494 SINDBAD, THE SAILOR. a hideous black man, who was as tall as a palm-tree ; he had but one eye, his teeth were long and sharp, and his nails like the talons of a bird. He took me up as I would a kitten, but finding I was little better than skin and bone, he put me down with disdain. The captain being the fattest of the party, was sacrificed to his appetite. When the monster had finished his meal, he stretched himself upon a great stone bench in the por- tico, and fell asleep—snoring louder than thunder. In this manner he slept till morning. In the morning he went out. I said to my companions, ‘Do not waste time in useless sorrow ; Jet us hasten to look for timber to make floats.” We found some timber on the sea-shore, and laboured hard to make our floats before the giant should return; but, having no tools, it ‘was evening before we had finished them ; and whilst we were on the point of pushing them off the beach, our hideous tyrant returned, and drove us to his palace, as if we had been a flock of sheep, We saw another of our companions sacrificed, and the giant lay down to sleep as before. Our desperate condition gave us courage; nine of us got up very softly, and held the points of the roasting spits in the fire, until we made them red hot; we then thrust them at once into the monster's eye. He uttered a frightful scream, and having endeavoured in vain to find us, he opened the ebony gate and left the palace. We did not stay long behind him, but hastened to the sea-shore; and having got our floats ready, we only waited for daylight to em- bark upon them, But at the dawn of day we beheld our mon- strous enemy, led by two giants of equal size, and followed by many others of similar size. We jumped upon our floats, and pushed them from the shore, the tide assisting us. ‘The giants seeing us likely to escape, tore great pieces of rocks, and wading in the water up to their waists, hurled them at us with all their might. They sunk every one of the floats but that one on