VI. ḤAKĪM-I-MIṢRĪ.*

He was well skilled both in the theory and the practice of medicine and learned in all traditional learning. He had some acquaintance with the profane sciences, such as exorcism, etymo­logy, and the formation of broken plurals. He is a cheerful soul and a good companion, whose very approach is a blessing. He put forth his best efforts in treating Shaikh Faiẓī in his last illness, but all to no avail. What indeed could he do in the face of the irresistible decree of fate, before which all are helpless and dumb. If medicine could prolong the life physicians should never die.

The ḥakīm sometimes wrote droll verses in Persian, an example of which is the following couplet which he wrote on Kh'āja 166 Shamsu-d-dīn of Khawāf,* the Dīvān.

Couplet.

“What overbearing conduct is this of Kh‘āja Shamsu-d-
dīn's?
He intrudes, God forbid it,* upon the domain of medicine!”

One day, on seeing an oleander, which in Arabic is called difl, in bloom, he uttered the following hemistich:—

“The locks leap up like flame from the head of the difl.”

When the emperor built a dais in the courtyard of the masjid at Lāhōr and issued an order to the effect that anybody who wished to do so might recite their prayers there in his presence, akīm-i-Miṣrī wrote the following verses:—

“Our king has founded a masjid
O ye faithful, good fortune may it bring!
It is good policy also in this masjid
To recite and reckon up our prayers.”

He was very simple-minded and unselfish, and for this reason acquired but little wealth. He produced, however, some practi­cal treatises on medicine. He died in Burhānpūr in Khāndēsh and was buried in the neighbourhood of that city.*