FORTY -- [The Amir is persecuted
by Asman Pari, and tricked by the White Dev.]
After the horse finally let him dismount, Hamzah wandered amidst
tilisms, having many magical adventures. With Khizr’s aid, he conquered
the tilism of Solomon’s Chessboard, and others as well. One particularly
difficult tilism he conquered only after Solomon himself appeared to him
in a dream and told him how to do it. Finally he managed to place
a powerful Dev so much in his debt that the Dev, *Arna’is, agreed to convey
him to the World.
Before I come back to this dastan, I’ll tell
a bit about Asman Pari. One morning, putting on red clothing, and
frowning until the lines showed in her forehead, she seated herself on
her throne; with supreme elegance and grace she adorned her peerless throne.
And she summoned the nobles of the realm, who were regularly in attendance
at court. Everyone who saw her in this fearsome aspect grew pale:
each one was afraid of falling victim to her wrath. Seated there,
she addressed herself to ‘Abdur Rahman: “Khvajah, I had the Amir
abandoned in the Island of Confusion; I ordered those Devs who set out
with him to leave him there and come away. Look and tell me where
the Sahib-qiran is now--whether he’s alive or dead, and what he’s about,
what he’s doing and saying.”
‘Abdur Rahman, with folded hands, submitted,
“Oh Queen of the Universe, from geomancy it appears that the Amir is still
roaming anxiously in the Island of Confusion; he is distraught and wandering
in that wilderness. But the Dev Arna’is has promised the Amir, ‘If
you get my beloved *Lanisah for me, then I’ll do anything you command;
I’ll take you to the World.’ Thus the Amir got Lanisah for him, and
did as he had said he would. Today is the second day that Arna’is
is in the Agate-inlaid Fort absorbed in festivities; completely carefree,
he is celebrating with luxury and enjoyment. Tomorrow he will take
the Amir to the World; what he has sworn to do, he will perform.”
Asman Pari, the moment she heard this, became
a flame of fire; she was mad with wrath like a conflagration. She
said, “Arna’is has had the gall to think of taking my husband away from
me! He didn’t have even the slightest fear of me--just watch what
punishment I give him!” With these words, she at once mounted her
throne; taking many thousands of Devs, Jinns, and Parizads with her, she
set out for the Agate-inlaid Fort. When she drew near it, her spies
reported, and informed her, “Arna’is, with Lanisah in his arms, is sleeping
on a bed. In this unconscious state he can easily be captured; you
can have him bound hand and foot and give him over to the Devs.”
Asman Pari, as soon as she arrived, went and
bound both of them hand and foot, and took them to Garden of Iram.
Tenderizing their bones with blows, she confined them both in the #Dungeon
of Solomon, the prisoners of which never emerge alive. And she had
the proclamation-drum beaten in the whole city: “Anyone who sets
out to take the Amir to the World without my order, and embarks on the
path of disobedience to me, will be punished in the same way.”
Now please hear about the Amir. When
three days passed and Arna’is did not come, he said to himself, “In truth,
the race of Devs is utterly treacherous, and ungrateful, and faithless!
To trust their word is an absolute error. Hamzah, no one will take
you to the world--any Dev who, for his own purposes, promises to do so,
will betray you in the end. But God the Most High and Honorable,
in Whom is all power, might have mercy on your condition, and guide you
again to the World.” With this thought, he remembered Mihr Nigar,
and began to weep bitterly.
Suddenly from one side came the sound of “Peace
by upon you.” When the Amir looked, it was Hazrat Khizr. Rising,
the Amir greeted him reverently and said, “Oh Messenger of God, will I
have to keep wandering like this around Qaf? How long must I live
like this in the wilderness, confused and distressed? Anyone who
promises to escort me proves faithless, and never ceases from vileness
and mischief! Arna’is Dev swore so many kinds of oaths, but he didn’t
fulfill his vow.”
Hazrat Khizr said, “Oh Father of Greatness,
it depends on the time. Don’t be anxious at heart, don’t be troubled
by doubts and fears. If God the Helper wills, you will go into the
World, you will have the full joy of seeing your near and dear ones.
But there’s a bit of hardship left. Arna’is Dev is guiltless:
there was no duplicity in his oath, he intended to fulfill his vow.
But Asman Pari, learning of the matter from ‘Abdur Rahman, took Arna’is
and Lanisah away from the Agate-inlaid Fort as prisoners; conveying them
to Garden of Iram, she punished them and put them both in the Dungeon of
Solomon.” With these words, Hazrat Khizr went back where he had come
from. The Amir was so astonished at hearing all this that he paid
no attention to where Khizr went.
The Amir went on from there. For seventeen
days he traveled. On the eighteenth day he arrived at the foot of
a mountain; on its peak a very lofty crystal dome could be seen.
Slipping and stumbling, the Amir made his way closer to it and looked at
its pinnacle. Even the sun itself, beholding it directly, would have
been dazzled. The Amir said to himself, “I ought to look at it from
close at hand, I ought to find out in full detail the state of this fort.”
When he climbed the mountain, he saw a garden with a wall around it; but
the garden door was locked from the outside, and he couldn’t see anyone
around. Breaking the lock, the Amir went into the garden; with great
hardihood he entered fearlessly.
He saw that in truth it rivalled the Garden
of Paradise, and in the whole of Qaf he had never found such an enchanting
house; he said to himself, “Since the first day of my arrival in
Qaf, my eyes have never beheld such a house and such a garden.” And
when he looked carefully at the pinnacle of the dome, he discovered that
a Night-glowing Pearl had been placed atop it, a priceless jewel was mounted
there. The Amir reached out by means of the miraculous power bestowed
by Hazrat Adam:/1/
he stretched out his hand and pulled down the Night-glowing Pearl from
the pinnacle. When he placed it next to the Night-glowing Pearl in
his own coronet, he couldn’t find the smallest difference. The Amir
was delighted: “This too is a special gift from Qaf--in the World,
how can any king or king of kings ever have even seen such a thing!”
When the Amir went inside the dome, he saw
a jewel-adorned throne. Wherever he looked, he saw that everything
was in its own proper place, costly, and rare. He wanted to rest
there for an hour or two, and allow himself a bit of repose from the fatigue
of the journey. But then the thought came to him, “It would be no
surprise if this house too were in the power of some Dev. If he should
find me here, he would be enraged, and would cause me some trouble.
So it’s not proper to stay here; I ought to leave this house.” With
this thought, he came out of the dome, spread his wolfskins by a flower-bed,
made his staff into a back-rest, and sat down.
Not even an hour had passed when a strong
wind came from the forest, so that even the splendid big trees were on
the verge of falling; they were almost flattened to the earth by the force
of the wind. After this, a Dev, white in color, five hundred yards
tall in stature, entered the garden, yelling. His roaring and tumult
seemed to tower to the sky: “Who is the thief who has taken out the
Night-glowing Pearl, Hazrat Solomon’s sacred relic, from the pinnacle of
the dome, and deprived the Dome of Solomon of its glory?” The Amir,
approaching him, gave his battle-cry, and challenged him with a shout of
“God is great”: “Oh you big tall ugly ball of fat, who are you looking
for? Don’t you even know me, or not? Don’t you recognize the
destroyer of Devs, the breaker of tilisms, or not? If you recognize
me, then take a good look--come before me, and know who I am! I am
the Earthquake of Qaf, the Younger Solomon, the slayer of ‘Ifrit and the
killer of Ahriman!”
He replied, “Now I know that the Garden of
Qaf was destroyed by you alone, it was you alone who wrought mischief in
the whole of Qaf! Son of Adam, I’ll take revenge on you for all of
it, just wait and see how harshly I’ll punish you! If you have a
thousand lives, you won’t escape from me with even one of them left; now
there’s no way for you to save yourself from my clutches!” The Amir
said, “Why go on jabbering? If you miss the slaughtered Devs, and
are eager to see them, I’ll send you to join them, I’ll start you off on
the road right now! Come on, how much of an attack can you make?
Come before me and show your courage!”
He struck a blow at the Amir’s head, using
his whole strength, with a cypress-tree staff in which several millstones
were embedded. The Amir used the Scorpion of Solomon to cut the staff
in two. Then, grabbing the Dev’s belt, he lifted him up by main force
and hurled him to the ground. Mounting his breast, he placed the
dagger of Rustam against his throat. Then the Dev’s eyes filled with
tears and he said, “Oh Earthquake of Qaf, don’t kill me! I’ll be
very useful to you--any order you give, I’ll obey with my whole heart and
soul.” The Amir replied, “If you become a Muslim, then why not?
Otherwise, I’ll kill you right now with this dagger.”
The Dev replied, “Under this mountain are
some enemies of mine. If you kill them, then I’ll become a Muslim,
I’ll be your true-hearted and faithful servant.” The Sahib-qiran
said, “Who are they? Tell me all about them, and give me a full account
of them.” The Dev said, “Under this mountain is the pleasure-park
of Hazrat Solomon. At the end of the day he always used to sit and
enjoy the saffron field, and freely take pleasure in this fragrant spot.
In this saffron field live the monstrous Seven Apes of Solomon. All
the Devs speak of them as extremely powerful. Oh Sahib-qiran, it’s
not confined to me--all the Devs fear them, and obey them faithfully.
If you will please kill them, it will be a great kindness to me.”
The Amir said, “Take me there.” The
Dev took the Amir beneath the mountain, and showed him their dwelling.
The Amir saw that the saffron field extended for many miles, and in its
midst was a river which was two hundred yards wide and immeasurably long.
Its water was clear and pleasant, and in the midst of this river was a
platform of crystal, fifty yards square and fifty yards high. Topaz
railings surrounded it; in those railings too jewels had been inlaid with
great craftsmanship. And in the center of the platform was a throne
decorated with diamonds; it too was of peerless sophistication. The
reflection of the Saffron-field Mountain shimmered on the platform, as
though grass was waving in the wind.
The Amir, with a bound, leaped to the platform,
stood there, and looked all around. He asked the *White Dev, “Where
are those enemies of yours?” The Dev said, “They’re in this very
saffron field. Please call out and say, ‘Oh seven monstrous apes,
what do you eat?’ They’ll answer you, and will appear before you;
they’ll never delay in coming.” The Amir called out and said, “Oh
monstrous apes, what do you eat, and where are you? I am eager to
meet you! Come out and meet me, show me your faces.” A voice
came, “We eat saffron. Please wait a minute, we’re coming.”
Finally the seven monstrous apes came before
the Amir, and stood before him in a line. The Amir saw that they
were of strange form: their bodies were like men’s, and their front
teeth were like spears--so sharp that if even a fly should light on one
of them, he would be pierced through! The Amir, drawing the Scorpion
of Solomon, leaped among them, and slaughtered all seven with his well-tempered
sword. Then he said to the White Dev, “Now your enemies have been
killed. All your grief and sorrow has been removed; your heart’s
desire has been achieved.”
The White Dev was delighted; putting one hand
on his head and the other on his buttocks, he began to dance. And
he replied, “Oh son of Adam, you’ve killed my enemies, but I, your enemy,
am still here! It’s the custom of our race to return evil for good;
we aren’t worried about the consequences.” With these words, he lifted
up a heavy slab of stone and flung it at the Amir. The Amir warded
it off and, drawing his sword, flung himself at the Dev. The Dev
ran desperately away, he didn’t stop for even a moment. Although
the Amir called to him, he wouldn’t approach the Amir. He said, “I’m
not such a fool as to deliberately come near you and lose my life, and
purposely get myself slaughtered! When sometime I find you with your
guard down, then I’ll give you a taste of what you deserve!” With
these words, he flew away.
The Sahib-qiran said to himself, “It’s not
good to stay here any longer; it’s proper to get away from this place.
The White Dev has become my enemy--God knows when he’ll see his chance
and harm me, and take his revenge on me.” He set out at that very
moment. The narrator writes that the Amir went on for seven days
and nights together through fear of the White Dev, in order to escape from
his clutches, and not suffer harm at the hands of that vile creature; he
didn’t pause to rest for even a moment.
On the eighth day, he saw a settlement, and
found it a bizarre place. The people there had only half a body;
when two of them came and stood together, they made up one complete person.
Thus these people are called the Half-bodies, and they exist in this very
condition. Their king’s name was Futuh the Half-bodied; he was extremely
courteous, and widely renowned for his kindness. As it happened,
this king was informed of the Sahib-qiran’s arrival. Welcoming him,
the king brought him with the greatest honor into his city, and insisted
on seating him on the throne; he treated him with extreme hospitality and
respect.
Kissing his feet, the king said, “Ever since
I heard from Hazrat Solomon that a son of Adam would come here and overthrow
the Devs of Qaf, and wound thousands and cut thousands of heads off, and
would be a Younger Solomon with the Medallion of Solomon/2/
in his possession--ever since then I’ve been eager to see you, I’ve been
absolutely longing to meet you. Thanks to God the Most High and Honorable,
who has guided your feet in this direction, so that you’ve arrived here
safe and well.” In short, the king feasted the Amir for a number
of days. The Amir said to the king, “Can you manage to send me to
the World?” He replied, “We are half-bodied. We cannot set
foot outside our borders; we cannot by any means go from this place to
another.” The Amir, taking leave of him, went on.
The narrator writes that the Sahib-qiran,
through the greatest exertion and effort, crossed that calamitous wilderness
in ten days. On the eleventh day, he arrived at the bank of a river.
He saw that the river was full of high waves, and there was no trace at
all of a ship or boat. It was not possible to cross the river without
a boat. Astonished, he said, “Hamzah, in Qaf there are so many rivers
like this, with waves immeasurably high! Not to speak of a man, even
a bird couldn’t cross them! Thus your going to the World is out of
the question, it seems to be your fate to stay right here.” Sitting
down on a boulder, he began to weep bitterly at being separated from Mihr
Nigar and missing his friends. Remembering them all, he grew distraught
with grief.
As he wept, his eyes gradually closed, and
he entered the oblivion of sleep; after many days of fatigue, he was dead
to the world. The White Dev was on the alert: seeing the Amir
unconscious, he picked him up together with the boulder, and took to the
air. He had gone about four miles high, when the strong wind caused
the Amir’s eyes to open. He saw that the White Dev was flying away
with him, carrying him like a bundle on his back. The Amir said,
“Oh White Dev, I did good to you, and you are doing evil to me--evil in
return for good! Don’t you have any fear of God?” The Dev replied,
“I’ve already told you that we return evil for good, that’s our habit.
Now tell me this: shall I throw you down on a mountain, or in the
river?”
The Amir reflected, “Devs have perverse natures.
Whatever I say, he’ll do the opposite.” The Amir said, “Throw me
down on a mountain; if you are taking revenge on me, take it like that.”
The White Dev replied, “Oh son of Adam, I’ll throw you into the river,
so you’ll drown, and will never oppress or tyrannize us again!” With
these words, the Dev threw him, together with the boulder, into the river,
and flew off; he immediately did the opposite of what the Amir had said./3/
Hazrats Khizr and Elias, by the order of God
Most High, took the Amir in their arms and put him down, standing, on the
riverbank. The Amir saluted both Prophets, and said, with a thousand
tears and lamentations, “Oh Hazrats, Asman Pari has tormented me cruelly,
and caused me the greatest grief! She doesn’t allow me to go to the
World; she gives me no peace from my sufferings.” Hazrat Khizr said,
“Oh Amir, there’s no cause for anxiety. You are fated to eat the
food and drink the water of Qaf for a little longer. When that time
is over, then you’ll leave this place, and return to your homeland, and
be at peace. A few more hard days remain; they too, if the Lord wills,
will pass. Trust in God and show fortitude; your good days are at
hand.”
Now please hear a little about King Shahpal
and Asman Pari. One day King Shahpal was seated on his throne, holding
court, when Asman Pari, wearing red clothing, came in, with her face like
a blazing fire. Seating herself on her throne, she summoned Khvajah
‘Abdur Rahman, and ordered that he attend upon her. At that time
there were eighteen hundred thousand chiefs of the Devs and Parizads in
attendance at the royal court. All of them who saw Asman Pari in
this dress and aspect began to tremble; out of fear, they all covered their
faces: “Today Asman Pari has come to court looking like the red planet
Mars, she has come to court in great rage! Let’s see whose heads
fate will play with, and who will lose their lives, and on whom her anger
will bring disaster!”
In the meantime ‘Abdur Rahman came in, and
made obeisance to the king and princess. The princess, addressing
him, asked, “Tell me, Khvajah, where is the Amir now--is he alive or dead,
miserable or joyous?” The Khvajah, looking at his divining-diagrams,
struck his brow, and shed tears. He spoke to Shahpal, and said, “What
evil has Hamzah done to you, that you avenge yourself like this, and give
him such pain?” The king asked anxiously, “Khvajah, is everything
all right? How is he? Tell me the truth, in what difficulty
is he trapped--tell me quick!” He replied, “Where there is evil,
how can there be any good? The White Dev has thrown Hamzah into the
Green River; we ought to see whether he’s still alive or not.”
The king, when he heard this ominous news,
pulled the crown off his head and threw it on the floor; after hearing
this, he was overpowered by great grief and sorrow. Asman Pari too
tore the hair from her head, and screamed “Alas!”, and in her anxiety brought
groans and laments to her lips. At once the king, together with great
and small, set out for the Green River. The Devs picked up his throne,
and brought him to the river in the space of a single breath.
The Sahib-qiran, with Khvajas Khizr and Elias,
were just finishing their prayers, when the king, with Asman Pari, arrived.
When, while finishing his prayer, the Amir turned his face to the right,
he saw Shahpal and frowned; when he turned to the left, on that side Asman
Pari was standing. The Amir turned his face away from her too, and
paid absolutely no attention to either of them. Asman Pari and the
king fell at Hazrat Khizr’s feet and said, “Oh Hazrat, this time we swear
before you that in six months we’ll send the Amir to the World, we absolutely
won’t prove false to our vow! If we prove false, we are sinners in
your eyes and the eyes of the Lord. This one time, please cause the
Sahib-qiran to pardon our sin.”
Hazrat Khizr reasoned with the Amir, and said
with the greatest affection, “You’ve already stayed there for nine years--stay
there six months more, for my sake! Whatever comes to you through
the workings of Divine Providence, endure it whether you wish to or not.
Asman Pari and Shahpal have sworn oaths; test their oaths too.” The
Amir, with his head bowed, said, “Oh Hazrat, you are a Prophet of God;
you are a good servant, accepted in the Presence of the Great Lord.
Apart from submission and obedience, what choice do I have? Very
well, I’ll stay for six months more.” Asman Pari and King Shahpal
both fell at the Amir’s feet and begged forgiveness, and made many excuses
for their harsh behavior, and made him promise to pardon them. The
Amir, having no choice, took leave of Hazrats Khizr and Elias; seating
himself on the throne with King Shahpal and Asman Pari, he set out for
Garden of Iram.
===========
/1/ This
power seems to be the same one that permits Hamzah’s sword to reach upwards
to the head of even the tallest enemy.
/2/ The
text does not tell us what the Medallion of Solomon is, or how and when
Hamzah obtained it.
/3/ This
encounter with the White Dev closely parallels Rustam’s encounter with
a Dev named Akvan in the Shah namah (Levy 148-149).
== on to Chapter
41 ==