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1
331-340

  • The bottle was one, though in his eyes it seemed two; when he broke the bottle, there was no other.
  • When one was broken, both vanished from sight: a man is made squint-eyed by (evil) propensity and anger.
  • Anger and lust make a man squint-eyed, they change the spirit (so that it departs) from rectitude.
  • When self-interest appears, virtue becomes hidden: a hundred veils rise from the heart to the eye.
  • When the cadi lets bribery gain hold of his heart, how should he know the wronger from the wretched victim of wrong? 335
  • The king, from Jewish rancour, became so squint-eyed that (we cry), “Mercy, O Lord, mercy (save us from such an affliction)!”
  • He slew hundreds of thousands of wronged (innocent) believers, saying, “I am the protection and support of the religion of Moses.”
  • How the vizier instructed the king to plot.
  • He had a vizier, a miscreant and ogler (deceiver), who by reason of (his exceeding) guile would tie knots on water.
  • “The Christians,” said he, “seek to save their lives; they hide their religion from the king.
  • Slay them not, for slaying (them) is useless: religion hath no smell, it is not musk and aloes-wood. 340