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THE
TOOTI NAMEH,
OR
TALES OF A PARROT
CONTENTS.
Page
Title Page
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ix
Preface
9
Tale I.
Of the Birth of Miemun; and of Khojisteh falling in love
10
II.
The Fidelity of a Sentinel towards the King of Teberistan
25
III.
The Goldsmith and the Carpenter; and the Theft and Concealment of the Golden Images
35
IV.
The Nobleman, and the Soldier's Wife, whose Virtue he put to the proof
41
V.
The Goldsmith, the Carpenter, the Taylor, and the Hermit, who quarrelled about a Wooden Woman
49
VI.
The King of Kinoge and his Daughter, with whom a Dirveish became enamoured
54
VII.
The Fowler, the Parrot, and her young ones,
58
VIII.
The Merchant, and his Wife, who outwitted him
62
IX.
The Shopkeeper's Wife, who, having an Amour with a Person, confounded her Father-in-law
65
X.
The Merchant's Daughter and the Jackal
69
XI.
The Lion, and the Brahmin, who, on account of his Avarice, lost his Life
73
XII.
The old Lion, and the Cat, who, having killed the Mice, was turned out of office,
76
XIII.
Of Shapoor, Commander of the Frogs, and the Snake
80
XIV.
A Lion whom a Syagosh dispossessed of his Dwelling
84
XV.
Zereer the Weaver, whom Fortune would not befriend
89
XVI.
Four Rich Persons who became Poor
92
XVII.
How the Jackal was made King, and then killed
95
XVIII.
Of the Intimacy of Besheer with a Woman named Chundar
98
XIX.
The Merchant, and how a Person's Mare was killed
102
XX.
The Woman who by a Stratagem escaped out of the Lion's clutches
105
XXI.
Of a King and his Sons, and of a Frog and a Snake
108
XXII.
The Merchant whose Daughter was lost
113
XXIII.
Of a Brahmin falling in love with the King of Babylon's Daughter
117
XXIV.
How the Son of the King of Babylon fell in love with a young Woman
122
XXV.
Of a Woman, who, having gone to buy Sugar, had an Amour with a Grocer
126
XXVI.
The Merchant's Daughter, whom the King rejected
129
XXVII.
The Potter, who is taken into the Service of a King, and made General of his Army
134
XXVIII.
The Lion and his Whelps, and how he fostered a young Jackal
137
XXIX.
The Nobleman who concealed a Snake in his Sleeve
140
XXX.
The Soldier and the Goldsmith, the latter of whom lost his Life from the Love of Money
144
XXXI.
Of the Merchant and the Barber's beating the Brahmins
148
XXXII.
The Frog, the Bee, and the Bird, who killed the Elephant
151
XXXIII.
The Emperor of China, in a Dream, falls in love with the Queen of Room
155
XXXIV.
The Elk and the Ass, who are both taken prisoners
161
XXXV.
A King falls in love.—Khojisteh is put to death by the hands of Miemun
164
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