Now noble Bishútan, the minister,
Was sorely troubled by this butchery,
And rising in the world-lord's presence said:—
“Just monarch! if revengement was thy due,
And 'twas thy heart's desire, that wish of thine
Is perfected in loss. Cease to enjoin
Raid, slaughter, turmoil, strife. Approve them not,
Refrain thyself, fear God, and think of us.
Consider well the turns of fortune's wheel,
How it exalteth this man to the clouds,
And putteth that man into sorry plight.
Thy sire, that world-lord and the army's Lustre,
Did he not go Nímrúz-ward for a bier,
And did not Rustam too when at Kábul
Go to the chase and perish in a pit?
While thou dost live, O king of pure descent!
Vex not a man of birth, for if the son
Of Sám, the son of Narímán, shall cry
Against his bondage to the great All-giver,
Thou wilt be pinched, successful as thou art,
When he appealeth to the Omnipotent.
To Rustam, warder of the Kaian throne,
Who used to gird his loins for every toil,
Thou wast indebted for this crown and not
To Sháh Gushtásp or to Asfandiyár.
Trace downward from the days of Kai Kubád
To those of Kai Khusrau of holy rede;
All owed their greatness to his scimitar,
And held the mightiest his inferiors.
If thou art wise release Zál from his bonds,
And turn thy heart back from the evil way.”
The Sháh repented of those deeds of his
When he had heard the words of Bishútan.