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Commonplace I
The Arabian Nights - Penguin Vol. 1 - pp. 180
The blind man may escape a pit
In which the man of keen sight will be trapped.
The ignorant may not be injured by the word
That brings destruction to the clever men.
A believer may find it hard to earn his daily bread,
Unlike the unbeliever and the libertine.
Of what use are man's actions and his schemes?
What happens is what fate decrees for them.
The Arabian Nights - Penguin Vol. 1 - pp. 183
I then knocked at the door and out came two young girls with swelling breasts, virgins like moons. 'Come in,' they said. 'Our mistress is expecting you, and she did not sleep last night, so pleased was she with you.' I entered a vaulted hall with seven doors, round which were windows overlooking a garden with fruits of all kinds, gushing waters and singing birds. The walls were treated with sultani gypsum in which a man could see his own face, while the ceiling was ornamented with gold, showing inscriptions in lapis lazuli, encompassing all the qualities of beauty and dazzling those who looked at it. The floor was laid with variegated marble and strewn with carpets, coloured silks and mattresses, while in the centre was a fountain, at whose corners were birds made of pearls and other gems.