Page:Persian Literature (1900), vol. 1.djvu/46

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After the lapse of seven hundred years, however, inordinate ambition inflamed the heart of Jemshíd, and, having assembled all the illustrious personages and learned men in his dominions before him, he said to them:—“Tell me if there exists, or ever existed, in all the world, a king of such magnificence and power as I am?” They unanimously replied:—“Thou art alone, the mightiest, the most victorious: there is no equal to thee!” The just God beheld this foolish pride and vanity with displeasure, and, as a punishment, cast him from the government of an empire into a state of utter degradation and misery.