One Of These
Was Sent Into The Territory Of Damascus, And The Other Into
Curdistan.[NOTE 2]
NOTE 1.
- Romantic as this story is, it seems to be precisely the same that
was current over all the East. It is given by Odoric at length, more
briefly by a Chinese author, and again from an Arabic source by Hammer in
the Mines de l'Orient.
The following is the Chinese account as rendered by Remusat: "The soldiers
of this country (Mulahi) are veritable brigands. When they see a lusty
youth, they tempt him with the hope of gain, and bring him to such a point
that he will be ready to kill his father or his elder brother with his own
hand. After he is enlisted, they intoxicate him, and carry him in that
state into a secluded retreat, where he is charmed with delicious music
and beautiful women. All his desires are satisfied for several days, and
then (in sleep) he is transported back to his original position. When he
awakes, they ask what he has seen. He is then informed that if he will
become an Assassin, he will be rewarded with the same felicity. And with
the texts and prayers that they teach him they heat him to such a pitch
that whatever commission be given him he will brave death without regret
in order to execute it."
The Arabic narrative is too long to extract. It is from a kind of
historical romance called The Memoirs of Hakim, the date of which Hammer
unfortunately omits to give.
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