WHEN the lady was excited with wine, her lover came
into her mind, and she lost her wits, and forgot where
she was. The old companion leapt into her suddenly,
and with a dagger she cut her hair to the roots. She
scratched her cheek with her nails, till her face was
bathed in blood. At dawn the lady went forth from
the house, confused as her own tresses. When she
reached home she began to weep; tore her collar and
bared her head—her face all wounds with her nails.
She raised her cries and wail to the moon; twisted her
hairs round her fingers, pulled them out, and strewed
them by handfuls all the way home, so that her path
resembled the Milky Way therewith; saying that her
husband's days were come to an end—a stranger had
unexpectedly told her that news. The women gathered
in her street, and they all became as disordered as her
hair. One said: “The poor thing! see how, fair
creature, for the death of her husband, she has cut
off her hair!” Another said: “See her face, how she
has torn it into wounds! See what she has done to her
bosom!” There now befell wailings in that dwelling;
the mansion was filled with the weeping of mourners.
She prepared a worthy wake for her husband, and
gave food.*
—After a month had elapsed, her lord
came home. Like fire from iron, the woman leapt
out, and exclaimed: “Take care, O young man—you
outside-cheat! I knew not if thou wast in the bath
stoke-hole or in the tomb. For thy death have I cut
off my hair from the roots, and torn all my face with
my nails. With whom have you been in close converse?
Tell me, with whom have you been in close search?
If I had a little once, not an atom now remains;—for
this reason, of thy ten houses not a farthing has been
left. What an evil day was that on which we were
joined!” Thus did she vent her ill-temper. Her lord
said: “O kind companion, what may it all be? Let
no harm come to thy life.” He then made up for all
the expenses that had befallen, and paid all the money
she had borrowed.—Thus do women practise sleight-
“If his Majesty,” continued the Fifth Vazīr, “is not wearied by these headache-giving tales, I will relate another example.”