On the Margaret island, in the bosom of the blue Danube, was the paradise of Hassan Pasha, and to behold its treasures was death. At every interval of twenty yards stands a eunuch behind the groves of the island with a long musket, and if any man fares upon the water within bullet-reach, he certainly will never tell anyone what he saw. Paradise exhales every intoxicating joy, every transient delight; it is full of flowers, and no sooner does one flower bloom than another instantly fades away; and this also is the fate of those flowers which are called damsels, for some of these likewise fade in a day, whilst others are culled to adorn the table of the favourite. This, I say, is the fate of all the flowers, and frequently in those huge porcelain vases which stand before Azrael's bed, among its wreaths of roses and pomegranate flowers, one may see the head of an odalisk with drooping eyes who yesterday was as bright and merry as her comrades, the rose and pomegranate blossoms. Oh, that woman is a veritable dream! Since he possessed her Hassan Pasha is no longer a man, but a piece of wax which receives the impression of her ideas. He hears nothing but her voice, and sees nothing but her. Already they are beginning to say that Hassan Pasha no longer recognizes a man ten feet off, and is no longer able to distinguish between the sound of the drum and the sound of the trumpet. And it is true, but whoever said so aloud would be All the better does Yffim Beg see and hear, Yffim Beg who is constantly about Azrael; if he were not such an old and faithful favourite of Hassan Pasha he might almost regret that he has such good eyes and ears. But Azrael's penetrating mind knows well enough that Yffim Beg's head stands much more firmly on his shoulders than stand the heads of those whom Hassan Pasha sacrifices to her whims, so she flatters him, and it is all the worse for him that she does flatter. Hassan Pasha, scarce waiting for the day to end and dismissing all serious business, sat him down in his curtained pinnace, known only to the dwellers on the fairy island, and had himself rowed across to his hidden paradise, where, amidst two hundred attendant damsels, Azrael, the loveliest of the living, awaits him in the hall of the fairy kiosk, round whose golden trellis work twine the blooms of a foreign sky. Yffim Beg alone accompanies the Pasha thither. The Governor, after embracing the odalisk, strolled thoughtfully through the labyrinth of fragrant trees where the paths were covered by coloured pebbles and a whole army of domesticated birds made their nests in the trees. Yffim Beg follows them at a little distance, and not a movement escapes his keen eyes, not so much as a sigh eludes his sharp ears; he keeps a strict watch on all that Azrael does and says. In the midst of their walk—they hadn't gone a hundred paces—a falcon rose before them from among the trees and perched on a poplar close by. "Look, sir, what a beautiful falcon!" cried Yffim Beg. Azrael laughed aloud and looked back. "Oh, my good Beg, how canst thou take a wood-pigeon for a falcon? why it was a wood-pigeon." "Why, that's better still—now he calls a nut-tree a poplar. Eh, eh! worthy Beg, thou must needs have been drinking a little to see so badly." "Well, that was what I fancied," said the Beg, much perplexed, and for the life of him not perceiving the point of the jest. Why should the odalisk make a fool of him so? "But look then, my love," said Azrael, appealing to the Pasha; "thou didst see that bird fly away from the tree yonder, was it not a wood-pigeon flying from a nut-tree?" Hassan saw neither the tree nor the bird, but he pretended he did, and agreed with the odalisk. "Of course it was a wood-pigeon and a nut-tree." Yffim Beg did not understand it at all. They went on further, and presently Yffim Beg again spoke. "Shall we not turn, my master, towards that beautiful arcade of rose-trees?" Azrael clapped her hands together in amazement. "What! an arcade of roses! Where is it?" "Turn in that direction and thou wilt see it." "These things! Why if he isn't taking some sumach trees full of berries for an arcade of rose-trees!" Hassan Pasha laughed. As for Yffim Beg he was lost in amazement—why did this damsel choose to jest with him in this fashion? At that moment a cannon shot resounded from the Pesth shore. "Ah!" said the Pasha, stopping, "a cannon shot!" "Yes, my master," said Yffim, "from the direction of Pesth." "From Pesth indeed," said Azrael, "it was from Buda; it was the signal for closing the gate." "I heard it plainly." "Excuse me, my good Beg, but thy hearing is as bad as thy sight. I am beginning to be anxious "Maybe a fresh host has arrived, which now awaits us." "Come," cried Azrael, seizing Hassan's hand, "we will find out at once who is right;" and she hastened with them to the shore of the island. On the further bank the camp of Feriz Beg was visible; they were just pitching their tents on the side of the hills. A company of cavalry was just going down to the water's-edge, at whose head ambled a slim young man whose features were immediately recognised, even at that distance, both by the favourite Beg and the favourite damsel. Only Hassan saw nothing; in the distance everything was to him but a blur of black and yellow. "Well, what did I say?" exclaimed Yffim Beg triumphantly; "that is the camp of Feriz Beg, and there is Feriz himself trotting in front of them." The words were scarce out of his mouth when the terrible thought occurred to him that Azrael had no business to be looking upon this strange man. The odalisk, laughing loudly, flung herself on Hassan's neck. "Ha, ha, ha! the worthy Beg takes the water-carrying girls for an army!" Then Yffim Beg began to tremble, for he perceived now whither this woman wanted to carry her joke. "My master," said he, "forbid thy slave-girl to make a fool of me. The camp of Feriz Beg is straight in front of us, and thou wilt do well to prevent thy maid-servant from looking at these men with her face unveiled." "Allah! thou dost terrify me, good Beg!" said Azrael, feigning horror so admirably that Hassan himself felt the contagion of it. "Say! where dost thou see this camp?" "There, on the water-side; dost thou not see the tents on the hillocks?" "And that blare of trumpets?" "I only hear the merry songs that the girls are singing." In his fury Yffim Beg plucked at his beard. "My master, this devilish damsel is only mocking us." "Thou art suffering from deliriums," said Azrael, with a terrible face, "or thou art under a spell which makes thee see before thee things which exist not. Contradict me not, I beg; this hath happened to thee once before. Dost thou not remember when thou fleddest from Transylvania how, then also, thou didst maintain that the enemy was everywhere close upon thy heels! Thou also then wert under the spell of a hideous enchantment, for thy eunuch horseman who remained behind at Nagyenyed, and is now a sentinel on this island, hath told me that there was no sign of any enemy for more than twenty leagues around, and he remained waiting for thee for ten days and fancied thou wert mad. Most assuredly some evil sorcery made thee fly before an imaginary enemy without thy turban or tunic." Yffim Beg grew pale. He felt that he must surrender unconditionally to this infernal woman. "Was it so, Yffim?" cried Hassan angrily. "Pardon him, my lord," said Azrael soothingly; "he was under a spell then, as he is now. Thou art bewitched, my good Yffim." "Really, I believe I am," he stammered involuntarily. "But I will turn away the enchantment," said the damsel; and tripping down to the water's-edge she moistened her hand and sprinkled the face of the Beg, murmuring to herself at the same time some magic spell. "Now look and see!" The Beg did all that he was bidden to do. "Who, then, are these walking on the bank of the Danube?" "And those things spread out yonder." "Wet linen." "Dost thou not hear the songs of the girls?" "Certainly I do." "Look now, my master, what wonders there are beneath the sun!" said Azrael, turning towards Hassan Pasha; "is it not marvellous that Yffim should see armies when there is nothing but pretty peasant girls?" "Miracles proceed from Allah, but methinks Yffim Beg must have very bad sight to mistake maidens for men of war." Yffim Beg durst not say to Hassan Pasha that he also had bad sight; he might just as well have pronounced his own death sentence at once. Hassan wanted to pretend to see all that his favourite damsel pointed out, and she proceeded to befool the pair of them most audaciously in the intimate persuasion that Hassan would not betray the fact that he could not see, while Yffim Beg was afraid to contradict lest he should be saddled with that plaguy Transylvanian business. Meanwhile, on the opposite bank, Feriz Beg in a sonorous voice was distributing his orders and making his tired battalions rest, galloping the while an Arab steed along the banks of the Danube. The odalisk followed every movement of the young hero with burning eyes. "I love to hear the songs of these damsels; dost not thou also, my master?" she inquired of Hassan. "Oh, I do," he answered hastily. "Wilt thou not sit down beside me here on the soft grass of the river bank?" The Pasha sat down beside the odalisk, who, lying half in his bosom, with her arm round his neck, followed continually the movements of Feriz with sparkling eyes. "Look, my master!" said she, pointing him out to Hassan; "look at that slim, gentle damsel, prominent And with these words the odalisk pressed Hassan to her bosom, covering his face with kisses at every word; and he, beside himself with rapture, saw everything which the girl told him of, never suspecting that those kisses, those embraces, were not for him but for a youth to whom his favourite damsel openly confessed her love beneath his very eyes! And Yffim Beg, amazed, confounded, stood behind them, and shaking his head, bethought him of the words of Haji Baba, "Cast forth that devil, and beware lest she give you away!" |