So marked a preference for so young and seemingly mediocre a
person [Quddús] kindled the envy of the disciples of Hájí Mírzá Karím Khán, who,
describing in vivid and exaggerated language the honours which were being
lavished upon Quddús, sought to excite the dormant hostility of their chief.
“Behold,” they whispered in his ears, “he who is the best beloved, the trusted
and most intimate companion of the Siyyid-i-Báb, is now the honoured guest of
one who is admittedly the most powerful inhabitant of Kirmán. If he be allowed
to live in close companionship with Hájí Siyyid Javád, he will no doubt instil
his poison into his soul, and will fashion him as the instrument whereby he
will succeed in disrupting your authority and in extinguishing your fame.” Alarmed
by these evil whisperings, the cowardly Hájí Mírzá Karím Khán appealed to the
governor and induced him to call in person upon Hájí Siyyid Javád and demand
that he terminate that dangerous association. The representations of the
governor inflamed the wrath of the intemperate Hájí Siyyid Javád. “How often,”
he violently protested, “have I advised you to ignore the whisperings of this
evil plotter! My forbearance has emboldened him. Let him beware lest he
overstep his bounds. Does he desire to usurp my position? Is he not the man who
receives into his home thousands of abject and ignoble people and overwhelms
them with servile flattery? Has he not, again and again, striven to exalt the
ungodly and to silence the innocent? Has he not, year after year, by
reinforcing the hand of the evil-doer, sought to ally himself with him and
gratify his carnal desires? Does he not until this day persist in uttering his
blasphemies against all that is pure and holy in Islám? My silence seems to
have added to his temerity and insolence. He gives himself the liberty of
committing the foulest deeds, and refuses to allow me to receive and honour in
my own home a man of such integrity, such learning and nobleness. Should he
refuse to desist from his practice, let him be warned that the worst elements
of the city will, at my instigation, expel him from Kirmán.” Disconcerted by
such vehement denunciations, the governor apologised for his action. Ere he
retired, he assured Hájí Siyyid Javád that he need entertain no fear, that he
himself would endeavour to awaken Hájí Mírzá Karím Khán to the folly of his
behaviour, and would induce him to repent.
The siyyid’s message stung Hájí Mírzá Karím Khán. Convulsed
by a feeling of intense resentment which he could neither suppress nor gratify,
he relinquished all hopes of acquiring the undisputed leadership of the people
of Kirmán. That open challenge sounded the death-knell of his cherished
ambitions.
(Chapter 9, ‘The Dawn-Breakers’)