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    7- Aboulhassen Ali Ebn Becar and Schemselnihar

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    The History of Aboulhassen Ali Ebn Becar, and Schemselnihar, Favourite of Caliph Maroon Al Rusheed. In the reign of the caliph Haroon al Rusheed, there lived at
    Bagdad a druggist, named Alboussan Ebn Thaher, a very rich
    handsome man. He had more wit and politeness than people of his
    profession generally possess: his integrity, sincerity, and good
    humour made him beloved and sought after by all sorts of people.
    The caliph, who knew his merit, had entire confidence in him. He
    held him in such high esteem, that he entrusted him to provide
    his favourite ladies with all the things they stood in need of.
    He chose for them their clothes, furniture, and jewels, with
    admirable taste.

    His good qualities, and the favour of the caliph, occasioned the
    sons of emirs, and other officers of the first rank, to be always
    about him: his house was the rendezvous of all the nobility of
    the court Among the young lords that went daily to visit him, was
    one whom he took more notice of than the rest, and with whom he
    contrasted a particular friendship, called Aboulhassen Ali Ebn
    Becar, originally of an ancient royal family of Persia. This
    family had continued at Bagdad ever since the conquest of that
    kingdom. Nature seemed to have taken pleasure in endowing this
    young prince with the rarest qualities of body and mind: his face
    was so very beautiful, his shape so fine, his air so easy, and
    his physiognomy so engaging, that it was impossible to see him
    without immediately loving him. When he spoke, he expressed
    himself in terms proper and well chosen, with a new and agreeable
    turn, and his voice charmed all that heard him: he had besides so
    much wit and judgment, that he thought and spoke of all subjects
    with admirable exactness. He was so reserved and modest, that he
    advanced nothing till after he had taken all possible care to
    avoid giving any ground of suspicion that he preferred his own
    opinion to that of others.

    Being such a person as I have represented him, we need not wonder
    that Ebn Thaher distinguished him from all the other young
    noblemen of the court, most of whom had the vices which composed
    the opposites to his virtues. One day, when the prince was with
    Ebn Thaher, there came a lady mounted on a piebald mule, in the

    midst of ten female slaves who accompanied her on foot, all very
    handsome, as far as could be judged by their air, and through
    their veils which covered their faces. The lady had a girdle of a
    rose colour, four inches broad, embroidered with pearls and
    diamonds of an extraordinary bigness; and for beauty it was easy
    to perceive that she surpassed all her women, as far as the full
    moon does that of two days old. She came to buy something, and as
    she wanted to speak to Ebn Thaher, entered
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