Story
of the King Who Would Be Stronger Than Fate
Once
upon a time, far away in the east country, there lived a king who loved hunting
so much that, when once there was a deer in sight, he was careless of his own
safety. Indeed, he often became quite separated from his nobles and attendants,
and in fact was particularly fond of lonely adventures. Another of his
favourite amusements was to give out that he was not well, and could not be
seen; and then, with the knowledge only of his faithful Grand Wazeer, to
disguise himself as a pedlar, load a donkey with cheap wares, and travel about.
In this way he found out what the common people said about him, and how his
judges and governors fulfilled their duties.
One
day his queen presented him with a baby daughter as beautiful as the dawn, and
the king himself was so happy and delighted that, for a whole week, he forgot
to hunt, and spent the time in public and private rejoicing.
Not
long afterwards, however, he went out after some deer which were to be found in
a far corner of his forests. In the course of the beat his dogs disturbed a
beautiful snow-white stag, and directly he saw it the king determined that he
would have it at any cost. So he put the spurs to his horse, and followed it as
hard as he could gallop. Of course all his attendants followed at the best
speed that they could manage; but the king was so splendidly mounted, and the
stag was so swift, that, at the end of an hour, the king found that only his
favourite hound and himself were in the chase; all the rest were far, far
behind and out of sight.
Nothing
daunted, however, he went on and on, till he perceived that he was entering a
valley with great rocky mountains on all sides, and that his horse was getting
very tired and trembled at every stride. Worse than all evening was already
drawing on, and the sun would soon set. In vain had he sent arrow after arrow
at the beautiful stag. Every shot fell short, or went wide of the mark; and at
last, just as darkness was setting in, he lost sight altogether of the beast.
By this time his horse could hardly move from fatigue, his hound staggered
panting along beside him, he was far away amongst mountains where he had never
been before, and had quite missed his way, and not a human creature or dwelling
was in sight.
All
this was very discouraging, but the king would not have minded if he had not
lost that beautiful stag. That troubled him a good deal, but he never worried
over what he could not help, so he got down from his horse, slipped his arm
through the bridle, and led the animal along the rough path in hopes of
discovering some shepherd's hut, or, at least, a cave or shelter under some
rock, where he might pass the night.
Presently
he heard the sound of rushing water, and made towards it. He toiled over a
steep rocky shoulder of a hill, and there, just below him, was a stream dashing
down a precipitous glen, and, almost beneath his feet, twinkling and flickering
from the level of the torrent, was a dim light as of a lamp. Towards this light
the king with his horse and hound made his way, sliding and stumbling down a
steep, stony path. At the bottom the king found a narrow grassy ledge by the
brink of the stream, across which the light from a rude lantern in the mount of
a cave shed a broad beam of uncertain light. At the edge of the stream sat an
old hermit with a long white beard, who neither spoke nor moved as the king
approached, but sat throwing into the stream dry leaves which lay scattered
about the ground near him.
'Peace
be upon you,' said the king, giving the usual country salutation.
'And
upon you peace,' answered the hermit; but still he never looked up, nor stopped
what he was doing.
For
a minute or two the king stood watching him. He noticed that the hermit threw
two leaves in at a time, and watched them attentively. Sometimes both were
carried rapidly down by the stream; sometimes only one leaf was carried off,
and the other, after whirling slowly round and round on the edge of the
current, would come circling back on an eddy to the hermit's feet. At other
times both leaves were held in the backward eddy, and failed to reach the main
current of the noisy stream.
'What
are you doing?' asked the king at last, and the hermit replied that he was
reading the fates of men; every one's fate, he said, was settled from the
beginning, and, whatever it were, there was no escape from it. The king
laughed. 'I care little,' he said, 'what
my fate may be; but I should be curious to know the fate of my little
daughter.'
'I
cannot say,' answered the hermit.
'Do
you not know, then?' demanded the king.
'I
might know,' returned the hermit, 'but it is not always wisdom to know much.'
But
the king was not content with this reply, and began to press the old man to say
what he knew, which for a long time he would not do. At last, however, the king
urged him so greatly that he said:
'The
king's daughter will marry the son of a poor slave-girl called Puruna, who
belongs to the king of the land of the north. There is no escaping from Fate.'
The
king was wild with anger at hearing these words, but he was also very tired; so
he only laughed, and answered that he hoped there would be a way out of THAT
fate anyhow. Then he asked if the hermit could shelter him and his beasts for
the night, and the hermit said 'Yes'; so, very soon the king had watered and
tethered his horse, and, after a supper of bread and parched peas, lay down in
the cave, with the hound at his feet, and tried to go to sleep. But instead of
sleeping he only lay awake and thought of the hermit's prophecy; and the more
he thought of it the angrier he felt, until he gnashed his teeth and declared
that it should never, never come true.
Morning
came, and the king got up, pale and sulky, and, after learning from the hermit
which path to take, was soon mounted and found his way home without much
difficulty. Directly he reached his palace he wrote a letter to the king of the
land of the north, begging him, as a favour, to sell him his slave girl Puruna
and her son, and saying that, if he consented, he would send a messenger to
receive them at the river which divided the kingdoms.
For
five days he awaited the reply, and hardly slept or ate, but was as cross as
could be all the time. On the fifth day his messenger returned with a letter to
say that the king of the land of the north would not sell, but he would give,
the king the slave girl and her son. The king was overjoyed. He sent for his
Grand Wazeer and told him that he was going on one of his lonely expeditions,
and that the Wazeer must invent some excuse to account for his absence. Next he
disguised himself as an ordinary messenger, mounted a swift camel, and sped
away to the place where the slave girl was to be handed over to him. When he
got there he gave the messengers who brought her a letter of thanks and a
handsome present for their master and rewards for themselves; and then without
delay he took the poor woman and her tiny baby-boy up on to his camel and rode
off to a wild desert.
After
riding for a day and a night, almost without stopping, he came to a great cave
where he made the woman dismount, and, taking her and the baby into the cave,
he drew his sword and with one blow chopped her head off. But although his
anger made him cruel enough for anything so dreadful, the king felt that he
could not turn his great sword on the helpless baby, who he was sure must soon
die in this solitary place without its mother; so he left it in the cave where
it was, and, mounting his camel, rode home as fast as he could.
Now,
in a small village in his kingdom there lived an old widow who had no children
or relations of any kind. She made her living mostly by selling the milk of a
flock of goats; but she was very, very poor, and not very strong, and often
used to wonder how she would live if she got too weak or ill to attend to her
goats. Every morning she drove the goats out into the desert to graze on the
shrubs and bushes which grew there, and every evening they came home of
themselves to be milked and to be shut up safely for the night.
One
evening the old woman was astonished to find that her very best nanny-goat returned
without a drop of milk. She thought that some naughty boy or girl was playing a
trick upon her and had caught the goat on its way home and stolen all the milk.
But when evening after evening the goat remained almost dry she determined to
find out who the thief was. So the next day she followed the goats at a
distance and watched them while they grazed. At length, in the afternoon, the
old woman noticed this particular nanny-goat stealing off by herself away from
the herd and she at once went after her. On and on the goat walked for some
way, and then disappeared into a cave in the rocks. The old woman followed the
goat into the cave and then, what should she see but the animal giving her milk
to a little boy-baby, whilst on the ground near by lay the sad remains of the
baby's dead mother! Wondering and frightened, the old woman thought at last
that this little baby might be a son to her in her old age, and that he would
grow up and in time to come be her comfort and support. So she carried home the
baby to her hut, and next day she took a spade to the cave and dug a grave
where she buried the poor mother.
Years
passed by, and the baby grew up into a find handsome lad, as daring as he was
beautiful, and as industrious as he was brave. One day, when the boy, whom the
old woman had named Nur Mahomed, was about seventeen years old, he was coming
from his day's work in the fields, when he saw a strange donkey eating the
cabbages in the garden which surround their little cottage. Seizing a big
stick, he began to beat the intruder and to drive him out of his garden. A
neighbour passing by called out to him--'Hi! I say! why are you beating the
pedlar's donkey like that?'
'The
pedlar should keep him from eating my cabbages,' said Nur Mahomed; 'if he comes
this evening here again I'll cut off his tail for him!'
Whereupon
he went off indoors, whistling cheerfully. It happened that this neighbour was
one of those people who make mischief by talking too much; so, meeting the
pedlar in the 'serai,' or inn, that evening, he told him what had occurred, and
added: 'Yes; and the young spitfire said that if beating the donkey would not
do, he would beat you also, and cut your nose off for a thief!'
A
few days later, the pedlar having moved on, two men appeared in the village
inquiring who it was who had threatened to ill-treat and to murder an innocent
pedlar. They declared that the pedlar, in fear of his life, had complained to
the king; and that they had been sent to bring the lawless person who had said
these things before the king himself. Of course they soon found out about the
donkey eating Nur Mahomed's cabbages, and about the young man's hot words; but
although the lad assured them that he had never said anything about murdering
anyone, they replied they were ordered to arrest him, and bring him to take his
trial before the king. So, in spite of his protests, and the wails of his
mother, he was carried off, and in due time brought before the king. Of course
Nur Mahomed never guessed that the supposed pedlar happened to have been the
king himself, although nobody knew it.
But
as he was very angry at what he had been told, he declared that he was going to
make an example of this young man, and intended to teach him that even poor
travelling pedlars could get justice in HIS country, and be protected from such
lawlessness. However, just as he was going to pronounce some very heavy
sentence, there was a stir in the court, and up came Nur Mahomed's old mother,
weeping and lamenting, and begging to be heard. The king ordered her to speak,
and she began to plead for the boy, declaring how good he was, and how he was
the support of her old age, and if he were put in prison she would die. The
king asked her who she was. She replied that she was his mother.
'His
mother?' said the king; 'you are too old, surely, to have so young a son!'
Then
the old woman, in her fright and distress, confessed the whole story of how she
found the baby, and how she rescued and brought him up, and ended by beseeching
the king for mercy.
It
is easy to guess how, as the story came out, the king looked blacker and
blacker, and more and more grim, until at last he was half fainting with rage
and astonishment. This, then, was the baby he had left to die, after cruelly
murdering his mother! Surely fate might have spared him this! He wished he had
sufficient excuse to put the boy to death, for the old hermit's prophecy came
back to him as strongly as ever; and yet the young man had done nothing bad
enough to deserve such a punishment. Everyone would call him a tyrant if he
were to give such an order--in fact, he dared not try it!
At
length he collected himself enough to say:--'If this young man will enlist in
my army I will let him off. We have need of such as him, and a little
discipline will do him good.' Still the old woman pleaded that she could not
live without her son, and was nearly as terrified at the idea of his becoming a
soldier as she was at the thought of his being put in prison. But at length the
king--determined to get the youth into his clutches--pacified her by promising
her a pension large enough to keep her in comfort; and Nur Mahomed, to his own
great delight, was duly enrolled in the king's army.
As a
soldier Nur Mahomed seemed to be in luck. He was rather surprised, but much
pleased, to find that he was always one of those chosen when any difficult or
dangerous enterprise was afoot; and, although he had the narrowest escapes on
some occasions, still, the very desperateness of the situations in which he
found himself gave him special chances of displaying his courage. And as he was
also modest and generous, he became a favourite with his officers and his
comrades.
Thus
it was not very surprising that, before very long, he became enrolled amongst
the picked men of the king's bodyguard. The fact is, that the king had hoped to
have got him killed in some fight or another; but, seeing that, on the
contrary, he throve on hard knocks, he was now determined to try more direct
and desperate methods.
One
day, soon after Nur Mahomed had entered the bodyguard, he was selected to be
one of the soldiers told off to escort the king through the city. The
procession was marching on quite smoothly, when a man, armed with a dagger,
rushed out of an alley straight towards the king. Nur Mahomed, who was the
nearest of the guards, threw himself in the way, and received the stab that had
been apparently intended for the king. Luckily the blow was a hurried one, and
the dagger glanced on is breastbone, so that, although he received a severe
wound, his youth and strength quickly got the better of it. The king was, of
course, obliged to take some notice of this brave deed, and as a reward made
him one of his own attendants.
After
this the strange adventures the young man passed through were endless. Officers
of the bodyguard were often sent on all sorts of secret and difficult errands,
and such errands had a curious way of becoming necessary when Nur Mahomed was
on duty. Once, while he was taking a journey, a foot-bridge gave way under him;
once he was attacked by armed robbers; a rock rolled down upon him in a
mountain pass; a heavy stone coping fell from a roof at his feet in a narrow
city alley. Altogether, Nur Mahomed began to think that, somewhere or other, he
had made an enemy; but he was light-hearted, and the thought did not much
trouble him. He escaped somehow every time, and felt amused rather than anxious
about the next adventure.
It
was the custom of that city that the officer for the day of the palace guards
should receive all his food direct from the king's kitchen. One day, when Nur
Mahomed's turn came to be on duty, he was just sitting down to a delicious stew
that had been sent in from the palace, when one of those gaunt, hungry dogs,
which, in eastern countries, run about the streets, poked his nose in at the
open guard-room door, and looked at Nur Mahomed with mouth watering and
nostrils working. The kind-hearted young man picked out a lump of meat, went to
the door, and threw it outside to him. The dog pounced upon it, and gulped it
down greedily, and was just turning to go, when it staggered, fell, rolled
over, and died. Nur Mahomed, who had been lazily watching him, stood still for
a moment, then he came back whistling softly. He gathered up the rest of his
dinner and carefully wrapped it up to carry away and bury somewhere; and then
he sent back the empty plates.
How
furious the king was when, at the next morning's durbar, Nur Mahomed appeared
before him fresh, alert and smiling as usual. He was determined, however, to
try once more, and bidding the young man come into his presence that evening,
gave orders that he was to carry a secret despatch to the governor of a distant
province. 'Make your preparations at once,' added he, 'and be ready to start in
the morning. I myself will deliver you the papers at the last moment.'
Now
this province was four or five days' journey from the palace, and the governor
of it was the most faithful servant the king had. He could be silent as the
grave, and prided himself on his obedience. Whilst he was an old and tried
servant of the king's, his wife had been almost a mother to the young princess
ever since the queen had died some years before. It happened that, a little
before this time, the princess had been sent away for her health to another
remote province; and whilst she was there her old friend, the governor's wife,
had begged her to come and stay with them as soon as she could.
The
princess accepted gladly, and was actually staying in the governor's house at
the very time when the king made up his mind to send Nur Mahomed there with the
mysterious despatch.
According
to orders Nur Mahomed presented himself early the next morning at the king's
private apartments. His best horse was saddled, food placed in is saddle-bag,
and with some money tied up in his waist-band, he was ready to start. The king
handed over to him a sealed packet, desiring him to give it himself only into
the hands of the governor, and to no one else. Nur Mahomed hid it carefully in
his turban, swung himself into the saddle, and five minutes later rode out of
the city gates, and set out on his long journey.
The
weather was very hot; but Nur Mahomed thought that the sooner his precious
letter was delivered the better; so that, by dint of riding most of each night
and resting only in the hottest part of the day, he found himself, by noon on
the third day, approaching the town which was his final destination.
Not
a soul was to be seen anywhere; and Nur Mahomed, stiff, dry, thirsty, and
tired, looked longingly over the wall into the gardens, and marked the
fountains, the green grass, the shady apricot orchards, and giant mulberry
trees, and wished he were there.
At
length he reached the castle gates, and was at once admitted, as he was in the
uniform of the king's bodyguard. The governor was resting, the soldier said,
and could not see him until the evening. So Nur Mahomed handed over his horse
to an attendant, and wandered down into the lovely gardens he had seen from the
road, and sat down in the shade to rest himself. He flung himself on his back
and watched the birds twittering and chattering in the trees above him. Through
the branches he could see great patches of sky where the kites wheeled and
circled incessantly, with shrill whistling cried. Bees buzzed over the flowers
with a soothing sound, and in a few minutes Nur Mahomed was fast asleep.
Every
day, through the heat of the afternoon, the governor, and his wife also, used
to lie down for two or three hours in their own rooms, and so, for the matter
of that, did most people in the palace. But the princess, like many other
girls, was restless, and preferred to wander about the garden, rather than rest
on a pile of soft cushions. What a torment her stout old attendants and
servants sometime thought her when she insisted on staying awake, and making
them chatter or do something, when they could hardly keep their eyes open!
Sometimes, however, the princess would pretend to go to sleep, and then, after
all her women had gladly followed her example, she would get up and go out by
herself, her veil hanging loosely about her. If she was discovered her old
hostess scolded her severely; but the princess only laughed, and did the same
thing next time.
This
very afternoon the princess had left all her women asleep, and, after trying in
vain to amuse herself indoors, she had slipped out into the great garden, and
rambled about in all her favourite nooks and corners, feeling quite safe as
there was not a creature to be seen. Suddenly, on turning a corner, she stopped
in surprise, for before her lay a man fast asleep! In her hurry she had almost
tripped over him. But there he was, a young man, tanned and dusty with travel,
in the uniform of an officer of the king's guard. One of the few faults of this
lovely princess was a devouring curiosity, and she lived such an idle life that
she had plenty of time to be curious. Out of one of the folds of this young
man's turban there peeped the corner of a letter! She wondered what the letter
was--whom it was for! She drew her veil a little closer, and stole across on
tip-toe and caught hold of the corner of the letter. Then she pulled it a
little, and just a little more! A great big seal came into view, which she saw
to be her father's, and at the sight of it she paused for a minute half ashamed
of what she was doing. But the pleasure of taking a letter which was not meant
for her was more than she could resist, and in another moment it was in her
hand. All at once she remembered that it would be death to this poor officer if
he lost the letter, and that at all hazards she must put it back again. But
this was not so easy; and, moreover, the letter in her hand burnt her with
longing to read it, and see what was inside. She examined the seal. It was
sticky with being exposed to the hot sun, and with a very little effort it
parted from the paper. The letter was open and she read it! And this was what
was written:
'Behead
the messenger who brings this letter secretly and at once. Ask no questions.'
The
girl grew pale. What a shame! she thought. SHE would not let a handsome young
fellow like that be beheaded; but how to prevent it was not quite clear at the
moment. Some plan must be invented, and she wished to lock herself in where no
one could interrupt her, as might easily happen in the garden. So she crept
softly to her room, and took a piece of paper and wrote upon it: 'Marry the
messenger who brings this letter to the princess openly at once. Ask no
questions.' And even contrived to work the seals off the original letter and to
fix them to this, so that no one could tell, unless they examined it closely,
that it had ever been opened. Then she slipped back, shaking with fear and
excitement, to where the young officer still lay asleep, thrust the letter into
the fold so his turban, and hurried back to her room. It was done!
Late
in the afternoon Nur Mahomed woke, and, making sure that the precious despatch
was still safe, went off to get ready for his audience with the governor. As
soon as he was ushered into his presence he took the letter from his turban and
placed it in the governor's hands according to orders. When he had read it the
governor was certainly a little astonished; but he was told in the letter to
'ask no questions,' and he knew how to obey orders. He sent for his wife and
told her to get the princess ready to be married at once.
'Nonsense!'
said his wife, 'what in the world do you mean?'
'These
are the king's commands,' he answered; 'go and do as I bid you. The letter says
"at once," and "ask no questions." The marriage, therefore,
must take place this evening.'
In
vain did his wife urge every objection; the more she argued, the more
determined was her husband. 'I know how to obey orders,' he said, 'and these
are as plain as the nose on my face!' So the princess was summoned, and,
somewhat to their surprise, she seemed to take the news very calmly; next Nur
Mahomed was informed, and he was greatly startled, but of course he could but
be delighted at the great and unexpected honour which he thought the king had
done him. Then all the castle was turned upside down; and when the news spread
in the town, THAT was turned upside down too. Everybody ran everywhere, and
tried to do everything at once; and, in the middle of it all, the old governor
went about with his hair standing on end, muttering something about 'obeying
orders.'
And
so the marriage was celebrated, and there was a great feast in the castle, and
another in the soldiers' barracks, and illuminations all over the town and in
the beautiful gardens. And all the people declared that such a wonderful sight
had never been seen, and talked about it to the ends of their lives.
The
next day the governor despatched the princess and her bridegroom to the king,
with a troop of horsemen, splendidly dressed, and he sent a mounted messenger
on before them, with a letter giving the account of the marriage to the king.
When
the king got the governor's letter, he grew so red in the face that everyone
thought he was going to have apoplexy. They were all very anxious to know what
had happened, but he rushed off and locked himself into a room, where he ramped
and raved until he was tired. Then, after awhile, he began to think he had
better make the best of it, especially as the old governor had been clever enough
to send him back his letter, and the king was pretty sure that this was in the
princess's handwriting. He was fond of his daughter, and though she had behaved
badly, he did not wish to cut HER head off, and he did not want people to know
the truth because it would make him look foolish. In fact, the more he
considered the matter, the more he felt that he would be wise to put a good
face on it, and to let people suppose that he had really brought about the
marriage of his own free will.
So,
when the young couple arrived, the king received them with all state, and gave
his son-in-law a province to govern. Nur Mahomed soon proved himself as able
and honourable a governor as he was a brave soldier; and, when the old king
died, he became king in his place, and reigned long and happily.
Nur
Mahomed's old mother lived for a long time in her 'son's' palace, and died in
peace. The princess, his wife, although she had got her husband by a trick,
found that she could not trick HIM, and so she never tried, but busied herself
in teaching her children and scolding her maids. As for the old hermit, no
trace of him was ever discovered; but the cave is there, and the leaves lie
thick in front of it unto this day.
[Told
the writer by an Indian.]
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