CHAPTER 31 -- Expedition of the Shahinshah to the Siwalik Mountains, and the completion of the affair of Bairam Khan.

[[181]] He (Bairam) turned his face towards the sublime court, and in Aban, Divine month corresponding to Muharram 968, he flung a handkerchief round his neck and made the prostration of shame and contrition. He laid his dust-strewn head at the sphere-traversing feet of H. M. the Shahinshah, partly with pain, partly with shame for his crimes, and partly with joy at his pardon, and wept aloud. H. M. the Shahinshah accepted his excuses, and with his sacred hand raised Bairam Khan's head from the ground of humiliation and embraced him. He took the cloth from his neck and wiped from his face the tears of penitence and the dust of shame. With his gracious lips he inquired about his health and bade him sit on his right hand, as had been the rule when Bairam Khan was prime minister (vakil). He bade Munim Khan sit down beside him, while the other officers took their places according to their rank. With his gracious lips he uttered such words of kindness and favour, that the dust of bashfulness and the mist of shame disappeared from his brow. Yet the word remains true,
'Though the crime be forgiven, shame abideth.'
    Thereafter he rose up and bestowed on Bairam Khan a glorious robe which he was wearing over his own breast, and gave him permission to go to the Hijaz. In accordance wsith vigilance and foresight, which are the basis of every act, especially of acts of sovereignty, he gave him as companion Tarsun Muhammad Khan and Haji Muhammad Khan Sistani. They were to be his guides to the confines of the empire, and were to conduct him safely over the dangerous roads. They returned from the territory of Nagor.

    One day Bairam Khan reproached Haji Muhammad Khan Sistani, saying, "No one's opposition and infidelity hurt me so much as yours; you forgot all your old obligations." Haji Muhammad Khan replied, [[182]] "You in spite of all the claims to loyalty which H. M. Jahanbani Jinnat Ashiyani [Humayun] possessed, and all his nurture of you, and all the kindnesses which you had received from H. M. the Shahinshah, showed yourself a rebel and drew the sword, and then occurred what has occurred. If I have left your society, what is there extraordinary? and what have I done?" Bairam Khan felt ashamed, and made no rejoinder. I have heard on good authority that Bairam Khan continually during that journey felt the pain which these forcible [=forceful?] words had given him.

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