The people who gathered pepper came
to meet me as soon as they saw me, and asked me in Arabic who I was, and
whence I came. I was overjoyed to hear them speak in my own language,
and satisfied their curiosity by giving them an account of my shipwreck,
and how I fell into the hands of the black men. 'Those black men,'
replied they, 'are cannibals, and by what miracle did you escape their
cruelty?' I told them the same story I now tell you, at which they were
wonderfully surprised.
I stayed with them till they had gathered their quantity of pepper, and
then sailed with them to the island from whence they came. They
presented me to their king, who was a good prince. He had the patience
to hear the relation of my adventures, which surprised him, and he
afterwards gave me clothes, and commanded care to be taken of me.
The island was very well peopled, plentiful in everything, and the
capital was a place of great trade. This agreeable retreat was very
comfortable to me after my misfortune, and the kindness of this generous
prince towards me completed my satisfaction. In a word, there was not a
person more in favor with him than myself; and, in consequence, every
man in court and city sought to oblige me, so that in a very little time
I was looked upon rather as a native than a stranger.
I observed one thing which to me appeared very extraordinary. All the
people, the king himself not excepted, rode their horses
without bridle or stirrups. This made me one day take the liberty to ask
the king how that came to pass. His majesty answered, that I talked to
him of things which nobody knew the use of in his dominions. I went
immediately to a workman, and gave him a model for making the stock of a
saddle. When that was done, I covered it myself with velvet and leather,
and embroidered it with gold. I afterwards went to a locksmith, who made
me a bridle according to the pattern I showed him, and then he made me
also some stirrups. When I had all things completed, I presented them to
the king, and put them upon one of his horses. His majesty mounted
immediately, and was so pleased with them, that he testified his
satisfaction by large presents to me. I could not avoid making several
others for his ministers and the principal officers of his household,
who all of them made me presents that enriched me in a little time. I
also made some for the people of best quality in the city, which gained
me great reputation and regard.
As I paid court very constantly to the king, he said to me one day,
'Sinbad, I love thee; and all my subjects who know thee treat thee
according to my example. I have one thing to demand of thee, which thou
must grant.'
'Sir,' answered I, 'there is nothing but I will do, as a mark of my
obedience to your majesty, whose power over me is absolute.'
'I have a mind thou shouldst marry,' replied he, 'that so thou mayst
stay in my dominion, and think no more of thy own country.'
I dared not resist the prince's will, and so he gave me one of the
ladies of his court, a noble, beautiful, and rich lady. The ceremonies
of marriage being over, I went and dwelt with the lady, and for some
time we lived together in perfect harmony. I was not, however, very well
satisfied with my condition, and therefore designed to make my escape on
the first occasion, and to return to Baghdad, which my present
settlement, how advantageous so ever, could not make me forget.
While I was thinking on this, the wife of one of my neighbors, with whom
I had contracted a very close friendship, fell sick and died. I went to
see and comfort him in his affliction, and finding him swallowed up with
sorrow, I said to him as soon as I saw him, 'God preserve you and grant
you a long life.'
'Alas!' replied he, 'how do you think I should obtain that favor you
wish me? I have not above an hour to live.'
'Pray,' said I,
'do not entertain such a melancholy thought; I hope it will not be so,
but that I shall enjoy your company for many years.'
'I wish you,' said he, 'a long life; but for me my days are at an end,
for I must be buried this day with my wife. This is a law which our
ancestors established in this island, and always observed inviolably.
The living husband is interred with the dead wife, and the living wife
with the dead husband. Nothing can save me; every one must submit to
this law.'
While he was entertaining me with an account of this barbarous custom,
the very hearing of which frightened me cruelly, his kindred, friends
and neighbors came in a body to assist at the funerals. They put on the
corpse the woman's richest apparel, as if it had been her wedding-day,
and dressed her with all her jewels; then they put her into an open
coffin, and lifting it up, began their march to the place of burial. The
husband walked at the head of the company, and followed the corpse. They
went up to a high mountain, and when they came thither, took up a great
stone, which covered the mouth of a very deep pit, and let down the
corpse, with all its apparel and jewels. Then the husband, embracing his
kindred and friends, suffered himself to be put into another open coffin
without resistance, with a pot of water, and seven little loaves, and
was let down in the same manner as they let down his wife. The mountain
was pretty long, and reached to the sea. The ceremony being over, they
covered the hole again with the stone, and returned.
It is needless to say that I was the only melancholy spectator of this
funeral, whereas the rest were scarcely moved at it, the practice was so
customary to them. I could not forbear speaking my thoughts on this
matter to the king. 'Sir,' said I, 'I cannot but wonder at the strange
custom in this country of burying the living with the dead. I have been
a great traveler, and seen many countries, but never heard of so cruel a
law.'
'What do you mean, Sinbad?' said the king; 'it is a common law. I shall
be interred with the queen, my wife, if she die first.'
'But, sir,' said I, 'may I presume to ask your majesty if strangers be
obliged to observe this law?'
'Without doubt,' replied the king, smiling at my question; 'they are not
exempted, if they are married in this island.'
I went home very melancholy at this answer, for the fear of my wife
dying first, and my being interred alive with her, occasioned me very
mortifying reflections. But there was no remedy: I must have patience,
and submit to the will of God. I trembled, however, at every little
indisposition of my wife; but alas! in a little time my fears came upon
me all at once, for she fell ill, and died in a few days.
You may judge of my sorrow; to be interred alive seemed to me as
deplorable an end as to be devoured by cannibals. But I must submit; the
king and all his court would honor the funeral with their presence, and
the most considerable people of the city would do the like. When all was
ready for the ceremony, the corpse was put into a coffin, with all her
jewels and magnificent apparel. The cavalcade began, and, as second
actor in this doleful tragedy, I went next to the corpse, with my eyes
full of tears, bewailing my deplorable fate. Before I came to the
mountain, I addressed myself to the king, in the first place, and then
to all those who were round me, and bowing before them to the earth to
kiss the border of their garments, I prayed them to have compassion upon
me. 'Consider,' said I, 'that I am a stranger, and ought not to be
subject to this rigorous law, and that I have another wife and child in
my own country.' It was to no purpose for me to speak thus, no soul was
moved at it; on the contrary, they made haste to let down my wife's
corpse into the pit, and put me down the next moment in an open coffin,
with a vessel full of water and seven loaves. In short, the fatal
ceremony being performed, they covered up the mouth of the pit,
notwithstanding the excess of my grief and my lamentable cries.