登陆注册
15699700000058

第58章

He waited patiently for some days till the dates were nearly ripe, and then he called his six sons, and said: 'One of you must watch the date tree till the dates are ripe, for if it is not watched the slaves will steal them, and I shall not have any for another year.'

And the eldest son answered, 'I will go, father,' and he went.

The first thing the youth did was to summon his slaves, and bid them beat drums all night under the date tree, for he feared to fall asleep. So the slaves beat the drums, and the young man danced till four o'clock, and then it grew so cold he could dance no longer, and one of the slaves said to him: 'It is getting light; the tree is safe; lie down, master, and go to sleep.'

So he lay down and slept, and his slaves slept likewise.

A few minutes went by, and a bird flew down from a neighbouring thicket, and ate all the dates, without leaving a single one.

And when the tree was stripped bare, the bird went as it had come. Soon after, one of the slaves woke up and looked for the dates, but there were no dates to see. Then he ran to the young man and shook him, saying:

'Your father set you to watch the tree, and you have not watched, and the dates have all been eaten by a bird.'

The lad jumped up and ran to the tree to see for himself, but there was not a date anywhere. And he cried aloud, 'What am I to say to my father? Shall I tell him that the dates have been stolen, or that a great rain fell and a great storm blew? But he will send me to gather them up and bring them to him, and there are none to bring! Shall I tell him that Bedouins drove me away, and when I returned there were no dates? And he will answer, "You had slaves, did they not fight with the Bedouins?"It is the truth that will be best, and that will I tell him.'

Then he went straight to his father, and found him sitting in his verandah with his five sons round him; and the lad bowed his head.

'Give me the news from the garden,' said the sultan.

And the youth answered, 'The dates have all been eaten by some bird: there is not one left.'

The sultan was silent for a moment: then he asked, 'Where were you when the bird came?'

The lad answered: 'I watched the date tree till the cocks were crowing and it was getting light; then I lay down for a little, and I slept. When I woke a slave was standing over me, and he said, "There is not one date left on the tree!" And I went to the date tree, and saw it was true; and that is what I have to tell you.'

And the sultan replied, 'A son like you is only good for eating and sleeping. I have no use for you. Go your way, and when my date tree bears again, I will send another son; perhaps he will watch better.'

So he waited many months, till the tree was covered with more dates than any tree had ever borne before. When they were near ripening he sent one of his sons to the garden: saying, 'My son, I am longing to taste those dates: go and watch over them, for to-day's sun will bring them to perfection.'

And the lad answered: 'My father, I am going now, and to-morrow, when the sun has passed the hour of seven, bid a slave come and gather the dates.'

'Good,' said the sultan.

The youth went to the tree, and lay down and slept. And about midnight he arose to look at the tree, and the dates were all there--beautiful dates, swinging in bunches.

'Ah, my father will have a feast, indeed,' thought he. 'What a fool my brother was not to take more heed! Now he is in disgrace, and we know him no more. Well, I will watch till the bird comes. I should like to see what manner of bird it is.'

And he sat and read till the cocks crew and it grew light, and the dates were still on the tree.

'Oh my father will have his dates; they are all safe now,' he thought to himself. 'I will make myself comfortable against this tree,' and he leaned against the trunk, and sleep came on him, and the bird flew down and ate all the dates.

When the sun rose, the head-man came and looked for the dates, and there were no dates. And he woke the young man, and said to him, 'Look at the tree.'

And the young man looked, and there were no dates. And his ears were stopped, and his legs trembled, and his tongue grew heavy at the thought of the sultan. His slave became frightened as he looked at him, and asked, 'My master, what is it?'

He answered, 'I have no pain anywhere, but I am ill everywhere.

My whole body is well, and my whole body is sick I fear my father, for did I not say to him, "To-morrow at seven you shall taste the dates"? And he will drive me away, as he drove away my brother! I will go away myself, before he sends me.'

Then he got up and took a road that led straight past the palace, but he had not walked many steps before he met a man carrying a large silver dish, covered with a white cloth to cover the dates.

And the young man said, 'The dates are not ripe yet; you must return to-morrow.'

And the slave went with him to the palace, where the sultan was sitting with his four sons.

'Good greeting, master!' said the youth.

And the sultan answered, 'Have you seen the man I sent?'

'I have, master; but the dates are not yet ripe.'

But the sultan did not believe his words, and said; 'This second year I have eaten no dates, because of my sons. Go your ways, you are my son no longer!'

And the sultan looked at the four sons that were left him, and promised rich gifts to whichever of them would bring him the dates from the tree. But year by year passed, and he never got them. One son tried to keep himself awake with playing cards;another mounted a horse and rode round and round the tree, while the two others, whom their father as a last hope sent together, lit bonfires. But whatever they did, the result was always the same. Towards dawn they fell asleep, and the bird ate the dates on the tree.

The sixth year had come, and the dates on the tree were thicker than ever. And the head-man went to the palace and told the sultan what he had seen. But the sultan only shook his head, and said sadly, 'What is that to me? I have had seven sons, yet for five years a bird has devoured my dates; and this year it will be the same as ever.'

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 我想重来一次体验痛苦

    我想重来一次体验痛苦

    爱情究竟是什么,或者说情,是什么?友是什么,爱是什么,亲是什么,最终还是没能解答
  • tfboys之盛夏的雨季

    tfboys之盛夏的雨季

    唯雪琦她们从小的时候,妈妈就被杀了,然后她们就跑了出去,后来她们有被英国德国和美国的女王给收养了,十年之后她们又回到了中国,回国,之后他们原本是来报仇的,后来,又遇到了让他们心动的三位男生,之后会发生什么呢?
  • 酒心巧克力

    酒心巧克力

    她,是跆拳道黑带六段,最萌小少女。他,是呆萌腹黑少爷。可是一个“可怜”的少女怎么斗得过腹黑少呢?于是,一个有一百页的逃婚计划书便落地了,一晚上,她一直在研究如何逃婚,而他,在思考如何抓住她的心。“求你了,放过我吧!我给你找漂亮的大美女啊,求你了!”某男抬起一张妖孽的脸说道:“不,除非你斗得过我。”晕。。。
  • 战龙星辰

    战龙星辰

    遭灭门之祸,从此决心复仇,强吞幻文,半龙半人之身,脚踏数亿天才,走向神的道路,却发现一切皆是假象,灭神,灭人,灭龙,问苍茫天地,何人敢与我一战。
  • 学长大人请接招

    学长大人请接招

    一封带着心意的情书,却被他扔进了垃圾桶;一次次的追爱攻势,他却无动于衷。他冷冷地说:“我永远都不会喜欢你的。”而他说:“明明是我先遇见你的,为什么你喜欢的不是我。”因为一句话,让她明白自己跟他的差距,她说:“学长,对不起。”他淡淡地对她说:“如果累了,那就换我来爱你”
  • 星海三卷

    星海三卷

    盘古生太极,两仪四象循。天地万物,冥冥中自有定数,然而有圣人反阴阳,乱五行,混淆天数。如今大道有感,赐大运于天人……
  • 火澜

    火澜

    当一个现代杀手之王穿越到这个世界。是隐匿,还是崛起。一场血雨腥风的传奇被她改写。一条无上的强者之路被她踏破。修斗气,炼元丹,收兽宠,化神器,大闹皇宫,炸毁学院,打死院长,秒杀狗男女,震惊大陆。无止尽的契约能力,上古神兽,千年魔兽,纷纷前来抱大腿,惊傻世人。她说:在我眼里没有好坏之分,只有强弱之分,只要你能打败我,这世间所有都是你的,打不败我,就从这世间永远消失。她狂,她傲,她的目标只有一个,就是凌驾这世间一切之上。三国皇帝,魔界妖王,冥界之主,仙界至尊。到底谁才是陪着她走到最后的那个?他说:上天入地,我会陪着你,你活着,有我,你死,也一定有我。本文一对一,男强女强,强强联手,不喜勿入。
  • 黄帝阴符经注

    黄帝阴符经注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 亦云梦则

    亦云梦则

    传说神族庇护着凡间,人们才得以生存。神族的一位贵族,爱上了一位凡间的民女,私自生下了拥有神族的能力和人类的善良两大元素的本身族:沐子凡。沐子凡的父母糟其神族的追杀,自己由一家善良的人收养。在凡界,沐子凡的能力赞为觉醒,就爱上了一位人间的少女:林璐璐。神界的公主悠棱。私自逃到了人间,巧遇沐子凡,心被其所深深吸引。神界之主知此事,下令追捕私逃公主悠棱并追杀沐子凡。就此产生了神界与人族的首次“禁族战争”。
  • 荒元传说

    荒元传说

    荒元大陆,传奇再现。他是地球末世的武王,他携带地球武学《武典》,穿越而来。他为武者而生,为刀而狂。人武境、地武境、天武境......人武境:炼体九阶、练气九阶、融灵三(四)阶地武境:通脉九阶(先天)、归元九阶、魂开觉识天武境......荒元大陆的传说,就此开始