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2
2738-2787

  • When the heart becomes whole (is healed) of pain and disease, it will recognize the flavour of falsehood and truth.
  • When Adam's greed for the wheat waxed great, it robbed Adam's heart of health.
  • Then he gave ear to your lies and enticements: he was befooled and drank the killing poison. 2740
  • At that moment he knew not scorpion (kazhdum) from wheat (gandum): discernment flies from one that is drunken with vain desire.
  • The people are drunken with cupidity and desire: hence they are accepting your cheatery.
  • Whoever has rid his nature of vain desire has (thereby) made his (spiritual) eye familiar with the secret.
  • How a cadi complained of the calamity of (holding) the office of cadi, and how his deputy answered him.
  • They installed a cadi, (and meanwhile) he wept. The deputy said, ‘O cadi, what are you weeping for?
  • This is not the time for you to weep and lament: it is the time for you to rejoice and receive felicitations.’ 2745
  • ‘Ah,’ said he, ‘how shall a man without insight pronounce judgement—an ignorant man (decide) between two who know?
  • Those two adversaries are acquainted with their own case: what should the poor cadi know of those two tangles?
  • He is ignorant and unaware of their (real) state: how should he proceed (to give judgment) concerning their lives and property?’
  • He (the deputy) said, ‘The litigants know (the truth of their case) and (nevertheless) are unsound (prejudiced); you are ignorant (of the facts), but you are the luminary of the whole body (of Moslems),
  • Because you have no prejudice to interfere (with your discernment), and that freedom (from prejudice) is light to the eyes; 2750
  • While those two who know are blinded by their self-interest: prejudice has put their knowledge into the grave.
  • Unprejudicedness makes ignorance wise; prejudice makes knowledge perverse and iniquitous.
  • So long as you accept no bribe, you are seeing; when you act covetously, you are blind and enslaved.’
  • I have turned my nature away from vain desire: I have not eaten delicious morsels.
  • My heart, which tastes (and distinguishes), has become bright (like a clear mirror): it really knows truth from falsehood. 2755
  • How Mu‘áwiya—may God be well-pleased with him!— induced Iblís to confess.
  • Why did you awaken me? You are the enemy of wakefulness, O trickster.
  • You are like poppy-seeds: you put every one to sleep. You are like wine: you take away understanding and knowledge.
  • I have impaled you. Come, tell the truth, I know what is true: do not seek evasions.
  • I expect from every person (only) that of which by nature and disposition he is the owner.
  • I do not look for any sugar from vinegar; I do not take the catamite for a soldier. 2760
  • I do not, like (idolatrous) infidels, seek (expect) from an idol that it should be God or even a sign from God.
  • I do not seek the smell of musk from dung; I do not seek dry bricks in river water.
  • From Satan, who is other (than good), I do not look for this— that he should awaken me with good (intent).”
  • How Iblís told truly his hidden thought to Mu‘áwiya—may God be well-pleased with him!
  • Iblís spoke many words of deceit and treachery, (but) the Amír hearkened not to him and strove (against him) and showed fortitude.
  • (At length), with the bitterest pangs he (Iblís) said: “O such-and-such, know that I awakened you for the purpose 2765
  • That you might join the congregation (of Moslems) in praying after the Prophet of high estate.
  • If the time of prayers had passed, this world would have become dark to you and without a gleam of light;
  • (And then) from disappointment and grief tears would have flowed from your two eyes in the fashion of (water from) water-skins,
  • (Because) every one has delight in some act of devotion and consequently cannot bear to miss it (even) for a short while.
  • That disappointment and grief would have been (as) a hundred prayers: what is (ritual) prayer in comparison with the (spiritual) glow of humble supplication?” 2770
  • The excellence of the remorse felt by one who was sincere (in his devotion) for having missed the congregational prayers.
  • A certain man was going into the mosque (when) the people were coming out of the mosque.
  • He began to ask (one of them), saying, “What ails the congregation that they are coming out of the mosque (so) soon?”
  • That person said to him, “The Prophet has prayed with the congregation and finished (his) communion.
  • How art thou going in, O foolish man, when the Prophet has given the blessing?”
  • He cried, “Ah!” and smoke issued from that (burning) sigh: his sigh was giving forth the smell of blood from his heart. 2775
  • A certain man said, “Give (me) that sigh and may this (ritual) prayer of mine be (bestowed) on thee as a gift!”
  • He answered, “I give the sigh and accept the prayers.” He (the other) took that sigh with a hundred yearnings (towards God).
  • At night, whilst (he was) asleep, a Voice said to him, “Thou hast bought the Water of Life and salvation.
  • In honour of this choice and this appropriation the prayers of all the people have been accepted.”
  • Conclusion of the confession made by Iblís to Mu‘áwiya of his deceit.
  • Then ‘Azázíl said to him, “O noble Amír, I must lay my deceit before (you). 2780
  • If you had missed the prayers, you would then from heartache have uttered sighs and lamentations,
  • And that regret and that lamentation and that (sorrowful) yearning would have exceeded (in value) two hundred litanies and prayers.
  • I awakened you in fear lest such a sigh might burn the veil (of formality),
  • In order that such a sigh should not be yours; in order that you should not have any way to it.
  • I am envious: from envy I acted thus. I am the enemy: my (proper) work is deceit and malice.” 2785
  • He (Mu‘áwiya) said, “Now you have told the truth, you are veracious. This (deceit) comes (naturally) from you: to this you are adapted.
  • You are a spider, you have flies as your prey; O cur, I am not a fly, (so) do not worry.