English    Türkçe    فارسی   

2
3106-3155

  • Hell and Paradise are entirely parts of him: he is beyond any thought that you may conceive (of him).
  • All that you may think of is liable to pass away; he that comes not into thought is God.
  • Wherefore (then do they behave with) presumption at the door of this house, if they know who is within the house?
  • Fools venerate the mosque and exert themselves in maltreating them that have the heart (in which God dwells).
  • That (mosque) is phenomenal, this (heart) is real, O asses! The (true) mosque is naught but the hearts of the (spiritual) captains. 3110
  • The mosque that is the inward (consciousness) of the saints is the place of worship for all: God is there.
  • Until the heart of the man of God was grieved, never did God put any generation to shame.
  • They were going to make war on the prophets: they saw the body (of the prophet), they supposed he was a man.
  • In thee are the moral natures of those peoples of yore: how art not thou afraid lest thou be the same (as they)?
  • Forasmuch as all those marks are in thee, and thou art (one) of them, how wilt thou be saved? 3115
  • The story of Júhí and the child who cried lamentably beside his father's bier.
  • A child was crying bitterly and beating his head beside his father's coffin,
  • Saying, “Why, father, where are they taking you to put you under some earth?
  • They are taking you to a narrow and noisome house: there is no carpet in it, nor any mat;
  • No lamp at night and no bread by day; neither smell nor sign of food is there.
  • No door in good repair, no way to the roof; not one neighbour to be (your) refuge. 3120
  • Your eye, which was a place for the people's kisses—how should it go into a blind and murky house?—
  • A pitiless house and narrow room, where neither (your) face will be lasting nor (your) colour.”
  • In this manner was he enumerating the qualities of the house, whilst he wrung tears of blood from his two eyes.
  • Júhí said to his father, “O worthy (sir), by God they are taking this (corpse) to our house.”
  • The father said to Júhí, “Don't be a fool!” “O papa,” said he, “hear the marks (of identity). 3125
  • These marks which he mentioned one by one—our house has them (all), without uncertainty or doubt.
  • (It has) neither mat nor lamp nor food; neither its door is in good repair, nor its court nor its roof.”
  • In this wise the disobedient have a hundred marks upon themselves, but how should they see them?
  • The house, namely, the heart that remains unlighted by the beams of the sun of (Divine) Majesty,
  • Is narrow and dark as the souls of Jews, (being) destitute of (spiritual) savour of the loving King. 3130
  • Neither has the light of the Sun shone into that heart, nor is there (in it any) spaciousness or opening of the door.
  • The tomb is better for thee than a heart like this. Come now, arise from the tomb which is thy heart!
  • Thou art living and born of the living. O gay and winsome one, art not thou choked by this narrow tomb?
  • Thou art the Joseph of the time and the sun of heaven: arise from this pit and prison, and show thy face!
  • Thy Jonah has been cooked in the fish's belly: for his deliverance there is no means but glorification of God. 3135
  • If he had not glorified (God), the fish's belly would have been his gaol and prison until they shall be raised (from the dead).
  • Through glorification he escaped from the body of the fish. What is glorification? The sign (and token) of the Day of Alast.
  • If thou hast forgotten that glorification (rendered to God) by thy spirit, hearken to the glorifications of (uttered by) those Fishes (the prophets and saints).
  • Whosoever hath seen God is of God: whosoever hath seen that Sea is that Fish.
  • This world is a sea, and the body a fish, and the spirit is the Jonah debarred from the light of the dawn. 3140
  • If it be a glorifier (of God), it is delivered from the fish; otherwise, it becomes digested therein and vanishes.
  • The spiritual Fishes abound in this sea (the world), (but) thou seest them not, for thou art blind, O miserable wretch.
  • Those Fishes are darting at thee: open thine eye, that thou mayst see them clearly.
  • If thou art not seeing the Fishes plain—after all, thine ear hath heard their glorification (of God).
  • To practise patience is the soul of thy glorifications: have patience, for that is the true glorification. 3145
  • No glorification hath such a (high) degree (as patience hath); have patience: patience is the key to relief (from pain).
  • Patience is like the bridge Sirát, (with) Paradise on the other side: with every fair (boy) there is an ugly pedagogue.
  • So long as you flee from the pedagogue, there is no meeting (with the boy), because there is no parting of the handsome boy from the pedagogue.
  • What should you know of the (sweet) savour of patience, O you of brittle heart—especially, of patience for the sake of that Beauty of Chigil?
  • A man’s delight is in campaigns (for Islam) and in the glory and pomp (of war); pathico voluptas e pene est. [A man’s delight is in campaigns (for Islam) and in the glory and pomp (of war); a (passive) catamite’s delight is from the penis.] 3150
  • Nihil est religio et precatio ejus nisi penis: his thought has borne him down to the lowest depth. [His religion and his prayer (is) nothing but the penis: his thought has borne him down to the lowest depth. ]
  • Though he rise to the sky, be not afraid of him, for (it is only) in love of lowness (degradation) he has studied (and gained eminence).
  • He gallops his horse towards lowness, albeit he rings the bell (proclaims that he is going) aloft.
  • What is there to fear from the flags of beggars?—for those flags are (but) a means for (getting) a mouthful of bread.
  • Timet puer quidam hominem corpulentum. “Ne timueris,” inquit, “O puer; ego enim vir non sum.” [About a boy’s fear of the corpulent man and how that person said, “Don’t be afraid, O boy, since I am not manly.”]
  • Juvenis robustus puerum deprehendit solum. Palluit timore puer ne forte homo impetum faceret. [A stout youth found a boy alone. The boy turned pale from fear of the man’s intention (to attack).] 3155