The Story Of Ahikar
We have in The
Story of Ahikar (Haiqar) one of the most ancient sources of human
thought and wisdom. Its influence can be traced through the legends of many
people, including the Koran, and the Old and New Testaments.
Amosaic found in Treves, Germany, pictured among
the wise men of the world the character of Ahikar. Here is his colorful tale.
The date of this story has been a subject of lively discussion. Scholars finally
put it down about the First Century when they were proved in error by the
original story turning up in an Aramaic papyrus of 500 B. C. among the ruins of
Elephantine.
The story is obviously fiction and not history. In fact the reader can make its
acquaintance in the supplementary pages of The Arabian Nights. It is
brilliantly written, and the narrative which is full of action, intrigue, and
narrow escape holds the attention to the last. The liberty of imagination is the
most precious possession of the writer.
The writing divides itself into four phases: (1) The Narrative; (2)The Teaching
(a remarkable series of Proverbs); (3)The Journey to Egypt; (4) The Similitudes
or Parables (with which Ahikar completes the education of his erring nephew).
CHAP. I.
Ahikar, Grand Vizier of Assyria,
has 60 wives but is fated to have no son.
Therefore he adopts his nephew. He crams him full of wisdom and knowledge more
than of bread and water.
- THE story of Haiqar the Wise,
Vizier of Sennacherib the King, and of Nadan, sister's son to Haiqar the
Sage.
- There was a Vizier in the days of King
Sennacherib, son of Sarhadum, King of Assyria and Nineveh, a wise man named
Haiqar, and he was Vizier of the king Sennacherib.
- He had a fine fortune and much goods, and he
was skilful, wise, a philosopher, in knowledge, in opinion and in
government, and he had married sixty women, and had built a castle for each
of them.
- But with it all he had no child by any of
these women, who might be his heir.
- And he was very sad on account of this, and
one day he assembled the astrologers and the learned men and
the wizards and explained to them his condition and the matter of his
barrenness.
- And they said to him, 'Go, sacrifice to the
gods and beseech them that perchance they may provide thee with a boy.'
- And he did as they told him and offered
sacrifices to the idols, and besought them and implored them with
request and entreaty.
- And they answered him not one word. And he
went away sorrowful and dejected, departing with a pain at his heart.
- And he returned, and implored the Most High
God, and believed, beseeching Him with a burning in his heart, saying, '0
Most High God, 0 Creator of the Heavens and of the earth, o Creator of all
created things!
- I beseech Thee to give me a boy, that I may be
consoled by him, that he may be present at my death, that
he may close my eyes, and that he may bury me.'
- Then there came to him a voice saying,
'Inasmuch as thou hast relied first of all on graven images, and hast
offered sacrifices to them, for this reason thou Shalt remain childless thy
life long.
- But take Nadan thy sister's son, and make him
thy child and teach him thy learning and thy good breeding, and at thy death
he shall bury thee.'
- Thereupon he took Nadan his sister's son, who
was a little suckling. And he handed him over to eight wet-nurses, that they
might suckle him and bring him up.
- And they brought him up with good food and
gentle training and silken clothing, and purple and crimson.
And he was seated upon couches of silk.
- And when Nadan grew big and walked, shooting
up like a tall cedar, he taught him good manners and writing and science and
philosophy.
- And after many days King Sennacherib looked at
Haiqar and saw that he had grown very old, and moreover he said to him.
- '0 my honoured friend, the skilful, the
trusty, the wise, the governor, my secretary, my vizier, my Chancellor and
director; verily thou art grown very old and weighted with years; and thy
departure from
this world must be near.
- Tell me who shall have a place in my service
after thee.' And Haiqar said to him, '0 my lord, may thy head live for ever!
There is Nadan my sister's son, I have made him my child.
- And I have brought him up and taught him my
wisdom and my knowledge.'
- And the king said to him, '0 Haiqar ! bring
him to my presence, that I may see him, and if I find him suitable, put him
in thy place; and thou shalt go thy way, to take a rest and to live the
remainder of thy life in sweet repose.'
- Then Haiqar went and presented Nadan his
sister's son. And he did homage and wished him power and honour.
- And he looked at him and admired him and
rejoiced in him and said to Haiqar: 'Is this thy son, 0 Haiqar? I pray
that God may preserve him. And as thou hast served me and my father Sarhadum
so may this boy of thine serve me and fulfil my undertakings, my needs, and
my business, so that I may honour him and make
him powerful for thy sake.'
- And Haiqar did obeisance to the king and said
to him 'May thy head live, 0 my lord the king, for ever! I seek from thee
that thou mayst be patient with my boy Nadan and forgive his mistakes that
he may serve thee as it is fitting.'
- Then the king swore to him that he would make
him the greatest of his favourites, and the most powerful of his friends,
and that he should be with him in all honour and respect. And he kissed his
hands and bade him farewell.
- And he took Nadan his sister's son with him
and seated him in a parlour and set about teaching him night and day till he
had crammed him with wisdom and knowledge more than with bread and water.
CHAP. II.
A "Poor Richard's Almanac" of ancient
days. Immortal precepts of human conduct concerning money, women, dress,
business, friends. Especially interesting proverbs are found in Verses 12, 17,
23, 37, 45, 47 Compare Verse 63 with some oj the cynicism of today.
- Thus he taught him, saying: '0 my son! hear my
speech and follow my advice and remember what I say.
- O my son! if thou hearest a word, let it die
in thy heart, and reveal it not to another, lest it become a live coal and
burn thy tongue and cause a pain in thy body, and thou gain a reproach, and
art shamed before God and man.
- 0 my son! if thou hast heard a report, spread
it not; and if thou hast seen something, tell it not.
- 0 my son! make thy eloquence easy to the
listener, and be not hasty to return an answer.
- 0 my son! when thou hast heard anything, hide
it not.
- 0 my son! loose not a sealed knot, nor untie
it, and seal not a loosened knot.
- 0 my son! covet not outward beauty, for it
wanes and passes away, but an honourable remembrance lasts for aye.
- 0 my son! let not a silly woman deceive thee
with her speech, lest thou die the most miserable of deaths, and she
entangle thee in the net till thou art ensnared.
- 0 my son! desire not a woman bedizened with
dress and with ointments, who is despicable and silly in her soul.
Woe to thee if thou bestow on her anything that is thine, or commit to her
what is in thine hand and , she entice thee into sin, and God be wroth with
thee.
- 0 my son! be not like the almond-tree, for it
brings forth leaves before all the trees, and edible fruit after them all,
but be like the mulberry - tree, which brings forth edible fruit before all
the trees, and leaves after them all.
- 0 my son! bend thy head low down, and soften
thy voice, and be courteous, and walk in the straight path, and be not
foolish. And raise not thy voice when thou laughest, for if it were by a
loud voice that a house was built, the ass would build many houses every
day; and if it were by dint of strength that the plough were driven, the
plough would never be removed from under the shoulders of the camels.
- 0 my son! the removing of stones with a wise
man is better than the drinking of wine with a sorry man.
- 0 my son! pour out thy wine on the tombs of
the just, and drink not with ignorant, contemptible people.
- 0 my son! cleave to wise men who fear God and
be like them, and go not near the ignorant, lest thou become like him and
learn his ways.
- 0 my son! when thou hast got thee a comrade or
a friend, try him, and afterwards make him a comrade and a friend; and do
not praise him without a trial; and do not spoil thy speech with a man who
lacks wisdom.
- 0 my son! while a shoe stays on thy foot, walk
with it on the thorns, and make a road for thy son, and for thy household
and thy children, and make thy ship taut before she goes on the sea and its
waves and sinks and cannot be saved.
- 0 my son! if the rich man eat a snake, they
say, "It is by his wisdom," and if a poor man eat it, the people
say, "From his hunger."
- 0 my son! be content with thy daily bread and
thy goods, and covet not what is another's.
- 0 my son! be not neighbour to the fool, and
eat not bread with him, and rejoice not in the calamities of thy neighbours.
(Psalms CXLI. 4) If thine enemy wrong thee, show him kindness.
- 0 my son! a man who fears God do thou fear him
and honour him.
- 0 my son! the ignorant man falls and stumbles,
and the wise man, even if he stumbles, he is not shaken, and even if he
falls he gets up quickly, and if he is sick, he can take care of his life.
But as for the ignorant, stupid man, for his disease there is no drug.
- 0 my son! if a man approach thee who is
inferior to thyself, go forward to meet him, and remain standing, and if he
cannot recompense thee, his Lord will recompense thee for him.
- 0 my son! spare not to beat thy son, for the
drubbing of thy son is like manure to the garden, and like tying the mouth
of a purse, and like the tethering of beasts, and like the bolting of the
door.
- 0 my son! restrain thy son from wickedness,
and teach him manners before he rebels against thee and brings thee into
contempt amongst the people and thou hang thy head in the streets and the
assemblies and thou be punished for the evil of his wicked deeds.
- 0 my son! get thee a fat ox with a foreskin,
and an ass great with its hoofs, and get not an ox with large horns, nor
make friends with a tricky man, nor get a quarrelsome slave, nor a thievish
handmaid, for everything which thou committest to them they will ruin.
- 0 my son! let not thy parents curse thee, and
the Lord be pleased with them; for it hath been said, "He who despiseth
his father or his mother let him die the death (I mean the death of sin);
and he who honoureth his parents shall prolong his days and his life and
shall see all that is good."
- 0 my son! walk not on the road without
weapons, for thou knowest not when the foe may meet thee, so that thou mayst
be ready for him.
- 0 my son! be not like a bare, leafless tree
that doth not grow, but be like a tree covered with its leaves and its
boughs; for the man who has neither wife nor children is disgraced in the
world and is hated by them, like a leafless and fruitless tree.
- 0 my son! be like a fruitful tree on the
roadside, whost fruit is eaten by all who pass by, and the beasts of the
desert rest under its shade and eat of its leaves.
- 0 my son! every sheep that wanders from its
path and its companions becomes food for the wolf.
- 0 my son! say not, "My lord is a fool and
I am wise,' and relate not the speech of ignorance and folly, lest thou be
despised by him.
- 0 my son! be not one of those servants, to
whom their lords say, "Get away from us," but be one of those to
whom they say, "Approach and come near to us."
- 0 my son! caress not thy slave in the presence
of his companion, for thou knowest not which of them shall be of most value
to thee in the end.
- 0 my son! be not afraid of thy Lord who
created thee, lest He be silent to thee.
- 0 my son! make thy speech fair and sweeten thy
tongue; and permit not thy companion to tread on thy foot, lest he tread at
another time on thy breast.
- 0 my son! if thou beat a wise man with a word
of wisdom, it will lurk in his breast like a subtle sense of shame; but if
thou drub the ignorant with a stick he will neither understand nor hear,
- 0 my son! if thou send a wise man for thy
needs, do not give him many orders, for he will do thy business as thou
desirest: and if thou send a fool, do not order him, but go thyself and do
thy business, for if thou order him, he, will not do what thou desirest. If
they send thee on business, hasten to fulfil it quickly,
- 0 my son! make not an enemy of a man stronger
than thyself, for he will take thy measure, and his revenge on thee.
- 0 my son! make trial of thy son, and of thy
servant, before thou committest thy belongings to them, lest they
make away with them; for he who hath a full hand is called wise, even if he
be stupid and ignorant, and he who hath an empty hand is called poor,
ignorant, even if he be the prince of sages.
- 0 my son! I have eaten a colocynth, and
swallowed aloes, and I have found nothing more bitter than poverty and
scarcity.
- 0 my son! teach thy son frugality and hunger,
that he may do well in the management of his household.
- 0 my son! teach not to the ignorant the
language of wise men, for it will be burdensome to him.
- 0 my son! display not thy condition to thy
friend, lest thou be despised by him.
- 0 my son! the blindness of the heart is more
grievous than the blindness of the eyes, for the blindness of the eyes may
be guided little by little, but the blindness of the heart is not guided,
and it leaves the straight path, and goes in a crooked way.
- 0 my son! the stumbling of a man with his foot
is better than the stumbling of a man with his tongue.
- 0 my son! a friend who is near is better than
a more excellent brother who is far away.
- 0 my son! beauty fades but learning lasts, and
the world wanes and becomes vain, but a good name neither becomes vain nor
wanes.
- 0 my son! the man who hath no rest, his death
were better than his life; and the sound of weeping is better than the sound
of singing; for sorrow and weeping, if the fear of God be in them, are
better than the sound of singing and rejoicing.
- 0 my child! the thigh of a frog in thy hand is
better than a goose in the pot of thy neighbour; and a sheep near thee is
better than an ox far away; and a sparrow in thy hand is better than a
thousand sparrows flying; and
poverty which gathers is better than the scattering of much provision; and a
living fox is better than a dead lion; and a pound of wool is better than a
pound of wealth, I mean of gold and silver; for the gold and the silver are
hidden and covered up in the earth, and are not seen; but the wool stays. in
the markets and it is seen,
and it is a beauty to him who wears it.
- 0 my son! a small fortune is better than a
scattered fortune.
- 0 my son! a living dog is better than a dead
poor man.
- 0 my son! a poor man who does right is better
than a rich man who is dead in sins.
- 0 my son! keep a word in thy heart, and it
shall be much to thee, and beware lest thou reveal the secret of thy friend.
- 0 my son! let not a word issue from thy mouth
till thou hast taken counsel with thy heart. And stand not betwixt persons
quarrelling, because from a bad word there comes a quarrel, and from a
quarrel there comes war, and from war there comes fighting, and thou wilt be
forced to bear witness; but run from thence and rest thyself.
- 0 my son! withstand not a man stronger than
thyself, but get thee a patient spirit, and endurance and an upright
conduct, for there is nothing more excellent than that.
- 0 my son! hate not thy first friend, for the
second one may not last.
- 0 my son! visit the poor in his affliction,
and speak of him in the Sultan's presence, and do thy diligence to save him
from the mouth of the lion.
- 0 my son! rejoice not in the death of thine
enemy, for after a little while thou shalt be his neighbour, and him
who mocks thee do thou respect and honour and be beforehand with him in
greeting.
- 0 my son! if water would stand still in
heaven, and a black crow become white, and myrrh grow sweet as honey, then
ignorant men and fools might understand and become wise.
- 0 my son! if thou desire to be wise, restrain
thy tongue from lying, and thy hand from stealing, and thine eyes from
beholding evil; then thou wilt be called wise.
- 0 my son! let the wise man beat thee with a
rod, but let not the fool anoint thee with sweet salve. Be humble in thy
youth and thou shalt be honoured in thine old age.
- 0 my son! withstand not a man in the days of
his power, nor a river in the days of its flood.
- 0 my son! be not hasty in the wedding of a
wife, for if it turns out well, she will say, 'My lord, make provision for
me'; and if it turns out ill, she will rate at him who was the cause of it.
- 0 my son! whosoever is elegant in his dress,
he is the same in his speech; and he who has a mean appearance in his dress,
he also is the same in his speech.
- 0 my son! if thou hast committcd a theft, make
it known to the Sultan, and give him a share of it, that thou rnayst be
delivered from him, for otherwise thou wilt endure bitterness.
- 0 my son! make a friend of the man whose hand
is satisfied and filled, and make no friend of the man whose hand is closed
and hungry.
- There are four things in which neither the
king nor his army can be secure: oppression by the vizier, and bad
government, and perversion of the will, and tyranny over the subject; and
four things which cannot be hidden:
the prudent, and the foolish, and the rich, and the poor.
CHAP. III
Ahikar retires from active
participation in affairs of state. He turns over his possessions to his
treacherous nephew. Here is the amazing story of how a thankless profligate
turns forgerer. A clever plot to entangle Ahikar results in his being condemned
to death. Apparently the end of Ahikar.
- Thus spake Haiqar, and when he had finished
these injunctions and proverbs to Nadan, his sister's son, he imagined that he
would keep them all, and he knew not that instead of that he was displaying to
him weariness and contempt and mockery.
- Thereafter Haiqar sat still in his house and
delivered over to Nadan all his goods, and the slaves, and the handmaidens, and the horses, and the cattle, and everything else that he
had possessed and gained; and the power of bidding and of forbidding remained in the hand of Nadan.
- And Haiqar sat at rest is his house, and every
now and then Haiqar went and paid his respects to the king, and returned home.
- Now when Nadan perceived that the power of
bidding and of forbidding was in his own hand, he despised the position of Haiqar and scoffed at him, and set about blaming him
whenever he appeared, saying, 'My uncle Haiqar is in his dotage, and he knows nothing now.'
- And he began to beat the slaves and the
handmaidens, and to sell the horses and the camels and be spendthrift with all that his uncle Haiqar had owned.
- And when Haiqar saw that he had no compassion
on his servants nor on his household, he arose and chased him from his house, and sent to inform the king that he had
scattered his possessions and his provision.
- And the king arose and called Nadan and said to
him: 'Whilst Haiqar remains in health, no one shall rule over his goods, nor over his
household, nor over his possessions.'
- And the hand of Nadan was lifted off from his
uncle Haiqar and from all his goods, and in the meantime he went neither in nor out, nor did he greet him.
- Thereupon Haiqar repented him of his toil with
Nadan his sister's son, and he continued to be very sorrowful.
- And Nadan had a younger brother named
Benuzardan, so Haiqar took him to himself in place of Nadan, and brought him up and honoured him with the utmost honour. And he delivered
over to him all that he possessed, and made him governor of his house.
- Now when Nadan perceived what had happened he
was seized with envy and jealousy, and he
began to complain to every one who questioned him, and to mock his uncle Haiqar,
saying:
'My uncle has chased me from his house, and has preferred my brother to me,
but if the Most High God give me the power, I shall bring upon him the
misfortune of being killed.'
- And Nadan continued to meditate as to the
stumblingblock he might contrive for him. And after a while Nadan turned it over in his mind, and wrote a letter to
Achish, son of Shah the Wise, king of Persia, saying thus:
- 'Peace and health and might and honour from
Sennacherib king of Assyria and Nineveh, and from his vizier and his secretary Haiqar unto thee, 0 great king! Let there be peace
between thee and me.
- And when this letter reaches thee, if thou
wilt arise and go quickly to the plain of Nisrin, and to Assyria and Nineveh, I will deliver up the kingdom to thee without war
and without battle-array.'
- And he wrote also another letter in the name
of Haiqar to Pharaoh king of Egypt.'Let there be peace between thee and me, 0 mighty king!
- If at the time of this letter reaching thee
thou wilt arise and go to Assyria and Nineveh to the plain of Nisrin, I will deliver up to thee the kingdom without war and without fighing.'
- And the writing of Nadan was like to the
writing of his uncle Haiqar.
- Then he folded the two letters, and sealed
them with the seal of his uncle Haiqar; they were nevertheless in the king's
palace.
- Then he went and wrote a letter likewise from
the king to his uncle Haiqar: 'Peace and health to my Vizier,
my Secretary, my Chancellor, Haiqar.
- 0 Haiqar, when this letter reaches thee,
assemble all the soldiers who are with thee, and let them be perfect in clothing
and in numbers, and bring them to me on the fifth day in the plain of Nisrin.
- And when thou shalt see me there coming
towards thee, haste and make the army move against me as an enemy who would
fight with me, for I have with me the ambassadors of Pharaoh king of Egypt, that
they may see the strength of our army and may fear us, for they are our enemies
and they hate us.'
- Then he sealed the letter and sent it to
Haiqar by one of the king's servants. And he took the other letter which he had
written and spread it before the king and read it to him and showed him the
seal.
- And when the king heard what was in the letter
he was perplexed with a great perplexity and was wroth with a great and fierce
wrath, and said, 'Ah, I have shown my wisdom! what have I done to Haiqar that he
has written these letters to my enemies? Is this my recompense from him for my
benefits to him?'
- And Nadan said to him, 'Be not grieved, 0
king! nor be wroth, but let us go to the plain of Nisrin and see if the tale be
true or not.'
- Then Nadan arose on the fifth day and took the
king and the soldiers and the vizier, and they went to the desert to the plain
of Nisrin. And the king looked, and lo! Haiqar and the army were set in array.
- And when Haiqar saw that the king was there,
he approached and signalled to the army to move as in war and to fight in
array against the king as it had been found in the letter, he not knowing
what a pit Nadan had digged for him.
- And when the king saw the act of Haiqar he was
seized with anxiety and terror and perplexity, and was wroth with a great wrath.
- And Nadan said to him, 'Hast thou seen, 0 my
lord the king! what this wretch has done? but be not thou wroth and be not grieved nor pained, but go to thy house and sit
on thy throne, and I will bring Haiqar to thee bound and chained with chains, and I will chase
away thine enemy from thee without toil.'
- And the king returned to his throne, being
provoked about Haiqar, and did nothing concerning him. And Nadan went to Haiqar and said to him, 'W'allah, 0 my uncle! The king verily
rejoiceth in thee with great joy and thanks thee for having done what he commanded thee.
- And now he hath sent me to thee that thou
mayst dismiss the soldiers to their duties and come thyself to
him with thy hands bound behind thee, and thy feet chained, that the ambassadors
of Pharaoh may see this,
and that the king may be feared by them and by their king.'
- Then answered Haiqar and said, 'To hear is to
obey.' And he arose straightway and bound his hands behind him, and chained his
feet.
- And Nadan took him and went with him to the
king. And when Haiqar entered the king's presence he did
obeisance before him on the ground, and wished for power and perpetual life to
the king.
- Then said the king, '0 Haiqar, my Secretary,
the Governor of my affairs, my Chancellor, the ruler of my State,
tell me what evil have I done to thee that thou hast rewarded me by this ugly
deed.'
- Then they showed him the letters In his
writing and with his seal. And when Haiqar saw this, his limbs trembled and his
tongue was tied at once, and he was unable to speak a word from fear; but he
hung his head towards the earth and was dumb.
- And when the king saw this, he felt certain
that the thing was from him, and he straightway arose and
commanded them to kill Haiqar, and to strike his neck with the sword outside of
the city.
- Then Nadan screamed and said, '0 Haiqar, 0
blackface! what avails thee thy meditation or thy power in the doing of this deed to the king?'
- Thus says the story-teller. And the name of
the swordsman was Abu Samik. And the king said to him,
'0 swordsman! arise go, cleave the neck of Haiqar at the door of his house, and
cast away his head from his body a hundred cubits.'
- Then Haiqar knelt before the king, and said,
'Let my lord the king live for ever! and if thou desire to slay me,
let thy wish be fulfilled; and I know that I am not guilty, but the wicked man
has to give an account of his wickedness; nevertheless, 0 my lord the king! I
beg of thee and of thy friendship, permit the swordsman to give my body to my
slaves, that they may bury me, and let thy slave be thy sacrifice.'
- The king arose and commanded the swordsman to
do with him according to his desire.
- And he straightway commanded his servants to
take Haiqar and the swordsman and go with him naked that
they might slay him.
- And when Haiqar knew for certain that he was
to be slain he sent to his wife, and said to her, 'Come out and meet me, and let
there be with thee a thousand young virgins, and dress them in gowns of purple
and silk
that they may weep for me fore my death.
- And prepare a table for the swordsman and for
his servants. And mingle plenty of wine, that they may drink.'
- And she did all that he commanded her. And she
was very wise, clever, and prudent. And she united all possible courtesy and learning.
- And when the army of the king and the
swordsman arrived they found the table set in order, and the wine and the luxurious viands, and they began eating and drinking till
they were gorged and drunken.
- Then Haiqar took the swordsman aside apart
from the company and said, '0 Abu Samik, dost thou not know
that when Sarhadum the king, the father of Sennacherib, wanted to kill thee, I
took thee and hid thee in a certain place till the king's anger subsided and he asked for thee?
- And when I brought thee into his presence he
rejoiced in thee: and now remember the kindness I did thee.
- And I know that the king will repent him about
me and will be wroth with a great wrath about my execution.
- For I am not guilty, and it shall he when thou
shalt present me before him in his palace, thou shalt meet with great good
fortune, and know that Nadan my sister's son has deceived me and has done this
bad deed to me, and the king will repent of having slain me; and now I have a
cellar in the garden of my house, and no one knows of it.
- Hide me in it with the knowledge of my wife.
And I have a slave in prison who deserves to be killed.
- Bring him out and dress him in my clothes, and
command the servants when they are drunk to slay him.
They will not know who it is they are killing.
- And cast away his head a hundred cubits from
his body, and give his body to my slaves that they may bury it. And thou shalt have laid up a great treasure with me.
- And then the swordsman did as Haiqar had
commanded him, and he went to the king and said to him,
'May thy head live for ever!'
- Then Haiqar's wife let down to him in the
hiding-place every week what sufficed for him and no one knew of it but
herself.
- And the story was reported and repeated and
spread abroad in every place of how Haiqar the Sage had been slain and was dead,
and all the people of that city mourned for him.
- And they wept and said: 'Alas for thee, 0 Haiqar! and for thy learning and thy courtesy! How sad about
thee and about thy knowledge! Where can another like thee be found? and where can there be a man so
intelligent, so learned, so skilled in ruling as to resemble thee that he may
fill thy place?'
- But the king was repenting about Haiqar, and
his repentance availed him naught.
- Then he called for Nadan and said to him, 'Go
and take thy friends with thee and make a mourning and a weeping for thy uncle
Haiqar, and lament for him as the custom is, doing honour to his memory.'
- But when Nadan, the foolish, the ignorant, the
hardhearted, went to the house of his uncle, he neither wept nor sorrowed nor wailed, but assembled heartless and dissolute people and set about
eating and drinking.
- And Nadan began to seize the maidservants and
the slaves belonging to Haiqar, and bound them and tortured them and drubbed
them with a sore drubbing.
- And he did not respect the wife of his uncle,
she who had brought him up like her own boy, but wanted her to fall into sin with him.
- But Haiqar had been cast into the
hiding-place, and he heard the weeping of his slaves and his neighbours, and he
praised the Most High God, the Merciful One, and gave thanks, and he always
prayed and besought the Most High God.
- And the swordsman came from time to time to
Haiqar whilst he was in the midst of the hiding-place: and Haiqar came and entreated him. And he comforted him and wished his deliverance.
- And when the story was reported in other
countries that Haiqar the Sage had been slain all the kings were grieved and
despised king Sennacherib, and they lamented over Haiqar the solver of riddles.
CHAP. IV.
"The Riddles of the Sphinx." What
really happened to Ahikar, His return.
- And when
the king of Egypt had made sure that Haiqar was slain, he arose straightway and
wrote a letter to king Sennacherib, reminding him in it 'of the peace and the
health and the might and the honour which we wish specially for thee, my beloved
brother, king Sennacherib.
- I have been desiring to build a castle between
the heaven and the earth, and I want thee to send me a wise, clever man from
thyself to build it for me, and to answer me all my questions, and that I may
have the taxes and the custom duties of Asyria for three years.'
- Then he sealed the letter and sent it to
Sennacherib.
- He took it and read it and gave it to
his viziers and to the nobles of his kingdom, and they were perplexed and
ashamed, and he was wroth with a great wrath, and was puzzled about how he
should act.
- Then he assembled the old men and the learned
men and the wise men and the philosophers, and the diviners and the astrologers, and every one who was in his country, and read them the
letter and said to them, Who amongst you will go to Pharaoh king of Egypt and answer him his questions?'
- And they said to him, '0 our lord the king!
know thou that there is none in thy kingdom who is acquainted with these questions except Haiqar, thy vizier and secretary.
- But as for us, we have no skill in this, unless
it be Nadan, his sister's son for he taught him all his wisdom and learning and knowledge. Call him to thee, perchance he may untie this hard
knot.'
- Then the king called Nadan and said to him,
'Look at this letter and understand what is in it.' And when Nadan read it, he
said, '0 my lord! who is able to build a castle between the heaven and the
earth?'
- And when the king heard the speech of Nadan he
sorrowed with a great and sore sorrow, snd stepped down from his throne and sat
in the ashes, and began to weep and wail over Haiqar
- Saying, '0 my grief! 0 Haiqar, who didst know
the secrets and the riddles! woe is me for thee, 0 Haiqar! 0 teacher of my country and ruler of my kingdom, where shall I find thy like? 0
Haiqar, 0 teacher of my country,
where shall I turn for thee? woe is me for thee! how did I destroy thee! and I
listened to the talk of a stupid, ignorant boy without knowledge, without
religion, without manliness.
- Ah! and again Ah for myself! who can give thee
to me just for once, or bring me word that Haiqar is alive?
and I would give him the half of my kingdom.
- Whence is this to me? Ah, Haiqar! that I might
see thee just for once, that I might take my fill of gazing at thee, and delighting in thee.
- Ah! 0 my grief for thee to all time! 0 Haiqar,
how have I killed thee! and I tarried not in thy case till I had seen the end of
the matter.'
- And the king went on weeping night and day.
Now when the swordsman saw the wrath of the king and his sorrow for Haiqar, his heart was softened towards him, and he approached into
his presence and said to him:
- '0 my lord! command thy servants to cut off my
head.' Then said the king to him: 'Woe to thee, Abu Samik, 'what is thy fault?'
- And the swordsman said unto him, '0 my master!
every slave who acts contrary to the word of his master is killed, and I have
acted contrary to thy command.'
- Then the king said unto him. 'Woe unto thee, 0
Abu Samik, in what hast thou acted contrary to my command?'
- And the swordsman said unto him, '0 my lord!
thou didst command me to kill Haiqar, and I knew that thou wouldst repent thee concerning him, and that he had been wronged, and I hid
him in a certain place, and I killed one of his slaves, and he is now safe in the cistern, and if thou
command me I will bring him to thee.'
- And the king said unto him. 'Woe to thee, 0
Abu Samik! thou hast mocked me and I am thy lord.'
- And the swordsman said Unto him, 'Nay, but by
the life of thy head, 0 my lord! Haiqar safe and alive.'
- And when the king heard that saying, he felt
sure of the matter, and his head swam, and he fainted from joy, and he commanded them to bring Haiqar.
- And he said to the swordsman, '0 trusty
servant! if thy speech be true, I would fain enrich thee, and exalt thy dignity above that of all thy friends.'
- And the swordsman went along rejoicing till he
came to Haiqar's house. And he opened the door of the hiding-place, and went
down and found Haiqar sitting, praising God, and thanking Him.
- And he shouted to him, saying, '0 Haiqar, I
bring the greatest of joy, and happiness, and delight!'
- And Haiqar said to him, 'What is the news, 0
Abu Samik?' And he told him all about Pharaoh from the beginning to the end. Then he took him and went to the king.
- And when the king looked at him, he saw him in
a state of want, and that his hair had grown long like the wild beasts' and his nails like the claws of an eagle, and that his body was
dirty with dust, and the colour of his face had changed and faded and was now like ashes.
- And when the king saw him he sorrowed over him
and rose at once and embraced him and kissed him, and wept over him and said: 'Praise be to God! who hath brought thee back to
me.'
- Then he consoled him and comforted him. And he
stripped off his robe, and put it on the swordsman, and was very gracious to
him, and gave him great wealth, and made Haiqar rest.
- Then said Haiqar to the king, 'Let my lord the
king live for ever! These be the deeds of the children of the world. I have reared me a palm - tree that I might lean on it, and it bent sideways,
and threw me down.
- But, 0 my lord! since I have appeared before
thee, let not care oppress thee.' And the king said to him: 'Blessed be God, who showed thee mercy, and knew that thou wast wronged, and
saved thee and delivered thee from being slain.
- But go to the warm bath, and shave thy head,
and cut thy nails, and change thy clothes and amuse thyself for the space of forty days, that thou mayst do good to thyself and improve thy
condition and the colour of thy face may come back to thee.
- Then the king stripped off his costly robe,
and put it on Haiqar, and Haiqar thanked God and did obeisance to the king, and departed to his dwelling glad and happy, praising the Most High
God.
- And the people of his household rejoiced with
him, and his friends and every one who heard that he was alive rejoiced also.
CHAP. V.
The letter of the "riddles" is shown to
Ahikar. The boys on the eagles. The first "airplane" ride. Off to
Egypt. Ahikar, being a man of wisdom also has o sense of humor. (Verse 27).
- And he did
as the king commanded him, and took a rest for forty days.
- Then he dressed himself in his gayest dress,
and went riding to the king, with his slaves behind him and before him,
rejoicing and delighted.
- But when Nadan his sister's son perceived what
was happening, fear took hold of him and terror, and he was perplexed, not
knowing what to do.
- And when Haiqar saw it he entered into the
king's presence and greeted him, and he returned the greeting, and made him sit down at his side, saying to him, '0 my darling Haiqar! look at
these letters which the king of Egypt
sent to us, after he had heard that thou wast slain.
- They have provoked us and overcome us, and many
of the people of our country have fled to Egypt for fear of the taxes that the king of Egypt has sent to demand from us.'
- Then Haiqar took the letter and read it and
understood all its contents.
- Then he said to the king, Be not wroth, 0 my
lord! I will go to Egypt, and I will return the answers to Pharaoh, and I will display this letter to him, and I will reply to him about the taxes,
and I will send back all those who have run away; and I will put thy enemies to shame with the help of the Most
High God, and for the Happiness of thy kingdom.'
- And when the king heard this speech from Haiqar
he rejoiced with a great joy, and his heart was expanded and he showed him favour.
- And Haiqar said to the king: 'Grant me a delay
of forty days that I may consider this question and manage it.'
And the king permitted this.
- And Haiqar went to his dwelling, and he
commanded the huntsmen to capture two young eaglets for him, and they captured them and brought them to him: and he commanded the weavers of
ropes to weave two cables of cotton for him, each of them two thousand cubits long, and he had the
carpenters brought and ordered them to make two great boxes, and they did this.
- Then he took two little lads, and spent every
day sacrificing lambs and feeding the eagles and the boys, and
making the boys ride on the backs of the eagles, and he bound them with a firm
knot, and tied the cable to the feet of the eagles and let them soar upwards little by little every day, to a
distance of ten cubits, till they grew accustomed and were educated to it; and they rose all the length of the rope
till they reached the sky; the boys being on their backs. Then he drew them to himself.
- And when Haiqar saw that his desire was
fulfilled he charged the boys that when they were borne aloft to the sky they
were to shout, saying:
- Bring us clay and stone that we may build a
castle for king Pharaoh, for we are idle.'
- And Haiqar was never done training them and
exercising them till they had reached the utmost possible point (of skill).
- Then leaving them he went to the king and said
to him, 'O my lord! the work is finished according to thy desire. Arise with me that I may show thee the wonder.'
- So the king sprang up and sat with Haiqar and
went to a wide place and sent to bring the eagles and the boys, and Haiqar tied them and let them off into the air all the length of the ropes
and they began to shout as he had taught them. Then he drew them to himself and
put them in their places.
- And the king and those who were with him
wondered with a great wonder: and the king kissed Haiqar between his eyes and
said to him, 'Go in peace, 0 my beloved! 0 pride of my kingdom! to Egypt and
answer the questions of Pharaoh and overcome him by the strength of the Most
High God.'
- Then he bade him farewell, and took his troops
and his army and the young men and the eagles, and went towards the dwellings of Egypt; and when he had arrived, he turned towards the
country of the king.
- And when the people of Egypt knew that
Sennacherib had sent a man of his Privy Council to talk with Pharaoh and to answer his questions, they carried the news to king Pharaoh, and he sent
a party of his Privy Councillors to bring him before him.
- And he came and entered into the presence of
Pharaoh, and did obeisance to him as it is fitting to do to kings.
- And he said to him: '0 my lord the king!
Sennacherib the king hails thee with abundance of peace and might, and honour.
- And he has sent me, who am one of his slaves,
that I may answer thee thy questions, and may fulfil all thy desire: for thou
hast sent to seek from my lord the king a man who will build thee a castle
between the heaven and the earth.
- And I by the help of the Most High God and thy
noble favour and the power of my lord the king will build it for
thee as thou desirest.
- But, 0 my lord the king! what thou hast said
in it about the taxes of Egypt for three years - now the stability
of a kingdom is strict justice, and if thou winnest and my hand bath no skill in
replying to thee, then my lord the king will send thee the taxes which thou hast mentioned.
- And if I shall have answered thee in thy
questions, it shall remain for thee to send whatever thou hast mentioned to my lord the king.'
- And when Pharaoh heard that speech, he
wondered and was perplexed by the freedom of his tongue and the
pleasantness of his speech.
- And king Pharaoh said to him, '0 man! what is
thy name?' And he said, 'Thy servant is Abiqam, and I a little ant of the ants of king Sennacherib.'
- And Pharaoh said to him, 'Had thy lord no one
of higher dignity than thee, that he has sent me a little ant
to reply to me, and to converse with me?'
- And Haiqar said to him, '0 my lord the king! I
would to God Most High that I may fulfil what is on thy mind, for God is with the weak that He may confound the
strong.'
- Then Pharaoh commanded that they should
prepare a dwelling for Abiqam and supply him with provender,
meat, and drink, and all that he needed.
- And when it was finished, three days
afterwards Pharaoh clothed himself in purple and red and sat on his throne, and
all his viziers and the magnates of his kingdom were standing with their hands
crossed, their feet close together, and their heads bowed.
- And Pharaoh sent to fetch Abiqam, and when he
was presented to him, he did obeisance before him, and kissed the ground in front of him.
- And king Pharaoh said to him, '0 Abiqam, whom
am I like? and the nobles of my kingdom, to whom are they like?'
- And Haiqar said to him '0 my lord the king
!thou art like the idol Bel, and the nobles of thy kingdom are like his servants.'
- He said to him, 'Go, and come back hither to -
morrow.' So Haiqar went as king Pharaoh had commanded him.
- And on the morrow Haiqar went into the
presence of Pharaoh, and did obeisance, and stood before the king.
And Pharaoh was dressed in a red colour, and the nobles were dressed in white.
- And Pharaoh said to him '0 Abiqam, whom am I
like? and the nobles of my kingdom, to whom are they like?'
- And Abiqam said to him, '0 my lord! thou art
like the sun, and thy servants are like its beams.' And Pharaoh said to him, 'Go to thy dwelling, and come hither to - morrow.'
- Then Pharaoh commanded his Court to wear pure
white, and Pharaoh was dressed like them and sat upon his throne and he commanded them to fetch Haiqar. And he entered and sat down
before him.
- And Pharaoh said to him, '0 Abiqam, whom am I
like? and my nobles, to whom are they like?'
- And Abiqam said to him, '0 my lord! thou art
like the moon, and thy nobles are like the planets and the stars.' And Pharaoh said to him, 'Go, and to - morrow be thou here.'
- Then Pharaoh commanded his servants to wear
robes of various colours, and Pharaoh wore a red velvet dress, and sat on his
throne, and commanded them to fetch Abiqam. And he entered and did obeisance
before him.
- And he said, '0 Abiqam, whom am I like? and my
armies, to whom are they like?' And he said, '0 my lord! thou art like the month of April, and thy armies are like its flowers.'
- And when the king heard It he rejoiced with a
great joy, and said, '0 Abiqam! the first time thou didst compare me to the idol
Bel, and my nobles to his servants.
- And the second time thou didst compare me to
the sun, and my nobles to the sunbeam'.
- And the third time thou didst compare me to
the moon, and my nobles to the planets and the stars.
- And the fourth time thou didst compare me to
the month of April, and my nobles to its flowers.
But now, 0 Abiqam! tell me, thy lord, king Sennacherib, whom is he like? and his
nobles, to whom are they like ?'
- And Haiqar shouted with a loud voice and said:
'Be it far from me to make mention of my lord the king and thou seated on thy throne. But get up on thy feet that I
may tell thee whom my lord the king is like and to whom his nobles are like.'
- And Pharaoh was perplexed by the freedom of
his tongue and his boldness in answenng. Then Pharaoh arose from his throne, and stood before Haiqar, and said to him, 'Tell me now, that I
may perceive whom thy lord the king is like, and his nobles, to whom they are
like.'
- And Haiqar said to him: 'My lord is the God of heaven, and his nobles are the lightnings and the
thunder, and when he wills the winds blow and the rain falls.
- And he commands the thunder, and it lightens
and rains, and he holds the sun, and it gives not its light, and the moon and
the stars, and they circle not.
- And he commands the tempest, and it blows and
the rain falls and it tramples on April and destroys its flowers and its houses.'
- And when Pharaoh heard this speech, he was
greatly perplexed and was wroth with a great wrath, and said to him: '0 man!
tell me the truth, and let me know who thou really art.'
- And he told him the truth. 'I am Haiqar the
scribe, greatest of the Privy Councillors of king Sennacherib, and I am his vizier and the Governor of his
kingdom, and his Chancellor.'
- And he said to him, 'Thou hast told the truth
in this saying. But we have heard of Haiqar, that king Sennacherib has slain him, yet thou dost seem to be alive and well.'
- And Haiqar said to him, 'Yes, so it was, but
praise be to God, who knoweth what is hidden, for my lord the king commanded me to be killed, and he believed the word of profligate men, but the
Lord delivered me,
and blessed is he who trusteth in Him.'
- And Pharaoh said to Haiqar, 'Go, and to -
morrow be thou here, and tell me a word that I have never heard from my nobles nor from the people of my kingdom and my country.'
CHAP. VI.
The ruse succeeds. Ahikar answers every question
of Pharaoh. The boys on the eagles are the climax of the day. Wit, so rarely
found in the ancient Sciptures, is revealed in Verses 34~35.
- And Haiqar
went to his dwelling, and wrote a letter, saying in it on this wise:
- 'From Sennacherib king of Assyria and Nineveh
to Pharaoh king of Egypt.
- 'Peace be to thee, 0 my brother! and what we
make known to thee by this is that a brother has need of his brother, and kings
of each other, and my hope from thee is that thou wouldst lend me nine hundred
talents of gold, for I need it for the victualling of some of the soldiers, that
I may spend it upon them. And after a little while I will send it thee.'
- Then he folded the letter, and presented it on
the morrow to Pharaoh.
- And when he 'saw it, he was perplexed and said
to him, 'Verily I have never heard anything like this language from any one.'
- Then
Haiqar said to him, 'Truly this is a debt which thou owest to my lord the king.'
- And Pharaoh accepted this, saying, '0 Haiqar,
it is the like of thee who are honest in the service of kings.
- Blessed be God who hath made thee perfect in
wisdom and hath adorned thee with philosophy and knowledge.
- And now, 0 Haiqar, there remains what we desire
from thee, that thou shouldst build us a castle between heaven and earth.'
- Then said Haiqar, 'To hear is to obey. I will
build thee a castle according to thy wish and choice; but, 0 my lord! prepare us lime and stone and clay and workmen, and I have skilled
builders who will build for thee as thou desirest.'
- And the king prepared all that for him, and
they went to a wide place; and Haiqar and his boys came to it, and he took the eagles and the young men with him; and the king and all his nobles
went and the whole city assembled, that they might see what Haiqar would do.
- Then Haiqar let the eagles out of the boxes,
and tied the young men on their backs, and tied the ropes to the eagles' feet,
and let them go in the air. And they soared upwards, till they remained between
heaven and earth.
- And the boys began to shout, saying, 'Bring
bricks, bring clay, that we may build the king's castle, for we are standing
idle!'
- And the crowd were astonished and perplexed,
and they wondered. And the king and his nobles wondered.
- And Haiqar and his servants began to beat the
workmen and they shouted for the king's troops, saying to them, 'Bring to the skilled workmen what they want and do not hinder them from their
work.'
- And the king said to him, 'Thou art mad; who
can bring anything up to that distance?'
- And Haiqar said to him, '0 my lord! how shall
we build a castle in the air? and if my lord the king were here,
he would have built several castles in a single day.'
- And Pharaoh said to him, 'Go, 0 Haiqar, to thy dwelling, and rest, for we have given up building the
castle, and to - morrow come to me.'
- Then Haiqar went to his dwelling and on the
morrow he appeared before Phanaoh. And Pharaoh said, '0 Haiqar, what news is there of the horse of thy lord? for when he neighs in
the country of Assyria and Nineveb, and our mares hear his voice, they cast their young.'
- And when Haiqar heard this speech he went and
took a cat, and bound her and began to flog her with a violent flogging till the Egyptians heard it, and they went and told the king about it.
- And Pharaoh sent to fetch Haiqar, and said to
him, '0 Haiqar, wherefore dost thou flog thus and beat that dumb beast?'
- And Haiqar said to him, '0 my lord the king!
verily she has done an ugly deed to me, and has deserved this drubbing and flogging, for my lord king Sennacherib had given me a fine cock,
and he had a strong true voice and knew the hours of the day and the night.
- And the cat got up this very night and cut off
its head and went away, and because of this deed I have treated her to this
drubbing.'
- And Pharaoh said to him, '0 Haiqar, I see from
all this that thou art growing old and art in thy dotage, for between Egypt and Nineveh there are sixty-eight parasangs, and how did she
go this very night and cut off the head of thy cock and come back?'
- And Haiqar said to him, '0 my lord! if there
were such a distance between Egypt and Nineveh, how could thy mares hear when my lord the king's horse neighs and cast their young?
and how could the voice of the horse reach to Egypt?'
- And when Pharaoh heard he knew that Haiqar had
answered his questions.
- And Pharaoh said, '0 Haiqar, I want thee to
make me ropes of the sea - sand.'
- And Haiqar said to him, '0 my lord the king!
order them to bring me a rope out of the treasury that I may make one like it.'
- Then Haiqar went to the back of the house, and
bored holes in the rough shore of the sea, and took a handful of sand in his hand, sea - sand, and when the sun rose, and
penetrated into the holes, he spread the sand in the sun till it became as if woven like ropes.
- And Haiqar said, 'Command thy servants to take
these ropes, and whenever thou desirest it, I will weave thee some like them.'
- And Pharaoh said, 'O Haiqar, we have a
millstone here and it has been broken and I want thee to sew it up.'
- Then Haiqar looked at it and found another
stone.
- And he said to Pharaoh. '0 my lord! I am a
foreigner and I have no tool for sewing.
- But I want thee to command thy faithful
shoemakers to cut awls from this stone, that I may sew that millstone.'
- Then Pharaoh and all his nobles laughed. And
he said, 'Blessed be the Most High God, who gave thee this wit and knowledge.'
- And when Pharaoh saw that Haiqar had overcome
him, and returned him his answers, he at once became excited, and commanded them to collect for him three years' taxes, and to bring them to
Haiqar.
- And he stripped off his robes and put them
upon Haiqar, and his soldiers, and his servants, and gave him the expenses of his journey.
- And he said to him, 'Go in peace, 0 strength
of his lord and pride of his Doctors! have any of the Sultans thy like?
give my greetings to thy lord king Sennacherib, and say to him how we have sent
him gifts, for kings are content with little.'
- Then Haiqar arose, and kissed king Pharaoh's
hands and kissed the ground in front of him, and wished him strength and
continuance, and abundance in his treasury, and said to him, '0 my lord! I
desire from thee that not one of our countryrnen may remain in Egypt.'
- And Pharaoh arose and sent heralds to proclaim
in the streets of Egypt that not one of the people of Assyria
or Nineveh should remain in the land of Egypt, but that they should go with
Haiqar.
- Then Haiqar went and took leave of king
Pharaoh, and journeyed, seeking the land of Assyria and Nineveh; and he had some treasures and a great deal of wealth.
- And when the news reached king Sennacherib
that Haiqar was coming, he went out to meet him and rejoiced over him
exceedingly with great joy and embraced him and kissed him, and said to him,
'Welcome home, 0 kinsman! my brother Haiqar, the strength of my kingdom, and
pride of my realm.
- Ask what thou would'st have from me, even if
thou desirest the half of my kingdom and of my possessions.
- Then said Haiqar unto him, '0 my lord the
king, live for ever! Show favour, 0 my lord the king! to Abu Samik in my stead, for my life was in the hands of God and in his.'
- Then said Sennacherib the king, 'Honour be to
thee, 0 my beloved Haiqar! I will make the station of Abu Samik the swordsman higher than all my Privy Councillors and my favourites.'
- Then the king began to ask him how he had got
on with Pharaoh from his first arrival until he had come away from his presence,
and how he had answered all his questions, and how he had received the taxes
from him, and the changes of raiment and the presents.
- And Sennacherib the king rejoiced with a great
joy, and said to Haiqar, 'Take what thou wouldst fain have of this tribute, for
it is all within the grasp of thy hand.'
- And Haiqar said: 'Let the king live for ever!
I desire naught but the safety of my lord the king and the continuance of his
greatness.
- 0 my lord! what can I do with wealth and its
like? but if thou wilt show me favour, give me Nadan, my sister's son, that I
may recompense him for what he has done to me, and grant me his blood and hold
me guiltless of it.'
- And Sennacherib the king said, 'Take him, I
have given him to thee,' And Haiqar took Nadan, his sister's son, and bound his hands with chains of iron, and took him to his
dwellmg, and put a heavy fetter on his feet, and tied it with a tight knot, and after binding him thus he
cast him into a dark room, beside the retiring - place, and appointed Nebu - hal as sentinel over him and
commanded him to give him a loaf of bread and a little water every day.
CHAP. VII,
The parables of Ahikar in which he completes his nephew's education.
Striking similes. Ahikar calls the boy picturesque names. Here ends the story of Ahikar.
- And whenever Haiqar went in or out he scolded
Nadan, his sister's son, saying to him wisely:
- 0 Nadan, my boy! I have done to thee all that
is good and kind. and thou hast rewarded me for it with what is ugly and bad and with killing.
- '0 my son! it is said in the proverbs: He who
listeneth not with his ear, they will make him listen with the scruff of his neck.'
- And Nadan said, 'For what cause art thou wroth
with me?'
- And Haiqar said to him, 'Because I brought thee
up, and taught thee, and gave thee honour and respect and
made thee great, and reared thee with the best of breeding, and seated thee in
my place that thou mightest be my heir in the world, and thou didst treat me with killing and didst repay me
with my ruin.
- But the Lord knew that I was wronged, and He
saved me from the snare which thou hadst set for me, for the Lord healeth the broken hearts and hindereth the envious and
the haughty.
- 0 my boy! thou hast been to me like the
scorpion which, when it strikes on brass, pierces it.
- 0 my boy! thou art like the gazelle who was
eating the roots of the madder, and it said to her, "Eat of me to - day and take thy fill, and to - morrow they will tan thy
hide in my roots."
- O my boy! thou hast been to me like a man who
saw his comrade naked in the chilly time of winter; and he took cold water and
poured it upon him.
- 0 my boy! thou hast been to me like a man who
took a stone, and threw it up to heaven to stone his Lord with it. And the stone did not hit, and did not reach high enough, but it became the
cause of guilt and sin.
- 0 my boy! if thou hadst honoured me and
respected me and hadst listened to my words thou wouldst have been my heir, and
wouldst have reigned over my dominions.
- 0 my son! know thou that if the tail of the
dog or the pig were ten cubits long it would not approach to the worth of the
horse's even if it were like silk.
- 0 my boy! I thought that thou wouldst have
been my heir at my death; and thou through thy envy and thy insolence didst desire to kill me. But the Lord delivered me from thy
cunning.
- 0 my son! thou hast been to me like a trap
which was set up on the dunghill, and there came a sparrow and found the trap
set up. And the sparrow said to the trap, "What doest thou here?" Said
the trap, "I am praying here to God."
- And the lark asked it also, "What is the
piece of wood that thou holdest?" Said the trap, "That is a young
oak-tree on which I lean at the time of prayer.
- Said the lark: "And what is that thing in
thy mouth?" Said the trap: "That is bread and victuals which I carry
for all the hungry and the poor who come near to me."
- Said the lark: "Now then may I come
forward and eat, for I am hungry?" And the trap said to him, "Come
forward." And the lark approached that it might eat.
- But the trap sprang up and seized the lark by
its neck
- And the lark answered and said to the trap,
"If that is thy bread for the hungry God accepteth not thine alms and thy
kind deeds.
- And if that is thy fasting and thy prayers,
God accepteth from thee neither thy fast nor thy prayer, and God will not
perfect what is good concerning thee."
- 0 my boy? thou hast been to me (as) a lion who
made friends with an ass, and the ass kept walking before the lion for a time;
and one day the lion sprang upon the ass and ate it up.
- 0 my boy! thou hast been to me like a weevil
in the wheat, for it does no good to anything, but spoils the wheat and gnaws
it.
- 0 my boy! thou hast been like a man who sowed
ten measures of wheat, and when it was harvest time, he arose and reaped it, and
garnered it, and threshed it, and toiled over it to the very utmost, and it
turned out to be ten measures, and its master said to it: "0 thou lazy
thing! thou hast not grown and thou hast not shrunk."
- 0 my boy! thou hast been to me like the
partridge that had been thrown into the net, and she could not save herself, but
she called out to the partridges, that she might cast them with herself into the
net.
- 0 my son! thou hast been to me like the dog
that was cold and it went into the potter's house to get warm.
- And when it had got warm, it began to bark at
them, and they chased it out and beat it, that it might not bite them.
- 0 my son! thou hast been to me like the pig
who went into the hot bath with people of quality, and when it came out of the hot bath, it saw a filthy hole and it went down and,
wallowed in it.
- 0 my son! thou hast been to me like the goat
which joined its comrades on their way to the sacrifice, and it was unable to
save itself.
- 0 my boy! the dog which is not fed from its
hunting becomes food for flies.
- 0 my son! the hand which does not labour and
plough and (which) is greedy and cunning shall be cut away from its shoulder.
- 0 my son! the eye in which light is not seen,
the ravens shall pick at it and pluck it out.
- 0 my boy! thou hast been to me like a tree
whose branches they were cutting, and it said to them, "If something of me were not in your hands, verily you would be
unable to cut me."
- 0 my boy! thou art like the cat to whom they
said: "Leave off thieving till we make for thee a chain of gold and feed thee
with sugar and almonds."
- And she said, "I am not forgetful of the
craft of my father and my mother."
- 0 my son! thou hast been like the serpent
riding on a thorn-bush when he was in the midst of a river, and a wolf saw them
and said, "Mischief upon mischief, and let him who is more mischievous than
they direct both of them."
- And the serpent said to the wolf, "The
lambs and the goats and the sheep which thou hast eaten all thy life, wilt thou
return them to their fathers and to their parents or no?"
- Said the wolf, "No." And the serpent
said to him, "I think that after myself thou art the worst of us."
- 0 my boy! I fed thee with good food and thou
didst not feed me with dry bread.
- 0 my boy! I gave thee sugared water to drink
and good syrup, and thou didst not give me water from the well to drink.
- 0 my boy! I taught thee, and brought thee up,
and thou didst dig a hiding-place for me and didst conceal me.
- 0 my boy! I brought thee up with the best
upbringing and trained thee like a tall cedar; and thou hast twisted and bent me.
- 0 my boy! it was my hope concerning thee that
thou wouldst build me a fortified castle, that I might be concealed from my enemies in it, and thou didst become to me like one burying in
the depth of the earth; but the Lord took pity on me and delivered me from thy cunning.
- 0 my boy! I wished thee well, and thou didst
reward me with evil and hatefulness, and now I would fain tear out thine eyes,
and make thee food for dogs, and cut out thy tongue, and take off thy head with
the edge of the sword, and recompense thee for thine abominable deeds.'
- And when Nadan heard this speech from his
uncle Haiqar, he said: '0 my uncle! deal with me according to thy knowledge, and
forgive me my sins, for who is there who hath sinned like me, or who is there
who forgives like thee?
- Accept me, 0 my uncle! Now I will serve in thy
house, and groom thy horses and sweep up the dung of thy cattle, and feed thy sheep, for I am the wicked and thou art the
righteous: I the guilty and thou the forgiving.'
- And Haiqar said to him, '0 my boy! thou art
like the tree which was fruitless beside the water, and its master was fain to cut it down, and it said to him, "Remove me to another
place, and if I do not bear frult, cut me down."
- And its master said to it, "Thou
being beside the water hast not borne fruit, how shalt thou bear fruit when thou art in another place?"
- 0 my boy! the old age of the eagle is better
than the youth of the crow.
- 0 my boy! they said to the wolf, "Keep
away from the sheep lest their dust should harm thee." And the wolf said, "The dregs of the sheep's milk are good for my
eyes."
- 0 my boy! they made the wolf go to school that
he might learn to read, and they said to him, "Say A, B." He said, "Lamb and goat in my belly."
- 0 my boy! they set the ass down at the table
and he fell, and began to roll himself in the dust, and one said, "Let him roll himself, for it is his nature, he will not change."
- 0 my boy! the saying has been confirmed which
runs: "If thou begettest a boy, call him thy son, and if thou rearest a boy, call him thy slave."
- 0 my boy! he who doeth good shall meet with
good; and he who doeth evil shall meet with evil, for the Lord requiteth a man according to the measure of his work.
- 0 my boy! what shall I say more to thee than
these sayings? for the Lord knoweth what is' hidden, and is acquainted with the
mysteries and the secrets.
- And He will requite thee and will judge
betwixt me and thee, and will recompense thee according to thy desert,'
- And when Nadan heard that speech from his
uncle Haiqar, he swelled up immediately and became like a blown-out bladder.
- And his limbs swelled and his legs and his
feet and his side, and he was torn and his belly burst asunder and his entrails were scattered, and he perished, and died.
- And his latter end was destruction, and he
went to hell. For he who digs a pit for his brother shall fall into it; and he
who sets up traps shall be caught in them.
- This is what happened and (what) we found
about the tale of Haiqar, and praise be to God for ever.
- Amen, and peace.
- This chronicle is finished with the help of
God, may He be exalted:
Amen, Amen, Amen.