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1
1112-1136

  • Reason is hidden, and (only) a world (of phenomena) is visible: our forms are the waves or a spray of it (of that hidden ocean).
  • Whatsoever (thing) the form makes (uses as) a means of approach to It (to Reason), by that (same) means the ocean (of Reason) casts it (the form) far away.
  • So long as the heart does not see the Giver of (its) conscience, so long as the arrow does not see the far-shooting Archer,
  • He (who is thus blind) thinks his horse is lost, though (all the while) he is obstinately speeding his horse on the road. 1115
  • That fine fellow thinks his horse is lost, while the horse in truth is sweeping him onward like the wind.
  • In lamentation and inquiry that scatterbrain (runs) from door to door in every direction, asking and searching:
  • “Where and who is he that stole my horse?” What is this (animal) under thy thigh, O master?
  • “Yes, this is the horse, but where is this horse?” O dexterous rider in search of thy horse, come to thyself!
  • The Spirit is lost (to view) because of its being so manifest and near: how, having thy belly full of water, art thou dry-lipped like a jar? 1120
  • How wilt thou see red and green and russet, unless before (seeing) these three (colours) thou see the light?
  • But since thy mind was lost (absorbed) in (perception of) the colour, those colours became to thee a veil from (debarred thee from contemplating) the light.
  • Inasmuch as at night those colours were hidden, thou sawest that thy vision of the colour was (derived) from the light.
  • There is no vision of colour without the external light: even so it is with the colour of inward phantasy.
  • This outward (light) is (derived) from the sun and from Suhá, while the inward (light) is from the reflexion of the beams of (Divine) Glory. 1125
  • The light which gives light to the eye is in truth the light of the heart: the light of the eye is produced by the light of hearts.
  • Again, the light which gives light to the heart is the Light of God, which is pure and separate from the light of intellect and sense.
  • At night there was no light and thou didst not see the colours; then it (the light) was made manifest by the opposite of light (by darkness).
  • (First) comes the seeing of light, then the seeing of colour; and this thou knowest immediately by the opposite of light (darkness).
  • God created pain and sorrow for the purpose that happiness might be made manifest by means of this opposite. 1130
  • Hidden things, then, are manifested by means of their opposite; since God hath no opposite, He is hidden;
  • For the sight fell (first) on the light, then on the colour: opposite is made manifest by opposite, like Greeks and Ethiopians.
  • Therefore thou knewest light by its opposite: opposite reveals opposite in (the process of) coming forth.
  • The Light of God hath no opposite in (all) existence, that by means of that opposite it should be possible to make Him manifest:
  • Necessarily (therefore) our eyes do not perceive Him, though He perceives (us): see this (fact) from (the case of) Moses and the mountain (Sinai). 1135
  • Know that form springs from spirit (reality) as the lion from the jungle, or as voice and speech from thought.