When it was the Eight Hundred and Sixty-ninth Night; She pursued,It hath reached me,O auspicious King,that the girl gave to Nur al-Din all she had doffed,saying,'O beloved of my heart,in very sooth the gift is after the measure of the giver.'
So he accepted this from her and gave it back to her and kissed her on the mouth and cheeks and eyes.When this was ended and done,for naught is durable save the Living,the Eternal;Provider of the peacock and the owl,[438] Nur al-Din rose from the seance and stood upon his feet,because the darkness was now fallen and the stars shone out;whereupon quoth the damsel to him,'Whither away,O my lord?';and quoth he,'To my father's home.'Then the sons of the merchants conjured him to night with them,but he refused and mounting his shemule,rode,without stopping,till he reached his parent's house,where his mother met him and said to him,'O my son,what hath kept thee away till this hour? By Allah,thou hast troubled myself and thy sire by thine absence from us,and our hearts have been occupied with thee.'Then she came up to him,to kiss him on his mouth,and smelling the fumes of the wine,said,'O my wine-bibber and a rebel against Him to whom belong creation and commandment?'But Nur al-Din threw himself down on the bed and lay there.Presently in came his sire and said,'What aileth Nur al-Din to lie thus?'
and his mother answered,'Twould seem his head acheth for the air of the garden.'So Taj al-Din went up to his son,to ask him of his ailment,and salute him,and smelt the reek of wine.[439] Now the merchant loved not wine-drinkers;so he said to Nur al-Din,'Woe to thee,O my son! Is folly come to such a pass with thee,that thou drinkest wine?'When Nur al-Din heard his sire say this,he raised his hand,being yet in his drunkenness,and dealt him a buffet,when by decree of the Decreer the blow lit on his father's right eye which rolled down on his cheek;whereupon he fell a-swoon and lay therein awhile.
They sprinkled rose-water on him till he recovered,when he would have beaten his son;but the mother withheld him,and he swore;by the oath of divorce from his wife that,as soon as morning morrowed,he would assuredly cut off his son's right hand.[440] When she heard her husband's words,her breast was straitened and she feared for he son and ceased not to soothe and appease his sire,till sleep overcame him.Then she waited till moon-rise,when she went in to her son,whose drunkenness had now departed from him,and said to him,'O Nur al-Din,what is this foul deed thou diddest with thy sire?'He asked,'And what did I with him?';and answered she,'Thou dealtest him a buffet on the right eye and struckest it out so that it rolled down his cheek;
and he hath sworn by the divorce-oath that,as soon as morning shall morrow he will without fail cut off thy right hand.'Nur al-Din repented him of that he had done,whenas repentance profited him naught,and his mother sait to him,'O my son,this penitence will not profit thee;nor will aught avail thee but that thou arise forthwith and seek safety in flight: go forth the house privily and take refuge with one of thy friends and there what Allah shall do await,for he changeth case after case and state upon state.'Then she opened a chest and taking out a purse of an hundred dinars said,'O my son,take these dinars and provide thy wants therewith,and when they are at an end,O my son,send and let me know thereof,that I may send thee other than these,and at the same time covey to me news of thyself privily: haply Allah will decree thee relief and thou shalt return to thy home.And she farewelled him and wept passing sore;nought could be more.Thereupon Nur al-Din took the purse of gold and was about to go forth,when he espied a great purse containing a thousand dinars,which his mother had forgotten by the side of the chest.So he took this also and binding the two purses about his middle,[441] set out before dawn threading the streets in the direction of Bulak,where he arrived when day broke and all creatures arose,attesting the unity of Allah the Opener and went forth each of them upon his several business,to win that which Allah had unto him allotted.Reaching Bulak he walked on along the riverbank till he sighted a ship with her gangway out and her four anchors made fast to the land.The folk were going up into her and coming down from her,and Nur al-Din;seeing some sailors there standing,asked them whither they were bound,and they answered,'To Rosetta-city.'Quoth he,'Take me with you;'and quoth they,'Well come,and welcome to thee,to thee,O goodly one!'So he betook himself forthright to the market and buying what he needed of vivers and bedding and covering,returned to the port and went on board the ship,which was ready to sail and tarried with him but a little while before she weighed anchor and fared on,without stopping,till she reached Rosetta,[442] where Nur al-Din saw a small boat going to Alexandria.So he embarked in it and traversing the sea-arm of Rosetta fared on till he came to a bridge called Al-Jami,where he landed and entered Alexandria by the gate called the Gate of the Lote-tree.Allah protected him,so that none of those who stood on guard at the gate saw him,and he walked on till he entered the city.--And Shahrazad perceived the dawn of day and ceased to say her permitted say.