V. SHAIKH MUḤAMMAD-I-KAMBŪ,*
OF SAMBHAL.

He belonged to the Qādirī* order. On first entering the reli­gious 8. life he subjected himself to a most rigorous discipline. He was a man who was mysteriously drawn towards God* and was subject to fits of religious ecstasy. He had a sweet voice and when he was in one of his fits of ecstasy he would chant so sweetly as to touch the hearts of all who heard him; the flavour of that ecstatic song still lingers on the palate of my soul. In his earlier years he acquired exoteric knowledge and was engaged in teaching. He had an ardent love for such forms as display, in their beauty, the power of the Creator, nor was he ever at any time free from the bonds of that love which is transferred from the Creator to the creature,* and when in these bonds he lost all self-control, and, putting aside all dissimulation and restraint took no account of the praise or blame of others, careless alike of their disapprobation and their approval. For this reason was he known as Shaikh Muḥammad-i-‘Āshiq, or “the lover.” In A.H. 985 (A.D. 1579) he transferred the baggage of his existence to that land where the soul is united to God.* The words “the sixth of Shavvāl”* give the date of his death. May God make his soul fragrant!