Indeed I’m heart-broken to see thee start, ✿ Nor can I farewell thee ere thou depart;
Allah wotteth I left not to say adieu ✿ Save for fear that saying would melt your heart.
Hasan also wept for parting from them, till he swooned, and repeated these couplets:—
Indeed, ran my tears on the severance-day ✿ Like pearls I threaded in necklace-way:
The cameleer drove his camels with song ✿ But I lost heart, patience and strength and stay:
I bade them farewell and retired in grief ✿ From tryst-place and camp where my dearlings lay:
I turned me unknowing the way nor joyed ✿ My soul, but in hopes to return some day.
Oh listen, my friend, to the words of love ✿ God forbid thy heart forget all I say!
O my soul when thou partest wi’ them, part too ✿ With all joys of life nor for living pray!
Then he farewelled them and fared on diligently night and day, till he came to Baghdad, the House of Peace and Sanctuary of the Abbaside Caliphs unknowing what had passed during his wayfare. At once entering his house he went in to his mother to salute her, but found her worn of body and wasted of bones, for excess of mourning and watching, weeping and wailing, till she was grown thin as a toothpick and could not answer him a word. So he dismissed the dromedaries then asked her of his wife and children and she wept till she fainted, and he seeing her in this state searched the house for them, but found no trace of them. Then he went to the store-closet and finding it open and the chest broken and the feather-dress missing, knew forthright that his wife had possessed herself thereof and flown away with her children. Then he returned to his mother and, finding her recovered from her fit, questioned her of his spouse and babes, whereupon she wept and said, “O my son, may Allah amply requite thee their loss! These are their three tombs.”[[99]] When Hasan heard these words of his mother, he shrieked a loud shriek and fell down in a fainting-fit in which he lay from the first of the day till noon-tide; whereupon anguish was added to his mother’s anguish and she despaired of his life. However, after awhile, he came to himself and wept and buffeted his face and rent his raiment and went about the house clean distraught, reciting these two couplets[[100]]:—