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699-748

  • Thou hast borne them away from kindred and relatives and (their own) nature, Thou hast made every fair thing foul in his (such a one's) eyes.
  • He spurns all that is perceived by the senses, and leans for support on that which is invisible. 700
  • His love is manifest and his Beloved is hidden: the Friend is outside (of the world), (but) His fascination is in the world.
  • Give up this (belief). Loves (felt) for what is endued with form have not as their object the (outward) form or the lady's face.
  • That which is the object of love is not the form, whether it be love for (the things of) this world or yonder world.
  • That which you have come to love for its form—why have you abandoned it after the spirit has fled?
  • Its form is still there: whence (then) this satiety (disgust)? O lover, inquire who your beloved (really) is. 705
  • If the beloved is that which the senses perceive, every one that has senses would be in love (with it).
  • Inasmuch as constancy is increased by that (spiritual) love, how is constancy altered (impaired) by the (decay of the material) form?
  • The sunbeam shone upon the wall: the wall received a borrowed splendour.
  • Why set your heart on a piece of turf, O simple man? Seek out the source which shines perpetually.
  • You who are in love with your intellect, deeming yourself superior to worshippers of form, 710
  • That (intellect) is a beam of (Universal) Intellect (cast) on your sense-perception; regard it as borrowed gold on your copper.
  • Beauty in humankind is like gilding; else, how did your sweetheart become (as ugly as) an old ass?
  • She was like an angel, she became like a demon, for that loveliness in her was a borrowed (transient) thing.
  • Little by little they take away that beauty: little by little the sapling withers.
  • Go, recite (the text) to whom so We grant length of days, him We cause to decline. Seek the heart (spirit), set not thy heart on bones; 715
  • For that beauty of the heart is the lasting beauty: its fortune gives to drink of the Water of Life.
  • Truly it is both the water and the giver of drink and the drunken: all three become one when your talisman is shattered.
  • That oneness you cannot know by reasoning. Do service (to God) and refrain from foolish gabble, O undiscerning man!
  • Your reality is the form and that which is borrowed: you rejoice in what is relative and (secondary like) rhyme.
  • Reality is that which seizes (enraptures) you and makes you independent of form. 720
  • Reality is not that which makes blind and deaf and causes a man to be more in love with form.
  • The portion of the blind is the fancy that increases pain; the share of the (spiritual) eye is these fancies (ideas) of dying to self (faná).
  • The blind are a mine (full) of the letter of the Qur’án: they do not see the ass, and (only) cling to the pack-saddle.
  • Since you have sight, go after the ass which has jumped (away from you): how long (will you persist in) stitching the saddle, O saddle-worshipper?
  • When the ass is there, the saddle will certainly be yours: bread does not fail when you have the (vital) spirit. 725
  • (On) the back of the ass is shop and wealth and gain; the pearl of your heart is the stock (which provides wealth) for a hundred bodies.
  • Mount the ass bare-backed, O busybody: did not the Prophet ride the ass bare-backed?
  • The Prophet rode (his beast) bare-backed; and the Prophet, it is said, journeyed on foot.
  • The ass, your fleshly soul, has gone off; tie it to a peg. How long will it run away from work and burden, how long?
  • It must bear the burden of patience and thanksgiving, whether for a hundred years or for thirty or twenty. 730
  • None that is laden supported another's load; none reaped until he sowed something.
  • ’Tis a raw (absurd) hope; eat not what is raw, O son: eating raw brings illness to men.
  • (Do not say to yourself), “So-and-so suddenly found a treasure; I would like the same: neither work nor shop (for me)!”
  • That (discovery of treasure) is Fortune's doing (a piece of luck), and moreover it is rare: one must earn a living so long as the body is able.
  • How does earning a livelihood prevent the (discovery of) treasure? Do not retire from work: that (treasure), indeed, is (following) behind (the work). 735
  • See that you are not made captive by “if,” saying, “If I had done this or the other (thing),”
  • For the sincere Prophet forbade (people) to say “if,” and said, “That is from hypocrisy”;
  • For the hypocrite died in saying “if,” and from saying “if” he won nothing but remorse.
  • Parable.
  • A certain stranger was hastily seeking a house: a friend took him to a house in ruins.
  • He said (to the stranger), “If this (house) had a roof, it would be a home for you beside me. 740
  • Your family too would be comfortable, if it had another room in it.”
  • “Yes,” said he, “it is nice (to be) beside friends, but my dear soul, one cannot lodge in ‘if’.”
  • All the world are seekers of happiness, and on account of a false happiness they are in the fire.
  • Old and young have become gold-seekers, but the common eye does not distinguish alloy from gold.
  • The pure (gold) shot a beam on the alloy: see that you choose not the gold on the ground of (mere) opinion, without a touchstone. 745
  • If you have a touchstone, choose; otherwise, go, devote yourself to him that knows (the difference).
  • Either you must have a touchstone within your own soul, or if you know not the Way, do not go forward alone.
  • The cry of the ghouls is the cry of an acquaintance—an acquaintance who would lure you to perdition.