One night Pírán received a messenger,
Who bade him wait upon Afrásiyáb.
The monarch spake about the past: “My heart,”
He said, “is yexed by thoughts and grief too hard
To put aside; this child of Siyáwush
Hath, so to speak, o'er??ast my day; but will
High policy allow a shepherd-swain
To rear one of the race of Farídún?
If ill through this child hath been written for me
No caution will avert it; 'tis God's doing.
But while the child suspecteth not the past
Let him be glad and we too will rejoice;
Still, if he showeth any evil bent,
He, as his father did, must lose his head.”
Pírán replied: “O king! thou needest none
To teach thee. This boy is as mad folk are!
What notions can he have about the past?
A child brought up by shepherds on the mountains
Is like wild animals; what can he know?
The foster-father told me yester-night:—
‘The boy is comely but devoid of wits.’
In spite of beauty, stature, form, and Grace,
The prince's head yet lacketh understanding;
Vex not thyself and think no more hereof.
What said the sage—a man exceeding wise?