He has performed the pilgrimage to Makkah. He was the
pupil of Lisānī, and has written, in reply to the book Sahw-ul-
“They were not mounds of driven sand—
His elephants, for they are in battle array;
And, for the purpose of engulfing his foes
They are, on every side, the billows of the ocean of cala-
mity.”
As meed for this ode the emperor ordered that a horse and a money reward should be given to him, but the treasurer delayed in carrying out the order, and Ḥaidarī wrote this fragment:—
“I have a difficulty, O King! I wish to present to thee a
petition.
My difficulty imprints on my heart a hundred brands of
regret.
Thou didst command silver and gold to be given to me,
but from thy treasurer
It is hard to get, and yet harder not to get.”*
Some of his verses:—
“No trust is to be placed in the love* of the moon-faced
beauties of this world
A ray of the sun settles not long on one place.“I burn ever with an inward fire, such it is.
I am contemned everywhere, such is my miserable lot.219 A fragment.“Ḥaidarī! Strive, like the virtuous, to the utmost
To attain to some perfection in this world of sorrow;
For to go from this world deficient in anything
Is as though one were to leave the bath unclean.”