[1454] i.e. after the dethronement of the Bāī-qarā family by Shaibānī.
[1455] He had been one of rebels of 921 AH. (Translator’s Note s.a.; T.R. p. 356).
[1456] f. 137.
[1457] This is the Adjutant-bird, Pīr-i-dang and Hargila (Bone-swallower) of Hindūstān, a migrant through Kābul. The fowlers who brought it would be the Multänīs of f. 142b.
[1458] f. 280.
[1459] Memoirs, p. 267, sycamore; Mémoires ii, 84, saules; f. 137.
[1460] Perhaps with his long coat out-spread.
[1461] The fortnight’s gap of record, here ended, will be due to illness.
[1462] f. 203b and n. to Khams, the Fifth. Taṣadduq occurs also on f. 238 denoting money sent to Bābur. Was it sent to him as Pādshāh, as the Qorān commands the Khams to be sent to the Imām, for the poor, the traveller and the orphan?
[1463] Rose-water, sherbet, a purgative; English, jalap, julep.