پس دل پژمردهی پوسیدهجان ** بر سر تخته نهی آن سو کشان 890
Then thou wilt lay upon a bier the corrupt heart, whose soul is rotten, to carry (it) Yonder,
که دل آوردم ترا ای شهریار ** به ازین دل نبود اندر سبزوار
And say, “I bring Thee a heart, O King: there is no better heart than this in Sabzawár.”
گویدت این گورخانهست ای جری ** که دل مرده بدینجا آوری
He (God) will answer thee, saying, “O audacious man, is this a graveyard that thou shouldst bring a dead heart hither?
رو بیاور آن دلی کو شاهخوست ** که امان سبزوار کون ازوست
Go, bring the Heart that is kingly, from which is (derived) the security of the Sabzawár of (mundane) existence.”
گویی آن دل زین جهان پنهان بود ** زانک ظلمت با ضیا ضدان بود
You may say that that Heart is hidden from this world, because darkness and light are opposites.
دشمنی آن دل از روز الست ** سبزوار طبع را میراثی است 895
From the Day of Alast there is an hereditary enmity of that Heart to the Sabzawár of the carnal nature;
زانک او بازست و دنیا شهر زاغ ** دیدن ناجنس بر ناجنس داغ
For it is a falcon, while this world is the city of the crow: the sight of one who is uncongenial inflicts pain upon him who is not his congener;
ور کند نرمی نفاقی میکند ** ز استمالت ارتفاقی میکند
And if he (the worldling) behave with mildness (complaisance), he is acting hypocritically: he is seeking an advantage for himself by conciliating (the owner of the Heart).
میکند آری نه از بهر نیاز ** تا که ناصح کم کند نصح دراز
He assents, not on account of sincere feeling, (but) in order that the admonisher may curtail his long admonition;
زانک این زاغ خس مردارجو ** صد هزاران مکر دارد تو به تو
For this vile carrion-seeking crow hath a hundred thousand manifold tricks.