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5
1745-1794

  • For they will not make you a prisoner of (incapacitated by) wind and dysentery and crucify you with gripes. 1745
  • (In the case of material food) if you eat (too) little, you will remain hungry like the crow; and if you eat your fill, you will suffer from eructation.
  • If you eat (too) little, (the result will be) ill-temper and anaemia and consumption; if you eat your fill, your body will incur (the penalty of) indigestion.
  • Through (partaking of) the Food of God and the easily digested (delicious) nutriment, ride like a ship on such a (spiritual) ocean.
  • Be patient and persistent in fasting: (be) always expecting the Food of God;
  • For God, who acts with goodness and is long-suffering, bestows (His) gifts (on them that are) in expectation. 1750
  • The full-fed man does not wait expectantly for bread, (wondering) whether his allowance will come soon or late;
  • (But) the foodless man is always asking, “Where (is it)?” and expecting it hungrily and seeking and searching (for it).
  • Unless you are expectant, that bounty of manifold felicity will not come to you.
  • (Practise) expectation, O father, expectation, like a (true) man, for the sake of the dishes from above.
  • Every hungry man obtained some food at last: the sun of (spiritual) fortune shone upon him. 1755
  • When a magnanimous guest will not eat some (inferior) food, the host brings better food,
  • Unless he be a poor host and a mean one. Do not think (so) ill of the generous Provider!
  • Lift up your head like a mountain, O man of authority, in order that the first rays of the Sun may strike upon you;
  • For the lofty firm-based mountain-peak is expecting the sun of dawn.
  • Reply to the simpleton who has said that this world would be delightful if there were no death and that the possessions of the present life would be delightful if they were not fleeting, and (has uttered) other absurdities in the same style.
  • A certain man was saying, “The world would be delightful, were it not for the intervention of death.” 1760
  • The other said, “If there were no death, the tangled world would not be worth a straw.
  • It would be (like) a stack heaped up in the field and neglected and left unthreshed.
  • You have supposed (what is really) death to be life: you have sown your seed in a barren soil.
  • The false (discursive) reason, indeed, sees the reverse (of the truth): it sees life as death, O man of weak judgement.”
  • Do Thou, O God, show (unto us) everything as it really is in this house of illusion. 1765
  • None that has died is filled with grief on account of death; his grief is caused by having too little provision (for the life hereafter);
  • Otherwise (he would not grieve, for) he has come from a dungeon into the open country amidst fortune and pleasure and delight;
  • From this place of mourning and (this) narrow vale (of tribulation) he has been transported to the spacious plain.
  • (’Tis) a seat of truth, not a palace of falsehood; a choice wine, not an intoxication with buttermilk.
  • (’Tis) the seat of truth, and (there) God is beside him: he is delivered from this water and earth of the fire-temple. 1770
  • And if you have not (yet) led the illuminative life, one or two moments (still) remain: die (to self) like a man!
  • Concerning what may be hoped for from the mercy of God most High, who bestows His favours before they have been deserved— and He it is who sends down the rain after they have despaired. And many an estrangement produces intimacy (as its result), and there is many a blessed sin, and many a happiness that comes in a case where penalties are expected, in order that it may be known that God changes their evil deeds to good.
  • In the Traditions (of the Prophet) it is related that on the Day of Resurrection every single body will be commanded to arise.
  • The blast of the trumpet is the command from the Holy God, namely, “O children (of Adam), lift up your heads from the grave.”
  • (Then) every one's soul will return to its body, just as consciousness returns to the (awakened) body at dawn.
  • At daybreak the soul recognises its own body and re-enters its own ruin, like treasures (hidden in waste places). 1775
  • It recognises its own body and goes into it: how should the soul of the goldsmith go to the tailor?
  • The soul of the scholar runs to the scholar, the spirit of the tyrant runs to the tyrant;
  • For the Divine Knowledge has made them (the souls) cognisant (of their bodies), as (happens with) the lamb and the ewe, at the hour of dawn.
  • The foot knows its own shoe in the dark: how should not the soul know its own body, O worshipful one?
  • Dawn is the little resurrection: O seeker of refuge (with God), judge from it what the greater resurrection will be like. 1780
  • Even as the soul flies towards the clay (of its body), the scroll (of every one's good and evil actions) will fly into the left hand or the right.
  • Into his hand will be put the scroll (register) of avarice and liberality, impiety and piety, and all the (good or evil) dispositions that he had formed yesterday.
  • At dawn when he wakes from slumber, that good and evil will come back to him.
  • If he has disciplined his moral nature, the same (purified) nature will present itself to him when he wakes;
  • And if yesterday he was ignorant and wicked and misguided, he will find his left hand black as a letter of mourning; 1785
  • But if yesterday he was (morally) clean and pious and religious, when he wakes he will gain the precious pearl.
  • Our sleep and waking are two witnesses which attest to us the significance of death and resurrection.
  • The lesser resurrection has shown forth the greater resurrection; the lesser death has illumined the greater death.
  • But (in the present life) this scroll (of our good and evil actions) is a fancy and hidden (from our sight), though at the greater resurrection it will be very clearly seen.
  • Here this fancy is hidden, (only) the traces are visible; but there He (God) from this fancy will produce (actual) forms. 1790
  • Behold in the architect the fancy (idea) of a house, (hidden) in his mind like a seed in a piece of earth.
  • That fancy comes forth from within (him), as the earth bears (plants) from the seed (sown) within.
  • Every fancy that makes its abode in the mind will become a (visible) form on the Day of Resurrection,
  • Like the architect's fancy (conceived) in his thought; like the plant (produced) in the earth that takes the seed.