English    Türkçe    فارسی   

4
499-523

  • Whoever possessed vision was beholding His Light; the blind man too was being heated by that Sun.
  • Hence, by reason of the heat, the blind man's eye was perceiving that there had arisen a Sun whose strength faileth not. 500
  • But this heat (unlike the heat of the terrestrial sun) opens the (inward) eye, that it may see the very substance of everything heard.
  • Its heat has (as effect) a grievous agitation and emotion, (but) from that glow there comes to the heart a joyous (sense of) freedom, an expansion.
  • When the blind man is heated by the Light of Eternity, from gladness he says, “I have become seeing.”
  • Thou art mightily well drunken, but, O Bu ’l-Hasan, there is a bit of way (to be traversed ere thou attain) to seeing.
  • This is the blind man's portion from the Sun, (and) a hundred such (portions); and God best knoweth what is right. 505
  • And he that hath vision of that Light—how should the explanation of him (his state) be a task (within the capacity) of Bú Síná?
  • (Even) if it be hundredfold, who (what) is this tongue that it should move with its hand the veil of (mystical) clairvoyance?
  • Woe to it if it touch the veil! The Divine sword severs its hand.
  • What of the hand? It (the sword) rends off even its (the tongue's) head—the head that from ignorance puts forth many a head (of pride and self-conceit).
  • I have said this to you, speaking hypothetically; otherwise, indeed, how far is its hand from being able to do that! 510
  • Materterae si testiculi essent, ea avunculus esset: this is hypothetical—“if there were.” [(If) in regard to a maternal aunt there were testicles, she would would be a maternal uncle: this is hypothetical—“if there were.”]
  • (If) I say that between the tongue and the eye that is free from doubt there is a hundred thousand years' (journey), ’tis little (in comparison with the reality).
  • Now come, do not despair! When God wills, light arrives from heaven in a single moment.
  • At every instant His power causes a hundred influences from the stars to reach the (subterranean) mines.
  • The star (planet) of heaven deletes the darkness; the star of God is fixed in His Attributes. 515
  • O thou that seekest help, the celestial sphere, (at a distance) of five hundred years' journey, is in effect nigh unto the earth.
  • ’Tis (a journey of) three thousand five hundred years to Saturn; (yet) his special property acts incessantly (upon the earth).
  • He (God) rolls it up like a shadow at the return (of the sun): in the sun's presence what is (what avails) the length of the shadow?
  • And from the pure star like souls replenishment is ever coming to the stars of heaven.
  • The outward (aspect) of those stars is our ruler, (but) our inward (essence) has become the ruler of the sky. 520
  • Explaining that (while) philosophers say that Man is the microcosm, theosophists say that Man is the macrocosm, the reason being that philosophy is confined to the phenomenal form of Man, whereas theosophy is connected with the essential truth of his true nature.
  • Therefore in form thou art the microcosm, therefore in reality thou art the macrocosm.
  • Externally the branch is the origin of the fruit; intrinsically the branch came into existence for the sake of the fruit.
  • If there had not been desire and hope of the fruit, how should the gardener have planted the root of the tree?