Twilight Land
by
Howard Pyle

Part 1 out of 5








Twilight Land

by Howard Pyle




Table of Contents

Introduction
The Stool of Fortune
The Talisman of Solomon
Ill-Luck and the Fiddler
Empty Bottles
Good Gifts and a Fool's Folly
The Good of a Few Words
Woman's Wit
A Piece of Good Luck
The Fruit of Happiness
Not a Pin to Choose
Much Shall Have More and Little Shall Have Less
Wisdom's Wages and Folly's Pay
The Enchanted Island
All Things are as Fate Wills
Where to Lay the Blame
The Salt of Life




Introduction

I found myself in Twilight Land. How I ever got there I cannot
tell, but there I was in Twilight Land.

What is Twilight Land? It is a wonderful, wonderful place where
no sun shines to scorch your back as you jog along the way, where
no rain falls to make the road muddy and hard to travel, where no
wind blows the dust into your eyes or the chill into your marrow.
Where all is sweet and quiet and ready to go to bed.

Where is Twilight Land? Ah! that I cannot tell you. You will
either have to ask your mother or find it for yourself.

There I was in Twilight Land. The birds were singing their
good-night song, and the little frogs were piping "peet, peet."
The sky overhead was full of still brightness, and the moon in
the east hung in the purple gray like a great bubble as yellow as
gold. All the air was full of the smell of growing things. The
high-road was gray, and the trees were dark.

I drifted along the road as a soap-bubble floats before the wind,
or as a body floats in a dream. I floated along and I floated
along past the trees, past the bushes, past the mill-pond, past
the mill where the old miller stood at the door looking at me.

I floated on, and there was the Inn, and it was the Sign of
Mother Goose.

The sign hung on a pole, and on it was painted a picture of
Mother Goose with her gray gander.

It was to the Inn I wished to come.

I floated on, and I would have floated past the Inn, and perhaps
have gotten into the Land of Never-Come-Back-Again, only I caught
at the branch of an apple-tree, and so I stopped myself, though
the apple-blossoms came falling down like pink and white
snowflakes.

The earth and the air and the sky were all still, just as it is
at twilight, and I heard them laughing and talking in the
tap-room of the Inn of the Sign of Mother Goose--the clinking of
glasses, and the rattling and clatter of knives and forks and
plates and dishes. That was where I wished to go.

So in I went. Mother Goose herself opened the door, and there I
was.

The room was all full of twilight; but there they sat, every one
of them. I did not count them, but there were ever so many:
Aladdin, and Ali Baba, and Fortunatis, and Jack-the-Giant-Killer,
and Doctor Faustus, and Bidpai, and Cinderella, and Patient
Grizzle, and the Soldier who cheated the Devil, and St. George,
and Hans in Luck, who traded and traded his lump of gold until he
had only an empty churn to show for it; and there was Sindbad the
Sailor, and the Tailor who killed seven flies at a blow, and the
Fisherman who fished up the Genie, and the Lad who fiddled for
the Jew in the bramble-bush, and the Blacksmith who made Death
sit in his apple-tree, and Boots, who always marries the
Princess, whether he wants to or not--a rag-tag lot as ever you
saw in your life, gathered from every place, and brought together
in Twilight Land.

Each one of them was telling a story, and now it was the turn of
the Soldier who cheated the Devil.

"I will tell you," said the Soldier who cheated the Devil, "a
story of a friend of mine."

"Take a fresh pipe of tobacco," said St. George.

"Thank you, I will," said the Soldier who cheated the Devil.

He filled his long pipe full of tobacco, and then he tilted it
upside down and sucked in the light of the candle.

Puff! puff! puff! and a cloud of smoke went up about his head, so
that you could just see his red nose shining through it, and his
bright eyes twinkling in the midst of the smoke-wreath, like two
stars through a thin cloud on a summer night.

"I'll tell you," said the Soldier who cheated the Devil, "the
story of a friend of mine. Tis every word of it just as true as
that I myself cheated the Devil."

He took a drink from his mug of beer, and then he began.

"Tis called," said he--


The Stool of Fortune

Once upon a time there came a soldier marching along the road,
kicking up a little cloud of dust at each step--as strapping
and merry and bright-eyed a fellow as you would wish to see in a
summer day. Tramp! tramp! tramp! he marched, whistling as he
jogged along, though he carried a heavy musket over his shoulder
and though the sun shone hot and strong and there was never a
tree in sight to give him a bit of shelter.

At last he came in sight of the King's Town and to a great field
of stocks and stones, and there sat a little old man as withered
and brown as a dead leaf, and clad all in scarlet from head to
foot.

"Ho! soldier," said he, "are you a good shot?"

"Aye," said the soldier, "that is my trade."

"Would you like to earn a dollar by shooting off your musket for
me?"

"Aye," said the soldier, "that is my trade also."

"Very well, then," said the little man in red, "here is a silver
button to drop into your gun instead of a bullet. Wait you here,
and about sunset there will come a great black bird flying. In
one claw it carries a feather cap and in the other a round stone.
Shoot me the silver button at that bird, and if your aim is good
it will drop the feather cap and the pebble. Bring them to me to
the great town-gate and I will pay you a dollar for your
trouble."

"Very well," said the soldier, "shooting my gun is a job that
fits me like an old coat." So, down he sat and the old man went
his way.

Well, there he sat and sat and sat and sat until the sun touched
the rim of the ground, and then, just as the old man said, there
came flying a great black bird as silent as night. The soldier
did not tarry to look or to think. As the bird flew by up came
the gun to his shoulder, squint went his eye along the
barrel--Puff! bang!--

I vow and declare that if the shot he fired had cracked the sky
he could not have been more frightened. The great black bird gave
a yell so terrible that it curdled the very blood in his veins
and made his hair stand upon end. Away it flew like a flash--a
bird no longer, but a great, black demon, smoking and smelling
most horribly of brimstone, and when the soldier gathered his
wits, there lay the feather cap and a little, round, black stone
upon the ground.

"Well," said the soldier, "it is little wonder that the old man
had no liking to shoot at such game as that." And thereupon he
popped the feather cap into one pocket and the round stone into
another, and shouldering his musket marched away until he reached
the town-gate, and there was the old man waiting for him.

"Did you shoot the bird?" said he.

"I did," said the soldier.

"And did you get the cap and the round stone?"

"I did."

"Then here is your dollar."

"Wait a bit," said the soldier, "I shot greater game that time
than I bargained for, and so it's ten dollars and not one you
shall pay me before you lay finger upon the feather cap and the
little stone."

"Very well," said the old man, "here are ten dollars."

"Ho! ho!" thought the soldier, "is that the way the wind
blows?"--"Did I say ten dollars?" said he; " twas a hundred
dollars I meant."

At that the old man frowned until his eyes shone green. "Very
well," said he, "if it is a hundred dollars you want, you will
have to come home with me, for I have not so much with me.
Thereupon he entered the town with the soldier at his heels.

Up one street he went and down another, until at last he came to
a great, black, ancient ramshackle house; and that was where he
lived. In he walked without so much as a rap at the door, and so
led the way to a great room with furnaces and books and bottles
and jars and dust and cobwebs, and three grinning skulls upon the
mantelpiece, each with a candle stuck atop of it, and there he
left the soldier while he went to get the hundred dollars.

The soldier sat him down upon a three-legged stool in the corner
and began staring about him; and he liked the looks of the place
as little as any he had seen in all of his life, for it smelled
musty and dusty, it did: the three skulls grinned at him, and he
began to think that the little old man was no better than he
should be. "I wish," says he, at last, "that instead of being
here I might be well out of my scrape and in a safe place."

Now the little old man in scarlet was a great magician, and there
was little or nothing in that house that had not some magic about
it, and of all things the three-legged stool had been conjured
the most.

"I wish that instead of being here I might be well out of my
scrape, and in a safe place." That was what the soldier said; and
hardly had the words left his lips when--whisk! whir!--away
flew the stool through the window, so suddenly that the soldier
had only just time enough to gripe it tight by the legs to save
himself from falling. Whir! whiz!--away it flew like a bullet.
Up and up it went--so high in the air that the earth below
looked like a black blanket spread out in the night; and then
down it came again, with the soldier still griping tight to the
legs, until at last it settled as light as a feather upon a
balcony of the king's palace; and when the soldier caught his
wind again he found himself without a hat, and with hardly any
wits in his head.

There he sat upon the stool for a long time without daring to
move, for he did not know what might happen to him next. There he
sat and sat, and by-and-by his ears got cold in the night air,
and then he noticed for the first time that he had lost his head
gear, and bethought himself of the feather cap in his pocket. So
out he drew it and clapped it upon his head, and then--lo and
behold!--he found he had become as invisible as thin air--not
a shred or a hair of him could be seen. "Well!" said he, "here is
another wonder, but I am safe now at any rate." And up he got to
find some place not so cool as where he sat.

He stepped in at an open window, and there he found himself in a
beautiful room, hung with cloth of silver and blue, and with
chairs and tables of white and gold; dozens and scores of
waxlights shone like so many stars, and lit every crack and
cranny as bright as day, and there at one end of the room upon a
couch, with her eyelids closed and fast asleep, lay the prettiest
princess that ever the sun shone upon. The soldier stood and
looked and looked at her, and looked and looked at her, until his
heart melted within him like soft butter, and then he kissed her.

"Who is that?" said the princess, starting up, wide-awake, but
not a soul could she see, because the soldier had the feather cap
upon his head.

"It is I," said he, "and I am King of the Wind, and ten times
greater than the greatest of kings here below. One day I saw you
walking in your garden and fell in love with you, and now I have
come to ask you if you will marry me and be my wife?"

"But how can I marry you?" said the princess, "without seeing
you?"

"You shall see me," said the soldier, "all in good time. Three
days from now I will come again, and will show myself to you, but
just now it cannot be. But if I come, will you marry me?"

"Yes I will," said the princess, "for I like the way you
talk--that I do!"

Thereupon the soldier kissed her and said good-bye, and then
stepped out of the window as he had stepped in. He sat him down
upon his three-legged stool. "I wish," said he, "to be carried to
such and such a tavern." For he had been in that town before, and
knew the places where good living was to be had.

Whir! whiz! away flew the stool as high and higher than it had
flown before, and then down it came again, and down and down
until it lit as light as a feather in the street before the
tavern door. The soldier tucked his feather cap in his pocket,
and the three-legged stool under his arm, and in he went and
ordered a pot of beer and some white bread and cheese.

Meantime, at the king's palace was such a gossiping and such a
hubbub as had not been heard there for many a day; for the pretty
princess was not slow in telling how the invisible King of the
Wind had come and asked her to marry him; and some said it was
true and some said it was not true, and everybody wondered and
talked, and told their own notions of the matter. But all agreed
that three days would show whether what had been told was true or
no.

As for the soldier, he knew no more how to do what he had
promised to do than my grandmother's cat; for where was he to get
clothes fine enough for the King of the Wind to wear? So there he
sat on his three-legged stool thinking and thinking, and if he
had known all that I know he would not have given two turns of
his wit upon it. "I wish," says he, at last--"I wish that this
stool could help me now as well as it can carry me through the
sky. I wish," says he, "that I had a suit of clothes such as the
King of the Wind might really wear."

The wonders of the three-legged stool were wonders indeed!

Hardly had the words left the soldier's lips when down came
something tumbling about his ears from up in the air; and what
should it be but just such a suit of clothes as he had in his
mind--all crusted over with gold and silver and jewels.

"Well," says the soldier, as soon as he had got over his wonder
again, "I would rather sit upon this stool than any I ever saw."
And so would I, if I had been in his place, and had a few minutes
to think of all that I wanted.

So he found out the trick of the stool, and after that wishing
and having were easy enough, and by the time the three days were
ended the real King of the Wind himself could not have cut a
finer figure. Then down sat the soldier upon his stool, and
wished himself at the king's palace. Away he flew through the
air, and by-and-by there he was, just where he had been before.
He put his feather cap upon his head, and stepped in through the
window, and there he found the princess with her father, the
king, and her mother, the queen, and all the great lords and
nobles waiting for his coming; but never a stitch nor a hair did
they see of him until he stood in the very midst of them all.
Then he whipped the feather cap off of his head, and there he
was, shining with silver and gold and glistening with
jewels--such a sight as man's eyes never saw before.

"Take her," said the king, "she is yours." And the soldier looked
so handsome in his fine clothes that the princess was as glad to
hear those words as any she had ever listened to in all of her
life.

"You shall," said the king, "be married to-morrow."

"Very well," said the soldier. "Only give me a plot of ground to
build a palace upon that shall be fit for the wife of the King of
the Wind to live in."

"You shall have it," said the king," and it shall be the great
parade ground back of the palace, which is so wide and long that
all my army can march round and round in it without getting into
its own way; and that ought to be big enough."

"Yes," said the soldier, "it is." Thereupon he put on his feather
cap and disappeared from the sight of all as quickly as one might
snuff out a candle.

He mounted his three-legged stool and away he flew through the
air until he had come again to the tavern where he was lodging.
There he sat him down and began to churn his thoughts, and the
butter he made was worth the having, I can tell you. He wished
for a grand palace of white marble, and then he wished for all
sorts of things to fill it--the finest that could be had. Then he
wished for servants in clothes of gold and silver, and then he
wished for fine horses and gilded coaches. Then he wished for
gardens and orchards and lawns and flower-plats and fountains,
and all kinds and sorts of things, until the sweat ran down his
face from hard thinking and wishing. And as he thought and
wished, all the things he thought and wished for grew up like
soap-bubbles from nothing at all.

Then, when day began to break, he wished himself with his fine
clothes to be in the palace that his own wits had made, and away
he flew through the air until he had come there safe and sound.

But when the sun rose and shone down upon the beautiful palace
and all the gardens and orchards around it, the king and queen
and all the court stood dumb with wonder at the sight. Then, as
they stood staring, the gates opened and out came the soldier
riding in his gilded coach with his servants in silver and gold
marching beside him, and such a sight the daylight never looked
upon before that day.

Well, the princess and the soldier were married, and if no couple
had ever been happy in the world before, they were then. Nothing
was heard but feasting and merrymaking, and at night all the sky
was lit with fireworks. Such a wedding had never been before, and
all the world was glad that it had happened.

That is, all the world but one; that one was the old man dressed
in scarlet that the soldier had met when he first came to town.
While all the rest were in the hubbub of rejoicing, he put on his
thinking-cap, and by-and-by began to see pretty well how things
lay, and that, as they say in our town, there was a fly in the
milk-jug. "Ho, ho!" thought he, "so the soldier has found out all
about the three-legged stool, has he? Well, I will just put a
spoke into his wheel for him." And so he began to watch for his
chance to do the soldier an ill turn.

Now, a week or two after the wedding, and after all the gay
doings had ended, a grand hunt was declared, and the king and his
new son-in-law and all the court went to it. That was just such a
chance as the old magician had been waiting for; so the night
before the hunting-party returned he climbed the walls of the
garden, and so came to the wonderful palace that the soldier had
built out of nothing at all, and there stood three men keeping
guard so that no one might enter.

But little that troubled the magician. He began to mutter spells
and strange words, and all of a sudden he was gone, and in his
place was a great black ant, for he had changed himself into an
ant. In he ran through a crack of the door (and mischief has got
into many a man's house through a smaller hole for the matter of
that). In and out ran the ant through one room and another, and
up and down and here and there, until at last in a far-away part
of the magic palace he found the three-legged stool, and if I had
been in the soldier's place I would have chopped it up into
kindling-wood after I had gotten all that I wanted. But there it
was, and in an instant the magician resumed his own shape. Down
he sat him upon the stool. "I wish," said he, "that this palace
and the princess and all who are within it, together with its
orchards and its lawns and its gardens and everything, may be
removed to such and such a country, upon the other side of the
earth."

And as the stool had obeyed the soldier, so everything was done
now just as the magician said.

The next morning back came the hunting-party, and as they rode
over the hill--lo and behold!--there lay stretched out the great
parade ground in which the king's armies used to march around and
around, and the land was as bare as the palm of my hand. Not a
stick or a stone of the palace was left; not a leaf or a blade of
the orchards or gardens was to be seen.

The soldier sat as dumb as a fish, and the king stared with eyes
and mouth wide open. "Where is the palace, and where is my
daughter?" said he, at last, finding words and wit.

"I do not know," said the soldier.

The king's face grew as black as thunder. "You do not know?" he
said, "then you must find out. Seize the traitor!" he cried.

But that was easier said than done, for, quick as a wink, as they
came to lay hold of him, the soldier whisked the feather cap from
his pocket and clapped it upon his head, and then they might as
well have hoped to find the south wind in winter as to find him.

But though he got safe away from that trouble he was deep enough
in the dumps, you may be sure of that. Away he went, out into the
wide world, leaving that town behind him. Away he went, until
by-and-by he came to a great forest, and for three days he
travelled on and on--he knew not whither. On the third night, as
he sat beside a fire which he had built to keep him warm, he
suddenly bethought himself of the little round stone which had
dropped from the bird's claw, and which he still had in his
pocket. "Why should it not also help me," said he, "for there
must be some wonder about it." So he brought it out, and sat
looking at it and looking at it, but he could make nothing of it
for the life of him. Nevertheless, it might have some wishing
power about it, like the magic stool. "I wish," said the soldier,
"that I might get out of this scrape." That is what we have all
wished many and many a time in a like case; but just now it did
the soldier no more good to wish than it does good for the rest
of us. "Bah!" said he, "it is nothing but a black stone after
all." And then he threw it into the fire.

Puff! Bang! Away flew the embers upon every side, and back
tumbled the soldier, and there in the middle of the flame stood
just such a grim, black being as he had one time shot at with the
silver button.

As for the poor soldier, he just lay flat on his back and stared
with eyes like saucers, for he thought that his end had come for
sure.

"What are my lord's commands?" said the being, in a voice that
shook the marrow of the soldier's bones.

"Who are you?" said the soldier.

"I am the spirit of the stone," said the being. "You have heated
it in the flame, and I am here. Whatever you command I must
obey."

"Say you so?" cried the soldier, scrambling to his feet. "Very
well, then, just carry me to where I may find my wife and my
palace again."

Without a word the spirit of the stone snatched the soldier up,
and flew away with him swifter than the wind. Over forest, over
field, over mountain and over valley he flew, until at last, just
at the crack of day, he set him down in front of his own palace
gate in the far country where the magician had transported it.

After that the soldier knew his way quickly enough. He clapped
his feather cap upon his head and into the palace he went, and
from one room to another, until at last he came to where the
princess sat weeping and wailing, with her pretty eyes red from
long crying.

Then the soldier took off his cap again, and you may guess what
sounds of rejoicing followed. They sat down beside one another,
and after the soldier had eaten, the princess told him all that
had happened to her; how the magician had found the stool, and
how he had transported the palace to this far-away land; how he
came every day and begged her to marry him--which she would
rather die than do.

To all this the soldier listened, and when she had ended her
story he bade her to dry her tears, for, after all, the jug was
only cracked, and not past mending. Then he told her that when
the sorcerer came again that day she should say so and so and so
and so, and that he would be by to help her with his feather cap
upon his head.

After that they sat talking together as happy as two
turtle-doves, until the magician's foot was heard on the stairs.
And then the soldier clapped his feather cap upon his head just
as the door opened.

"Snuff, snuff!" said the magician, sniffing the air, "here is a
smell of Christian blood."

"Yes," said the princess, "that is so; there came a peddlar
to-day, but after all he did not stay long."

"He'd better not come again," said the magician, "or it will be
the worse for him. But tell me, will you marry me?"

"No," said the princess, "I shall not marry you until you can
prove yourself to be a greater man than my husband."

"Pooh!" said the magician, "that will be easy enough to prove;
tell me how you would have me do so and I will do it."

"Very well," said the princess, "then let me see you change
yourself into a lion. If you can do that I may perhaps believe
you to be as great as my husband."

"It shall," said the magician, "be as you say. He began to mutter
spells and strange words, and then all of a sudden he was gone,
and in his place there stood a lion with bristling mane and
flaming eyes--a sight fit of itself to kill a body with terror.

"That will do!" cried the princess, quaking and trembling at the
sight, and thereupon the magician took his own shape again.

"Now," said he, "do you believe that I am as great as the poor
soldier?"

"Not yet," said the princess; "I have seen how big you can make
yourself, now I wish to see how little you can become. Let me see
you change yourself into a mouse."

"So be it," said the magician, and began again to mutter his
spells. Then all of a sudden he was gone just as he was gone
before, and in his place was a little mouse sitting up and
looking at the princess with a pair of eyes like glass beads.

But he did not sit there long. This was what the soldier had
planned for, and all the while he had been standing by with his
feather hat upon his head. Up he raised his foot, and down he set
it upon the mouse.

Crunch!--that was an end of the magician.

After that all was clear sailing; the soldier hunted up the
three-legged stool and down he sat upon it, and by dint of no
more than just a little wishing, back flew palace and garden and
all through the air again to the place whence it came.

I do not know whether the old king ever believed again that his
son-in-law was the King of the Wind; anyhow, all was peace and
friendliness thereafter, for when a body can sit upon a
three-legged stool and wish to such good purpose as the soldier
wished, a body is just as good as a king, and a good deal better,
to my mind.


The Soldier who cheated the Devil looked into his pipe; it was
nearly out. He puffed and puffed and the coal glowed brighter,
and fresh clouds of smoke rolled up into the air. Little Brown
Betty came and refilled, from a crock of brown foaming ale, the
mug which he had emptied. The Soldier who had cheated the Devil
looked up at her and winked one eye.

"Now," said St. George, "it is the turn of yonder old man," and
he pointed, as he spoke, with the stem of his pipe towards old
Bidpai, who sat with closed eyes meditating inside of himself.

The old man opened his eyes, the whites of which were as yellow
as saffron, and wrinkled his face into innumerable cracks and
lines. Then he closed his eyes again; then he opened them again;
then he cleared his throat and began: "There was once upon a time
a man whom other men called Aben Hassen the Wise--"

"One moment," said Ali Baba; "will you not tell us what the story
is about?"

Old Bidpai looked at him and stroked his long white beard. "It
is," said he, "about--


The Talisman of Solomon

There was once upon a time a man whom other men called Aben
Hassen the Wise. He had read a thousand books of magic, and knew
all that the ancients or moderns had to tell of the hidden arts.

The King of the Demons of the Earth, a great and hideous monster,
named Zadok, was his servant, and came and went as Aben Hassen
the Wise ordered, and did as he bade. After Aben Hassen learned
all that it was possible for man to know, he said to himself,
"Now I will take my ease and enjoy my life." So he called the
Demon Zadok to him, and said to the monster, "I have read in my
books that there is a treasure that was one time hidden by the
ancient kings of Egypt--a treasure such as the eyes of man never
saw before or since their day. Is that true?"

"It is true," said the Demon.

"Then I command thee to take me to that treasure and to show it
to me," said Aben Hassen the Wise.

"It shall be done," said the Demon; and thereupon he caught up
the Wise Man and transported him across mountain and valley,
across land and sea, until he brought him to a country known as
the "Land of the Black Isles," where the treasure of the ancient
kings was hidden. The Demon showed the Magician the treasure, and
it was a sight such as man had never looked upon before or since
the days that the dark, ancient ones hid it. With his treasure
Aben Hassen built himself palaces and gardens and paradises such
as the world never saw before. He lived like an emperor, and the
fame of his doings rang through all the four corners of the
earth.

Now the queen of the Black Isles was the most beautiful woman in
the world, but she was as cruel and wicked and cunning as she was
beautiful. No man that looked upon her could help loving her; for
not only was she as beautiful as a dream, but her beauty was of
that sort that it bewitched a man in spite of himself.

One day the queen sent for Aben Hassen the Wise. "Tell me," said
she, "is it true that men say of you that you have discovered a
hidden treasure such as the world never saw before?" And she
looked at Aben Hassen so that his wisdom all crumbled away like
sand, and he became just as foolish as other men.

"Yes," said he, "it is true."

Aben Hassen the Wise spent all that day with the queen, and when
he left the palace he was like a man drunk and dizzy with love.
Moreover, he had promised to show the queen the hidden treasure
the next day.

As Aben Hassen, like a man in a dream, walked towards his own
house, he met an old man standing at the corner of the street.
The old man had a talisman that hung dangling from a chain, and
which he offered for sale. When Aben Hassen saw the talisman he
knew very well what it was--that it was the famous talisman of
King Solomon the Wise. If he who possessed the talisman asked it
to speak, it would tell that man both what to do and what not to
do.

The Wise Man bought the talisman for three pieces of silver (and
wisdom has been sold for less than that many a time), and as soon
as he had the talisman in his hands he hurried home with it and
locked himself in a room.

"Tell me," said the Wise Man to the Talisman, "shall I marry the
beautiful queen of the Black Isles?"

"Fly, while there is yet time to escape!" said the Talisman; "but
go not near the queen again, for she seeks to destroy thy life."

"But tell me, O Talisman!" said the Wise Man, "what then shall I
do with all that vast treasure of the kings of Egypt?"

"Fly from it while there is yet chance to escape!" said the
Talisman; "but go not into the treasure-house again, for in the
farther door, where thou hast not yet looked, is that which will
destroy him who possesses the treasure."

"But Zadok," said Aben Hassen; "what of Zadok?"

"Fly from the monster while there is yet time to escape," said
the Talisman, "and have no more to do with thy Demon slave, for
already he is weaving a net of death and destruction about thy
feet."

The Wise Man sat all that night pondering and thinking upon what
the Talisman had said. When morning came he washed and dressed
himself, and called the Demon Zadok to him. "Zadok," said he,
"carry me to the palace of the queen." In the twinkling of an eye
the Demon transported him to the steps of the palace.

"Zadok," said the Wise Man, "give me the staff of life and
death;" and the Demon brought from under his clothes a wand,
one-half of which was of silver and one-half of which was of
gold. The Wise Man touched the steps of the palace with the
silver end of the staff. Instantly all the sound and hum of life
was hushed. The thread of life was cut by the knife of silence,
and in a moment all was as still as death.

"Zadok," said the Wise Man, "transport me to the treasure-house
of the king of Egypt." And instantly the Demon had transported
him thither. The Wise Man drew a circle upon the earth. "No one,"
said he, "shall have power to enter here but the master of Zadok,
the King of the Demons of the Earth."

"And now, Zadok," said he, "I command thee to transport me to
India, and as far from here as thou canst." Instantly the Demon
did as he was commanded; and of all the treasure that he had, the
Wise Man took nothing with him but a jar of golden money and a
jar of silver money. As soon as the Wise Man stood upon the
ground of India, he drew from beneath his robe a little jar of
glass.

"Zadok," said he, "I command thee to enter this jar."

Then the Demon knew that now his turn had come. He besought and
implored the Wise Man to have mercy upon him; but it was all in
vain. Then the Demon roared and bellowed till the earth shook and
the sky grew dark overhead. But all was of no avail; into the jar
he must go, and into the jar he went. Then the Wise Man stoppered
the jar and sealed it. He wrote an inscription of warning upon
it, and then he buried it in the ground.

"Now," said Aben Hassen the Wise to the Talisman of Solomon,
"have I done everything that I should?"

"No," said the Talisman, "thou shouldst not have brought the jar
of golden money and the jar of silver money with thee; for that
which is evil in the greatest is evil in the least. Thou fool!
The treasure is cursed! Cast it all from thee while there is yet
time."

"Yes, I will do that, too, " said the Wise Man. So he buried in
the earth the jar of gold and the jar of silver that he had
brought with him, and then he stamped the mould down upon it.
After that the Wise Man began his life all over again. He bought,
and he sold, and he traded, and by-and-by he became rich. Then he
built himself a great house, and in the foundation he laid the
jar in which the Demon was bottled.

Then he married a young and handsome wife. By-and-by the wife
bore him a son, and then she died.

This son was the pride of his father's heart; but he was as vain
and foolish as his father was wise, so that all men called him
Aben Hassen the Fool, as they called the father Aben Hassen the
Wise.

Then one day death came and called the old man, and he left his
son all that belonged to him--even the Talisman of Solomon.

Young Aben Hassen the Fool had never seen so much money as now
belonged to him. It seemed to him that there was nothing in the
world he could not enjoy. He found friends by the dozens and
scores, and everybody seemed to be very fond of him.

He asked no questions of the Talisman of Solomon, for to his mind
there was no need of being both wise and rich. So he began
enjoying himself with his new friends. Day and night there was
feasting and drinking and singing and dancing and merrymaking and
carousing; and the money that the old man had made by trading and
wise living poured out like water through a sieve.

Then, one day came an end to all this junketing, and nothing
remained to the young spend-thrift of all the wealth that his
father had left him. Then the officers of the law came down upon
him and seized all that was left of the fine things, and his
fair-weather friends flew away from his troubles like flies from
vinegar. Then the young man began to think of the Talisman of
Wisdom. For it was with him as it is with so many of us: When
folly has emptied the platter, wisdom is called in to pick the
bones.

"Tell me," said the young man to the Talisman of Solomon, "what
shall I do, now that everything is gone?"

"Go," said the Talisman of Solomon, "and work as thy father has
worked before thee. Advise with me and become prosperous and
contended, but do not go dig under the cherry-tree in the
garden."

"Why should I not dig under the cherry-tree in the garden?" says
the young man; "I will see what is there, at any rate."

So he straightway took a spade and went out into the garden,
where the Talisman had told him not to go. He dug and dug under
the cherry-tree, and by-and-by his spade struck something hard.
It was a vessel of brass, and it was full of silver money. Upon
the lid of the vessel were these words, engraved in the
handwriting of the old man who had died:

"My son, this vessel full of silver has been brought from the
treasure-house of the ancient kings of Egypt. Take this, then,
that thou findest; advise with the talisman; be wise and
prosper."

"And they call that the Talisman of Wisdom," said the young man.
"If I had listened to it I never would have found this treasure."

The next day he began to spend the money he had found, and his
friends soon gathered around him again.

The vessel of silver money lasted a week, and then it was all
gone; not a single piece was left.

Then the young man bethought himself again of the Talisman of
Solomon. "What shall I do now," said he, "to save myself from
ruin?"

"Earn thy bread with honest labor," said the Talisman, "and I
will teach thee how to prosper; but do not dig beneath the
fig-tree that stands by the fountain in the garden."

The young man did not tarry long after he heard what the Talisman
had said. He seized a spade and hurried away to the fig-tree in
the garden as fast as he could run. He dug and dug, and by-and-by
his spade struck something hard. It was a copper vessel, and it
was filled with gold money. Upon the lid of the vessel was
engraved these words in the handwriting of the old man who had
gone: "My son, my son," they said, "thou hast been warned once;
be warned again. The gold money in this vessel has been brought
from the treasure-house of the ancient kings of Egypt. Take it;
be advised by the Talisman of Solomon; be wise and prosper."

"And to think that if I had listened to the Talisman, I would
never have found this," said the young man.

The gold in the vessel lasted maybe for a month of jollity and
merrymaking, but at the end of that time there was nothing
left--not a copper farthing.

"Tell me," said the young man to the Talisman, "what shall I do
now?"

"Thou fool," said the Talisman, "go sweat and toil, but do not go
down into the vault beneath this house. There in the vault is a
red stone built into the wall. The red stone turns upon a pivot.
Behind the stone is a hollow space. As thou wouldst save thy life
from peril, go not near it!"

"Hear that now," says the young man, "first, this Talisman told
me not to go, and I found silver. Then it told me not to go, and
I found gold; now it tells me not to go--perhaps I shall find
precious stones enough for a king's ransom."

He lit a lantern and went down into the vault beneath the house.
There, as the Talisman had said, was the red stone built into the
wall. He pressed the stone, and it turned upon its pivot as the
Talisman had said it would turn. Within was a hollow space, as
the Talisman said there would be. In the hollow space there was a
casket of silver. The young man snatched it up, and his hands
trembled for joy.

Upon the lid of the box were these words in the father's
handwriting, written in letters as red as blood: "Fool, fool!
Thou hast been a fool once, thou hast been a fool twice; be not a
fool for a third time. Restore this casket whence it was taken,
and depart."

"I will see what is in the box, at any rate," said the young man.

He opened it. There was nothing in it but a hollow glass jar the
size of an egg. The young man took the jar from the box; it was
as hot as fire. He cried out and let it fall. The jar burst upon
the floor with a crack of thunder; the house shook and rocked,
and the dust flew about in clouds. Then all was still; and when
Aben Hassen the Fool could see through the cloud of terror that
enveloped him he beheld a great, tall, hideous being as black as
ink, and with eyes that shone like coals of fire.

When the young man saw that terrible creature his tongue clave to
the roof of his mouth, and his knees smote together with fear,
for he thought that his end had now certainly come.

"Who are you?" he croaked, as soon as he could find his voice.

"I am the King of the Demons of the Earth, and my name is Zadok,"
answered the being. "I was once thy father's slave, and now I am
thine, thou being his son. When thou speakest I must obey, and
whatever thou commandest me to do that I must do."

"For instance, what can you do for me?" said the young man.

"I can do whatsoever you ask me; I can make you rich."

"You can make me rich?"

"Yes, I can make you richer than a king."

"Then make me rich as soon as you can," said Aben Hassen the
Fool, "and that is all that I shall ask of you now."

"It shall be done," said the Demon; "spend all that thou canst
spend, and thou shalt always have more. Has my lord any further
commands for his slave?"

"No," said the young man, "there is nothing more; you may go
now."

And thereupon the Demon vanished like a flash.

"And to think," said the young man, as he came up out of the
vault--"and to think that all this I should never have found if I
had obeyed the Talisman."

Such riches were never seen in that land as the young man now
possessed. There was no end to the treasure that poured in upon
him. He lived like an emperor. He built a palace more splendid
than the palace of the king. He laid out vast gardens of the most
exquisite beauty, in which there were fountains as white as snow,
trees of rare fruit and flowers that filled all the air with
their perfume, summer-houses of alabaster and ebony.

Every one who visited him was received like a prince, entertained
like a king, given a present fit for an emperor, and sent away
happy. The fame of all these things went out through all the
land, and every one talked of him and the magnificence that
surrounded him.

It came at last to the ears of the king himself, and one day he
said to his minister, "Let us go and see with our own eyes if all
the things reported of this merchant's son are true."

So the king and his minister disguised themselves as foreign
merchants, and went that evening to the palace where the young
man lived. A servant dressed in clothes of gold and silver cloth
stood at the door, and called to them to come in and be made
welcome. He led them in, and to a chamber lit with perfumed lamps
of gold. Then six black slaves took them in charge and led them
to a bath of white marble. They were bathed in perfumed water and
dried with towels of fine linen. When they came forth they were
clad in clothes of cloth of silver, stiff with gold and jewels.
Then twelve handsome white slaves led them through a vast and
splendid hall to a banqueting-room.

When they entered they were deafened with the noise of carousing
and merrymaking.

Aben Hassen the Fool sat at the head of the table upon a throne
of gold, with a canopy of gold above his head. When he saw the
king and the minister enter, he beckoned to them to come and sit
beside him. He showed them special favor because they were
strangers, and special servants waited upon them.

The king and his minister had never seen anything like what they
then saw. They could hardly believe it was not all magic and
enchantment. At the end of the feast each of the guests was given
a present of great value, and was sent away rejoicing. The king
received a pearl as big as a marble; the minister a cup of
wrought gold.

The next morning the king and the prime-minister were talking
over what they had seen. "Sire," said the prime-minister, "I have
no doubt but that the young man has discovered some vast hidden
treasure. Now, according to the laws of this kingdom, the half of
any treasure that is discovered shall belong to the king's
treasury. If I were in your place I would send for this young man
and compel him to tell me whence comes all this vast wealth."

"That is true," said the king; "I had not thought of that before.
The young man shall tell me all about it."

So they sent a royal guard and brought the young man to the
king's palace. When the young man saw in the king and the
prime-minister his guests of the night before, whom he had
thought to be only foreign merchants, he fell on his face and
kissed the ground before the throne. But the king spoke to him
kindly, and raised him up and sat him on the seat beside him.
They talked for a while concerning different things, and then the
king said at last, "Tell me, my friend, whence comes all the
inestimable wealth that you must possess to allow you to live as
you do?"

"Sire," said the young man, "I cannot tell you whence it comes. I
can only tell you that it is given to me."

The king frowned. "You cannot tell," said he; "you must tell. It
is for that that I have sent for you, and you must tell me."

Then the young man began to be frightened. "I beseech you," said
he," do not ask me whence it comes. I cannot tell you."

Then the king's brows grew as black as thunder. "What!" cried he,
"do you dare to bandy words with me? I know that you have
discovered some treasure. Tell me upon the instant where it is;
for the half of it, by the laws of the land, belongs to me, and I
will have it."

At the king's words Aben Hassen the Fool fell on his knees.
"Sire," said he, "I will tell you all the truth. There is a demon
named Zadok--a monster as black as a coal. He is my slave, and
it is he that brings me all the treasure that I enjoy." The king
thought nothing else than that Aben Hassen the Fool was trying to
deceive him. He laughed; he was very angry. "What," cried he, "do
you amuse me by such an absurd and unbelievable tale? Now I am
more than ever sure that you have discovered a treasure and that
you wish to keep the knowledge of it from me, knowing, as you do,
that the one-half of it by law belongs to me. Take him away!"
cried he to his attendants. "Give him fifty lashes, and throw him
into prison. He shall stay there and have fifty lashes every day
until he tells me where his wealth is hidden."

It was done as the king said, and by-and-by Aben Hassen the Fool
lay in the prison, smarting and sore with the whipping he had
had.

Then he began again to think of the Talisman of Solomon.

"Tell me," said he to the Talisman, "What shall I do now to help
myself in this trouble?"

"Bear thy punishment, thou fool," said the Talisman. "Know that
the king will by-and-by pardon thee and will let thee go. In the
meantime bear thy punishment; perhaps it will cure thee of thy
folly. Only do not call upon Zadok, the King of the Demons, in
this thy trouble."

The young man smote his hand upon his head. "What a fool I am,"
said he, "not to have thought to call upon Zadok before this!"
Then he called aloud, "Zadok, Zadok! If thou art indeed my slave,
come hither at my bidding."

In an instant there sounded a rumble as of thunder. The floor
swayed and rocked beneath the young man's feet. The dust flew in
clouds, and there stood Zadok as black as ink, and with eyes that
shone like coals of fire.

"I have come," said Zadok, "and first let me cure thy smarts, O
master."

He removed the cloths from the young man's back, and rubbed the
places that smarted with a cooling unguent. Instantly the pain
and smarting ceased, and the merchant's son had perfect ease.

"Now," said Zadok, "what is thy bidding?"

"Tell me," said Aben Hassen the Fool, "whence comes all the
wealth that you have brought me? The king has commanded me to
tell him and I could not, and so he has had me beaten with fifty
lashes."

"I bring the treasure," said Zadok, "from the treasure-house of
the ancient kings of Egypt. That treasure I at one time
discovered to your father, and he, not desiring it himself, hid
it in the earth so that no one might find it."

"And where is this treasure-house, O Zadok?" said the young man.

"It is in the city of the queen of the Black Isles," said the
King of the Demons; "there thy father lived in a palace of such
magnificence as thou hast never dreamed of. It was I that brought
him thence to this place with one vessel of gold money and one
vessel of silver money."

"It was you who brought him here, did you say, Zadok? Then, tell
me, can you take me from here to the city of the queen of the
Black Isles, whence you brought him?"

"Yes," said Zadok, "with ease."

"Then," said the young man, "I command you to take me thither
instantly, and to show me the treasure."

"I obey," said Zadok.

He stamped his foot upon the ground. In an instant the walls of
the prison split asunder, and the sky was above them. The Demon
leaped from the earth, carrying the young man by the girdle, and
flew through the air so swiftly that the stars appeared to slide
away behind them. In a moment he set the young man again upon the
ground, and Aben Hassen the Fool found himself at the end of what
appeared to be a vast and splendid garden.

"We are now," said Zadok, "above the treasure-house of which I
spoke. It was here that I saw thy father seal it so that no one
but the master of Zadok may enter. Thou mayst go in any time it
may please thee, for it is thine."

"I would enter into it now," said Aben Hassen the Fool.

"Thou shalt enter," said Zadok. He stooped, and with his
finger-point he drew a circle upon the ground where they stood;
then he stamped with his heel upon the circle. Instantly the
earth opened, and there appeared a flight of marble steps leading
downward into the earth. Zadok led the way down the steps and the
young man followed. At the bottom of the steps there was a door
of adamant. Upon the door were these words in letters as black as
ink, in the handwriting of the old man who had gone:

"Oh, fool! Fool! Beware what thou doest. Within here shalt thou
find death!"

There was a key of brass in the door. The King of the Demons
turned the key and opened the door. The young man entered after
him.

Aben Hassen the Fool found himself in a vast vaulted room, lit by
the light of a single carbuncle set in the centre of the dome
above. In the middle of the marble floor was a great basin twenty
paces broad, and filled to the brim with money such as he had
found in the brazen vessel in the garden.

The young man could not believe what he saw with his own eyes.
"Oh, marvel of marvels!" he cried; "little wonder you could give
me boundless wealth from such a storehouse as this."

Zadok laughed. "This," said he, "is nothing; come with me."

He led him from this room to another--like it vaulted, and like
it lit by a carbuncle set in the dome of the roof above. In the
middle of the floor was a basin such as Aben Hassen the Fool had
seen in the other room beyond; only this was filled with gold as
that had been filled with silver, and the gold was like that he
had found in the garden. When the young man saw this vast and
amazing wealth he stood speechless and breathless with wonder.
The Demon Zadok laughed. "This," said he," is great, but it is
little. Come and I will show thee a marvel indeed."

He took the young man by the hand and led him into a third
room--vaulted as the other two had been, lit as they had been by
a carbuncle in the roof above. But when the young man's eyes saw
what was in this third room, he was like a man turned drunk with
wonder. He had to lean against the wall behind him, for the sight
made him dizzy.

In the middle of the room was such as basin as he had seen in the
two other rooms, only it was filled with jewels--diamonds and
rubies and emeralds and sapphires and precious stones of all
kinds--that sparkled and blazed and flamed like a million stars.
Around the wall, and facing the basin from all sides, stood six
golden statues. Three of them were statues of the kings and three
of them were statues of the queens who had gathered together all
this vast and measureless wealth of ancient Egypt.

There was space for a seventh statue, but where it should have
stood was a great arched door of adamant. The door was tightly
shut, and there was neither lock nor key to it. Upon the door
were written these words in letters of flame:

"Behold! Beyond this door is that alone which shall satisfy all
thy desires."

"Tell me, Zadok," said the young man, after he had filled his
soul with all the other wonders that surrounded him--"tell me
what is there that lies beyond that door?"

"That I am forbidden to tell thee, O master!" said the King of
the Demons of the Earth.

"Then open the door for me," said the young man; "for I cannot
open it for myself, as there is neither lock nor key to it."

"That also I am forbidden to do," said Zadok.

"I wish that I knew what was there," said the young man.

The Demon laughed. "Some time," said he, "thou mayest find for
thyself. Come, let us leave here and go to the palace which thy
father built years ago, and which he left behind him when he
quitted this place for the place in which thou knewest him."

He led the way and the young man followed; they passed through
the vaulted rooms and out through the door of adamant, and Zadok
locked it behind them and gave the key to the young man.

"All this is thine now," he said; "I give it to thee as I gave it
to thy father. I have shown thee how to enter, and thou mayst go
in whenever it pleases thee to do so."

They ascended the steps, and so reached the garden above. Then
Zadok struck his heel upon the ground, and the earth closed as it
had opened. He led the young man from the spot until they had
come to a wide avenue that led to the palace beyond. "Here I
leave thee," said the Demon, "But if ever thou hast need of me,
call and I will come."

Thereupon he vanished like a flash, leaving the young man
standing like one in a dream.

He saw before him a garden of such splendor and magnificence as
he had never dreamed of even in his wildest fancy. There were
seven fountains as clear as crystal that shot high into the air
and fell back into basins of alabaster. There was a broad avenue
as white as snow, and thousands of lights lit up everything as
light as day. Upon either side of the avenue stood a row of black
slaves, clad in garments of white silk, and with jewelled turbans
upon their heads. Each held a flaming torch of sandal-wood.
Behind the slaves stood a double row of armed men, and behind
them a great crowd of other slaves and attendants, dressed each
as magnificently as a prince, blazing and flaming with
innumerable jewels and ornaments of gold.

But of all these things the young man thought nothing and saw
nothing; for at the end of the marble avenue there arose a
palace, the like of which was not in the four quarters of the
earth--a palace of marble and gold and carmine and
ultramarine--rising into the purple starry sky, and shining in
the moonlight like a vision of Paradise. The palace was
illuminated from top to bottom and from end to end; the windows
shone like crystal, and from it came sounds of music and
rejoicing.

When the crowd that stood waiting saw the young man appear, they
shouted: "Welcome! Welcome! To the master who has come again! To
Aben Hassen the Fool!"

The young man walked up the avenue of marble to the palace,
surrounded by the armed attendants in their dresses of jewels and
gold, and preceded by dancing-girls as beautiful as houris, who
danced and sung before him. He was dizzy with joy. "All--all
this," he exulted, "belongs to me. And to think that if I had
listened to the Talisman of Solomon I would have had none of it."

That was the way he came back to the treasure of the ancient
kings of Egypt, and to the palace of enchantment that his father
had quitted.

For seven months he lived a life of joy and delight, surrounded
by crowds of courtiers as though they were a king, and going from
pleasure to pleasure without end. Nor had he any fear of an end
coming to it, for he knew that his treasure was inexhaustible. He
made friends with the princes and nobles of the land. From far
and wide people came to visit him, and the renown of his
magnificence filled all the world. When men would praise any one
they would say, "He is as rich," or as "magnificent," or as
"generous, as Aben Hassen the Fool."

So for seven months he lived a life of joy and delight; then one
morning he awakened and found everything changed to grief and
mourning. Where the day before had been laughter, to-day was
crying. Where the day before had been mirth, to-day was
lamentation. All the city was shrouded in gloom, and everywhere
was weeping and crying.

Seven black slaves stood on guard near Aben Hassen the Fool as he
lay upon his couch. "What means all this sorrow?" said he to one
of the slaves.

Instantly all the slaves began howling and beating their heads,
and he to whom the young man had spoken fell down with his face
in the dust, and lay there twisting and writhing like a worm.

"He has asked the question!" howled the slaves--"he has asked
the question!"

"Are you mad?" cried the young man. "What is the matter with
you?"

At the doorway of the room stood a beautiful female slave,
bearing in her hands a jewelled basin of gold, filled with
rose-water, and a fine linen napkin for the young man to wash and
dry his hands upon. "Tell me," said the young man, "what means
all this sorrow and lamentation?"

Instantly the beautiful slave dropped the golden basin upon the
stone floor, and began shrieking and tearing her clothes. "He has
asked the question!" she screamed--"he has asked the question!"

The young man began to grow frightened; he arose from his couch,
and with uneven steps went out into the anteroom. There he found
his chamberlain waiting for him with a crowd of attendants and
courtiers. "Tell me," said Aben Hassen the Fool, "why are you all
so sorrowful?"

Instantly they who stood waiting began crying and tearing their
clothes and beating their hands. As for the chamberlain--he was
a reverend old man--his eyes sparkled with anger, and his
fingers twitched as though he would have struck if he had dared.
"What," he cried, "art thou not contented with all thou hast and
with all that we do for thee without asking the forbidden
question?"

Thereupon he tore his cap from his head and flung it upon the
ground, and began beating himself violently upon the head with
great outcrying.

Aben Hassen the Fool, not knowing what to think or what was to
happen, ran back into the bedroom again. "I think everybody in
this place has gone mad," said he. "Nevertheless, if I do not
find out what it all means, I shall go mad myself."

Then he bethought himself, for the first time since he came to
that land, of the Talisman of Solomon.

"Tell me, O Talisman," said he, "why all these people weep and
wail so continuously?"

"Rest content," said the Talisman of Solomon, "with knowing that
which concerns thine own self, and seek not to find an answer
that will be to thine own undoing. Be thou also further advised:
do not question the Demon Zadok."

"Fool that I am," said the young man, stamping his foot; "here am
I wasting all this time when, if I had but thought of Zadok at
first, he would have told me all. Then he called aloud, Zadok!
Zadok! Zadok!"

Instantly the ground shook beneath his feet, the dust rose in
clouds, and there stood Zadok as black as ink, and with eyes that
shone like fire.

"Tell me," said the young man; "I command thee to tell me, O
Zadok! Why are the people all gone mad this morning, and why do
they weep and wail, and why do they go crazy when I do but ask
them why they are so afflicted?"

"I will tell thee," said Zadok. "Seven-and-thirty years ago there
was a queen over this land--the most beautiful that ever was
seen. Thy father, who was the wisest and most cunning magician in
the world, turned her into stone, and with her all the attendants
in her palace. No one since that time has been permitted to enter
the palace--it is forbidden for any one even to ask a question
concerning it; but every year, on the day on which the queen was
turned to stone, the whole land mourns with weeping and wailing.
And now thou knowest all!"

"What you tell me," said the young man, "passes wonder. But tell
me further, O Zadok, is it possible for me to see this queen whom
my father turned to stone?"

"Nothing is easier," said Zadok.

"Then," said the young man, "I command you to take me to where
she is, so that I may see her with mine own eyes."

"I hear and obey," said the Demon.

He seized the young man by the girdle, and in an instant flew
away with him to a hanging-garden that lay before the queen's
palace.

"Thou art the first man," said Zadok, "who has seen what thou art
about to see for seven-and-thirty years. Come, I will show thee a
queen, the most beautiful that the eyes of man ever looked upon."

He led the way, and the young man followed, filled with wonder
and astonishment. Not a sound was to be heard, not a thing moved,
but silence hung like a veil between the earth and the sky.

Following the Demon, the young man ascended a flight of steps,
and so entered the vestibule of the palace. There stood guards in
armor of brass and silver and gold. But they were without
life--they were all of stone as white as alabaster. Thence they
passed through room after room and apartment after apartment
crowded with courtiers and nobles and lords in their robes of
office, magnificent beyond fancying, but each silent and
motionless--each a stone as white as alabaster. At last they
entered an apartment in the very centre of the palace. There sat
seven-and-forty female attendants around a couch of purple and
gold. Each of the seven-and-forty was beautiful beyond what the
young man could have believed possible, and each was clad in a
garment of silk as white as snow, embroidered with threads of
silver and studded with glistening diamonds. But each sat silent
and motionless--each was a stone as white as alabaster.

Upon the couch in the centre of the apartment reclined a queen
with a crown of gold upon her head. She lay there motionless,
still. She was cold and dead--of stone as white as marble. The
young man approached and looked into her face, and when he looked
his breath became faint and his heart grew soft within him like
wax in a flame of fire.

He sighed; he melted; the tears burst from his eyes and ran down
his cheeks. "Zadok!" he cried--"Zadok! Zadok! What have you
done to show me this wonder of beauty and love! Alas! That I have
seen her; for the world is nothing to me now. O Zadok! That she
were flesh and blood, instead of cold stone! Tell me, Zadok, I
command you to tell me, was she once really alive as I am alive,
and did my father truly turn her to stone as she lies here?"

"She was really alive as thou art alive, and he did truly
transform her to this stone," said Zadok.

"And tell me," said the young man, "can she never become alive
again?"

"She can become alive, and it lies with you to make her alive,"
said the Demon. "Listen, O master. Thy father possessed a wand,
half of silver and half of gold. Whatsoever he touched with
silver became converted to stone, such as thou seest all around
thee here; but whatsoever, O master, he touched with the gold, it
became alive, even if it were a dead stone."

"Tell me, Zadok," cried the young man; "I command you to tell me,
where is that wand of silver and gold?"

"I have it with me," said Zadok.

"Then give it to me; I command you to give it to me."

"I hear and obey," said Zadok. He drew from his girdle a wand,
half of gold and half of silver, as he spoke, and gave it to the
young man.

"Thou mayst go now, Zadok," said the young man, trembling with
eagerness.

Zadok laughed and vanished. The young man stood for a while
looking down at the beautiful figure of alabaster. Then he
touched the lips with the golden tip of the wand. In an instant
there came a marvellous change. He saw the stone melt, and begin
to grow flexible and soft. He saw it become warm, and the cheeks
and lips grow red with life. Meantime a murmur had begun to rise
all through the palace. It grew louder and louder--it became a
shout. The figure of the queen that had been stone opened its
eyes.

"Who are you?" it said.

Aben Hassen the Fool fell upon his knees. "I am he who was sent
to bring you to life." he said. "My father turned you to cold
stone, and I--I have brought you back to warm life again."

The queen smiled--her teeth sparkled like pearls. "If you have
brought me to life, then I am yours," she said, and she kissed
him upon the lips.

He grew suddenly dizzy; the world swam before his eyes.

For seven days nothing was heard in the town but rejoicing and
joy. The young man lived in a golden cloud of delight. "And to
think," said he, "if I had listened to that accursed Talisman of
Solomon, called The Wise,' all this happiness, this ecstasy that
is now mine, would have been lost to me."

"Tell me, beloved," said the queen, upon the morning of the
seventh day--"thy father once possessed all the hidden treasure
of the ancient kings of Egypt--tell me, is it now thine as it
was once his?"

"Yes," said the young man, "it is now all mine as it was once all
his."

"And do you really love me as you say?"

"Yes," said the young man, "and ten thousand times more than I
say."

"Then, as you love me, I beg one boon on you. It is that you show
me this treasure of which I have heard so much, and which we are
to enjoy together."

The young man was drunk with happiness. "Thou shalt see it all,"
said he.

Then, for the first time, the Talisman spoke without being
questioned. "Fool!" it cried; "wilt thou not be advised?"

"Be silent," said the young man. "Six times, vile thing, you
would have betrayed me. Six times you would have deprived me of
joys that should have been mine, and each was greater than that
which went before. Shall I now listen the seventh time? Now,"
said he to the queen, "I will show you our treasure." He called
aloud, "Zadok, Zadok, Zadok!"

Instantly the ground shook beneath their feet, the dust rose in
clouds, and Zadok appeared, as black as ink, and with eyes that
shone like coals of fire.

"I command you," said the young man, "to carry the queen and
myself to the garden where my treasure lies hidden."

Zadok laughed aloud. "I hear thee and obey thee, master," said
he.

He seized the queen and the young man by the girdle, and in an
instant transported them to the garden and to the treasure-house.

"Thou art where thou commandest to be," said the Demon.

The young man immediately drew a circle upon the ground with his
finger-tip. He struck his heel upon the circle. The ground
opened, disclosing the steps leading downward. The young man
descended the steps with the queen behind him, and behind them
both came the Demon Zadok.

The young man opened the door of adamant and entered the first of
the vaulted rooms.

When the queen saw the huge basin full of silver treasure, her
cheeks and her forehead flushed as red as fire.

They went into the next room, and when the queen saw the basin of
gold her face turned as white as ashes.

They went into the third room, and when the queen saw the basin
of jewels and the six golden statues her face turned as blue as
lead, and her eyes shone green like a snake's.

"Are you content?" asked the young man.

The queen looked about her. "No!" cried she, hoarsely, pointing
to the closed door that had never been opened, and whereon were
engraved these words:

"Behold! Beyond this door is that alone which shall satisfy all
thy desires."

"No!" cried she. "What is it that lies behind yon door?"

"I do not know," said the young man.

"Then open the door, and let me see what lies within."

"I cannot open the door," said he. "How can I open the door,
seeing that there is no lock nor key to it?"

"If thou dost not open the door," said the queen, " all is over
between thee and me. So do as I bid thee, or leave me forever."

They had both forgotten that the Demon Zadok was there. Then the
young man bethought himself of the Talisman of Solomon. "Tell me,
O Talisman," said he, "how shall I open yonder door?"

"Oh, wretched one!" cried the Talisman, "oh, wretched one! Fly
while there is yet time--fly, for thy doom is near! Do not push
the door open, for it is not locked!"

The young man struck his head with his clinched fist. "What a
fool am I!" he cried. "Will I never learn wisdom" Here have I
been coming to this place seven months, and have never yet
thought to try whether yonder door was locked or not!"

"Open the door!" cried the queen.

They went forward together. The young man pushed the door with
his hand. It opened swiftly and silently, and they entered.

Within was a narrow room as red as blood. A flaming lamp hung
from the ceiling above. The young man stood as though turned to
stone, for there stood a gigantic Black Demon with a napkin
wrapped around his loins and a scimitar in his right hand, the
blade of which gleamed like lightning in the flame of the lamp.
Before him lay a basket filled with sawdust.

When the queen saw what she saw she screamed in a loud voice,
"Thou hast found it! Thou hast found it! Thou hast found what
alone can satisfy all thy desires! Strike, O slave!"

The young man heard the Demon Zadok give a yell of laughter. He
saw a whirl and a flash, and then he knew nothing.

The Black had struck--the blade had fallen, and the head of
Aben Hassen the Fool rolled into the basket of sawdust that stood
waiting for it.


"Aye, aye," said St. George, "and so it should end. For what was
your Aben Hassen the Fool but a heathen Paniem? Thus should the
heads of all the like be chopped off from their shoulders. Is
there not some one here to tell us a fair story about a saint?"

"For the matter of that," said the Lad who fiddled when the Jew
was in the bramble-bush--"for the matter of that I know a very
good story that begins about a saint and a hazel-nut.

"Say you so?" said St. George. "Well, let us have it. But stay,
friend, thou hast no ale in thy pot. Wilt thou not let me pay for
having it filled?"

"That," said the Lad who fiddled when the Jew was in the
bramble-bush, "may be as you please, Sir Knight; and, to tell the
truth, I will be mightily glad for a drop to moisten my throat
withal."

"But," said Fortunatus, "you have not told us what the story is
to be about."

"It is," said the Lad who fiddled for the Jew in the
bramble-bush, "about--


Ill-Luck and the Fiddler

Once upon a time St. Nicholas came down into the world to take a
peep at the old place and see how things looked in the
spring-time. On he stepped along the road to the town where he
used to live, for he had a notion to find out whether things were
going on nowadays as they one time did. By-and-by he came to a
cross-road, and who should he see sitting there but Ill-Luck
himself. Ill-Luck's face was as gray as ashes, and his hair as
white as snow--for he is as old as Grandfather Adam--and two
great wings grew out of his shoulders--for he flies fast and
comes quickly to those whom he visits, does Ill-Luck.

Now, St. Nicholas had a pocketful of hazel-nuts, which he kept
cracking and eating as he trudged along the road, and just then
he came upon one with a worm-hole in it. When he saw Ill-Luck it
came into his head to do a good turn to poor sorrowful man.

"Good-morning, Ill-Luck," says he.

"Good-morning, St. Nicholas," says Ill-Luck.

"You look as hale and strong as ever," says St. Nicholas.

"Ah, yes," says Ill-Luck, "I find plenty to do in this world of
woe."

"They tell me," says St. Nicholas, "that you can go wherever you
choose, even if it be through a key-hole; now, is that so?"

"Yes," says Ill-Luck, "it is."

"Well, look now, friend," says St. Nicholas, "could you go into
this hazel-nut if you chose to?"

"Yes," says Ill-Luck, "I could indeed."

"I should like to see you," says St. Nicholas; "for then I should
be of a mind to believe what people say of you."

"Well," says Ill-Luck, "I have not much time to be pottering and
playing upon Jack's fiddle; but to oblige an old
friend"--thereupon he made himself small and smaller, and--phst!
he was in the nut before you could wink.

Then what do you think St. Nicholas did? In his hand he held a
little plug of wood, and no sooner had Ill-Luck entered the nut
than he stuck the plug in the hole, and there was man's enemy as
tight as fly in a bottle.

"So!" says St. Nicholas, "that's a piece of work well done." Then
he tossed the hazel-nut under the roots of an oak-tree near by,
and went his way.

And that is how this story begins.


Well, the hazel-nut lay and lay and lay, and all the time that it
lay there nobody met with ill-luck; but, one day, who should come
travelling that way but a rogue of a Fiddler, with his fiddle
under his arm. The day was warm, and he was tired; so down he sat
under the shade of the oak-tree to rest his legs. By-and-by he
heard a little shrill voice piping and crying, "Let me out! let
me out! let me out!"

The Fiddler looked up and down, but he could see nobody. "Who are
you?" says he.

"I am Ill-Luck! Let me out! let me out!"

"Let you out?" says the Fiddler. "Not I; if you are bottled up
here it is the better for all of us;" and, so saying, he tucked
his fiddle under his arm and off he marched.

But before he had gone six steps he stopped. He was one of your
peering, prying sort, and liked more than a little to know all
that was to be known about this or that or the other thing that
he chanced to see or hear. "I wonder where Ill-Luck can be, to be
in such a tight place as he seems to be caught in," says he to
himself; and back he came again. "Where are you, Ill-Luck?" says
he.

"Here I am," says Ill-Luck--"here in this hazel-nut, under the
roots of the oak-tree."

Thereupon the Fiddler laid aside his fiddle and bow, and fell to
poking and prying under the roots until he found the nut. Then he
began twisting and turning it in his fingers, looking first on
one side and then on the other, and all the while Ill-Luck kept
crying, "Let me out! let me out!"

It was not long before the Fiddler found the little wooden plug,
and then nothing would do but he must take a peep inside the nut
to see if Ill-Luck was really there. So he picked and pulled at
the wooden plug, until at last out it came; and--phst! pop! out
came Ill-Luck along with it.

Plague take the Fiddler! say I.

"Listen," says Ill-Luck. "It has been many a long day that I have
been in that hazel-nut, and you are the man that has let me out;
for once in a way I will do a good turn to a poor human body."
Therewith, and without giving the Fiddler time to speak a word,
Ill-Luck caught him up by the belt, and--whiz! away he flew like
a bullet, over hill and over valley; over moor and over mountain,
so fast that not enough wind was left in the Fiddler's stomach to
say "Bo!"

By-and-by he came to a garden, and there he let the Fiddler drop
on the soft grass below. Then away he flew to attend to other
matters of greater need.

When the Fiddler had gathered his wits together, and himself to
his feet, he saw that he lay in a beautiful garden of flowers and
fruit-trees and marble walks and what not, and that at the end of
it stood a great, splendid house, all built of white marble, with
a fountain in front, and peacocks strutting about on the lawn.

Well, the Fiddler smoothed down his hair and brushed his clothes
a bit, and off he went to see what was to be seen at the grand
house at the end of the garden.

He entered the door, and nobody said no to him. Then he passed
through one room after another, and each was finer than the one
he left behind. Many servants stood around; but they only bowed,
and never asked whence he came. At last he came to a room where a
little old man sat at a table. The table was spread with a feast
that smelled so good that it brought tears to the Fiddler's eyes
and water to his mouth, and all the plates were of pure gold. The
little old man sat alone, but another place was spread, as though
he were expecting some one. As the Fiddler came in the little old
man nodded and smiled. "Welcome!" he cried; "and have you come at
last?"

"Yes," said the Fiddler, "I have. It was Ill-Luck that brought
me."

"Nay," said the little old man, "do not say that. Sit down to the
table and eat; and when I have told you all, you will say it was
not Ill-Luck, but Good-Luck, that brought you."

The Fiddler had his own mind about that; but, all the same, down
he sat at the table, and fell to with knife and fork at the good
things, as though he had not had a bite to eat for a week of
Sundays.

"I am the richest man in the world," says the little old man,
after a while.

"I am glad to hear it," says the Fiddler.

"You may well be," said the old man, "for I am all alone in the
world, and without wife or child. And this morning I said to
myself that the first body that came to my house I would take for
a son--or a daughter, as the case might be. You are the first,
and so you shall live with me as long as I live, and after I am
gone everything that I have shall be yours."

The Fiddler did nothing but stare with open eyes and mouth, as
though he would never shut either again.

Well, the Fiddler lived with the old man for maybe three or four
days as snug and happy a life as ever a mouse passed in a green
cheese. As for the gold and silver and jewels--why, they were
as plentiful in that house as dust in a mill! Everything the
Fiddler wanted came to his hand. He lived high, and slept soft
and warm, and never knew what it was to want either more or less,
or great or small. In all of those three or four days he did
nothing but enjoy himself with might and main.

But by-and-by he began to wonder where all the good things came
from. Then, before long, he fell to pestering the old man with
questions about the matter.

At first the old man put him off with short answers, but the
Fiddler was a master-hand at finding out anything he wanted to
know. He dinned and drummed and worried until flesh and blood
could stand it no longer. So at last the old man said that he
would show him the treasure-house where all his wealth came from,
and at that the Fiddler was tickled beyond measure.

The old man took a key from behind the door and led him out into
the garden. There in a corner by the wall was a great trap-door
of iron. The old man fitted the key to the lock and turned it. He
lifted the door, and then went down a steep flight of stone
steps, and the Fiddler followed close at his heels. Down below it
was as light as day, for in the centre of the room hung a great
lamp that shone with a bright light and lit up all the place as
bright as day. In the floor were set three great basins of
marble: one was nearly full of silver, one of gold, and one of
gems of all sorts.

"All this is mine," said the old man, "and after I am gone it
shall be yours. It was left to me as I will leave it to you, and
in the meantime you may come and go as you choose and fill your
pockets whenever you wish to. But there is one thing you must not
do: you must never open that door yonder at the back of the room.
Should you do so, Ill-Luck will be sure to overtake you."

Oh no! The Fiddler would never think of doing such a thing as
opening the door. The silver and gold and jewels were enough for
him. But since the old man had given him leave, he would just
help himself to a few of the fine things. So he stuffed his
pockets full, and then he followed the old man up the steps and
out into the sunlight again.

It took him maybe an hour to count all the money and jewels he
had brought up with him. After he had done that, he began to
wonder what was inside of the little door at the back of the
room. First he wondered; then he began to grow curious; then he
began to itch and tingle and burn as though fifty thousand
I-want-to-know nettles were sticking into him from top to toe. At
last he could stand it no longer. "I'll just go down yonder,"
says he, "and peep through the key-hole; perhaps I can see what
is there without opening the door."

So down he took the key, and off he marched to the garden. He
opened the trap-door, and went down the steep steps to the room
below. There was the door at the end of the room, but when he
came to look there was no key-hole to it. "Pshaw!" said he, "here
is a pretty state of affairs. Tut! tut! tut! Well, since I have
come so far, it would be a pity to turn back without seeing
more." So he opened the door and peeped in.

"Pooh!" said the Fiddler, "There's nothing there, after all," and
he opened the door wide.

Before him was a great long passageway, and at the far end of it
he could see a spark of light as though the sun were shining
there. He listened, and after a while he heard a sound like the
waves beating on the shore. "Well," says he, "this is the most
curious thing I have seen for a long time. Since I have come so
far, I may as well see the end of it." So he entered the
passageway, and closed the door behind him. He went on and on,
and the spark of light kept growing larger and larger, and
by-and-by--pop! out he came at the other end of the passage.

Sure enough, there he stood on the sea-shore, with the waves
beating and dashing on the rocks. He stood looking and wondering
to find himself in such a place, when all of a sudden something
came with a whiz and a rush and caught him by the belt, and away
he flew like a bullet.

By-and-by he managed to screw his head around and look up, and
there it was Ill-Luck that had him. "I thought so," said the
Fiddler; and then he gave over kicking.

Well; on and on they flew, over hill and valley, over moor and
mountain, until they came to another garden, and there Ill-Luck
let the Fiddler drop.

Swash! Down he fell into the top of an apple-tree, and there he
hung in the branches.

It was the garden of a royal castle, and all had been weeping and
woe (though they were beginning now to pick up their smiles
again), and this was the reason why:

The king of that country had died, and no one was left behind him
but the queen. But she was a prize, for not only was the kingdom
hers, but she was as young as a spring apple and as pretty as a
picture; so that there was no end of those who would have liked
to have had her, each man for his own. Even that day there were
three princes at the castle, each one wanting the queen to marry
him; and the wrangling and bickering and squabbling that was
going on was enough to deafen a body. The poor young queen was
tired to death with it all, and so she had come out into the
garden for a bit of rest; and there she sat under the shade of an
apple-tree, fanning herself and crying, when--

Swash! Down fell the Fiddler into the apple-tree and down fell a
dozen apples, popping and tumbling about the queen's ears.

The queen looked up and screamed, and the Fiddler climbed down.

"Where did you come from?" said she.

"Oh, Ill-Luck brought me," said the Fiddler.

"Nay," said the queen, "do not say so. You fell from heaven, for
I saw it with my eyes and heard it with my ears. I see how it is
now. You were sent hither from heaven to be my husband, and my
husband you shall be. You shall be king of this country,
half-and-half with me as queen, and shall sit on a throne beside
me."

You can guess whether or not that was music to the Fiddler's
ears.

So the princes were sent packing, and the Fiddler was married to
the queen, and reigned in that country.

Well, three or four days passed, and all was as sweet and happy
as a spring day. But at the end of that time the Fiddler began to
wonder what was to be seen in the castle. The queen was very fond
of him, and was glad enough to show him all the fine things that
were to be seen; so hand in hand they went everywhere, from
garret to cellar.

But you should have seen how splendid it all was! The Fiddler
felt more certain than ever that it was better to be a king than
to be the richest man in the world, and he was as glad as glad
could be that Ill-Luck had brought him from the rich little old
man over yonder to this.

So he saw everything in the castle but one thing. "What is behind
that door?" said he.

"Ah! that," said the queen, "you must not ask or wish to know.
Should you open that door Ill-Luck will be sure to overtake you."

"Pooh!" said the Fiddler, "I don't care to know, anyhow," and off
they went, hand in hand.

Yes, that was a very fine thing to say; but before an hour had
gone by the Fiddler's head began to hum and buzz like a beehive.
"I don't believe," said he, "there would be a grain of harm in my
peeping inside that door; all the same, I will not do it. I will
just go down and peep through the key-hole." So off he went to do
as he said; but there was no key-hole to that door, either. "Why,
look!" says he, "it is just like the door at the rich man's house
over yonder; I wonder if it is the same inside as outside," and
he opened the door and peeped in. Yes; there was the long passage
and the spark of light at the far end, as though the sun were
shining. He cocked his head to one side and listened. "Yes," said
he, "I think I hear the water rushing, but I am not sure; I will
just go a little further in and listen," and so he entered and
closed the door behind him. Well, he went on and on until--pop!
there he was out at the farther end, and before he knew what he
was about he had stepped out upon the sea-shore, just as he had
done before.

Whiz! whirr! Away flew the Fiddler like a bullet, and there was
Ill-Luck carrying him by the belt again. Away they sped, over
hill and valley, over moor and mountain, until the Fiddler's head
grew so dizzy that he had to shut his eyes. Suddenly Ill-Luck let
him drop, and down he fell--thump! bump!--on the hard ground.
Then he opened his eyes and sat up, and, lo and behold! there he
was, under the oak-tree whence he had started in the first place.
There lay his fiddle, just as he had left it. He picked it up and
ran his fingers over the strings--trum, twang! Then he got to
his feet and brushed the dirt and grass from his knees. He tucked
his fiddle under his arm, and off he stepped upon the way he had
been going at first.

"Just to think!" said he, "I would either have been the richest
man in the world, or else I would have been a king, if it had not
been for Ill-Luck."

And that is the way we all of us talk.


Dr. Faustus had sat all the while neither drinking ale nor
smoking tobacco, but with his hands folded, and in silence. "I
know not why it is," said he, "but that story of yours, my
friend, brings to my mind a story of a man whom I once knew--a
great magician in his time, and a necromancer and a chemist and
an alchemist and mathematician and a rhetorician, an astronomer,
an astrologer, and a philosopher as well."

" Tis a long list of excellency," said old Bidpai.

" Tis not as long as was his head, " said Dr. Faustus.

"It would be good for us all to hear a story of such a man," said
old Bidpai.

"Nay," said Dr. Faustus, "the story is not altogether of the man
himself, but rather of a pupil who came to learn wisdom of him."

"And the name of your story is what?" said Fortunatus.

"It hath no name," said Dr. Faustus.

"Nay," said St. George, "everything must have a name."

"It hath no name," said Dr. Faustus. "But I shall give it a name,
and it shall be--


Empty Bottles

In the old, old days when men were wiser than they are in these
times, there lived a great philosopher and magician, by name
Nicholas Flamel. Not only did he know all the actual sciences,
but the black arts as well, and magic, and what not. He conjured
demons so that when a body passed the house of a moonlight night
a body might see imps, great and small, little and big, sitting
on the chimney stacks and the ridge-pole, clattering their heels
on the tiles and chatting together.

He could change iron and lead into silver and gold; he discovered
the elixir of life, and might have been living even to this day
had he thought it worth while to do so.

There was a student at the university whose name was Gebhart, who
was so well acquainted with algebra and geometry that he could
tell at a single glance how many drops of water there were in a
bottle of wine. As for Latin and Greek--he could patter them
off like his A B C's. Nevertheless, he was not satisfied with the
things he knew, but was for learning the things that no schools
could teach him. So one day he came knocking at Nicholas Flamel's
door.

"Come in," said the wise man, and there Gebhart found him sitting
in the midst of his books and bottles and diagrams and dust and
chemicals and cobwebs, making strange figures upon the table with
jackstraws and a piece of chalk--for your true wise man can
squeeze more learning out of jackstraws and a piece of chalk than
we common folk can get out of all the books in the world.

No one else was in the room but the wise man's servant, whose
name was Babette.


 


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