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6
417-441

  • When you have eaten (too much) honey, the fever (caused by it) does not come to (does not attack) another; your day's wages do not come at nightfall to another.
  • In what (work) have you exerted yourself without its returning to you (in some form) What have you sown without the produce of the seed coming (back to you)?
  • Your action that is born of your soul and body clings to your skirt, like your (own) child.
  • In the Unseen World the action is given a form (corresponding to its nature): is not a gallows erected (in retribution) for the act of robbery? 420
  • How should the gallows resemble robbery? But that is the form given (to robbery) by God who knoweth things unseen,
  • Since God inspired the prefect's heart to make such a form for justice' sake.
  • So long as you are wise and just, how should Destiny deal justice and give retribution not in accordance (with your actions)?
  • Since a judge does this in the case of a virtuous man, how (then) will the most Just of these judges give judgement?
  • When you sow barley nothing except barley will grow up: (if) you have borrowed, from whom (but yourself) will you require the security? 425
  • Do not lay (responsibility for) your sin upon any one else: give your mind and ear to this retribution.
  • Lay the sin upon yourself, for you yourself sowed (the seed): make peace with the recompense and justice of God.
  • The cause of (your) affliction is some evil deed: acknowledge that evil is done by you, not by Fate.
  • To look at Fate (alone) makes the eye asquint: it makes the dog be attached to the kennel and lazy.
  • Suspect yourself, O youth; do not suspect the recompense of (Divine) justice. 430
  • Repent like a man, turn your head into the (right) Way, for whoso doeth a mote's weight (of good or evil) shall see it.
  • Do not be duped by the wiles of the carnal soul, for the Divine Sun will not conceal a single mote.
  • These material motes, O profitable man, are visible in the presence of this material sun.
  • (So too) the motes consisting of ideas and thought are manifest in the presence of the Sun of Realities.
  • Story of the fowler who had wrapped himself in grass and drawn over his head a handful of roses and red anemones, like a cap, in order that the birds might think he was grass. The clever bird had some little notion that he was (really) a man, and said (to itself), “I have never seen grass of this shape”; but it did not wholly apprehend (the truth) and was deceived by his guile, because at the first view it had no decisive argument, (whereas) on its second view of the trick it had a decisive argument, namely, cupidity and greed, (which are) especially (potent) at the time of excessive want and poverty. The Prophet—God bless and save him!—has said that poverty is almost infidelity.
  • A bird went into a meadow: there was a trap (set) for the purpose of fowling. 435
  • Some grain had been placed on the ground, and the fowler was ensconced there in ambush.
  • He had wrapped himself in leaves and grass, that the wretched prey might slip off from the path (of safety).
  • A little bird approached him in ignorance (of his disguise): then it hopped round and ran up to the man,
  • And said to him, “Who are you, clad in green in the desert amidst (all) these wild animals?”
  • He replied, “I am an ascetic severed (from mankind): I have become content (to live) here with some grass. 440
  • I adopted asceticism and piety as my religion and practice because I saw before me the appointed end of my life.