Ali himself was nearly  killed. Arrows  fell    so  thick   and
fast    around  him that    as  one witness said,   “his    two cubs,
Hasan   and Hussein,    were    hard    put to  fend    oʃ  the shafts
with    their   shields.”   They    urged   Ali to  move    faster  so  as
to  avoid   being   so  exposed.    His famed   reply,  the epitome
of  heroic  sangfroid   in  the face    of  battle, was an  augury
of  what    was to  come.
“My  sons,”  he  said,   “the    fateful     day     will    inevitably
come    for your    father. Going   fast    will    not make    it  come
later,  and going   slow    will    not make    it  come    sooner. It
makes   no  diʃerence   to  your    father  whether he  comes
upon    death,  or  death   comes   upon    him.”
But death   would   not come    upon    Ali at  Siɽn.   As  the
sun rose    on  the Friday  morning,    the ɹeld    was all but
won.    The Syrian  line    was not holding,    and the Iraqis
were     slowly  but     inexorably  advancing,  despite     their
losses. It  was only    a   matter  of  time—another    few hours
at   most—until  Ali’s   forces  could   claim   a   deɹnitive
victory,    or  so  it  seemed.
Amr persuaded   Muawiya that    what    could   not be  won
by   might   could   nonetheless     be  won     by  guile.
Unburdened   as  Muawiya     was     by  any     aspiration  to
spiritual   leadership, he  should  feel    free    to  make    whatever
he  saw as  the best    use of  faith.  So  the command was
given:  not to  retreat,    and certainly   not to  surrender,  but
to  bring   several parchment   copies  of  the Quran.  These
were     distributed     among   Muawiya’s   top     cavalry,    with
