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5
565-614

  • When thou knowest the definition of thyself, flee from this definition, that thou mayst attain to Him who hath no definition, O sifter of dust. 565
  • (Thy) life has gone (to waste) in (the consideration of logical) predicate and subject: (thy) life, devoid of (spiritual) insight, has gone in (study of) what has been received by hearsay.
  • Every proof (that is) without (a spiritual) result and effect is vain: consider the (final) result of thyself!
  • Thou hast never perceived a Maker except by means of a thing made: thou art content with a syllogism.
  • The philosopher multiplies links (consisting) of (logical) proofs; on the other hand, the elect (the mystic) is contrary to him (in this respect).
  • The latter flees from the proof and from the veil (between himself and God): he has sunk his head in his bosom for the sake of (contemplating) the Object of the proof. 570
  • If to him (the philosopher) the smoke is a proof of the fire, to us (mystics) ’tis sweet (to be) in the fire without the smoke,
  • Especially this Fire which, through (our) nighness and fealty (to God), is nearer to us than the smoke.
  • Therefore ’tis black villainy to go (turn away) from the Soul (Reality) towards the smoke for the sake of (indulging) the phantasies (illusions) of the (animal) soul.
  • In explanation of the saying of the Prophet, on whom be peace, “There is no monkery in Islam.”
  • “Do not tear out thy feathers, but detach thy heart from (desire for) them, because (the existence of) the enemy is the necessary condition for (waging) this Holy War.
  • When there is no enemy, the Holy War is inconceivable; (if) thou hast no lust, there can be no obedience (to the Divine command). 575
  • There can be no self-restraint when thou hast no desire; when there is no adversary, what need for thy strength?
  • Hark, do not castrate thyself, do not become a monk; for chastity is in pawn to (depends on the existence of) lust.
  • Without (the existence of) sensuality ’tis impossible to forbid sensuality: heroism cannot be displayed against the dead.
  • He (God) hath said ‘Spend’: therefore earn something, since there can be no expenditure without an old (previously acquired) income.
  • Although He used (the word) Spend absolutely, (yet) read (it as meaning) ‘Earn, then spend.’ 580
  • Similarly, since the King (God) has given the command ‘Refrain yourselves,’ there must be some desire from which thou shouldst avert thy face.
  • Hence (the command) ‘Eat ye’ is for the sake of the snare (temptation) of appetite; after that (comes) ‘Do not exceed’: that is temperance.
  • When there is no ‘predicate’ (relative quality) in him (any one), the existence of the ‘subject’ (the correlative term) is impossible.
  • When thou hast not the pain of self-restraint, there is no protasis: therefore the apodosis (recompense) does not follow.
  • How admirable is that protasis and how joyful is that apodosis (recompense), a recompense that charms the heart and increases the life of the spirit! 585
  • Explaining that God (Himself) is the reward bestowed by Him for the (devotional) work of the lover.
  • For (His) lovers He (alone) is (all their) joy and sorrow; He (alone) is their wages and hire for service.
  • If there be any spectacle (object of regard for them) except the Beloved, ’tis not love: ’tis an idle passion.
  • Love is that flame which, when it blazes up, consumes everything else but the Beloved.
  • He (the lover) drives home the sword of Not in order to kill all other than God: thereupon consider what remains after Not.
  • There remains except God: all the rest is gone. Hail, O mighty Love, destroyer of polytheism! 590
  • Verily, He is the First and the Last: do not regard polytheism as arising from aught except the eye that sees double.
  • Oh, wonderful! Is there any beauty but from the reflexion of Him? The (human) body hath no movement but from the spirit.
  • The body that hath defect in its spirit will never become sweet, (even) if you smear it with honey.
  • This he knows who one day was (spiritually) alive and received a cup from this Soul of the soul;
  • While to him whose eye has not beheld those (beauteous) cheeks this smoky heat is (appears to be) the spirit. 595
  • Inasmuch as he never saw ‘Umar (ibn) ‘Abdu ’l-‘Azíz, to him even Hajjáj seems just.
  • Inasmuch as he never saw the firmness (unshakable strength) of the dragon of Moses, he fancies (there is) life in the magic cords.
  • The bird that has never drunk the limpid water keeps its wings and feathers in the briny water.
  • No opposite can be known except through its opposite: (only) when he (any one) suffers blows will he know (the value of) kindness.
  • Consequently the present life has come in front (first), in order that you may appreciate the realm of Alast. 600
  • When you are delivered from this place and go to that place, you will give thanks (to God) in the sugar-shop of everlastingness.
  • You will say, ‘There (in the world below) I was sifting dust, I was fleeing from this pure world.
  • Alas, would that I had died ere now, so that my (time of) being tormented in the mud might have been less!’
  • Commentary on the saying of the Prophet, on whom be peace, “None ever died without wishing, if he was a righteous man, that he had died before he (actually) died, in order that he might sooner attain unto felicity; and if he was a wicked man, in order that his wickedness might be less.”
  • Hence the wise Prophet has said that no one who dies and dismounts from (the steed of) the body
  • Feels grief on account of departure and death, but (only) grieves because of having failed (in good works) and missed his opportunities. 605
  • In sooth every one that dies wishes that the departure to his destination had been earlier:
  • If he be wicked, in order that his wickedness might have been less; and if devout, in order that he might have come home sooner.
  • The wicked man says, ‘I have been heedless, moment by moment I have been adding to the veil (of sin).
  • If my passing (from the world) had taken place sooner, this screen and veil of mine would have been less.’
  • Do not in covetousness rend the face of contentment, and do not in pride rend the visage of humility. 610
  • Likewise do not in avarice rend the face of munificence, and in devilishness the beauteous countenance of worship.
  • Do not tear out those feathers which are an ornament to Paradise: do not tear out those feathers which (enable thee to) traverse the Way.”
  • When he (the peacock) heard this counsel, he looked at him (the Sage) and, after that, began to lament and weep.
  • The long lamentation and weeping of the sorrowful (peacock) caused every one who was there to fall a-weeping;