C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
Critical and Biographical Introduction
By James Justinian Morier (1780?1849)
H
Mr. Morier seems to have been saturated with the Oriental feeling; and his knowledge of the Persian character, in all grades of society, is so comprehensive, his acquaintance with Persian literature so sympathetic, and his study of its religion, morals and manners, and way of regarding life, is so deep, that the narrative put into the mouth of the barber of Ispahan strikes no false note. The story has no companion for verisimilitude in all those written by foreigners of another age and another race; including all the romances of Greek and Roman life, which invariably smell of erudition and of archæology. Hajji tells his story like a Persian, and his tale is worthy to rank with the ‘Arabian Nights.’ Hajji is as unconscious of his cheerful rascality, and of the revelations he is making of his people, as the story-tellers of the ‘Nights’ are of the Occidental view of the moral law. As a picture of Oriental life his narrative fits in well with the ‘Arabian Nights’; but it has also kinship to Benvenuto Cellini and to ‘Gil Blas.’ But there is a great difference between the ‘Arabian Nights’ and ‘Hajji Baba.’ The latter is a satire, and was bitterly resented by the Persians as a satire; whereas the same sort of revelations in the ‘Tales’ seem to them genial and natural. To them this satire is particularly offensive in the exposure of the pillars of the church,—the dervishes and the mollahs,—and Hajji’s apparently unconscious admission of the natural vices of cowardice, lying, and deceit. As a keen piece of satire it has never been surpassed; and it is heightened by coming from the mouth of a good-natured adventurer and thief.
The reader will not go amiss of entertainment on any page of this curious book; but we have selected from it the following account of the Persian physician and how the Shah took physic, as fairly representative of its humor, and complete in itself.