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6
941-965

  • Fortune is strutting and (proudly) trailing her skirt and beating the drums (as a signal) to break vows of repentance.
  • Once more the flood-water has swept repentance away: the opportunity has arrived, the watchman is overcome by sleep.
  • Every toper has drunk the wine and is intoxicated: to-night we will pawn all our belongings.
  • From (drinking) the ruby wine of the life-increasing Spirit we are ruby within ruby within ruby.
  • Once more the assembly-place has become flourishing and heart-illuminating: arise and burn rue-seed to keep off the evil eye. 945
  • The cries of the joyous drunken (lovers) are coming to me: O Beloved, I want it (to continue) like this unto everlasting.
  • Lo, a new moon (hilálí) has been united with a Bilál: the blows of the (scourge of) thorns have become (delightful) to him (as) roses and pomegranate-flowers.
  • (Bilál said), “If my body is (full of holes, like) a sieve from the blows of the (scourge of) thorns, (yet) my soul and body are a rose-garden of felicity.
  • My body is exposed to the blows of the Jew's (scourge of) thorns, (but) my spirit is intoxicated and enravished by that Loving One.
  • The scent of a (beloved) Soul is coming towards my soul: the scent of my loving Friend is coming to me.” 950
  • (When) Mustafá (Mohammed) came (to earth) from the Ascension, (he pronounced) on his Bilál (the blessing), “How dear to me (art thou), how dear!”
  • On hearing this (ecstatic utterance) from Bilál, in whose speech there was no guile, the Siddíq (Abú Bakr) washed his hands of urging him to repent.
  • How the Siddíq (Abú Bakr), may God be pleased with him, recalled (to his mind) what had happened to Bilál, may God be pleased with him, and his maltreatment by the Jews and his crying “One! One!” and the Jews becoming more incensed (against him); and how he told the story of the affair to Mustafá (Mohammed), on whom be peace, and consulted him as to buying him (Bilál) from the Jews.
  • Afterwards the Siddíq related to Mustafá the plight of the faithful Bilál,
  • Saying, “That heaven-surveying nimble (spirit) of blessed wing is at this time in love (with thee) and in thy net.
  • The Sultan's falcon is tormented by those owls; that grand treasure is buried in filth. 955
  • The owls are doing violence to the falcon: they are tearing out his plumes and feathers though he is innocent.
  • His only crime is this, that he is a falcon: after all, what is Joseph's crime except (that he had) beauty?
  • The owl's origin and existence is (in) the wilderness; that is the cause of their Jewish (fanatical) anger against the falcon.
  • (They say), ‘Why art thou (always) making mention of yonder land, or of the palace and wrist of the Emperor?
  • Thou art behaving impudently in the owls’ village, thou art introducing dissension and disturbance (amongst us). 960
  • Our dwelling-place, which is the envy of the empyrean, thou callest a wilderness and givest it the name of “vile.”
  • Thou hast employed hypocrisy in order that our owls may make thee (their) king and leader.
  • Thou art instilling into them a vain imagination and a mad fancy: thou art giving the name “ruin” to this Paradise.
  • We will beat thy head so long, O (bird) of evil qualities, that thou wilt renounce this hypocrisy and nonsense.’
  • They (the Jews) are crucifying him (Bilál), his face to the East, and flogging his naked body with a thorny branch. 965