The punishment due to Hajji Baba falls upon Nadan, which makes the
former a staunch predestinarian.
I had passed ten long and tedious
days in my hiding-place without the smallest tidings
from the mollah Nadan. I was suspicious that his
star was still glancing obliquely at him, and that
matters had not gone quite so well as he had expected.
Little communication existed between the city and
the village; and I began to despair of ever again hearing
of my horse, my rich trappings and clothes, when,
one evening a peasant, who had gone to the market-place
of Hamadan for the purpose of hiring himself as a
labourer in the fields, and who had returned disappointed,
by his discourse threw some light upon my apprehension.
He said that a great stir had been
excited by the arrival of a nasakchi, who had seized
the son of their Aga (the owner of the village), taken
away his horse, and carried him off prisoner to the
capital, under the accusation of being the murderer
of the mollah bashi of Tehran.
I leave the gentle reader to judge
of my feelings upon hearing this intelligence.
I soon became satisfied of the reason of the mollah’s
silence; and although I felt myself secure for the
present, yet I was far from certain how long I might
remain so. I immediately declared that I was
perfectly restored to health, and taking a hasty leave
of my hospitable villagers, made the best of my way
to Hamadan, in order to ascertain the truth of the
peasant’s intelligence.
Nadan’s father was well known
in the city, and I found no difficulty in discovering
where he lived. I abstained from entering his
house, and making any direct inquiries concerning
the fate of my friend; but I stopped at the shop of
a barber in the neighbourhood, both because I wanted
his assistance in giving a decent appearance to my
head and face, and because I knew that he would be
the most likely person to inform me of the real state
of the case.
I found him as talkative and as officious
as I could wish. When I had asked him the news
of the day, and had pleaded my ignorance of the recent
occurrence that had filled everybody with astonishment,
he stepped back two paces, and exclaimed, ’Whence
do you come, that the iniquities of that dog the mollah
Nadan are unknown to you? He was not satisfied
with killing the chief priest, but he must needs dress
himself in his very clothes; and, not content with
that, he also has stolen one of the chief executioner’s
best horses and furniture. Wondrous dirt has
he been eating!’
I entreated my informant to relate
all the particulars of a story of which I pretended
to be totally ignorant; and without waiting for a
second request, he spoke as follows:
’About ten days ago this Nadan
arrived at the gate of his father’s house, mounted
on a superb horse, caparisoned in a style more fitting
a khan and a man of the sword than a poor servant
of God. He was dressed in shawls of the finest
quality, and looked indeed like the high priest himself.
His appearance in this fashion of dress and equipage
created an extraordinary sensation; because a very
short time before it was reported that he had incurred
the Shah’s displeasure, and had been turned
out of Tehran in the most ignominious manner.
He gave himself all sorts of airs upon alighting;
and when questioned concerning his expulsion from
the capital, he appeared to make very light of it,
and said that he had been made to understand, in a
secret manner, that his disgrace was only temporary;
and that, by way of softening it, he had been presented
with the horse which he then rode.
’This tale was believed by every
one, and he was received at his father’s house
with great honours; but most unfortunately, the next
day, when about mounting his horse to show himself
in the city, a nasakchi passed the gate of the house,
having just arrived from Tehran. He stopped,
and looked at the animal very earnestly; inspected
the bridle and gold-pommelled saddle, and then cried
out, La Allah il Allah! there is but one God!
He inquired of the bystanders to whom the horse belonged,
and was informed that it was the property of the mollah
Nadan.
’"The Mollah Nadan!” exclaimed
he in a great rage: “whose dog is he?
That horse is the property of my master, the chief
executioner; and whoever says it is not is a liar,
whoever he may be, mollah or no mollah!”
’At this interval appeared the
delinquent himself, who, upon seeing what was going
on, endeavoured to hide himself from the observation
of the nasakchi; for it so happened that he was one
of the officers who had paraded him through the capital
on the day of his disgrace.
’Wearing the garments and turbaned
cap of the deceased chief priest, the dangers of his
situation immediately stared him in the face, and
he would have decamped on the spot, had he not been
recognized by the nasakchi, who as soon as he saw
him cried out, “Seize him, take his soul, that
is he the very man. Well done, my happy
stars! By the head of Ali, by the beard of the
Prophet, that is the bankrupt rogue who killed the
chief priest and stole my master’s horse.”
’By this time the nasakchi had
dismounted, and, with the assistance of his own attendant,
and of the bystanders (who soon discovered that he
was acting under authority), he secured the mollah,
who, in his defence, made oath upon oath that he was
neither thief nor murderer, and that he was ready
to swear his innocence upon the Koran.’
The barber related very faithfully
the whole conversation which took place between Nadan
and the nasakchi, the result of which was that the
latter took the former with him to Tehran, notwithstanding
all the interest made in his favour by the mollah’s
father and friends.
Never was breast torn by so many contending
feelings as mine, upon hearing the fate that had befallen
my companion, as related to me by the barber.
In the first place, I bemoaned the loss of my horse
and his rich trappings, and of my fine shawl dresses;
but in the next I enjoyed a feeling of security when
I considered, that if poor Nadan should happen to
lose his head, no account would ever be asked from
me of my late iniquities. I still could not help
looking upon myself as one under the protection of
a good star, whilst the mollah, I concluded, was inevitably
doomed to be unfortunate: else why should we have
exchanged clothes, and he taken my horse from me at
a time when I was in no way inclined to accede to
his proposals? But, notwithstanding there was
every likelihood that he would suffer the punishment
due to me, still, for the present, I could not feel
myself secure so long as I remained in Persia, and
therefore determined to proceed upon my original intention,
and quit it without further delay. I consoled
myself for the loss of the horse and clothes, by the
possession of the remaining ninety-five tomauns, which
would be sufficient for my present wants; and then
those powerful words, Khoda buzurg est! God
is great, stood me in lieu (as they do many a poor
wretch besides) of a provision for the future, and
of protection against all the unforeseen misfortunes
preparing for us by the hand of fate.