Ch.XXII, p.513, f.1
   "An intense clamor arose from the crowd at this moment as the onlookers 
 saw the Bab freed from his bonds advancing towards them.  Amazing to 
 believe, the bullets had not struck the condemned but, on the contrary, had 
 broken his bonds and he was delivered.  It was a real miracle and God alone 
 knows what would have happened without the fidelity and calm of the 
 Christian regiment on this occurrence.  The soldiers in order to quiet the 
 excitement of the crowd which, being extremely agitated, was ready to 
 believe the claims of a religion which thus demonstrated its truth, showed 
 the cords broken by the bullets, implying that no miracle had really taken 
 place.  At the same time, they seized the Bab and tied him again to the 
 fatal post.  This time the execution was effective.  Muhammadan justice 
 and ecclesiastical law had asserted themselves.  But the crowd, vividly 
 impressed by the spectacle they had witnessed, dispersed slowly, hardly 
 convinced that the Bab was a criminal.  After all his crime was only a 
 crime for the legalists and the world is indulgent toward crimes which it 
 does not understand."  (M.C. Huart's "La Religion du Bab," pp. 3-4.)  
   "An extraordinary thing happened, unique in the annals of the history of 
 humanity:  the bullets cut the cords that held the Bab and he fell on his 
 feet without a scratch."  (A. L. M. Nicolas' "Siyyid Ali-Muhammad dit le 
 Bab," p. 375.)  
   "By a strange coincidence, the bullet only touched the cords which bound 
 the Bab, they were broken and he felt himself free.  Uproar and shouts 
 arose on all sides, no one understanding at first what it was all about."  
 (Ibid., p. 379.)