English    Türkçe    فارسی   

5
1785-1834

  • 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.
  • My object in (speaking of) both these resurrections is (to tell) a story; (yet) in its exposition there is a moral for the true believers. 1795
  • When the sun of the Resurrection rises, foul and fair (alike) will leap up hastily from the grave.
  • They will be running to the Díwán (Chancery) of the (Divine) Decree: the good and bad coin will go into the crucible—
  • The good coin joyously and with great delight; the false coin in anguish and melting (with terror).
  • At every moment the (Divine) probations will be arriving (coming into action): the thoughts concealed in the heart will be appearing in the body,
  • As when the water and oil in a lamp are exposed to view, or like a piece of earth from which grow up the (seeds) deposited within. 1800
  • From onion, leek, and poppy the hand of Spring reveals the secret of Winter—
  • One (party) fresh and green, saying, “We are the devout”; and the other drooping their heads like the violet,
  • Their eyes starting out (of the sockets) from (dread of) the danger, and streaming like ten fountains from fear of the appointed end;
  • Their eyes remaining in (fearful) expectation, lest the scroll (of their deeds) come (to them) from the left side;
  • Their eyes rolling to right and left, because the fortune of the scroll (that comes) from the right (side) is not easy (to win). 1805
  • (Then) there comes into the hand of (such) a servant (of God) a scroll headed with black and cram-full of crime and wickedness;
  • Containing not a single good deed or act of saving grace— nothing but wounds inflicted on the hearts of the saintly;
  • Filled from top to bottom with foulness and sin, with mockery and jeering at the followers of the Way,
  • (With all) his rascalities and thieveries and Pharaoh-like expressions of self-glorification.
  • When that odious man reads his scroll, he knows that he is (virtually) on the road to prison. 1810
  • Then he sets out, like robbers going to the gallows; his crime manifest, and the way (possibility) of excusing himself barred.
  • The thousands of bad pleas and (false) speeches (made during his life) have become like an evil nail (seal) on his mouth.
  • The stolen property has been discovered on his person and in his house: his (plausible) story has vanished.
  • He sets out, therefore, to the prison of Hell; for thorns have no means of escape from (being burnt in) the fire.
  • The angels that (formerly) were hidden, (whilst they walked) as custodians before and behind (him), have (now) become visible like policemen. 1815
  • They take him along, prodding him with the goad and saying, “Begone, O dog, to thy own kennels!”
  • He drags his feet (lingers) on every road, that perchance he may escape from the pit (of Hell).
  • He stands expectantly, keeping silence and turning his face backward in a (fervent) hope,
  • Pouring tears like autumn rain. A mere hope—what has he except that?
  • (So) at every moment he is looking back and turning his face to the Holy Court (on high). 1820
  • Then from God in the realm of light comes the command— “Say ye to him, ‘O ne’er-do-well destitute (of merit),
  • What art thou expecting, O mine of mischief? Why art thou looking back, O giddy-headed man?
  • Thy scroll (record) is that which came into thy hand, O offender against God and worshipper of the Devil.
  • Since thou hast seen the scroll of thy deeds, why dost thou look back? Behold the reward of thy works!
  • Why art thou tarrying in vain? Where is hope of light in such a (deep) pit as this? 1825
  • Neither outwardly hast thou any act of piety (to thy credit), nor inwardly and in thy heart an intention (to perform one);
  • No nightly orisons and vigils, no abstinence and fasting in the daytime;
  • No holding thy tongue to avoid hurting any one, no looking earnestly forward and backward.
  • What is (meant by looking) forward? To think of thy own death and last agony. What is (meant by looking) backward? (To remember) the predecease of thy friends.
  • Thou hast (in thy record) no wailful penitence for thy injustice, O rogue who showest wheat and sellest barley. 1830
  • Since thy scales were wrong and false, how shouldst thou require the scales of thy retribution to be right?
  • Since thou wert a left foot (wert going to the left) in fraud and dishonesty, how should the scroll come into thy right hand?
  • Since retribution is (like) the shadow, accordingly thy shadow, O man of bent figure, falls crookedly before thee.’”
  • (To him) from this quarter (Heaven) come (such) harsh words of rebuke that even the back of a mountain would be bowed by them.