According to most commentators, Sâsân, after whom this Assembly is named, was the eldest son of the king of part of Western Persia, who was disinherited by his father in favour of a daughter and her progeny, and fled in high dudgeon from his father’s court, to lead the life of a nomad shepherd amongst the Kurds. Thus he became the beau-idéal of beggars and vagrants, and the hero of popular tales, like the “king of the gipsies.” Others state that, under “the race of Sâsân,” the Persian kings of the last Dynasty are meant, many of whose descendants were, after the conquest of the country by the Arabs, reduced to the utmost poverty and excited popular commiseration by their tragic downfall. Alluding to this prince of beggars or beggared princes, Abû Zayd urges his son to practise mendicancy as a fine art, which he himself had found preferable to all other recognised means to gain an enjoyable livelihood.
Al Ḥârith, son of Hammâm, related: The report
reached me, that Abû Zayd, when he neared the
(number of years indicated by the) clenched fist (ninety-
There is, my son, a bequest for thee, such as none afore was bequeathed yet,
One bright and fraught with the essence of choice rules and maxims that guide aright.
I selected them as a counseller sincere and earnest in his advice,
So act according to what I teach, as a wise and well-conducted wight,
That admiringly all people say: ‘This in truth is yonder lion’s whelp.’”
Said he: “O my son, I have given thee my last behest and made it right complete. Now, if thou follow it, well done! but if thou trespass against it, out upon thee! And may Allah be my substitute with thee, and I trust thou wilt not belie what I think of thee.” Then his son said to him: “O my father, may thy throne be never brought low, nor thy bier uplifted. Thou hast indeed spoken true, and taught aright, and bestowed on me that which never yet father has bestowed on son, and if I be spared after thee, but may I never taste thy loss, I will forsooth mould my manners after thy manners, the excellent, and follow thy traces, the illustrious, so that it may be said how like is this night to yesterday, and the morning cloud to the cloud of even.” Thereupon Abû Zayd rejoiced at his answer and smiled, and said: “He who resembles his father, wrongs not” (i.e., his mother’s fair fame).
Said Al Ḥarith, son of Hammâm: It has come to my knowledge that when the sons of Sâsân heard these beautiful mandates, they prized them above the mandates of Loḳman, and learnt them by heart, as the mother of the Koran is learnt, so that they reckon them to this time the best that they can teach their children, and more profitable to them than a gift of gold.