open,
and out jumped Laili.
She was now very old. Twelve years she had wandered about
the jungle, and for twelve years she had lived inside her Rohu; and she was no
longer beautiful, and had lost her teeth. The snake took her on his back and
carried her into the country, and there he put her down, and she wandered on
and on till she got to Majnuns court-house, where King Majnun was sitting.
There some men heard her crying, Majnun, Majnun; I want Majnun, and they
asked her what she wanted. I want King Majnun," she said.
So they went in and said to Prince Majnun, An old woman
outside says she wants you. I cannot leave this place, said he; send her in
here. They brought her in and the prince asked her what she wanted. I want to
marry you, she answered. Twenty-four years ago you came to my father the
Phalana Rajas country, and I wanted to marry you then; but you went away
without marrying me. Then I went mad, and I have wandered about all these years
looking for you. Prince Majnun said, Very good.Pray to Khuda, said Laili, to make us both young
again, and then we shall be married. So the prince prayed to Khuda, and Khuda
said to him, Touch Lailis clothes and they will catch fire, and when they are
on fire, she and you will become young again. When he touched Lailis clothes
they caught fire, and she and he became young again. And there were great
feasts, and they were married, and travelled to the Phalana country to see her
father and mother.
Now Lailis father and mother had wept so much for their
daughter that they had become quite blind, and her father kept always
repeating, "Laili, Laili, Laili. When Laili saw their blindness, she
prayed to Khuda to restore their sight to them, which he did. As soon as the
father and mother saw Laili, they hugged her and kissed her, and then they had
the wedding all over again amid great rejoicings. Prince Majnum and Laili
stayed with Munsuk Raja and his wife for three years, and then they returned to
King Dantal, and lived happily for some time with him. They used to go out
hunting, and they often went from country to country to eat the air and amuse
themselves.
One day Prince Majnun said to Laili, Let us go through
this jungle." "No, no, said Laili; if we go through this jungle,
some harm will happen to me. But Prince Majnun laughed, and went into the
jungle. And as they were going through it, Khuda thought, I should like to
know how much Prince Majnun loves his wife. Would he be very sorry if she died?
And would he marry another wife? I will see. So he sent one of his angels in
the form of a fakir into the jungle; and the angel went up to Laili, and threw
some powder in her face, and instantly she fell to the ground a heap of ashes.
Prince Majnun was in great sorrow and grief when he saw
his dear Laili turned into a little heap of ashes; and he went straight home to
his father, and for a long, long time he would not be comforted. After a great
many years he grew more cheerful and happy, and began to go again into his
fathers beautiful garden with Husain Mahamat. King Dantal wished his son to
marry again. I will only have Laili for my wife; I will not marry any other
woman, said Prince Majnun.
How can you marry Laili? Laili is dead. She will never
come back to you, said the father. Then Ill not have any wife at all, said
Prince Majnun.
Meanwhile Laili was living in the jungle where her
husband had left her a little heap of ashes. As soon as Majnun had gone, the
fakir had taken her ashes and made them quite clean, and then he had mixed clay
and water with the ashes, and made the figure of a woman with them, and so
Laili regained her human form, and Khuda sent life into it. But Laili had
become once more a hideous old woman, with a long, long nose, and teeth like
tusks; just such an old woman, excepting her teeth, as she had been when she
came out of the Rohu fish; and she lived in the jungle, and neither ate nor
drank, and she kept on saying, Majnun, Majnun; I want Majnun.At last the angel who had come as a fakir and thrown the
powder at her, said to Khuda, Of what use is it that this woman should sit in
the jungle crying, crying for ever, Majnun, Majnun; I want Majnun, and eating
and drinking nothing? Let me take her to Prince Majnun. Well," said
Khuda, you may do so; but tell her that she must not speak to Majnun if he is
afraid of her when he sees her; and that if he is afraid when he sees her, she
will become a little white dog the next day. Then she must go to the palace,
and she will only regain her human shape when Prince Majnun loves her, feeds
her with his own food, and lets her sleep in his bed.
So the angel came to Laili again as a fakir and carried
her to King Dantals garden. Now, he said, it is Khudas command that you
stay here till Prince Majnun comes to walk in the garden, and then you may show
yourself to him. But you must not speak to him, if he is afraid of you; and
should he be afraid of you, you will the next day become a little white dog.
He then told her what she must do as a little dog to regain her human form.
Laili stayed in the garden, hidden in the tall grass,
till Prince Majnun and Husain Mahamat came to walk in the garden. King Dantal
was now a very old man, and Husain Mahamat, though he was really only as old as
Prince Majnun, looked a great deal older than the prince, who had been made
quite young again when he married Laili.As Prince Majnun and the Wazirs son walked in the
garden, they gathered the fruit as they had done as little children, only they
bit the fruit with their teeth; they did not cut it. While Majnun was busy
eating a fruit in this way, and was talking to Husain Mahamat, he turned
towards him and saw Laili walking behind the Wazirs son.
Oh, look, look! he cried, see what is following you;
it is a Rakshas or a demon, and I am sure it is going to eat us. Laili looked
at him beseechingly with all her eyes, and trembled with age and eagerness; but
this only frightened Majnun the more. It is a Rakshas, a Rakshas!" he
cried, and he ran quickly to the palace with the Wazirs son; and as they ran
away, Laili disappeared into the jungle. They ran to King Dantal, and Majnun
told him there was a Rakshas or a demon in the garden that had come to eat
them.What nonsense, said his father. Fancy two grown men
being so frightened by an old ayah or a fakir! And if it had been a Rakshas, it
would not have eaten you. Indeed King Dantal did not believe Majnun had seen
anything at all, till Husain Mahamat said the prince was speaking the exact
truth. They had the garden searched for the terrible old woman, but found
nothing, and King Dantal told his son he was very silly to be so much
frightened. However, Prince Majnun would not walk in the garden any more.
The next day Laili turned into a pretty little dog; and
in this shape she came into the palace, where Prince Majnun soon became very
fond of her. She followed him everywhere, went with him when he was out
hunting, and helped him to catch his game, and Prince Majnun fed her with milk,
or bread, or anything else he was eating, and at night the little dog slept in
his bed.But one night the little dog disappeared, and in its
stead there lay the little old woman who had frightened him so much in the
garden; and now Prince Majnun was quite sure she was a Rakshas, or a demon, or
some such horrible thing come to eat him; and in his terror he cried out,
"What do you want? Oh, do not eat me; do not eat me! Poor Laili answered,
Dont you know me? I am your wife Laili, and I want to marry you. Dont you
remember how you would go through that jungle, though I begged and begged you
not to go, for I told you that harm would happen to me, and then a fakir came
and threw powder in my face, and I became a heap of ashes. But Khuda gave me my
life again, and brought me here, after I had stayed a long, long while in the jungle
crying for you, and now I am obliged to be a little dog; but if you will marry
me, I shall not be a little dog any more. Majnun, however, said How can I
marry an old woman like you? how can you be Laili? I am sure you are a Rakshas
or a demon come to eat me, and he was in great terror.
In the morning the old woman had turned into the little
dog, and the prince went to his father and told him all that had happened. An
old woman! an old woman! always an old woman! said his father. You do nothing
but think of old women. How can a strong man like you be so easily frightened?
However, when he saw that his son was really in great terror, and that he
really believed the old woman would came back at night, he advised him to say
to her, I will marry you if you can make yourself a young girl again. How can
I marry such an old woman as you are?
That night as he lay trembling in bed the little old
woman lay there in place of the dog, crying Majnun, Majnun, I want to marry
you. I have loved you all these long, long years. When I was in my fathers
kingdom a young girl, I knew of you, though you knew nothing of me, and we
should have been married then if you had not gone away so suddenly, and for
long, long years I followed you.Well, said Majnun, if you can make yourself a young
girl again, I will marry you.
Laili said, Oh, that is quite easy. Khuda will make me a
young girl again. In two days time you must go into the garden, and there you
will see a beautiful fruit. You must gather it and bring it into your room and
cut it open yourself very gently, and you must not open it when your father or
anybody else is with you, but when you are quite alone; for I shall be in the
fruit quite naked, without any clothes at all on. In the morning Laili took
her little dogs form, and disappeared in the garden.
Prince Majnun told all this to his father, who told him
to do all the old woman had bidden him. In two days time he and the Wazirs
son walked in the garden, and there they saw a large, lovely red fruit.
"Oh! said the Prince, I wonder shall I find my wife in that fruit."
Husain Mahamat wanted him to gather it and see, but he would not till he had
told his father, who said, That must be the fruit; go and gather it. So
Majnun went back and broke the fruit off its stalk; and he said to his father,
Come with me to my room while I open it; I am afraid to open it alone, for
perhaps I shall find a Rakshas in it that will eat me.
No, said King Dantal; remember, Laili will be naked;
you must go alone and do not be afraid if, after all, a Rakshas is in the
fruit, for I will stay outside the door, and you have only to call me with a
loud voice, and I will come to you, so the Rakshas will not be able to eat
you.Then Majnun took the fruit and began to cut it open
tremblingly, for he shook with fear; and when he had cut it, out stepped Laili,
young and far more beautiful than she had ever been. At the sight of her
extreme beauty, Majnun fell backwards fainting on the floor.Laili took off his turban and wound it all round herself
like a sari (for she had no clothes at all on), and then she called King
Dantal, and said to him sadly, Why has Majnun fallen down like this? Why will
he not speak to me? He never used to be afraid of me; and he has seen me so
many, many times.
King Dantal answered, It is because you are so
beautiful. You are far, far more beautiful than you ever were. But he will be
very happy directly. Then the King got some water, and they bathed Majnuns
face and gave him some to drink, and he sat up again.
Then Laili said, Why did you faint? Did you not see I am
Laili?Oh! said Prince Majnun, I see you are Laili come back
to me, but your eyes have grown so wonderfully beautiful, that I fainted when I
saw them. Then they were all very happy, and King Dantal had all the drums in
the place beaten, and had all the musical instruments played on, and they made
a grand wedding-feast, and gave presents to the servants, and rice and
quantities of rupees to the fakirs.After some time had passed very happily, Prince Majnun
and his wife went out to eat the air. They rode on the same horse, and had only
a groom with them. They came to another kingdom, to a beautiful garden.
"We must go into that garden and see it, said Majnun.No, no, said Laili; it belongs to a bad Raja, Chumman
Basa, a very wicked man. But Majnun insisted on going in, and in spite of all
Laili could say, he got off the horse to look at the flowers. Now, as he was
looking at the flowers, Laili saw Chumman Basa coming towards them, and she
read in his eyes that he meant to kill her husband and seize her. So she said
to Majnun, Come, come, let us go; do not go near that bad man. I see in his
eyes, and I feel in my heart, that he will kill you to seize me.What nonsense, said Majnun. I believe he is a very
good Raja. Anyhow, I am so near to him that I could not get away.Well, said Laili, it is better that you should be
killed than I, for if I were to be killed a second time, Khuda would not give
me my life again; but I can bring you to life if you are killed. Now Chumman
Basa had come quite near, and seemed very pleasant, so thought Prince Majnun;
but when he was speaking to Majnun, he drew his scimitar and cut off the
princes head at one blow.
Laili sat quite still on her horse, and as the Raja came
towards her she said, Why did you kill my husband?Because I want to take you, he answered.
You cannot, said Laili.Yes, I can, said the Raja.Take me, then, said Laili to Chumman Basa; so he came
quite close and put out his hand to take hers to lift her off her horse. But
she put her hand in her pocket and pulled out a tiny knife, only as long as her
hand was broad, and this knife unfolded itself in one instant till it was such
a length! and then Laili made a great sweep with her arm and her long, long
knife, and off came Chumman Basas head at one touch.
Then Laili slipped down off her horse, and she went to
Majnuns dead body, and she cut her little finger inside her hand straight down
from the top of her nail to her palm, and out of this gushed blood like healing
medicine. Then she put Majnuns head on his shoulders, and smeared her healing
blood all over the wound, and Majnun woke up and said, What a delightful sleep
I have had! Why, I feel as if I had slept for years! Then he got up and saw
the Rajas dead body by Lailis horse.
Whats that? said Majnun.That is the wicked Raja who killed you to seize me, just
as I said he would.Who killed him? asked Majnun.I did, answered Laili, and it was I who brought you to
life.Do bring the poor man to life if you know how to do so,
said Majnun.No, said Laili, for he is a wicked man, and will try
to do you harm. But Majnun asked her for such a long time, and so earnestly to
bring the wicked Raja to life, that at least she said, Jump up on the horse,
then, and go far away with the groom.What will you do, said Majnun, if I leave you? I
cannot leave you.I will take care of myself, said Laili; but this man
is so wicked, he may kill you again if you are near him. So Majnun got up on
the horse, and he and the groom went a long way off and waited for Laili. Then
she set the wicked Rajas head straight on his shoulders, and she squeezed the
wound in her finger till a little blood-medicine came out of it. Then she
smeared this over the place where her knife had passed, and just as she saw the
Raja opening his eyes, she began to run, and she ran, and ran so fast, that she
outran the Raja, who tried to catch her; and she sprang up on the horse behind
her husband, and they rode so fast, so fast, till they reached King Dantals
palace.
There Prince Majnun told everything to his father, who
was horrified and angry. How lucky for you that you have such a wife, he
said. Why did you not do what she told you? But for her, you would be now
dead." Then he made a great feast out of gratitude for his sons safety,
and gave many, many rupees to the fakirs. And he made so much of Laili. He
loved her dearly; he could not do enough for her. Then he built a splendid
palace for her and his son, with a great deal of ground about it, and lovely
gardens, and gave them great wealth, and heaps of servants to wait on them. But
he would not allow any but their servants to enter their gardens and palace,
and he would not allow Majnun to go out of them, nor Laili; for, said King
Dantal, Laili is so beautiful, that perhaps some one may kill my son to take
her away.
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