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1
2056-2080

  • Whether he (the saint) speak hot or cold, receive (his words) with joy: in order that thou mayst escape from the hot and cold (of Nature) and from Hell-fire.
  • His “hot” and “cold” is life's new season of spring, the source of sincerity and faith and service.
  • Inasmuch as the garden of the spirits is living through him, and the sea of (his) heart is filled with these pearls,
  • Thousands of griefs lie (heavy) on a wise man's heart, if from the garden of his heart (even) a toothpick fail (be missing).
  • How the Siddíqa (‘Á’isha), may God be well-pleased with her, asked Mustafá (Mohammed), God bless him and give him peace, saying, “What was the inner meaning of to-day's rain?”
  • The Siddíqa said, “O (thou who art the) cream of existence, what was the (true) reason of to-day's rain? 2060
  • Was it (one) of the rains of mercy, or (was it) for the sake of menace and the justice of (Divine) Majesty?
  • Was it from the favour of the vernal attributes, or from a baneful autumnal attribute?”
  • He said, “This (rain) was for the purpose of allaying the grief that is upon the race of Adam in calamity.
  • If man were to remain in that fire (of grief), much ruin and loss would befall.
  • This world would at once become desolate: (all) selfish desires would go forth from men.” 2065
  • Forgetfulness (of God), O beloved, is the pillar (prop) of this world: (spiritual) intelligence is a bane to this world.
  • Intelligence belongs to that (other) world, and when it prevails, this world is overthrown.
  • Intelligence is the sun and cupidity the ice; intelligence is the water and this world the dirt.
  • A little trickle (of intelligence) is coming from yonder world, that cupidity and envy may not roar (too loudly) in this world.
  • If the trickle from the Unseen should become greater, in this world neither virtue nor vice will be left. 2070
  • This (topic) has no bound. Go to the starting-point, go back to the tale of the minstrel.
  • The remainder of the story of the old harper and the explanation of its issue (moral)
  • That minstrel by whom the world was filled with rapture, from whose voice wondrous phantasies grew (arose in the minds of those who heard him),
  • At whose song the bird of the soul would take wing, and at whose note the mind of the spirit would be distraught—
  • When time passed and he grew old, from weakness the falcon, his soul, became a catcher of gnats.
  • His back became bent like the back of a wine-jar, the brows over his eyes like a crupper-strap. 2075
  • His charming soul-refreshing voice became ugly and worth nothing to any one.
  • The tone that had (once) been the envy of Zuhra (Venus) was now like the bray of an old donkey.
  • Truly, what sweet one is there that did not become unsweet, or what roof that did not become a carpet?—
  • Except the voices of holy men in their breasts, from the repercussion of whose breath is the blast of the trumpet (of Resurrection).
  • (Theirs is) the heart by which (all) hearts are made drunken, (theirs is) the nonexistence whereby these existences of ours are made existent. 2080