A. | G. | Serial. | TITLES OF THE ANECDOTES. |
Part I. Chapter XVIII. On the Anecdotes of the Secretaries. | |||
f215b | f155b | 987 | Introduction: A short discourse on the importance of the office of a Secretary. ‘Abdu’llah b. Ṭáhir Dhu’l-Yamínayn’s epigrammatic epistle sent to al-Ma’mún after his victory over ‘Alí b. ‘Isá b. Máhán. |
A. | G. | Serial. | TITLES OF THE ANECDOTES. |
f216a | f156a | 988 | ‘Amr b. Mas‘ada’s, encounter with the “Weaver of words” and his brilliant description of the five kinds of secretaries, viz. for revenue settlement, civil procedure, criminal procedure, army enlistment, and diplomatic correspondence. (T. F. S. Pt. II. pp. 35—8). |
f216b | * | 989 | Yúsuf-i-‘Ijlí, the secretary of ‘Abdu’llah b. ‘Alí the Umayyad and the Caliph al-Manṣúr. |
” | f156b | 990 | The eloquent plea of an Arab for obtaining a reward from Abú ‘Abdi’llah, the Wazír of al-Mahdí, and the remark of his secretary. |
f217a | ” | 991 | Muẓaffar Khamj (?), the retired secretary of Maliksháh the Saljúq, and how he was installed in office by Sanjar without any effort of his own. |
f217b | * | 992 | Naṣr b. Málik al-Khuzá‘í restored to the favour of the Caliph Hárún by submitting an apologetic request. |
” | * | 993 | Ibn Nawwába (?), the secretary of the Caliph al-Muqtadir, composes the mandate about the reinstallation of Abu’l-Ḥasan Furát to the Wizárat. |
” | * | 994 | Abu’l-Ḥasan ‘Alí b. ‘Ísá drafts a mandate to the governor of Egypt, at the request of Ibn-i-Muqla, after the restoration of al-Muqtadir to the Caliphate. |
f218a | f157a | 995 | Abú Abdi’llah (?) the secretary forwards the pathetic appeal of Ibn-i-Muqla to Ibnu’l-Furát. Account of the intrigues of Ibn-i-Muqla. |
f218b | * | 996 | The Sultan Maḥmúd’s threat to the Caliph, and the short reply of <Arabic> from the Caliph, and its interpretation by Abú Bakr Quhistání. |
” | * | 997 | How the title of “Mawlá” was changed into “Wálí” by the Caliph, at the clever suggestion of one of the secretaries of the Sultan Maḥmúd. |
” | * | 998 | How the Sultan Maḥmúd mischievously obtains the mandate of the Caliph from the Court of the Khán of Samarqand and tries to excite the wrath of the Caliph. |
f219a | * | 999 | How an unemployed secretary, a native of Baghdád, goes to Mawṣil and obtains office from the Ṣáḥib-i-Díwán of the Caliph al-Mahdí. |
” | * | 1000 | A clever secretary who saves his employer, the governor of Ádharbáyján from disappointment. |
f219b | * | 1001 | Account of the release and appointment of ‘Alí (b.) Ḥusayn Iskáfí, the secretary of Abú Músá Bughá-i-Kabír. |
” | * | 1002 | How an unemployed secretary obtains office from Abu’l-Ḥasan the governor of Iṣfahán. |
f220a | f157b | 1003 | Appeal for redress sent by the Muslim prisoners in Byzantium to Sultan Sanjar, and the epistle sent by Mu‘ín-i-Aṣamm, the famous secretary, to the Qayṣar of Rúm. [This epistle is cited from here in the Átháru’l-Wuzará’. See Or. 4107. Br. Mus. ff. 111—114]. |
f221a | f158b | 1004 | The epigrammatic challenge written by Abu’l-Qásim Iskáf, the secretary of the Amír of the Chaghánís, to Núḥ b. Manṣúr the Sámánid, his arrest and enlistment in the service of the Sámánids. |
” | * | 1005 | How Duwayb b. Tha‘lab was punished secretly by a secretary of the Caliph ‘Abdu’l-Malik b. Marwán. |
” | * | 1006 | The inflammatory letter of Bú Sa‘íd Jannábí. Qirmiṭi to the Caliph al-Mu‘tadhid, which was sent through ‘Abbás (b.) ‘Amr Ghanawí. |
f221b | * | 1007 | The reply of an imprisoned secretary to a consolatory letter, through which he indirectly gains the favour of ‘Abdu’llah b. Ṭáhir. |
A. | G. | Serial. | TITLES OF THE ANECDOTES. |
f221b | * | 1008 | How Fadhl b. Marwán, the Ṣáḥib-i-Díwán of the Caliph al-Mu‘taṣim, appoints Ibn-i-‘Arús as his assistant at the recommendation of Yúnus b. Walíd al-Anbárí. |
f222a | f158b | 1009 | The clever artifice of an unemployed secretary in al-Mu‘taṣim’s reign, who amassed wealth out of nothing. |
” | * | 1010 | How Ṣáliḥ b. ‘Alí Kátib is restored to prosperity through the favour of Aḥmad b. Abí Khálid and is made the governor of Egypt. |
f222b | * | 1101 | How ‘Abdu’llah Hubayrí (?), one of the old clerks of the Umayyads, used to annoy Aḥmad b. Abí Khálid by his visits and how the Caliph al-Ma’mún appoints him governor of Egypt. |
f223a | f158b | 1012 | The tacit pact among three young friends: Abú Khálid, Abú ‘Abdi’llah Mahdí and Abú Ayyúb, and how Abú ‘Abdi’llah when he obtained the office of secretary fulfilled his early promises. |
” | f159a | 1013 | How Ibráhim b. Rayyán, the assistant secretary of Muḥammad b. ‘Abdu’l Malik, the secretary of the Caliph al-Wáthiq, was warned by the secretary and reminded of the dignity of the office. |
” | ” | 1014 | A secretary of Ibráhím b. ‘Abbás omits the date in a letter, and is reminded by his master of the importance of putting dates in correspondence. |
” | ” | 1015 | The clever suggestion of Sulaymán b. Wahb, the secretary of the Caliph al-Mu‘taṣim to Aḥmad-i-‘Ammár about Iṣfáḥ (?), the chamberlain, one of the undischarged clients of the Caliph. |
f223b | * | 1016 | Khusrawsháh points out to Naṣru’llah b. ‘Abdi’l-Ḥamíd the etiquette of writing the name of a place in which the word Maḥmúd occured. |
” | * | 1017 | Another instance of Khusrawsháh the Ghaznawid’s short method of correcting and replying to petitions. |
” | * | 1018 | Rashídu’d-Dín Waṭwáṭ writes an euphemistic letter by the order of Sultan Után with instructions to castrate Aḥmad Zawzaní, who had torn out one of the testicles of Abú ‘Abdi’llah in a fight. |
” | * | 1019 | Rashídu’d-Dín Waṭwáṭ’s request to the Sultan Sanjar to be sent back to the service of Sultan Után. |
f224a | * | 1020 | ‘Alí [b.] Haytham (?) Tha‘álibí or Taghlibí (?) quits for ever the service of Fadhl b. Rabí‘ when abused by him once. |
” | * | 1021 | How Yaḥyá b. Khálid the Barmecide rewarded ‘Abdu’llah (<Arabic>) (?) his secretary for having annoyed him. |
” | f159a | 1022 | The controversy of the commander (amír) and the secretary (dabír) about their respective merits. |
” | ” | 1023 | The author Muḥammad al-‘Awfí’s own discourse on the comparative merits of the sword and the pen, and an epilogue in which he declares that the services of both have tended to enhance the success of his patron Wazír, the Niẓámu’l-Mulk Muḥammad b. Abí Sa‘d al-Junaydí. |