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1
1207-1256

  • Therefore the tongue of mutual understanding is different indeed: to be one in heart is better than to be one in tongue.
  • Without speech and without sign or scroll, hundreds of thousands of interpreters arise from the heart.
  • The birds, all and each, their secrets of skill and knowledge and practice
  • Were revealing, one by one, to Solomon, and were praising themselves by way of submitting a request (for his consideration), 1210
  • Not from pride and self-conceit, (but) in order that he might give them access to him.
  • When a captive wants a lord (to buy him as a slave), he offers a preface (summary account) of his talent;
  • (But) when he is ashamed (disgusted) at his buying him, he makes himself out to be sick and deaf and palsied and lame.
  • The turn came for the hoopoe and his craft and the explanation of his skill and thoughtfulness.
  • “O king,” said he, “I will declare (only) one talent, which is an inferior one; ’tis better to speak briefly.” 1215
  • “Tell on,” said Solomon; “let me hear what talent that is.” The hoopoe said, “At the time when I am at the zenith,
  • I gaze from the zenith with the eye of certainty and I see the water at the bottom of the earth,
  • So that (I know) where it is and what is its depth; what its colour is, whence it gushes forth—from clay or from rock.
  • O Solomon, for the sake of thine army's camping-place keep this wise one (beside thee) on thy expeditions.”
  • Then said Solomon, “O good companion in waterless far-stretching wastes!” 1220
  • How the crow impugned the claim of the hoopoe.
  • When the crow heard (this), from envy he came and said to Solomon, “He has spoken false and ill.
  • It is not respectful to speak in the king's presence, in particular (to utter) lying and absurd self-praise.
  • If he had always had this (keen) sight, how would not he have seen the snare beneath a handful of earth?
  • How would he have been caught in the snare? How would he have gone into the cage willy-nilly?”
  • Then Solomon said: “O hoopoe, is it right that these dregs have risen from thee at the first cup? 1225
  • O thou who hast drunk buttermilk, how dost thou pretend intoxication and brag in my presence and tell lies besides?”
  • The hoopoe's answer to the attack of the crow.
  • He said, “O king, for God's sake do not listen to the enemy's words against me, bare beggar as I am.
  • If my claim is (made) with falsehood, I lay my head (before thee): sever this neck of mine.
  • The crow, who disbelieves in the (absolute) authority of the Divine destiny, is an infidel, though he have thousands of wits.
  • Whilst there is in you a single k (derived) from the káfirán (infidels), you are the seat of stench and lust, velut rima femoris. [Whilst there is in you a single k (derived) from the káfirán (infidels), you are the seat of stench and lust, like the slit (vulva) between the thighs (of a woman).] 1230
  • I see the snare (when I am) in the air, if the Divine destiny do not muffle the eye of my intelligence.
  • When the Divine destiny comes, wisdom goes to sleep, the moon becomes black, the sun is stopped (from shining).
  • How is this disposal (of things) by the Divine destiny (to be called) singular? Know that it is by the Divine destiny that he (the infidel) disbelieves in the Divine destiny.
  • The story of Adam, on whom be peace, and how the Divine destiny sealed up his sight so that he failed to observe the plain meaning of the prohibition and to refrain from interpreting it.
  • The father of mankind, who is the lord of He (God) taught (Adam) the Names, hath hundreds of thousands of sciences in every vein.
  • To his soul accrued (knowledge of) the name of every thing, even as that thing exists (in its real nature) unto the end (of the world). 1235
  • No title that he gave became changed: that one whom he called ‘brisk’ did not become ‘lazy.’
  • Whoso is (to be) a believer at the last, he saw at the first; whoso is (to be) an infidel at the last, to him it became manifest.
  • Do thou hear the name of every thing from the knower: hear the inmost meaning of the mystery of He taught the Names.
  • With us, the name of every thing is its outward (appearance); with the Creator, the name of every thing is its inward (reality).
  • In the eyes of Moses the name of his rod was ‘staff’; in the eyes of the Creator its name was ‘dragon.’ 1240
  • Here the name of ‘Umar was ‘idolater,’ but in Alast. his name was ‘believer.’
  • That of which the name, with us, was ‘seed’ was, in the sight of God, this figure (of thee) who art (now) with me.
  • This ‘seed’ was a form (idea) in non-existence (potentiality), existent with God, neither more nor less (than the form in which it appeared externally).
  • In brief, that which is our end is really our name with God.
  • He bestows on a man a name according to his final state, not according to that (state) to which He gives the name of ‘a loan.’ 1245
  • Inasmuch as the eye of Adam saw by means of the Pure Light, the soul and inmost sense of the names became evident to him.
  • Since the angels perceived in him the rays of God, they fell in worship and hastened to do homage.
  • If until the Resurrection I reckon up the praise of this Adam whose name I am celebrating, I fall short (of what is due).
  • All this he knew; (yet) when the Divine destiny came, he was at fault in the knowledge of a single prohibition,
  • Wondering whether the prohibition was for the purpose of making unlawful (the thing prohibited), or whether it admitted of an interpretation and was a cause of perplexity. 1250
  • When (the view that it admitted of) interpretation prevailed in his mind, his nature hastened in bewilderment towards the wheat.
  • When the thorn went into the foot of the gardener (Adam), the thief (Satan) found an opportunity and quickly carried off the goods.
  • As soon as he escaped from bewilderment, he returned into the (right) road; (then) he saw that the thief had carried off the wares from the shop.
  • He cried, ‘O Lord, we have done wrong,’ and ‘Alas,’ that is to say, ‘darkness came and the way was lost.’
  • Divine destiny, then, is a cloud that covers the sun: thereby lions and dragons become as mice. 1255
  • If I (the hoopoe) do not see a snare in the hour of Divine ordainment, ’tis not I alone who am ignorant in the course of Divine ordainment.”