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1
3429-3453

  • He (goes on) like this, while the children at his heels are without knowledge of his intoxication and the taste of his wine.
  • All mankind are children except him that is intoxicated with God; none is grownup except him that is freed from sensual desire. 3430
  • He (God) said, “This world is a play and pastime, and ye are children”; and God speaks truth.
  • If you have not gone forth from (taken leave of) play, you are a child: without purity of spirit how should he (any one) be fully intelligent?
  • Know, O youth, that the lust in which men are indulging here (in this world) is like the sexual intercourse of children.
  • What is the child's sexual intercourse? An idle play, compared with the sexual intercourse of a Rustam and a brave champion of Islam.
  • The wars of mankind are like children's fights—all meaningless, pithless, and contemptible. 3435
  • All their fights are (fought) with wooden swords, all their purposes are (centred) in futility;
  • They all are riding on a reed-cane (hobby-horse), saying, “This is our Buráq or mule that goes like Duldul.”
  • They are (really) carrying (their hobby-horses), but in their folly they have raised themselves on high: they have fancied themselves to be riders and carried along the road.
  • Wait till the day when those who are borne aloft by God shall pass, galloping, beyond the nine tiers (of Heaven)!
  • “The spirit and the angels shall ascend to Him”: at the ascension of the spirit Heaven shall tremble. 3440
  • Like children, ye all are riding on your skirts: ye have taken hold of the corner of your skirt (to serve) as a horse.
  • From God came (the text), “Verily, opinion doth not enable (you) to dispense (with the Truth)”: when did the steed of opinion run (mount) to the Heavens?
  • While preferring (in case of doubt) the stronger of the two (alternative) opinions, do not doubt whether you see the sun when it is shining!
  • At that time (when the spirit returns to God) behold your steeds! Ye have made a steed of your own foot.
  • Come, recognise that your imagination and reflection and sense-perception and apprehension are like the reed-cane on which children ride. 3445
  • The sciences of the mystics bear them (aloft); the sciences of sensual men are burdens to them.
  • When knowledge strikes on the heart (is acquired through mystical experience), it becomes a helper (yárí); when knowledge strikes on the body (is acquired through the senses), it becomes a burden (bárí).
  • God hath said, “(Like an ass) laden with his books”: burdensome is the knowledge that is not from Himself.
  • The knowledge that is not immediately from Himself does not endure, (it is) like the tire woman's paint.
  • But when you carry this burden well, the burden will be removed and you will be given (spiritual) joy. 3450
  • Beware! Do not carry that burden of knowledge for the sake of selfish desire (but mortify yourself), so that you may behold the barn (store-house) of knowledge within (you),
  • So that you may mount the smooth-paced steed of knowledge, (and that) afterwards the burden may fall from your shoulder.
  • How wilt thou be freed from selfish desires without the cup of Hú (Him), O thou who hast become content with no more of Hú than the name of Hú?