most cured, Hakim Masihuzzaman was summoned from Lahor. 
e, in consultation with Hakim Muhammad Da’iid, add 
m‘ajiin wardi, and the recovery fully set in. It was to Hakim 
Muhammad Da’id that the credit of the successful treatment 
was due. 
_ Although all other disorders were cured, yet for five 
months more, inspite of applications of various ointments, the 
ulcer caused by the burn was not healed. It was healed at 
last by an ointment given by one of His Majesty’s servants, 
named ‘Arif, which was used for two months. 
The happy Jashn or feast held on Her Imperial Highness’s 
recovery was observed in Shawwal. Her Highness bathed 
on her recovery at the end of Ramazan and the Jashn came off 
on the 5th Shawwal (5th December), on which date the Begam 
Sahib came out of her rooms to make her obeisance to her 
father, the Emperor. The Jashn lasted eight days, a vivid 
description of which is given. In the course of those days costly 
the latter being Haji Muhammad Jan Qudsi of Mashhad, were 
paid handsomely. Again on the 24th Di’l-Q‘ada of the same 
year, Her Highness the Begam Sahib herself bore all the ex- 
penses of another Jashn, when all classes were entertained and 
rewarded. 
His Majesty became now desirous of visiting the sepulchre 
of Khwaja Mu‘in’uddin Chishti at Ajmer as a thanksgiving for 
the recovery of his daughter, and started for that purpose 
from Agra on the 26th Di’l-Q‘ada. ‘The overland journey 
proving too fatiguing for the Princess, and the _ulceration 
by the river Jamna. On the 10th Du’l-Hijja Muhammad 
‘Ali, Faujdar of Sarkar Hisar, brought to His Majesty’s notice 
that there was a poor faqir, named Hamin, who had a very 
efficacious ointment. The man was sent for, and the remedy 
applied to the sores, proved most efficacious. After twenty- 
two days Her Highness’s recovery was complete, while the court 
was in the jurisdiction of Dehli territory. 
The Historian (p. 409) says : Although noted Surgeons— 
Musalmans, Firingis (Europeans), an Hindus—who were 
specialists on this branch of the subject, tried their best to pre 
pare various ointments, but they did not produce the slightest 
effect. But the luck of Hamin and of ‘Arif, who were quite 
unknown persons, was such that only did their ointment prove 
efficacious. 
