Kalílah said, ‘I have heard that in former times there was a King, who had opened the hand of despotic power and oppression, and had set the foot of obstinate wickedness beyond the beaten path of justice and beneficence.
The people night and day had lifted up their hands in prayer against his injustice, and had loosed the tongue of detestation. One day this King went to the chase, and when he returned, he ordered a proclamation, saying, ‘O people! the eye of my heart has to this day been covered with a veil from beholding the aspect of rectitude, and the hand of my transgression has drawn the scymitar of tyranny against the countenances of the despairing oppressed, and the unhappy objects of persecution. Now I have become sincerely disposed to cherish my subjects, and steadfast in the office of administration of justice. My hope is that after to-day the hand of an oppressor will not strike the ring of vexation on the door of any peasant, nor the foot of a persecutor reach the court of the dwelling of any poor man.’
The people felt new life at these tidings, and to the poor, the rose of desire blossomed in the garden of hope.
In short the felicitous influence of his justice reached such a point, that the lambs drank milk from the dugs of the savage lioness, and the pheasant sported in communion with the hawk, and on this account they bestowed on him the title of ‘The Justice-dispensing King.’
One of the confidential ministers of the cabinet of state, took an opportunity
to ask the state of the case, and inquired into the change of the bitterness of
oppression and tyranny for the sweetness of mercy and good faith. The
King said, ‘That day that I went to hunt, I was galloping on every side,
when suddenly I observed a dog pursue a fox, and bite through the bone of
his leg with his teeth:—
And I have hit off this example with this view, that thou mayest dread retribution,
and abandon a malevolent disposition, lest disastrous results should
reach thee, and the meaning [of the saying] ‘Whoever dug a pit for his
brother assuredly fell into it himself,’ be manifested in thy case; and a
sage has said, ‘Do not evil, that thou mayest keep back evil;*
dig not a
pit, lest thou fall therein thyself.’ Damnah said, ‘In this matter I am the
oppressed—