XXXVI. JA‘FAR.*

He is a Sayyid of Hirāt and has good taste in poetry and in the composition of enigmas. He was the chief paymaster of Ataga Khān* and has written an ode and composed an enigma dedicated to Mīrza ‘Azīz Kūka,* containing a list of his titles and prayers for his long life and prosperity. The following few couplets are selected from his poems:—

“Now that the comb has disturbed those musky locks*
Ah, that the wind would bear this message to thine ear!”

“I would not that the dust, even of musk, should settle on 216
that cheek,
God forbid that dust should have a place near thy heart.”

“The place of herbage in the garden is beneath the foot of
the rose,
In the garden of thy beauty* herbage has settled on the
rose.”