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5
1695-1719

  • گفت یا رب دشمنم گیرند خلق  ** چون فشارم خلق را در مرگ حلق  1695
  • He replied, “O Lord, Thy creatures will regard me as their enemy when I strangle them at death.
  • تو روا داری خداوند سنی  ** که مرا مبغوض و دشمن‌رو کنی 
  • Dost Thou deem it right, O exalted Lord, to make me hated and like a foe in appearance?”
  • گفت اسبابی پدید آرم عیان  ** از تب و قولنج و سرسام و سنان 
  • He (God) said, “I will bring into clear view certain causes, (such as) fever and dysentery and phrenitis and spear(-wounds);
  • که بگردانم نظرشان را ز تو  ** در مرضها و سببهای سه تو 
  • For (so) I will turn their attention from thee to the diseases and threefold causes (of death).”
  • گفت یا رب بندگان هستند نیز  ** که سببها را بدرند ای عزیز 
  • He (Azrael) replied, “O Lord, there are also servants (of Thine) who rend (shatter the illusion of) causes, O Almighty.”
  • چشمشان باشد گذاره از سبب  ** در گذشته از حجب از فضل رب  1700
  • Their eye pierces through the cause: by the grace of the Lord, it has passed beyond (all) veils.
  • سرمه‌ی توحید از کحال حال  ** یافته رسته ز علت و اعتلال 
  • It has obtained the collyrium of Unity from the oculist of ecstasy and has been delivered from ailment and infirmity.
  • ننگرند اندر تب و قولنج و سل  ** راه ندهند این سببها را به دل 
  • They do not look at fever and dysentery and consumption: they do not admit these causes into their heart;
  • زانک هر یک زین مرضها را دواست  ** چون دوا نپذیرد آن فعل قضاست 
  • For every one of these diseases has its cure: when it becomes incurable, that is the act of the (Divine) Decree.
  • هر مرض دارد دوا می‌دان یقین  ** چون دوای رنج سرما پوستین 
  • Know for certain that every disease has its cure, as (for example) a fur is the cure for the pain of cold;
  • چون خدا خواهد که مردی بفسرد  ** سردی از صد پوستین هم بگذرد  1705
  • (Yet), when God wills that a man shall be frozen, the cold penetrates even a hundred furs
  • در وجودش لرزه‌ای بنهد که آن  ** نه به جامه به شود نه از آشیان 
  • And puts into his body a tremor that will not be made better by (wrapping himself in) clothes or by (snuggling in) the house.
  • چون قضا آید طبیب ابله شود  ** وان دوا در نفع هم گمره شود 
  • When the Decree comes, the physician is made foolish, and the medicine too loses its beneficial effect.
  • کی شود محجوب ادراک بصیر  ** زین سببهای حجاب گول‌گیر 
  • How should the perception of the (mystic) seer be veiled by these (secondary) causes, which are a veil to catch the dolt?
  • اصل بیند دیده چون اکمل بود  ** فرع بیند چونک مرد احول بود 
  • When the eye is quite perfect, it sees the root (origin); when a man is squint-eyed, it sees the branch (derivative).
  • جواب آمدن کی آنک نظر او بر اسباب و مرض و زخم تیغ نیاید بر کار تو عزرائیل هم نیاید کی تو هم سببی اگر چه مخفی‌تری از آن سببها و بود کی بر آن رنجور مخفی نباشد کی و هو اقرب الیه منکم و لکن لا تبصرون 
  • The (Divine) answer, (namely), “One who does not regard causes and diseases and sword-wounds will likewise pay no regard to thy action, O Azrael, for thou too art a (secondary) cause, although thou art more concealed than those (other) causes.” And maybe it (the real nature of Azrael) is not concealed from the sick (dying) man, for He (God) is nigher to him than ye are, but ye do not see.
  • گفت یزدان آنک باشد اصل دان  ** پس ترا کی بیند او اندر میان  1710
  • God said, “He who perceives the origin (does not regard the derivative): how, then, should he be conscious of thy intervention?
  • گرچه خویش را عامه پنهان کرده‌ای  ** پیش روشن‌دیدگان هم پرده‌ای 
  • Although thou hast concealed thyself (thy real nature) from the vulgar, still to the clear-eyed (mystics) thou art (no more than) a veil (instrument).”
  • وانک ایشان را شکر باشد اجل  ** چون نظرشان مست باشد در دول 
  • And (indeed) those to whom death is (sweet) as sugar—how should their sight be intoxicated (dazzled) with the fortunes (of this world)?
  • تلخ نبود پیش ایشان مرگ تن  ** چون روند از چاه و زندان در چمن 
  • Bodily death is not bitter to them, since they go from a dungeon and prison into a garden.
  • وا رهیدند از جهان پیچ‌پیچ  ** کس نگرید بر فوات هیچ هیچ 
  • They have been delivered from the world of torment: none weeps for the loss of (what amounts to) nothing, nothing.
  • برج زندان را شکست ارکانیی  ** هیچ ازو رنجد دل زندانیی  1715
  • (If) an elemental spirit breaks the bastion of a prison, will the heart of any prisoner be angry with him?
  • کای دریغ این سنگ مرمر را شکست  ** تا روان و جان ما از حبس رست 
  • (Will they say?) “Alas, he has broken this marble stone, so that our spirits and souls have escaped from confinement.
  • آن رخام خوب و آن سنگ شریف  ** برج زندان را بهی بود و الیف 
  • The beautiful marble and the noble stone of the prison-bastion were pleasing and agreeable (to us).
  • چون شکستش تا که زندانی برست  ** دست او در جرم این باید شکست 
  • Why did he break them, so that the prisoners escaped? His hand must be broken (cut off) as a penalty for this (crime).”
  • هیچ زندانی نگوید این فشار  ** جز کسی کز حبس آرندش به دار 
  • No prisoner will talk such nonsense except that one who is brought from prison to the gallows.