So he returned thence, and came to Gujrát, to stir up the Khán Khánán to the conquest of the Dak'hin, and bring him with him:—
“You have managed the affairs of the world so well,
That you now turn your hand to the affairs of heaven.”
And Rájah 'Alí Khán with the army of the Dak'hin marched
against A'zam Khán, who had not the power to withstand him, and
so retreated to Barár. Neither could he stand his ground there,
and so having ravaged and laid waste Ilichpúr and not remaining even
there, he hastened to Nadarbár. The Dak'hinís pursued him
from station to station. A'zam Khán left his army at Nadarbár,
and went alone with only a few men to Aḥmadábád to ask help of
the Khán Khánán, who was his sister's husband. The Khán
Khánán came out to meet him, and they had an interview at Maḥ-
And in this year Mír Abu-l-Ghays of Bokhára, whose praise is beyond the power of the tongue or the pen:—
“How can the description of his praise be made
By a pen more broken than my heart,”
died at Láhór of an attack of cholic. This sacred bier was brought to Dihlí and buried in the Rouzah-i Ábá-i-kirám, and the date was found to be given by “The Mír of praiseworthy disposition ”:* —(By the Author)
“I went into his cemetry one day to take warning,
I saw a world of sleepers together in its plain.[P. 363] A multitude had gone from this side, but none returned from that,
That I could ask of his state, or news of us reach him.
In that city of the silent there was a multitude of my eloquent ones,
Gone from the palace of the world to become its guests.
Of that number was one pure-natured prince, like Buturáb*
Abu-Ghais, whom the Heaven calls a Gous,* the pivot of the sky.
Alas! for my lord of worthy disposition, and of as happy fortune,
The nature of Muḥammad was manifest in his smiling face.
A Bokháráí through whom Dihlí became the Qubbat-ul-Islám:*
What is become of that Qubbah, and that Islám, and where O God! is its Musalmán?
Since he was a derwish as well as a soldier, if I should meet with the dust of his feet,
I would put it on the eye of my fortune, as though it were collyrium of Ispahán.
At his pillow from the candle of my own heart I burnt a taper,
Although the light of his poverty was a divine torch.
I made the bed of his tomb wet with my tears,
Although the cloud of Mercy washed him with the rain of Forgiveness.”
In this year a new command was issued that all people should give up the Arabic sciences, and should study only the really useful ones, viz., Astronomy, Mathematics, Medicine, and Philosophy. The date of this given by the words “Decline of Learning.”*
And in Sha'bán of the said year Mán Singh came to Court. News also came that Abd-ulláh Khán had taken Harí,* and slain 'Alí Qulí Khán, commandant of that place, together with an immense number of Turkománs and inhabitants of the town, and “the taking of Harí”* was found to give the date.