extreme reverence, each of the believers who had gathered
to meet him.
On the night of his arrival, as soon as the believers who
had been invited to dinner to meet Mulla Husayn had returned
to their homes, the host, turning to his guest, enquired
whether he would enlighten him more particularly regarding
his intimate experiences with the Bab in the castle of Mah-Ku.
"Many and diverse," replied Mulla Husayn, "were the things
which I heard and witnessed in the course of my nine days'
association with Him. He spoke to me of things relating
both directly and indirectly to His Faith. He gave me,
however, no definite directions as to the course I should
pursue for the propagation of His Cause. All He told me
was this: `On your way to Tihran, you should visit the
believers in every town and village through which you pass.
From Tihran you should proceed to Mazindaran, for there
lies a hidden treasure which shall be revealed to you, a treasure
which will unveil to your eyes the character of the task
you are destined to perform.' By His allusions I could,
however dimly, perceive the glory of His Revelation and was
able to discern the signs of the future ascendancy of His
Cause. From His words I gathered that I should eventually
be called upon to sacrifice my unworthy self in His path.
For on previous occasions, whenever dismissing me from His
presence, the Bab would invariably assure me that I should
again be summoned to meet Him. This time, however, as
He spoke to me His parting words, He gave me no such
promise, nor did He allude to the possibility of my ever
meeting Him again face to face in this world. `The Feast
of Sacrifice,' were His last words to me, `is fast approaching.
Arise and gird up the loin of endeavour, and let nothing
detain you from achieving your destiny. Having attained
your destination, prepare yourself to receive Us, for We too
shall ere long follow you.'"
Quddus enquired whether he had brought with him any
of his Master's writings, and, on being informed that he had
none with him, presented his guest with the pages of a
manuscript which he had in his possession, and requested
him to read certain of its passages. As soon as he had read
a page of that manuscript, his countenance underwent a
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Qa'im, the most distinguished among his fellow-disciples
would have unanimously acknowledged his claim and submitted
to his authority. Had not Mulla Muhammad-i-Mamaqani,
that noted and learned disciple of Shaykh Ahmad-i-Ahsa'i,
after he was made acquainted in Tabriz by Mulla
Husayn with the claims of the new Revelation, declared: "I
take God as my witness! Had this claim which the Siyyid-i-Bab
has made been advanced by this same Mulla Husayn
I would, in view of his remarkable traits of character and
breadth of knowledge, have been the first to champion his
cause and to proclaim it to all people. As he, however, has
chosen to subordinate himself to another person, I have
ceased to have any confidence in his words and have refused
to respond to his appeal." Had not Siyyid Muhammad-Baqir-i-Rashti,
when he heard Mulla Husayn so ably resolve
the perplexities which had long afflicted his mind, testified
in such glowing terms to his high attainments: "I, who
fondly imagined myself capable of confounding and silencing
Siyyid Kazim-i-Rashti, realised, when I first met and conversed
with him who claims to be only his humble disciple,
how grievously I had erred in my judgment. Such is the
strength with which this youth seems endowed that if he
were to declare the day to be night, I would still believe
him able to deduce such proofs as would conclusively demonstrate,
in the eyes of the learned divines, the truth of his
statement."
On the very night he was brought in contact with the
Bab, Mulla Husayn, though at first conscious of his own
infinite superiority and predisposed to belittle the claims
advanced by the son of an obscure merchant of Shiraz, did
not fail to perceive, as soon as his Host had begun to unfold
His theme, the incalculable benefits latent in His Revelation.
He eagerly embraced His Cause and disdainfully abandoned
whatever might hamper his own efforts for the proper understanding
and the effective promotion of its interests. And
when, in due course, Mulla Husayn was given the opportunity
of appreciating the transcendent sublimity of the writings of
Quddus, he, with his usual sagacity and unerring judgment,
was likewise able to estimate the true worth and merit of
those special gifts with which both the person and the utterance
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