< Tales from the Arabic
This work is a translation and has a separate copyright status to the applicable copyright protections of the original content.
TALES FROM THE ARABIC.
CASHAN EDITION
Limited to One Thousand Copies
No. 958
Contents
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CONTENTS OF THE SECOND VOLUME. Breslau Text.
Calcutta (1814–18) Text.
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Note: The nesting below tries to follow the actual structure of the stories, it doesn't match exactly the Contents in the printed book. (Wikisource contributor note)
Breslau Text
- King Shah Bekht and His Vizier Er Rehwan (continued)
- Story of the Pious Woman Accused of Lewdness
- Story of the Journeyman and the Girl
- Story of the Weaver Who Became a Physician by His Wife’s Commandment
- Story of the Two Sharpers Who Cheated Each His Fellow
- Story of the Sharpers with the Money-Changer and the Ass
- Story of the Sharper and the Merchants
- Story of the King and His Chamberlain’s Wife
- Story of the Foul-Favoured Man and His Fair Wife
- Story of the King Who Lost Kingdom and Wife and Wealth and God Restored Them to Him
- Story of Selim and Selma
- Story of the King of Hind and His Vizier
Shehrzad and Shehriyar[1]
- El Melik ez Zahir Rukneddin Bibers el Bunducdari and the Sixteen Officers of Police
- The First Officer’s Story
- The Second Officer’s Story
- The Third Officer’s Story
- The Fourth Officer’s Story
- The Fifth Officer’s Story
- The Sixth Officer’s Story
- The Seventh Officer’s Story
- The Eighth Officer’s Story
- The Ninth Officer’s Story
- The Tenth Officer’s Story
- The Eleventh Officer’s Story
- The Twelfth Officer’s Story
- The Thirteenth Officer’s Story
- The Fourteenth Officer’s Story
- A Merry Jest of a Thief
- Story of the Old Sharper
- The Fifteenth Officer’s Story
- The Sixteenth Officer’s Story
- Abdallah Ben Nafi and the King’s Son of Cashghar
Calcutta (1814–8) Text. #Women’s Craft
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Original: | ![]() This work was published before January 1, 1927, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago. |
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Translation: | ![]() This work was published before January 1, 1927, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago. |
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