“Extremely irritated, discontented and worried, the Mullás
of Fárs, unable to foresee the heights that popular indignation against them
might reach were not the only ones to be perplexed. The authorities of the town
and of the province understood only too well that the people, who were under
their care but who were never very much under their control, this time were
quite independent of it. The men of Shíráz, superficial, mockers, noisome,
quarrelsome, rebellious, insolent in the extreme, perfectly indifferent toward
the Qájár dynasty, were never easy to govern and their administrators often
passed wearisome days. What then would be the position of these administrators
if the real chief of the city and of the country, the arbiter of their
thoughts, their idol, were to be a young man who, undaunted, with no ties
whatsoever, and no love of personal gain, made a pedestal of his independence
and took advantage of it by impudently and publicly attacking every day all
that which, until now, had been considered as strong and respected in the city?
“In truth, the court, the government and its policies had
not as yet been the object of any of the violent denunciations of the
Innovator, but, in view of the fact that he was so rigid in his habits, so
unrelenting against intellectual dishonesty and the plundering practices of the
clergy, it was unlikely that he would approve the same rapaciousness so
flagrant in the public officials. One could well believe that the day when they
would fall under his scrutiny, he would not fail to see and violently condemn
the abuses which could no longer be concealed.”
- Comte de Gobineau’s (“Les
Religions et les Philosophies dans l’Asie Centrale,” pp. 122–123.; Footnotes to
chapter 9 included by Shoghi Effendi)