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5
1147-1196

  • Go from the world of death towards the (eternal) provision: since everlastingness is possible, do not be perishing’—
  • They will seek (to shed) thy blood and (take) thy life, not in zeal for religion and (spiritual and moral) excellence.
  • The reason why the vulgar are at enmity with, and live in estrangement from, the saints of God who call them unto God and the Water of Life everlasting.
  • Nay, but on account of their sticking to house and goods ’tis bitter (hateful) to them to hear this exposition (given by the prophets).
  • (Suppose) a rag is stuck fast upon the donkey's sore: when you wish to tear it off, bit by bit, 1150
  • The donkey, because of the pain (inflicted on him), will certainly kick: happy the man who abstained from (touching) him!—
  • Especially (when there are) fifty sores, and a soaked rag stuck on the top of them in every case.
  • House and goods are like the rag, and this greed (of thine) is the sore: the greater the greed, the greater the sore.
  • The wilderness alone is the house and goods of the owl: he (the owl) will not listen to descriptions of Baghdád and Tabas.
  • If a royal falcon come from the road and bring to these owls a hundred reports of the King, 1155
  • (With) a full account of the imperial city and the orchards and the rivers—then a hundred enemies will jeer at him,
  • Saying, ‘What has the falcon brought? An old story. He is weaving words of vanity and idle brag.’
  • (’Tis) they (that) are old and rotten unto everlasting; otherwise (they would know that) that breath (of prophetic inspiration) makes the old new.
  • It gives life to the old dead (spirits): it gives the crown of reason and the light of faith.
  • Do not steal thy heart away from the spirit-bestowing heart-ravisher, for he will mount thee on the back of Rakhsh. 1160
  • Do not steal thy head away from the crown-giving one whose head is exalted, for he will untie a hundred knots from the foot of thy heart.
  • Whom shall I tell? Where in the village is any (spiritually) living one? Where is any one that runs towards the Water of Life?
  • Thou art fleeing from Love because of a single humiliation: what dost thou know of Love except the name?
  • Love hath a hundred disdains and prides: Love is gained by means of a hundred blandishments.
  • Since Love is loyal, it purchases (desires) him that is loyal: it does not look at a disloyal comrade. 1165
  • Man resembles a tree, and the root is the covenant (with God): the root must be cherished with all one's might.
  • A corrupt (infirm) covenant is a rotten root and is cut off (deprived) of fruit and grace.
  • Although the boughs and leaves of the date-palm are green, greenness is no benefit (when conjoined) with corruption of the root;
  • And if it (the bough) have no green leaves, while it hath a (good) root, at the last a hundred leaves will put forth their hands.
  • Be not duped by his (the learned man's) knowledge; seek (to know whether he keeps) the covenant: knowledge is like a husk, and his covenant is its kernel. 1170
  • Explaining that when the evil-doer becomes settled in evil-doing and sees the effect of the (spiritual) fortune of the doers of righteousness, he from envy becomes a devil and preventer of good, like Satan; for he whose stack is burnt desires that all (others) should have their stacks burnt: ‘hast thou seen him who forbids a servant (of God) when he performs the (ritual) prayer?’
  • When you see that the loyal have profited, thereat you become envious, like a devil.
  • Whenever a man's temperament and constitution is feeble, he does not wish any one to be sound in body.
  • If you dislike (to have) the jealousy of Iblís, come (away) from the door of pretension (and advance) to the portal of loyalty.
  • When thou hast not loyalty, at least do not talk (presumptuously), for words are for the most part self-assertion—‘we’ and ‘I.’
  • These words, (whilst they stay) in the breast, are an income consisting of (spiritual) kernels: in silence the spiritual kernel grows a hundredfold. 1175
  • When it (the word) comes on to the tongue, the kernel is expended: refrain from expending, in order that the goodly kernel may remain (with you).
  • The man who speaks little hath strong thoughts: when the husk, namely speech, becomes excessive, the kernel goes.
  • (When) the rind is excessive, the kernel is thin: the rind becomes thin when it (the kernel) becomes perfect and goodly.
  • Look at these three (fruits) when they have passed beyond immaturity: the walnut and the almond and the pistachio.
  • Whoever disobeys (God) becomes a devil, for he becomes envious of the fortune of the righteous. 1180
  • When you have acted loyally in (keeping) your covenant with God, God will graciously keep His covenant with you.
  • You have shut your eyes to keeping faith with God, you have not hearkened to (the words) remember Me, I will remember you.
  • Give ear, listen to (the words) keep My covenant, in order that (the words) I will keep your covenant may come from the Friend.
  • What is our covenant and loan, O sorrowful one? (It is) like sowing a dry seed in the earth.
  • From that (sowing) neither do glory and grandeur accrue to the earth, nor riches to the owner of the earth. 1185
  • (’Tis nothing) except an indication, as though to say, ‘I need this kind (of produce), the origin whereof Thou didst create from non-existence.
  • I ate, and (now) I bring the seed as a token, begging Thee to send to us such bounty (as before).’
  • Abandon, then, the dry (verbal) prayer, O fortunate one; for the tree demands (presupposes) the scattering of seed.
  • (But) if you have no seed, on account of that prayer God will bestow on you a palm-tree, saying, ‘How well did he labour!’
  • Like Mary: she had (heartfelt) pain, but no seed: an artful One made green that (withered) palm-tree (for her sake). 1190
  • Because that noble Lady was loyal (to God), God gave unto her a hundred desires without desire on her part.
  • The company who have been loyal are given superiority over all (other) sorts (of men).
  • Seas and mountains are made subject to them; the four elements also are the slaves of that class.
  • This (miraculous power) is only a favour (conferred on them) for a sign, to the end that the disbelievers may see it plainly.
  • Those hidden graces of theirs, which come not into (the perception of) the senses or into description— 1195
  • Those are the (real) matter: those are enduring for ever, they are neither cut off nor reclaimed.
  • Prayer.