This chief of free souls, of
wanderers for the love of
God, was only an infant when, in Mazgán, he was suckled
at the breast of grace. He was a child of the eminent
scholar,
Shay
kh-i-Mazgání; his noble father was one of the
leading citizens of Qamsar, near Ká
shán, and for piety,
holiness, and the fear of God he had no peer. This father
embodied all the qualities that are worthy of praise; moreover
his ways were pleasing, his disposition good, he was
an excellent companion, and for all these things he was
well known. When he threw off restraint and openly declared
himself a believer, the faithless, whether friend or
stranger, turned their backs on him and began to plot his
death. But he continued to further the Cause, to alert the
people’s hearts, and to welcome the newcomers as generously
as ever. Thus in Ká
shán the fame of his strong faith
reached as high as the Milky Way. Then the pitiless aggressors
rose up, plundered his possessions and killed him.