B. K. M. Serial. TITLES OF THE ANECDOTES.
        Part IV, Chapter XXV = C: On Pieces of Humour and the Facetiousness of Eminent Persons.
f287b f537b f247b 2075 A short introduction illustrated with the wit of the Prophet. The Prophet Muḥammad jokingly offers one of his followers for sale.
f538a f248a 2076 The Prophet perplexes a woman by saying in jest that her husband’s eyes have turned white.
2077 The Prophet and his wife ‘Á’isha equal in the race.
2078 The Prophet humorously asks Khawwát b. Jubayr al-Anṣárí what became of the runaway camel, alluding to a hoax, which Khawwát had played upon an oil-selling woman in pre-Islamic days.
f248b 2079 The Prophet cracks a joke on one of his followers about the she-calf of a camel.
f288a 2080 A Companion of the Prophet succeeds in putting him into good humour when he was angry.
2081 The Prophet enjoys for a year the practical joke of Nu‘aymán on Suwaybiṭ, the Companion, whom Nu‘aymán sold by force for ten camels under the pretence that he was an unruly slave. (Cf. Ibn Qutayba, Kitábu’l-Ma‘árif, p. 167, where Nu‘aymán is the victim of Suwaybiṭ).
f538b f249a 2082 Nu‘aymán, the jocular Companion of the Prophet, and the pot of honey.
2083 Another trick of Nu‘aymán on ‘Utba b. Ḥuṣayn al-Fazárí, by mischievously suggesting to him to fast in the night if he could not bear the heat in the day.
2084 How Nu‘aymán used to tease Ibn-i-Nawfal az-Zuhrí, the blind man. (Cf. Ibn Qut., Ma‘árif, p. 168).
f249b 2085 A joke of the wife of the Imám A‘mash on her husband.
f539a 2086 A joke of the Imám A‘mash at the expense of his wife.
f288b 2087 The Qádhí Shurayḥ befools the people of Hamadán. (Cf. Ibn Khall. Wüst. Biog. No. 289).
f250a 2088 The Qádhhí Shurayḥ amused at the euphemistic expressions of a husband and wife who appealed to him for their individual rights.
2089 Husband and wife as litigants before a Qádhí, and their ribaldry.
2090 Husband and wife as litigants before an undignified Qádhí, and his scurrilous retort.
2091 Sharp retorts that passed between a Ṣúfí and a theologian on the question of free-will.
 
B. K. M. Serial. TITLES OF THE ANECDOTES.
f288b f539a f250b 2092 The retort of a Náṣibí to a Shí‘ite who maliciously alleged that ‘Á’isha, the wife of the Prophet, was guilty of misconduct.
f539b 2093 Jirábu’d-Dawla, [the Court Jester of the Buwayhids], and the amusing crier of the Prayer-Call, who used to take delight in hearing his own voice from a little distance, and therefore was in the habit of running away from his voice.
f251a 2094 The ignorant leader of the prayer and his blunt remark about the Verse of <Arabic>.
f250b 2095 The blunt remark of a Bedouin in prayer while the Verse <Arabic> were being recited by the leader of the prayer.
2096 ‘Abdu’l-Malik b. Marwán, the Caliph, demands from Suwayd ten words denoting a part of the body and beginning with the letter Káf. Suwayd enumerates nine words <Arabic>. The Caliph having objected to the tenth word <Arabic> as not being applicable to a man’s stomach, Suwayd, after a little while recollects another word <Arabic> in its stead and begins to cry it out from the lavatory, even before adjusting his clothes.
2097 The joke of a person about his own birth-constellation: a pun on the words <Arabic> and <Arabic>
f289a 2098 The joke of a physician on one of his patients who complained of stomach-ache on account of eating burnt bread. The physician applies medicine to his eyes rather than give him anything to drink.
2099 Another joke of a physician of Samarqand on one of his patients who complained of headache.
f251a 2100 Diatribe of a physician against the mother of a person who was suffering from inflammation of the throat, and a coarse allusion to his own wife’s sexual organ.
2101 A jester, who posed as a Prophet, when arrested and brought before the King, acquits himself of the charge of blasphemy by a witty remark about the production of a melon in three days, whereas God himself made three months the period of its normal growth.
2102 The witty remark of an ugly person at the table of Ziyád about his own beautiful daughters at home.
2103 A lampoon on Ḥájjí Harwísh, nicknamed Kargas; a native of Níshá­púr, by the poet Rafíqí (?).
f540a 2104 The witty ‘Ayán (?) or Bayán as a self-invited guest, and his apt quotation from the Qur’án, containing the ordinal number of the lozenges offered to him at table.
f251b 2105 Ḥammád-i-Ḥamíd (?) and the Amír Shujá‘ of Fárs and the former’s apt quotation from the Qur’án.
2106 The Caliph Hárún’s envy the hand-writing of Ismá‘íl [b.] Ṣubayḥ, and the latter’s clever allusion to the illiteracy of the Prophet being no disgrace to him.
 
B. K. M. Serial. TITLES OF THE ANECDOTES.
f289a f540a f251b 2107 Rabí‘, the Chamberlain, put to shame by a youth of Banú Háshim in presence of the Caliph al-Manṣúr.
2108 The Qádhí Sharík turns the tables on the Caliph al-Mahdí who wanted to cause dissension between the Qádhí and his own uncle ‘Ísá b. Músá.
2109 Yazíd b. Marthad pleases the Caliph Hárún by a witty remark, when the Caliph was playing polo.
f289b f540b 2110 Witty remarks of a soldier who was going out of garrison with a bow without arrows.
f252a 2111 The Qádhí, being asked about a statement by ‘Alí, baffles his inter­rogator by citing a verse from the Qur’án.
2112 A retort of Walíd b. Yazíd to Hishám b. ‘Abdu’l-Malik, about buying a dastár.
2113 ‘Abbás b. Walíd b. ‘Abdu’l-Malik and the crimson robe, and his retort to his uncle Maslama b. ‘Abdu’l-Malik.
        The last or 100th chapter being defective in almost all the oldest Mss., three other Mss. are selected which contain a fairly reliable text of this chapter: B. = [Suppl. Persan 95]; K. = [Or. 236 Br. Mus.]; M. = [Add. 7672, Br. Mus.].
        The work ends with a splendid panegyric on the Wazír.