One day Dáráb said to the launderer:—
“Albeit that I never mention it
Affection stirreth not in me for thee,
Nor is my face like thine. I feel astounded
Whene'er thou call'st me son and seatest me
Beside thee in the shop.”
The launderer said:—
“What words are these? Alack for all the pains
Bestowed on thee! If thou out-classest me
Seek for thy sire; thy mother hath thy secret.”
It happened that the launderer one day
Went from the house and hastened to the stream.
In fright the woman
Begged for her life and called on God for succour.
She said: “Seek not my blood, and I will tell thee
All as thou biddest.”
She recounted all,
With neither reticence nor subterfuge,
About the ark, the infant yet unweaned,
About the golden coins and royal jewels,
And said: “We were but simple working-folk
Quite unrelated to the quality.
What wealth we have is all derived from thine;
Through thee we rose from low to high estate.
We are but slaves and thine is to command:
What wilt thou? We are thine both soul and body.”
Dáráb stood in amaze on hearing this,
Plunged in profound surmise. He said to her:—
“Doth anything remain of all that wealth,
Or hath the launderer spent the whole of it?
Is there enough still left to buy a horse
In this our day of lowliness and want?”
The woman said: “There is and more than that,
And there are money, land, and fruitful gardens.”
She gave him all the money that she had,
And showed to him the precious uncut gem.
He spent the money on a noble steed,
A lasso, mace, and saddle of low price.
There was a prudent marchlord, one of weight,
A magnate well approved and well advised,
To whom Dáráb betook himself with soul
O'erclouded and perturbed. The marchlord held him
In highest estimation; no disaster
Befell him any whit.
Now as it chanced
An army marched from Rúm to levy war
Upon that prosperous land, that frontier-chief