Scanned and spellchecked by Duane Troxel;
formatted for the web by Jonah Winters 10/01
First published April 1917
This edition 1953
George Ronald
Wheatley, Oxford
We sailed from Marseilles on February 9th, 1898, on board the
S.S. (Carthage bound for Bombay and arrived in Port Said on
February 13th. We were met on board by Ahmad Yazdi and Nurullah
Effendi. They did everything for us, got us rooms at the hotel,
attended to our baggage, and during the time we were there came to
us almost every hour of the day and evening, inviting us to their
homes, taking us to drive, and indeed showing us a love and
kindness such as we had never seen before. At the time we could
not understand the spirit which animated them, but afterwards we
knew that we were dead and they were living and were quickened with
the love of God. On the afternoon of our arrival Nurullah Effendi
called for us and drove us to his house, where we met his dear wife
and daughters with the same radiant faces and wonderful love that
we had seen in our two brothers, and there for the first time we
beheld the face of our beloved Master. I could not remove my eyes
from this picture, and these friends gave us each a copy and a lock
of hair of the Blessed Perfection. Then we were entertained with
tea and many sweet cakes, and when we left, although not a word had
been spoken except through an occasional interpretation of our
brother, we were united in an indissoluble bond of love, and we
felt that no language could have been more eloquent than that
silence in which our hearts alone had spoken.
We were obliged to wait two days for the little boat running
along the coast of Beirut, and we went on board about seven o'clock
of the evening of the 15th accompanied by our faithful brothers.
With what deep feeling they entrusted to us messages of love for
their Master and with what longing eyes they watched us as we
sailed away. Ah! soon I was to understand! I remember how calm
the sea was under the noonday sun when we stopped at Jaffa the next
day, and we spoke of the little house of Simon the tanner and the
wonderful vision St. Peter had on that house top. We visited this
historic spot on our return trip; now every hour that separated us
from our Beloved seemed all too long. So we continued on our
journey, sitting quietly on deck until the twilight fell about us,
the shadows deepened, and with the gathering darkness the stars
shun out one by one, large and effulgent in that clear atmosphere.
We arose and went forward and saw looming up through the darkness,
dimly at first, but growing ever more distinct and grand, the noble
outline of Mount Carmel, then the twinkling lights along the shore,
and the breath of the Holy Land was wafted to us laden with the
perfume of roses and orange blossoms.
There were two Russian pilgrims on board who for hours had been
standing motionless at the ship's rail facing the east, and now
their steadfast gaze was on 'Akka, and thus we all stood in prayer
and worship as the ship slowly entered the bay of Haifa and cast
anchor. Then followed a confusion of boats, lights and voices
which we heeded not until we were rowed ashore and saw the faces
of our American brothers beaming upon us. They greeted us
cordially as they helped us out, and said, 'Our Master is in
Haifa.' We were driven to the house which the Master had taken for
the American pilgrims and cordially greeted by sister Maryam and
others, and we retired to spend our first night in the Holy Land,
between waking and sleeping, waiting for the sunrise of that
glorious day.
On the following morning, Friday the 17th, at about seven
o'clock, sister Maryam hurried into our room and announced that
'Abdu'l-Bahá would arrive in a few moments. We had barely time to
dress when a sudden stir without set all our beings in commotion.
We went out into a large central hall from which opened all the
rooms in the house and opposite the door of one of these we saw the
shoes of the believers; thus we new that the blessed Master was
within.
The others preceded me. In a moment I stood on the threshold
and dimly saw a room full of people sitting quietly about the
walls, and then I beheld my Beloved. I found myself at His feet,
and He gently raised me and seated me beside Him, all the while
saying some loving words in Persian in a voice that shook my heart.
Of that first meeting I can remember neither joy nor pain nor
anything I can name. I had been carried suddenly to too great a
height; my soul had come in contact with the Divine Spirit; and
this force so pure, so holy, so mighty, had overwhelmed me. He
spoke to each one of us in turn of ourselves and our lives and
those whom we loved, and although His words were so few and so
simple they breathed the Spirit of Life to our souls. To me He
said among other things: 'You are like the rain which is poured
upon the earth making it bud and blossom and become fruitful; so
shall the Spirit of God descent upon you, filling you with
fruitfulness and you shall go forth and water His vineyard. Now
your troubles are ended and you must wipe away your tears, for you
know the parable that Christ spoke of the sower and the seed; and
so as in nature the good ground is made ready by rain and storm and
ploughing and sunshine for the good seed to be sown, so is it in
life, and the heart is made ready by all experience for the seed
of life.'
The Russian Jews who had been on the boat the night before now
arrived, their faces shinning with a great light as they entered
His Presence. We could not remove our eyes from His glorious face:
we heard all He said; we drank tea with Him at His bidding; but
existence seemed suspended, and when He arose and suddenly left us
we came back with a start to life: but never again, thank God, to
the same life on this earth! We had 'beheld the King in His
beauty. We had seen the land which is very far off.'
Our beloved Master returned at noon to lunch with us and again
at supper-time, and whenever He arrived many of the believers
followed. They always knew just where He was day and night and
seemed to surround Him by their watchful love; yet wholly
unobtrusive, never approaching Him in public, always humble and
submissive, waiting for His least command, seeking to render the
humblest service. That evening He invited us all to meet Him on
Sunday morning under the cedar trees on Mount Carmel where he had
been in the habit of sitting with Bahá'u'lláh. We were all most
happy in this hope, and great was my disappointment next morning
when I found myself quite ill. As soon as the Master arrived for
breakfast He came directly to my room and walking over my bedside
took both my hands in His, passed His hands over my brow, and gazed
upon me with such gentleness and mercy that I forgot everything but
the love and goodness of God, and my whole soul was healed and
comforted. I looked up into His face and said: 'I am well now,
Mawlana.' But He smiled and shook His head and bade me remain there
quietly, until He should return at noon. Although I had been
suffering during the night, all pain and distress were gone, and
I slept quietly. That night we were sitting together with some
members of the Master's family; the room was dimly lighted by
candles which cast strange shadows on the walls and low ceiling;
the latticed windows opened on to the narrow street flooded with
moonlight, and as we sat thus in silence waiting for our Master we
heard His voice in the hall, and all arose to greet Him as He
appeared on the threshold, and the light of His beautiful
countenance was shed upon us.
On Sunday morning we awakened with the joy and hope of the
meeting on Mount Carmel. The Master arrived quite early and after
looking at me, touching my head and counting my pulse, still
holding my hand He said to the believers present: 'There will be
no meeting on Mount Carmel to-day. We shall meet elsewhere,
Insha'allah, in a few days, but we could not go and leave one of
the beloved of God alone and sick. We could none of us be happy
unless all the beloved were happy.' We were astonished. That
anything so important as this meeting in that blessed spot should
be cancelled because one person was ill and could not go seemed
incredible. It was so contrary to all ordinary habits of thought
and action, so different from the life of the world where daily
events and material circumstances are supreme in importance that
it gave us a genuine shock of surprise, and in that shock the
foundations of the old order began to totter and fall. The
Master's words had opened wide the door of God's Kingdom and given
us a vision of that infinite world whose only law is love. This
was but one of many times that we saw 'Abdu'l-Bahá place above
every other consideration the love and kindness, the sympathy and
compassion due to every soul. Indeed, as we look back upon that
blessed time spent in His presence we understand that the object of
our pilgrimage was to learn for the first time on earth what love
is to witness its light in every face, to feel its burning heat in
every heart and to become ourselves enkindled with this divine
flame from the Sun of Truth, the Essence of whose being is love.
So on that Sunday morning He sat with us for a while and we thought
no more of the meeting on Mount Carmel, for in the joy and infinite
rest of His presence all else was swallowed up.
Next day, Monday, others of our party, who had been up the Nile,
arrived, and later our Beloved told us that He would be obliged to
go to "Akka that day as important government matters made His
immediate presence there indispensable. Then He told us all to be
happy and cheerful for soon we should be in the home of our
Heavenly Father, and He bade us be ready to leave for 'Akka on
Wednesday morning at about 6 o'clock, and then bade each one a
loving farewell. On Tuesday his daughters and my spiritual mother,
Lua, arrived from 'Akka, and on that same afternoon we received
visits from several cousins and other members of the holy family
who lived in Haifa. On Tuesday night I told my spiritual mother
that the Master did not realise how ill and week I was or He would
never have expected me to leave with the others on Wednesday
morning. Oh! We of little faith! No wonder she smiled and shook
her head, saying, 'You will soon realise something of the power of
'Abdu'l-Bahá.'
It was about dawn when I awoke, feeling myself stirred by a
breeze. I cannot describe what followed, but through my soul was
flowing an essence; a mighty, unseen force was penetrating all my
being, expanding it with boundless life and love and happiness,
lifting and enfolding me in its mighty strength and peace. I knew
then it was the Holy Spirit of God and that our Lord was praying
for His servants in that blessed dawn, an I arose and prayed and
was quite well. At an early hour we all met and set out in
carriages for the holy city and the merciful spirit of God never
left us as we drove along the shore, drawing ever nearer to the
early abode of Him who was the Glory of God, His bounty descending
like rain upon our souls. Our hearts were too full for words and
in reverent silence we gazed upon the walled city as it lay white
and clear and beautiful in the still morning light, with the deep
blue Mediterranean at its feet and the dome of the luminous sky
above. We crossed two streams which flowed from the land into the
sea, the horses wading up to their sides, and reached at least the
stone gates of 'Akka, drove through the narrow, picturesque streets
where the early-rising oriental world was up and stirring, and
arrived at the house of 'Abdu'l-Bahá.
We passed through a large stone doorway opening on to a square
court and ascended a flight of steps which led to the apartments
above. There, standing beside the window of a small room,
overlooking the azure sea, we found our Beloved. We came to His
feet and poured out our overwhelming love and thankfulness, while
He laid His hands on our heads and spoke low and tenderly to His
poor servants. The Greatest Holy Leaf now entered, with the Holy
Mother and her daughters, they welcomed us with love and tears of
joy as though we had been parted for a while but had returned at
last to our heavenly home, as indeed we had! They took us to our
rooms which, alas!, they had vacated for our sakes; they gave us
every comfort, anticipated every need and surrounded us with care
and attention; yet though it all shone the light of wonderful
spirituality, through these kindly human channels their
divine love was poured forth and their own lives, their own
comfort, were as a handful of dust, they themselves were utterly
sacrificed and forgotten in love and servitude to the divine
threshold.
During the three wonderful days and nights we spent in that
sacred spot we heard naught but the mention of God; His Holy Name
was on every tongue; His beauty and goodness were in the theme of
all conversation; His Glorious Cause the only aim on every life.
Whenever we gathered together in one of the rooms they spoke
unceasingly of the Blessed Perfection, relating incidents in the
life of the Beloved, mentioning His words, telling of His deeds and
passionate love and devotion to His followers until our hearts
ached with love and longing. There were some women in the
household who were clad all in white and we learned that they were
the wives of martyrs, and we heard the tragic and glorious
histories of many of our Persian brethren.
On the morning of our arrival, after we had refreshed ourselves,
the Master summoned us all to Him in a long room overlooking the
Mediterranean. He sat in silence gazing out of the window, then
looking up He asked if all were present. Seeing that one of the
believers was absent, He said, 'Where is Robert?' This was a
coloured servant, whom one of the pilgrims in our party, in her
generosity, had sent to 'Akka. In a moment Robert's radiant face
appeared in the doorway and the Master rose to greet him, bidding
him be seated, and said, 'Robert, your Lord loves you. God gave
you a black skin, but a heart white as snow.'
Then our Master spoke and said:
'We can all serve in the Cause of God no matter what our
occupation is. No occupation can prevent the soul coming to
God. Peter was a fisherman, yet he accomplished most
wonderful things; but the heart must be turned always towards
God, no matter what the work is; this is the important things:
and then the power of God will work i us. We are like a piece
of iron in the midst of the fire which becomes heated to such
a degree that it partakes of the nature of the fire and gives
out the same effect to all it touches--so is the soul that is
always turned towards God, and filled with the spirit.'
One of the believers asked how we could cut our hearts from the
world, and 'Abdu'l-Bahá answered:
'If your hearts are turned always towards God, and filled with
the love of God, that love will separate them from all other
things, that love will be the wall that will come between them
and every other desire. You must all be joined one to another
in heart and soul, then you will be prospered in your work and
gain ever greater gifts, and the Cause of God will be spread
through all the countries by your means. Remember what Christ
said; you have taken the gifts of God without money and
without price; so also you must freely give. This command
shows too that all these gifts are sent to you by the free
generosity of your God and not on account of any merit on your
part, and you must rejoice greatly in the loving mercy of your
God upon you and all. For all will taste of these free gifts
before long. They will come from the East and from the West
to the Kingdom of God; and even as Christ has foretold this
also has come to pass, that some of those who are nearest are
cut off, whilst those from a far distance receive these great
gifts.'
We all met again at table for dinner, and as we sat down to
our first meal in the holy household a great light shone upon us,
and the Master said: 'Blessed is he who shall eat bread in the
Kingdom of God.' Then He told us that the prophecy of Christ was
now fulfilled and that we should thank God unceasingly and with all
our hearts for this great blessing which it was beyond our power
at present to realise. He told us that the meal was composed of
two parts, spiritual and material. That the material food was of
no importance, and its effects only lasted twenty-four hours, but
the spiritual food was the life of the soul, and that the effects
of this meal which we were enjoying would last for ever and ever.
During the dinner our Master talked to us and taught us, referring
to Christ, quoting His utterances and prophecies, and always
speaking with a clearness and simplicity which any child could
comprehend; yet His symbols and metaphors, drawn always from
nature, embodied that essence of wisdom and truth which baffles the
learnt and great. Our Master always answered all questions,
however trivial, with the utmost courtesy and respondent genially
to every subject of conversation; yet we noticed that He gave the
most commonplace subject a higher significance, and transformed
material things into spiritual realities. For instance, if anyone
mentioned that the food was delicious, He smiled lovingly on the
speaker and said:
'That is because your heart is full of love; when the heart
is filled with love everything seems beautiful and delightful
to us.' @Then He told us the story of the hermit; how once
when the Blessed Perfection was travelling from one place to
another with His followers He passed through a lonely country
where, at some little distance from the highway, a hermit
lived alone in a cave. He was a holy man, and having heard
that Our Lord, Bahá'u'lláh, would pass that way, he watched
eagerly for His approach. When the Manifestation arrived at
that spot the hermit knelt down and kissed the dust before His
feet, and said to Him: 'Oh, my Lord, I am a poor man living
alone in a cave nearby; but henceforth I shall account myself
the happiest of mortals if Thou wilt but come for a moment to
my cave and bless it Thy Presence.' Then Bahá'u'lláh told the
man that he would come, not for a moment but for three days,
and He bade His followers cast their tents, and await His
return. The poor man was so overcome with joy and gratitude
that he was speechless, and led the way in humble silence to
his lowly dwelling in a rock. There the Glorious one sat with
him, talking to him, and teaching him, and toward evening the
man bethought himself that he had nothing to offer his great
Guest but some dry meat and some dark bread, and water from
a spring nearby. Not knowing what to do he threw himself at
the feet of his Lord and confessed his dilemma. Bahá'u'lláh
comforted him and by a word bade him fetch the meat and bread
and water; then the Lord of the universe partook of this
frugal repast with joy and fragrance as though it had been a
banquet, and during the three days of His visit they ate only
of this food which seemed to the poor hermit the most
delicious he had ever eaten. Bahá'u'lláh declared that He had
never been more nobly entertained or received greater
hospitality and love. 'This,' exclaimed the Master, when He
had finished the story, 'shows us how little man requires when
he is nourished by the sweetest of all foods--the love of
God.' At the end of the dinner one of the Indian boys who
served at table brought in a basket full of flowers sent by
Abul-Qasim, the gardener of the Ridvan. The Master received
them with pleasure, and then held the fragrant bunches to His
face, then gave one to each of the believers. Often He would
hand to one of us, in passing, a bunch of blue hyacinths,
these pure symbols of the hyacinths of wisdom and knowledge
growing in the garden of El-'Abha.
We had learnt that to be with 'Abdu'l-Bahá was all life, joy
and blessedness. We were to learn also that His Presence is a
purifying fire. The pilgrimage to the Holy City is naught but a
crucible in which the souls are tried; where the gold is purified
and the dross is consumed. It did not seem possible that anything
but love could ever again animate our words and actions. Yet that
very afternoon, in my room with two of the believers, I spoke
against a brother in the truth, finding fault with him, and giving
vent to the evil in my own heart by my words. While we were still
sitting together our Master who had been visiting the poor and
sick, returned, and immediately sent for my spiritual mother, Lua,
who was with us. He told her that during His absence one of His
servants had spoken unkindly of another, and that it grieved His
heart that the believers should not love one another or that they
should speak against any soul. Then He charged her not to speak
of it but to pray. A little later we all went to supper, and my
hard heart was unconscious of its error, until as my eyes sought
the beloved face of my Master, I met His gaze, so full of
gentleness and compassion that I was smitten to the heart. For in
some marvellous way His eyes spoke to me; in that pure and perfect
mirror I saw my wretched self and burst into tears. He took no
notice of me for a while and everyone kindly continued with the
supper while I sat in His dear Presence washing away some of my
sins in tears. After a few moments He turned and smiled on me and
spoke my name several times as though He were calling me to Him.
In an instant such sweet happiness pervaded my soul, my heart was
comforted with such infinite hope, that I knew He would cleanse me
of all my sins.
The next morning we assembled as before to hear His words, and
when we were all present He said:
'All the sufferings you pass through in gaining the Kingdom
of God will be obliterated when you attain its perfect happiness.
It is as a man who has been ill and helpless for two or three years
and afterwards becomes well and strong, then all remembrance of his
pain vanishes. The happiness of the Kingdom is a perfect one
unlike the imperfection of our best earthly conditions and is never
again to be clouded by any vestige of sorrow. Whatever troubles
we have on our way to the Kingdom are a test to the soul. When man
enters this world it is in troubles and hardships, but he comes
from the invisible to the visible to gain great things for himself.
As the material birth is a time of trouble, so also is the
spiritual. The way to God is strewn with troubles and
difficulties, but remember always what Christ said: "Though the
body is weak the spirit is powerful." Many great men and women have
desired, century after century, to live in this wonderful Age of
God, and you ought to thank God with all your heart that you have
been chosen to be here at this time. Christ said that the stone
the builders rejected became the headstone of the corner. This
means that the spiritually great men and women of the world have
been rejected and despised in all times by the builders of the
world; but that now in this, the time of the Kingdom, these
spiritual ones will become the chief stones in the building. The
wise man does not work for the present moment but for the good
results of the future. See in the winter how bare and lifeless
the trees and plants seem, without leaves and without fruit.
Suppose one should pass by at this time who knew nothing of the
condition of the earth and saw a man ploughing it up and casting
grain in the furrow. Would he not say, "How foolish this man is.
He is troubling himself for no result, working for no purpose and
wasting that which would give him food"? But in due time the
showers descend upon the earth, the sun shines, the breezes blow
and we see the result in great beauty and production. So is the
work of the Holy Spirit in your hearts. The earthly sun is like
the Sun of Truth; the rain is the shower of the mercy of God; the
seed is the word of God; the air is the fragrant waves of His Holy
Spirit and the soil is the hearts of the people. Now the spiritual
seeds are being scattered throughout the world and the showers of
the mercy of God are falling on the hearts of the people. The
result will be a great and wonderful harvest and every tree and
branch and scrub will bear fruit, and you will see it.'
In a large hall where we dined, were hanging two parrots in
cages, and these, besides all the sparrows that flew in at the
windows, twittering in the rafters overhead, made a great noise,
so the Master bade one of the Indian boys remove the cages; and
then the conversation turned to the treatment of animals.
'Abdu'l-Bahá said that we should be kind and merciful to every
creature; that cruelty was sin and that human race should never
injure any of God's creatures, but ought to be always careful to
do nothing to diminish or exterminate any order of living thing;
that human beings ought to use the animals, fishes and birds when
necessary for food, or any just service, but never for pleasure or
vanity and that it was most wrong and cruel to hunt.
Then Mrs. Thornburgh asked permission to tell a story of a
little bird who had stolen a bird's nest full of eggs, and a lady
meeting him on the road stopped him and rebuked him: 'Don't you
know that it is very cruel to steal that nest? What will the poor
mother bird do when she comes to the tree and finds her eggs all
gone?' And the little boy looked up at the lady and said: 'Maybe
that is the mother you have got on your hat.' How the Master
laughed, and He said: 'That is a good story and a cleaver little
boy.'
The above incident is only one of many showing with what a
universal spirit of joyousness, sweetness and sympathy the Master
touches on all the concerns of our daily life, so that I have never
seen such happiness nor heard such laughter as at 'Akka. The
Master seems to sound all the chords of our human nature and set
them vibrating to heavenly music.
How wonderful to be able to see our beloved Master at any
hour, to hear His divine voice, to lie down beneath the same roof
which sheltered His blessed person! But indeed every hour spent
in His presence has no place in time and no part in the life of
this world. Those days are unfading, eternal. They were the goal
for which all life before was but a preparation, and the source
from which all life since has flowed. When, in the twilight, all
in the household had gathered together, and spoke in quiet tones
of the Blessed Perfection and our Master, suddenly the glorious
light of His presence would shine upon us, and all would rise to
meet Him as He entered; then He would sit silently in our midst,
while His daughter Ruha chanted a Tablet, and there would be about
Him such heavenly beauty, from His Blessed Being would emanate such
supreme mildness, gentleness, and humility as wrung our hearts with
shame and sorrow for our sins, yet lifted them on mighty wings of
hope and aspiration. He always bade us all good-night, telling us
to rest well in our Father's home and to dream beautiful dreams;
and in the morning He would greet us early and enquire of each one
concerning their spiritual health and happiness, showing the most
loving solicitude for those who were not well.
On one occasion of the American believers said to their Holy
Mother that she was now an orphan since her parents did not
believe. The wife of our Master took the girl in her arms, laid
her head on her breast and told her that she was now her mother;
therefore she should be comforted. Then she took her into the
presence of the Master and sitting on the floor before Him in the
most natural manner, still holding the girl close to her loving
heart, she told Him all. 'Abdu'l-Bahá said: 'Material relationship
is nothing, it bears no eternal fruits. You are the child of God
and of the Kingdom and the ties of the flesh are nothing, but the
ties of the spirit are all. I am your father, these are your
brothers and sisters, and you must be glad and rejoice, for I love
you exceedingly.'
On Friday morning the Master told us that we would, that day,
visit the Holy Tomb of Bahá'u'lláh. Accordingly, that afternoon,
we all set out in carriages and drove through the narrow streets,
out into the stone gates into the beautiful surrounding country in
the direction of the Bahji and the garden of Ridvan. It was a
beautiful day, the sky was blue and clear, the sun shone with
eastern warmth and splendour, a light breeze stirred and the air
was perfumed with roses.
After driving for about half an hour we reached the garden
where Bahá'u'lláh spent much of His time during His long years of
exile in 'Akka. Although this garden is small it is one of the
loveliest spots we had ever seen. Bahá'u'lláh frequently said to
His gardener, Abul-Qasim, 'This is the most beautiful garden in
the world.' With its tall trees, its wealth of flowers, and its
fountains, it lies like a peerless gem surrounded by two limpid
streams of water just as it is described in the Qur'an; and the
atmosphere which pervades it is so fraught with sacred memories,
with divine significance, with heavenly peace and calm that one no
longer marvels to hear of the traveller who, passing one day before
its gates, paused and gazing in saw Bahá'u'lláh seated beneath the
shade of the mulberry trees, 'that canopy not made with hands,' and
remembering the prophecy in the Qur'an, he recognized his Lord and
hastened to prostrate himself at His feet.
We visited the little house at the end of the garden and stood
on the threshold of that room where Bahá'u'lláh was wont to sit in
hot weather, and one by one we knelt down, and with tears of love
and longing kissed the ground where His blessed feet had rested.
We returned to the garden, where Abul-Qasim made tea for us, and
there he told us the story of the locusts. How that during one hot
summer there had been a pest of locusts and they had consumed most
of the foliage in the surrounding country. One day Abul-Qasim saw
a thick cloud coming swiftly towards the garden, and in a moment
thousands of locusts were covering the tall trees beneath which
Bahá'u'lláh so often sat. Abul-Qasim hastened to the house at the
end of the garden and coming before his Lord besought Him saying:
'My Lord, the locusts have come, and are eating away the shade from
above Thy blessed head. I beg of Thee to cause them to depart.'
The Manifestation smiled, and said: 'The locusts must be fed; let
them be.' Much chagrined, Abul-Qasim returned to the garden and for
sometime watched the destructive work in silence; but presently,
unable to bear it, he ventured to return again to Bahá'u'lláh and
humbly entreat Him to send away the locusts. The Blessed
perfection arose and went into the garden and stood beneath the
trees covered with the insects. Then He said: 'Abul-Qasim does not
want you; God protect you.' And lifting up the hem of His robe He
shook it, and immediately all the locusts arose in a body and flew
away.
When Abul-Qasim concluded this story he exclaimed with strong
emotion as he touched his eyes: 'Oh, blessed are these eyes to have
seen such things; oh, blessed are these ears to have heard such
things.' In parting he gave us flowers, and seemed , like all the
oriental believers, unable to do enough to show his love. We then
entered once more our carriages, and still gazing back at that
lovely spot, we drove towards the Holy Tomb.
'Abdu'l-Bahá met us opposite the group of buildings comprising
the Bahji, the terrace, the little tea-house and the Holy Tomb.
When we alighted we found a group of more than one hundred oriental
believers waiting for us. Knowing that we were among the first
American pilgrims to that Holy Spot they had come from all
directions to behold our faces, and their own shone with love and
joy which amazed us, and which we can never forget. We mounted the
steps leading to the terrace above and entered the tea-house, and
there we found our Beloved seated by an open window. He arose to
welcome us, and greeting us with infinite love, He bade us be
seated and we and to partake of some tea which was being prepared
on a little table by His faithful servant, 'Ali Muhammad. Then
with a word of excuse He left us. He stepped out onto the terrace
and with His hands clasped behind Him and gazing upward He walked
to and fro. As not the least action or word of the Master's is
without a purpose and a meaning, we soon saw that He was walking
on the terrace so that all His servants might behold Him; and we
saw our oriental brothers standing in a group on the grass below,
perfectly motionless and silent, gazing in rapt love and devotion
on the Blessed One. Who indeed could remove their gaze from His
face, so luminous, so calm and so glorious! Never was our Beloved
more beautiful than on that day, when we were about to enter with
Him into the hallowed precincts of the Holy Tomb. As we gazed on
Him, we could only love Him, follow Him, obey Him, and thereby draw
nearer to His beauty. I understood that we could not fathom the
mystery of His being; we could only hope to be engulfed therein.
By and by He came to the door of the tea-room, and the
lightning of His glance fell on us and He said in a quiet, low
tone: 'We are now going to visit the Holy Tomb. When you are
praying in that divine spot remember the promise of Bahá'u'lláh,
that those who attain this pilgrimage shall receive an answer to
their prayers, and their wishes shall be granted.' He then bade us
follow Him and descended the steps, followed by the American
pilgrim, then all the other believers in a body behind us, and in
this order, the Master walking a few yards in advance, we proceeded
slowly towards the Tomb of Bahá'u'lláh. When we reached the outer
door 'Abdu'l-Bahá removed His shoes and motioned us to do likewise.
We followed Him through a passage-way into a square court with a
glass roof, and in the centre a plot of earth were flowering bushes
and mandarin trees were growing. As we entered, a door in the
opposite corner opened and in the ladies of the holy family
arrived, thickly veiled; they came forward and greeted us tenderly.
At the further end of the court is a door at one side, and within
is the Holy Tomb. As we gazed upon the veiled door our souls
stirred within us as though seeking release, and had we not been
upheld by the mercy of God we could not have endured the poignancy
of joy and sorrow and love and yearning that shook the foundations
of our beings. The Blessed Master was calm and radiant and led us
to the open space at the end of the court beside the Tomb, where,
in the mellow light of a stained glass window, we all stood in
silence until he bade one of our group to sing The Holy City. No
pen could describe the solemn beauty of that moment, as, in a
broken voice, this young girl sang the praise and glory of God,
while all were immersed in the ocean of the Divine Presence. The
tears of the pilgrims flowed and strong men wept aloud. The
'Abdu'l-Bahá led us to the door of the Tomb where we knelt for a
moment, then He opened the door and led us in. Those who have
passed that threshold have been for a brief moment in the presence
of God, their Creator, and no thoughts can follow them. The Tablet
of the Holy Tomb was chanted by a young Persian, and when we left
that blessed spot the oriental pilgrims entered slowly, until all
had been within; then our Beloved closed the door, and after
singing Never, My God, to Thee at His request, we quietly withdrew.
Outside we found the carriages waiting at a little distance,
and 'Abdu'l-Bahá leaving us to follow slowly, walked to a slight
rise in the rolling green fields before us and there stood against
the soft background of the evening sky. Oh, most glorious form!
Standing there in the gathering twilight with the sunset fading in
mild tints from the western sky and the full moon rising above His
divine head. We returned to our home in 'Akka in the cool of the
evening through that perfumed land which is forever blest and holy
above all places, 'the joy of the whole earth.'
From that time a greater peace descended upon us, and in the
heavenly calm and beauty of that last night in 'Akka, we were
girded with strength for the future. We were to leave next morning
for Haifa, and in the afternoon we would be again on the sea, every
hour taking us further from the presence of 'Abdu'l-Bahá. When we
awoke on Saturday morning it seemed like the full realization of
this separation descended like a great darkness upon us, and we
were utterly alone in the wide world, save only for Him. He called
us to Him at an early hour, and as we gazed upon His merciful face
we saw that He knew all and that He would uphold us and give us
strength; that verily He was sufficient for the whole world. In
the might and majesty of His presence our fear was turned to
perfect faith, our weakness into strength, our sorrow into hope and
ourselves forgotten in our love for Him. As we sat before Him
waiting to hear His words, some of the believers wept bitterly.
He asked them for His sake not to weep, nor would He talk to us or
teach us until all tears were banished and we were quite calm.
Then He said:
'Pray that your hearts may be cur from yourselves and from the
world, that you may be confirmed by the Holy Spirit and filled with
the fire of the love of God. The nearer you are to the light, the
further you are from the darkness; the nearer you are to heaven,
the further you are from the earth; the nearer you are to God, the
further you are from the world. You have come here among the first
and your reward is great. There are two visits; the first is for
a blessing; the ye come and are blessed and are sent forth to work
in God's vineyard; the second ye come with music and the banners
flying, like soldiers, in gladness and triumph to receive your
reward. If in times past those who have risen up and gone forth
in the Cause of God have been helped and confirmed by His spirit,
even to suffering death for Him, how much greater is the flood of
life with which ye shall be flooded now! For this is the end and
the full revelation, and I say unto you that anyone who will rise
up in the Cause of God at this time shall be filled with the spirit
of God, and that He will send His hosts from heaven to help you and
that nothing shall be impossible to you if you have faith. And now
I give you a commandment which shall be for a covenant between you
and Me--that ye have faith be steadfast as a rock that no storms
can move, that nothing can disturb, and that it endure through all
things even to the end; even should ye hear that your Lord has been
crucified, be not shaken in your faith; for I am with you always,
whether living or dead, I am with you to the end. As ye have faith
so shall your powers and blessings be. This is the balance--this
is the balance.'
Then He arose and bade us follow Him. He led us into the next
room, and there resting on a divan against the wall was the
portrait of Bahá'u'lláh. We fell on our knees before it, and the
tears that flowed were of pure love and adoration. We could have
remained thus forever with our eyes fastened on that wonderful
face, but the Master touched us on the shoulder, that we might see
also the picture of His Highness the Bab. His was a beautiful
young face, but I could not keep my eyes from the eyes of
Bahá'u'lláh, until 'Abdu'l-Bahá turned suddenly to us, and raising
His voice in a tone so poignant that it pierced every heart, He
stretched His hands above us and said:
'Now the time has come when we must part, but the separation
is only of our bodies, in spirit we are united. Ye are the lights
which shall be diffused; ye are the waves of that sea which shall
spread and overflow the world. Each wave is precious to Me and My
nostrils shall be gladdened by our fragrance. Another commandment
I give unto you, that ye love one another even as I love you.
Great mercy and blessings are promised to the peoples of your land,
but on one condition: that their hearts are filled with the fire
of love, that they live in perfect kindness and harmony like one
soul in different bodies. If they fail in this condition the great
blessings will be deferred. Never forget this; look at one another
with the eyes of perfection; look at Me, follow Me, be as I am;
take no thought for yourselves or your lives, whether ye eat or
whether we sleep, whether we are comfortable, whether we are well
or ill, whether ye are with friends or foes, whether ye receive
praise or blame; for all of these things we must care not at all.
Look at Me and be as I am; ye must die to yourselves and to the
world, so shall ye be born again and enter the Kingdom of Heaven.
Behold a candle and how it gives its light. It weeps its life away
drop by drop in order to give forth its flame of light.'
When He had finished speaking we were led gently away by the
members of the Holy Family, and for a moment it seemed that we were
dying; but our Master never removed His compassionate gaze from our
faces, until we could see Him no longer, for our tears. Then we
were clasped one after the other in the arms of the Holy Family,
and the hearts were wrung, and it seemed as if all the cords of
life were breaking; until, as we drove away from the home of our
Heavenly Father, suddenly His spirit came to us, a great strength
and tranquillity filled our souls, the grief of the bodily
separation was turned into the joy of spiritual union.
We had left our Beloved in His glorious prison that we might
go forth and serve Him; that we might spread His Cause and deliver
His Truth to the world; and already His words were fulfilled:
'The time has come when we must part, but the separation is only of our bodies; in spirit we are united forever.'
May Maxwell