The World's Greatest Books — Volume 01 — Fiction by Various
page 91 of 407 (22%)
page 91 of 407 (22%)
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great fear of his deed, this Mussulman carried the corpse into the
street, and placed it upright against a shop. Came by a Christian merchant at dawn of day, and running against the hunchback tumbled him over; then thinking himself attacked he struck the body, and at that moment the watch came by and haled the merchant before the sultan. Now the hunchback was a favourite of the sultan, and he ordered the Christian merchant to be executed. To the scaffold, just when death was to be done, came the Mussulman, and confessed that he was the murderer. So the executioner released the Christian, and was about to hang the other, when the doctor came and confessed to being the murderer. So the doctor took the place of the Mussulman, when the tailor and his wife hastened to the scene, and confessed that they were guilty. Now, when this story came to the ears of the sultan, he said: "Great is Allah, whose will must be done!" and he released all of them, and commanded this story of the hunchback to be written in a book. _VI.--Aladdin, or the Wonderful Lamp_ There was in the old time a bad and idle boy who lived with his mother, a poor widow, and gave her much unrest. And there came to him one day a wicked magician, who called himself the boy's uncle, and made rich presents to the mother, and one day he led Aladdin out to make him a |
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