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PANCHTANTRA
STORIES
THE
SEVENTH & LAST VOYAGE OF SINBAD THE SAILOR
After my sixth voyage I was quite determined that
I would go to sea no more. I was now of an age to
appreciate a quiet life, and I had run risks enough.
I only wished to end my days in peace. One day,
however, when I was entertaining a number of my
friends, I was told that an officer of the Caliph
wished to speak to me, and when he was admitted
he bade me follow him into the presence of Haroun
al Raschid, which I accordingly did. After I had
saluted him, the Caliph said:
"I have sent for you, Sinbad, because I need
your services. I have chosen you to bear a letter
and a gift to the King of Serendib in return for
his message of friendship."
The Caliph's commandment fell upon me like a thunderbolt.
"Commander of the Faithful," I answered,
"I am ready to do all that your Majesty commands,
but I humbly pray you to remember that I am utterly
disheartened by the unheard of sufferings I have
undergone. Indeed, I have made a vow never again
to leave Bagdad."
With this I gave
him a long account of some of my strangest adventures,
to which he listened patiently.
"I admit," said he, "that you have
indeed had some extraordinary experiences, but I
do not see why they should hinder you from doing
as I wish. You have only to go straight to Serendib
and give my message, then you are free to come back
and do as you will. But go you must; my honour and
dignity demand it."
Seeing that there was no help for it, I declared
myself willing to obey; and the Caliph, delighted
at having got his own way, gave me a thousand sequins
for the expenses of the voyage. I was soon ready
to start, and taking the letter and the present
I embarked at Balsora, and sailed quickly and safely
to Serendib. Here, when I had disclosed my errand,
I was well received, and brought into the presence
of the king, who greeted me with joy. "Welcome,
Sinbad," he cried. "I have thought of
you often, and rejoice to see you once more."
After thanking him for the honour that he did me,
I displayed the Caliph's gifts. First a bed with
complete hangings all cloth of gold, which cost
a thousand sequins, and another like to it of crimson
stuff. Fifty robes of rich embroidery, a hundred
of the finest white linen from Cairo, Suez, Cufa,
and Alexandria. Then more beds of different fashion,
and an agate vase carved with the figure of a man
aiming an arrow at a lion, and finally a costly
table, which had once belonged to King Solomon.
The King of Serendib received with satisfaction
the assurance of the Caliph's friendliness toward
him, and now my task being accomplished I was anxious
to depart, but it was some time before the king
would think of letting me go. At last, however,
he dismissed me with many presents, and I lost no
time in going on board a ship, which sailed at once,
and for four days all went well. On the fifth day
we had the misfortune to fall in with pirates, who
seized our vessel, killing all who resisted, and
making prisoners of those who were prudent enough
to submit at once, of whom I was one. When they
had despoiled us of all we possessed, they forced
us to put on vile raiment, and sailing to a distant
island there sold us for slaves. I fell into the
hands of a rich merchant, who took me home with
him, and clothed and fed me well, and after some
days sent for me and questioned me as to what I
could do. I answered that I was a rich merchant
who had bee captured by pirates, and therefore I
knew no trade.
"Tell me,"
said he, "can you shoot with a bow?"
I replied that this had been one of the pastimes
of my youth, and that doubtless with practice my
skill would come back to me. Upon this he provided
me with a bow and arrows, and mounting me with him
upon his own elephant took the way to a vast forest
which lay far from the town. When we had reached
the wildest part of it we stopped, and my master
said to me: "This forest swarms with elephants.
Hide yourself in this great tree, and shoot at all
that pass you. When you have succeeded in killing
one come and tell me." So saying he gave me
a supply of food, and returned to the town, and
I perched myself high up in the tree and kept watch.
That night I saw nothing, but just after sunrise
the next morning a large herd of elephants came
crashing and trampling by. I lost no time in letting
fly several arrows, and at last one of the great
animals fell to the ground dead, and the others
retreated, leaving me free to come down from my
hiding place and run back to tell my master of my
success, for which I was praised and regaled with
good things. Then we went back to the forest together
and dug a mighty trench in which we buried the elephant
I had killed, in order that when it became a skeleton
my master might return and secure its tusks. For
two months I hunted thus, and no day passed without
my securing, an elephant. Of course I did not always
station myself in the same tree, but sometimes in
one place, sometimes in another. One morning as
I watched the coming of the elephants I was surprised
to see that, instead of passing the tree I was in,
as they usually did, they paused, and completely
surrounded it, trumpeting horribly, and shaking
the very ground with their heavy tread, and when
I saw that their eyes were fixed upon me I was terrified,
and my arrows dropped from my trembling hand. I
had indeed good reason for my terror when, an instant
later, the largest of the animals wound his trunk
round the stem of my tree, and with one mighty effort
tore it up by the roots, bringing me to the ground
entangled in its branches. I thought now that my
last hour was surely come; but the huge creature,
picking me up gently enough, set me upon its back,
where I clung more dead than alive, and followed
by the whole herd turned and crashed off into the
dense forest. It seemed to me a long time before
I was once more set upon my feet by the elephant,
and I stood as if in a dream watching the herd,
which turned and trampled off in another direction,
and were soon hidden in the dense underwood. Then,
recovering myself, I looked about me, and found
that I was standing upon the side of a great hill,
strewn as far as I could see on either hand with
bones and tusks of elephants. "This then must
be the elephants' burying place," I said to
myself, "and they must have brought me here
that I might cease to persecute them, seeing that
I want nothing but their tusks, and here lie more
than I could carry away in a lifetime." Whereupon
I turned and made for the city as fast as I could
go, not seeing a single elephant by the way, which
convinced me that they had retired deeper into the
forest to leave the way open to the Ivory Hill,
and I did not know how sufficiently to admire their
sagacity. After a day and a night I reached my master's
house, and was received by him with joyful surprise.
"Ah! poor Sinbad," he cried, "I was
wondering what could have become of you. When I
went to the forest I found the tree newly uprooted,
and the arrows lying beside it, and I feared I should
never see you again. Pray tell me how you escaped
death."
I soon satisfied his curiosity, and the next day
we went together to the Ivory Hill, and he was overjoyed
to find that I had told him nothing but the truth.
When we had loaded our elephant with as many tusks
as it could carry and were on our way back to the
city, he said:
"My brother--since
I can no longer treat as a slave one who has enriched
me thus--take your liberty and may Heaven prosper
you. I will no longer conceal from you that these
wild elephants have killed numbers of our slaves
every year. No matter what good advice we gave them,
they were caught sooner or later. You alone have
escaped the wiles of these animals, therefore you
must be under the special protection of Heaven.
Now through you the whole town will be enriched
without further loss of life, therefore you shall
not only receive your liberty, but I will also bestow
a fortune upon you." To which I replied, "Master,
I thank you, and wish you all prosperity. For myself
I only ask liberty to return to my own country."
"It is well,"
he answered, "the monsoon will soon bring the
ivory ships hither, then I will send you on your
way with somewhat to pay your passage."
So I stayed with him till the time of the monsoon,
and every day we added to our store of ivory till
all his ware-houses were overflowing with it. By
this time the other merchants knew the secret, but
there was enough and to spare for all. When the
ships at last arrived my master himself chose the
one in which I was to sail, and put on board for
me a great store of choice provisions, also ivory
in abundance, and all the costliest curiosities
of the country, for which I could not thank him
enough, and so we parted. I left the ship at the
first port we came to, not feeling at ease upon
the sea after all that had happened to me by reason
of it, and having disposed of my ivory for much
gold, and bought many rare and costly presents,
I loaded my pack animals, and joined a caravan of
merchants. Our journey was long and tedious, but
I bore it patiently, reflecting that at least I
had not to fear tempests, nor pirates, nor serpents,
nor any of the other perils from which I had suffered
before, and at length we reached Bagdad. My first
care was to present myself before the Caliph, and
give him an account of my embassy. He assured me
that my long absence had disquieted him much, but
he had nevertheless hoped for the best. As to my
adventure among the elephants he heard it with amazement,
declaring that he could not have believed it had
not my truthfulness been well known to him.
By his orders this story and the others I had told
him were written by his scribes in letters of gold,
and laid up among his treasures. I took my leave
of him, well satisfied with the honours and rewards
he bestowed upon me; and since that time I have
rested from my labours, and given myself up wholly
to my family and my friends. Thus Sinbad ended the
story of his seventh and last voyage, and turning
to Hindbad he added:
"Well, my friend, and what do you think now?
Have you ever heard of anyone who has suffered more,
or had more narrow escapes than I have? Is it not
just that I should now enjoy a life of ease and
tranquillity?"
Hindbad drew near, and kissing his hand respectfully,
replied, "Sir, you have indeed known fearful
perils; my troubles have been nothing compared to
yours. Moreover, the generous use you make of your
wealth proves that you deserve it May you live long
and happily in the enjoyment in it." Sinbad
then gave him a hundred sequins, and hence-forward
counted him among his friends; also he caused him
to give up his profession as a porter, and to eat
daily at his table that he might all his life remember
Sinbad the Sailor.
Edited by: Andrew
Lang 1918 |