Paul Patoff, by F. Marion 
Crawford 
 
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Title: Paul Patoff 
Author: F. Marion Crawford 
 
Release Date: October 3, 2007 [eBook #22879] 
Language: English 
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PAUL PATOFF 
by 
F. MARION CRAWFORD 
Author of "A Roman Singer," "To Leeward," "An American 
Politician," "Saracinesca," Etc. 
 
New York The MacMillan Company London: MacMillan & Co., Ltd. 
1911 
All rights reserved 
Copyright, 1887, by F. Marion Crawford. 
Copyright, 1892, by F. Marion Crawford. 
First published elsewhere. Reprinted with corrections, April, 1893; 
June, 1894; June, 1899; July, 1906; January, 1912. 
Norwood Press J. S. Cushing & Co.--Berwick & Smith Norwood Mass. 
U.S.A. 
 
PAUL PATOFF. 
My dear lady--my dear friend--you have asked me to tell you a story, 
and I am going to try, because there is not anything I would not try if 
you asked it of me. I do not yet know what it will be about, but it is
impossible that I should disappoint you; and if the proverb says, "Needs 
must when the devil drives," I can mend the proverb into a show of 
grace, and say, The most barren earth must needs bear flowers when an 
angel sows the seed. 
When you asked for the story I could only find a dry tale of my own 
doings, which I detailed to you somewhat at length, as we cantered 
down into the Valley of the Sweet Waters. The south wind was warm 
this afternoon, though it brought rain with it and wetted us a little as we 
rode; it was soft and dreamy, and made everything look sleepy, and 
misty, and a little uncertain in outline. Baghdad sniffed it in his deep 
red nostrils, for it was the wind of his home; but Haroun al Raschid 
shook the raindrops restlessly from his gray mane, as though he hated 
to be damp, and was thinking longingly of the hot sand and the desert 
sun. But he had no right to complain, for water must needs come in the 
oases,--and truly I know of no fairer and sweeter resting-place in life's 
journey than the Valley of the Sweet Waters above the Golden Horn. 
That same south wind--when I think, it is a point or two easterly, and it 
seems to smell of Persia--well, that same soft wind is blowing at my 
windows now in the dark night, and is murmuring, sometimes almost 
complaining, then dying away in a fitful, tearful sigh, sorry even to 
weeping for its restless fate, sorry perhaps for me and sighing for me. 
God knows, there is enough to sigh for in this working-day world, is 
there not? I have heard you sigh, too, very sadly, as though something 
hurt you, although you are so bright and young and fair. The wind sighs 
hopelessly, in great sobs of weariness and despair, for he is filled with 
the ghosts of the past; but your breath has a music in it that is more like 
the song of the sunrise that used to break out from the heart of the 
beautiful marble at dawn. 
Poor wind! He is trying to speak to me through the pines,--perhaps he 
is bringing a message. It is long since any one brought me a message I 
cared to hear. I will open the door to the terrace and let him in, and see 
what he has to say. 
Truly, he speaks great words:--
"I am the belt and the girdle of this world. I carry in my arms the souls 
of the dead and the sins of them; the souls of them that have not yet 
lived, with their deeds, are in my bosom. I am sorrowful with the 
sorrow of ages, and strong with the strength of ages yet unlived. What 
is thy sorrow to my sorrow, or thy strength to my strength? Listen. 
"Knowest thou whence I come, or whither I go? Fool, thou knowest not 
even of thyself what thou shalt do to-morrow, and it may be that on the 
next day I shall have thy soul, to take it away, and hold it, and buffet it, 
and tear it as I will. Fool, thou knowest little! The gardens of Persia are 
sweet this night; this night the    
    
		
	
	
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