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The prologue tale.(TEXTS & TRANSLATIONS)(Short story)

Publication: Marvels & Tales

Publication Date: 01-APR-07

Author: Lane, Edward
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COPYRIGHT 2007 Wayne State University Press

Guest Editor's Introduction

The Thousand and One Nights, commonly called in England The Arabian Nights' Entertainments, a new translation from the Arabic with copious notes by Edward William Lane, Hon. M.R.S.L. etc., Author of "The Modern Egyptian." Illustrated by many hundred engravings on wood. From Original designs by William Harvey. A New Edition. From a Copy Annotated by the Translator; edited by his nephew Edward Stanley Poole. In three volumes.

Thus reads the title page of Lane's translation published in London by C. Knight between 1839 and 1841. "The Prologue Tale" exists in English only in Lane's lengthy note at the end of chapter 24 (3: 343-47). In the Bulaq edition the tale runs from the end of the 756th night to the beginning of the 778th night. In his introductory note, Edward Lane explains that "in the original, ... ['Sayf al-Muluk'] has the following introduction, which I have transferred to this place because it seems to me to be of little interest, and calculated to induce expectations that will not be fully realized. The Breslau edition does not contain it." The story follows below.

There was, in ancient times, a King, of the Kings of the Persians, whose name was Mohammad the son of Sebaik, and who ruled over the countries of Khurasan, and every year be used to invade the countries of the infidels, in El-Hind (1) and Es-Sind (2) and China, and the regions that are beyond the River [Oxus], and other countries besides these, of the Persians and other nations. He was a just, brave, generous, liberal King. And this King was fond of conversations over the cup, and traditions and verses, and histories and tales, and night-discourses, and the lives of the ancients. Whoever preserved in his memory an extraordinary tale, and related it to him, he used to confer favours upon him. It is said that if a stranger came to him with an extraordinary night-discourse, and recited before him, and he approved of his tale, and his words pleased him, he used to bestow upon him a sumptuous robe of honour, give him a thousand pieces of gold, mount him upon a horse saddled and bridled, clothe him from head to foot, and give him magnificent gifts; and the man would take the things and go his way.

Now it happened that an old man came to him with an extraordinary night-tale, which he related before him, and he approved of...

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