THE SULTAN’S CAT
CHAPTER I
There was a Turkish Sultan who
had a cat. It was a handsome cat. It had a beautiful speckled fur, a long bushy
tail and eyes that gleamed at times like emeralds and at times like gold.
This cat came from a certain
province in Asia Minor (the Biblical Asia). The Greeks had founded the city and called it
Ankyra, hoping that there they had laid anchor. When the Turks overran Asia Minor,
looted and devastated the city of the anchor, they also perverted the Greek
name into Enguri which later was orthographised
in Europe as
Angora. The province
possessed a species of handsome cats which were known in Europe
as Angora cats.
Now this cat, whether it was
angry that it had been brought from its native haunts to the Sultan’s palace on
the Bosphorous or whether it was natural disposition,
displayed a vicious temper
It might have been content to
live in the Sultan’s Palace, a gem of architecture, the creation of the genius
of a non-Turkish brain, built on the banks of the Bosphorous,
in a city that had been founded by a Byzantine Emperor and bore his name Constantinopolis (Constantine’s City), but instead the cat
sulked, tore the silken and velvet cushions of the Sultan’s divan and smashed
the costly porcelain cups and dishes on the Sultan’s table imported from China.
Thereupon the Sultan procured a
trainer to train the cat into good manners, and so effectively was the work of
the training completed that the cat became as accomplished as a courtier in the
art of receiving his august master’s guests, and could understand whatever was
required of him to do when the Sultan spoke his commands. The Sultan was so highly gratified with the
new qualifications of his pet that he conferred upon it the title of
Effendi. All the servitors of the Palace
and the Sultan’s Ministers from the Grand Vizier downwards and even the Sultan himself, addressed the cat as Effendi.
The Sultan had a necklace made
for his pet in the form of a collar, it was studded with diamonds, emeralds and
sapphires, the precious stones came in order like
this: An emerald set in a cluster of
diamonds, then a sapphire set in diamonds and so on
alternately
until the circlet was completed. The
Sultan had also golden bells fastened to the cat’s paws and the bells tinkled
whenever the cat walked.
Now it happened that it came to
the Sultan’s knowledge about certain stories published and circulated in Europe
very detrimental to the Turkish character, in particular one great Orator in a
certain European country had made a public speech denouncing the Turks as worse
that savages.