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4
2344-2393

  • How should this (soil) become a rose-garden or cornfield till this soil becomes ugly and ruined?
  • How should it become orchards and crops and leaves and fruit till its arrangement is turned upside down?’ 2345
  • Till you pierce the purulent ulcer with a lancet, how will it become well and how will you become healthy?
  • Till he (the physician) cleanse your (corrupt) humours with medicine, how will the indisposition be removed? How will a cure be effected?
  • When a tailor cuts (the cloth for) a garment piece by piece, will any one strike that expert tailor,
  • Saying, ‘Why have you torn this choice satin? What can I do with a torn (garment)?’
  • Whenever they (the builders) put an old building in good repair, do not they first ruin the old one? 2350
  • Likewise the carpenter, the iron-smith and the butcher—with them (too) there is destruction before restorations.
  • The pounding of myrobalan and bastard myrobalan—by reason of that destruction they become the means of restoring the body (to health).
  • Until you crush wheat in the mill, how will our table be garnished with it?
  • (The obligation of gratitude for) that bread and salt (of thine) demanded that I should deliver thee, O fish, from the net.
  • If thou accept the counsel of Moses, thou wilt escape from such an evil infinite net. 2355
  • Inasmuch as thou hast made thyself the slave of sensuality, thou hast made a petty worm into a dragon.
  • I have brought a dragon for (thy) dragon, that I may correct (thy dragon's) breath by (my dragon's) breath,
  • So that the breath of that one may be defeated by the breath of this one, and that my serpent may destroy that dragon (of thine).
  • If thou submittest, thou art freed from two serpents; otherwise, it (thy dragon) will bring thy spirit to utter perdition.”
  • He (Pharaoh) said, “In truth, thou art an exceedingly cunning sorcerer, for by craft thou hast introduced duality (disunion) here. 2360
  • Thou hast made the unanimous people into two factions: sorcery makes fissures in rock and mountain.”
  • He (Moses) said, “I am submerged in the message of God: who (ever) saw sorcery together with the name of God?
  • The substance of sorcery is forgetfulness (of God) and unbelief: the spirit of Moses is the flaming torch of the (true) religion.
  • How do I resemble sorcerers, O impudent one?—for the Messiah (Jesus) is becoming jealous of my (life-giving) breath.
  • How do I resemble sorcerers, O polluted one?—for the (Revealed) Books are receiving light from my spirit. 2365
  • Since thou art soaring on the wings of sensuality, inevitably thou bearest (in thy heart) that (ill) thought against me.”
  • Every one whose actions are those of wild beasts hath ill thoughts against the noble.
  • Since thou art a part of the world, howsoever thou art thou deemest all to be of the same description as thyself, misguided man.
  • If thou whirl round and thy head whirl round, thy (organ of) sight sees the house whirling round;
  • And if thou embark in a ship moving on the sea, thou deemest the seashore to be running (along). 2370
  • If thou art narrow (oppressed) at heart from (being engaged in) combat, thou deemest the whole atmosphere of the world to be narrow;
  • And if thou art happy as thy friends would desire, this world seems to thee like a garden of roses.
  • How many a one has gone as far as Syria and ‘Iráq and has seen nothing but unbelief and hypocrisy;
  • And how many a one has gone as far as India and Hirá (Herát) and seen nothing but selling and buying;
  • And how many a one has gone as far as Turkistán and China and seen nothing but deceit and hidden guile! 2375
  • Since he has no object of perception save colour and perfume (external phenomena), let him seek (through) all the climes, (he will see nothing spiritual).
  • (If) a cow come suddenly into Baghdád and pass from this side (of the city) to that (farther) side,
  • Of all (its) pleasures and joys and delights she will see nothing but the rind of a water-melon.
  • (If) straw or hay has fallen on the road, (it is) suitable to his (such a one's) bovine or asinine disposition.
  • (Hanging) dry on the nail of (his bestial) nature, like strips of meat (exposed to the sun), his spirit, bound with (the cords of) secondary causes, does not grow; 2380
  • But the spacious realm where means and causes are torn to shreds (transcended) is the earth of God, O most honourable sire.
  • It is ever changing, like a (fleeting) picture: the spirit beholds in clairvoyance a world (appearing) anew and anew.
  • (Everything), though it be Paradise and the rivers of Eden, becomes ugly when it is congealed (fixed permanently) in one aspect.
  • Explaining that every percipient sense of man has different objects of perception too, of which the other senses are ignorant, as (for example) every skilled craftsman is unfamiliar with the work of those skilled in other crafts; and its (another sense's) ignorance of that which is not its business does not prove that those objects of perception are non-existent. Although it virtually denies them, yet here in this place we only mean by its ‘denial’ its ignorance.
  • Thy perception is the measure of thy vision of the world: thy impure senses are the veil (which prevents thee from having sight) of the pure (holy men).
  • Wash thy senses for a while with the water of clairvoyance: know that the garment-washing of the Súfís is like this. 2385
  • When thou hast become purified, the spirit of the pure ones will tear off the veil and attach itself to thee.
  • If the whole world be (filled with) light and (radiant) forms, (only) the eye would be aware of that loveliness.
  • (Suppose) thou hast shut the eye and art bringing forward the ear that thou mayst show unto it the locks and face of an adorable beauty,
  • The ear will say, “I do not attend to the (visible) form: if the form utter a cry, I will hearken.
  • I am skilled, but (only) in my own art: my art is (the perception of) a (spoken) word or sound, no more.” 2390
  • (And if thou say), “Hey, nose, come and see this beauteous one,” the nose is not fit for this purpose.
  • “If there be any musk or rose-water, I will smell it: this is my art and science and knowledge.
  • How should I see the face of that silver-shanked one? Take heed, do not lay (on me) as a task that which cannot be done.”