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2
1055-1104

  • How should he please his heart with fair designs who sees the design of God (prevailing) over them? 1055
  • He is within the snare (of God) and is laying a snare: by your life, neither that (snare) will escape (destruction) nor will this (man).
  • Though (in the meanwhile) a hundred herbs grow and fade, there will grow up at last that which God has sown.
  • He (the cunning man) sowed new seed over the first seed; (but) this second (seed) is passing away, and (only) the first is sound (and enduring).
  • The first seed is perfect and choice; the second seed is corrupt and rotten.
  • Cast away this contrivance of yours before the Beloved— though your contrivance indeed is of His contriving. 1060
  • That which God has raised (and that alone) has use: what He has at first sown at last grows.
  • Whatever you sow, sow for His sake, inasmuch as you are the Beloved's captive, O lover.
  • Do not hang about the thievish fleshly soul and its work: whatsoever is not God's work is naught, naught.
  • (Sow the good seed) ere the Day of Resurrection shall appear and the night-thief be shamed before Him whose is the Kingdom,
  • With the goods stolen by his contrivance and craft (still) remaining on his neck at the Day of Judgement. 1065
  • Hundreds of thousands of minds may jump together (conspire) to lay a snare other than His snare;
  • (But) they only find their snare more grievous (to themselves), (for) how can straws show any power (of resistance) against the wind?
  • If you say, “What was the profit of (our created) being?” (I reply), “There is profit in your question, O contumacious one.
  • If this question of yours has no profit, why should we listen to it in vain and fruitlessly?
  • And if there are many profits in your question, then why, pray, is the world unprofitable? 1070
  • And (again), if from one standpoint the world is unprofitable, from other standpoints it is advantageous.
  • If your profit is no profit to me, (yet) since it is a profit to you, do not withdraw from it.”
  • The beauty of Joseph profited a (whole) world (of people), though to his brethren it was a vain superfluity.
  • The melodies of David were so dear (to the faithful), but to the interdicted (unbeliever) they were (no more than) the noise of wood.
  • The water of the Nile was superior to the Water of Life, but to the interdicted and unbelieving it was blood. 1075
  • To the true believer martyrdom is life; to the hypocrite it is death and corruption.
  • Tell (me), what single blessing is there in the world, from which some group of people is not excluded?
  • What profit have the ox and the ass in sugar? Every soul has a different food;
  • But if that food is accidental to it (and not according to its real nature), then admonition is the (proper) correction for it.
  • As (in the case of) one who from disease has become fond of (eating) clay— though he may suppose that that (clay) is indeed his (natural) food, 1080
  • He has (in reality) forgotten his original food and has betaken himself to the food of disease.
  • Having given up honey, he has eaten poison; he has made the food of disease (to be his nourishment) as (though it were) fat.
  • Man's original food is the Light of God: animal food is improper for him;
  • But, in consequence of disease, his mind has fallen into this (delusion), that day and night he should eat of this water and clay.
  • (He is) pale-faced, weak-footed, faint-hearted—where is the food of by Heaven which hath (starry) tracks? 1085
  • That is the food of the chosen ones of the (Divine) sovereignty; the eating thereof is (done) without throat or instrument.
  • The food of the (spiritual) sun is (derived) from the light of the (celestial) Throne; (the food that belongs) to the envious and devilish is (derived) from the smoke of the (terrestrial) carpet.
  • God said concerning the martyrs, they are (alive with their Lord) receiving sustenance. For that food there was neither mouth nor dish.
  • The heart is eating a (particular) food from every single companion; the heart is getting a (particular) excellence from every single (piece of) knowledge.
  • Every human being's (outer) form is like a cup; (only) the (spiritual) eye is a percipient of his (or her) reality. 1090
  • You eat (receive) something from meeting with any one, and you carry away something from conjunction with any associate.
  • When planet comes into conjunction with planet, the effect appropriate to them both is assuredly produced,
  • As (for example) the conjunction of man and woman brings to birth the human being, and (as) sparks arise from the conjunction of stone and iron;
  • And (as) from the conjunction of earth with rains (there are produced) fruits and greenery and sweet herbs;
  • And (as) from the conjunction of green things (plants and verdant spots) with man (there is produced) joy of heart and carelessness and happiness; 1095
  • And (as) from the conjunction of happiness with our souls are born our goodness and beneficence.
  • Our bodies become capable of eating and drinking when our desire for recreation (in the open air) is satisfied.
  • Redness of countenance is (derived) from the conjunction of blood (with the face); blood is (derived) from the beautiful rose-coloured sun.
  • Redness is the best of (all) colours, and that is (born) of the sun and is arriving (to us) from it.
  • Every land that has been conjoined with Saturn has become nitrous and is not the place for sowing. 1100
  • Through concurrence power comes into action, as (in the case of) the conjunction of the Devil with hypocrites.
  • These spiritual truths without (possessing) any (worldly) pomp and grandeur, have pomp and grandeur from the Ninth Heaven.
  • The pomp and grandeur belonging to (the world of) creation is a borrowed (adventitious) thing; the pomp and grandeur belonging to the (world of) Command is an essential thing.
  • For the sake of (earthly) pomp and grandeur they endure abasement; in the hope of glory they are happy in (their) abasement.