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4
573-597

  • When Solomon beheld that (gift), he laughed, saying, “When did I seek tharíd from you?
  • I do not bid you bestow gifts on me; nay, I bid you be worthy of the gifts (which I bestow);
  • For I have rare gifts (coming) from the Unseen, which human beings durst not even ask for. 575
  • Ye worship the star (planet) that makes gold: turn your faces towards Him that makes the star.
  • Ye worship the sun in heaven, having despised the Spirit (which is) of high price.
  • The sun, by command of God, is our cook: ’twere folly that we should say it is God.
  • If thy sun be eclipsed, what wilt thou do? How wilt thou expel that blackness from it?
  • Wilt not thou bring thy headache (trouble and pain) to the court of God, saying, ‘Take the blackness away, give back the radiance!’ 580
  • If they would kill thee at midnight, where is the sun, that thou shouldst wail (in supplication) and beg protection of it?
  • Calamities, for the most part, happen in the night; and at that time the object of thy worship is absent.
  • If thou sincerely bow (in prayer) to God, thou wilt be delivered from the stars: thou wilt become intimate (with God).
  • When thou becomest intimate, I will open my lips (to speak) with thee, that thou may’st behold a Sun at midnight.
  • It hath no Orient but the pure spirit: in (respect of) its rising, there is no difference between day and night. 585
  • ’Tis day when it (the Sun) rises; when it begins to shine, night is night no more.
  • (Such) as the mote appears in the presence of the sun, even such is the sun (of this world) in the pure substance (of the Light of God).
  • The sun that becomes resplendent, and before which the (keenest) sight is blunted and dazzled—
  • Thou wilt see it as a mote in the light of the Divine Throne, (a mote) beside the illimitable abounding light of the Divine Throne.
  • Thou wilt deem it base and lowly and impermanent, (when) strength has come to thine (inward) eye from the Creator.” 590
  • (The Divine Light is) the Philosophers' Stone from which a single impression fell on the (primal) vapour, and it (the vapour) became a star;
  • The unique elixir of which half a gleam struck upon a (region of) darkness and made it the sun;
  • The marvellous alchemist who by a single operation fastened all these properties on Saturn.
  • Know, O seeker, that the remaining planets and the spiritual substances are (to be judged) according to the same standard.
  • The sensuous eye is subject to the sun: seek and find a divine eye, 595
  • In order that the beams of the flaming sun may become subject (abased) before that vision;
  • For that vision is luminous, while these (sunbeams) are igneous: fire is very dark in comparison with light.
  • The miraculous gifts and illumination of Shaykh ‘Abdullah Maghribí, may God sanctify his spirit.