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5
1739-1763

  • What should the spirit (thus) laid asleep know of the body, (or care) whether it (the body) is in a rose-garden or an ashpit?
  • (For) in the bright (celestial) world the spirit is crying, “Oh, would that my people knew!” 1740
  • If the spirit shall not live without this body, then for whom shall Heaven be the palace (of everlasting abode)?
  • If thy spirit shall not live without the body, for whom is the blessing (promised in the words) in Heaven is your provision?
  • Explaining the banefulness of the fat and sweet things of the World and how they hinder one from (receiving) the Food of God, as he (the Prophet) hath said—“Hunger is the Food of God with which He revives the bodies of the true (witnesses to Him),” i.e. in hunger the Food of God is (forthcoming); and he hath said, “I pass the night with my Lord and He gives me food and drink”; and God hath said, “being provided for, rejoicing.”
  • (If) you are delivered from this provision of gross scraps, you will fall to (eating) dainty viands and noble food.
  • (Even) if you are eating a hundred pounds' weight of His viands, you will depart pure and light as a peri;
  • For they will not make you a prisoner of (incapacitated by) wind and dysentery and crucify you with gripes. 1745
  • (In the case of material food) if you eat (too) little, you will remain hungry like the crow; and if you eat your fill, you will suffer from eructation.
  • If you eat (too) little, (the result will be) ill-temper and anaemia and consumption; if you eat your fill, your body will incur (the penalty of) indigestion.
  • Through (partaking of) the Food of God and the easily digested (delicious) nutriment, ride like a ship on such a (spiritual) ocean.
  • Be patient and persistent in fasting: (be) always expecting the Food of God;
  • For God, who acts with goodness and is long-suffering, bestows (His) gifts (on them that are) in expectation. 1750
  • The full-fed man does not wait expectantly for bread, (wondering) whether his allowance will come soon or late;
  • (But) the foodless man is always asking, “Where (is it)?” and expecting it hungrily and seeking and searching (for it).
  • Unless you are expectant, that bounty of manifold felicity will not come to you.
  • (Practise) expectation, O father, expectation, like a (true) man, for the sake of the dishes from above.
  • Every hungry man obtained some food at last: the sun of (spiritual) fortune shone upon him. 1755
  • When a magnanimous guest will not eat some (inferior) food, the host brings better food,
  • Unless he be a poor host and a mean one. Do not think (so) ill of the generous Provider!
  • Lift up your head like a mountain, O man of authority, in order that the first rays of the Sun may strike upon you;
  • For the lofty firm-based mountain-peak is expecting the sun of dawn.
  • Reply to the simpleton who has said that this world would be delightful if there were no death and that the possessions of the present life would be delightful if they were not fleeting, and (has uttered) other absurdities in the same style.
  • A certain man was saying, “The world would be delightful, were it not for the intervention of death.” 1760
  • The other said, “If there were no death, the tangled world would not be worth a straw.
  • It would be (like) a stack heaped up in the field and neglected and left unthreshed.
  • You have supposed (what is really) death to be life: you have sown your seed in a barren soil.