![]() The Persian later travels to Paris and takes up living in a small, middle-class flat in the rue de Rivoli, across the street from the Tuileries, and employs a servant named Darius. However, as a distant member of the royal family, The Persian continued to be paid a small pension. When news of the escape spread, the Shah correctly suspected The Persian of being involved, and punished him by stripping him of his property and sending him into exile. Being kindhearted, he helped Erik escape from Persia instead, a trick that involved presenting a body washed up on the shore as Erik's. The Shah ordered him to execute Erik after Erik provided his services in construction for the Shah. He is also considered Erik's only friend.Īccording to his account of himself in the novel, the Persian once served as the chief of police (daroga) in the court of the Shah of Persia during the years that Erik was there. Erik refers to him as the " daroga" ( داروغه, Persian for "police-chief") and his memoirs are featured in five chapters of the novel. ![]() ![]() ![]() In the book he is the one who tells most of the background of Erik's history. The Persian is a major character from the 1910 Gaston Leroux novel The Phantom of the Opera. ![]()
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