"The siege had been going on for four months and had made no visible
progress. The old fortifications had b
een destroyed but, with indomitable
energy, the Babis had built new ones and, night and day, they restored and
enlarged them. It was impossible to foresee the outcome of this situation,
the more so because, as I have already said, Mazindaran was no
t the only
region in Persia where the devotees of the new Faith were giving evidence
of their zeal and their daring. The King and the prime minister, in their
anxiety, burst forth into abuse against their lieutenants. Not only did
they charge th
em with incompetence, in the most bitter terms, but they
threatened to extend to them the same treatment planned for the Babis, if
a final settlement were not reached without delay. Thereupon, the command
was taken from Mihdi-Quli Mirza and given t
o the Afshar Sulayman Khan,
a man of acknowledged firmness and of great influence, not only in his own
tribe, one of the noblest in Persia, but throughout the military circles
who knew him and held him in high esteem. He was given the most rigorous
orders." (Comte de Gobineau's "Les Religions et les Philosophies
dans
l'Asie Centrale," pp. 183-184.)
"Those
who remained firm had already
consumed not only all
their food supply, but such grass as they c
ould find in the enclosure and
the bark of all the trees. There remained only the leather of their belts
and the scabbards of their swords. They had to resort to the expedient
recommended by the Spanish ambassador to the soldiers of the league
b
esieged in Paris; they ground the bones of the dead and made flour with
the dust thereof. At last, desperate, they were reduced to perpetrate a
sort of profanation. The horse of Mulla Husayn had died of the wounds
suffered during that fatal night
which witnessed the death of its master.
The Babis had buried it out of regard for their holy leader and a little
of the deep veneration which all felt for him hovered over the grave of the
poor animal. They held council and, deploring the necessi
ty for such a
discussion, they debated the question whether extreme distress could
justify them to disinter the sacred charger and eat the remains. With deep
sorrow, they agreed that the deed was justifiable. They cooked the remains
of the horse
with the flour made from the bones of the dead, they ate this
strange mixture and took up their guns once more!" (Ibid., pp 186-187.)