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Rh out of danger, and was too fearless to shun it. Hence, he was soon arrested. On examination, the violence of temper that had marred a fine character blazed out once more. He taunted the Agha who was judging him, till the official cut him down with his own sabre, and this somewhat pugnacious martyr died proclaiming vengeance on his murderers, "whose bodies the fowls of the air shall eat." The doom could hardly have sounded very terrible to a Zoroastrian; but as a matter of fact, the man was soon after killed in a hunting accident.

Aqib-shima, the venerable Bishop of Khanitha near Arbela—an ascetic known and revered by all for his labours in converting the heathen of the hill country round the modern Rowanduz (where the Christian villages that are his monument still remain)—was one of the later victims of the time of trial. Like many of the more notable prisoners, he was finally sent for execution to the "door of the King," but an incident that occurred at one of his many examinations is worth recording.

The martyr was before his judges, when a Manichæan was brought in, and ordered to abjure his peculiar version of Christianity. This he readily