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    22- Adventures of the Cauzee and his Wife - Page 2

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    convinced and repentant, but revenge rankled
    in his heart. Some days after this they reached the sea-shore,
    where the young man perceiving a ship, made a signal to speak
    with it, and the master letting down his boat sent it to land;
    upon which the young man going on board the vessel, informed the
    master that he had for sale a handsome female slave, for whom he
    asked a thousand deenars. The master, who had been used to
    purchase slaves upon that coast, went on shore, and looking at
    the cauzee's wife, paid the money to the wicked young man, who
    went his way, and the lady was carried on board the ship,
    supposing that her companion had taken the opportunity of easing
    her fatigue, by procuring her a passage to some sea-port near
    Mecca: but her persecution was not to end here. In the evening
    she was insulted by attentions of the master of the vessel, who
    being surprised at her coolness, informed her that he had
    purchased her as his slave for a thousand deenars. The
    unfortunate lady told him that she was a free woman, but this had
    no effect on the brutish sailor, who finding tenderness
    ineffectual proceeded to force and blows in order to reduce her
    to submit to his authority. Her strength was almost exhausted,
    when suddenly the ship struck upon a rock, the master was hurried
    upon deck, and in a few moments the vessel went to pieces.
    Providentially the virtuous wife laying hold of a plank was
    wafted to the shore, after being for several hours buffeted by
    the waves. Having recovered her senses she walked inland, and
    found a pleasant country abounding in fruits and clear streams,
    which satisfied her hunger and thirst. On the second day she
    arrived at a magnificent city, and on entering it was conducted
    to the sultan, who inquiring her story, she informed him that she
    was a woman devoted to a religious life, and was proceeding on
    the pilgrimage to Mecca, when her vessel was shipwrecked on his
    coast, and whether any of the crew had escaped she knew not, as
    she had seen none of them since her being cast ashore on a plank;
    but as now the hopes of her reaching the sacred house were cut
    off, if the sultan would allot her a small hut, and a trifling
    pittance for her support, she would spend the remainder of her
    days in prayers for the prosperity of himself and his subjects.


    The sultan, who was truly devout, and pitied the misfortune of
    the lady, gladly acceded to her request, and allotted a pleasant
    garden-house near his palace for her residence, at which he often
    visited her, and conversed with her on religious topics, to his
    great edification and comfort, for she was sensibly pious. Not
    long after her arrival, several refractory vassals who had for
    years withheld their usual tribute, and against whom
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