and language of the Qur'an. In the face of the people of this
city, he has flung these challenging words: `Produce one like
it, if you are men of truth.' The day is fast approaching when
the whole of Isfahan will have embraced his Cause!" Haji
Siyyid Asadu'llah returned evasive answers to their complaints.
"What am I to say?" he was at last forced to reply.
Do you not yourselves admit that Mulla Husayn has, by
his eloquence and the cogency of his argument, silenced a
man no less great than my illustrious father? How can I,
then, who am so inferior to him in merit and knowledge,
presume to challenge what he has already approved? Let
each man dispassionately examine these claims. If he be
satisfied, well and good; if not, let him observe silence, and
not incur the risk of discrediting the fair name of our Faith."
Finding that their efforts had failed to influence Haji
Siyyid Asadu'llah, his disciples referred the matter to Haji
Muhammad-Ibrahim-i-Kalbasi. "Woe betide us," they loudly
protested, "for the enemy has risen to disrupt the holy Faith
of Islam. ln lurid and exaggerated language, they stressed
the challenging character of the ideas propounded by Mulla
Husayn. "Hold your peace," replied Haji Muhammad-Ibrahim.
" Mulla Husayn is not the person to be duped by
anyone, nor can he fall a victim to dangerous heresies. If
your contention be true, if Mulla Husayn has indeed espoused
a new Faith, it is unquestionably your first obligation
to enquire dispassionately into the character of his teachings,
and to refrain from denouncing him without previous and
careful scrutiny. If my health and strength be restored, it
is my intention, God willing, to investigate the matter myself,
and to ascertain the truth."
This severe rebuke, pronounced by Haji Kalbasi, greatly
disconcerted the disciples of Haji Siyyid Asadu'llah. In
their dismay they appealed to Manuchihr Khan, the Mu'tamidu'd-Dawlih,
the governor of the city. That wise and
judicious ruler refused to interfere in these matters, which
he said fell exclusively within the jurisdiction of the ulamas.
He warned them to abstain from mischief and to cease disturbing
the peace and tranquillity of the messenger. His
trenchant words shattered the hopes of the mischief-makers.
Mulla Husayn was thereby relieved from the machinations
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Among the siyyids of Isfahan, a few, such as Mirza
Muhammad-'Aliy-i-Nahri, whose daughter was subsequently
joined in wedlock with the Most Great Branch,(1) Mirza Hadi,
the brother of Mirza Muhammad-'Ali, and Mirza Muhammad-Riday-i-Pa-Qal'iyi,
recognised the truth of the Cause.
Mulla Sadiq-i-Khurasani, formerly known as Muqaddas, and
surnamed by Baha'u'llah, Ismu'llahu'l-Asdaq, who, according
to the instructions of Siyyid Kazim, had during the last five
years been residing in Isfahan and had been preparing the
way for the advent of the new Revelation, was also among
the first believers who identified themselves with the Message
proclaimed by the Bab.(2) As Soon as he learned of the arrival
of Mulla Husayn in Isfahan, he hastened to meet him. He
gives the following account of his first interview, which took
place at night in the home of Mirza Muhammad-'Aliy-i-Nahri:
"I asked Mulla Husayn to divulge the name of Him
who claimed to be the promised Manifestation. He replied:
`To enquire about that name and to divulge it are alike
forbidden.' `Would it, then, be possible,' I asked, `for me,
even as the Letters of the Living, to seek independently the
grace of the All-Merciful and, through prayer, to discover
His identity?' `The door of His grace,' he replied, `is never
closed before the face of him who seeks to find Him.' I immediately
retired from his presence, and requested his host
to allow me the privacy of a room in his house where, alone
and undisturbed, I could commune with God. In the midst
of my contemplation, I suddenly remembered the face of a
Youth whom I had often observed while in Karbila, standing
in an attitude of prayer, with His face bathed in tears at the
entrance of the shrine of the Imam Husayn. That same countenance
now reappeared before my eyes. In my vision I
seemed to behold that same face, those same features, expressive
of such joy as I could never describe. He smiled
as He gazed at me. I went towards Him, ready to throw
myself at His feet. I was bending towards the ground,
when, lo! that radiant figure vanished from before me. Overpowered
with joy and gladness, I ran out to meet Mulla
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Husayn, who with transport received me and assured me
that I had, at last, attained the object of my desire. He
bade me, however, repress my feelings. `Declare not your
vision to anyone,' he urged me; `the time for it has not yet
arrived. You have reaped the fruit of your patient waiting
in Isfahan. You should now proceed to Kirman, and there
acquaint Haji Mirza Karim Khan with this Message. From
that place you should travel to Shiraz and endeavour to rouse
the people of that city from their heedlessness. I hope to
join you in Shiraz and share with you the blessings of a joyous
reunion with our Beloved.'"(1) From Isfahan, Mulla Husayn proceeded to Kashan. The
first to be enrolled in that city among the company of the
faithful was a certain Haji Mirza Jani, surnamed Par-Pa,
who was a merchant of note.(2) Among the friends of Mulla
Husayn was a well-known divine, Siyyid Abdu'l-Baqi, a
resident of Kashan and a member of the shaykhi community.
Although intimately associated with Mulla Husayn during
his stay in Najaf and Karbila, the Siyyid felt unable to sacrifice
rank and leadership for the Message which his friend had
brought him.
Arriving in Qum, Mulla Husayn found its people utterly
unprepared to heed his call. The seeds he sowed among them
did not germinate until the time when Baha'u'llah was exiled
to Baghdad. In those days Haji Mirza Musa, a native of
Qum, embraced the Faith, journeyed to Baghdad, and there
met Baha'u'llah. He eventually quaffed the cup of martyrdom
in His path.
From Qum, Mulla Husayn proceeded directly to Tihran.
He lived, during his stay in the capital, in one of the rooms
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obscurity into which it has sunk. You seem, however, to
have betrayed its cause. You have shattered our fondest
expectations. If you persist in disseminating these subversive
doctrines, you will eventually extinguish the remnants
of the shaykhis in this city." Mulla Husayn assured him
that he had no intention of prolonging his stay in Tihran,
that his aim was in no wise to abase or suppress the teachings
inculcated by Shaykh Ahmad and Siyyid Kazim.(1)
During his stay in Tihran, Mulla Husayn each day would
leave his room early in the morning and would return to it
only an hour after sunset. Upon his return he would quietly
and alone re-enter his room, close the door behind him, and
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remain in the privacy of his cell until the next day.(1) Mirza
Musa, Aqay-i-Kalim, the brother of Baha'u'llah, recounted
to me the following: "I have heard Mulla Muhammad-i-Mu'allim,
a native of Nur, in the province of Mazindaran,
who was a fervent admirer of both Shaykh Ahmad and Siyyid
Kazim, relate this story: `I was in those days recognised as
one of the favoured disciples of Haji Mirza Muhammad, and
lived in the same school in which he taught. My room adjoined
his room, and we were closely associated together.
On the day that he was engaged in discussion with Mulla
Husayn, I overheard their conversation from beginning to
end, and was deeply affected by the ardour, the fluency, and
learning of that youthful stranger. I was surprised at the
evasive answers, the arrogance, and contemptuous behaviour
of Haji Mirza Muhammad. That day I felt strongly attracted
by the charm of that youth, and deeply resented the
unseemly conduct of my teacher towards him. I concealed
my feelings, however, and pretended to ignore his discussions
with Mulla Husayn. I was seized with a passionate desire
to meet the latter, and ventured, at the hour of midnight,
to visit him. He did not expect me, but I knocked at his door,
and found him awake seated beside his lamp. He received
me affectionately, and spoke to me with extreme courtesy and
tenderness. I unburdened my heart to him, and as I was
addressing him, tears, which I could not repress, flowed
from my eyes. "I can now see," he said, "the reason why I
have chosen to dwell in this place. Your teacher has contemptuously
rejected this Message and despised its Author.
My hope is that his pupil may, unlike his master, recognise
its truth. What is your name, and which city is your home?"
"My name," I replied, "is Mulla Muhammad, and my surname
Mu'allim. My home is Nur, in the province of Mazindaran."
"Tell me," further enquired Mulla Husayn, "is
there to-day among the family of the late Mirza Buzurg-i-Nuri,
who was so renowned for his character, his charm, and
artistic and intellectual attainments, anyone who has proved
himself capable of maintaining the high traditions of that
105
illustrious house?" "Yea," I replied, "among his sons now
living, one has distinguished Himself by the very traits which
characterised His father. By His virtuous life, His high
at-
tainments, His loving-kindness and liberality, He has proved
Himself a noble descendant of a noble father." "What is
His occupation?" he asked me. "He cheers the disconsolate
106
and feeds the hungry," I replied. "What of His rank and
position?" "He has none," I said, "apart from befriending
the poor and the stranger." "What is His name?" " Husayn-'Ali."
"In which of the scripts of His father does He excel?"
"His favourite script is shikastih-nasta'liq." "How does He
spend His time?" "He roams the woods and delights in the
beauties of the countryside."(1) "What is His age?" "Eight
and twenty." The eagerness with which Mulla Husayn
questioned me, and the sense of delight with which he welcomed
every particular I gave him, greatly surprised me.
Turning to me, with his face beaming with satisfaction and
joy, he once more enquired: "I presume you often meet Him?"
"I frequently visit His home," I replied. "Will you," he
said, "deliver into His hands a trust from me?" "Most assuredly,"
was my reply. He then gave me a scroll wrapped
in a piece of cloth, and requested me to hand it to Him the
next day at the hour of dawn. "Should He deign to answer
me," he added, "will you be kind enough to acquaint me with
His reply. I received the scroll from him and, at break of
day, arose to carry out his desire.
"`As I approached the house of Baha'u'llah, I recognised
His brother Mirza Musa, who was standing at the gate, and
to whom I communicated the object of my visit. He went
into the house and soon reappeared bearing a message of
welcome. I was ushered into His presence, and presented the
scroll to Mirza Musa, who laid it before Baha'u'llah. He
bade us both be seated. Unfolding the scroll, He glanced at
its contents and began to read aloud to us certain of its passages.
I sat enraptured as I listened to the sound of His
107
voice and the sweetness of its melody. He had read a page
of the scroll when, turning to His brother, He said: " Musa,
what have you to say? Verily I say, whoso believes in the
Qur'an and recognises its Divine origin, and yet hesitates,
though it be for a moment, to admit that these soul-stirring
words are endowed with the same regenerating power, has
most assuredly erred in his judgment and has strayed far
from the path of justice." He spoke no more. Dismissing
me from His presence, He charged me to take to Mulla Husayn,
as a gift from Him, a loaf of Russian sugar and a package
of tea,(1) and to convey to him the expression of His appreciation
and love.
"`I arose and, filled with joy, hastened back to Mulla
Husayn, and delivered to him the gift and message of Baha'u'llah.
With what joy and exultation he received them from
me! Words fail me to describe the intensity of his emotion.
He started to his feet, received with bowed head the gift
from my hand, and fervently kissed it. He then took me in
his arms, kissed my eyes, and said: "My dearly beloved
friend! I pray that even as you have rejoiced my heart,
God may grant you eternal felicity and fill your heart with
imperishable gladness." I was amazed at the behaviour of
Mulla Husayn. What could be, I thought to myself, the
nature of the bond that unites these two souls? What could
have kindled so fervid a fellowship in their hearts? Why
should Mulla Husayn, in whose sight the pomp and circumstance
of royalty were the merest trifle, have evinced such
gladness at the sight of so inconsiderable a gift from the
hands of Baha'u'llah? I was puzzled by this thought and
could not unravel its mystery.
"`A few days later, Mulla Husayn left for Khurasan.
As he bade me farewell, he said: "Breathe not to anyone what
you have heard and witnessed. Let this be a secret hidden
within your breast. Divulge not His name, for they who envy
His position will arise to harm Him. In your moments of
meditation, pray that the Almighty may protect Him, that,
through Him, He may exalt the downtrodden, enrich the poor,
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and redeem the fallen. The secret of things is concealed from
our eyes. Ours is the duty to raise the call of the New Day
and to proclaim this Divine Message unto all people. Many
a soul will, in this city, shed his blood in this path. That
blood will water the Tree of God, will cause it to flourish,
and to overshadow all mankind."'"