THE TALE OF THE FOUR DURWESH,
TRANSLATED FROM THE OORDOO TONGUE
of MEER UMMUN OF DHAILEE.
by LEWIS FERDINAND SMITH,
Late Secretary of His Majesty's Embassy to the Court of Persia
WITH NOTES BY THE TRANSLATOR
Illustrative of the
Manners, Customs, and Ideas of the Natives of India.
Calcutta: Muddoosoon Day at British and Foreign Library, at Minerva Press.

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To the Right Honorable
Gilbert Lord Minto,
Governor General, &c. &c. &c.
THIS TRANSLATION
Is most Humbly and Respectfully Dedicated
WITH PERMISSION
by Your Lordship's Most Obedient and Humble Servant,
THE TRANSLATOR.

Calcutta,
The 1st of August, 1813

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PREFACE by the TRANSLATOR.

I undertook this Translation to beguile the tediousness of time in India, which must weigh heavy on every active mind that is not dedicated to official duties or literary pursuits. The work itself is the best and the most correct that has been composed in the Oordoo language; a language which is both dulcet and elegant, and which was little known to Europeans until the zeal, labour and talents of Mr. Gilchrist opened to us a perfect path to acquire it. Moreover, the Bagh O Bahar is a classical work in the College of Fort William; it highly deserves its distinguished fate, as it contains various modes of expression in correct language; it displays a great variety of Eastern manners and modes of thinking, and it is an excellent introduction not only to the colloquial style of Hindoostan, but to a knowledge of its various idioms. The Tale itself is interesting, ifwe keep in our minds the previous idea, that no Asiatic Writer of Romance or History was ever consistent, or free from fabulous credulity; the cautious march of undeviating truth, and a careful regard to vraisemblance never enters into their plan; wildness of imagination, fabulous machinery, and unnatural scenes ever pervade through the composition of every Oriental Author: even their most serious works on History and Ethics are stained with these imperfections. But as the Arabian Night Tales, the grand prototype of all Asiatic Romances, have these imperfections, and are still read with undiminished pleasure, I hope my friend Meer Ummun may raise a smile, or exhilarate a languid hour. He will likewise instruct those who wish to view the outre pictures of Eastern manners; his Genii and his Demons, his Fairies and his Angels, formed parts of his religious creed; he believed in their existence on the faith of the Qoran; and as Mahometans are much more superstitiously attached to their Religion than we are to ours we ought not to be surprised at their credulity.

I have rendered the Translation as literal as possible, consistent with the comprehension of the author's meaning; this may be considered by some a slavish, dull compliance; but in my humble opinion we ought to display the author's thoughts and ideas; all we are permitted to do is to change their dress. This mode has one superior advantage which may compensate for its seeming dullness: we acquire an insight into the modes of thinking and action of the people, whose works we peruse through the medium of a literal translation, and great conclusions may be drawn from this insight. When an Asiatic moralist applauds untruth which has mercy for its object, we perceive at once their imperfect ideas of morals; when he talks of the seven heavens we smile at his ignorance, and regret his superstition; for he says no more than his Qoran inculcates; and when he teaches prostration before kings and princes, as the criterion of bienseance, we lament the slavery under which asia has ever groaned. But when he recommends the fifth of one's income to be appropriated to charity, as an indispensable and religious duty; when he reprobates the smallest interest on money, we must admire his principles, though we may not feel inclined to follow his precepts. Moreover, as I intended this Translation for the student, who wishes to acquire the Oordoo tongue with the help of Meer Ummun, I have made it nearly literal, and preserved the original construction as far as possible, to facilitate the attainment of that useful if not elegant language. I might have made the Tale a pleasing Romance, which even Ladies could read in their languid moments, but I have formed it for the mere student, and sacrificed the dulce to the utile.

The memorable saying of the immortal Clive would be a bad precept in these days; he never knew the language of India: when asked why he never learnt it, he replied, "Why, if I had, I should not have conquered India; the black knaves would have led me astray by their cunning advice; but as I never understood them, I was never misled by them." This might be true in subduing India; but India can never be retained, if the Civil and Military servants of the Company do not understand Hindoostanee; a tongue which is understood from Hurdwar to Cape Comorin and from Lahore to Chittagong. The ignorance of their language, guided by rashness and folly, may one day kindle a flame in India, amongst the Native Troops, which the blood of all the Europeans in the country would not extenguish. Look at the momentous period of the massacre at Vellore! The religious rites and the peculiar customs of the Hindoos, who compose the vast majority in the population of our Eastern possessions, must be understood and tolerated, from their pertinacious adherence to them; they cannot be known without knowing their language.

Some of the Notes will be superfluous to the Oriental Scholar who has been in India; but in this case I think it better to be redundant than risk the chance of being deficient. Moreover, as the book may be perused by the Curious in Europe, many of whom know nothing of India except having seen it in the map of the world, these notes were absolutely necessary to understand the work. As I am no poet, I have translated the pieces of poetry, which are interspersed in the original, into humble and modulated prose.

    --Lewis Ferdinand Smith.


 
 
 

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