She said, ‘They have related that in ancient times* there was a King fond of hunting. He was ever giving reins to the courser of his desire in the pursuit of game, and was always casting the lasso of gladness over the neck of sport. Now this King had a Hawk, who at a single flight could bring down the Símurgh from the peak of Ḳáf,* and in terror of whose claws the constellation Aquila kept himself close in the green nest of the sky.
And the King had a prodigious fondness for this Hawk, and always cared
for it with his own hands. It happened that one day the Monarch, holding
the Hawk on his hand, had gone to the chase. A stag leapt up before him
and he galloped after it with the utmost eagerness. But he did not succeed in
coming up with it, and became separated from his retinue and servants; and
though some of them followed him, the king rode so hotly that the morning
breeze—
Meantime the fire of his thirst was kindled, and the intense desire to drink overcame the King. He galloped his steed in every direction, and traversed the desert and the waste in search of water, until he reached the skirt of a mountain, and beheld that from its summit limpid water was trickling. The King drew forth a cup which he had in his quiver, and riding under the mountain filled the cup with that water, which fell drop by drop, and was about to take a draught, when the Hawk made a blow with his wing, and spilled all the water in the goblet. The King was vexed at that action, but held the cup a second time under the rock until it was brimful. He then raised it to his lips again, and again the Hawk made a movement and overthrew the cup.
The King, rendered impatient by thirst, dashed the Hawk on the ground, and killed it. Shortly after a stirrup-holder* of the King came up and saw the Hawk dead, and the King athirst. He then undid a water-vessel* from his saddle-cord, and washed the cup clean, and was about to give the King to drink. The latter bade him ascend the mountain, as he had the strongest inclination for the pure water which trickled from the rock; and could not wait to collect it in the cup, drop by drop, and therefore he desired the attendant to fill a cup with it, and come down. The stirrup-holder ascended the mountain and beheld a spring like the eye of hard-hearted misers, giving out a drop at a time with a hundred stintings; and a huge serpent lay dead on the margin of the fountain; and as the heat of the sun had taken effect upon it, the poisonous saliva mixed with the water of that mountain, and it trickled drop by drop down the rock. The stirrup-holder was overcome with horror, and came down from the mountain bewildered, and represented the state of the case, and gave the king a cup of cold water from his ewer. The latter raised the cup to his lips, and his eyes overflowed with tears.
The attendant asked the reason of his weeping. The king drew a cold sigh from his anguished heart, and said,
He then related in full the story of the Hawk and the spilling of the water in the cup, and said, ‘I grieve for the death of the Hawk, and bemoan my own deed in that without inquiry I have deprived a creature, so dear to me, of life.’ The attendant replied, ‘This Hawk protected thee from a great peril, and has established a claim to the gratitude of all the people of this country. It would have been better if the King had not been precipitate in slaying it, and had quenched the fire of wrath with the water of mildness, and had turned back the reins of the courser of his passions with the vigor of endurance, and had not transgressed the monition of the wise, who have said,
The King replied, ‘I repent of this unseemly action, but my repentance is now unavailing, and the wound of this sorrow cannot be healed by any salve; and as long as I live I shall retain on my bosom the scar of this regret, and lacerate the visage of my feelings with the nail of remorse.
And I have adduced this story in order that it may be known that many such incidents have occurred, where, through the disastrous results of precipitation, men have fallen into the whirlpool of repentance; and, owing to their abandonment of deliberate and cautious procedure, have sunk in the vortex of calamity.
The Devotee replied, ‘O partner of my life, and ornament of my exist-ence! thou hast consoled me with this story, and salved my wounded heart. And I know that I have many to share with me this guilt; and just as their stories have been recorded on the page of time, so shall my tale also be narrated. So that, whoever is incautious in his actions, and participates not in the advantages of gravity and placidity, may be warned by this narrative, and derive a salutary* lesson from this history.
This is the story of one who, without deliberation, carries the intention of doing anything into execution, and engages in a matter without thought. And it behoves a man of understanding to make experience his guide, and to furbish the mirror of his judgment with the directions of sages and the admonitions of the wise; and on all occasions to incline towards reflection and counsel, and to turn away from the path of rashness and levity, in order that good fortune and prosperity may, in abundant and successive waves, reach the shore of his happiness, and the help of welfare and good gifts may be added to his virtues and courage.