- One man is enraptured and delighted in the nook of a mosque, while another is morose and disappointed in a garden.
- آن یکی در کنج مسجد مست و شاد ** وآن دگر در باغ ترش و بیمراد
- The palace (body) is nothing: ruin your body! The treasure lies in the ruin, O my prince.
- قصر چیزی نیست ویران کن بدن ** گنج در ویرانیست ای میر من
- Don't you see that at the wine-feast the drunkard becomes happy (only) when he becomes ruined (senseless)?
- این نمیبینی که در بزم شراب ** مست آنگه خوش شود کو شد خراب
- Although the (bodily) house is full of pictures, demolish it: seek the treasure, and with the treasure put it (the house) into good repair.
- گرچه پر نقش است خانه بر کنش ** گنج جو و از گنج آبادان کنش
- ’Tis a house filled with pictures of imagination and fancy, and these forms (ideas) are as a veil over the treasure of union (with God). 3425
- خانهی پر نقش تصویر و خیال ** وین صور چون پرده بر گنج وصال
- ’Tis the radiance of the Treasure and the splendours of the (spiritual) gold that cause the forms (ideas) to surge up in this breast.
- پرتو گنجست و تابشهای زر ** که درین سینه همیجوشد صور
- ’Tis from the purity and translucence of the noble Water that the particles of foam have veiled the face of the Water.
- هم ز لطف و عکس آب با شرف ** پرده شد بر روی آب اجزای کف
- ’Tis from the purity and (ceaseless) agitation of the precious Spirit that the bodily figure has veiled the face of the Spirit.
- هم ز لطف و جوش جان با ثمن ** پردهای بر روی جان شد شخص تن
- Hearken, then, to the adage that issued from the mouths (of men)—“this which is (cast) upon us, O brother, is (derived) from us.”
- پس مثل بشنو که در افواه خاست ** که اینچ بر ماست ای برادر هم ز ماست
- Because of this veil, these thirsty ones who are (so) fond of the foam have got out of reach of the pure Water. 3430
- زین حجاب این تشنگان کفپرست ** ز آب صافی اوفتاده دوردست