VOL. I.,
which contains 472 pages = 92 Nights. It is rudely written, with great carelessness and frequent corrections, and there is a noted improvement in the subsequent vols. which Scott would attribute to another transcriber. This, however, I doubt: in vol. i. the scribe does not seem to have settled down to his work. The MS. begins abruptly and without caligraphic decoration; nor is there any red ink in vol. i. except for the terminal three words. The topothesia is in the land of Sásán, in the Isles of Al-Hind and Al-Sind; the elder King being called “Báz” and “Shár-báz” and the younger “Kahramán” (p. 1, ll. 5–6), and in the same page (l. 10) “Saharbán, King of Samarkand”; while the Wazir’s daughters are “Shahrzádah” and “Dunyázádah” (p. 8). The Introduction is like that of the Mac. Edit. (my text); but the dialogue between the Wazir and his Daughter is shortened, and the “Tale of the Merchant and his Wife,” including “The Bull and the Ass,” is omitted. Of novelties we find few. When speaking of the Queen and Mas’úd the Negro (called Sa’id in my text, p. 6) the author remarks:—
Take no black to lover; pure musk tho’ he be ✿ Carrion-taint shall pierce to the nose of thee.
And in the “Tale of the Trader and the Jinni” (MS. 1, 9: see my transl. 1, 25) the ’Ifrit complains that the Merchant had thrown the date-stones without exclaiming “Dastúr!”—by thy leave.
The following is a list of the Tales in vol. i.:—
| PAGE. | |
|---|---|
| Introductory Chapter | 1–9 |
| Tale of the Trader and the Jinni, Night i.–ii. | 9 |
| The First Shaykh’s Story, Night ii. | 14 |
| The Second Shaykh’s Story, Night ii. | 23 |
| The Third Shaykh’s Story, Night iv. | 34 |
Scott, following “Oriental Collections,” ii. 34, supposes that the latter was omitted by M. Galland “on account of its indecency, it being a very free detail of the amours of an unfaithful wife.” The true cause was that it did not exist in Galland’s Copy of The Nights (Zotenberg, Histoire d’ ’Alâ al-Dîn, p. 37). Scott adds, “In this copy the Genie restores the Antelope, the Dogs and the Mule to their pristine forms, which is not mentioned by Galland, on their swearing to lead virtuous lives.”
| PAGE. | |
|---|---|
| Conclusion of the Trader and the Jinni, Night v. | 43 |
| The Fisherman and the Jinni, including the Tales of the Sage Dúbán and the ensorcelled Prince and omitting the Stories (1) of King Sindibád and his Falcon (2) the Husband and the Parrot and (3) the Prince and the Ogress: | 44 |
| The Porter and the Three Ladies of Baghdad, Night v. | 100 |
| The First Kalandar’s Tale, Night xxxix. | 144 |
| The Second Kalandar’s Tale, Night xlviii. | 152 |
| (The beginning of this Tale is wanting in the MS. which omits p. 151: also The Envier and the Envied, admitted into the list of Hikáyát, is here absent.) | |
| The Third Kalandar’s Tale, Night lv. | 173 |
| The Eldest Lady’s Tale, Night lxvi. | 231 |
| Tale of the Portress. Conclusion of the Story of the Porter and Three Ladies of Baghdad, Night lxii. (a clerical mistake for lxx.?) | 260 |
| (In Galland follow the Voyages of Sindbad the Seaman which are not found in this copy.) | |
| The Tailor and the Hunchback, Night lxviii. (for lxxiv.) | 295 |
| The Nazarene Broker’s Story, Night lxviii. (for lxxiv.?) | 308 |
| The Youth whose hand was cut off, Night (?)[[629]] | 312 |
| (In p. 314 is a hiatus not accounting for the loss of hand.) | |
| The Barber’s Tale of his First Brother | 314 |
| —— Second —— | 317 |
| —— Third —— | 323 |
| —— Fourth —— | 327 |
| —— Fifth —— | 331 |
| —— Sixth —— | 343 |
| The end of the Tale of the Hunchback, the Barber and others, Night lxviii. (?) | 350 |
| (HERE ENDS MY VOL. I.) | |
| Núr al-Dín Alí and the Damsel Anis al-Jalís, Night lxviii. | 355 |
| Sayf al-Mulúk and Badí’a al-Jamal, Night xci.[[630]] | 401 |
| Tale of the Youth of Mosul whose hand was cut off, Night xcii. | 466–472 |
| (The Tale of the Jewish Doctor in my vol. i. 288–300.) | |
Vol. i. ends with a page of scrawls, the work of some by-gone owner.