-
تاسهی تو شد نشان آن کشش ** بر تو بیکاری بود چون جان کنش
- The sign of that pulling is your anguish: to be inactive is to you like the death-agony.
-
این جهان و آن جهان زاید ابد ** هر سبب مادر اثر از وی ولد 1000
- This world and that world are for ever giving birth: every cause is a mother, the effect is the child (born) from it.
-
چون اثر زایید آن هم شد سبب ** تا بزاید او اثرهای عجب
- When the effect was born, that too became a cause, so that it might give birth to wondrous effects.
-
این سببها نسل بر نسل است لیک ** دیدهای باید منور نیک نیک
- These causes are generation on generation, but it needs a very well illumined eye (to see all the links in their chain).”
-
شاه با او در سخن اینجا رسید ** یا بدید از وی نشانی یا ندید
- The King, in conversation with him, arrived at this point: he either saw or did not see a sign.
-
گر بدید آن شاه جویا دور نیست ** لیک ما را ذکر آن دستور نیست
- If that searching King saw (such a sign), ’tis not strange; but we are not permitted to mention it.
-
چون ز گرمابه بیامد آن غلام ** سوی خویشش خواند آن شاه و همام 1005
- When that (other) slave came from the warm bath, that King and lofty personage called him to his presence,
-
گفت صحا لک نعیم دایم ** بس لطیفی و ظریف و خوب رو
- (And) said, “Health (to you)! Lasting happiness be yours! You are very fine and elegant and good-looking.
-
ای دریغا گر نبودی در تو آن ** که همیگوید برای تو فلان
- Oh, alas! If there were not in you that which so-and-so says about you,
-
شاد گشتی هر که رویت دیدهیی ** دیدنت ملک جهان ارزیدیی
- Whoever beheld your face would become glad; the sight of you would be worth the empire of the world.”
-
گفت رمزی ز آن بگو ای پادشاه ** کز برای من بگفت آن دین تباه
- He said, “O King, utter some hint of what that miscreant said about me.”
-
گفت اول وصف دو روییت کرد ** کاشکارا تو دوایی خفیه درد 1010
- The King said, “In the first place he described you as double-faced, saying that you are ostensibly a remedy (but) secretly a disease.”
-
خبث یارش را چو از شه گوش کرد ** در زمان دریای خشمش جوش کرد
- When he heard from the King the malice of his companion, at once the sea of his anger surged up.
-
کف بر آورد آن غلام و سرخ گشت ** تا که موج هجو او از حد گذشت
- That slave foamed and reddened, so that the billows of his vituperation exceeded (all) bounds.
-
کاو ز اول دم که با من یار بود ** همچو سگ در قحط بس گه خوار بود
- He said, “From the first moment that he was associated with me, he was a great eater of dung, like a dog in (time of) famine.”
-
چون دمادم کرد هجوش چون جرس ** دست بر لب زد شهنشاهش که بس
- As he satirised him in succession (without intermission), like a bell, the King put his hand on his (the slave's) lips, saying, “Enough!”
-
گفت دانستم ترا از وی بدان ** از تو جان گنده ست و از یارت دهان 1015
- He said, “I know you from him by that (which you have spoken): in you the spirit is foul, and in your companion (only) the mouth.
-
پس نشین ای گنده جان از دور تو ** تا امیر او باشد و مأمور تو
- Therefore do you sit far off, O foul-spirited one, that he may be the commander and you under his command.”
-
در حدیث آمد که تسبیح از ریا ** همچو سبزهی گولخن دان ای کیا
- It is (said) in the Hadíth (Traditions of the Prophet): “Know, sire, that glorification (of God) from hypocrisy is like the verdure on a midden.”
-
پس بدان که صورت خوب و نکو ** با خصال بد نیرزد یک تسو
- Know, then, that a fair and goodly form with bad qualities (within) is not worth a farthing;
-
ور بود صورت حقیر و ناپذیر ** چون بود خلقش نکو در پاش میر
- And though the form be despicable and unpleasing, (yet) when his (that person's) disposition is good, die at his feet!
-
صورت ظاهر فنا گردد بدان ** عالم معنی بماند جاودان 1020
- Know that the outward form passes away, (but) the world of reality remains for ever.
-
چند بازی عشق با نقش سبو ** بگذر از نقش سبو رو آب جو
- How long will you play at loving the shape of the jug? Leave the shape of the jug; go, seek the water.
-
صورتش دیدی ز معنی غافلی ** از صدف دری گزین گر عاقلی
- You have seen its (outward) form, you are unaware of the reality; pick out from the shell a pearl, if you are wise.
-
این صدفهای قوالب در جهان ** گر چه جمله زندهاند از بحر جان
- These shells of bodies in the world, though they all are living by (grace of) the Sea of Soul—
-
لیک اندر هر صدف نبود گهر ** چشم بگشا در دل هر یک نگر
- Yet there is not a pearl in every shell: open your eyes and look into the heart of each one,
-
کان چه دارد وین چه دارد میگزین ** ز انکه کمیاب است آن در ثمین 1025
- And pick out what that one has and what this, because that costly pearl is seldom found.
-
گر به صورت میروی کوهی به شکل ** در بزرگی هست صد چندان که لعل
- If you go (turn your attention) to the form, by external appearance a mountain is a hundred times as much as a ruby in bigness;
-
هم به صورت دست و پا و پشم تو ** هست صد چندان که نقش چشم تو
- Also, in respect of form, your hands and feet and hair are a hundred times as much as the contour of the eye;
-
لیک پوشیده نباشد بر تو این ** کز همه اعضا دو چشم آمد گزین
- But this (fact) is not hidden from you, that the two eyes are the choicest of all (your) members.
-
از یک اندیشه که آید در درون ** صد جهان گردد به یک دم سر نگون
- By one thought that comes into the mind a hundred worlds are overturned in a single moment.
-
جسم سلطان گر به صورت یک بود ** صد هزاران لشکرش در پی دود 1030
- If the body of the Sultan is, in form (appearance), one (only), (yet) hundreds of thousands of soldiers run behind (it).
-
باز شکل و صورت شاه صفی ** هست محکوم یکی فکر خفی
- Again, the figure and form of the excellent King are ruled by one invisible thought.
-
خلق بیپایان ز یک اندیشه بین ** گشته چون سیلی روانه بر زمین
- Behold people without end who, moved by one thought, have gone over the earth like a flood;
-
هست آن اندیشه پیش خلق خرد ** لیک چون سیلی جهان را خورد و برد
- Small is that thought in the people's eyes, but like a flood it swallowed and swept away the world.
-
پس چو میبینی که از اندیشهای ** قایم است اندر جهان هر پیشهای
- So, when you see that from a thought every craft in the world (arises and) subsists—
-
خانهها و قصرها و شهرها ** کوهها و دشتها و نهرها 1035
- (That) houses and palaces and cities, mountains and plains and rivers,
-
هم زمین و بحر و هم مهر و فلک ** زنده از وی همچو کز دریا سمک
- Earth and ocean as well as sun and sky, are living (derive their life) from it as fishes from the sea—
-
پس چرا از ابلهی پیش تو کور ** تن سلیمان است و اندیشه چو مور
- Then why in your foolishness, O blind one, does the body seem to you a Solomon, and thought (only) as an ant?
-
مینماید پیش چشمت که بزرگ ** هست اندیشه چو موش و کوه گرگ
- To your eye the mountain appears great: (to you) thought is like a mouse, and the mountain (like) a wolf.
-
عالم اندر چشم تو هول و عظیم ** ز ابر و رعد و چرخ داری لرز و بیم
- The (material) world in your eyes is awful and sublime: you tremble and are frightened at the clouds and the thunder and the sky,
-
وز جهان فکرتی ای کم ز خر ** ایمن و غافل چو سنگ بیخبر 1040
- While in regard to the world of thought, O less (lower) than the ass, you are secure and indifferent as a witless stone,
-
ز انکه نقشی وز خرد بیبهرهای ** آدمی خو نیستی خر کرهای
- Because you are a (mere) shape and have no portion of intelligence; you are not of human nature, you are an ass's colt.
-
سایه را تو شخص میبینی ز جهل ** شخص از آن شد نزد تو بازی و سهل
- From ignorance you deem the shadow to be the substance: hence to you the substance has become a plaything and of slight account.
-
باش تا روزی که آن فکر و خیال ** بر گشاید بیحجابی پر و بال
- Wait till the Day when that thought and phantasy unfolds its wings and pinions without any veil (encumbrance).
-
کوهها بینی شده چون پشم نرم ** نیست گشته این زمین سرد و گرم
- You will see that the mountains have become soft as wool, (and that) this Earth of hot and cold has become naught;
-
نه سما بینی نه اختر نه وجود ** جز خدای واحد حی ودود 1045
- You will see neither the sky nor the stars nor (any) existence but God, the One, the Living, the Loving.
-
یک فسانه راست آمد یا دروغ ** تا دهد مر راستیها را فروغ
- Here is a tale, (be it) true or false, to illustrate (these) truths.
-
حسد کردن حشم بر غلام خاص
- How the (King's) retainers envied the favourite slave.
-
پادشاهی بندهای را از کرم ** بر گزیده بود بر جمله حشم
- A King had, of his grace, preferred a certain slave above all his retinue.
-
جامگی او وظیفهی چل امیر ** ده یک قدرش ندیدی صد وزیر
- His allowance was the stipend of forty Amírs; a hundred Viziers would not see (receive) a tenth of its amount.