SCENE VI
The palace at Bassora.
Alzayni, Salar.
ALZAYNI
So it is written here. Hot interchange
And high defiance have already passed
Between our Caliph and the daring Roman.
Europe and Asia are at grips once more.
To inspect the southward armies unawares
Haroun himself is coming.
SALAR
Alfazzal then
Returns to us, unless the European,
After their barbarous fashion, seize on him.
ALZAYNI
'Tis strange, he sends no tidings of the motion
I made to Egypt.
SALAR
'Tis too dangerous
To write of, as indeed 'twas ill-advised
To make the approach.
ALZAYNI
Great dangers justify
The smaller. Caliph Alrasheed conceives
On trifling counts a dumb displeasure towards me
Which any day may speak; 'tis whispered of
In Bagdad. Alkhasib, the Egyptian Vizier,
Is in like plight. It is mere policy,
Salar, to build out of a common peril
A common safety.
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SALAR
Haroun al Rasheed
Could break each one of you between two fingers,
Stretching his left arm out to Bassora,
His right to Egypt. Sultan, wilt thou strive
Against the single giant of the world ?
ALZAYNI
Giants are mortal, friend, be but our swords
As bold as sharp. Call Murad here to me.
Exit Solar.
My state is desperate, if Haroun lives;
He's sudden and deadly, when his anger bursts.
But let me be more sudden, yet more deadly.
Enter Murad.
Murad, the time draws near. The Caliph comes
To Bassora; let him not thence return.
MURAD
My blade is sharp and what I do is sudden.
ALZAYNI
My gallant Turk! Thou shalt rise high, believe it.
For I need men like thee.
MURAD
(to himself)
But Kings like thee
Earth needs not.
VOICE
WITHOUT
Justice! Justice! Justice, King!
King of the Age, I am a man much wronged.
ALZAYNI
Who cries beneath my window? Chamberlain!
Enter Sunjar.
Page – 666
SUNJAR
An Arab daubed with mud and dirt, all battered,
Unrecognizable, with broken lips cries out
For justice.
ALZAYNI
Bring him here.
Exit Sunjar.
It is some brawl.
Enter Sunjar with Almuene.
Thou, Vizier! Who has done this thing to thee?
ALMUENE
Mahomed, son of Suleyman! Sultan
Alzayni! Abbasside! how shalt thou long
Have friends, if the King's enemies may slay
In daylight, here, in open Bassora
The King's best friends because they love the King?
ALZAYNI
Name them at once and choose their punishment.
ALMUENE
Alfazzal's son, that brutal profligate,
Has done this.
MURAD
Nureddene!
ALZAYNI
Upon what quarrel?
ALMUENE
A year ago Alfazzal bought a slave-girl
With the King's money for the King, a gem
Of beauty, learning, mind, fit for a Caliph.
But seeing the open flower he thought perhaps
Page – 667
Your royal nose too base to smell at it,
So gave her to his royaller darling son
To soil and rumple. No man with a neck
Dared tell you of it, such your faith was in him.
ALZAYNI
Is't so ? our loved and trusted Ibn Sawy!
ALMUENE
This profligate squandering away his wealth
Brought her to market; there I saw her and bid
Her fair full price. Whereat he stormed at me
With words unholy; yet I answered mild,
"My son, not for myself, but the King's service
I need her." He with bold and furious looks,
"Dog, Vizier of a dog, I void on thee
And on thy Sultan." With which blasphemy
He seized me, rolled in the mire, battered with blows,
Kicks, pullings of the beard, then dragged me back
And flung me at his slave-girl's feet, who, proud
Of her bold lover, footed my grey head
Repeatedly and laughed, "This for thy King,
Thy dingy stingy King who with so little
Would buy a slave-girl sole in all the world".
SUNJAR
Great Hasheem's vein cords all the Sultan's forehead.
MURAD
The dog has murdered both of them with his.
ALZAYNI
Now by the Prophet, my forefather! Out,
Murad! drag here the fellow and his girl,
Trail them with ropes tied to their bleeding heels,
Their faces in the mire, with pinioned hands
Behind their backs, into my presence here.
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Sack Sawy's mansion, raze it to the ground.
What, am I grown so bare that by-lane dogs
Like these so loudly bay at me ? They die!
MURAD
Sultan,—
ALZAYNI
He's doomed who speaks a word for them.
Exit.
ALMUENE
Brother-in-law Murad, fetch your handsome brother.
Soon, lest the Sultan hear of it!
MURAD
Vizier,
I know my duty. Know your own and do it.
ALMUENE
I'll wash, then forth in holiday attire
To see that pretty sport.
Exit.
SUNJAR
What will you do ?
MURAD
Sunjar, a something swift and desperate.
I will not let them die.
SUNJAR
Run not on danger.
I'll send a runner hotfoot to their house
To warn them.
Exit Sunjar.
Page – 669
MURAD
Do so. What will Doonya say
When she hears this ? How will her laughing eyes
Be clouded and brim over! Till Haroun comes!
Exit.
Page – 670
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