There are many classes of men amongst
the Mussulmauns, who either abjure the world or seem
to do so, independent of those denominated Durweish;
such us the religions mendicants, &c., who have no
earthly calling, and derive their subsistence from
the free-will offerings of their neighbours, or the
bounty of the rich, who from respect for their humble
calling, and a hope of benefit from their prayers,
or rather from the veneration of Mussulmauns towards
such of their faith as have renounced the world for
the service of God.
The Chillubdhaars are a well-known
class of wanderers; their founder was a Syaad, Ahmud
Kaabeer, of whom many wonderful things are related
sufficient to impress on the weak mind a belief in
his supernatural ascendancy. His presumed powers
are said to have been chiefly instrumental in curing
the sick or in removing temporal afflictions; but his
effectual prayers in behalf of people in difficulty,
they say, surpassed those of any other of the whole
tribes of devotees that have at any age existed.
His admirers and followers speak of him as having been
invulnerable to fire. In his lifetime he had
forty disciples or pupils constantly with him; at
his death these forty separated, each in the course
of time accumulating his forty pupils, after the pattern
of their founder, who also eventually became leaders,
and so on, until at the present time, it is conjectured,
there are few places in Asia exempt from one or more
detachments of these Chillubdhaar practical beggars
who are much admired by the weak; and although they
profess the same tenets and rules of life with their
founder, Syaad Ahmud Kaabeer, yet, I believe, no one
gives the Chillubdhaars of the present period credit
for possessing either the virtues or the power of
that man who set them so many bright examples; nevertheless,
they are applied to on emergencies by the ignorant
and the credulous of the present day, courted by the
weak, and tolerated by all.
They all practise one plan whenever
called upon to remove the difficulty of any person
who places sufficient confidence in their ability.
On such occasions, a young heifer, two years old,
is supplied by the person having a request to make,
after which a fire of charcoal is made in an open space
of ground, and the animal sacrificed according to Mussulmaun
form. The tender pieces of meat are selected,
spitted, and roasted over the fire, of which when
cooked, all present are requested to partake.
Whilst the meat is roasting, the Chillubdhaars beat
time with a small tambourine to a song or dirge expressive
of their love and respect to the memory of the departed
saint, their founder and patron, and a hymn of praise
to the Creator.
The feast concluded, whilst the fire
of charcoal retains a lively heat, these devotees
commence dancing, still beating their tambourines and
calling out with an audible voice, ’There is
but one God! Mahumud is the Prophet of
God!’ Then they sing in praise of Ali, the descendants
of the Prophet, and, lastly, of Syaad Ahmud Kaabeer
their beloved saint. Each then puts his naked
foot in the fire: some even throw themselves upon
it, their associates taking care to catch
them before they are well down, others
jump into the fire and out again instantly; lastly,
the whole assembly trample and kick the remaining
embers about, whilst a spark remains to be quenched
by this means. These efforts, it is pretended,
are sufficient to remove the difficulties of the persons
supplying the heifer and the charcoal.
These mendicants live on public favour
and contributions; they wear clothes, are deemed harmless,
never ask alms, but are always willing to accept them,
and have no laws of celibacy, as is the case with some
wandering beggars in India, who are naked except the
wrapper; sometimes they settle, making fresh converts,
but many wander from city to city, always finding
people disposed to administer to their necessities.
They are distinguished from other sects, by each individual
carrying a small tambourine, and wearing clothing
of a deep buff colour.
There are another set of wandering
mendicants, who are called Madhaar beggars, or
the Duffelees, by reason of the small hand-drum
they carry with them. These are the disciples
of the sainted Maadhaar, whose tomb is visited annually
by little short of a million of people, men, women,
and children, at a place called Muckunpore, about
twenty koss from Cawnpore.
Maadhaar was esteemed in his lifetime
a most perfect Durweish, and his admirers speak of
the power he then possessed as still existing; in that
his pure spirit at stated periods hovers near his last
earthly remains, where the common people make a sort
of pilgrimage to entreat his influence in their behalf.
A mayllah (fair) is the consequence of this annual
pilgrimage, which continues, I think, seventeen days
in succession, and brings together, from many miles
distant, the men of business, the weak-minded, and
the faithful devotees of every class in the Upper
Provinces.
From the respect paid to the memory
of Maadhaar, and the expected influence of his spirit
at the shrine, the ignorant people bring their sons
to receive the saint’s blessing on their tender
years. The man of business also presents himself
before it, desirous to insure a share of success at
the fair, and ultimate prosperity at home. The
devotee visits the shrine from a desire to increase
in true wisdom by the reflected light of the Maadhaar
Durweish’s purer spirit. Women having made
vows to visit the shrine, come to fulfil it at this
period, if their hopes be realized in the birth of
a son; and others to entreat his influence that their
daughters may be suitably married; in short, all who
assemble at this mayllah have some prayer to offer,
or acknowledgments to make, for they depend on the
abundant power and influence of the saint’s spirit
to supply their several wants or desires.
At the shrine of this saint, a descendant,
or as is suspected often in such cases, a pretended
relative, takes his station to collect, with all the
appearance of sanctity and humility, the nuzzas offered
at the shrine of Maadhaar. The amount so collected
is enormous, if credit be given to the reports in
circulation; for all visitors are expected to present
an offering, and most of the pilgrims do it for conscience
sake. I knew a Mussulmaun who went from curiosity
to this mayllah; he was accosted rather rudely as
he was quitting the tomb, without leaving a nuzza;
he told the guardian of the tomb he had presented
the best nuzza he possessed, in a prayer for the soul
of the departed; (as commanded every Mussulmaun should
offer when drawing near the tomb of one of his own
faith).
I have conversed with a remarkably
devout person, on the numerous extraordinary stories
related of Maadhaar’s life, and the subsequent
influence of his tomb. He told me that women can
never, with safety to themselves, enter the mausoleum
containing his ashes; they are immediately seized
with violent pains as if their whole body was immersed
in flames of fire. I spoke rather doubtingly
on this subject, upon which he assured me that he
had known instances of one or two women who had imprudently
defied the danger, and intruded within the mausoleum,
when their agony was extreme, and their sufferings
for a long time protracted, although they eventually
recovered.
Another still more remarkable circumstance
has been related to me by the Natives, for the truth
of which I cannot venture to vouch, although I have
no reason to doubt the veracity of the narrators.
’A party of foreigners, encamped
near the fair, wished to see what was going on at
this far-famed mayllah, and for the purpose of gratifying
their curiosity, halted on a certain day in the vicinity
of the Durgah, when the place was much thronged by
the various pilgrims to that shrine. The party
dined in their tent, but drank more wine than was consistent
with propriety, and one was particularly overcome.
When they sallied forth, at the close of the day,
to visit this saint’s tomb, their approach was
observed by the keepers, who observing how very unfit
the strangers appeared to enter the sanctuary of other
men’s devotions, the hallowed ground
that was by them respected, the head-keeper
very civilly advanced as they moved towards the entrance,
requesting that they would desist from entering in
their apparent condition, contrary to the rules of
the place and people. The convivial party then
drew back, without contesting the point, excepting
the one most disguised in liquor, who asserted his
right to enter wherever and whenever he thought good,
nor would he be controlled by any man in India.
’The keepers spoke very mildly
to the tipsy foreigner, and would have persuaded him
he was doing wrong, but he was not in a state to listen
to any argument dissuading him from his determined
purpose; they warned him that a severe punishment
must follow his daring, as he pushed past them and
reeled into the mausoleum, triumphing at his success.
He had approached the tomb, when he was immediately
seized with trembling, and sank senseless on the floor;
his friends without, observing his situation, advanced
and were assisted by the keepers in removing the apparently
inanimate body to the open air: water was procured,
and after considerable delay, returning symptoms of
life were discovered. When able to speak, he
declared himself to be on the eve of death, and in
a few short hours he breathed his last.’
The unhappy man may have died of apoplexy.
The ignorant part of the population
of Hindoostaun hold a superstitious belief in the
occasional visitations of the spirit of Sheikh Suddoo.
It is very common to hear the vulgar people say if
any one of their friends is afflicted with melancholy,
hypochondria, &c., ’Ay, it is the spirit of
Sheikh Suddoo has possessed him.’ In such
cases the spirit is to be dislodged from the afflicted
person by sweetmeats, to be distributed among the
poor; to which is added, if possible, the sacrifice
of a black goat. I am not quite sure that the
night blindness, with which the lower orders of Natives
are frequently attacked, has not some superstitious
allusion attached to it; but the only remedy I have
ever heard prescribed for it is, that the patient
should procure the liver of a young kid, which must
be grilled over the fire, and eaten by the afflicted
person. The story of this Sheikh Suddoo, which
is often related in the zeenahnahs of the Mussulmauns,
is as follows:
’Sheikh Suddoo was a very learned
man, but a great hypocrite, who passed days and nights
in the mosque, and was fed by the charitable, his
neighbours, from such viands as they provided daily
for the poor traveller, and those men who forsake
the world. The Sheikh sometimes wandered into
a forest seldom penetrated by the foot of man, where,
on a certain day, he discovered a copper cup, curiously
engraved with characters which he tried in vain with
all his learning to decipher. The Sheikh returned
with the cup to the mosque, regretting that the characters
were unknown to him; but as he had long desired to
have a good-sized lamp, he fancied from the peculiar
shape of his prize, that it would answer the very purpose,
and the same night he exultingly prepared his charaagh
(a light) in the engraved vessel.
’The moment he had ignited one
wick, he was surprised by the appearance of a figure,
resembling a human being, standing before him, “Who
art thou,” he demanded, “intruding at
this hour on the privacy of a hermit?” “I
come”, replied the figure, “on the summons
from your lamp. That vessel, and whoever possesses
it, has four attendants, one of whom you see before
you, your slave. We are Genii, and can only be
summoned by the lighting up of the vessel now before
you; the number of your slaves will be in due attendance,
always guided by as many wicks as it may be your pleasure
to light up for our summons. Demand our attendance,
at any hour you please, we are bound to obey.”
’The Sheikh inquired if he or
his companions possessed any power. “Power”,
replied the Genii, “belongs to God alone, the
Creator of all things visible and invisible; but by
His permission we are enabled to perform, to a certain
extent, any reasonable service our master requires.”
’The Sheikh soon put their abilities
to the test, and satisfied himself that these agents
would aid and assist him in raising his character with
the world (for he coveted their praise), “They
would”, he thought, “assuredly believe
he was a pious Durweish, when he could convince them
by a ready compliance with their requests, which must
seem to follow his prayers, and which he should be
able to further now by the aid of the Genii.”
’The pretended holy man employed
his attendant Genii fully; many of his demands on
their services were difficult, and too often revolting
to them; yet whilst he retained the lamp in his possession,
they were bound to obey his commands. He once
heard of a king’s daughter, who was young and
beautiful; he therewith summoned the Genii, and required
that they should convey the princess to him.
They reluctantly obeyed his command, and the princess
was the Sheikh’s unwilling companion in the mosque.
On another occasion, he desired the Genii to bring
without delay, to the ground in front of his present
abiding place, a very curious mosque situated many
leagues distant, the stones of which were so nicely
cemented together, that no trace of the joining could
be discovered. The Genii received this command
with regret, but they were obliged to obey, and departed
from the Sheikh’s presence to execute his unworthy
orders.
’It happened that the mosque
which the Sheikh coveted was the retreat of a righteous
man, who had separated from the world to serve his
God, venerable in years and devout in his duties.
The Genii commenced their labour of removing the mosque;
the good man who was at his devotions within, fancied
an earthquake was shaking the building to its foundation,
but as he trusted in God for preservation, he breathed
a fervent prayer as he remained prostrate before Him.
’The shaking of the mosque continued,
and he was inspired by a sudden thought that induced
him to believe some supernatural agency was employed
against the holy house; he therefore called out, “Who
and what are ye, who thus sacrilegiously disturb the
house of God!” The Genii appeared, and made
known to what order of beings they belonged, whose
servants they were, and the purpose of their mission.
’"Begone this instant!”
replied the pious man, with a tone of authority that
deprived them of strength: “a moment’s
delay, and I will pray that you be consumed by fire!
Know ye not that this is a mosque, holy, and erected
wherein to do service to the great and only God?
Would Sheikh Suddoo add to his enormities by forcing
the house of God from its foundation? Away, ye
servants of the wicked Sheikh, or meet the fire that
awaits you by a moment’s further delay!”
’The Genii fled in haste to
their profane employer, whose rage was unbounded at
their disobedience, as he termed their return without
the mosque; he raved, stormed, and reviled his slaves
in bitter sarcasms, when they, heartily tired of the
Sheikh’s servitude, caught up the copper vessel,
and, in his struggle to resist the Genii, he was thrown
with violence on the ground, when his wicked soul
was suddenly separated from his most impure body.’
This story receives many alterations
and additions, agreeable to the talent and the inclination
of the person relating it in Native society; but as
there once was a person on whose history it has been
founded, they do not denominate it fabulous or khaunie.
The following, which I am about to copy from a translation
of my husband’s, is really a mere fable; and,
however trifling and childish it may appear, I feel
bound to insert it, as one among those things which
serves to illustrate the character of the people I
have undertaken to describe; merely adding, that all
these fables prove an unceasing entertainment in the
zeenahnah, with females who cannot themselves read,
either for amusement or instruction:
’A certain man was travelling
on horseback through an immense forest; and when he
came to a particular spot, he observed fire consuming
some bushes, in the centre of which was a monstrous
large snake. The Snake was in danger of being
destroyed by the flames, so he called to the Traveller,
in a voice of despair “Oh! good Sahib,
save me, or I perish!"
’The Traveller was a very tender-hearted
creature, prone to pity the painful sufferings of
every living creature, whether man or animal; and
therefore began to devise some scheme for liberating
the Snake from the devouring flames. His horse’s
corn bag, which was made of leather, hung dangling
by a rope from the crupper; this, he thought, would
be the best thing he could offer to the distressed
Snake. Accordingly, holding fast by the rope,
he threw the bag towards the flames, and desired the
Snake to hasten into it, who immediately accepted
the offered aid, and the Traveller drew him out of
his perilous situation.
’No sooner was the Snake released
from danger, than, ungrateful for the services he
had received from the Traveller, he sprang towards
him, with the purpose of wounding his deliverer.
This, however, he failed to accomplish, for the Traveller
drew back in time to escape the attack; and demanded
of his enemy his reasons for such base ingratitude,
saying “Have I not saved your life
by my prompt assistance? What a worthless reptile
art thou! Is this thy mode of rewarding benefits?” “Oh!”
said the Snake, “I am only imitating the way
of the world; who ever thinks of returning good for
good? No, no! every benefit received by the creature
of this world is rewarded to the donor by an ungrateful
return. I tell you, good Traveller, I am only
following the example set me in the way of the world.”
’"I shall not take your word
for it,” said the Traveller in reply; “but
if I can be convinced that what you say is true, you
shall be welcome to bite me.” “Agreed,”
said the Snake; and off they set together in search
of adventures.
’The first object they met was
a large Pepul-tree whose branches spread out an
inviting shelter to the weary traveller to repose under,
without rent or tax. The Pepul-tree was asked,
“Whether it was consistent with the way of the
world for the Snake to try to wound the man who had
preserved him from destruction.”
’The Pepul-tree replied, “To
follow in the way of the world, I should say the Snake
was justified. A good return is never now-a-days
tendered for a benefit received by mere worldlings,
as I can bear witness by my own sufferings. Listen
to my complaint: Here in this solitary jungle,
where neither hut nor mansion is to be found, I spread
forth my well-clothed branches, a welcome
shelter to the passing traveller from the burning
heat of the noontide sun, or the deluge poured out
from the over-charged cloud; –under
my cover they cook their meal, and my falling leaves
supply them with fuel, as also with a bed on which
they may recline their weary limbs. Think you,
when they have thus profited by the good I have done
them, that they are grateful for my services? Oh,
no! the ingrates despoil the symmetry of my form,
break off my branches with violence, and trudge off
triumphantly with the spoil which may serve them for
fuel for cooking at their next stage. So you
see the Snake is right; he has but followed the way
of the world.”
’The Snake exultingly led the
way in search of other proofs by which he should be
justified. They fell in with a man who was by
occupation a camel-driver. The Man being made
acquainted with the point at issue, desired to be
heard, as he could prove by his own tale that the Snake’s
ingratitude was a true picture of the way of the world: “I
was the sole proprietor of a very fine strong camel,
by whose labour I earned a handsome competence for
each day’s provision of myself and family, in
conveying goods and sometimes travellers from place
to place, as my good fortune served me. On a
certain day, returning home through an intricate wood,
I drew near to a poor blind man who was seated on the
ground lamenting his hard fate. Hearing my camel’s
feet advance, he redoubled his cries of distress,
calling loudly for help and assistance. His piteous
cries won upon the tender feelings of my heart; so
I drew near to inquire into his situation, he told
me with tears and sobs, that he was travelling on
foot from his home to visit his relations at the next
town; that he had been attacked by robbers, his property
taken from him by violence, and that the boy, his
guide, was forced from him by the banditti as a slave;
and here, added the blind man, must I perish, for I
can neither see my way home, nor search for food;
in this lone place my friends will never think to
seek me, and my body will be the feast for jackals
ere the morning dawns.
’"The poor man’s story
made so deep an impression on my mind, that I resolved
on assisting him; accordingly my camel was made to
kneel down, I seated the blind man safely on my beast,
and set off with him to the city he called his home.
Arrived at the city gates, I lowered my camel, and
offered to assist the poor man in descending from his
seat; but, to my astonishment, he commenced abusing
me for my barefaced wickedness, collected a mob around
us, by his cries for help from his persecutor, declared
himself the master of the camel, and accused me of
attempting to rob him now as I had done his brother
before.
’"So plausible was his speech so
apparently innocent and just his demands that
the whole collected populace believed I was actually
attempting to defraud the blind man of his property,
and treated me in consequence with great severity.
I demanded to be taken before the Kauzy of the city.
‘Yes yes,’ said the blind man, ’we
will have you before the Kauzy’; and away we
went, accompanied by the crowd who had espoused the
blind man’s cause against me.
’"The blind man preferred his
claim, and advocated his own cause with so many arguments
of apparent justice, that I was not allowed a voice
in the business; and in the end I was sentenced to
be thrust out of the city as a thief and vagabond,
with a threat of still greater punishment if I dared
to return. Here ends my sad tale; and you may
judge for yourself, oh, Traveller! how truly the Snake
has proved to you that he follows but the way of the
world!”
’As they pursued their way in
search of further conviction, they met a Fox, whose
wisdom and sagacity was consulted on the important
question. Having heard the whole history with
becoming gravity, the Fox addressed the Traveller: “You
can have no good reason to suppose, Mr. Traveller,
that in your case there should be any deviation from
the general rule. I have often been obliged to
suffer the vilest returns from friends whom I have
been active to oblige; but I am rather curious to see
the way you effected the release of the Snake from
the fire, for I will candidly confess myself so stupid
as not clearly to understand the description you have
both attempted to give. I shall judge the merits
of the case better if I see it performed.”
’To this proposal the Snake
and Traveller agreed: and when the corn bag was
thrown towards the Snake, he crept into it as before.
The Fox then called out to the Traveller “Draw
quickly!” he did so, and the Snake was caught
by a noose in the cord which the Fox had contrived
unperceived, by which the Snake was secured fast round
the middle. “Now,” said the Fox,
“bruise your enemy, and thus relieve the world
of one base inhabitant!"’
This fable is frequently enlarged
and embellished by the reciter to a considerable extent,
by introducing many different objects animate and
inanimate, to elucidate the question before the Fox
arrives, who is generally brought in to moral the
fable.
I trust to be excused for transcribing
the following moral fable which was translated from
the Persian by my husband for my amusement, bearing
the title of ’The King who longed for an unknown
fruit:’
’A certain King was so great
a tyrant, that his servants and subjects dreaded each
burst of anger, as it were the prelude to their own
annihilation. The exercise of his will was as
absolute as his power; he had only to command, and
obedience followed, however difficult or inconvenient
to the people who served under him.
’This tyrant dreamed one night
that he was eating fruit of an extraordinary flavour
and quality. He had never in his whole life seen
fruit of the kind, neither had he heard such described
by travellers; yet when he ruminated on the subject
in the morning he was resolved to have fruit of the
same sort his dream presented, or his people should
suffer for his disappointment.
’The King related his dream,
and with it his commands to his Vizier, his courtiers,
and attendants, that fruit of the same description
should be brought before him within seven days; in
default of which he vowed solemnly that death should
be the portion of his Vizier, his courtiers, and servants.
They all knew the King meant to be obeyed, by the
earnestness of his manner, and they trembled under
the weight of his perplexing orders; each, therefore,
was speedily engaged in the all-important search.
The whole empire was canvassed, and all the business
of the Court was suspended to satisfy the whim of the
Monarch, without avail; terror and dismay marked the
countenance of the whole city for certain
death awaited these servants of the Court and
there was but now one day left to their hopes.
The city, the suburbs, the provinces, had been searched;
disappointment followed from every quarter, and the
threatened party gave up their hearts to despair.
’A certain Durweish, knowing
the consternation of the people, and feeling pity
for their unmerited sufferings, sent for the Vizier
privately. “I am not”, said the Durweish,
“by any means anxious to please the vanity and
silly wishes of your master, the King, but I do hear
with pity the state of despair you and your fellows
are reduced to, by the unsuccessful results of your
search after the fruit, and the certain consequences
which are to follow your failure.”
’Then giving the Vizier a fragment
of a broken pitcher, on which was ciphered unknown
characters, he told him to take it with him to a certain
tomb, situated in the suburbs of the royal city, (directing
him to the spot with great exactness), and casting
the fragment on the tomb, to follow the directions
he would there receive; he further desired him to be
secret, to go alone, and at midnight.
’The now hope-inspired Vizier
went as desired at midnight, and cast the fragment
on the tomb, which instantly opened to him. He
then descended a flight of steps, from the foot of
which, at a little distance, he first espied a light
not larger than a taper, but which increased as he
went on until the full splendour of noonday succeeded.
Proceeding with confidence, revived hope cheered his
heart, anticipating that by success so many lives
besides his own would be preserved through his humble
endeavours; and that life would be more than doubly
dear, as the prospect of losing the gift had embittered
the last few days so severely.
’The Vizier passed on courageously
through halls, corridors, and apartments of magnificent
structure, decorated and furnished in the most perfect
style of elegant neatness. Everything he saw bore
marks of splendour. The King’s palace was
then remembered in all its costliness, to be as much
inferior to the present scene as could be detected
by the lapidary’s correct eye, when comparing
the diamond with the pebble.
’He was perfectly entranced
as he gazed on the emerald gate, through which he
had to pass to enter a garden of luxuriant beauty,
where every shrub, plant, flower, and fruit teemed
with richness. In the centre of a walk an old
man was seated in a chair of burnished gold, clad in
the costume of the country, who seemed to be engaged
in breathing the sweet odours by which he was surrounded
with a calm and tranquil countenance of joy. “I
know your business,” said the possessor of this
paradise, to the Vizier as he advanced towards him;
“you are come to obtain fruit from this tree,
which bows its branches to the earth with the weight
and number of its burden. Take one only; this
is the fruit your master’s dream pictured to
his fancy.”
’Full of joy at the prospect
of release from the dreaded anger of his royal master,
the Vizier hastily plucked the fruit, and retreated
by the way he came, without waiting to inquire what
the old man meant by an exclamation he uttered at
parting, which at the time seemed of lesser import
than he afterwards imagined; but “Alas, the world”
was recalled to his memory on his way back to the
palace, and haunted his mind so strongly that he became
restless and uneasy, even after the King had conferred
honours and favours innumerable on him for his successful
efforts in procuring that fruit which had never before
been seen by any creature on earth but by the King,
and by him only in a dream. “Alas, the world!”
was like a dark envelope over every attempt to be
cheerful; an impenetrable cloud seemed to pervade
the Vizier’s mind; he could think of nothing
but the parting words of the old man, and his own
folly in not inquiring his meaning.
’The Vizier at last went to
the same Durweish who had befriended him in his hour
of need, and related to him the obstacle to his enjoyment
of the blessings and honours which had crowned his
success, and hoped from this holy-minded man to ascertain
the meaning of that perplexing sentence, “Alas,
the world!” The Durweish could not, or would
not explain the old man’s meaning; but willing
to do the Vizier all possible service, he proposed
giving him again the necessary passport to the inhabitant
of the garden.
’The fragment of a pitcher was
again traced with the mystic characters, and with
this in his hand the Vizier at midnight sought the
tomb, where he found as easy access as on the former
occasion. Everything he saw seemed doubly beautiful
to his imagination since his former visit. He
entered by the emerald gate and found the old man
enjoying the magnificent and sense-devouring scene,
with as much delight as mortals are wont to show when
content fills the heart of man.
’"I know your second errand,
my friend,” said the old man, “and am quite
as willing to oblige you as on your first visit.
Know then, Vizier, that whilst an inhabitant of earth,
I followed the humble occupation of a village barber;
by shaving and paring nails I earned my daily bread,
and maintained my family. Sometimes I collected
ten pice in my day of labour from house to house,
and if twelve crowned my efforts I was fortunate.
’"Many years passed over my
head in this way, when one day I was less successful
in my calling, and but half my usual earnings was all
I had gained. On my way home I was ruminating
on the scantiness of the meal likely to be procured
by five pice for my family of seven people; the season
was one of such great scarcity, that ten pice on other
days had been of late barely sufficient to procure
our daily food; and even with twelve we thought our
wants had been but inadequately supplied. I went
on grieving, more for my family than myself,
it is true, and could have cried at the
thought of the small portion of bread and dhall I should
see allotted to each individual dependant on me.
’"In my progress towards home,
whilst regretting my poverty, I saw an unfortunate
beggar, whose earnest entreaty seemed to make no impression
on those who passed him by; for, in truth, when money
is scarce and corn dear, people’s hearts grow
somewhat cold to the distresses of those who have no
claim by kindred ties. But with me it was otherways:
my scantiness seemed to make me more tender to the
sorrows of my fellow-creatures. Poor soul, said
I to myself, thou art starving, and no one gives ear
to thy complaints; now if I take home this scanty
produce of my day’s labour, it will not give
a meal to all my household; besides, they dined with
me tolerably well yesterday. We shall not starve
by one day’s fasting; to-morrow Divine Providence
may send me in the way of more bearded men than I
have met to-day. I am resolved this poor man shall
have the benefit of a good meal for once, which he
supplicates for in the name of God.
’"I then went to the beggar
and threw the five pice into his upheld wrapper.
‘There, brother,’ said I, ’it is
all I have; go, make yourself happy in a good meal,
and remember me in your prayers.’ ’May
Heaven give you plenty in this world and bless your
soul in the next!’ was his only response.
That prayer was heard, for during my further sojourn
on earth abundance crowned my board; and here, it
is unnecessary to remark on the bounties by which
you perceive I am surrounded.
’"That I said Alas, the world!
was from the reflection that I did but one act of
real charity whilst I remained in it, and see what
an abundance rewards me here. Had I known how
such things are rewarded hereafter, I should have
been more careful to have embraced the passing opportunities,
while I walked with my fellow-man on earth. That
I said, Alas, the world! to you, was an intended
admonition to mankind; to convince them of the blessings
bestowed in this world of bliss eternal, in reward
for every proper use to which the benefits they received
in their probationary state of existence may have
been devoted. Go, friend! and profit by the example
I present of heavenly rewards! Persevere in a
course of practical charity in that world you still
inhabit; and secure, whilst you may, the blessed rewards
of eternity!"’