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Abstract: Two versions: a literalistic translation by Stephen Lambden and a poetic one by Sen McGlinn. |
Tablet of Hallelujah Hallelujah Hallelujah O Glad Tidings (Lawh-i Halih, Halih, Halih yá Bisharát)
translated by Stephen Lambden and Sen McGlinn
1983/1995
About: A version of the first translation, by Lambden, was originally published in
the Bahá'í Studies Bulletin 2:3 (December 1983), pp. 105-112, along with
the text as printed in Ishraaq Khaavarii's Ganj-i-Shaayigaan.
An asterisk will mark words or phrases the translation of which remains
particularly tentative or subject to possible alteration in a future
revision...I have retained the "Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad
Tidings!" though it would not I think be untoward if reciters wished to
substitute "Rejoice, Rejoice, Rejoice, O Glad Tidings!" throughout, or perhaps
at every other line — for some perhaps, reciting Hallelujah has unbecoming
evangelical associations.
Lawh-i Halih, Halih Halih Ya Bisharat
A Tablet of Bahá'u'lláh of the Late Iraq Period
translated by Stephen Lambden (1995-07-16)
Intro: Reproduced below is the Persian text of Bahá'u'lláh's *Lawh-i Halih Halih
Halih Ya Bisharat* as printed in `Abd al-Hamid Ishraq Khavari's *Gani-i
Shayigan* (Tihran 123 Badi`/1967-8 pp. 33-35) and revised slightly in the light
of the mss text contained in INBAMC vol.35:455-6. There follows my somewhat
literalistic provisional translation. This poetic work derives its title from
the refrain which follows each internally rhyming line (halih = Rejoice! or
[loosely] Hallelujah!). Composed towards the end of Bahá'u'lláh's residence in
Baghdad (late 1862 or early 1863 CE?) it is expressive of his claim to special
communion with God through a celestial maiden (hur cf. for example, al-Qasida
al-Warqa'iyya; Hur-i `Ujab; Lawh-i Huriyya) and of his assuming leadership of
the Babi community. Drawing on Qur'anic, sufi and Babi imagery, Bahá'u'lláh,
in this mystically oriented ode, calls upon the members of the Babi community
to listen to his "wondrous new melodies" (cf. Tarikh-i Nabil Zarandi [Pt II ]
cited in Ishraq Khavari, Ayyam-i Tis`ih, 332f).
Lawh-i Halih, Halih, Halih, Ya Bisharat ("Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
He is the Beloved One
[1] The Maid of Eternity came from the Exalted Paradise; Hallelujah,
Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[2] With harp and with song, with crimson goblet she came; Hallelujah,
Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[3] With amorous glances, with the taste of mystical death — with dance and with
song she came; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[4] With musky tresses, with beauteous ruby lips — from nigh unto God, she
came; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[5] Two daggers her eyebrows, one hundred arrows from her eyelashes — to pierce
our hearts she came; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[6] All souls in her path, all hearts in her embrace — massacred when she
came; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[7] With snow-white hand, with raven locks — like the dragon of Moses she
came; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[8] This sweet Davidic voice, from the Divine Lote-Tree — with the Messianic
Spirit she came; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[9] With the allurement of fidelity, with the protection of Baha' — from the
Dawning-Place of "H" she came; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad
Tidings!
[10] With guiding light from the morn of the Divine Encounter, with Mount
Sinai she came; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[11] This song of the spirit came to her lovers from the Nightingale of
"No"; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[12] With the joyful tidings of reunion this Divine Maiden came from a branch
of the Tree of Blessedness; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad
Tidings!
[13] This annihilated lover, this earthly bird — she came as a sacrifice in the
Path of the Beloved; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[14] This sword of oppression, from the Throne of fidelity — she came upon the
neck of the Beloved; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[15] This sacred missive, with an Arab messenger — she came from the city of
Sheba; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[16] This Eternal Countenance, she came with snow-white hand from the Divine
command; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[17] This Hijazi Falcon came with Iraqi accents from the forearm of the
King; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[18] This Pardoning Visage, she came with fetching allure from the Court of
Nearness; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[19] This Nightingale of mystic meaning, she came from the sacred rose bush
with the hand of *ecstasy*; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad
Tidings!
[20] This luminous page, she came with light and splendour from the Midian of
Spirit; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[21] This Witness of the Omnipotent, this heady Wine of the Beloved — she came
with the goblet of Sovereignty; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad
Tidings!
[22] That essence of the Beauty of the True One, that jewel of the Glory of
the True One — she came with the Most Great Sign; Hallelujah, Hallelujah,
Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[23] That Countenance of the Desired One, that Face of the Adored One — she
came with the Most-Supreme Mercy; Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad
Tidings!
[24] The souls to her reunion, the hearts to her Bestowal — as the Most Exalted
Lord she hath come! Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Hallelujah, O Glad Tidings!
[25] This Wondrous Remembrance hath come from the Eternal Rosegarden that the
lovers of the beauty of the Adored One, hearts and souls burning with love,
might, in utmost tranquillity, busy themselves with these wondrous new
melodies; that perchance, attracted thereby, the inmates of the Kaaba of gnosis
might be shaken with ecstasy and remember their divine and sacred homeland.
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Notes
Without attempting to comment on the Lawh-i Halih Halih in detail the
following few points may be noted.
Line 5
It is clear from the INBA mss, as Frank Lewis brilliantly proposed, that line
5 has *du sayf* = lit. "two swords" and not (as in the almost certainly
erroneous Ganj printing) *du tayf* — which I had earlier hesitantly translated
"two phantoms". Tony's first class suggestion — in the light of Frank Lewis'
correct emendation to *sayf* ("sword") — "two daggers" has been retained as
a dagger can be a short sword — possibly curved like the maiden's eyebrows!
Line 7
The "Maid of Eternity" is represented as coming with the miraculous
"snow-white hand" of Moses (see for example, Exodus 4:6f; Qur'an 7:108) and
like his rod which turned into a "serpent" or "dragon". i.e. she manifests the
signs of true prophethood.
Line 8
Bahá'u'lláh refers to himself or the "Divine Maiden" - who at times
seems to be his celestial Self - as being capable of uttering verses comparable
to those of King David the psalmist and being characterised by the spirit (ruh)
of Jesus.
Line 9
The "dawning-place of [the letter] "H" (ha')" as the locale from which
the Maiden came probably expresses the fact that she came from the most
elevated divine real or from God; "H" (ha') being the first letter of huwa
(Allah) ("He is [God]) and Huwiyya ("He-ness"; the Divine Ipseity) and Hahut,
the realm of the huwiyya, the exalted Divinity.
line 11 (REVISED)
The la = "no" indicates the Arabic negative particle — probably not lahut
("the divine realm") — which has various senses in Persian and Arabic mystical
poetry mostly relating to the "no" at the beginning of the *kalimat al-tawhid*
(la ilaha ila Allah) = "there is NO God but God" or a Babi version such as
"there is no God except I Myself" (la ilaha ila ana). It may be that the
"lovers" are the Babis to whom Bahá'u'lláh appears uttering a version of the
Sinaitic declaration of divinity ("There is NO God except I, Myself") and
calling them to attain the Divine Presence (see line 12). On the use of "no"
(la) in Persian poetry and in line 13b of Bahá'u'lláh's earlier *Rashh-i
`ama'* ("The Sprinkling of the Cloud of Unknowing") see BSB 3:2 (September 1984
— REVISED VERSION FORTHCOMING), p.28
n.b. *Rashh-i `ama'* line 13b =
"Observe the Iraqi Harmony! Behold the Hijazi Tambourine! See thou that the
rapture of "no" (la) raineth down from the Divine Hand"
lines 13-14
Allusions to Bahá'u'lláh's sufferings and lamentation over the debased
condition of many Babis?
line 15
An allusion to the message sent by the Queen of Sheba to Solomon (see
Qur'an 27:20ff) through the hoopoe.
line 16
An allusion to Bahá'u'lláh's superiority to Mirza Yahya (?)
line 17
An allusion to Bahá'u'lláh's exile from Iran to Iraq (?) cf the
following lines from the Lawh-i madinat al-tawhid ("Tablet of the City of the
Divine Unity"; late Baghdad Period)
"Hearken on this Day in which the Caller (al-munad) crieth out in the midst of
the immortal realm and the Dove of Hijaz warbleth in the region of Iraq (fi
shatr al-`Iraq) summoning all unto concord.." (Ishraq Khavari, Ma'ida-yi
Asmani, 4:326-7).
Line 19
The INBA mss, where the Ganj printed text has *kaff-i vasl(??)*, is not at all
clear though there is not an alif missing. If the reading is not as above it
could well be *kaff-i vujdAn* ("hand of ecstasy") or (less likely) *kaff-i
vah.dAn* ("hand of singleness")?? I have followed the probable reading *kaff-i
vujdAn* ("hand of ecstasy") which would seem to be OK for the rhythm. I'm
still pondering on this and hoping for another clearer mss.
line 20
Bahá'u'lláh likens his status to that which Moses attained after leaving Midian
for Egypt
lino 24
The sense and translation of kana rabb `ala are uncertain. It may be that
Bahá'u'lláh alludes to his manifestation as the "return of the Bab" (at times
known among his followers as Hadrat-i Rabbi al-a`la ("His Holiness my Lord
the Most High").
2. Comments on the above translation
posted by Frank Lewis to an email list (1995-07-10)
Thank you very much for the translation of *Lawh-i halih halih yA
bishArat*. Some of the lines in this poem are not so very easy to
construe and you are to be commended. The difficulty of the lines is
made more difficult, I think, by a few errors which have crept in to the
edition of the Persian text of the poem as given in Ishraq-Khavari's
*ganj-e shAyegAn*.
The version of *ganj-i ShAyigAn* which I am working from is dated
124 Badi`, and it seems to be the same text referred to in Stephen's
message. As I say, I suggest that the text is corrupt and that either
Ishraq-Khavari's typist introduced the errors or the ms which
Ishraq-Khavari was working from might be corrupt (I think the former more
likely, as Ishraq-Khavari would have most probably caught the errors I am
about to mention). LINE 5: TWO PHANTOMS FROM HER EYEBROWS
First, the image of phantoms (*t.ayf*) flying out of the eyebrows
is most peculiar. I have never before encountered such an image, which
doesn't mean, of course, that it doesn't exist. But, as an image, it
is rather illogical, and it does not fit the context (which requires a
piercing weapon of attack, like arrows). I believe that the word might
be either "sword" (*sayf*) or "blade" (*tigh*) and not "phantom"
(*t.ayf*). The beloved's eyebrows are often imagined as bows which fire
the arrows of love (rather more menacing than our little putti, Cupid) at
the lover. I have never heard of them firing phantoms, though I supposed
Northrop (or whoever it is that manufactures the F-14 Phantom) could,
with a little technical gadget wizardry, make such an image believable.
The phantom (*t.ayf*) in Persian and Arabic usually refers to the
apparition of the beloved which haunts the wakeful lover in the long
hours of the night. Most of the time, they do not appear in pairs.
LINE 7: DRAGON OF MOSES
Though the Persian has *ezhdar-e musA*, I think this ought to be
translated as snake or serpent, rather than "dragon." Shouldn't we
construe it as an allusion to Moses' staff which "magically" turns to a
snake? Or is there some other dragon associated with Moses in Talmudic
lore that I am ignorant of? LINE 15: THE SWIFT [ARAB?] HOOPEE
Arab is the correct rendering for *tAzi*, not swift. The word *tAz*
(the present tense stem of *tAxtan*), can mean swift-charging or fiercly
attacking in compound formations, but *tAzi*, by itself, means Arab. The
Hoopoe bird hails from the Arabian realm (Sheba), as does the Hijazi
Falcon and its Iraqi accents, in line 17. By the way, in the medieval
period, both Hijazi and Iraqi were names of musical modes, so, in
addition to suggesting the accent or language of the speaker, in
connection with the word *lah.n* (melody, tone), Hijazi and Iraqi also
allude to the flow and intonation, or music, of the speaker. Adding to
the note on line 17, Hijazi (from the Hijaz, or southwestern region of
Arabia, above the Yemen, where Mecca is situated) may be a reference to
Muhammad or `Ali (and Iraqi perhaps to Husayn?), in which case, the truth
of Muhammad (or the `Alids) can now be heard in Iraq, in the person of
Bahá'u'lláh. Also, since the Bab was a Sayyid, Hijazi may be a reference
to Him, while Iraqi may allude to Bahá'u'lláh's own exile in Iraq.
Either way, the allusion is to falconry, the royal bird being the falcon,
which here becomes the messenger of God. LINE 19: THE HAND OF
UNION
This part of the text is almost certainly a corruption. While it is
not uncommon to come across metrical irregularities in Bahá'u'lláh's
poetry, *kaff-e vas.l* would be a violation of the rhyme of this poem,
which is, in all the other lines "aa". Furthermore, *kaff-e vas.l* would
be a somewhat unusual image. The open palm (*kaff*) does symbolize
liberality and beneficence, but not usually in conjunction with *vas.l*.
I propose that the phrase ought to read *kaff o s.alA* rather than
*kaff-e vas.l* [this means that the words have been printed to closely
and an alif has been left out]. The word *s.alA* would provide the
correct rhyme. It is an interjection, like "bon appetit" or "come and
get it", used to call the guests to food. It was quite popular with
Sufis, who, it seems, liked to eat. (BTW, Brent, whatever happened to
the *moqta`edin* order? Will it be joining with the Bahá'í mystics
society, or can it not be bothered to get off its duff?).
In any case, the nightingale seems to be calling the believers to
a (spiritual) feast. The outstretched palm (*kaff*) might be a gesture
of invitation to the food and *s.alA* the verbal reaffirmation of the
invitation — "please, help yourselves to the mystic truth."
1. The Halih Halih Halih in rhythmic verse
Translated by Sen McGlinn, 18 December 1996)
Bahá'u'lláh's poem 'Halih Halih Halih ya Bishaarat' (Hallelujah, hallelujah,
hallelujah, O glad tidings!) consists of 24 one-line verses and a final (and
striking) concluding verse of 4 or 5 lines. The refrain is repeated after every
verse except the last. A translation by Stephen Lambden was printed in the
Bahá'í Studies Bulletin 2:3, December 1983, pp. 105-112, along with the text as
printed in Ishraaq Khaavarii's Ganj-i-Shaayigaan. (I am using double vowels,
'aa' etc, to represent the long vowels for email purposes). I have made
grateful use of this, and of discussions of the translation and of textual
variants which took place on the TalismanI email discussion list. The
translation is particularly indebted to some suggestions which Frank Lewis made
about both text and translation.
The translation below is intended to be chanted. It makes no pretence to being
more scholarly or accurate than Stephen Lambden's work. I have consciously made
rhythm the first priority in the translation, with accuracy second and rhyme
and other poetic embellishments third. Where the accuracy has suffered, this is
explained in a footnote. To maintain the desired rhythm I have in some places
added words, which are marked in [ ]. On the whole I have got away with either
repeating a phrase or inserting a synonym, so I think few of these additions
increase the inevitable element of personal interpretation.
Many of the verses break neatly into two half-lines ending on a long aa, plus
the final verb which is the same in every verse: aamad (but can have different
meanings, see the notes to verses 5 and 6). For instance, the first line reads
1. huur-i-baqaa farduus-i-alaa aamad I have tried to
reflect this pattern by working mainly with half-lines, of three stresses. I
have laid the half-lines out below each other here, just because long lines
get cut wrapped around in some email systems.
Bahá'u'lláh rings the changes on the basic pattern in several verses: 3.
baa ghamzeh-ye-jaanii baa mazeh-ye-faanii baa raqs-o-navaa
aamad Which I have tried to emulate with variations in rhythm - in
verse 3 with a half-line with so many stresses it must be sung in a quick
tripping rhythm. Considering that there are 24 similar verses, alternating with
24 identical refrains, the effect would be quite stupifying if there was no
variation. Verse 7 has a similar tripping passage (pausing at 'staff').
The melody I have in mind is that which Lora McCall uses for the first line in
her rendering of Stephen Lambden's translation. The first stressed syllable of
each half-line is lengthened, followed by a rise in tone:
The mAAid eternal came^.
Since I am musically illiterate and cannot send music by email anyway, I leave
it to your imaginations.
1. The Maid eternal came from paradise on high, Hallelujah,
hallelujah, Hallelujah O glad tidings! 2. With harp and song[1] She
came with ruby[2] cup[3] [drew nigh], Hallelujah, hallelujah,
Hallelujah O glad tidings!
3. With animated charm, the [tang and] taste of death,[4]
dancing slowly,[5] chanting [lowly] [from paradise on high the Maid
eternal] came. Hallelujah, hallelujah, Hallelujah O glad
tidings! 4. With raven[6] ringlets, exquisite ruby lips,
from nigh unto God She has come Hallelujah, hallelujah, Hallelujah
O glad tidings!
5. Her[7] eyebrows like daggers,[8] her lashes many[9] darts,
they struck[10] and pierced our hearts Hallelujah, hallelujah,
Hallelujah O glad tidings!
6. The souls beneath her feet, the hearts in her embrace, all
things come to nothingness[11] Hallelujah, hallelujah, Hallelujah
O glad tidings!
7. One hand of lilly white[12] and coal-black[13] ringlets [coiling
down] as serpentine as Moses' staff[14] the Maiden came.
Hallelujah, hallelujah, Hallelujah O glad tidings!
8. This psa^lm[15] of David came with the spi^rit[16] of Christ from the
lote tree divine:[17] Hallelujah, hallelujah, Halle-lu-jah O glad
tidings!
9. She ca^me with faith's[18] allure from the Mashriq of Ha^[19] with the
shield[20] of Baha^: Hallelujah, hallelujah, Halle-lu-jah O glad
tidings!
10. She ca^me with beacon[21] [bright] igni^ted in the Dawn of the
Meeting with God[22] on[23] Mount Si^nai's [sere height]: Hallelujah,
hallelujah, Halle-lu-jah O glad tidings!
11. This me^lody of life [from pa^radise on high] attained to the Loved
One of the nightingale[24] of La^![25] Hallelujah, hallelujah,
Halle-lu-jah O glad tidings!
12. This go^dly maiden came with glad tidings of union [plucked] from a
limb of the heavenly tree of delight
Hallelujah, hallelujah, Halle-lu-jah O glad tidings!
13. [Then] this mo^rtal devotee this bird of earth [and clay] offered
himself[26] in the path of the loved One: Hallelujah, hallelujah,
Halle-lu-jah O glad tidings!
14. The cru^el[27] sabre fell[28] upo^n the sweetheart's neck [it fell
as a sword] from fidelity's[29] Court[30] Hallelujah, hallelujah,
Halle-lu-jah O glad tidings!
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Notes
1. i.e., chanting
2. hamra, any shade of red.
3. a goblet, chalice.
4. Fana, spiritual annihilation, nothingness, death to the self.
5. raqas, a kind of slow rhythmic dance.
6. muskin, musky or jet black
7. lit: her two eyebrows
8. The Ganj-i Shayigan here has tayf, a phantom, rage or madness. Stephen
Lambden says that the INBA mss reads sayf, sword or sabre.
9. lit: hundred arrows.
10. In my reading, the subject of the verb 'come' in this sentence is the
Maid's bewitching projectiles. Stephen Lambden reads 'she came' here.
11. Or, the universe of death came. Again, in my reading the Maid of heaven
is not the subject of the verb 'come' here. Stephen Lambden has "All souls in
her path, all hearts in her embrace — massacred when she came."
12. In Exodus 4:7, Moses puts his hand in his bosom and takes it out
completely white with leprosy. He puts it back into his bosom and it is healed.
This is a sign which he could have used before Pharoah, although he does not
actually do so in the story as told. In the Qur`an, 7:108 the demonstration is
actually made before Pharoah: Moses pulls his hand from his bosom and it
emerges white, an auspicious sign, with no mention of leprosy or of subsequent
healing. In Yusuf `Alii's commentary the 'whiteness' is a white light shining
from the hand. In Persian baizii means either whiteness or purity. Thus it
seems unlikely that there is any overtone of the Exodus version - white with
leprosy - to be read here.
13. Ganj-i-Shayigaan has sauda, trade or profit. I have read it as sauda'
means both black and passion or sensuality (contrasting to white and purity in
the previous half-line). So the white and black in this line may refer to
divine law and divine love. I would be grateful for any suggestions of an
English idiom which combines blackness and passion.
14. The Persian here is simpler: "like Moses' snake".
15. naqme, a soft sweet voice, or a melody or song.
16. We should probably understand the spirit which Christ breathes into the
'dead' to revive them. The resurrection of Lazarus is a proof of Christ's
station, just as the Moses' hand and staff are proofs of his station, and the
Psalms are a witness to David's inspiration. New life is one of the key themes
of the poem.
17. Lahut, of the divine nature.
18. In the sense of her faithfulness, rather than our faith in God.
19. Possibly Hahut, or Huwa (he), as in the Ayyam-i-haa.
20. lit. 'protection'.
21. lit. the light of guidance.
22. Literally, with the light of guidance from the dawn of meeting
(subh-liqaa). I have assumed that we are to read liqaa as a shortened form of
liqaa'llaah, the meeting with God, which would normally refer to the
resurrection but in the context of Mount Sinai is more likely to refer to
Moses' encounter with God. It must be admitted, against this reading, that if
liqaa is to be read as liqaa'llah it should have a final hamza, comparable to
bahaa' in the previous verse (which is a shortened form of Bahaa'u'llaah). It
would also be theoretically possible to read sabh as sabah, the flash of steel,
and liqaa as a military encounter, in which case the maid bears the light of
guidance from the flashing [of swords] in battle.
23. The text reads baa tuur-i-Sinaa, which would be with Mount Sinai. I am
reading it as bar tuur-i-Sinaa.
24. The nightingale, the 'lover of the rose' in poetry, and an emblem of
romantic love. The nightingale is also an epithet applied to Mohammad, 'the
nightingale among the crows', (where the crows are presumably the poets of
Mecca). The song of life (the maid) is coming to the presence of the One for
whom the nightingale of Laa warbled His melodies.
25. Laa, could be 'no' (in Arabic), but seems more likely to be the letter
L, perhaps meaning the realm of Lahut.
26. I am reading fadaa aamad as a compound 'to come as a sacrifice', which
would seem to imply voluntary sacrifice, self- sacrifice. There is no explicit
reflexive in the Persian text.
27. jafaa`, oppression, injustice or inequity is also used poetically of a
mistress who wounds the heart or withholds her favours.
28. lit. 'came'.
29. wafaa', fidelity, loyalty or fulfillment, has the connotation of
faithfulness to a promise, loyalty to an oath. One reading of these two verses
is that Bahaa'u'llaah, in response to the Maiden, has offered 'himself' - that
is, his human self - as a sacrifice in the same sense that Christ surrenders
himself to the will of God with the words "Thy will not mine be done". In this
verse the offer is accepted: God's outstanding promise of "Him Whom God will
make manifest" will be fulfilled in the person of Bahaa'u'llaah, which entails
a kind of death for Miirzaa Husayn- `Alii.
30. `arsh, a throne (esp. the throne of God) or palace. In this case perhaps
the place from which judgement is delivered.
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