D. | G. | Serial. | TITLES OF THE ANECDOTES. |
Part III, Chapter XXIII = LXXIII: On Chaste and Virtuous Women. | |||
f276b | f282a | 1759 | Introduction. The three kinds of women described, in reply to a man who had already consulted ninety-nine persons on the choice of a wife, by one of the Imám Abú Ḥanífa’s colleagues who was feigning madness. |
D. | G. | Serial. | TITLES OF THE ANECDOTES. |
f277a | f282b | 1760 | David, the prophet, explains the enigmatic advice of his young son about the choice of a wife. |
” | ” | 1761 | The story of the divorce of a virtuous wife who was very obedient to her husband, even though she did not like him at all. |
f277b | ” | 1762 | The pathetic contentment of a beautiful woman, and her submissiveness towards her ugly and cruel husband. |
” | ” | 1763 | al-Aṣma‘í’s surprise at the incongruous union of a beautiful and eloquent woman with an ugly Bedouin. |
f278a | f283a | 1764 | The wife of a follower of the Prophet is promised the divine reward on account of her having acquiesced in the second marriage of her husband. |
” | ” | 1765 | The saintly woman Rábi‘a warns indirectly a cruel governor, appointed by al-Ḥajjáj in Baṣra, of the inevitable retribution. |
” | ” | 1766 | The ordeals which Marḥúma, the virtuous and the fair, had to suffer on account of her fatal beauty and extreme purity. |
f279a | f283b | 1767 | A noble of Baṣra cowed by the bold remark of the pious wife of his gardener. |
” | ” | 1768 | The chaste daughter of an ‘Alawí contrives her own death at the hands of Burqu‘í(?), the chief of the invading band of the Zangís, rather than face ignominy. |
f279b | ” | 1769 | An account of a virtuous woman in the days of the mother of Khwája ‘Abdu’l-Malik(?). |
” | ” | 1770 | A chaste woman rebukes an ‘Alawí who wanted to commit sin. |
” | f284a | 1771 | A pious woman vindicates her honour by offering her eyeballs to ‘Utba b. Ghulám, which leads to his penitence. |
” | ” | 1772 | The conviction of a tailor about the chastity of wives. |
f280a | ” | 1773 | The unshaken constancy of Ná’ila to the Caliph ‘Uthmán. |
The chapter ends with a panegyric on the Wazír. |