A Traveler’s Narrative
way; I crave naught but to be slain in Thy love; and God the Supreme sufficeth as an Eternal Protection.”
He likewise composed a number of works in explanation and elucidation of the verses of the
Qur’án, of sermons, and of prayers in Arabic; inciting and urging men to expect the appearance of that Person; and these books He named “Inspired Pages” and “Word of Conscience.” But on investigation it was discovered that He laid no claim to revelation from an angel.
Now since He was noted amongst the people for lack of instruction and education, this circumstance appeared in the sight of men supernatural. Some men inclined to Him, but the greater part manifested strong disapproval; whilst all the learned doctors and lawyers of repute who occupied chairs, altars, and pulpits were unanimously agreed on eradication and suppression, save some divines of the
Shay
khí party who were anchorites and recluses, and who, agreeably to their tenets, were ever seeking for some great, incomparable, and trustworthy person, whom they accounted, according to their own terminology, as the “Fourth Support” and the central manifestation of the truths of the
Perspicuous Religion.
Of this number
Mullá Ḥusayn of Bu
shrúyih,
Mírzá Aḥmad of Az
ghand,
Mullá Ṣádiq Muqaddas [the Holy],
Shay
kh Abú-Turáb of I
shtihard, Mullá Yúsúf of Ardibíl, Mullá Jalíl of Urúmíyyih, Mullá Mihdí of Kand,
Shay
kh Sa’íd the Indian, Mullá ‘Alí of Bastám, and the like of these came out unto Him and spread themselves through all parts of
Persia.
The Báb Himself set out to perform the circumambulation of the House of God.
1 On His return, when the news of His arrival at Bú
shihr reached
Shíráz, there was much discussion, and a strange excitement and agitation became apparent in
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