1852.] Tale hxj Inshd Allah Khdn. 15 



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what you hesitate to say, send to me in writing. Whatever you write 

 shall be immediately fulfilled to the letter. If you say, * Cast your- 

 selves into a well/ we will both do so : if you say, * Cut your head off,' 

 we forthwith will do it." Ude-bhan, who hitherto spoke not at all, hav- 

 ing the prospect of writing opened to him, said this much : " Good : 

 be pleased to take your departure. I consent to your proposal of 

 writing. But in no way speak before me of what I shall write about : 

 else, I shall be ashamed. On this account I said nothing in your pre- 

 sence." He wrote as follows : " Now that my life is ready to depart, 

 and as I must speak out, and that you have examined and proved me 

 in a hundred ways, without shame, with reverence, without disguise, 

 and with entreaty, sorrow and deprecation, I thus write. In this 

 world, no one is secure from the attacks of love. Indeed, who is there 

 without sorrow? That day that I went to look at the verdure of the 

 fields, when there a deer with ears erect held on before me, and I pursued 



