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<h2> THE FORTY THIEVES </h2>
<p>In a town in Persia there dwelt two brothers, one named Cassim, the other
Ali Baba. Cassim was married to a rich wife and lived in plenty, while Ali
Baba had to maintain his wife and children by cutting wood in a
neighboring forest and selling it in the town. One day, when Ali Baba was
in the forest, he saw a troop of men on horseback, coming toward him in a
cloud of dust. He was afraid they were robbers, and climbed into a tree
for safety. When they came up to him and dismounted, he counted forty of
them. They unbridled their horses and tied them to trees. The finest man
among them, whom Ali Baba took to be their captain, went a little way
among some bushes, and said: "Open, Sesame!"(1) so plainly that Ali Baba
heard him. A door opened in the rocks, and having made the troop go in, he
followed them, and the door shut again of itself. They stayed some time
inside, and Ali Baba, fearing they might come out and catch him, was
forced to sit patiently in the tree. At last the door opened again, and
the Forty Thieves came out. As the Captain went in last he came out first,
and made them all pass by him; he then closed the door, saying: "Shut,
Sesame!" Every man bridled his horse and mounted, the Captain put himself
at their head, and they returned as they came.</p>
<p>(1) Sesame is a kind of grain.</p>
<p>Then Ali Baba climbed down and went to the door concealed among the
bushes, and said: "Open, Sesame!" and it flew open. Ali Baba, who expected
a dull, dismal place, was greatly surprised to find it large and well
lighted, hollowed by the hand of man in the form of a vault, which
received the light from an opening in the ceiling. He saw rich bales of
merchandise—silk, stuff-brocades, all piled together, and gold and
silver in heaps, and money in leather purses. He went in and the door shut
behind him. He did not look at the silver, but brought out as many bags of
gold as he thought his asses, which were browsing outside, could carry,
loaded them with the bags, and hid it all with fagots. Using the words:
"Shut, Sesame!" he closed the door and went home.</p>
<p>Then he drove his asses into the yard, shut the gates, carried the
money-bags to his wife, and emptied them out before her. He bade her keep
the secret, and he would go and bury the gold. "Let me first measure it,"
said his wife. "I will go borrow a measure of someone, while you dig the
hole." So she ran to the wife of Cassim and borrowed a measure. Knowing
Ali Baba's poverty, the sister was curious to find out what sort of grain
his wife wished to measure, and artfully put some suet at the bottom of
the measure. Ali Baba's wife went home and set the measure on the heap of
gold, and filled it and emptied it often, to her great content. She then
carried it back to her sister, without noticing that a piece of gold was
sticking to it, which Cassim's wife perceived directly her back was
turned. She grew very curious, and said to Cassim when he came home:
"Cassim, your brother is richer than you. He does not count his money, he
measures it." He begged her to explain this riddle, which she did by
showing him the piece of money and telling him where she found it. Then
Cassim grew so envious that he could not sleep, and went to his brother in
the morning before sunrise. "Ali Baba," he said, showing him the gold
piece, "you pretend to be poor and yet you measure gold." By this Ali Baba
perceived that through his wife's folly Cassim and his wife knew their
secret, so he confessed all and offered Cassim a share. "That I expect,"
said Cassim; "but I must know where to find the treasure, otherwise I will
discover all, and you will lose all." Ali Baba, more out of kindness than
fear, told him of the cave, and the very words to use. Cassim left Ali
Baba, meaning to be beforehand with him and get the treasure for himself.
He rose early next morning, and set out with ten mules loaded with great
chests. He soon found the place, and the door in the rock. He said: "Open,
Sesame!" and the door opened and shut behind him. He could have feasted
his eyes all day on the treasures, but he now hastened to gather together
as much of it as possible; but when he was ready to go he could not
remember what to say for thinking of his great riches. Instead of
"Sesame," he said: "Open, Barley!" and the door remained fast. He named
several different sorts of grain, all but the right one, and the door
still stuck fast. He was so frightened at the danger he was in that he had
as much forgotten the word as if he had never heard it.</p>
<p>About noon the robbers returned to their cave, and saw Cassim's mules
roving about with great chests on their backs. This gave them the alarm;
they drew their sabres, and went to the door, which opened on their
Captain's saying: "Open, Sesame!" Cassim, who had heard the trampling of
their horses' feet, resolved to sell his life dearly, so when the door
opened he leaped out and threw the Captain down. In vain, however, for the
robbers with their sabres soon killed him. On entering the cave they saw
all the bags laid ready, and could not imagine how anyone had got in
without knowing their secret. They cut Cassim's body into four quarters,
and nailed them up inside the cave, in order to frighten anyone who should
venture in, and went away in search of more treasure.</p>
<p>As night drew on Cassim's wife grew very uneasy, and ran to her
brother-in-law, and told him where her husband had gone. Ali Baba did his
best to comfort her, and set out to the forest in search of Cassim. The
first thing he saw on entering the cave was his dead brother. Full of
horror, he put the body on one of his asses, and bags of gold on the other
two, and, covering all with some fagots, returned home. He drove the two
asses laden with gold into his own yard, and led the other to Cassim's
house. The door was opened by the slave Morgiana, whom he knew to be both
brave and cunning. Unloading the ass, he said to her: "This is the body of
your master, who has been murdered, but whom we must bury as though he had
died in his bed. I will speak with you again, but now tell your mistress I
am come." The wife of Cassim, on learning the fate of her husband, broke
out into cries and tears, but Ali Baba offered to take her to live with
him and his wife if she would promise to keep his counsel and leave
everything to Morgiana; whereupon she agreed, and dried her eyes.</p>
<p>Morgiana, meanwhile, sought an apothecary and asked him for some lozenges.
"My poor master," she said, "can neither eat nor speak, and no one knows
what his distemper is." She carried home the lozenges and returned next
day weeping, and asked for an essence only given to those just about to
die. Thus, in the evening, no one was surprised to hear the wretched
shrieks and cries of Cassim's wife and Morgiana, telling everyone that
Cassim was dead. The day after Morgiana went to an old cobbler near the
gates of the town who opened his stall early, put a piece of gold in his
hand, and bade him follow her with his needle and thread. Having bound his
eyes with a handkerchief, she took him to the room where the body lay,
pulled off the bandage, and bade him sew the quarters together, after
which she covered his eyes again and led him home. Then they buried
Cassim, and Morgiana his slave followed him to the grave, weeping and
tearing her hair, while Cassim's wife stayed at home uttering lamentable
cries. Next day she went to live with Ali Baba, who gave Cassim's shop to
his eldest son.</p>
<p>The Forty Thieves, on their return to the cave, were much astonished to
find Cassim's body gone and some of their money-bags. "We are certainly
discovered," said the Captain, "and shall be undone if we cannot find out
who it is that knows our secret. Two men must have known it; we have
killed one, we must now find the other. To this end one of you who is bold
and artful must go into the city dressed as a traveler, and discover whom
we have killed, and whether men talk of the strange manner of his death.
If the messenger fails he must lose his life, lest we be betrayed." One of
the thieves started up and offered to do this, and after the rest had
highly commended him for his bravery he disguised himself, and happened to
enter the town at daybreak, just by Baba Mustapha's stall. The thief bade
him good-day, saying: "Honest man, how can you possibly see to stitch at
your age?" "Old as I am," replied the cobbler, "I have very good eyes, and
will you believe me when I tell you that I sewed a dead body together in a
place where I had less light than I have now." The robber was overjoyed at
his good fortune, and, giving him a piece of gold, desired to be shown the
house where he stitched up the dead body. At first Mustapha refused,
saying that he had been blindfolded; but when the robber gave him another
piece of gold he began to think he might remember the turnings if
blindfolded as before. This means succeeded; the robber partly led him,
and was partly guided by him, right in front of Cassim's house, the door
of which the robber marked with a piece of chalk. Then, well pleased, he
bade farewell to Baba Mustapha and returned to the forest. By and by
Morgiana, going out, saw the mark the robber had made, quickly guessed
that some mischief was brewing, and fetching a piece of chalk marked two
or three doors on each side, without saying anything to her master or
mistress.</p>
<p>The thief, meantime, told his comrades of his discovery. The Captain
thanked him, and bade him show him the house he had marked. But when they
came to it they saw that five or six of the houses were chalked in the
same manner. The guide was so confounded that he knew not what answer to
make, and when they returned he was at once beheaded for having failed.
Another robber was dispatched, and, having won over Baba Mustapha, marked
the house in red chalk; but Morgiana being again too clever for them, the
second messenger was put to death also. The Captain now resolved to go
himself, but, wiser than the others, he did not mark the house, but looked
at it so closely that he could not fail to remember it. He returned, and
ordered his men to go into the neighboring villages and buy nineteen
mules, and thirty-eight leather jars, all empty except one, which was full
of oil. The Captain put one of his men, fully armed, into each, rubbing
the outside of the jars with oil from the full vessel. Then the nineteen
mules were loaded with thirty-seven robbers in jars, and the jar of oil,
and reached the town by dusk. The Captain stopped his mules in front of
Ali Baba's house, and said to Ali Baba, who was sitting outside for
coolness: "I have brought some oil from a distance to sell at to-morrow's
market, but it is now so late that I know not where to pass the night,
unless you will do me the favor to take me in." Though Ali Baba had seen
the Captain of the robbers in the forest, he did not recognize him in the
disguise of an oil merchant. He bade him welcome, opened his gates for the
mules to enter, and went to Morgiana to bid her prepare a bed and supper
for his guest. He brought the stranger into his hall, and after they had
supped went again to speak to Morgiana in the kitchen, while the Captain
went into the yard under pretense of seeing after his mules, but really to
tell his men what to do. Beginning at the first jar and ending at the
last, he said to each man: "As soon as I throw some stones from the window
of the chamber where I lie, cut the jars open with your knives and come
out, and I will be with you in a trice." He returned to the house, and
Morgiana led him to his chamber. She then told Abdallah, her fellow-slave,
to set on the pot to make some broth for her master, who had gone to bed.
Meanwhile her lamp went out, and she had no more oil in the house. "Do not
be uneasy," said Abdallah; "go into the yard and take some out of one of
those jars." Morgiana thanked him for his advice, took the oil pot, and
went into the yard. When she came to the first jar the robber inside said
softly: "Is it time?"</p>
<p>Any other slave but Morgiana, on finding a man in the jar instead of the
oil she wanted, would have screamed and made a noise; but she, knowing the
danger her master was in, bethought herself of a plan, and answered
quietly: "Not yet, but presently." She went to all the jars, giving the
same answer, till she came to the jar of oil. She now saw that her master,
thinking to entertain an oil merchant, had let thirty-eight robbers into
his house. She filled her oil pot, went back to the kitchen, and, having
lit her lamp, went again to the oil jar and filled a large kettle full of
oil. When it boiled she went and poured enough oil into every jar to
stifle and kill the robber inside. When this brave deed was done she went
back to the kitchen, put out the fire and the lamp, and waited to see what
would happen.</p>
<p>In a quarter of an hour the Captain of the robbers awoke, got up, and
opened the window. As all seemed quiet, he threw down some little pebbles
which hit the jars. He listened, and as none of his men seemed to stir he
grew uneasy, and went down into the yard. On going to the first jar and
saying, "Are you asleep?" he smelt the hot boiled oil, and knew at once
that his plot to murder Ali Baba and his household had been discovered. He
found all the gang was dead, and, missing the oil out of the last jar,
became aware of the manner of their death. He then forced the lock of a
door leading into a garden, and climbing over several walls made his
escape. Morgiana heard and saw all this, and, rejoicing at her success,
went to bed and fell asleep.</p>
<p>At daybreak Ali Baba arose, and, seeing the oil jars still there, asked
why the merchant had not gone with his mules. Morgiana bade him look in
the first jar and see if there was any oil. Seeing a man, he started back
in terror. "Have no fear," said Morgiana; "the man cannot harm you: he is
dead." Ali Baba, when he had recovered somewhat from his astonishment,
asked what had become of the merchant. "Merchant!" said she, "he is no
more a merchant than I am!" and she told him the whole story, assuring him
that it was a plot of the robbers of the forest, of whom only three were
left, and that the white and red chalk marks had something to do with it.
Ali Baba at once gave Morgiana her freedom, saying that he owed her his
life. They then buried the bodies in Ali Baba's garden, while the mules
were sold in the market by his slaves.</p>
<p>The Captain returned to his lonely cave, which seemed frightful to him
without his lost companions, and firmly resolved to avenge them by killing
Ali Baba. He dressed himself carefully, and went into the town, where he
took lodgings in an inn. In the course of a great many journeys to the
forest he carried away many rich stuffs and much fine linen, and set up a
shop opposite that of Ali Baba's son. He called himself Cogia Hassan, and
as he was both civil and well dressed he soon made friends with Ali Baba's
son, and through him with Ali Baba, whom he was continually asking to sup
with him. Ali Baba, wishing to return his kindness, invited him into his
house and received him smiling, thanking him for his kindness to his son.
When the merchant was about to take his leave Ali Baba stopped him,
saying: "Where are you going, sir, in such haste? Will you not stay and
sup with me?" The merchant refused, saying that he had a reason; and, on
Ali Baba's asking him what that was, he replied: "It is, sir, that I can
eat no victuals that have any salt in them." "If that is all," said Ali
Baba, "let me tell you that there shall be no salt in either the meat or
the bread that we eat to-night." He went to give this order to Morgiana,
who was much surprised. "Who is this man," she said, "who eats no salt
with his meat?" "He is an honest man, Morgiana," returned her master;
"therefore do as I bid you." But she could not withstand a desire to see
this strange man, so she helped Abdallah to carry up the dishes, and saw
in a moment that Cogia Hassan was the robber Captain, and carried a dagger
under his garment. "I am not surprised," she said to herself, "that this
wicked man, who intends to kill my master, will eat no salt with him; but
I will hinder his plans."</p>
<p>She sent up the supper by Abdallah, while she made ready for one of the
boldest acts that could be thought on. When the dessert had been served,
Cogia Hassan was left alone with Ali Baba and his son, whom he thought to
make drunk and then to murder them. Morgiana, meanwhile, put on a
head-dress like a dancing-girl's, and clasped a girdle round her waist,
from which hung a dagger with a silver hilt, and said to Abdallah: "Take
your tabor, and let us go and divert our master and his guest." Abdallah
took his tabor and played before Morgiana until they came to the door,
where Abdallah stopped playing and Morgiana made a low courtesy. "Come in,
Morgiana," said Ali Baba, "and let Cogia Hassan see what you can do"; and,
turning to Cogia Hassan, he said: "She's my slave and my housekeeper."
Cogia Hassan was by no means pleased, for he feared that his chance of
killing Ali Baba was gone for the present; but he pretended great
eagerness to see Morgiana, and Abdallah began to play and Morgiana to
dance. After she had performed several dances she drew her dagger and made
passes with it, sometimes pointing it at her own breast, sometimes at her
master's, as if it were part of the dance. Suddenly, out of breath, she
snatched the tabor from Abdallah with her left hand, and, holding the
dagger in her right hand, held out the tabor to her master. Ali Baba and
his son put a piece of gold into it, and Cogia Hassan, seeing that she was
coming to him, pulled out his purse to make her a present, but while he
was putting his hand into it Morgiana plunged the dagger into his heart.</p>
<p>"Unhappy girl!" cried Ali Baba and his son, "what have you done to ruin
us?"</p>
<p>"It was to preserve you, master, not to ruin you," answered Morgiana. "See
here," opening the false merchant's garment and showing the dagger; "see
what an enemy you have entertained! Remember, he would eat no salt with
you, and what more would you have? Look at him! he is both the false oil
merchant and the Captain of the Forty Thieves."</p>
<p>Ali Baba was so grateful to Morgiana for thus saving his life that he
offered her to his son in marriage, who readily consented, and a few days
after the wedding was celebrated with greatest splendor.</p>
<p>At the end of a year Ali Baba, hearing nothing of the two remaining
robbers, judged they were dead, and set out to the cave. The door opened
on his saying: "Open Sesame!" He went in, and saw that nobody had been
there since the Captain left it. He brought away as much gold as he could
carry, and returned to town. He told his son the secret of the cave, which
his son handed down in his turn, so the children and grandchildren of Ali
Baba were rich to the end of their lives.(1)</p>
<p>(1) Arabian Nights.</p>
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