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    16- The Sultan, the Dervish, and the Barber's son - Page 2

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    an honourable attendance, to conduct the venerable
    dervish to his presence, where being arrived, he was received
    with the most distinguishing attention, and the barber's son was
    promoted to high office. After some days, the sultan requested
    the dervish to instruct him in the transmutation of metals, which
    he readily did, as well as in many other occult mysteries; which
    so gratified his royal patron, that he trusted the administration
    of government to his care. This disgusted the ministers and
    courtiers, who could not bear to be controlled by a stranger, and
    therefore resolved to effect his ruin. By degrees they persuaded
    their credulous master that the dervish was a magician, who would
    in time possess himself of his throne, and the sultan, alarmed,
    resolved to put him to death. With this intention, calling him to
    the presence, he accused him of sorcery, and commanded an
    executioner to strike off his head. "Forbear awhile," exclaimed
    the dervish, "and let me live till I have shown you the most
    wonderful specimen of my art." To this the sultan consented, when
    the dervish, with chalk, drew a circle of considerable extent
    round the sultan and his attendants, then stepping into the
    middle of it, he drew a small circle round himself, and said,
    "Now seize me if you can;" and immediately disappeared from
    sight. At the same instant, the sultan and his courtiers found
    themselves assaulted by invisible agents, who, tearing off their
    robes, whipped them with scourges till the blood flowed in
    streams from their lacerated backs. At length the punishment
    ceased, but the mortification of the sultan did not end here, for
    all the gold which the dervish had transmuted returned to its
    original metals. Thus, by his unjust credulity, was a weak prince
    punished for his ungrateful folly. The barber and his son also
    were not to be found, so that the sultan could gain no
    intelligence of the dervish, and he and his courtiers became the
    laughingstock of the populace for years after their merited
    chastisement.
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