2. ¿Por qué crees que el padre de Schahrazada narró esa fábula a su hija?
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Respuestas
The story by chapters tells that Sultan Shahriar (in Persian: شهریار "king") married a virgin every day and ordered her to behead the next day. All this he did in revenge, for he found his first wife cheating on him. He had already had three thousand women killed when he met Scheherezade.
Daughter of Shahriar's grand vizier, Scheherezade offers herself against her father's will to the king in order to appease his anger. Once in the royal chambers, Scheherezade asks the sultan to say a final goodbye to his beloved sister, Dunyazad. Upon granting his request and finding his sister, she asks him for a tale, as Scheherezade had secretly planned, and thus the sultan's wife begins an all-night narrative.
Scheherezade thus keeps the king awake, listening with amazement and interest to the first story, so he asks the story to continue, and Scheherezade adduces the arrival of dawn to postpone the continuation until the following night. Shahriar keeps her alive at the prospect of the narrative to come. The same event is repeated over and over again, chaining the stories one after another and within another, until, after a thousand and one nights of various adventures, and with three children, not only had the king been entertained but also wisely educated in morality and kindness by Scheherazade, who from concubine becomes the full wife of the king.