Job Opportunities
"Charming Maimoune," asked Danhasch, "may I inquire who and what is the
prince of whom you speak?"
"Know," replied Maimoune, "that he is in much the same case as your
princess. The king, his father, wanted to force him to marry, and on the
prince's refusal to obey he has been imprisoned in an old tower where I
have just seen him."
"I don't like to contradict a lady," said Danhasch, "but you must
really permit me to doubt any mortal being as beautiful as my princess."
"Hold your tongue," cried Maimoune. "I repeat that is impossible."
Heading One
"Well, I don't wish to seem obstinate," replied Danhasch, "the best
plan to test the truth of what I say will be for you to let me take you
to see the princess for yourself."
"There is no need for that," retorted Maimoune; "we can satisfy
ourselves in another way. Bring your princess here and lay her down
beside my prince. We can then compare them at leisure, and decide which
is in the right."
Danhasch readily consented, and after having the tower where the
prince was confined pointed out to him, and making a wager with Maimoune
as to the result of the comparison, he flew off to China to fetch the
princess.
In an incredibly short time Danhasch returned, bearing the sleeping
princess. Maimoune led him to the prince's room, and the rival beauty
was placed beside him.
Heading Two
When the prince and princess lay thus side by side, an animated
dispute as to their respective charms arose between the fairy and the
genius. Danhasch began by saying: "Now you see that my princess is more
beautiful than your prince. Can you doubt any longer?"
"Doubt! Of course I do!" exclaimed Maimoune. "Why, you must be blind
not to see how much my prince excels your princess. I do not deny that
your princess is very handsome, but only look and you must own that I am
in the right."
"There is no need for me to look longer," said Danhasch, "my first
impression will remain the same; but of course, charming Maimoune, I am
ready to yield to you if you insist on it."
"By no means," replied Maimoune. "I have no idea of being under any
obligation to an accursed genius like you. I refer the matter to an
umpire, and shall expect you to submit to his verdict."
"Rise, Caschcasch," said she. "I summoned you to judge between me and
Danhasch. Glance at that couch, and say without any partiality whether
you think the youth or the maiden lying there the more beautiful."
Caschcasch looked at the prince and princess with every token of
surprise and admiration. At length, having gazed long without being able
to come to a decision, he said "Madam, I must confess that I should
deceive you were I to declare one to be handsomer than the other. There
seems to me only one way in which to decide the matter, and that is to
wake one after the other and judge which of them expresses the greater
admiration for the other."
Heading Three
This advice pleased Maimoune and Danhasch, and the fairy at once
transformed herself into the shape of a gnat and settling on
Camaralzaman's throat stung him so sharply that he awoke. As he did so
his eyes fell on the Princess of China. Surprised at finding a lady so
near him, he raised himself on one arm to look at her. The youth and
beauty of the princess at once awoke a feeling to which his heart had as
yet been a stranger, and he could not restrain his delight.
Continued