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The Adventures of
Aladdin
Once upon a time... a widow had an only
son whose name was Aladdin. They were very poor and lived from
hand to mouth, though Aladdin did what he could to earn some
pennies, by picking bananas in faraway places.
One day, as he was looking for wild figs
in a grove some way from the town, Aladdin met a mysterious stranger.
This smartly dressed dark-eyed man with a trim black beard and
a splendid sapphire in his turban, asked Aladdin an unusual question:
"Come here, boy," he ordered.
"How would you like to earn a silver penny?"
"A silver penny!" exclaimed
Aladdin. "Sir, I'd do anything for that kind of payment."
"I'm not going to ask you to do much. Just go down that
manhole. I'm much too big to squeeze through myself. If you do
as I ask, you'll have your reward."
The stranger helped Aladdin lift the manhole
cover, for it was very heavy. Slim and agile as he was, the boy
easily went down. His feet touched stone and he carefully made
his way down some steps . . . and found himself in a large chamber.
It seemed to sparkle, though dimly lit by the flickering light
of an old oil lamp. When Aladdin's eyes became used to the gloom,
he saw a wonderful sight: trees dripping with glittering jewels,
pots of gold and caskets full of priceless gems. Thousands of
precious objects lay scattered about. It was a treasure trove!
Unable to believe his eyes, Aladdin was standing dazed when he
heard a shout behind him.
"The lamp! Put out the flame and
bring me the lamp!"
Surprised and suspicious, for why should
the stranger, out of all such a treasure want only an old lamp,
Aladdin wondered. Perhaps he was a wizard. He decided to be on
his guard. Picking up the lamp, he retraced his steps up to the
entrance.
"Give me the lamp," urged the
wizard impatiently. "Hand it over," he began to shout,
thrusting out his arm to grab it, but Aladdin cautiously drew
back.
"Let me out first..."
"Too bad for you," snapped the
stranger, slamming down the manhole cover, never noticing that,
as he did so, a ring slid off his finger.
A terrified Aladdin was left in pitch
darkness, wondering what the wizard would do next. Then he trod
on the ring. Aimlessly putting it on his finger, he twisted it
round and round.
Suddenly the room was flooded with a rosy
light and a great genie with clasped hands appeared on a cloud.
"At your command, sire," said
the genie.
Now astounded, Aladdin could only stammer:
"I want to go home!"
In a flash he was back in his own home,
though the door was tightly shut.
"How did you get in?" called
his mother from the kitchen stove, the minute she set eyes on
him.
Excitedly, her son told her of his adventures.
"Where's the silver coin?" his
mother asked. Aladdin clapped a hand to his brow. For all he
had brought home was the old oil lamp
"Oh, mother! I'm so sorry. This is
all I've got."
"Well, let's hope it works. It's
so dirty..." and the widow began to rub the lamp.
Suddenly out shot another genie, in a
cloud of smoke.
"You've set me free, after centuries!
I was a prisoner in the lamp, waiting to be freed by someone
rubbing it. Now, I'm your obedient servant. Tell me your wishes."
And the genie bowed respectfully, awaiting Aladdin's orders.
The boy and his mother gaped wordlessly
at this incredible apparition, then the genie said with a hint
of impatience in his voice. "I'm here at your command. Tell
me what you want. Anything you like!"
Aladdin gulped, then said: "Bring
us... bring..."
His mother not having yet begun to cook
the dinner, went on to say: "... a lovely big meal."
From that day on, the widow and her son
had everything they could wish for: food, clothes and a fine
home, for the genie of the lamp granted them everything they
asked him. Aladdin grew into a tall handsome young man and his
mother felt that he ought to find himself a wife, sooner or later.
One day, as he left the market, Aladdin
happened to see the Sultan's daughter Halima in her sedan chair
being carried through the streets. He only caught a fleeting
glimpse of the princess, but it was enough for him to want to
marry her. Aladdin told his mother and she quickly said: "I'll
ask the Sultan for his daughter's hand. He'll never be able to
refuse. Wait and see!"
And indeed, the Sultan was easily persuaded
by a casket full of big diamonds to admit the widow to the palace.
However, when he learned why she had come, he told the widow
that her son must bring proof of his power and riches. This was
mostly the Chamberlain's idea, for he himself was eager to marry
the beautiful black-eyed Sultan's daughter.
"If Aladdin wants to marry Halima,'
said the Sultan, "he must send me forty slaves tomorrow.Every
slave must bring a box of precious stones. And forty Arab warriors
must escort the treasure."
Aladdin's mother went sadly home. The
genie of the magic lamp had already worked wonders, but nothing
like this.
Aladdin however,when he heard the news,
was not at all dismayed. He picked up the lamp, rubbed it harder
than ever and told the genie what he required. The genie simply
clapped his hands three times. Forty slaves magically appeared,
carrying the gemstones, together with their escort of forty Arab
warriors.
When he saw all this the next day, the
Sultan was taken aback. He never imagined such wealth could exist.
Just as he was about to accept Aladdin as his daughter's bridegroom,
the envious Chamberlain broke in with a question.
"Where will they live?" he asked.
The Sultan pondered for a moment, then allowing greed to get
the better of him, he told Aladdin to build a great, splendid
palace for Halima.
Aladdin went straight home and, in what
was once a wilderness, the genie built him a palace. The last
obstacle had been overcome. The wedding took place with great
celebrations and the Sultan was especially happy at finding such
a rich and powerful son-in-law.
News of Aladdin's sudden fortune and wealth
spread like wildfire, until.... one day, a strange merchant stopped
beneath the palace window.
"Old lamps for new," he called
to the princess, standing on the balcony.
Now, Aladdin had always kept his secret
to himself. Only his mother knew it and she had never told a
soul. Halima, alas, had been kept in the dark. And so, now, wanting
to give Aladdin a surprise as well as make a good bargain, she
fetched the old oil lamp she had seen Aladdin tuck away, and
gave it to the merchant in exchange for a new one.
The merchant quickly began to rub it ...
and the genie was now at the service of the wizard who had got
his magic lamp back. In a second he whisked away all Aladdin's
possessions and magically sent the palace and the princess to
an unknown land. Aladdin and the Sultan were at their wits' end.
Nobody knew what had happened. Only Aladdin knew it had something
to do with the magic lamp. But as he wept over the lost genie
of the lamp, he remembered the genie of the ring from the wizard's
finger. Slipping the ring on his finger, Aladdin twisted it round
and round. "
Take me to the place where the wizard
has hidden my wife," he ordered the genie.
In a flash, he found himself inside his
own palace, and peeping from behind a curtain, he saw the wizard
and the princess, now his servant.
"Psst! Psst!" hissed Aladdin.
"Aladdin! It's you!"
"Ssh. Don't let him hear you. Take
this powder and put it into his tea. Trust me."
The powder quickly took effect and the
wizard fell into a deep sleep. Aladdin hunted for the lamp high
and low, but it was nowhere to be seen. But it had to be there.
How, otherwise, had the wizard moved the palace? As Aladdin gazed
at his sleeping enemy, he thought of peering underneath the pillow.
"The lamp! At last," sighed
Aladdin, hastily rubbing it.
"Welcome back, Master!" exclaimed
the genie. "Why did you leave me at another's service for
so long?"
"Welcome," replied Aladdin.
"I'm glad to see you again. I've certainly missed you! It's
just as well I have you by me again."
"At your command," smiled the
genie. "First, put this wicked wizard in chains and take
him far away where he'll never be found again."
The genie grinned with pleasure, nodded
his head, and the wizard vanished. Halima clutched Aladdin in
fear:
"What's going on? Who is that genie?"
"Don't worry, everything is all right,"
Aladdin reassured her, as he told his wife the whole story of
how he had met the wizard and found the magic lamp that had enabled
him to marry her.
Everything went back to normal and the
happy pair hugged each other tenderly.
"Can we return to our own kingdom?"
the princess asked timidly, thinking of her father, so far away.
Aladdin glanced at her with a smile. "The
magic that brought you here will take you back, but with me at
your side, forever."
The Sultan was almost ill with worry.
His daughter had disappeared along with the palace, and then
his son-in-law had vanished too. Nobody knew where they were,
not even the wise men hastily called to the palace to divine
what had happened. The jealous Chamberlain kept on repeating:
"I told you Aladdin's fortune couldn't
last."
Everyone had lost all hope of ever seeing
the missing pair again, when far away, Aladdin rubbed the magic
lamp and said to the genie, "Take my wife, myself and the
palace back to our own land, as fast as you can."
"In a flash, Sire," replied
the genie.
At the snap of a finger, the palace rose
into the air and sped over the Sultan's kingdom, above the heads
of his astonished subjects. It gently floated down to earth and
landed on its old site. Aladdin and Halima rushed to embrace
the Sultan.
To this very day, in that distant country,
you can still admire the traces of an ancient palace which folk
call the palace that came from the skies.
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