Harvard Classics, Vol. 16
Shahrazad relating a story to the Sultan
Tell me what thou dost want of me; here am I, thy slave, and the slave of him who holdeth the Lamp.
One of the Jann
Harvard Classics, Vol. 16
Stories from the Thousand and One Nights
Translated by Edward William Lane Revised by Stanley Lane-Poole
The desperate entertainments of a wife delaying execution by her husband, this translation of 42 stories from a much larger collection has become the most well-known of folk tales for younger readers: Aladdin and his Wonderful Lamp, the Voyages of Sinbad, and Ali-Baba and the Forty Thieves.
Contents
NEW YORK: P.F. COLLIER & SON COMPANY, 1909–14
NEW YORK: BARTLEBY.COM, 2001
NEW YORK: BARTLEBY.COM, 2001
Introductory Note
- Introduction
- Nights 1–3
- The Story of the Merchant and the Jinni
- The Story of the First Sheykh and the Gazelle
- The Story of the Second Sheykh and the Two Black Hounds
- The Story of the Third Sheykh and the Mule
- Nights 3–9
- The Story of the Fisherman
- The Story of King Yunan and the Sage Duban
- The Story of the Husband and the Parrot
- The Story of the Envious Wezir and the Prince and the Ghuleh
- The Story of the Young King of the Black Islands
- Nights 9–18
- The Story of the Porter and the Ladies of Baghdad, and of the Three Royal Mendicants, Etc.
- The Story of the First Royal Mendicant
- The Story of the Second Royal Mendicant
- The Story of the Envier and the Envied
- The Story of the Third Royal Mendicant
- The Story of the First of the Three Ladies of Baghdad
- The Story of the Second of the Three Ladies of Baghdad
- Nights 24–32
- The Story of the Humpback
- The Story Told by the Christian Broker
- The Story Told by the Sultan’s Steward
- The Story Told by the Jewish Physician
- The Story Told by the Tailor
- The Barber’s Story of Himself
- The Barber’s Story of His First Brother
- The Barber’s Story of His Second Brother
- The Barber’s Story of His Third Brother
- The Barber’s Story of His Fourth Brother
- The Barber’s Fifth Brother
- The Barber’s Story of His Sixth Brother
- Nights 32–36
- The Story of Nur-Ed-din and Enis-El-Jelis
- Nights 537–566
- The Story of Es-Sindibad of the Sea and Es-Sindibad of the Land
- The First Voyage of Es-Sindibad of the Sea
- The Second Voyage of Es-Sindibad of the Sea
- The Third Voyage of Es-Sindibad of the Sea
- The Fourth Voyage of Es-Sindibad of the Sea
- The Fifth Voyage of Es-Sindibad of the Sea
- The Sixth Voyage of Es-Sindibad of the Sea
- The Seventh Voyage of Es-Sindibad of the Sea
- Nights 566–578
- The Story of the City of Brass
- Nights 738–756
- The Story of Jullanar of the Sea
- Appendix
- The Story of ‘Ala-ed-Din and the Wonderful Lamp
- Paras. 1–24
- Paras. 25–49
- Paras. 50–74
- Paras. 75–103
- The Story of ‘Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves