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5
1289-1313

  • The imitator is like a sick child, although he may have (at his disposal) subtle argumentation and (logical) proofs.
  • That profundity in (dealing with) proofs and difficult problems is severing him from (spiritual) insight. 1290
  • It took away (from him) the stock (of insight), which is the collyrium of his inmost consciousness, and applied itself to the discussion of (formal) problems.
  • O imitator, turn back from Bukhárá: go to self-abasement (ba-khwárí) that thou mayst become a (spiritual) hero,
  • And that thou mayst behold within (thee) another Bukhárá, in the assembly-place whereof the champions are unlearned.
  • Although the courier is a swift runner on land, when he goes to sea his sinews are broken.
  • He is only (like those of whom God says in the Qur’án) We have borne them on the land; (but) that one who is borne on the sea—he is somebody. 1295
  • The King (God) hath great bounty: run (to receive it), O thou who hast become in pawn to an imagination and fancy.
  • From conformity that simple disciple, too, was weeping in concert with the venerable (Shaykh);
  • (For), like the deaf man, he regarded the (Shaykh's) weeping in the manner of a conformist and was unaware of the cause.
  • When he had wept a long while, he paid his respects and departed: the (Shaykh's) favourite disciple came quickly after him,
  • And said, “O thou who art weeping like a witless cloud in concert with the weeping of the Shaykh (possessed) of insight, 1300
  • For God's sake, for God's sake, for God's sake, O loyal disciple, although in (thy) conformity thou art seeking (spiritual) profit,
  • Take heed not to say, ‘I saw that (spiritual) king weeping, and I wept like him’; for that is denial (of his exalted state).”
  • A weeping full of ignorance and conformity and (mere) opinion is not like the weeping of that trusted one.
  • Do not judge (one) weeping by the analogy of (another) weeping: ’tis a long way from this weeping to that (weeping).
  • That (weeping) is after a thirty years' (spiritual) warfare: the intellect can never get there. 1305
  • Beyond reason there are a hundred stages: deem not the intellect to be acquainted with that caravan.
  • His weeping is neither from sorrow nor from joy: (only) the spirit knows the weeping of (him who is) the fountain of beauties.
  • His weeping, his laughter—(both) are of Yonder (World) and transcend all that the intellect may conceive.
  • His tears are like his eye: how should the sightless eye become a (seeing) eye?
  • That which he sees cannot be touched (apprehended) either by the analogical judgement of the intellect or by way of the senses. 1310
  • Night flees when Light comes from afar: what, then, should the darkness of Night know concerning Light?
  • The gnat flees from the keen wind: what, then, should the gnat know of the (delicious) savour of the winds?
  • When the Eternal comes, the temporal is made vain: what, then, should the temporal know of Eternity?