SCENE III
The Slave-market.
Muazzim and his man; Balkis and Mymoona, Ajebe, Aziz,
Abdullah and other merchants.
MUAZZIM
Well, gentlemen, the biddings, the biddings! Will you begin, sir,
for an example now?
BALKIS
Who is the handsome youth in that rich dress?
MUAZZIM
It is Ajebe, the Vizier's nephew, a good fellow with a bad uncle.
BALKIS
Praise me to them poetically, broker.
MUAZZIM
I promise you for the poetry. Biddings, gentlemen.
A MERCHANT
Three thousand for the pretty one.
MUAZZIM
Why, sir, I protest! Three thousand pieces! Look at her! Allah
be good to me! You shall not find her equal from China to
Frangistan. Seven thousand, say I.
Aziz
The goods are good goods, broker, but the price heavy.
MUAZZIM
Didst thou say heavy? Allah avert the punishment from thee,
merchant Aziz. Heavy!
Page – 574
BALKIS
(to Ajebe)
Will you not bid for me ? My mirror tells me
That I am pretty, and I can tell, who know it,
I have a touch upon the lute will charm
The winds to hear me, and my voice is sweeter
Than any you have heard in Bassora.
Will you not bid?
AJEBE
And wherefore do you choose me
From all these merchants, child ?
BALKIS
I cannot say
That I have fallen in love with you. Your mother
Is kind and beautiful, I read her in your face,
And it is she I'ld serve.
AJEBE
I bid, Muazzim,
Five thousand for this little lady.
MUAZZIM
Five!
And she who chose you too! 'Bid seven or nothing.
AJEBE
Well, well, six thousand, not a dirham more.
MUAZZIM
Does any bid beyond?
MERCHANT
Let me see, let me see.
ABDULLAH
Fie, leave them, man! You'll have no luck with her,
Page – 575
Crossing her wishes.
MERCHANT
Let her go, let her go.
MUAZZIM
To you, sir, she belongs.
BALKIS
But if you'll have me,
Then take my sister too; we make one heart
Inseparably.
AJEBE
She's fair, but not like you.
BALKIS
If we are parted, I shall sicken and die
For want of her, then your six-thousand's wasted.
MUAZZIM
They make a single lot.
AJEBE
Two thousand more then.
Give her in that, or else the sale is off.
MUAZZIM
That's giving her away. Well, take her, take her.
AJEBE
I'll send the money.
Exit with Balkis and Mymoona.
ABDULLAH
What, a bargain, broker?
Page – 576
MUAZZIM
Not much, not much; the owner'll have some profit.
Aziz
The Vizier!
Enter Ibn Sawy.
ABDULLAH
Noble Alfazzal! There will be
Good sales today in the market, since his feet
Have trod here.
MERCHANTS
Welcome, welcome, noble Vizier.
IBN
SAWY
The peace be on you all. I thank you, sirs,
What, good Abdullah, all goes well at home?
ABDULLAH
My brother's failed, sir.
IBN
SAWY
Make me your treasurer.
I am ashamed to think good men should want
While I indulge in superfluities.
Well, broker, how's the market? Have you slaves
That I can profit by?
MUAZZIM
Admired Vizier,
There's nothing worth the kindness of your gaze.
Yet do but tell me what you need, I'll fit you
With stuff quite sound and at an honest price.
The other brokers are mere pillagers,
But me you know.
Page – 577
IBN
SAWY
If there's an honest broker,
You are that marvel, I can swear so much.
Now pick me out your sweetest thing in girls,
Perfect in beauty, wise as Sheban Balkis,
Yet more in charm than Helen of the Greeks,
Then name your price.
MUAZZIM
I have the very marvel.
You shall not see her equal in a century.
She has the Koran and the law by heart;
Song, motion, music and calligraphy
Are natural to her, and she contains
All science in one corner of her mind;
Yet learning less than wit; and either lost
In the mere sweetness of her speech and beauty.
You'll hardly have her within fifteen thousand;
She is a nonpareil.
IBN
SAWY
It is a sum.
MUAZZIM
Nay, see her only. Khalid, bring the girl.
Exit Khalid.
I should not ask you, sir, but has your son
Authority from you to buy ? He has
The promise of a necklet from me.
IBN
SAWY
A necklet!
MUAZZIM
A costly trifle. "Send it to such a house,"
He tells me like a prince, "and dun my father
For the amount. I know you'll clap it on
Page – 578
As high as Elburz, you old swindler. Fleece him!"
He is a merry lad.
IBN
SAWY
Fleece me! The rogue!
The handsome naughty rogue! I'll pull his curls for this.
The house ? To whom is it given ?
MUAZZIM
Well, sir, it is
A girl, a dainty Christian. I fear she has given
Something more precious far than what he pays her with.
IBN
SAWY
No doubt, no doubt. The rogue! quite conscienceless.
I'm glad you told me of this. Dun me! Well,
The rascal's frank enough, that is one comfort;
He adds no meaner vices, fear or lying,
To his impetuous faults. The blood is good
And in the end will bear him through. There's hope.
I'll come, Muazzim.
Exit.
MUAZZIM
The son repeats the father,
But with a dash of quicker, wilder blood.
Here's Khalid with the Persian.
Enter Khalid with Anice-Aljalice.
Khalid, run
And call the Vizier, he was here just now.
Exit Khalid. Enter Almuene, Fareed and slaves.
FAREED
There she is, father; there, there, there!
ALMUENE
You deal, sir? I know you well. Today be more honest than is
Page – 579
your wont. Is she bid for?
MUAZZIM
(aside)
Iblis straight out of Hell with his hobgoblin! (aloud) Sir, we are
waiting for the good Vizier, who is to bid for her.
ALMUENE
Here is the Vizier and he bids for her.
Two thousand for the lass. Who bids against me?
MUAZZIM
Vizier Almuene, you are too great to find any opposers, and you
know it; but as you are great, I pray you bid greatly. Her least
price is ten thousand.
ALMUENE
Ten thousand, swindler! Do you dare to cheat
In open market? Two thousand's her outside.
This spindly common wench! Accept it, broker,
Or call for bids; refuse at your worst risk.
MUAZZIM
It is not the rule of these sales. I appeal to you, gentlemen. What,
do you all steal off from my neighbourhood? Vizier, she is
already bespoken by your elder, Ibn Sawy.
ALMUENE
I know your broking tricks, you shallow rascal.
Call for more bids, you cheater, call for bids.
MUAZZIM
Abuse me not, Almuene bin Khakan! There is justice in Bassora
and the good Ibn Sawy will decide between us.
ALMUENE
Us! Between us! Thou dirty broking cheat,
Am I thy equal? Throw him the money, Nubian.
Page – 580
But if he boggle, seize him, have him flat
And powerfully persuade him with your sticks.
You, beauty, come. What, hussy, you draw back?
FAREED
Father, let me get behind her with my horse-tickler. I will trot
her home in a twinkling.
MUAZZIM
This is flat tyranny. I will appeal
To the good Vizier and our gracious King.
ALMUENE
Impudent thief! have first thy punishment
And howl appeal between the blows. Seize him.
Enter Khalid with Ibn Sawy.
MUAZZIM
Protect me, Vizier, from this unjust man,
This tyrant.
IBN
SAWY
What is this?
MUAZZIM
He takes by force
The perfect slave-girl I had kept for you,
And at a beggarly, low, niggard's price
I'ld not accept for a black kitchen-girl;
Then, when I named you, fell to tyrant rage,
Ordering his slaves to beat me.
IBN
SAWY
Is this true,
Vizier?
ALMUENE
Someone beat out my foggy brains ?
Page – 581
I took it for a trick, a broker's trick.
What, you bespoke the girl ? You know Fid lose
My hand and tongue rather than they should hurt you.
Well, well, begin the bidding.
IBN
SAWY
First, a
word.
Vizier, this purchase is not for myself;
'Tis for the King. I deem you far too loyal
To bid against your master, needlessly
Taxing his treasuries. But if you will,
You have the right. By justice and the law
The meanest may compete here. Do you bid?
ALMUENE
(to himself)
He baulks me everywhere, (aloud) The perfect slave-girl?
No, I'll not bid. Yet it is most unlucky,
My son has set his heart upon this very girl.
Will you not let him have her, Ibn Sawy?
IBN
SAWY
I grieve that he must be so disappointed,
But there's no help. Were it my own dear son
And he should pine to death for her, I would not
Indulge him here. The King comes first.
ALMUENE
Quite first.
Well, shall I see you at your house today ?
IBN
SAWY
State business, brother?
ALMUENE
Our states and how to join
Their linked loves yet closer. I have a thought
Touching Fareed here and your orphaned niece.
Page – 582
IBN
SAWY
I understand you. We will talk of it.
Brother, you know my mind about your boy.
He is too wild and rude; I would not trust
My dear soft girl into such dangerous hands,
Unless he showed a quick and strange amendment.
ALMUENE
It is the wildness of his youth. Provide him
A wife and he will soon domesticate.
Pen these wild torrents into quiet dams
And they will fertilize the kingdom, brother.
IBN
SAWY
I hope so. Well, we'll talk.
ALMUENE
Fareed, come with me.
FAREED
I'll have my girl! I'll beat them all and have her!
ALMUENE
Wagtail, your uncle takes her.
FAREED
Break his head then,
Whip the proud broker up and down the square
And take her without payment. Why are you
The Vizier, if you cannot do your will ?
ALMUENE
Madcap, she's for the King, be quiet.
FAREED
Oh!
Page – 583
ALMUENE
Come, I will buy you prettier girls than this
By hundredweights and tons.
FAREED
She has such hair! such legs!
God damn the Vizier and the King and you!
I'll take her yet.
Exit in a rage, followed by Almuene and slaves.
MUAZZIM
This is a budding Vizier!
Sir, look at her; were mine mere broker's praises?
IBN
SAWY
You, mistress! Does the earth contain such beauty?
MUAZZIM
Did I not tell you so ?
IBN
SAWY
'Tis marvellous,
And if her mind be equal to her body,
She is an emperor's portion. What's your name,
Sweet wonder ?
ANICE-AUALICE
Anice-Aljalice they call me.
IBN
SAWY
What is your history?
ANICE-ALJALICE
My parents sold me
In the great famine.
IBN
SAWY
What, is your mould indeed a thing of earth ?
Page – 584
Peri, have you not come disguised from heaven
To snare us with your lovely smiles, you marvel ?
ANICE-ALJALICE
I am a slave and mortal.
IBN
SAWY
Prove me that.
ANICE-ALJALICE
A peri, sir, has wings, but I have none.
IBN
SAWY
I see that difference only. Well now, her price?
MUAZZIM
She is a gift to thee, 0 Vizier.
IBN
SAWY
Ceremony?
I rate her value at ten thousand clear.
MUAZZIM
It is the price expected at your hands,
Though from a private purse we'ld have full value.
Keep her ten days with you; her beauty's worn
With journeying and its harsh fatigues. Give rest,
Give baths, give food, then shade your eyes to gaze at her.
IBN
SAWY
You counsel wisely. There's my poaching rascal,—
But I will seal her fast even from his questings,
The peace, Muazzim.
MUAZZIM
Peace, thou good Vizier, loaded with our blessings.
Exeunt.
Page – 585
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