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    10- Noor ad Deen and the Fair Persian

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    The Story of Noor ad Deen and the Fair Persian.

    The city of Bussorah was for many years the capital of a kingdom
    tributary to the caliphs of Arabia. The king who governed it in
    the days of the caliph Haroon al Rusheed was named Zinebi, who
    not thinking it proper to commit the administration of his
    affairs to a single vizier, made choice of two, Khacan and Saouy.

    Khacan was of a sweet, generous, and affable temper, and took
    pleasure in obliging, to the utmost of his power, those with whom
    he had any business to transact, without violating the justice
    which it became him to dispense to all. He was therefore
    universally respected, at court, in the city, and throughout the
    whole kingdom; and the praises he so highly deserved were the
    general theme.

    Saouy was of a very different character: he was always sullen and
    morose, and disgusted every body, without regard to their rank or
    quality. Instead of commanding respect by the liberal
    distribution of his immense wealth, he was so perfect a miser as
    to deny himself the necessaries of life. In short, nobody could
    endure him; and nothing good was said of him. But what rendered
    him most hateful to the people, was his implacable aversion to
    Khacan. He was always putting the worst construction on the
    actions of that worthy minister, and endeavouring as much as
    possible to prejudice him with the king.

    One day after council, the king of Bussorah amused himself with
    his two viziers and some other members. The conversation turned
    upon the female slaves that are daily bought and sold, and who
    hold nearly the same rank as the lawful wives. Some were of
    opinion, that personal beauty in slaves so purchased was of
    itself sufficient to render them proper substitutes for wives,
    which, often on account of alliance or interest in families, men
    are obliged to marry, though they are not always possessed of any
    perfection, either of mind or body.

    Others maintained, and amongst the rest Khacan, that personal
    charms were by no means the only qualifications to be desired in
    a slave; but that they ought to be accompanied with a great share
    of wit, a cultivated understanding, modesty, and, if possible,
    every agreeable accomplishment. The reason they gave was, that
    nothing could be more gratifying to persons on whom the

    management of important affairs devolved, than, after having
    spent the day in fatiguing employment, to have a companion in
    their retirement, whose conversation would be not only pleasing,
    but useful and instructive: for, in short, continued they, there
    is but little difference between brutes and those men who keep a
    slave only to look at, and to gratify a passion that we have in
    common with them.

    The king entirely
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