VI. MIHRAB SHAH

Quoth an inquirer, "Praise the Merciful!

My thumb which yesterday a scorpion nipped—

(It swelled and blackened)—lo, is sound again!

By application of a virtuous root

The burning has abated: that is well.

But now methinks I have a mind to ask,—

Since this discomfort came of culling herbs

Nor meaning harm,—why needs a scorpion be?

Yea, there began, from when my thumb last throbbed,

Advance in question-framing, till I asked

Wherefore should any evil hap to man—

From ache of flesh to agony of soul—

Since God's All-mercy mates All-potency?

Nay, why permits he evil to himself—

Man's sin, accounted such? Suppose a world

Purged of all pain, with fit inhabitant—

Man pure of evil in thought, word, and deed—

Were it not well? Then, wherefore otherwise?

Too good result? But he is wholly good!

Hard to effect? Ay, were he impotent!

Teach me, Ferishtah!"

Said the Dervish: "Friend,

My chance, escaped to-day, was worse than thine:

I, as I woke this morning, raised my head,

Which never tumbled but stuck fast on neck.

Was not I glad and thankful!"

"How could head

Tumble from neck, unchopped—inform me first!

Unless we take Firdausi's tale for truth,

Who ever heard the like?"

"The like might hap

By natural law: I let my staff fall thus—

It goes to ground, I know not why. Suppose,

Whene'er my hold was loosed, it skyward sprang

As certainly, and all experience proved

That, just as staves when unsupported sink,

So, unconfined, they soar?"

"Let such be law—

Why, a new chapter of sad accidents

Were added to humanity's mischance,

No doubt at all, and as a man's false step

Now lays him prone on earth, contrariwise,

Removal from his shoulder o£ a weight

Might start him upwards to perdition. Ay!

But, since such law exists in just thy brain,

I shall not hesitate to doff my cap

For fear my head take flight."

"Nor feel relief

Finding it firm on shoulder. Tell me, now!

What were the bond 'twixt man and man, dost judge,

Pain once abolished? Come, be true! Our Shah—

How stands he in thy favor? Why that shrug?

Is not he lord and ruler?"

"Easily!

His mother bore him, first of those four wives

Provided by his father, such his luck:

Since when his business simply was to breathe

And take each day's new bounty. There he stands—

Where else had I stood, were his birth-star mine?

No, to respect men's power, I needs must see

Men's bare hands seek, find, grasp and wield the sword

Nobody else can brandish! Bless his heart,

'Tis said, he scarcely counts his fingers right!"

"Well, then—his princely doles! from every feast

Off go the feasted with the dish they ate

And cup they drank from,—nay, a change besides

Of garments" ...

"Sir, put case, for service done,—

Or best, for love's sake,—such and such a slave

Sold his allowance of sour lentil-soup

To herewith purchase me a pipe-stick,—nay,

If he, by but one hour, cut short his sleep

To clout my shoe,—that were a sacrifice!"

"All praise his gracious bearing."

"All praise mine—

Or would praise did they never make approach

Except on all-fours, crawling till I bade,

'Now that with eyelids thou hast touched the earth,

Come close and have no fear, poor nothingness!'

What wonder that the lady-rose I woo

And palisade about from every wind,

Holds herself handsomely? The wilding, now,

Ruffled outside at pleasure of the blast,

That still lifts up with something of a smile

Its poor attempt at bloom" ...

"A blameless life,

Where wrong might revel with impunity—

Remember that!"

"The falcon on his fist—

Reclaimed and trained and belled and beautified

Till she believes herself the Simorgh's match—

She only deigns destroy the antelope,

Stoops at no carrion-crow: thou marvellest?

"So be it, then! He wakes no love in thee

For any one of divers attributes

Commonly deemed love-worthy. All the same,

I would he were not wasting, slow but sure,

With that internal ulcer" ...

"Say'st thou so?

How should I guess? Alack, poor soul! But stay—

Sure in the reach of art some remedy

Must lie to hand: or if it lurk,—that leech

Of fame in Tebriz, why not seek his aid?

Couldst not thou, Dervish, counsel in the case?"

"My counsel might be—what imports a pang

The more or less, which puts an end to one

Odious in spite of every attribute

Commonly deemed love-worthy?"

"Attributes?

Faugh!—nay, Ferishtah,—'tis an ulcer, think!

Attributes, quotha? Here 's poor flesh and blood,

Like thine and mine and every man's, a prey

To hell-fire! Hast thou lost thy wits for once?"

"Friend, here they are to find and profit by!

Put pain from out the world, what room were left

For thanks to God, for love to Man? Why thanks,—

Except for some escape, whatever the style,

From pain that might be, name it as thou mayst?

Why love,—when all thy kind, save me, suppose,

Thy father, and thy son, and ... well, thy dog,

To eke the decent number out—we few

Who happen—like a handful of chance stars

From the unnumbered host—to shine o'erhead

And lend thee light,—our twinkle all thy store,—

We only take thy love! Mankind, forsooth?

Who sympathizes with their general joy

Foolish as undeserved? But pain—see God's

Wisdom at work!—man's heart is made to judge

Pain deserved nowhere by the common flesh

Our birthright,—bad and good deserve alike

No pain, to human apprehension! Lust,

Greed, cruelty, injustice crave (we hold)

Due punishment from somebody, no doubt:

But ulcer in the midriff! that brings flesh

Triumphant from the bar whereto arraigned

Soul quakes with reason. In the eye of God

Pain may have purpose and be justified:

Man's sense avails to only see, in pain,

A hateful chance no man but would avert

Or, failing, needs must pity. Thanks to God

And love to man,—from man take these away,

And what is man worth? Therefore, Mihrab Shah,

Tax me my bread and salt twice over, claim

Laila my daughter for thy sport,—go on!

Slay my son's self, maintain thy poetry

Beats mine,—thou meritest a dozen deaths!

But—ulcer in the stomach,—ah, poor soul,

Try a fig-plaster: may it ease thy pangs!"


So, the head aches and the limbs are faint!

Flesh is a burden—even to you!

Can I force a smile with a fancy quaint?

Why are my ailments none or few?

In the soul of me sits sluggishness;

Body so strong and will so weak:

The slave stands fit for the labor—yes,

But the master's mandate is still to seek.

You, now—what if the outside clay

Helped, not hindered the inside flame?

My dim to-morrow—your plain to-day,

Yours the achievement, mine the aim?

So were it rightly, so shall it be!

Only, while earth we pace together

For the purpose apportioned you and me,

Closer we tread for a common tether.

You shall sigh, "Wait for his sluggish soul!

Shame he should lag, not lamed as I!"

May not I smile, "Ungained her goal:

Body may reach her—by and by"?