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6
4552-4601

  • Do not go so much into the sack of thy fleshly soul, do not be (so) forgetful of thy purchasers (redeemers).
  • در جوال نفس خود چندین مرو  ** از خریداران خود غافل مشو 
  • How next year Júhí's wife returned to the court of the cadi, hoping for the same contribution (of money) as last year, and how the cadi recognised her, and so on to the end of the story.
  • باز آمدن زن جوحی به محکمه‌ی قاضی سال دوم بر امید وظیفه‌ی پارسال و شناختن قاضی او را الی اتمامه 
  • After a year Júhí, in consequence of the afflictions (of poverty), turned to his wife and said, “O clever wife,
  • بعد سالی باز جوحی از محن  ** رو به زن کرد و بگفت ای چست زن 
  • Renew last year's contribution (to our household): complain of me to the cadi.”
  • آن وظیفه‌ی پار را تجدید کن  ** پیش قاضی از گله‌ی من گو سخن 
  • The wife came before the cadi with (some other) women: she made a certain woman her interpreter, 4555
  • زن بر قاضی در آمد با زنان  ** مر زنی را کرد آن زن ترجمان 
  • Lest the cadi should recognise her by her speech and remember his past misfortune.
  • تا بنشناسد ز گفتن قاضیش  ** یاد ناید از بلای ماضیش 
  • The coquettish glances of a woman are fascinating, but that (fascination) is increased a hundredfold by her voice.
  • هست فتنه غمره‌ی غماز زن  ** لیک آن صدتو شود ز آواز زن 
  • Since she durst not raise (utter) a sound, the wife's ogling looks alone were of no avail.
  • چون نمی‌توانست آوازی فراشت  ** غمزه‌ی تنهای زن سودی نداشت 
  • “Go,” said the cadi, “and fetch the defendant, that I may settle thy quarrel with him.”
  • گفت قاضی رو تو خصمت را بیار  ** تا دهم کار ترا با او قرار 
  • (When) Júhí arrived, the cadi did not recognise him at once, for at (their first) meeting he was in the chest. 4560
  • جوحی آمد قاضیش نشناخت زود  ** کو به وقت لقیه در صندوق بود 
  • He had (only) heard his voice outside, during the buying and selling and chaffering.
  • زو شنیده بود آواز از برون  ** در شری و بیع و در نقص و فزون 
  • He said (to Júhí), “Why won't you give your wife all the money she needs for expenses?” He replied, “I am devoted with (heart and) soul to the religious law,
  • گفت نفقه‌ی زن چرا ندهی تمام  ** گفت از جان شرع را هستم غلام 
  • But if I die I do not possess (enough to pay for) the shroud: I am bankrupt in this game, I have gambled everything away.”
  • لیک اگر میرم ندارم من کفن  ** مفلس این لعبم و شش پنج زن 
  • From (hearing) these words the cadi, as it happened, recognised him and called to mind his roguery and the trick he had played.
  • زین سخن قاضی مگر بشناختش  ** یاد آورد آن دغل وان باختش 
  • “You played that game with me,” he said: “last year you put me out of action. 4565
  • گفت آن شش پنج با من باختی  ** پار اندر شش درم انداختی 
  • My turn is past: this year try that gamble on some one else and keep your hands off me!”
  • نوبت من رفت امسال آن قمار  ** با دگر کس باز دست از من بدار 
  • The knower of God has been isolated from the six (directions) and the five (senses): (necessarily, therefore), he has become on his guard against the sixes and fives of the backgammon (played by the World and the Devil).
  • از شش و از پنج عارف گشت فرد  ** محترز گشتست زین شش پنج نرد 
  • He has escaped from the five senses and the six directions: he has made you acquainted with (what lies) beyond all that.
  • رست او از پنج حس و شش جهت  ** از ورای آن همه کرد آگهت 
  • His intimations are the intimations of Eternity: he has transcended all conceptions and withdrawn himself apart.
  • شد اشاراتش اشارات ازل  ** جاوز الاوهام طرا و اعتزل 
  • Unless he is outside of this hexagonal well, how should he bring up a Joseph from the inside (of it)? 4570
  • زین چه شش گوشه گر نبود برون  ** چون بر آرد یوسفی را از درون 
  • He is one who goes to draw water above the unpillared firmament, (while) his body, like a bucket, is (low down) in the well, helping (to rescue the fallen).
  • واردی بالای چرخ بی ستن  ** جسم او چون دلو در چه چاره کن 
  • The Josephs cling to his bucket, escape from the well, and become kings of Egypt.
  • یوسفان چنگال در دلوش زده  ** رسته از چاه و شه مصری شده 
  • The other buckets seek water from the well: his bucket has no concern with the water, it seeks (only) friends (in trouble).
  • دلوهای دیگر از چه آب‌جو  ** دلو او فارغ ز آب اصحاب‌جو 
  • The (other) buckets plunge into the water for food: his bucket is the food and life of the soul of the fish.
  • دلوها غواص آب از بهر قوت  ** دلو او قوت و حیات جان حوت 
  • The (other) buckets are attached to the lofty wheel (of Fortune): his bucket is (held) in two Almighty fingers. 4575
  • دلوها وابسته‌ی چرخ بلند  ** دلو او در اصبعین زورمند 
  • What bucket and what cord and what wheel? This is a very weak comparison, O pasha.
  • دلو چه و حبل چه و چرخ چی  ** این مثال بس رکیکست ای اچی 
  • (But) whence shall I get a comparison that is without frailty? One to match him (the knower of God) will not come, and never has come, (to hand).
  • از کجا آرم مثالی بی‌شکست  ** کفو آن نه آید و نه آمدست 
  • (He is) a hundred thousand men concealed in a single man, a hundred bows and arrows enclosed in a single blowpipe;
  • صد هزاران مرد پنهان در یکی  ** صد کمان و تیر درج ناوکی 
  • A (type of) thou didst not throw when thou threwest, a temptation (for the ignorant), a hundred thousand stacks (of grain) in a handful.
  • ما رمیت اذ رمیتی فتنه‌ای  ** صد هزاران خرمن اندر حفنه‌ای 
  • (He is) a sun hidden in a mote: suddenly that mote opens its mouth (and reveals the sun). 4580
  • آفتابی در یکی ذره نهان  ** ناگهان آن ذره بگشاید دهان 
  • The heavens and the earth crumble to atoms before that Sun when he springs forth from ambush.
  • ذره ذره گردد افلاک و زمین  ** پیش آن خورشید چون جست از کمین 
  • How is a spirit like this meet for (confinement in) the body? Hark, O body, wash thy hands of this spirit!
  • این چنین جانی چه درخورد تنست  ** هین بشو ای تن ازین جان هر دو دست 
  • O body that hast become the spirit's dwelling-place, ’tis enough: how long can the Sea abide in a water-skin?
  • ای تن گشته وثاق جان بسست  ** چند تاند بحر درمشکی نشست 
  • O thou who art a thousand Gabriels in (the form of) man, O thou who art (many) Messiahs inside the ass (of Jesus),
  • ای هزاران جبرئیل اندر بشر  ** ای مسیحان نهان در جوف خر 
  • O thou who art a thousand Ka‘bas concealed in a church, O thou who causest ‘ifrít and devil to fall into error, 4585
  • ای هزاران کعبه پنهان در کنیس  ** ای غلط‌انداز عفریت و بلیس 
  • Thou art the spaceless Object of worship in space: the devils have their shop destroyed by thee,
  • سجده‌گاه لامکانی در مکان  ** مر بلیسان را ز تو ویران دکان 
  • (For they say), “How should I pay homage to this clay? How should I bestow on a (mere) form a title signifying (my) obedience (adoration)?”
  • که چرا من خدمت این طین کنم  ** صورتی را نم لقب چون دین کنم 
  • He is not the form (in which he appears): rub thine eye well, that thou mayst behold (in him) the radiance of the light of (Divine) glory!
  • نیست صورت چشم را نیکو به مال  ** تا ببینی شعشعه‌ی نور جلال 
  • Resuming the explanation of the Story of the (eldest) prince and his constant attendance at the court of the King.
  • باز آمدن به شرح قصه‌ی شاه‌زاده و ملازمت او در حضرت شاه 
  • The prince in the presence of the King was bewildered by this (mystery): he beheld the Seven Heavens in a handful of clay.
  • شاه‌زاده پیش شه حیران این  ** هفت گردون دیده در یک مشت طین 
  • Nowise was it possible (for him) to open his lips in discussion, but never for a moment did soul cease to converse with soul. 4590
  • هیچ ممکن نه ببحثی لب گشود  ** لیک جان با جان دمی خامش نبود 
  • It came into his mind that ’twas exceedingly mysterious— “all this is reality: whence, then, comes the form (appearance)?”
  • آمده در خاطرش کین بس خفیست  ** این همه معنیست پس صورت ز چیست 
  • (’Tis) a form that frees thee from (the illusion of) form, a sleeper that awakens every one who is asleep (to the Truth).
  • صورتی از صورتت بیزار کن  ** خفته‌ای هر خفته را بیدار کن 
  • The words (spoken by him) deliver (thee) from words (of idle disputation), and the sickness (of love inspired by him) lets thee escape from the sickness (of sensuality).
  • آن کلامت می‌رهاند از کلام  ** وان سقامت می‌جهاند از سقام 
  • Therefore the sickness of love is the (very) soul of health: its pains are the envy of every pleasure.
  • پس سقام عشق جان صحتست  ** رنجهااش حسرت هر راحتست 
  • O body, now wash thy hands of this (animal) soul, or if thou wilt not wash (thy hands of it), seek another soul than this! 4595
  • ای تن اکنون دست خود زین جان بشو  ** ور نمی‌شویی جز این جانی بجو 
  • In short, the King cherished him (the prince) fondly, and in (the beams of) that Sun he was melting away like the moon.
  • حاصل آن شه نیک او را می‌نواخت  ** او از آن خورشید چون مه می‌گداخت 
  • The melting (wasting) away of lovers is (the cause of their spiritual) growth: like the moon, he (the lover) hath a fresh (shining) face whilst he is melting away.
  • آن گداز عاشقان باشد نمو  ** هم‌چو مه اندر گدازش تازه‌رو 
  • All the sick hope to be cured, but this sick one sobs, crying, “Increase my sickness!
  • جمله رنجوران دوا دارند امید  ** نالد این رنجور کم افزون کنید 
  • I have found no drink sweeter than this poison: no state of health can be sweeter than this disease.
  • خوش‌تر از این سم ندیدم شربتی  ** زین مرض خوش‌تر نباشد صحتی 
  • No act of piety can be better than this sin: years in comparison with this moment are (but) an hour.” 4600
  • زین گنه بهتر نباشد طاعتی  ** سالها نسبت بدین دم ساعتی 
  • In this fashion he remained with this King for a long while, his heart (roasted like) kabáb and his soul laid on the tray (of self-devotion).
  • مدتی بد پیش این شه زین نسق  ** دل کباب و جان نهاده بر طبق