TTENDED by His escort, the Bab proceeded in
the direction of Qum.(1) His alluring charm, combined
with a compelling dignity and unfailing
benevolence, had, by this time, completely disarmed
and transformed His guards. They seemed to have
abdicated all their rights and duties and to have resigned
themselves to His will and pleasure. In their eagerness to
224
serve and please Him, they, one day, remarked: "We are
strictly forbidden by the government to allow You to enter
the city of Qum, and have been ordered to proceed by an
unfrequented route directly to Tihran. We have been particularly
directed to keep away from the Haram-i-Ma'sumih,(1) that inviolable sanctuary under whose shelter the most
notorious criminals are immune from arrest. We are ready,
however, to ignore utterly for Your sake whatever instructions
we have received. If it be Your wish, we shall unhesitatingly
conduct You through the streets of Qum and enable
You to visit its holy shrine." "`The heart of the true believer
is the throne of God,'" observed the Bab. "He who
is the ark of salvation and the Almighty's impregnable stronghold
is now journeying with you through this wilderness. I
prefer the way of the country rather than to enter this unholy
city. The immaculate one whose remains are interred within
this shrine, her brother, and her illustrious ancestors no doubt
bewail the plight of this wicked people. With their lips they
pay homage to her; by their acts they heap dishonour upon
her name. Outwardly they serve and reverence her shrine;
inwardly they disgrace her dignity."
Such lofty sentiments had instilled such confidence in the
hearts of those who accompanied the Bab that had He at
any time chosen to turn away suddenly and leave them, no
one among His guards would have felt in the least perturbed
or would have attempted to pursue Him. Proceeding by a route that skirted the northern end of the city of Qum, they
halted at the village of Qumrud, which was owned by a
relative of Muhammad Big, and the inhabitants of which all
belonged to the sect of the Aliyu'llahi. At the invitation
of the headman of the village, the Bab tarried one night in
that place and was touched by the warmth and spontaneity
of the reception which those simple folk had accorded Him.
Ere He resumed His journey, He invoked the blessings of
225
ensuing day, and had decided to spend the night in the neighbourhood
of that fortress, when a messenger unexpectedly
arrived from Tihran, bearing a written order from Haji Mirza
Aqasi to Muhammad Big. That message instructed him to
proceed immediately with the Bab to the village of Kulayn,(1)
where Shaykh-i-Kulayni, Muhammad-ibn-i-Ya'qub, the author
of the Usul-i-Kafi, who was born in that place, had
been laid to rest with his father, and whose shrines are greatly
227
honoured by the people of that neighbourhood.(1) Muhammad Big was commanded, in view of the unsuitability of the houses in that village, to pitch a special tent for the Bab
and keep the escort in its neighbourhood pending the receipt
of further instructions. On the morning of the ninth day
after Naw-Ruz, the eleventh day of the month of Rabi'u'th-Thani,
in the year 1263 A.H.,(2) in the immediate vicinity of
that village, which belonged to Haji Mirza Aqasi, a tent
which had served for his own use whenever he visited that
place was erected for the Bab, on the slopes of a hill pleasantly
situated amid wide stretches of orchards and smiling
meadows. The peacefulness of that spot, the luxuriance of
its vegetation, and the unceasing murmur of its streams
greatly pleased the Bab. He was joined two days after by
Siyyid Husayn-i-Yazdi, Siyyid Hasan, his brother; Mulla
Abdu'l-Karim, and Shaykh Hasan-i-Zunuzi, all of whom
were invited to lodge in the immediate surroundings of His
tent. On the fourteenth day of the month of Rabi'u'th-Thani,(3)
the twelfth day after Naw-Ruz, Mulla Mihdiy-i-Khu'i
and Mulla Muhammad-Mihdiy-i-Kandi arrived from
Tihran. The latter, who had been closely associated with
Baha'u'llah in Tihran, had been commissioned by Him to
present to the Bab a sealed letter together with certain gifts
which, as soon as they were delivered into His hands, provoked
in His soul sentiments of unusual delight. His face
glowed with joy as He overwhelmed the bearer with marks
of His gratitude and favour.
That message, received at an hour of uncertainty and
suspense, imparted solace and strength to the Bab. It dispelled
the gloom that had settled upon His heart, and imbued
His soul with the certainty of victory. The sadness which
had long lingered upon His face, and which the perils of His
captivity had served to aggravate, visibly diminished. He
no longer shed those tears of anguish which had streamed
so profusely from His eyes ever since the days of His arrest
and departure from Shiraz. The cry "Beloved, My Well-Beloved,"
228
composed in these terms:(1) "Much as we desire to meet you, we find ourself unable, in view of our immediate departure from our capital, to receive you befittingly in Tihran. We
have signified our desire that you be conducted to Mah-Ku,
and have issued the necessary instructions to Ali Khan, the
warden of the castle, to treat you with respect and consideration.
It is our hope and intention to summon you to this
place upon our return to the seat of our government, at
231
the contemplated interview should rob him of his position
of unquestioned pre-eminence in the affairs of the State and
should lead eventually to his overthrow from power. He
entertained no feelings of malice or resentment toward the
Bab. He finally succeeded(1) in persuading his sovereign to
transfer so dreaded an opponent to a remote and sequestered
corner of his realm, and was thus able to relieve his mind
of a thought that continually obsessed him.(2) How stupendous
was his mistake, how grievous his blunder! Little did he
realise, at that moment, that by his incessant intrigues he
was withholding from his king and country the incomparable
benefits of a Divine Revelation which alone had the power
to deliver the land from the appalling state of degradation
into which it had fallen. By his act that short-sighted minister
did not only withhold from Muhammad Shah the supreme
instrument with which he could have rehabilitated a fast-declining
empire, but also deprived him of that spiritual
Agency which could have enabled him to establish his undisputed
ascendancy over the peoples and nations of the earth.
By his folly, his extravagance and perfidious counsels, he
undermined the foundations of the State, lowered its prestige,
sapped the loyalty of his subjects, and plunged them into
233
an abyss of misery.(1) Incapable of being admonished by the
example of his predecessors, he contemptuously ignored the
demands and interests of the people, pursued, with unremitting
zeal, his designs for personal aggrandisement, and by
his profligacy and extravagance involved his country in
ruinous wars with its neighbours. Sa'd-i-Ma'adh, who was
neither of royal blood nor invested with authority, attained,
through the uprightness of his conduct and his unsparing
234
devotion to the Cause of Muhammad, so exalted a station
that to the present day the chiefs and rulers of Islam have
continued to reverence his memory and to praise his virtues;
whereas Buzurg-Mihr, the ablest, the wisest and most experienced
administrator among the vazirs of Nushiravan-i-'Adil,
in spite of his commanding position, eventually was
publicly disgraced, was thrown into a pit, and became the
object of the contempt and the ridicule of the people. He
bewailed his plight and wept so bitterly that he finally lost
his sight. Neither the example of the former nor the fate
of the latter seemed to have awakened that self-confident
minister to the perils of his own position. He persisted in
his thoughts until he too forfeited his rank, lost his riches,(1) and sank into abasement and shame. The numerous properties which he forcibly seized from the humble and law-abiding
subjects of the Shah, the costly furnitures with
which he embellished them, the vast expenditures of labour
and treasure which he ordered for their improvement--all
were irretrievably lost two years after he had issued his
decree condemning the Bab to a cruel incarceration in the
inhospitable mountains of Adhirbayjan. All his possessions
were confiscated by the State. He himself was disgraced by
his sovereign, was ignominiously expelled from Tihran, and
fell a prey to disease and poverty. Bereft of hope and sunk
in misery, he languished in Karbila until the hour of his
death.(2)235
The Bab was accordingly ordered to proceed to Tabriz.(1)
The same escort, under the command of Muhammad Big,
attended Him on His journey to the northwestern province
of Adhirbayjan. He was allowed to select one companion
and one attendant from among His followers to be with Him
during His sojourn in that province. He selected Siyyid
Husayn-i-Yazdi and Siyyid Hasan, his brother. He refused
to expend on Himself the funds provided by the government
for the expense of that journey. All the allowances that
were given by the State He bestowed upon the poor and
needy, and devoted to His own private needs the money
which He, as a merchant, had earned in Bushihr and Shiraz.
As orders had been given to avoid entering the towns in
the course of the journey to Tabriz, a number of the believers
of Qazvin, informed of the approach of their beloved
Leader, set out for the village of Siyah-Dihan(2) and were
there able to meet Him.
One of them was Mulla Iskandar, who had been delegated
by Hujjat to visit the Bab in Shiraz, and to investigate
His Cause. The Bab commissioned him to deliver the following
message to Sulayman Khan-i-Afshar, who was a great
admirer of the late Siyyid Kazim: "He whose virtues the
late siyyid unceasingly extolled, and to the approach of whose
Revelation he continually alluded, is now revealed. I am
that promised One. Arise and deliver Me from the hand of
the oppressor." When the Bab entrusted this message to
Mulla Iskandar, Sulayman Khan was in Zanjan and was
preparing to leave for Tihran. Within the space of three
days, that message reached him. He failed, however, to
respond to that appeal.
236
for His confinement.(1) A detachment of the Nasiri regiment
stood guard at the entrance of His house. With the exception
of Siyyid Husayn and his brother, neither the public nor
His followers were allowed to meet Him. This same regiment,
which had been recruited from among the inhabitants
of Khamsih, and upon which special honours had been conferred,
was subsequently chosen to discharge the volley that
caused His death. The circumstances of His arrival had
stirred the people in Tabriz profoundly. A tumultuous concourse
of people had gathered to witness His entry into the
city.(2) Some were impelled by curiosity, others were earnestly
desirous of ascertaining the veracity of the wild reports that
were current about Him, and still others were moved by
their faith and devotion to attain His presence and to assure
Him of their loyalty. As He walked along the streets, the
acclamations of the multitude resounded on every side. The
great majority of the people who beheld His face greeted
Him with the shout of " Allah-u-Akbar,"(3) others loudly
glorified and cheered Him, a few invoked upon Him the
blessings of the Almighty, others were seen to kiss reverently
the dust of His footsteps. Such was the clamour which His
arrival had raised that a crier was ordered to warn the populace
of the danger that awaited those who ventured to seek
His presence. "Whosoever shall make any attempt to approach
the Siyyid-i-Bab," went forth the cry, "or seek to
meet him, all his possessions shall forthwith be seized and
he himself condemned to perpetual imprisonment."
On the day after the Bab's arrival, Haji
Muhammad-Taqiy-i-Milani, a noted merchant of the city, ventured,
together with Haji Ali-'Askar, to interview the Bab. They
were warned by their friends and well-wishers that by such
an attempt they would not only be risking the loss of their
240
to partake of the joy of His presence, in return for the one
visit which you have missed.' I was amazed at the confidence
with which he uttered those words. Not until the time
of my visit to the Bab in Tabriz, when, despite adverse circumstances,
I was, on several occasions, admitted into His
presence, did I recall those words of Mulla Husayn and
marvel at his remarkable foresight. How great was my surprise
when, on my seventh visit to the Bab, I heard Him
speak these words: `Praise be to God, who has enabled you
to complete the number of your visits and who has extended
to you His loving protection.'"