Gholam Hyder, the
Commander-inchief of the Afghan army, is feared reasonably, for he can
impale; all Kabul city fears the Governor of Kabul, who has power of life
and death through all the wards; but the Amir of Afghanistan, though
outlying tribes pretend otherwise when his back is turned, is dreaded
beyond chief and governor together. His word is red law; by the gust of
his passion falls the leaf of man’s life, and his favour is terrible. He
has suffered many things, and been a hunted fugitive before he came to the
throne, and he understands all the classes of his people. By the custom of
the East any man or woman having a complaint to make, or an enemy against
whom to be avenged, has the right of speaking face to face with the king
at the daily public audience. This is personal government, as it was in
the days of Harun al Raschid of blessed memory, whose times exist still
and will exist long after the English have passed away.
The privilege of open speech is of course exercised at certain personal
risk. The king may be pleased, and raise the speaker to honour for that
very bluntness of speech which three minutes later brings a too imitative
petitioner to the edge of the ever ready blade. And the people love to
have it so, for it is their right.
It happened upon a day in Kabul that the Amir chose to do his day’s
work in the Baber Gardens, which lie a short distance from the city of
Kabul. A light table stood before him, and round the table in the open air
were grouped generals and finance ministers according to their degree. The
Court and the long tail of feudal chiefs—men of blood, fed and cowed by
blood—stood in an irregular semicircle round the table, and the wind from
the Kabul orchards blew among them. All day long sweating couriers dashed
in with letters from the outlying districts with rumours of rebellion,
intrigue, famine, failure of payments, or announcements of treasure on the
road; and all day long the Amir would read the dockets, and pass such of
these as were less private to the officials whom they directly concerned,
or call up a waiting chief for a word of explanation. It is well to speak
clearly to the ruler of Afghanistan. Then the grim head, under the black
astrachan cap with the diamond star in front, would nod gravely, and that
chief would return to his fellows. Once that afternoon a woman clamoured
for divorce against her husband, who was bald, and the Amir, hearing both
sides of the case, bade her pour curds over the bare scalp, and lick them
off, that the hair might grown again, and she be contented. Here the Court
laughed, and the woman withdrew, cursing her king under her breath.
But when twilight was falling, and the order of the Court was a little
relaxed, there came before the king, in custody, a trembling haggard
wretch, sore with much buffeting, but of stout enough build, who had
stolen three rupees—of such small matters does His Highness take
cognisance.
‘Why did you steal?’ said he; and when the king asks questions they do
themselves service who answer directly.
‘I was poor, and no one gave. Hungry, and there was no food.’
‘Why did you not work?’
‘I could find no work, Protector of the Poor, and I was starving.’
‘You lie. You stole for drink, for lust, for idleness, for anything but
hunger, since any man who will may find work and daily bread.’
The prisoner dropped his eyes. He had attended the Court before, and he
knew the ring of the death-tone.
‘Any man may get work. Who knows this so well as I do? for I too have
been hungered—not like you, bastard scum, but as any honest man may be, by
the turn of Fate and the will of God.’
Growing warm, the Amir turned to his nobles all arow and thrust the
hilt of his sabre aside with his elbow.
‘You have heard this Son of Lies? Hear me tell a true tale. I also was
once starved, and tightened my belt on the sharp belly-pinch. Nor was I
alone, for with me was another, who did not fail me in my evil days, when
I was hunted, before ever I came to this throne. And wandering like a
houseless dog by Kandahar, my money melted, melted, melted till—’ He flung
out a bare palm before the audience. ‘And day upon day, faint and sick, I
went back to that one who waited, and God knows how we lived, till on a
day I took our best lihaf—silk it was, fine work of Iran, such as no
needle now works, warm, and a coverlet for two, and all that we had. I
brought it to a money-lender in a bylane, and I asked for three rupees
upon it. He said to me, who am now the King, “You are a thief. This is
worth three hundred.” “I am no thief,” I answered, “but a prince of good
blood, and I am hungry.”—“Prince of wandering beggars,” said that
money-lender, “I have no money with me, but go to my house with my clerk
and he will give you two rupees eight annas, for that is all I will lend.”
So I went with the clerk to the house, and we talked on the way, and he
gave me the money. We lived on it till it was spent, and we fared hard.
And then that clerk said, being a young man of a good heart, “Surely the
money-lender will lend yet more on that lihaf,” and he offered me two
rupees. These I refused, saying, “Nay; but get me some work.” And he got
me work, and I, even I, Abdur Rahman, Amir of Afghanistan, wrought day by
day as a coolie, bearing burdens, and labouring of my hands, receiving
four annas wage a day for my sweat and backache. But he, this bastard son
of naught, must steal! For a year and four months I worked, and none dare
say that I lie, for I have a witness, even that clerk who is now my
friend.’
Then there rose in his place among the Sirdars and the nobles one clad
in silk, who folded his hands and said, ‘This is the truth of God, for I,
who, by the favour of God and the Amir, am such as you know, was once
clerk to that money-lender.’
There was a pause, and the Amir cried hoarsely to the prisoner,
throwing scorn upon him, till he ended with the dread ‘Dar arid,’ which
clinches justice.
So they led the thief away, and the whole of him was seen no more
together; and the Court rustled out of its silence, whispering, ‘Before
God and the Prophet, but this is a man!’
Table of Contents
Next
Last updated on
Fri Mar 27 14:07:25 2009 for
eBooks@Adelaide.
Rudyard Kipling
Life's Handicap
Jews in Shushan
My newly purchased house furniture was, at the least, insecure; the
legs parted from the chairs, and the tops from the tables, on the
slightest provocation. But such as it was, it was to be paid for, and
Ephraim, agent and collector for the local auctioneer, waited in the
verandah with the receipt. He was announced by the Mahomedan servant as
‘Ephraim, Yahudi’—Ephraim the Jew.
1 comment