Story of the King
Who Would See Paradise
Once upon a time
there was king who, one day out hunting, came upon a fakeer in a lonely place
in the mountains. The fakeer was seated on a little old bedstead reading the
Koran, with his patched cloak thrown over his shoulders.
The king asked him
what he was reading; and he said he was reading about Paradise, and praying
that he might be worthy to enter there. Then they began to talk, and,
by-and-bye, the king asked the fakeer if he could show him a glimpse of
Paradise, for he found it very difficult to believe in what he could not see.
The fakeer replied that he was asking a very difficult, and perhaps a very
dangerous, thing; but that he would pray for him, and perhaps he might be able
to do it; only he warned the king both against the dangers of his unbelief, and
against the curiosity which prompted him to ask this thing. However, the king
was not to be turned from his purpose, and he promised the fakeer always to
provided him with food, if he, in return, would pray for him. To this the
fakeer agreed, and so they parted.
Time went on, and
the king always sent the old fakeer his food according to his promise; but,
whenever he sent to ask him when he was going to show him Paradise, the fakeer
always replied: 'Not yet, not yet!'
After a year or two
had passed by, the king heard one day that the fakeer was very ill-- indeed, he
was believed to be dying. Instantly he hurried off himself, and found that it
was really true, and that the fakeer was even then breathing his last. There
and then the king besought him to remember his promise, and to show him a
glimpse of Paradise. The dying fakeer replied that if the king would come to
his funeral, and, when the grave was filled in, and everyone else was gone
away, he would come and lay his hand upon the grave, he would keep his word,
and show him a glimpse of Paradise. At the same time he implored the king not
to do this thing, but to be content to see Paradise when God called him there.
Still the king's curiosity was so aroused that he would not give way.
Accordingly, after
the fakeer was dead, and had been buried, he stayed behind when all the rest
went away; and then, when he was quite alone, he stepped forward, and laid his
hand upon the grave! Instantly the ground opened, and the astonished king,
peeping in, saw a flight of rough steps, and, at the bottom of them, the fakeer
sitting, just as he used to sit, on his rickety bedstead, reading the Koran!
At first the king
was so surprised and frightened that he could only stare; but the fakeer
beckoned to him to come down, so, mustering up his courage, he boldly stepped
down into the grave.
The fakeer rose,
and, making a sign to the king to follow, walked a few paces along a dark
passage. Then he stopped, turned solemnly to his companion, and, with a
movement of his hand, drew aside as it were a heavy curtain, and
revealed--what? No one knows what was there shown to the king, nor did he ever
tell anyone; but, when the fakeer at length dropped the curtain, and the king
turned to leave the place, he had had his glimpse of Paradise! Trembling in
every limb, he staggered back along the passage, and stumbled up the steps out
of the tomb into the fresh air again.
The dawn was
breaking. It seemed odd to the king that he had been so long in the grave. It
appeared but a few minutes ago that he had descended, passed along a few steps
to the place where he had peeped beyond the veil, and returned again after
perhaps five minutes of that wonderful view! And what WAS it he had seen? He
racked his brains to remember, but he could not call to mind a single thing!
How curious everything looked too! Why, his own city, which by now he was
entering, seemed changed and strange to him! The sun was already up when he
turned into the palace gate and entered the public durbar hall. It was full; and
there upon the throne sat another king! The poor king, all bewildered, sat down
and stared about him. Presently a chamberlain came across and asked him why he
sat unbidden in the king's presence. 'But I am the king!' he cried.
'What king?' said
the chamberlain.
'The true king of
this country,' said he indignantly.
Then the chamberlain
went away, and spoke to the king who sat on the throne, and the old king heard
words like 'mad,' 'age,' 'compassion.' Then the king on the throne called him
to come forward, and, as he went, he caught sight of himself reflected in the polished
steel shield of the bodyguard, and started back in horror! He was old,
decrepit, dirty, and ragged! His long white beard and locks were unkempt, and
straggled all over his chest and shoulders. Only one sign of royalty remained
to him, and that was the signet ring upon his right hand. He dragged it off
with shaking fingers and held it up to the king.
'Tell me who I am,'
he cried; 'there is my signet, who once sat where you sit--even yesterday!'
The king looked at
him compassionately, and examined the signet with curiosity. Then he commanded,
and they brought out dusty records and archives of the kingdom, and old coins
of previous reigns, and compared them faithfully. At last the king turned to
the old man, and said: 'Old man, such a king as this whose signet thou hast,
reigned seven hundred years ago; but he is said to have disappeared, none know
whither; where got you the ring?'
Then the old man
smote his breast, and cried out with a loud lamentation; for he understood that
he, who was not content to wait patiently to see the Paradise of the faithful,
had been judged already. And he turned and left the hall without a word, and
went into the jungle, where he lived for twenty-five years a life of prayer and
meditations, until at last the Angel of Death came to him, and mercifully
released him, purged and purified through his punishment.
[A Pathan story told
to Major Campbell.]
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