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5
1116-1140

  • And if thou fall asleep thou seest the purchaser in thy dreams: how should the ill-omened owl dream of aught but a wilderness?
  • At every moment thou wantest a purchaser cringing (before thee): what hast thou to sell? Nothing, nothing.
  • If thy heart had any (spiritual) bread or breakfast, it would have been empty of (desire for worldly) purchasers.
  • Story of the person who claimed to be a prophet. They said to him, “What hast thou eaten that thou hast become crazy and art talking in vain?” He replied, “If I had found anything to eat, I should not have become crazy and talked in vain”; for whenever they (the prophets and saints) speak goodly words to people unworthy to hear them, they will have talked in vain, although they are (divinely) commanded to talk thus in vain.
  • A certain man was saying, “I am a prophet: I am superior to all the prophets.”
  • They bound his neck and took him to the king, saying, “This man says he is a prophet sent by God.” 1120
  • The people (were) gathered round him (thick) as ants and locusts, crying, “What deceit and imposture and trap is (this)?
  • If he that comes from (the realm of) non-existence is a prophet, we all are prophets and grand (in spiritual eminence).
  • We (too) came hither as strangers from that place (realm): why shouldst thou be specially endowed (with prophecy), O accomplished one?”
  • (He replied), “Did not ye come like a sleeping child? Ye were ignorant of the way and the destination.
  • Ye passed through the (different) stages asleep and intoxicated, unconscious of the way and (its) ups and downs; 1125
  • (But) we (prophets) set out in wakefulness and well (aware) from beyond the five (senses) and the six (directions) to (this world of) the five and six,
  • Having perceived (all) the stages from the source and foundation, possessed of experience and knowing the way like (skilled) guides.”
  • They said to the king, “Put him to the rack, that a person of his sort may never (again) speak such words.”
  • The king saw that he was very thin and infirm, so that such an emaciated man would die at a single blow.
  • (He thought to himself), “How is it possible to torture or beat him, since his body has become as (fragile as) a glass? 1130
  • But I will speak to him kindly and say, ‘Why dost thou boast of (this) high estate?’
  • For here harshness is of no use: ’tis by gentleness that the snake puts forth its head (is induced to come forth) from the hole.”
  • He caused the people to withdraw from around him (the claimant): the king was a gracious man, and gentleness was his way.
  • Then he bade him be seated, and asked him concerning his dwelling-place, saying, “Where hast thou thy means of livelihood and refuge?”
  • He replied, “O king, I belong to the Abode of Peace: I have come from the road (after having journeyed) to this Abode of Blame. 1135
  • I have neither home nor any companion: when has a fish made its home on the earth?”
  • Again the king answered him, saying by way of jest, “What (food) hast thou eaten and what provision hast thou (made) for the morning meal?
  • Hast thou appetite? What didst thou eat at daybreak that thou art so intoxicated and boastful and blustering?”
  • He replied, “If I had bread, (whether) dry or moist, how should I lay claim to prophecy?
  • To claim to be a prophet amongst these people is like seeking a heart from a mountain. 1140