That very chief [the guide who shared the parable] called his wife "Something More." They name the people there from a characteristic. I wonder what kind of name some people would have in this country if they had a name following their natural characteristic. He called his wife "Something More," because she always wanted something more; never satisfied, the more she had the more she wanted, and that was in that very land and in the family of that very man who told me this story. And I asked him if he would not stop the caravan when we came to the Angel's Lily, between Bagdad and Borzar. He said, "We always pass it before we know we have passed it, no matter which way we go." That parable contained an important lesson in the wisest philosophy of human living.