Analysis of Ch 01 Manner Of Kings Story 04

Sa di 1210 (Shiraz) – 1291 (Shiraz)



A band of Arab brigands having taken up their position on the top of
a mountain and closed the passage of caravans, the inhabitants of
the country were distressed by their stratagems and the troops of
the sultan foiled because the robbers, having obtained an inaccessible
spot on the summit of the mountain, thus had a refuge which they
made their habitation. The chiefs of that region held a consultation
about getting rid of the calamity because it would be impossible to
offer resistance to the robbers if they were allowed to remain.

A tree which has just taken root
       May be moved from the place by the strength of a man
       But, if thou leavest it thus for a long time,
       Thou canst not uproot it with a windlass.
       The source of a fountain may be stopped with a bodkin
       But, when it is full, it cannot be crossed on an elephant.

The conclusion was arrived at to send one man as a spy and to wait
for the opportunity till the brigands departed to attack some people
and leave the place empty. Then several experienced men, who had
fought in battles, were despatched to keep themselves in ambush in a
hollow of the mountain. In the evening the brigands returned from
their excursion with their booty, divested themselves of their arms,
put away their plunder and the first enemy who attacked them was
sleep, till about a watch of the night had elapsed:

The disk of the sun went into darkness.
       Jonah went into the mouth of the fish.

The warriors leapt forth from the ambush, tied the hands of every
one of the robbers to his shoulders and brought them in the morning to
the court of the king, who ordered all of them to be slain. There
happened to be a youth among them, the fruit of whose vigour was
just ripening and the verdure on the rose-garden of whose cheek had
begun to sprout. One of the veziers, having kissed the foot of the
king's throne and placed the face of intercession upon the ground,
said: 'This boy has not yet eaten any fruit from the garden of life
and has not yet enjoyed the pleasures of youth. I hope your majesty
will generously and kindly confer an obligation upon your slave by
sparing his life.' The king, being displeased with this request,
answered:

'He whose foundation is bad will not take instruction from the good,
 To educate unworthy persons is like throwing nuts on a cupola.

'It is preferable to extirpate the race and offspring of these
people and better to dig up their roots and foundations, because it is
not the part of wise men to extinguish fire and to leave burning coals
or to kill a viper and leave its young ones.

If a cloud should rain the water of life
       Never sip it from the branch of a willow-tree.
       Associate not with a base fellow
       Because thou canst not eat sugar from a mat-reed.'

The vezier heard these sentiments, approved of them nolens volens,
praised the opinion of the king and said: 'What my lord has uttered is
the very truth itself because if the boy had been brought up in the
company of those wicked men, he would have become one of themselves.
But your slave hopes that he will, in the society of pious men, profit
by education and will acquire the disposition of wise persons. Being
yet a child the rebellious and perverse temper of that band has not
yet taken hold of his nature and there is a tradition of the prophet
that every infant is born with an inclination for Islam but his
parents make him a Jew, a Christian or a Majusi.'

The spouse of Lot became a friend of wicked persons.
       His race of prophets became extinct.
       The dog of the companions of the cave for some days
       Associated with good people and became a man.

When the vezier had said these words and some of the king's
courtiers had added their intercession to his, the king no longer
desired to shed the blood of the youth and said: 'I grant the
request although I disapprove-of it.'

Knowest thou not what Zal said to the hero Rastam:
       'An enemy cannot be held despicable or helpless.
       I have seen many a water from a paltry spring
       Becoming great and carrying off a camel with its load.'

In short, the vezier brought up the boy delicately, with every
comfort, and kept masters to educate him, till they had taught him
to address persons in elegant language as well as to reply and he
had acquired every accomplishment. One day the vezier hinted at his
talents in the presence of the king, asserting that the instructions
of wise men had taken effect upon the boy and had expelled his
prev


Scheme AAABXXCX XDEFXX XBGHXXIX FX JCXIGHXKJXXX XH XLXM KJXX FLHXNOXNLF MXXD XXHX EFOX JXJLMLA
Poetic Form
Metre 0111011010110101011 01001010110001001 010001111000011 010101010100110100 1101010101101011 1101001111010010 011011001000111101001 10010101011001101 01111101 111101101101 1111111011 1110111010 0110101111010 111111101111100 001010111111101011 100100101010101110 0101101100100111 10100111010100 101010001001011 1010111001001111 10111000110010111 110101101101 0110110110 1010101101 0100111011011100 11010111001100101 011011101111111 101101011011111 1100001101101111 011111011010110 11010110100101 11111110101101011 01110101011111100 1100001001101001111 10110110011101 10 1101011111010101 110010101110110010 111000110010111 100101111100100111 101111101010011101 11101001111 1011101011 10111011011 0100110110 011111101011 0111100011111 10010101011111101 01010101101111100 10011101111011101 1111111000100110110 1010010100010111010 10100100011011111 1101111001100101010 110010111101010111 101101010101 0111010111010 111100101 0110010101111 0100111000101 101111101101 10011010101101110 010110110101110 01110111 11111110101 110010110100110 1111001010101 010101001010111 0101110110001100 100110110111111 111001001011110101 1010100010011011011 10001010101010010 11111001010101011 1
Closest metre Iambic octameter
Characters 4,484
Words 818
Sentences 27
Stanzas 13
Stanza Lengths 8, 6, 8, 2, 12, 2, 4, 4, 10, 4, 4, 4, 7
Lines Amount 75
Letters per line (avg) 47
Words per line (avg) 11
Letters per stanza (avg) 270
Words per stanza (avg) 63
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

4:04 min read
64

Sa di

Saadi Shirazi was a major Persian poet and prose write of the medieval period. more…

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