The Book of the Thousand Nights and a
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The Book of the Thousand Nights and a

Vol. VII

Anonymous

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The Book of the Thousand Nights and a

Vol. VII

Anonymous

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This seventh of nine volumes accurately translating the wonderful tales of the Arabian nights.

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Year
2013
ISBN
9781627937948

Arabian Nights, Volume 7 Footnotes

[1] Mayyafarikin, whose adjective for shortness is "FĂĄrikĂ­": the place is often mentioned in The Nights as the then capital of DiyĂĄr Bakr, thirty parasangs from NĂĄsibĂ­n, the classical Nisibis, between the upper Euphrates and Tigris.
[2] This proportion is singular to moderns but characterised Arab and more especially Turcoman armies.
[3] Such is the bathos caused by the Saja'-assonance: in the music of the Arabic it contrasts strangely with the baldness of translation. The same is the case with the Koran beautiful in the original and miserably dull in European languages, it is like the glorious style of the "Anglican Version" by the side of its bastard brothers in Hindostani or Marathi; one of these marvels of stupidity translating the "Lamb of God" by "God's little goat.
[4] This incident is taken from the Life of Mohammed who, in the "Year of Missions" (A. H. 7) sent letters to foreign potentates bidding them embrace Al-Islam, and, his seal being in three lines, Mohammed|Apostle|of Allah, Khusrau ParwĂ­z (=the Charming) was offended because his name was placed below Mohammed's. So he tore the letter in pieces adding, says Firdausi, these words:--
Hath the Arab's daring performed such feat, Fed on camel's milk and the lizard's meat, That he cast on KayĂĄnian crown his eye? Fie, O whirling world! on thy faith and fie!
Hearing of this insult Mohammed exclaimed, "Allah shall tear his kingdom!" a prophecy which was of course fulfilled, or we should not have heard of it. These lines are horribly mutilated in the Dabistan (iii. 99).
[5] This "TaklĂ­d" must not be translated "girt on the sword." The Arab carries his weapon by a baldrick or bandoleer passed over his right shoulder. In modern days the " Majdal" over the left shoulder supports on the right hip a line of TatĂĄrif or brass cylinders for cartridges: the other cross- belt (Al-Masdar) bears on the left side the KharĂ­zah or bullet-pouch of hide; and the HizĂĄm or waist-belt holds the dagger and extra cartridges. (Pilgrimage iii. 90.)
[6] Arab. "Bab," which may mean door or gate. The plural form (AbwĂĄb) occurs in the next line, meaning that he displayed all manner of martial prowess.
[7] Arab. "FarrĂĄsh" (also used in Persian), a man of general utility who pitches tents, speeps the floors. administers floggings, etc. etc. (Pilgrimage iii. 90.)
[8] i.e. the slogan-cry of "Allaho Akbar," which M. C. Barbier de Meynard compares with the Christian "Te Deum."
[9] The Anglo-Indian term for the Moslem rite of killing animals for food. (Pilgrimage i. 377.)
[10] Arab. "tawĂ­lan jiddan" a hideous Cairenism in these days; but formerly used by Al-Mas'ĂșdĂ­ and other good writers.
[11] Arab. " 'Ajwah," enucleated dates pressed together into a solid mass so as to be sliced with a knife like cold pudding. The allusion is to the dough-idols of the HanĂ­fah tribe, whose eating their gods made the saturnine Caliph Omar laugh.
[12] Mr. Payne writes "Julned." In a fancy name we must not look for grammar, but a quiescent lĂĄm (l) followed by nĂșn (n) is unknown to Arabic while we find sundry cases of "lan" (fath'd lĂĄm and nĂșn), and Jalandah means noxious or injurious. In Oman also there was a dynasty called JulĂĄndah. for which see Mr. Badger (xiii. and passim).
[13] Doubtless for Jawan-mard--un giovane, a brave See vol. iv., p. 208.
[14] Mr. Payne transposes the distichs, making the last first. I have followed the Arabic order finding it in the Mac. and Bul. Edits. (ii. 129).
[15] Al-Irak like Al-Yaman may lose the article in verse.
[16] Arab. "Ka'ka'at": hence Jabal Ka'ka'ĂĄn, the higher levels in Meccah, of old inhabited by the Jurhamites and so called from their clashing and jangling arms; whilst the Amalekites dwelt in the lower grounds called JiyĂĄd from their generous steeds. (Pilgrimage iii. 191.)
[17] Al-Shara', a mountain in Arabia.
[18] See vol. vi., 249. "This (mace) is a dangerous weapon when struck on the shoulders or unguarded arm: I am convinced that a blow with it on a head armoured with a salade (cassis cĂŠlata, a light iron helmet) would stun a man" (says La BrocquiĂšre).
[19] Oman, which the natives pronounce "AmĂĄn," is the region best known by its capital Maskat. These are the Omana Moscha and Omanum Emporium of Ptolemy and the Periplus. Ibn Batutah writes AmmĂĄn, but the best dictionaries give "Oman." (N.B.--Mr. Badger, p. 1, wrongly derives Sachalitis from "SawĂĄhĂ­ly": it is evidently "SĂĄhili.") The people bear by no means the best character: Ibn Batutah (fourteenth century) says, "their wives are most base; yet, without denying this, their husbands express nothing like jealousy on the subject." (Lee, p. 62.)
[20] The name I have said of a quasi-historical personage, son of Joktan, the first Arabist and the founder of the TobbĂĄ ("successor") dynasty in Al-Yaman; while Jurham, his brother, established that of Al-Hijaz. The name is probably chosen because well-known.
[21] Arab. "HĂĄkim": lit. one who orders; often confounded by the unscientific with HakĂ­m, doctor, a philosopher. The latter re-appears in the Heb. KhĂĄkhĂĄm applied in modern days to the Jewish scribe who takes the place of the Rabbi.
[22] As has been seen, acids have ever been and are still administered as counter-inebriants, while hot spices and sweets greatly increase the effect of Bhang, opium, henbane, datura &c. The Persians have a most unpleasant form of treating men when dead-drunk with wine or spirits. They hang them up by the heels, as we used to do with the drowned, and stuff their mouths with human ordure which is sure to produce emesis.
[23] Compare the description of the elephant-faced VetĂĄla (KathĂĄ S.S. Fasc. xi. p. 388).
[24] The lover's name SĂĄ'ik= the Striker (with lightning); Najmah, the beloved= the star.
[25] I have modified the last three lines of the Mac. Edit. which contain a repetition evidently introduced by the carelessness of the copyist.
[26] The Hindu Charvakas explain the Triad, Bramha, Vishnu and Shiva, by the sexual organs and upon Vishnu's having four arms they gloss, "At the time of sexual intercourse, each man and woman has as many." (Dabistan ii. 202.) This is the Eastern view of Rabelais' "beast with two backs."
[27] Arab. "Rabbat-i," my she Lord, fire (nĂĄr) being feminine.
[28] The prose-rhyme is answerable for this galimatias.
[29] A common phrase equivalent to our "started from his head."
[30] Arab. "MĂĄridĂșna"=rebels (against Allah and his orders).
[31] Arab. YĂĄfis or YĂĄfat. He had eleven sons and was entitled AbĂș al-Turk because this one engendered the Turcomans as others did the Chinese, Scythians, Slaves (Saklab), Gog, Magog, and the Muscovites or Russians. According to the Moslems there was a rapid falling off in size amongst this family. Noah's grave at Karak (the Ruin) a suburb of Zahlah, in La BrocquiĂšre's "Valley of Noah, where the Ark was built," is 104 ft. 10 in. Iong by 8 ft. 8 in. broad. (N.B.--It is a bit of the old aqueduct which Mr. Porter, the learned author of the "Giant Cities of Bashan," quotes as a "traditional memorial of primeval giants"--talibus carduis pascuntur asini!). Nabi Ham measures only 9 ft. 6 in. between headstone and tombstone, being in fact about as long as his father was broad.
[32] See Night dcliv., vol. vii, p. 43, infra.
[33] According to Turcoman legends (evidently pose- Mohammedan) Noah gave his son, Japhet a stone inscribed with the Greatest Name, and it had the virtue of bringing on or driving off rain. The Moghuls long preserved the tradition and hence probably the sword.
[34] This expresses Moslem sentiment; the convert to Al- Islam being theoretically respected and practically despised. The Turks call him a "BurmĂĄ"=twister, a turncoat, and no one either trusts him or believes in his sincerity.
[35] The name of the city first appears here: it is found also in the Bul. Edit., vol. ii. p. 132.
[36] Arab. " 'Amala hĂ­lah," a Syro-Egyptian vulgarism.
[37] i.e. his cousin, but he will not use the word.
[38] Arab. "La'ab," meaning very serious use of the sword: we still preserve the old "sword-play."
[39] Arab. " Ikhsa," from a root meaning to drive away a dog.
[40] Arab. "Hazza-hu," the quivering motion given to the "Harbak" (a light throw-spear or javelin) before it leaves the hand.
[41] Here the translator must either order the sequence of the sentences or follow the rhyme.
[42] Possibly taken from the Lions' Court in the Alhambra=(DĂĄr) Al-hamrĂĄ, the Red House.
[43] Arab. "ShĂĄzarwĂĄn" from Pers. ShadurwĂĄn, a palace, cornice, etc. That of the Meccan Ka'abah is a projection of about a foot broad in pent-house shape sloping downwards and two feet above the granite pavement: its only use appears in the large brass rings welded into it to hold down the covering. There are two breaks in it, one under the doorway and the other opposite Ishmael's tomb; and pilgrims are directed during circuit to keep the whole body outside it.
[44] The "MusĂĄfahah" before noticed, vol. vi., p. 287.
[45] i.e. He was confounded at its beauty.
[46] Arab. "'AjĂ­b," punning upon the name.
[47] Arab. "ZarrĂĄf" (whence our word) from "Zarf"=walking hastily: the old "cameleopard" which originated the nursery idea of its origin. It is one of the most timid of the antelope tribe and unfit for riding.
[48] Arab. "Takht," a useful word, meaning even a saddle. The usual term is "Haudaj"=the Anglo Indian "howdah."
[49] "Thunder-King," Arab. and Persian.
[50] i.e. "He who violently assaults his peers" (the best men of the age). Batshat al- KubrĂĄ=the Great Disaster, is applied to the unhappy "Battle of Bedr" (Badr) on Ramazan 17, A.H. 2 (=Jan. 13, 624) when Mohammed was so nearly defeated that the Angels were obliged to assist him (Koran, chapts. iii. 11; i. 42; viii. 9). Mohammed is soundly rated by Christian writers for beheading two prisoners Utbah ibn RabĂ­'a who had once spat on his face and Nazir ibn HĂĄris who recited Persian romances and preferred them to the "foolish fables of the Koran." What would our forefathers have done to a man who spat in the face of John Knox and openly preferred a French play to Pentateuch ?
[51] Arab. "JilbĂĄb" either habergeon (mail-coat) or the buff-jacket worn under it.
[52] A favourite way, rough and ready, of carrying light weapons, often alluded to in The Nights. So KhusrawĂĄn in Antar carried "under his thighs four small darts, each like a blazing flame."
[53] Mr. Payne very reasonably supplants here and below Fakhr Taj (who in Night dcxxxiv is left in her father's palace and who is reported to be dead in Night dclxvii.) by Star o' Morn. But the former is also given in the Bul. Edit. (ii. 148), so the story teller must have forgotten all about her. I leave it as a model specimen of Eastern incuriousness.
[54] There is some chivalry in his unwillingness to use the magical blade. As a rule the Knights of Romance utterly ignore fair play and take every dirty advantage in the magic line that comes to hand.
[55] Arab. "HammĂĄl al-Hatabi"=one who carries to market the fuel-sticks which he picks up m the waste. In the Koran (chaps. cxi.) it is applied to Umm JamĂ­l, wife of Mohammed's hostile cousin, Abd al-Uzza, there termed AbĂș Lahab (Father of smokeless Flame) with the implied meaning that she will bear fuel to feed Hell-fire.
[56] Arab. "AkyĂĄl," lit. whose word (Kaul) is obeyed, a title of the Himyarite Kings, of whom Al-Bergendi relates that one of them left an inscription at Samarcand, which many centuries ago no man could read. This evidently alludes to the dynasty which preceded the "Tobba" and to No. xxiv. Shamar Yar'ash (Shamar the Palsied). Some make him son of Malik surnamed NĂĄshir al-Ni'am (Scatterer of Blessings) others of AfrĂ­kĂșs (No. xviii.), who, according to Al-Jannabi, Ahmad bin Yusuf and Ibn Ibdun (Pocock, Spec. Hist. Arab.) founded the Berber (Barber) race, the remnants of the Causanites expelled by the "robber, Joshua son of NĂșn," and became the eponymus of "Africa." This word which, under the Romans, denoted a small province on the Northern Sea-board, is, I would sugges...

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