14 ALADDIN; OR, THE the influence of despair, he determined to cast himself into the water. He thought it right first to say his prayers ; and went to the river side to wash his hands and face, according to the Jaw of Mohammed. The bank of the river was steep and slip- pery ; and, as he trod upon it, he slid down against a little rock. In falling down the bank, he rubbed his ring so hard, that the same genius appeared which he had seen inthe cavern. Alad- din said, “ I command thee to convey me to the place where my palace stands, and set me down under the princess's window.” The genius immediately transported him into the midst of a large plain, on which his palace stood, and set him exactly under the window, and left him there fast asleep. ‘The next morning, one of the women perceived Aladdin, and told the princess, who could not believe her ; but, nevertheless, she instantly opened the window, where she saw Aladdin, and said to him, ‘I have sent to have one of the private gates opened for you.” Aladdin went into the princess's chamber, where, after they had affectionately embraced, he said to her, “ What has become of an old lamp, which I left on the cornice when I went hunting?” The princess told him that it had been ex~- changed for a new one; and that the next morning she found herself in an unknown country, which she had been told was in Africa, by the treacherous man himself, who had conveyed her thither by his magic art.“ Princess,” said Aladdin, “ you have informed me who the traitor is, by telling me you are in Africa, He is the most perfidious of all me ut this is not the time or place to give you a full account of his iniquity, Can. you tell me what he has done with the lamp, and where he has placed it ?”—“ He carries it carefully wrapped up in his bosom,” said the princess ; ‘and this I know, because he has taken it out and showed it to me.” Princess,” said Aladdin, “tell me, I conjure thee, how this wicked and treacherous man treats