احولیها اندک اندک کم شود ** چون ز هفصد بگذرد او یم شود
(But) the squintnesses, little by little, grow less, and when he passes beyond the seven hundred (veils), he becomes the Sea.
آتشی کاصلاح آهن یا زر است ** کی صلاح آبی و سیب تر است
The fire that does good to iron or gold—how is it good for fresh quinces and apples?
سیب و آبی خامیی دارد خفیف ** نه چو آهن تابشی خواهد لطیف
The apple and quince have (only) a slight crudity: unlike iron, they want a gentle heat;
لیک آهن را لطیف آن شعلههاست ** کاو جذوب تابش آن اژدهاست
But those flames are (too) gentle for the iron, for it is (eagerly) drawing to (itself) the heat of that (fiery) dragon.
هست آن آهن فقیر سخت کش ** زیر پتک و آتش است او سرخ و خوش830
That iron is the dervish who bears hardship (self-mortification): under the hammer and the fire he is red and happy.
حاجب آتش بود بیواسطه ** در دل آتش رود بیرابطه
He is the chamberlain of the fire (and) in immediate touch (with it): he goes into the heart of the fire without (any) link (between the fire and him).
بیحجاب آب و فرزندان آب ** پختگی ز آتش نیابند و خطاب
Without some screen, water and water's children get no cooking or conversation from the fire.
واسطه دیگی بود یا تابهای ** همچو پا را در روش پا تابهای
The medium is a pot or a pan—as (the medium) for the foot in walking (is) a sock (shoe)—
یا مکانی در میان تا آن هوا ** میشود سوزان و میآرد بما
Or a space between, so that the air becomes burning hot and brings (the fire) to the water.
پس فقیر آن است کاو بیواسطه ست ** شعلهها را با وجودش رابطه ست835
The dervish, then, is he that has no intermediary: the flames have (direct) connexion with his being.