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5
3048-3072

  • And if the wind came and carried off your turban, when did your heart show any anger against the wind?
  • The anger within you is a clear demonstration of (the existence of) a power of choice (in Man), so that you must not excuse yourself after the fashion of Necessitarians.
  • If a camel-driver goes on striking a camel, the camel will attack the striker. 3050
  • The camel's anger is not (directed) against his stick: therefore the camel has got some notion of the power of choice (in Man).
  • Similarly a dog, if you throw a stone at him, will rush at you and become contorted (with fury).
  • If he seize the stone, ’tis because of his anger against you; for you are far off and he has no means of getting at you.
  • Since the animal intelligence is conscious of the power of choice (in Man), do not thou, O human intelligence, hold this (Necessitarian doctrine). Be ashamed!
  • This (power of choice) is manifest, but in his desire for the meal taken before dawn that (greedy) eater shuts his eyes to the light. 3055
  • Since all his desire is for eating bread, he sets his face towards the darkness, saying, ‘It is not (yet) day.’
  • Inasmuch as greed causes the sun to be hidden (from him), what wonder if he turn his back on the convincing proof?
  • A Story illustrating and confirming the view that mankind have the power of choice, and showing that Pre-ordination and Predestination do not annul the power of choice.
  • A thief said to the magistrate, ‘O (my) king, that which I have done was decreed by God.’
  • The magistrate replied, ‘That which I am doing is also decreed by God, O light of my eyes.’
  • If any one take a radish from a (greengrocer's) shop, saying, ‘This is decreed by God, O man of understanding,’ 3060
  • You (the greengrocer) will give him two or three blows on the head with your fist, (as though to say), ‘O detestable man, this (beating) is God's decree that you put it (the radish) back here.’
  • Since this excuse, O trifler, is not accepted (even) by a greengrocer in the case of (stealing) a single vegetable,
  • How are you placing (such) a reliance on this excuse and frequenting the neighbourhood of (such) a dragon?
  • By (making) an excuse like this, O ignoble simpleton, you sacrifice all—your life, your property, and your wife;
  • (For) afterwards every one will pluck your moustache and offer (the same) excuse and make himself out to be acting under compulsion. 3065
  • If ‘the decree of God’ seems to you a proper excuse, then instruct me and give me a canonical decision (on the point);
  • For I have a hundred desires and lusts, (but) my hand is tied by fear and awe (of God).
  • Do me a favour, then: teach me the excuse, untie the knots from my hands and feet!
  • You have chosen a handicraft, (thereby) saying (virtually), ‘I have a (certain) choice and a (certain) thought.’
  • Otherwise, how have you chosen that (particular) handicraft out of all the rest, O master of the house? 3070
  • When the hour comes for the flesh and the passions (to be indulged), there comes to you as great a power of choice as is possessed by twenty men;
  • When your friend deprives you of a farthing of profit, the power to pick a quarrel (with him) is (at once) developed in your soul;