My last Letter introduced the Soofies
to your notice, the present shall convey a further
account of some of these remarkable characters who
have obtained so great celebrity among the Mussulmauns
of India, as to form the subjects of daily conversation.
I have heard some rigid Mussulmauns declare they discredit
the mysterious knowledge a Soofie is said to possess,
yet the same persons confess themselves staggered by
the singular circumstances attending the practice
of Soofies living in their vicinity, which they have
either witnessed or heard related by men whose veracity
they cannot doubt; amongst the number I may quote an
intimate acquaintance of my husband’s, a very
venerable Syaad of Lucknow, who relates an anecdote
of Saalik Soofies, which I will here introduce.
’Meer Eloy Bauxh, a Mussulmaun
of distinguished piety, who has devoted a long life
to the service of God, and in doing good to his fellow-men,
tells me, that being curious to witness the effect
of an assembly of Saalik Soofies, he went with a party
of friends, all equally disposed with himself to be
amused by the eccentricities of the Soofies, whose
practice they ridiculed as at least absurd, to
speak in no harsher terms of their pretended supernatural
gifts.
’This assembly consisted of
more than a hundred persons, who by agreement met
at a large hall in the city of Lucknow, for the purpose
of “remembering the period of absence”,
as they term the death of a highly revered Soofie
of their particular class. The room being large,
and free admittance allowed to all persons choosing
to attend the assembly, Meer Eloy Bauxh and his party
entered, and seated themselves in a convenient place
for the more strict scrutiny of the passing-scene.
’The service for the occasion
began with a solemn strain by the musical performers,
when one of the inspired Soofies commenced singing
in a voice of remarkable melody. The subject
was a hymn of praise to the great Creator, most impressively
composed in the Persian language. Whilst the
Soofie was singing, one of the elders in particular, though
all seemed sensibly affected by the strain, rose
from his seat, in what the Soofies themselves call,
“the condition changed,” which signifies,
by what I could learn, a religious ecstasy. This
person joined in the same melody which the other Soofie
had begun, and at the same time accompanied the music
by capering and sobbing in the wildest manner imaginable.
His example had the effect of exciting all the Soofies
on whom his eyes were cast to rise also and join him
in the hymn and dance.
’The singularity of this scene
seemed, to Meer Eloy Bauxh and his party, so ludicrous
that they could not refrain from laughing in an audible
manner, which attracted the attention of the principal
Soofie engaged in the dance, who cast his eyes upon
the merry party, not, however, apparently in anger.
Strange as he confesses it to be, and even
now it seems more like a dream than a reality, at
the moment he met the eye of the Soofie, there was
an instant glow of pure happiness on his heart, a
sensation of fervent love to God, which he had never
before felt, in his most devout moments of prayer
and praise; his companions were similarly affected,
their eyes filled with tears, their very souls seemed
elevated from earth to heaven in the rapture of their
songs of adoration, which burst forth from their lips
in unison with the whole Soofie assemblage.
’Before they had finished their
song of praise, which lasted a considerable time,
the chief of the Soofie party sunk exhausted on the
carpet, whilst the extraordinary display of devotion
continued in full force on the whole assembly, whether
Soofies or mere visitors, for many minutes after the
principal devotee had fallen to the floor. Water
was then procured, and animation gradually returned
to the poor exhausted devotee, but with considerable
delay. Meer Eloy Bauxh says he waited until the
Soofie was perfectly restored to sense, and saw him
taken to his place of abode; he then returned to his
own home to meditate on the events of a day he never
can forget.’
Soofeism, it appears, (by the accounts
I have received,) is a mystery; the secret of which
can only be imparted by the professor to such persons
as have been prepared for its reception, by a course
of religious instruction. No one can be initiated
into the mystery who has not first renounced all worldly
vanities and ambitious projects who is not
sincerely repentant of past offences who
has not acquired perfect humility of heart, and an
entire resignation to the Divine Will a
lively faith in God, and a firm determination to love
and serve Him, from a conviction, ’That God alone
is worthy to be served, loved, and worshipped by His
creatures.’ Thus prepared, the person is
to receive instruction from a Calipha, (head or leader
of the Soofies), who directs the pupil in certain exercises
of the heart, which constitute the secrets of their
profession. What these exercises are, I am not
competent to give an opinion, but judging by the way
a real Soofie conducts himself, it may be presumed
his practices are purely religious; for I am assured
that he is devoted to all good ways; that he carefully
avoids worldly vanities, and every species of temptation
and alluring gratification of the senses; that he is
incessant in prayer, and in fasting severe; free from
all prejudice, as regards the belief or persuasion
of other men, so long as they worship God alone; regarding
all mankind as brothers, himself the humblest of the
race; claiming no merit for the ascendancy he has
acquired over earthly wishes, he gives glory alone
to God, whom he loves and worships.
All the Durweish are of the Mussulmaun
persuasion. Many are devout Durweish, who are,
nevertheless, unacquainted with the mystery of Soofeism;
and, to use their own words, (by which the Natives
distinguish them), ’Every real Soofie is undoubtedly
a Durweish, but all Durweishes are not Soofies,’
although their lives may be devoted much in the same
holy way, both in the practice of religion and abstinence
from worldly enjoyments; and if the writers on these
subjects may be believed, many wonderful cures have
been effected by the prayers of the devout Durweish.
There are some pretenders, I am told,
who put themselves forth to the world in the character
of a Durweish, who are not, in fact, entitled to the
appellation, hypocritical devotees, who
wear the outward garb of humility, without the feeling
of that inward virtue which is the characteristic
principle of the true Durweish. The distinction
between the real and the pretended Durweish, may be
illustrated by the following anecdote which I have
received from the mouth of Meer Hadjee Shaah:
‘In the last century,’
he says, ’there lived at or near Delhi, a very
pure-minded Durweish, named Shah Sherif ood deen Mah-mood,
(he was known in his latter years by several of my
aged acquaintance at Lucknow, and his son and grandson
both lived, at different periods, in that city).
This person forsook the world whilst in the prime of
manhood, and devoted himself to prayer, fasting, and
good deeds. He was esteemed the most humble-minded
of human beings, and his devotion to his Maker sincere
and ardent. His principal abode was Delhi, where
his wife and children also resided, to whom he was
tenderly attached; yet so tempered were his affections,
that he never allowed any earthly endearments to interfere
with his devotions, or to separate him from his love
to his Creator.
’It was announced by the Soofies
and Durweish, that on a certain day a festival or
assembly of holy men would meet for the service of
God, at the Jummah musjud (Friday mosque), situated
in the city of Delhi.
’Shah Sherif ood deen was disposed
to attend the meeting, which consisted of the heads
or superiors of several classes of the religious, with
their disciples and followers. At this meeting,
as was expected, were assembled the Soofies, Durweish,
and religious mendicants of all ranks and conditions,
from those clothed in gold-cloth and brocade, down
to the almost naked Faakeer; and amongst the latter
number may be classed the humble-minded Shah Sherif
ood deen. A small wrapper girt about his loins
by a girdle of black wool spun into small ropes, and
a similar article wound round his head, with a coarse
white sheet over his shoulders for his summer apparel;
and a black blanket to shelter his naked limbs from
the cold winter, formed his sole wardrobe.
’This holy man took his station
in the most humble spot of the assembly, “sitting
amongst the shoes” of the more esteemed or more
aspiring personages. As there was nothing remarkable
in his appearance, he remained unobserved, or unnoticed
by the multitude present. Many of the assembly
made great display of their right to pre-eminence,
by the costliness of their robes, the splendour of
their equipage, and the number of their servants;
striving to command respect, if possible, by their
superior external habiliments.
’This meeting had been convened
to celebrate the death of one of their order, which
had occurred some years prior. After prayers had
been read, suited to the occasion, a poor man, whose
very appearance might excite compassion, addressed
the heads of the devotees with folded hands, beseeching
them, who were accounted so truly holy in their lives,
to offer up a prayer for him who had so long suffered
severe affliction, by reason of his neck and face
being drawn awry, from a paralytic attack, or some
like calamity. The sufferer said, “I am
a poor merchant, and have a large family dependant
altogether on my personal exertions for support; but,
alas! this illness prevents me from attending to the
business of life. I am wasting both in body and
in substance through this grievous affliction.”
’The sick man’s address
was heard by the whole assembly in silence; many present,
both Soofies and Durweish, were really pious men, and
were willing to allow the person who seemed to be
the head of this assembly, to intercede in behalf
of the sufferer. To him they all looked, expecting
he would commence a prayer in which they might join;
but he, it is suspected, conscious of his own duplicity
in assuming only the character of a Soofie without
the virtues, was anxious to dismiss the supplicant,
with a promise that prayer should certainly be made
for him in private, adding, “This is not a proper
season for your application; it is disrespectful to
disturb our meeting with your requests; we came not
here to listen to your importunities, but on more
important, business.”
’"True, my Lord,” answered
the afflicted man; “I am sensible of all you
say; but, I do assure you, private prayer has been
tried for my relief by many individuals of your holy
profession, and I have still to mourn my calamity.
I thought when so many holy persons were assembled
together, the united prayer in accordance
with our Prophet’s commands offered
up at this time, would certainly be received at the
throne of Mercy. I entreat then, at the hands
of this venerable assembly, the aid I require.”
’The pretended Soofie looked
haughtily on the sick man, and bade him retire to
his home; he should have a prayer offered, he might
depend, but it must be in private. The sufferer
was still importunate, and urged every argument he
could command, to induce the inexorable Soofie to allow
the present assembly to offer a prayer on the spot
for his recovery; but nothing he could urge availed
with the proud Soofie, who at length grew angry even
to the use of bitter words.
’Shah Sherif ood deen observed
in silence the scene before him; at length he ventured
(in the most respectful terms) to suggest to the heads
of the assembly the propriety of vouchsafing the poor
man’s request; and hinted that, the prayer of
some one more pure of heart than the rest might effectually
reach the throne of Mercy in behalf of the supplicant.
’"And pray,” said the
leader, rising haughtily, “who gave you leave
to suggest or recommend to your superiors in knowledge
and virtue? Is not our determination sufficient,
that you, insignificant being! should presume to teach
us what we ought to do? you can know nothing
of the Durweish’s powerful prayers, nor the
mystery of a Soofie’s holy calling.”
’"I am, indeed, a very ignorant
and unworthy creature,” replied Shah Sherif,
“and acknowledge my great presumption in daring
to speak before so many of my superiors in knowledge
and virtue; but we are told in our hudeeths (true
speech) that the prayers of many hearts may prevail
in a good cause, whilst singly offered the same prayer
might fail,” The proud Soofie’s anger
seemed to increase as the Durweish spoke; he bade him
keep silence, and reviled him with many bitter words,
which the good Shah received with his usual humility
and forbearance. At length, the Shah looked attentively
at the Soofie, who had thus rebuked and insulted him,
and said, “I will believe, Sir, you are the Soofie
you aspire to be thought among your fellow-men, if
you will immediately offer up your single prayer,
by which the suffering man may be relieved; for we
know such prayers have been answered by the gracious
Giver of all good.”
’"What do you know of the powerful
prayer of the Soofie?” replied the proud man,
“I suspect you to be an impostor in your humble
exterior.” “No, " said the
Shah, “I am but a poor beggar, and a humble,
the very humblest servant of God.” “You
pretend to much humility,” retorted the Soofie,
“suppose we see one of your miraculous works
in answer to your prayer; it would please us to witness
what you can do.”
’Shah Sherif ood deen raised
his eyes to Heaven, his heart went with his prayer,
and in a dignified manner he stretched forth his hand
towards the afflicted person. The man was instantly
restored; then drawing his hand into a direct line
with the proud Soofie, and pointing his finger to him,
he said, “What more, friend, dost them now require
of me? The man’s affliction is removed,
but the power which is delegated to me rests still
on my finger; command me, to whom shall I present it;
to you, or any one of your people?”
’The proud Soofie hung his head
abashed and confounded, he had not power to answer.
The Shah observed his confusion and said, “It
is not well to pray for relief to one poor weak fellow-creature,
and then to afflict another; to the mountain’s
retreat, I will consign this malady.” Then
shaking his hand as if to relieve himself from a heavy
weight, he uttered in a solemn tone, “Go to
the mountains!” and resumed that humble seat
he had first chosen with a smile of composure beaming
on his countenance.’ This miracle is actually
believed by the Natives to be true.
Shah Sherif ood deen, say the people
who know him, spent the principal part of each day
and night in silent prayer and meditation; no one ever
ventured to intrude within his small sanctuary, but
hundreds of people would assemble outside the building,
in front of which he occasionally sat for an hour,
but scarcely ever conversed with any one of his visitors.
During the time he was thus seated, he generally raised
his eyes once or twice, and looked round on the faces
of his audience. It was generally remarked, that
no one could meet the eye of Shah Jee that
familiar appellation by which he was known without
an indescribable sensation of reverential awe, which
irresistibly compelled them to withdraw their eyes.
The talismanic power of Shah Jee’s eyes had become
proverbial throughout the city of Delhi. A certain
Pattaan, however, of warlike appearance, a man
remarkable for his bravery, declared amongst his associates
that he would certainly out-stare Shah Jee, if ever
they met, which he was resolved should be the very
first opportunity; he accordingly went with his companions
at a time when this Durweish was expected to appear
in public.
The Pattaan was seated on the floor
with many other people; when the Shah issued from
his sanctuary, the people rose to make their salaams,
which Shah Jee either did not, or would not observe,
but seated himself according to his custom on the
mat which had been spread for him; where, his eyes
fixed on the ground, he seemed for some time to be
wholly absorbed in silent meditation. At length,
raising his head, he turned his face to the long line
of spectators, saluting with his eyes each person in
the row, until he came to the Pattaan, who, according
to his vow, kept his large eyes fixed on the Durweish.
Shah Jee went on with his survey, and a second time
cast a glance along the whole line, not omitting the
Pattaan as before, whose gaze, his companions observed,
was as firmly settled on the Durweish as at the first.
A third time the eyes of the Shah went round the assembly
and rested again on the Pattaan.
Observing the immoveable eyes of their
Pattaan acquaintance, the visitors smiled at each
other, and secretly gave him credit for a piety and
pureness of heart which he was not before supposed
to be blessed with; ‘How else,’ said they,
’would he have been able to withstand the penetrating
glance of the revered Durweish.’ Shah Jee
rose from his seat, and retired, thus giving to the
company a signal for their departure from the place.
The associates of the Pattaan congratulated
him on his success, and inquired by what stratagem
he had so well succeeded in fulfilling his promise;
but his eyes being still fixed in a wild stare, he
replied not to his questioners. They rallied
him, and tried by a variety of means to dissolve his
reverie; but the Pattaan was insensible, all the boasted
energies of his mind having forsaken him. His
friends were now alarmed at his abstractedness, and
with considerable difficulty removed him from the
place to his own home, where his family received him,
for the first time, with grief, as he was their whole
stay and support, and the kind head of a large family.
The Pattaan continued staring in the
same state throughout the night and following day,
talking wildly and incoherently. ’The Pattaan
is paid for his presumption,’ said some; others
recommended application to be made to the Durweish,
Shah Jee, who could alone remove the calamity.
The wife and mother, with many female dependants,
resolved on pleading his case with the benevolent
Shah Jee; but as access to him would be difficult,
they conceived the idea of making their petition through
the agency of the wife of the Durweish, to whom they
accordingly went in a body at night, and related their
distress, and the manner in which they supposed it
to have originated, declaring, in conclusion, that
as the excellent Durweish had been pleased to cast
this affliction on their guardian, they must become
slaves to his family, since bread could no longer be
provided by the labour of him who had hitherto been
their support.
The wife of the Durweish comforted
the women by kind words, desiring them to wait patiently
until her dear lord could be spoken with, as she never
ventured to intrude on his privacy at an improper moment,
however urgent the necessity. After a few hours’
delay, passed with impatient feeling by the group
of petitioning females, they were at length repaid
by the voice of Shah Jee. His wife going to the
door of his apartment, told him of the circumstance
attending the Pattaan, and the distressed condition
of the females of his family, who came to supplicate
his aid in restoring their relative to reason; adding,
’What commands will you be pleased to convey
by me? What remedy do you propose for the suffering
Pattaan?’
The Durweish answered, ’His
impure heart, then, could not withstand the reflected
light. Well, well! tell the poor women to be comforted,
and as they desire to have the Pattaan restored to
his former state, they need only purchase some sweetmeats
from the bazaar, which the man being induced to eat,
he will speedily be restored to his wonted bodily and
mental powers.’
Upon hearing the commands of Shah
Jee, the women speedily departed, ejaculating blessings
on the Durweish, his wife, and family. On their
return they purchased the sweetmeats and presented
them to the Pattaan, who devoured them with eagerness,
and immediately afterwards his former senses returned,
to the no small joy of his family circle. They
inquired of him, what had been the state of his feelings
during the time he was in that insensible state from
which he was now happily relieved? He replied,
that the first gaze of the Durweish had fixed his eyes
so firmly that he could by no means close or withdraw
them from the object; the second glance detached his
thoughts from every earthly vanity or wish; and that
the third look from the same holy person, fixed him
in unspeakable joys, transports pure and heavenly,
which continued until he had eaten the sweetmeats
they had presented, with a kind intention, he had no
doubt, but which nevertheless, must be ever regretted
by him whilst life remained; for no earthly joy could
be compared with that which he had experienced in
his trance.
The Durweish Shah Sherif ood deen,
was asked by some one why he had selected the bazaar
sweetmeats as a remedy in the Pattaan’s case?
He answered, ’Because I knew the man’s
heart was corrupt. The light which had been imparted
to him could alone be removed by his partaking of the
dirtiest thing mortals hold good for food, and surely
there cannot be any thing more dirty than the bazaar
sweetmeats, exposed as they are to the flies and dust
of the city; and how filthily they are manufactured
requires not my aid in exposing.’
This Durweish is said, and
believed by the good Mussulmaun people I have conversed
with, to have foreseen the hour when he
should be summoned from this life into eternity; and
three weeks prior to the appointed time, he endeavoured
to fortify the minds of his wife and family, to bear
with resignation that separation he had been warned
should take place. He assembled his affectionate
relatives on the occasion, and thus addressed them,
’My dear family, it is the will of God that we
should part; on such a day (mentioning the time),
my soul will take flight from its earthly mansion.
Be ye all comforted, and hereafter, if ye obey God’s
holy law, ye shall meet me again in a blessed eternity.’
As may be supposed, the females wept
bitterly; they were distressed, because the good Durweish
had ever been kind, indulgent, affectionate, and tender
in all the relative situations he held amongst them.
He tried many soothing arguments to comfort and console
them for some hours, but without in the least reducing
their grief, or moderating their bewailings: they
could not, and would not be comforted.
‘Well,’ said the Durweish,
’since the separation I have predicted causes
you all so much sorrow, it would be better, perhaps,
that we part not. I have thought of another method
to avoid the pangs of separation; I will offer my
prayers this night to the gracious Giver of all good,
that He may be pleased to permit ye all to bear me
company in death.’
‘Oh! stay your prayer!’
said the wife of the Durweish; ’this must not
be; for if we all die at once, who will perform the
funeral rites, and deposit our bodies in the earth?’
The Durweish smiled at his wife’s objection,
and answered, ’This is of no consequence to
us, dear wife: the body may be likened to a garment
that is thrown off when old; the soul having worn its
earthly covering for a season, at the appointed time
shakes off the perishable piece of corruption, to
enter into a purer state of existence. It matters
not if the body have a burial or not; the soul takes
no cognizance of the clay it has quitted. Yet,
if it be a matter of great consideration with you,
be assured that many pious men and Durweish, whose
respect we have enjoyed in life, will not fail to give
decent interment to the remains of those they have
loved and respected.’
This for a moment baffled the wife
in her argument; but presently she persuasively urged
that her daughters were all young, that they had as
yet seen but little of this world, and therefore it
would be cruel to take them away so soon; they must
desire to see more of this life ere they entered on
another state of existence. ‘Oh, my wife,’
said the Durweish, ’you reason badly; this life
hath no joys to be compared with those which the righteous
man’s hopes lead him to expect in the world beyond
the grave. I will assuredly make my promised
prayer, if I find a semblance of remaining grief upon
separating from me at the appointed time, for our
removal to perfect happiness.’
‘No, no!’ was cried by
all the assembled family; ’do let us remain a
little longer here, we are not in a hurry to quit this
world.’ ’Well, well, be satisfied
then,’ responded the Durweish, ’if such
is your desire; and hereafter let me not hear a sigh
or a murmur from one of you, for my appointed time
is drawing to a close; if you will not accompany me,
let me, at least, depart in peace.’
The people who relate this (and I
have heard the anecdote from many) add, that the Durweish
Shah Sherif ood deen Mah-mood died at the close of
the third week, and on the day and hour he had predicted.
A grandson of this Durweish I have
been writing about is still living in India, remarkable
for a very retentive memory and propriety of life.
I have not met with this gentleman during my residence
in India, but have often heard his name mentioned
with respect by Meer Hadjee Shaah who knew him well.
He says that this Syaad, when but a boy, learned the
whole Khoraun by heart in the short space of forty
days; he adds, that this person is exemplary in his
life, and in his habits and manners humble; that he
is truly a servant of God; rejects the mystic tenets
of Soofieism; possesses an enlightened mind, and is
a Moollah or Doctor of the Mussulmaun law. I
have heard many singular anecdotes of his life, proving
his disregard for riches, honours, and the vain pursuits
of the worldly-minded. If I recollect right,
he once was engaged in the confidential office of
Moonshie to a highly talented gentleman at Fort William,
from which employment he retired and took up his abode
for some time at Lucknow; from whence, it was said,
he went to Hydrabaad, where, it is probable, he may
still be found in the exercise of a religious course
of life. His name is respected by all the good
men of his own persuasion, with whom I have been most
intimately acquainted.
Conceiving the subject may be interesting
to my friends, I will not offer any apology for introducing
to your notice a female character of great merit,
whose death occurred during my residence in the vicinity
of her abode. I was induced to make memorandums
of the circumstances which brought the knowledge of
her virtues more immediately before the public.
Maulvee Meer Syaad Mahumud succeeded,
on the death of his father, in 1822, to the exalted
position amongst Mussulmauns of head leader and expounder
of the Mahumudan law in the city of Lucknow; he is
a person of unassuming manners and extreme good sense,
is an upright, honest-hearted, religious man, meriting
and receiving the respect and good opinion of all
his countrymen capable of appreciating the worthiness
of his general deportment. He is esteemed the
most learned person of the present age amongst Asiatic
scholars; and occupies his time in study and devotion,
and in giving gratuitous instruction to youth, at
stated hours, in those laws which he makes his own
rule of life. Neither is the good Maulvee’s
fame confined to the city in which he sojourns, as
may be gathered from the following anecdote, which
exhibits the upright principles of this worthy man,
at the same time that it discloses the character of
a very amiable female, whose charity was as unbounded
as her memory is revered in Furrukhabaad.
’The late Nuwaub of Furrukhabaad
was first married to a lady of birth and good fortune,
Villoiettee Begum, by whom he was not blessed with
a son; but he had other wives, one of whom bore him
an heir, who at the present time enjoys the musnud
of his father.
’Villoiettee Begum was beautiful
in person, and possessed a heart of the most benevolent
and rare kind; her whole delight was centred in the
exercises of those duties which her religion inculcated;
she spent much of her time in prayer, in acquiring
a knowledge of the Khoraun, in acts of kindness to
her fellow-creatures, and in strict abstinence.
’It was her unvaried custom
at meals before she touched a morsel herself, to have
twelve portions of food, selected from the choicest
viands provided for her use, set apart for as many
poor people; and when they had been served, she humbly
and sparingly partook of the meal before her.
She was possessed of great wealth, yet never expended
any portion of it in the extravagances of dress;
indeed, so humble was her appearance, that she might
have been mistaken for the meanest of her slaves or
domestics. It was her usual custom, whenever
she purchased new clothing for her own wear, to lay
in a large store for the poor; and it is affirmed,
by those who were long intimate with the family, that
a supplicant was never known to pass her door without
relief. She even sought out, with the aid of a
faithful domestic, the modest poor who were restrained
by their feelings from intruding their necessities;
and her liberal donations were distributed in so kind
a manner, that even the pride of birth could never
feel distressed when receiving her charitable assistance.
’This lady was much attached
to the duties of her religion, and delighted in acquiring
instruction from righteous persons of her own faith.
She showered favours on all the poor who were reported
to live in the fear of God; indeed, such was the liberality,
benevolence, and unvaried charity of this good lady,
that the news of her death was received by hundreds
of people as their greatest earthly calamity.
The example of this lady’s character is the
more enhanced by reflecting on the retired way in which
she was reared and lived, restrained by the customs
of her people within the high walls of a zeenahnah,
without the advantages of a liberal education or the
immediate society of intelligent people. She seems,
by all accounts, to have been a most perfect pattern
of human excellence.
’In forming her will (Villoiettee
Begum had been a widow several years before her death),
she does not appear to have wished a single thing to
be done towards perpetuating her name, as
is usual with the great, in erecting lofty domes over
the deposited clay of the Mussulmaun, but
her immense wealth was chiefly bequeathed in charitable
gifts. The holy and the humble were equally remembered
in its distribution. She had been acquainted
with the virtues of the good Maulvee of Lucknow, to
whom she left a handsome sum of money for his own
use, and many valuable articles to fit up the Emaum-baarah
for the service of Mahurrum, with a, desire that the
same should be conveyed to him as soon after her death
as convenient. Her vakeel (agent) wrote to Meer
Syaad Mahumud very soon after the lady’s death,
to apprise him of the bequest Villoiettee Begum had
willed to him, and at the same time forwarded the portable
articles to him at Lucknow.
’The Maulvee was much surprised,
and fancied there must be some mistake in the person
for whom this legacy was intended, as the lady herself
was entirely unknown to him, and an inhabitant of
a station so remote from his own residence as not
likely ever to have heard of him. He, however,
replied to the vakeel, and wrote also to a gentleman
in the neighbourhood, desiring to have a strict inquiry
instituted before he could venture to accept the riches
of this lady’s bounty, presuming that even if
he was the person alluded to in her will, that the
Begum must have intended him as her almoner to the
poor of Lucknow. The good, upright Maulvee acted
on the integrity of his heart and desired a strict
scrutiny might be instituted into the will of the
deceased, which was accordingly made, and he was assured
in reply, that Villoiettee Begum had been long acquainted
with his worth, and in her liberal bequest she had
decidedly intended the money for his sole use and
benefit, in testimony of her respect for his virtuous
character. The Maulvee again wrote and requested
to be informed by those most intimate with the Begum’s
way of life, whether she had left unperformed any
of the duties incumbent on a member of the faithful,
as regards zuckhaut, pilgrimage, the fast, &c.?
which not having accomplished, and having ample means,
he felt himself bound, in the situation he held, to
devote her legacy to the purpose of such duties by
proxy (which their law commands) in her name.
He was in reply assured that the good Begum had not
omitted any part of her duty; she had regularly applied
zuckhaut, duly performed the fast, had paid the expenses
for poor pilgrims to Mecca (her substitutes); and
not until all the scruples of the just Maulvec had
been removed would he hear of, or accept the Begum’s
legacy.’
The anecdote I have now given will
serve to illustrate the character of some good people
of Hindoostaun of the present day; indeed, the veneration
and respect paid by all classes to those men who lead
religious lives, is but little changed from the earlier
pages of the Mussulmaun history. I have just
met with a Durweish anecdote, of former times, that
may be worth transcribing, as I have received it from
Meer Hadjee Shaah, whose aid I am so much indebted
to for subjects with which to amuse my friends.
’Shaah ood Dowlah was a
Durweish who flourished in the reign of King Shah
Jaluui at Delhi, but whose fame is known throughout
India to the present day. The Durweish was remarkable
for his activity of body. It is related, that
he was often to be seen at prayer in Delhi, and in
three hours after he had transported himself eighty
miles oil without any visible assistance but his own
personal activity on foot. This extraordinary
rapidity of movement rendered him an object of veneration;
and the general belief was, that he was highly favoured
of Heaven, and gifted with supernatural power; the
life he led was purely religious, with a total disregard
of earthly riches.
’The King, Shah Jahan, was a
very sensible person, and a great admirer of all that
is counted good and excellent in his fellow-men; he
was particularly friendly to such men as the Durweish,
or others who devoted their lives to religious exercises.
He had often heard of Shah ood Dowlah, without ever
meeting with him, and on hearing of some singular acts
of this Durweish, he was desirous of seeing him, and
gave orders accordingly to his Minister, that messengers
should be sent in search of the holy man, but as often
as they appeared before the Durweish’s hut he
was invisible; this statement even added to the King’s
curiosity. On a certain day the King was seated
on the story of his palace which overlooked the town
and the outskirts beyond the walls, in conversation
with his Minister and favourites, when the Durweish
was espied at no great distance standing on the broadway;
which, when the King knew, he desired messengers might
be dispatched to convey the holy man to his presence.
“Your royal will shall be obeyed”, replied
the Minister; “but your Majesty must be aware
that the extent of the circuit from the palace to
the outer gate is so great that long before a slave
can get to that road, Shah ood Dowlah will be beyond
the reach of our summons. With all due submission
to your Majesty’s better judgement, would it
not be more prudent to call him from hence, and persuade
him to ascend the wall in a basket suspended to a rope.”
The King agreed, and the Durweish was hailed.
“Our King, the Protector of the World, commands
Shah ood Dowlah’s attendance?” The
Durweish, looking up at the summoner, inquired, “Where
is the King?” “In this apartment,”
he was answered. “How am I to get
near him? he is too far off: an old man does
not well to climb.” “Wait a
minute”, replied the servant, “your conveyance
shall be prepared.”
’In a few minutes the basket
descended from the upper story, by a strong rope,
well secured against the probability of accident.
The Durweish, who was covered with a chudha,
or sheet, to keep him from giddiness in the ascent, seated
himself firmly in the basket, and the servants drew
him up in safety. He was immediately conveyed
to the King’s apartment; who, contrary to precedent,
rose at his entrance to receive this respected and
much-desired guest.
’"Pray be seated, my friend”,
said the King, leading him to the most honoured part
of the royal carpet. The Durweish obeyed without
a moment’s hesitation, to the astonishment of
the Vizier, nobles, courtiers, &c., who had never
before seen a human being seated in the King’s
presence, not even one of the most exalted of the
nobles. “I have long desired this happiness,”
said the King to the Durweish, “that I might
converse with you. “ “Your
Majesty is very gracious to the poor Durweish”,
was responded. “I hear much of your great
virtue and good life,” said the King, “from
the world, my subjects.” “They
do but flatter the poor Durweish,” was his reply;
adding, “none can tell what passes in my heart,
when they view only my face. I am but a poor
Durweish.”
’"I have many questions to ask
you,” said the King, “which I hope to have
resolved from your own mouth; but, first, I beg to
be informed, what methods you have used in order to
acquire that command over selfish feelings, which
is displayed in your intercourse with the world? and
by what means you have become so enlightened in the
ways pleasing to God?”
’The Durweish with a smile of
pleasure, and in language calm as respectful, answered
in the following words: “Your Majesty,
the Protector of the World, was desirous of becoming
personally known to the very meanest of your subjects,
the poor Durweish; the opportunity arrived, and you
condescended to let down a line of rope to assist your
poor subject in the ascent to your presence.
With equal condescension you have seated me by your
side; and I, the poor Durweish, feel a due sense of
the honour conferred on me. Had I been anxious
to gain admittance to the Protector of the World,
many would have been the difficulties to surmount;
your castle is well guarded, your gates innumerable
to be passed ere this place could be reached, and
who would have aided the poor Durweish’s wishes?
But your Majesty had the will, and the power to effect
that will; whilst I, who had neither, might have exerted
myself for ages without effect. Such then, O
King! is the way God draws those whom He wills unto
Him. He sees into the hidden recesses of the
human heart, and knows every working of mortal minds;
He has no difficulty to surmount; for to whom in His
mercy He grants evidence of His love, He draws them
to Himself in heart, in soul, in mind, with infinitely
less effort than thou hast exerted to draw my mortal
body within thy palace. It is God who in love
and mercy throws the line to man; happy that soul
who accepts the offered means, by which he may ascend!"’
Meer Nizaam ood deen lived many
years at Lucknow, where he was much esteemed by the
religious men of the time; some who survived him have
frequently entertained me with anecdotes of that respected
Durweish. Out of the many I have heard detailed
by them, I have selected for this place a few of the
most interesting:
A certain King of Delhi (whose name
has escaped my recollection) having heard of the remarkable
piety of this Durweish, expressed a great desire to
see him, and the message was conveyed by a confidential
person, instructed to say to the holy man, that his
presence was solicited as a favour at Court.
The person intrusted with the royal message, remarked
to Meer Nizaam, when he had agreed to accompany him,
that his mean apparel was not suited to appear in
the presence of majesty, and offered to provide him
with a superior dress.
The Durweish looked steadily in the
face of the proposer, and addressed him, ’Friend!
know you not, that clad in these very garments you
deride, I make my daily prayers to Him who is the
Creator and Lord of the whole earth, and all that
therein is? If I am not ashamed to appear in the
presence of my God thus habited, canst thou think I
shall deem it needful to change my garments for one
who is, at best but the creature of my Creator?
Thinkest thou I would pay more deference to my fellow-man
than I have done to my God? No, no; be assured
the clothes I wear will not be changed for earthly
visits.’
This Durweish had a mind and heart
so entirely devoted to his Creator, and was so thoroughly
purified from earthly vanity, that his every wish was
granted as soon as it had been formed in his heart,
says one of his many admirers, Meer Eloy Bauxh;
who, in proof that he was so gifted, relates the following
anecdote which I give in his own words:
’One day I was conversing with
the Durweish, Meer Nizaam, when he told me he could
bring me to his door, from my own home, at any hour
or time he pleased. I was a little wavering in
my belief of his power to do so, and offered some
remarks that indicated my doubts. “Well,”
said he in reply, “you shall be convinced, my
friend, ere long, I promise you.”
’A few evenings after this conversation
had been held, I was seated on my charpoy, in meditation, my
usual practice after the evening namaaz, when
a sudden impulse seized my mind, that I must immediately
go off to the Durweish who lived at the opposite extremity
of this large city (Lucknow). I prepared to set
out, and by the time I was ready, the rain burst forth
in torrents from the over-charged clouds. Still
the impulse was so strong that I cared not for this
impediment even, which under ordinary circumstances
would have deterred me from venturing out on a dark
evening of storm; I wrapped myself up in my labaadah,
took a stick and umbrella, and sallied forth in great
haste. On reaching the outer gate of my premises,
the strong, feeling that had impelled me to proceed,
vanished from my mind, and I was as strongly urged
by an opposite impulse to retire again within my own
habitation, where, if I reasoned at all, it was on
the unusual changeableness of my fixed resolution,
for I never thought about the subject of the Durweish’s
prediction at the time.
’Some few days after this, I
paid Meer Nizaam a visit, and after our usual embrace
and salutations were over, he said to me, “Well,
my friend, are you convinced by this time, that I
have the power to bring you to me whenever I wish,
by the preparations you made for coming on the evening
of such a day?” (mentioning the time and hour
accurately).
’"I remember well my desire
to visit you, but why was I deterred from my purpose?”
I asked. The Durweish replied, “Out of pure
compassion for the fatigue and pains it would have
given you, had you come so far on such a night of
rain and tempest. My pity for you altered my wishes,
and thereby your purposes. I only wished you
to be convinced, and perhaps you are so now."’
Meer Eloy Bauxh often speaks of this
circumstance, and declares he has full confidence
that the Durweish in question possessed the power of
influencing the minds of others, or attracting them
by his wishes to appear before him.
’This Durweish was once applied
to by a Mussulmaun, who went regularly for many days
in succession, to watch a favourable moment for soliciting
advice and assistance in his then uneasy state of mind.
The Mussulmaun’s name was Hummoon, since
designated Shah, a native of the Upper Provinces of
Hindoostaun, in the Lahore district. Hummoon occasionally
passing near the river, had frequently observed, amongst,
the number of Hindoo women, on their way to and from
the place of bathing, one young female whose charms
riveted his attention. He sometimes fancied that
the girl smiled on him; but aware of the strong prejudices
of her caste, which prohibits intercourse even, much
less marriage, with men of another persuasion, he
loved therefore without hope; yet he could not resist,
as the opportunity offered, of again and again watching
for a glance at the beautiful Hindoo whose person
had won his entire affections. Not a word had
ever passed between them, but he fancied she sometimes
returned his looks of love in her smiles.
’The passion of Hummoon increased
daily; he could with difficulty restrain himself within
the prescribed bounds; he longed to address her, and
in vain puzzled his imagination for the proper means
to adopt, for he knew the edict of her caste had placed
a barrier between them of an insurmountable nature.
For months he endured all the torments of his perplexing
state, and at last resolved on applying to the good
Durweish for advice and assistance, whose famed powers
had been long the subject of admiration among the
Mussulmauns.
Hummoon went daily to the threshold
of the Durweish, and seated himself among the many
who, like him, had some favour to ask of the holy man,
at the propitious moment when he chose to be visible
and disposed to look round upon his petitioning visitors.
All waited for a look with the most intense anxiety
(for a Durweish does not always notice his courtiers),
and happy did he deem himself who was encouraged by
the recognition of his eye, to offer his petition
by word of mouth. Many such applicants had been
favoured by the Durweish, yet Hummoon visited daily
without being noticed by the holy man. At length,
however, a look of inquiry was given to the almost
despairing Hummoon; thus encouraged, he folded his
hands, and bent them forward in a supplicating attitude,
told his distresses as briefly as the subject would
permit, and concluded his tale of sorrow, by entreating
the Durweish would instruct him in the exercise of
some prayer by which he might be made happy with the
object of his love.
’The Durweish listened attentively
to Hummoon’s tale; and more, he pitied him,
for he felt at all times a due proportion of sympathy
for the misery of his fellow-creatures, and the singularity
of Hummoon’s case affected him. He told
him he could teach the way to become deserving of having
his wishes in this world granted to him, but more
he could not answer for; but it would take him a considerable
time to practise the devotions necessary to his future
peace, which were of the heart, not the mere repetition
of a prayer by the lips. Hummoon readily assured
the Durweish, he was willing to be guided by his advice
and instruction; adding, that he would patiently persevere
for any length of time necessary, so that at last his
object might be accomplished.
’Hummoon commenced under the
tuition of the Durweish the practice of devotional
exercises. He forsook (as was required of him)
all vain pursuits, worldly desires, or selfish gratifications;
day and night was devoted to religious study and prayer,
and such was the good effect of his perseverance and
progressive increase of faith, that at the end of some
few months he had entirely left off thinking of the
first object of his adoration, his whole heart and
soul being absorbed in contemplation of, and devotion
to, his Creator. At the end of a year, no trace
or remembrance of his old passion existed; he became
a perfect Durweish, retired to a solitary place, where
under the shade of trees he would sit alone for days
and nights in calm composure, abstracted from every
other thought but that of his God, to whom he was
now entirely devoted.’
I am told that this Durweish, Hummoon
Shah, is still living in the Lahore province, a pattern
of all that is excellent in virtue and devotion.