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6
3014-3038

  • A certain dervish, who was in debt, came from the outlying provinces to Tabríz.
  • آن یکی درویش ز اطراف دیار  ** جانب تبریز آمد وامدار 
  • His debts amounted to nine thousand pieces of gold. It happened that in Tabríz was (a man named) Badru’ddín ‘Umar. 3015
  • نه هزارش وام بد از زر مگر  ** بود در تبریز بدرالدین عمر 
  • He was the Police Inspector, (but) at heart he was an ocean (of bounty): every hair's tip of him was a dwelling-place (worthy) of Hátim.
  • محتسب بد او به دل بحر آمده  ** هر سر مویش یکی حاتم‌کده 
  • Hátim, had he been (alive), would have become a beggar to him and laid his head (before him) and made himself (as) the dust of his feet.
  • حاتم ار بودی گدای او شدی  ** سر نهادی خاک پای او شدی 
  • If he had given an ocean of limpid water to a thirsty man, such was his generosity that he would be ashamed of (bestowing) that gift;
  • گر بدادی تشنه را بحری زلال  ** در کرم شرمنده بودی زان نوال 
  • And if he had made a mote (as full of splendour as) a place of sunrise, (even) that would (seem) to his lofty aspiration (to) be an unworthy action.
  • ور بکردی ذره‌ای را مشرقی  ** بودی آن در همتش نالایقی 
  • That poor stranger came (to Tabríz) in hope of him, for to poor strangers he was always (like) a kinsman and relative. 3020
  • بر امید او بیامد آن غریب  ** کو غریبان را بدی خویش و نسیب 
  • That poor stranger was familiar with his door and had paid innumerable debts from his bounty.
  • با درش بود آن غریب آموخته  ** وام بی‌حد از عطایش توخته 
  • In reliance upon that generous (patron) he ran into debt, for the (poor) man was confident of (receiving) his donations.
  • هم به پشت آن کریم او وام کرد  ** که ببخششهاش واثق بود مرد 
  • He had been made reckless by him (the Inspector) and eager to incur debts in hope of (being enriched by) that munificent sea.
  • لا ابالی گشته زو و وام‌جو  ** بر امید قلزم اکرام‌خو 
  • His creditors looked sour, while he was laughing happily, like the rose, on account of that garden (abode) of generous souls.
  • وام‌داران روترش او شادکام  ** هم‌چو گل خندان از آن روض الکرام 
  • (When) his (the Moslem's) back is warmed by the Sun of the Arabs, what does he care for the moustache (vain bluster) of Bú Lahab? 3025
  • گرم شد پشتش ز خورشید عرب  ** چه غمستش از سبال بولهب 
  • When he has a covenant and alliance with the rain-cloud, how should he grudge water to the water-carriers?
  • چونک دارد عهد و پیوند سحاب  ** کی دریغ آید ز سقایانش آب 
  • How should the magicians who were acquainted with God's Hand (Power) bestow (the name of) hands and feet upon these hands and feet?
  • ساحران واقف از دست خدا  ** کی نهند این دست و پا را دست و پا 
  • The fox that is backed by those lions will break the skulls of the leopards with his fist.
  • روبهی که هست زان شیرانش پشت  ** بشکند کله‌ی پلنگان را به مشت 
  • How Ja‘far, may God be well-pleased with him, advanced alone to capture a fortress, and how the king of the fortress consulted (his vizier) as to the means of repelling him, and how the vizier said to the king, “Beware! Surrender (it) and do not be so foolhardy as to hurl thyself upon him; for this man is (Divinely) aided and possesses in his soul a great collectedness (derived) from God,” etc.
  • آمدن جعفر رضی الله عنه به گرفتن قلعه به تنهایی و مشورت کردن ملک آن قلعه در دفع او و گفتن آن وزیر ملک را کی زنهار تسلیم کن و از جهل تهور مکن کی این مرد میدست و از حق جمعیت عظیم دارد در جان خویش الی آخره 
  • When Ja‘far advanced against a certain fortress, the fortress (seemed) to his dry palate (to be no more than) a single gulp.
  • چونک جعفر رفت سوی قلعه‌ای  ** قلعه پیش کام خشکش جرعه‌ای 
  • Riding alone, he charged up to the fortress, so that they (the garrison) locked the fortress-gate in dread. 3030
  • یک سواره تاخت تا قلعه بکر  ** تا در قلعه ببستند از حذر 
  • No one dared to meet him in battle: what stomach have the ship's crew (to contend) with a leviathan?
  • زهره نه کس را که پیش آید به جنگ  ** اهل کشتی را چه زهره با نهنگ 
  • The king turned to his vizier, saying, “What is to be done in this crisis, Counsellor?”
  • روی آورد آن ملک سوی وزیر  ** که چه چاره‌ست اندرین وقت ای مشیر 
  • He replied, “(The only remedy is) that you should bid farewell to pride and cunning, and come to him with sword and shroud.”
  • گفت آنک ترک گویی کبر و فن  ** پیش او آیی به شمشیر و کفن 
  • “Why,” said the king, “is not he a single man (and) alone?” He (the vizier) replied, “Do not look with contempt on the man's loneliness.
  • گفت آخر نه یکی مردیست فرد  ** گفت منگر خوار در فردی مرد 
  • Open your eye: look well at the fortress: it is trembling before him like quicksilver. 3035
  • چشم بگشا قلعه را بنگر نکو  ** هم‌چو سیمابست لرزان پیش او 
  • He sits (alone) on the saddle, (but) his nerve is just as unshaken as if an (army of the) East and West were accompanying him.
  • شسته در زین آن‌چنان محکم‌پیست  ** گوییا شرقی و غربی با ویست 
  • Several men rushed forward, like Fidá’ís (desperate assassins), and flung themselves into combat with him.
  • چند کس هم‌چون فدایی تاختند  ** خویشتن را پیش او انداختند 
  • He felled each of them with a blow of his mace (so that they were hurled) headlong at the feet of his steed.
  • هر یکی را او بگرزی می‌فکند  ** سر نگوسار اندر اقدام سمند