The country of Juzján had for a long time of the reign of the family of Sámán appertained unto Farigun, the inheritance descending from grandfather to father, and brought down from predecessor to successor. Their beneficent and generous dispositions had deserted the path of ill-will (or suspicion) with regard to people, and the poor and good of those regions sought, as an object to be attained, their protection and favour. Hence their wealth was an opportunity for hope (to dwell upon). Their land became the plain and meadow for the relaxation of all noble hearts, and the reward of poetry bore a high price in the market of their humanity, whilst their liberality was always forward and engaged in mending that which was broken, and in freeing that which was captive; and the virtuous examples of the world were eager to receive the beauty and ornament of their benefits. And Abú-Harith-’bn-Muhammad was one of the most illustrious princes of his dynasty, and the glory of all the race, and in their very embroidered border he possessed saintly beneficence, a broad canopy of protection, and a well ruling sceptre. The Amír Sabaktagin had requested favour after favour in behalf of his son, and for his son Abú-Nasr he had procured an incomparable pearl (one of his daughters in marriage?) from the glorious ocean, Nasir-Addín, so that the ground (the existence) of a union in temperament had been established between their two Highnesses. Moreover bonds of kindred and confidences of affinity had been fixed and intertwined between them. And when Abú-Harith died, the Sultán confirmed his son in the possession of that territory, and specially aided and tended him, until, in the year 401, he migrated from the house of earth to the house of retribution. And Badí-Hamadání when he presented himself to their Majesties threw this fragment of poetry, when he was introduced, before them (Verse)
And when he left the presence he composed the following, as an offering of thanks for his reception (Verse)