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4
1484-1508

  • Oh, alas, ’tis harvest-time, but by our (ill) fortune the day has become late.
  • Time is pressing, and the amplitude of this (subject of) discussion (is such that) a perpetual life will be (too) restricted for it. 1485
  • To dart the lance in these narrow lanes brings to disgrace those who dart the lance.
  • The time is narrow (limited), and the mind and understanding of the vulgar is narrower a hundredfold than the time, O youth.
  • Inasmuch as silence is the (proper) reply to the fool, how art thou thus prolonging the discourse?
  • (Because) He (God), from the perfection of His mercy and the waves of His bounty, bestows rain and moisture on every barren soil.
  • Showing that (the proverb), "Omission to reply is a reply," confirms the saying that silence is the (proper) reply to the fool. The explanation of both these (sayings) is (contained) in the story which will now be related.
  • There was a king: he had a slave; he (the slave) was one whose reason was dead and whose lust was alive. 1490
  • He would neglect the niceties of service to him (the king): he was thinking evil and deeming (it) good.
  • The monarch said, “Reduce his allowance, and if he wrangle strike his name off the roll.”
  • His reason was deficient, his cupidity excessive: when he saw the allowance reduced he became violent and refractory.
  • Had there been reason (in him), he would have made a circuit round himself, in order that he might see his offence and become forgiven.
  • When, on account of asininity, a tethered ass becomes violent, both his (fore-)legs will be shackled in addition. 1495
  • Then the ass will say, “One tether is enough for me”; (but) in sooth do not think (that such is the case), for those two are (result) from the action of that vile creature.
  • In exposition of the following Hadíth of Mustafá (Mohammed), on whom be peace: "Verily, the most High God created the angels and set reason in them, and He created the beasts and set lust in them, and He created the sons of Adam and set in them reason and lust; and he whose reason prevails over his lust is higher than the angels, and he whose lust prevails over his reason is lower than the beasts."
  • It is related in the Hadíth that the majestical God created the creatures of the world (in) three kinds.
  • One class (He made) entirely reason and knowledge and munificence; that is the angel: he knoweth naught but prostration in worship.
  • In his original nature is no concupiscence and sensuality: he is absolute light, (he is) living through (his) love of God.
  • Another class is devoid of knowledge, like the animal (which lives) in fatness from (eating) fodder. 1500
  • It sees nothing but stable and fodder: it is heedless of (future) misery and glory (felicity).
  • The third (class) is Adam's descendant and Man: half of him is of the angel and half of him is ass.
  • The ass-half, indeed, inclines to that which is low; the other half inclines to that which is rational.
  • Those two classes (the angels and the beasts) are at rest from war and combat, while this Man is (engaged) in torment (painful struggle) with two adversaries.
  • And, moreover, this (race of) Man, through probation, has been divided: they (all) are of human shape, but (in truth) they have become three communities (families). 1505
  • One party have become submerged absolutely and, like Jesus, have attained unto the (nature of the) angel.
  • The form (of such a one is that of) Adam, but the reality is Gabriel: he has been delivered from anger and sensual passion and (vain) disputation.
  • He has been delivered from discipline and asceticism and self-mortification: you would say he was not even born of a child of Adam.