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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1908)
Tim OREGON SUNDAY TOTJRNAX, POrHA'nd, SUNDAY MORNIKG . JUNE 28 Hiii,m juijii'Mii.iiMi"i'"n'w vfr Tv tytf?j:;;: iuii;njTi tr uimsji iuhrttfrM rinl-f MTi Mv ' ' n, 'I,,,,, yiiiLniyiiiiMiiiii.)!! ir! w msmmM m Mill &M!$w a.wi u ifc - i , i ill t , iHil i l 1 IfflteiM llllliliil.liI;!l-.li..ii!ll!!l!lll,lil(liiiMIl,l:l!li,li ui i...lil"i;..'.:i...u.. I, u, i ,,M,,,n,MM,,,i,n,,,,ii,JinllMiinilMli,iu,i,,il i ir ,iir nlllillllhililill.l -n ' ' - ' ' J". - . n ii i i j i! . mumm ww i mi i .jiii ummmmmmmmmmmammmmmmm i i.iiiipiiiiiiiini i.: . mi. ipwimn i mbwmmwmbbbbmmwmmmmmpwi. ' ' y y etyatleg lofce TBenamfn. A Daniel come to Judgment! yea, a Daniel! Shakespeare THE Gate of the Caravans opens upon a grove of palm-trees. Beyond is the des ert, stretching away past eye-shot, and gleaming like burnished brass in the fierce light of the tropic sun. Yusuf, the Arab boy who peddled dates, crouched in the hadow of the gateway, watching the approach of a caravan. The. shrill cries of the camel-drivera came nearer and nearer, and pres ently a long line of laden dromedaries began to file through the open gate, slouching along with noise less tread, and bobbing their long necks up and down to an accompaniment of complaining grunts. Some of the drivers tossed "'luck-money" to tho Arab boy, 'whom they noticed, as they passed, re membering the words of the prophet: "The good that ye shall give in alms shall redound unto your which so many wonderful tales were told. ' He wondered now, as he watched the camels file past, whether he would ever be able to earn enough to buy one of those great, grunting, silent-fdbted beasts. A driver had told him once that even 'the cheapest camel costs more than a hundred pieces of gold, and a really good one twice as much. The boy raised hit hand to his turban, and felt the one gold coin that was tucked securely away in the lining. Just onel And be needed so many morel He picked up the coppers the men had flung him, wishing1 in his heart they were gold coins, too, and followed dejectedly in the wake of the camels, that could still be seen at the far end of the narrow street. All at once, as he shuffled along, his .bare foot struck against something in the dust of the road way that gave forth a jingling sound, He stooped quickly, and picked up a netted purse of green silk I Not a little slender purse, but big, fat, bulging i 1 1 II JjMHv' J 'my emeiaid! my emerald! what bast thou dons wna it thiefseggai?" Perhaps, .too, some of them felt genuine pity for the orphan lad, whose father , had owned many cam els, and had led many a richly laden caravan safely across the sandy wilderness, before he and his for 'tune we're swept away in one of those terrible simoons, that in ' moment, rushing from no one knows whence, blinds, burns and buries its victims, and sweeps on, no one knows whither, It was Yusuf's ambition to own a camel and travel with the caravans. The sailor's son loves the sea, though his father's, bones lie bleaching at the bottom of it; and Yusuf yearned for the desert as only an 'Arab can, although he knew that somewhere in its treacherous sands his father body lajp Every fcy at noon, when the merchant closed their bazaars and retired for thctr midday nap, the little, date-; seller would wander off to the Gate of the Caravans, ' and "gaze wistfully' on that great sea' of sarid of purse; and through Its meshes the boy caught the glint of gold! Yusuf slipped the purse quickly into the bosom of his tunic. He glanced furtively around. The street was deserted. No -one had seen him pick up the purse. No one need know he had found it unless he chose to tell. Need he tell? . He slipped back to the shade of the gateway, and sat down to think. ; - -' ' . -t He sat there, turning the matter over in his mind, ' a long, long while-, his hand pressed over the spot where the purse lay. How heavy it was! He dared ; not take it out to count his treasure, but he knew by the weight of jtthat here was the price of his camel, nd more. Need he tell? Whenever perplexed by doubt as to what he should do, the orphan had always before had re. course to one magic question: "What would father , have done?" Yusuf asked, himself that question , now, and answered it: "Seek for the owner!" Yes y find the owner: v That is what he must do. He rose (a little slowly, it is true, because it was - rfhard to give the camel up), and started up the street Who had lost the purse? He didn't know, but it seemed likely that it had been dropped by some one of the caravan. He would seek there first, , Before Yusuf could "come up with the caravan, however, another actor appeared on the scene. This was the Crier, a tall, venerable Turk with a flaming turban and a flowing gown of figured India stuff. He, carried a long statf, with which he struck the ground at every step, the better to emphasize his words. ' ' . "Hear ye! Hear ye! Hear, ye I All honest fieople," he cried. "The merchant Ebn-Aziz hath ost a purse containing two hundred pieces of gold,. He offers half as a reward to whomsoever shall re , turn it to him. Better the half with. honesty than' Che whole with deceit! Hath any found a nurse a purse containing two hundred pieces of gold." Yusuf interrupted the Crier. "I have found the purse," he said. He drew it forth from his bosom. "Here it is." "Follow me," said the Crier, "and Ebn-Aziz will , pay thee thy reward." . A little crowd had gathered. Pushing his way through these people, the Crier started up the street, followed by Yusuf, the idlers trailing along behind. Some, however, ran ahead, eager to carry the news to Eon-Aziz. As he passed up the street Yusuf heard his name utterea on all sides. "Yusuf, the date seller, hath found the merchant Ebn-Aziz's purse," cried one. "He will receive a hundred pieces of gold," said another. "He is promised a hundred pieces," rejoined , a third; "but if I know aught of the miser Ebn-Aziz. he will die before he will part with a single gola piece." , i,j, r- .... , . . line fa s nescmDie:? eecn prnen viccxnxdcxnce .inrbox mm r wine ire.r,yitm.L.iJCjr?rm. w r $cJf addressing the Crier. "A purse containing two hundred pieces of gold." "Was no mention made of an emerald?" "None. The purse alone was named." "Ebn-Aziz," said the Cadi, "if thy purse contained an emerald, as thou sayest, why didst thou not bid the Crier cry that also?" The crowd murmured approval at this question, but the merchant was ready with an answer. "Effendi," he said, "the emerald was of great size, 111 'ZZl!, 'PERHAPS THV EMERALD MAY BE FOUND, Yusuf s heart sank at these words; but hope re vived as one who had known his father called after him: "Well done, Yusuf! thou art an honest lad. I will go with thee and see that justice is done thee." A walk of a few minutes brought them to the bazaar of Ebn-Aiiz, who was indeed, as one of the speakers bad said, a miserly fellow. He had learned a few minutes before that his purse had been found, and now he was cudgeling his evil brain for some excuse by which he might escape paying the prom ised reward. The sympathies of the crowd, however., were with the boy, Angry voices cried to the mer chant! "Come, old money-grubber, here is thy purse; now give the lad his due." "Softly, softly," croaked the miser. "All in good time, my friends. Let us first see that what was lost is found." He extended his hand for the purse. Yusuf handed it to him. "Good!" said the merchant, as his fingers closed upon the gold. He glanced sharply at Yusuf from under his heavy brows. 'He is only a lad," thought Ebn, "and poor. I shall have, no difficulty in dis posing of him." He opened the purse. J "Count out the money," cried the crowd. "Half for thyself, and half for the boy." The merchant thrust one bony hand into the purse and rummaged around among the coins. "Ah, miserable wretch!" he exclaimed, with feigned emotion, "it is not herel Where is the emerald, boy? The emeTaldl" "The emerald?" faltered Yusuf "Aye, the emerald!" shrieked Ebn, seizing him roughly by the shoulder and shaking him. 'Think not to deceive my by such clumsy pretense. Thou returnest the gold, eh? i Oh. paragon of honesty I But thou thinkest to keep the enierald, then my precious emerald, that is worth ten times this paltry purse. Oh. unfortunate that I ami My emerald! My emerald! What hast thou done with it, thief beggar?" Yusuf shook himself free, and faced the old man, his eyes flashing. "I am no thief," he cried, "and no beggarl I gave back thy purse to thee a$ I found it; I did not even open it. If it is thy mind to deny me the reward, keep thy gold; I will have none of it!" He turned on his heel. "Go!" said Ebn, well satisfied with the success of his scheme, "and be grateful to Allah that thou es capest ao easily. I pardon thee for the sake of thy dead father, whose name I would not see disgraced. But the Crier laid detaining hand on the boy's shoulder. "Stop!" he cried. Then, turning to the merchant, he aaids ' What -thou wilt pardon and what thou wilt not pardon is not for thee to say. This matter hath gone beyond thee. If the boy is honest he is entitled to tlje reward; if he be, as you say, a thief, & a thief he must be punished. Come both of ye with me before theCadi." - "To the. Cadi ! echoed the crowd. "To the 'Cadi!" Once arrived at the divan of the Cadi, the case was soon stated. Yusuf told how be had found the purser and how he had returned it unopened to Ebn Asia. ' The merchant insisted that, besides the gold, the purse had contained an emerald of srreat value. "What wast thou bidden to cry?" said the. Cadi, COPTKIQHT BY THE CCNTURY COMPANY ' and uncut. I hoped the finder of the purse might prove ignorant of its value.) Many would return the purse for half the gold it contained. Had 1 proclaimed the value of the emer ald, the chances of seeing it again would have been less; and, besides. I should have been obliged to of fer a greater reward." "There speaks the miser' cried some one in the crowd. Ebn-Azis smiled. He cared nothing for the opinion of others, so long as his explanation was believed and it was. "Boy," said the Cadi, turning to Yusuf, "hast thou this emerald?" "No, Effendi. I know naught of the stone." "Let him be searched," said the Cadi Two men laid hold of Yusuf. and quickly ran sacked his clothing. Then one seized his turban, and with a quick motion unrolled it. The gold piece that was tucked away in the Kning fell to the floor with a ringing sound, to the amazement of the beholders. "Aha!" cried Ebn-Aziz. "He hath taken toll of the purse, then, and but a moment before he swote he had not opened it." s The case, for a moment, looked brighter for th: merchant. t "It is mine!" exclaimed Yasuf, passionately. " "Thine." rejoined Ebn. "What hath a beggar to do with gold? Doubtless thou wilt aay the emeralj is thine also, directly." This taunt had the effect the merchant intended The crowd began to think that perhaps, after all Ebn-Aziz was right. The Cadi, too, was frowning on the boy. But the friend of Yusuf's father had not forsaken him. "Effendi," he said, "the boy speaks truly. '-1 myself gave him this gold piece but yeaterweek, ia, exchange for coppers, that he might with more ease and safety preserve his little hoard." "Ebn-Aziz," said the Cadi, "how many gold pieces bast thou in thy purse?" "I I have not counted," faltered the merchant 'j "Count them. Stayl Count ao that I may sea, thee." The merchant poured out the gold pieces before' the Cadi, and began with trembling fingers to drop ' them back, one by one, into" the purse. There were' two hundred not one missing! The Cadi turned to one of the scribes who saB near, and dictated an order which the scribe en grossed on the roll. Then, at a sign from the Cadi, the clerk rose, and, raising his hands to command silence, cried in a loud voice: "In the name of Allah! In the name of Allah! In the name of Allah! Hear ye the judgment o the most just Cadi in the matter concerning, tha merchant Ebn-Aziz and the boy Yusuf." The crowd pressed nearer to the divan. Ebn Aziz glanced furtively at the Cadi, but his crafty eyes could find no trace of favor or displeasure ia the judge's impassive face. , 5 "Ebn-Aziz," said the Cadi, "listen attentively U me; for my decision in this case resteth on thy answer. Remember, too, that the reputation of this fatherless lad is at stake, and Allah, who watcheth over the orphan, hath said: 'Thou shalt not bear false witness.' Therefore, bethink thee before thou answerest. Art thou certain the purse thou lost contained an emerald?" "As Allah is my judge," answered Ebn, "I ans certain." ( 'Then, said the Cadi, "the matter is simple to de c lr ' cannot doubt so solemn an assurance." The merchant bowed low at these words, the better to hide the exulting smile that distorted his crafty countenance. ;But neither," continued the Cadi, in an even voice, 'can I .doubt the word of the boy Yusuf, whose reputation for truth and honesty hath been established by many witnesses." Ebn-Aziz straightened suddenly. The smile ha5 disappeared. 5 K , . T "This, then, is my verdict," said the Cadi: ' "Since tliy purse, tbn-Aziz, contained an ' emerald, and since the purse that the boy Yusuf found contained no emerald, it is clear that it was not thy purse that the boy found Therefore, I command that the purse be returned to the finder, Yusuf; and thee. Ebn-Aztz, I would advise to have thy loss again cried through the streets; perhaps thy emerald may yet be found." ' JCVeek later a string of laden camels filed out of the Gate of the Caravans and glided away into the desert. And with them, went Yosuf, glad in the fulfilment ot his dreams, as he strode proudlv be side the handsomest camel (so Yusuf thought) in the world. 6ED TIME m FAISY LAND