entitled Mudrost' Balavara "gruzinskaja versija dušepoleznoj istorii o Varlaamě i Ioasafe": Zapiski vostočnago otdělenija imperatorskago Russkago archeologičeskago obsčestva, tom. iii. str. 223-260.
But when the king heard these words he was filled with sorrow, and forthwith he resolved on the banishment from his land of all the servants of Christ; and he sent out a herald to proclaim as follows: "Thus saith Iabenes the king, if any of the Christians be found after three days, with the most awful tortures shall they all be exterminated." But one day the king went out to survey the outside of the city and beheld two men who were servants of God going out of the city, and he said to them: "How were ye so bold as not to leave my land, or did ye not hear what my herald proclaimed?" But they answered: "Lo, even now are we about to go forth." And he said to them: "Why did ye stay until now?" They answered him: "Because we needed provisions for the road." The king said to them: "They that are in dread of death, have they not provision for the road?" But they said to him: "If we had feared thee we should have hastened our going; but we have no fear of death, because from death we look for peace." And the king said: "How say ye this, yet at the same moment through your fear of me are departing from my territory?" They answered: "It is not through fear of death that we now take our departure from thy land, but for the reason that we may not give a pretext to a man who is a murderer and godless. But fear of thee hath in no wise entered our souls." And he let them go; but he gave orders that if any Christians should be found any more they should be burnt by fire.
Now the King Iabenes had a certain man by name Balavari, and he was