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5
2145-2194

  • It (the kernel) has a voice, (but one that is) not suited to the (bodily) ear: its voice is hidden in the ear of ecstasy. 2145
  • Were it not for the sweetness of a kernel's voice, who would listen to the rattling voice of a walnut-shell?
  • You endure the rattling of it (only) in order that you may silently come into touch with a kernel.
  • Be without lip and without ear for a while, and then, like the lip, be the companion of honey.
  • How long have you been uttering poetry and prose and (proclaiming) mysteries! O master, try the experiment and, for one day, be dumb!
  • Story in confirmation of the saying, “We have tried speech and talk all this time: (now) for a while let us. try self-restraint and silence.”
  • How long have you been cooking (things) sour and acid and (like the fruit of) the white tamarisk? For this one time make an experiment and cook sweets. 2150
  • On waking at the Resurrection, there is put into the hands of a (wicked) man the scroll of his sins: (it will be) black,
  • Headed with black, as letters of mourning; the body and margin of the scroll completely filled with (his) sins—
  • The whole (of it) wickedness and sin from end to end, full of infidelity, like the land of war.
  • Such a foul and noxious scroll does not come into the right hand; it comes into the left hand.
  • Here also (in this world) regard your scroll (the record of your actions), (and consider) whether it fits the left hand or the right. 2155
  • In the (bootmaker's) shop, can you know before trying (them) on that the left boot or shoe belongs to the left (foot)?
  • When you are not “right,” know that you are “left”; the cries of a lion and an ape are distinct (from one another).
  • He (God) who makes the rose lovely and sweet-scented—His bounty makes every “left” to be “right.”
  • He bestows “rightness” on every one belonging to the “left” He bestows a(fresh) running water on the (salt) sea.
  • If you are “left,” be “right” (in perfect harmony) with His Lordship, that you may see His mercies prevail (over His wrath). 2160
  • Do you think it allowable that this vile scroll (of yours) should pass from the left hand and come into the right?
  • How indeed should a scroll like this, which is full of iniquity and injury, be fit (to place) in the right hand?
  • Explaining the case of a person who makes a statement when his behaviour is not consistent with that statement and profession, like the infidels (of whom God hath said): “and if thou ask them who created the heavens and the earth they will surely say, ‘Allah.’” How is the worship of a stone idol and the sacrifice of life and wealth for its sake appropriate to a soul which knows that the creator of heaven and earth and (all) created beings is a God, all-hearing, all-seeing, omnipresent, all-observing, all dominating, jealous, etc.?
  • A certain ascetic had a very jealous wife: he also had a maid-servant (beautiful) as a houri.
  • The wife used to watch her husband jealously and not let him be alone with the maid.
  • For a long time the wife watched them both, lest an opportunity should occur for their being alone (together)— 2165
  • Until the decree and fore-ordainment of God arrived: (then) the watchman, Reason, became giddy-headed and good-for-nothing.
  • When His decree and fore-ordainment arrives unawares, who is Reason? Eclipse overtakes (even) the moon.
  • The wife was at the (public) bath: suddenly she remembered the wash-basin and (that) it was (had been left) at home.
  • She said to the maid, “Hark, go like a bird and fetch the silver basin from our house.”
  • On hearing this, the maid came to life, for (she knew that) now she would obtain (a meeting with) the master, 2170
  • (Since) the master was then at home and alone. So she ran joyously to the house.
  • For six years the maid had been longing to find the master alone like this.
  • She flew off and hastened towards the house: she found the master at home and alone.
  • Desire took possession of both the lovers so (mightily) that they had no care or thought of bolting the door.
  • Ambo summa alacritate coierunt: copulatis corporibus anima cum anima conjuncta est. [Both moved toward one another from joy; by means of (bodily) copulation, soul joined to soul (in) that moment.] 2175
  • Then the wife recollected (and said to herself), “Why did I send her (back) to the house?
  • I have set the cotton on fire with my own hand, I have put the lusty ram to the ewe.”
  • She washed off the clay (soap) from her head and ran, beside herself (with anxiety): she went in pursuit of her (the maid), drawing the chádar (over her head as she ran).
  • The former (the maid) ran because of the love in her soul, and the latter (the wife) because of fear. What is fear in comparison with love? (There is) a great difference.
  • The mystic's progress is (an ascension) at every moment to the throne of the (Divine) King; the ascetic's progress is one day's journey every month. 2180
  • Although, for the ascetic, one day is of great value, (yet) how should his one day be (equal to) fifty thousand (years)?
  • The length of every day in the life of the adept is fifty thousand of the years of the world.
  • Intellects are excluded from this mystery: if the heart of Imagination burst, let it burst!
  • In the sight of Love, fear is not (so much as) a single hair: in the law of Love, all things (else) are (offered) as a sacrifice.
  • Love is an attribute of God, but fear is an attribute of the servant (of God) who is afflicted by lust and gluttony. [Love is an attribute of God, but fear is an attribute of the servant (of God) who is afflicted by vulva and belly.] 2185
  • Since you have read in the Qur’án (the words) “they love Him” joined in a certain place with (the words) “He loves them,”
  • Know, then, that love (mahabbat), and excessive love (‘ishq) too, is an attribute of God: fear is not an attribute of God, O honoured sir.
  • What relation exists between the attributes of God and those of a handful of earth? What relation exists between the attributes of him who is originated in time and those of the Holy (Eternal) One?
  • If I should continue to describe Love, a hundred Resurrections would pass, and it (my description would still be) incomplete;
  • For there is a limit to the date of the Resurrection, but what limit can there be where the Divine attributes are (concerned)? 2190
  • Love hath five hundred wings, and every wing (extends) from above the empyrean to beneath the earth.
  • The timorous ascetic runs on foot; the lovers (of God) fly more quickly than the lightning and the wind.
  • How should those fearful ones overtake Love?—for Love's passion makes the (lofty) heaven its carpet—
  • Unless perchance the favours of the (Divine) Light come and say, “Become free from the world and from this wayfaring;