- But if his physician be the Light of God, there is no loss or crushing blow (that he will suffer) from old age and fever.
- لیک گر باشد طبیبش نور حق ** نیست از پیری و تب نقصان و دق
- His weakness is like the weakness of the intoxicated, for in his weakness he is the envy of a Rustam. 975
- سستی او هست چون سستی مست ** که اندر آن سستیش رشک رستمست
- If he die, his bones are drowned in (spiritual) savour; every mote of him is (floating) in the beams of the light of love-desire.
- گر بمیرد استخوانش غرق ذوق ** ذره ذرهش در شعاع نور شوق
- And he who hath not that (Light) is an orchard without fruit, which the autumn brings to ruin.
- وآنک آنش نیست باغ بیثمر ** که خزانش میکند زیر و زبر
- The roses remain not; (only) the black thorns remain: it becomes pale and pithless like a heap of straw.
- گل نماند خارها ماند سیاه ** زرد و بیمغز آمده چون تل کاه
- O God, I wonder what fault did that orchard commit, that these (beautiful) robes should be stripped from it.
- تا چه زلت کرد آن باغ ای خدا ** که ازو این حلهها گردد جدا
- “It paid regard to itself, and self-regard is a deadly poison. Beware, O thou who art put to the trial!” 980
- خویشتن را دید و دید خویشتن ** زهر قتالست هین ای ممتحن
- The minion for love of whom the world wept—the world (now) is repulsing him from itself: what is (his) crime?
- شاهدی کز عشق او عالم گریست ** عالمش میراند از خود جرم چیست
- “The crime is that he put on a borrowed adornment and pretended that these robes were his own property.
- جرم آنک زیور عاریه بست ** کرد دعوی کین حلل ملک منست
- We take them back, in order that he may know for sure that the stack is Ours and the fair ones are (only) gleaners;
- واستانیم آن که تا داند یقین ** خرمن آن ماست خوبان دانهچین