THE ORCHARD OF SA‘DI
| |
BY
SA‘DI OF SHIRAZ
OMPHALOSKEPSIS
Ames, Iowa
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
______________________ prologue
in
the name of God, the compassionate,
the merciful
In the name of Him Who created and sustains the
world, the Sage Who endowed tongue with speech.
He attains no honor who turns the face from the
doer of His mercy.
The kings of the earth prostate themselves before
Him in supplication.
He seizes not in haste the disobedient, nor drives
away the penitent with violence. The two worlds are as a drop of water in the
ocean of His knowledge.
He withholds not His bounty though His servants
sin; upon the surface of the earth has He spread a feast, in which both friend
and for may share.
Peerless He is, and His kingdom is eternal. Upon
the head of one He placeth a crown another he hurleth from the throne to the
ground.
The fire of His friend He turneth into a flower
garden; through the water of the Nile He sendeth His foes to perdition.
Behind the veil He seeth all, and concealeth our
faults with His own goodness.
He is near to them that are downcast, and
accepteth the prayers of them that lament.
He knoweth of the things that exist not, of
secrets that are untold.
He causeth the moon and the sun to revolve, and
spreadeth water upon the earth.
In the heart of a stone hath He placed a jewel;
from nothing hath He created all that is.
Who can reveal the secret of His qualities; what
eye can see the limits of His beauty?
The bird of thought cannot soar to the height of
His presence, nor the hand of understanding reach to the skirt of His praise.
Think not, O Sa‘di, that one can walk in the road
of purity except in the footsteps of Muhammad.
He is the patriarch of the prophets, the guide of
the path of salvation; the mediator of mankind, and the chief of the Court of
Judgment. What of thy praises can Sa‘di utter? The mercy of God be upon thee, O
Prophet, and peace!
____ On the reasons for the writing of
this book
I traveled in many regions of the globe and
passed the days in the company of many men. I reaped advantages in every
corner, and gleaned an ear of corn from every harvest. But I saw none like the
pious and devout men of Shiraz—upon which land be the grace of God—my
attachment with whom drew away my heart from Syria and Turkey.
I regretted that I should go from the garden of
the world empty-handed to my friends, and reflected: “Travelers bring
sugar-candy from Egypt as a present to their friends. Although I have no candy,
yet have I words that are sweeter. The sugar that I bring is not that which is
eaten, but what knowers of truth take away with respect.” When I built this
Palace of Wealth, I furnished it with ten doors of instruction.
It was in the year 655 that this famous treasury
became full of the pearls of eloquence. A quilted robe of silk, or of Chinese
embroidery, must of necessity be padded with cotton; if thou obtain aught of
the silk, fret not—be generous and conceal the cotton. I have Hear that in the
day of Hope and Fear the Merciful One will pardon the evil for the sake of the
good. If thou see evil in my words, do thou likewise. If one couplet among a
thousand please thee, generously withhold thy fault finding.
Assuredly, my compositions are esteemed in Persia
as the priceless musk of Khutan. Sa‘di brings roses to the garden with mirth.
His verses are like dates encrusted with sugar—when opened, a stone, is
revealed inside.
_____ Concerning Atabak Abu Bakr, son of
Sad
Although not desiring to write in praise of
kings, I have inscribed this book to the name of a certain one so that perhaps
the pious may say: “Sa‘di, who surpassed all in eloquence, lived in the time of
Abu Bakr, the son of Sad.” Thus in this book will his memory remain so long as
the moon and sun are in the skies. Beyond count are his virtues—may the world
fulfill his desires, the heavens be his friend, and the Creator be his
guardian.
________________ chapter_______________
Concerning
Justice, Counsel, and the
Administration of Government
The goodness of God
surpasseth imagination; what service can the tongue of praise perform?
Keep, O, God this king, Abu Bakr, beneath whose
shadow is the protection of the people, long established upon his throne, and
make his heart to live in obedience, to Thee. Render fruitful his tree of
hope; prolong his youth, and adorn his face with mercy.
O, King! Deck not thyself in royal garments when
thou comest to worship; make thy supplications like a dervish, saying: “O,
God! Powerful and strong Thou art. I am no monarch, but a beggar in Thy court.
Unless Thy helps sustain me, what can issue from my hand? Succor me, and give
me the means of virtue, or else how can I benefit my people?”
If thou rule by day, pray fervently by night. The
great among thy servants wait upon thee at thy door; thus shouldst thou serve,
with thy head in worship upon God’s threshold.
___________ Nushiravan’s Counsel to His
Son
Thus, when at the point of death, did Nushiravan
counsel his son Hormuz:
“Cherish the poor, and seek not thine own comfort.
The shepherd should not sleep while the wolf is among the sheep. Protect the
needy, for a king wears his crown for the sake of his subjects. The people are
as the root and the king is as the tree; and the tree, O son, gains strength
from the root. He should not oppress the people who have fear of injury to his
kingdom. Seek not plenteousness in that land where the people are afflicted by
the king. Fear them that are proud and them that fear not God.”
___________ A Discourse Concerning
Travelers
The king who deals harshly with merchants who
come from afar closes the door of well-being upon the whole of his subjects.
When do the wise return to the land of which they hear rumors of bad custom?
If thou desire a good name, hold merchants and
travelers in high esteem, for they carry thy reputation through the world. Be
cautious also lest, being enemies in the guise of friends, they seek thy
injury.
Advance the dignities of old friends, for treachery
comes not from them that are cherished.
When thy servant becomes stricken in years, be
not unmindful of the obligations towards him. If old age binds his hand from
service, the land of generosity yet remains to thee.
__ A Story Illustrating the Need for
Deliberation
There once landed at a seaport of Arabia a man
who had widely traveled and was versed in many sciences. He presented himself
at the palace of the king, who was so captivated by his wisdom and knowledge
that he appointed the traveler to the viziership.
With such skill did he perform the duties of that
office that he offended none, and brought the kingdom completely beneath his
sway. He closed the mouths of slanderers, because nothing evil issued from his
hand; and the envious, who could detect no fault in him, bemoaned their lack of
opportunity to do him injury.
At the court, however, there were two beautiful
young slaves towards whom the vizier displayed no small measure of affection.
(If thou wouldst that thy ranks endure, incline not thy heart towards the fair;
and though thy love be innocent, have care, for there is fear of loss.)
The former vizier, who had been dismissed to make
room for the newcomer, maliciously carried the story to the king.
“I know not,” he said, “who this new minister may
be, but he lives not chastely in this land. I have heard that he intrigues with
two of thy slaves—he is a perfidious man, and lustful. It is not right that one
such as he should bring ill-fame upon the court. I am not so unmindful of the
favors that I have received at thy hands that I should see these things and
remain silent.”
Angered by what he heard, the king stealthily
watched the new vizier, and when later he observed the latter glance towards
one of the slaves, who returned a covert smile, his suspicion of evil became at
once confirmed.
Summoning the minister to his side, he said: “I
did not know thee to be shameless and unworthy. Such a lofty station is not thy
proper place, but the fault is mine. If I cherish one who is of evil nature,
assuredly do I sanction disloyalty in my house.
“Since my skirt is free
from guilt,” the vizier replied, “I fear not the malignity of the evil-wisher.
I know not who has accused me of what I have not done.”
“This was told to me by the old vizier,”
explained the king.
The vizier smiled and said, “Whatever he said is
no cause for wonder. What would the envious man say when he saw me in his
former place? Him I knew to be my enemy that day when Khasrau appointed him to
a lower rank than me. Never till Doomsday will he accept me as a friend when in
my promotion he sees his own decline. If thou wilts give ear to thy slave I
will narrate a story that is apropos.
“In a dream some one saw the Prince of Evil,
whose figure was as erect as a fir-tree and whose face was as fair as the sun.
Regarding him, the sleeper said, “O splendid being! Mankind knows not of thy
beauty. Fearful of countenance do they imagine thee, and hideous have they
depicted thee on the walls of the public baths. The Prince of Evil smiled,
“Such is not my figure,” he replied, “but the pencil was in the hand of an
enemy! The root of their stock did I throw out of Paradise; now in malice do
they paint me ugly.”
“In the same way,” continued the vizier,
“although my fame is good, the envious speak ill of me. Those who are guiltless
are brave in speech; only he who gives false weight has fear of the inspector.”
“Forsooth,” the king exclaimed, his anger rising,
“I heard this not only from thine enemy. Have I not seen with my own eyes that
among the assemblage of this court thou regardest none, but those two slaves?”
“That is true,” the vizier said, “But I will
explain this matter if thou wilt listen. Dost thou not know that the beggar
eyes the rich with envy?
Once, like those slaves,
did I possess both grace and beauty. Two rows of teeth were set behind my lips,
erect like a wall of ivory bricks. One by one, like ancient bridges, have they
fallen—regard me now as here I stand! Why may I not glance with envy at those
slaves when they recall to me the past?”
When the wise man had pierced this pearl of
lustrous truth, the king exclaimed: “Better than this it would be impossible to
speak. Permissible it is to look toward the fair is one who can thus excuse
himself. Had I not in wisdom acted with deliberation, I should have wronged him
through the speech of an enemy.”
To carry the hand quickly to the sword in anger
is to carry the back of the hand to the teeth in regret. Heed not the words of
the envious; if thou actest upon them, remorseful wilt thou be.
Admonishing the slandered for his evil words, the
king further increased the dignity of the vizier, who directed the affairs of
the State for many years with justice and benevolence, and was long remembered
for his virtues.
The Story of the King Whose
Coat was Course
A certain just king habitually wore a coat
of coarse material. Some one said to him: “O, happy king! Make for thyself a
coat of Chinese brocade.”
“That which I wear,” the king replied, “affords
both covering and comfort; anything beyond that is luxury. I collect not
tribute that I may adorn my person and my throne. If, like a woman, I ornament
my body, how, like a man, can I repulse the enemy? The royal treasuries are not
for me alone—they are filled for the sake of the army, not for the purchase of
ornaments and jewelry.”
_______ The Story of Darius and the
Herdsman
Darius, king of Persia, became separated from his
retinue while hunting. A herdsman came running towards him, and the king
assuming the man to be an enemy, adjusted his bow. Thereupon the herdsman
cried, “I am no enemy. Seek not to kill me. I am he who tends the king’s horses,
and in this meadow am thus engaged.”
Becoming again composed, the king smiled and
said, “Heaven has befriended thee, otherwise would I have drawn the bowstring
to my ear.”
“It showeth neither wise administration nor good
judgment,” replied the herdsman, “when the king knows not an enemy from a
friend. Those who are greatest should know those who are least. Many times hast
thou seen me in thy presence, and asked of me concerning the horses and the
grazing fields. Now that I come again before thee thou takest me for an enemy.
More skilled am I, O king, for I can distinguish one horse out of a hundred
thousand. Tend thou thy people as I, with sense and judgment tend my horses.”
Ruin brings sorrow to that kingdom where the
wisdom of the shepherd exceeds that of the king.
________ The Story of Abdul Aziz and the
Pearl
The story is told of Abdul Aziz that he had a
pearl of great beauty and value set in a ring. Shortly after, a severe drought
occurred, causing distress among the people. Moved by compassion, the king
ordered the pearl to be sold and the money that it fetched to be given to the
poor.
Someone chided him for doing this, saying, “Never
again will such a stone come into thy hands.”
Weeping, the king replied, “Ugly is an ornament
upon the person of a king when the hearts of his people are distressed by want.
Better for me is a stoneless ring than a sorrowing people.”
Happy is he who sets the ease of others above his
own. The virtuous desire not their own pleasure at the expense of others. When
the king sleeps neglectfully upon his couch, I trow not that the beggar finds
enviable repose.
The Story of
How Tukla was Rebuked by a Devotee
Tukla, king of Persia, once visited a devotee and
said, “ Fruitless have been my years. None, but the beggar carries riches from
the world when earthly dignitaries are passed. Hence, would I now sit in the
corner of devotion that I might usefully employ the few short days that yet
remain to me.”
The devotee was angered at these words.
“Enough!” He cried. “Religion consists alone in
the service of the people; it finds no place in the prayer-beads, or
prayer-rug, or tattered garment. Be a king in sovereignty and a devotee in
purity of morals. Action, not words, is demanded by religion, for words
without action are void of substance.”
___ A Discourse Concerning Riches and
Poverty
Say not that no dignity excels that of sovereignty,
for no kingdom is more free from care than that of the dervish.
They are the most lightly burdened reach the
destination first.
The poor man is afflicted by lack of bread; the
king by the cares of his kingdom.
Though one may rule and other may serve, though
the one be exalted to the height of Saturn and the other languish in prison,
when death has claimed them it will not be possible to distinguish between the
two.
______ The Story of Qazal Arsalan and the
Fort
Qazal Arsalan possessed a fort, which raised its
head to the height of Alwand. Secure from all was those within its walls, for
its roads were a labyrinth, like the curls of a bride.
From a learned traveler Qazal once inquired,
“Didst thou ever, in thy wanderings, see a fort as strong as this?”
“Splendid it is,” was the reply, “but methinks
not it confers much strength. Before thee, did not other kings possess I for a
while, then pass away? After thee, will not other kings assume control, and eat
the fruits of the tree of thy hope.?”
In the estimation of the wise, the world is a
false gem that passes each moment from one hand to another.
____________________ A Story of
Damascus
Such famine was there once in Damascus that
lovers forgot their love. So miserly was the sky towards the earth that the
sown fields and the date-trees moistened not their lips. Fountains dried up,
and no water remained but the tears of the orphans. If smoke issued from a
chimney, naught was it but the sighs of the widows. Like beggars, the trees
stood leafless, and the mountains lost their verdure. The locusts devoured the
gardens, and men devoured the locusts.
At that time came to me a friend on whose bones
skin alone remained. I was astonished, since he was of lofty rank and rich. “O,
friend!” Said I, “What misfortune has befallen thee?”
“Where is thy sense?” He answered. “Seest thou
not that the severities of famine have reached their limit? Rain comes not from
the sky, neither do the lamentations of the suffering reach to heaven.”
“Thou at least,” I urged, “hast naught to fear;
poison kills only where there is no antidote.”
Regarding me with indignation, as a learned man
regards a fool, my friend replied, “Although a man be safely on the shore, he
stands not supine while his friends are drowning. My face is not pale through
want; the sorrows of the poor have wounded my heart. Although, praise be to
God, I am free from wounds, I tremble when I see the wounds of others.”
Bitter are the pleasures of him who is in health
when a sick man is at his side. When the beggar has not eaten, poisonous and
baneful is one’s food.
_____________________ The Story
of a Bully
A bully fell down a well and passed the night in
wailing and lamenting. Some one threw a stone down on to his head, and said,
“didst thou ever go to any one’s assistance that thou shouldst today cry out
for help? Didst thou ever sow the seeds of virtue? Who would place a salve upon
thy wounds when the hearts of all cry out by reason of thy tyrannies? Across
our path thou didst dig a pit, into which, perforce, hast thou now fallen.”
If thou do evil expect not goodness never does
the withered grapevine bring forth fruit.
O, thou who soweth the seed in autumn! I think
not that thou wilst reap the corn at harvest time.
If thou nourish the thorn-tree of the desert,
think not that thou wilts ever eat its fruit.
Green dates come not from the poisonous
colocynth; when thou sowest seed, hope only for the fruit of that very seed.
Concerning
Benevolence
If Thou art wise, incline towards the essential
truth, for that remains, while the things that are external pass away.
He who has neither knowledge, generosity, nor
piety resembles a man in form alone. He sleeps at peace beneath the ground who
made tranquil the hearts of men.
Give now of thy gold and bounty, for eventually
will it pass from thy grasp. Open the door of thy treasure today, for tomorrow
the key will not be in thy hands.
If thou would not be distressed on the Day of
Judgment, forget not them that are distressed.
Drive not the poor man empty from thy door, lest
thou should wander before the doors of strangers.
He protects the needy who fears that he himself
may become needful of the help of others.
Art not thou, too, a supplicant? BE grateful, and
turn not away them that supplicate thee.
__ A Story Illustrative of Doing Good to
the Evil
A woman said to her husband, “Do not again buy
bread from the baker in this street. Make thy purchases in the market, for this
man shows wheat and sells barley, and he has no customers but a swarm of
flies.”
“O, light of my life,” the husband answered, “pay
no heed to his trickery. In the hope of our custom has he settled in this
place, and not humane would it be to deprive him of his profits.”
Follow the path of the righteous, and, if thou
stand upon thy feet, stretch out thy hand to them that are fallen.
_______________ A Story Concerning Fasting
The wife of an officer of a king said to her husband,
“Arise, and go to the royal palace, that they may give thee food, for thy
children are in want.”
“The kitchen is closed today,” he answered, “last
night the Sultan resolved to fast awhile.”
In the despair of hunger, the woman bowed her
head and murmured, “What does the Sultan seek from his fasting when his
breaking the fast means a festival of joy for our children?”
One who eats that good may follow is better than
a Mammon worshipper who continually fasts. Proper it is to fast with him who
feeds the needy in the morning.
_______ A Story Illustrative of Practical
Charity
A certain man had generosity without the means of
displaying it; his pittance was unequal to his benevolence. (May riches never
fall to the mean, nor poverty be the lot of the generous!). His charity
exceeding the depth of his pocket, therefore was he always short of money.
One day a poor man wrote to him saying, “O, thou
of happy nature! Assist me with funds, since for some time have I languished in
prison.”
The generous man would have willingly acceded to
the request, but he possesses not so much as the smallest piece of money. He
sent someone to the creditors of the prisoner with the message, “Free this man
for a few days, and I will be his security.”
Then did he visit the prisoner in his cell and
say, “Arise, and fly with haste from the city.”
When a sparrow sees open the door of its cage, it
tarries not a moment. Like the morning breeze, the prisoner flew from the land.
Thereupon, they seized his benefactor, saying, “Produce either the man or the
money.”
Powerless to do either, he went to prison, for a
bird escaped is ne’er recaught. Long there did he remain, invoking help from
none, nor complaining, though he slept not at nights through restlessness.
A pious man came to him and said, “I did not
think that thou were dishonest; why are thou here imprisoned?”
“No villainy have I committed,” he replied. “I
saw a helpless man in bounds and his freedom only in my own confinement. I did
not deem it right that I should live in comfort while another was fettered by
the legs.” Eventually he died, leaving a good name behind.
Happy is he whose name dies not! He who sleeps
beneath the earth with a heart that lives is better that he who lives with a
soul that is dead, for the former remains for ever.
______ The Story of the Man and a Thirsty
Dog
In a desert, a man found a dog that was dying
from thirst. Using his hat as a bucket, he fetched water from a well and gave
it to the helpless animal. The prophet of the time stated that G-d had
forgiven the man his sins because of his kindly act.
Reflect, if thou be a tyrant, and make a profession
of benevolence.
He who shows kindness to a dog will not do less
towards the good among his fellows.
Be generous to the extent of thy power. If thou
hast not dug a well in the desert, at least place a lamp in a shrine.
Charity distributed from an ox’s skin that is
filled with treasure counts for less than a dinar given from the wages of toil.
Every man’s burden is suited to his strength—
heavy to the ant is the foot of the locust.
Do good to others so that on the morrow G-d may
not deal harshly with thee.
Be lenient with thy slave, for he may one day
become a king, like a pawn that becomes a queen.
_______________ A Story Apropos of Nemesis
A poor man complained of his distressed condition
to one who was rich as well as ill-disposi- tioned. The latter refused to help
him, and turned roughly upon him in anger.
The beggar’s heart bled by reason of this violence,
“Strange!” He reflected, “that this rich man should be of such forbidding
countenance! Perhaps he fears not the bitterness of begging.”
The rich man ordered his slave to drive the
beggar away. As a result of his ingratitude for the blessings that he enjoyed,
Fortune forsook him, and he lost all that he possessed. His slave passed into
the hands of a generous man of enlightened mind, who was as gladdened at the
sight of a beggar as the latter is at the sight of riches.
One night a beggar asked alms of the latter, and
he commanded his slave to give the man to eat. When the slave involuntarily
uttered a cry, and went back weeping.
“Why these tears?” His master asked.
“My heart is grieved at the plight of this unfortunate
old man,” the slave replied. “Once was he the owner of much wealth, and I his
slave.”
The master smiled and said, “This is not cause
for grief, O, son. Time, in its revolutions, is not unjust. Was not that
indigent man formerly a merchant who carried his head high in the air through
pride? I am he whom that day he drove from his door. Fate has now put him in
the place that I then occupied. Heaven befriended me and washed the dust of
sorrow from my face. Though G-d, in His wisdom, closed one door, another, in
His mercy, did He open.”
Many a needy one has become filled, and many a
Plutos has gone empty.
_______________ A Story of a Fool and a
Fox
Someone saw a fox that was bereft of the use of
its legs. He was wondering how the animal managed to live in this condition
when a tiger drew near with a jackal in its claws. The tiger ate the jackal,
and the fox finished the remains. The next day also did the Omnipotent Provider
send the fox its daily meal.
The eyes of the man were thus opened to the light
of true knowledge. “After this,” he reflected, “I will sit in a corner like an
ant, for the elephant’s portion is not gained by reason of its strength.”
So did he sit in silence, waiting for his daily
food to come from the Invisible. No one heeded him, and soon was he reduced to
skin and bones. When, at last, his senses had almost gone through weakness, a
voice came out from the wall of a mosque, saying:
“Go, O, false one! Be the rending tiger and pose
not as a paralytic fox. Exert thyself like the tiger, so that something may
remain from thy spoil. Why, like the fox, appease thy hunger with leaving? Eat
of the fruits of thine own endeavors; strive like a man, and relieve the wants
of the needy.”
Seize, O, youth, the hand of the aged; fall not
thyself, saying, “Hold my hand.” In the two words does he obtain reward who
does good to the people of God.
______________ The Story of a Devout Miser
In the remote regions of Turkey, there lived a
good and pious man, whom I and some fellowtravellers once visited. He received
us cordially, and seated us with respect. He had vineyards, and wheat-fields,
slaves and gold, but was miserly as a leafless tree. His feelings were warm,
but his fireplace was cold. He passed the night awake in prayer, and we in
hunger. In the morning he girt his loins and recommenced the same politeness of
the previous night.
One of our party was of merry wit and temper.
“Come, give us food in change for a kiss,” he said, “for that is better to a
hungry man. In serving me, place not thy hand upon my shoe, but give me bread
and strike thy shoe upon my head.”
Excellence is attained by generosity, not by vigils
in the night.
Idle words are a hollow drum; invocations without
merit are a weak support.
__________________ The Story of
Hatim Tai
Hatim Tai possessed a horse who fleetness was as
that of the morning breeze. Of this was the Sultan of Turkey informed.
“Like Hatim Tai,” he was told, “none is equal in
generosity; like his horse, nothing is equal in speed and gait. As a ship in
the sea it traverses the desert, while the eagle, exhausted, lags behind.”
“From Hatim will I request that horse, “ the king
replied. “If he be generous and give it to me, then shall I know that his fame
is true; if not, that it is but the sound of a hollow drum.”
So he dispatched a messenger with ten followers
to Hatim. They alighted at the house of the Arab chief, who prepared a feast
and killed a horse” in their honor.
On the following day, when the messenger
explained the object of his mission, Hatim became as one mad with grief. “Why,”
he cried, “didst thou not give me before thy message? That
swift-paced horse did I
roast last night for thee to eat. No other means had I to entertain thee; that
horse alone stood by my tent, and I would not that my guests should sleep
fasting.”
To the men he gave money and splendid robes, and
when the news of his generosity reached to Turkey, the king showered a thousand
praises upon his nature.
The Story of
Hatim and the Messenger Sent to
Kill Him
One of the kings of Yemen was renowned for his
liberality, yet the name of Hatim was never mentioned in his presence without
his falling into a rage. “How long,” he would ask, “wilt thou speak of that
vain man, who possesses neither a kingdom, nor power, nor wealth?”
On one occasion he prepared a royal feast, which
the people were invited to attend. Someone began to speak of Hatim, and another
to praise him. Envious, the king dispatched a man to slay the Arabian chief,
reflecting, “So long as Hatim lives, my name will never become famous.
The messenger departed, and traveled far seeking
for Hatim that he might kill him. As he went along the road a youth came out to
meet him. He was handsome and wise, and showed friendliness toward the
messenger, whom he took to his house to pass the night. Such liberality did he
shower upon his guest that the heart of the evil-minded one was turned to
goodness.
In the morning the generous youth kissed his hand
and said, “Remain with me for a few days.”
I am unable to tarry here,” replied the messenger,
“for urgent business is before me.”
“If thou wilt entrust me with thy secret,” said
the youth, “to aid the will I spare no effort.”
“O, generous man!” was the reply, “give ear to
me, for I know that the generous are concealers of secrets. Perhaps in this
country thou knowest Hatim, who is of lofty mind and noble qualities. The king
of Yemen desires his head, though I know not what enmity has arisen between
them. Grateful shall I be if thou wilts direct me to where he is. This hope from
thy kindness do I entertain, O friend!”
The youth laughed and said, “I am Hatim, see here
my head! Strike it from my body with thy sword. I would not that harm should
befall thee, or that thou shouldst fall in thy endeavor.”
Throwing aside his sword, the man fell on the
ground and kissed the dust of Hatim’s feet. “If I injured a hair on thy body,”
he cried, “I should no longer be a man.” So saying, he clasped Hatim to his
breast and took his way back to Yemen.
“Come,” said the king as the man approached,
“what news hast thou?” Why didst thou not tie his head to thy saddle-straps?
Perhaps that famous one attacked thee and thou wert too weak to engage in
combat.”
The messenger kissed the ground and said, “O,
wise and just king! I found Hatim, and saw him to be generous and full of
wisdom, and in courage superior to myself. My back was bent by the burden of
his favors; with the sword of kindness and bounty he killed me.”
When he had related all that he had seen of
Hatim’s generosity, the king uttered praises upon the family of the Arab chief
and rewarded the messenger with gold.
____ A Story Illustrative of Misdirected
Kindness
A certain man, in the ceiling of whose
house some bees had built their hives, asked his wife for a butcher’s knife so
that he might destroy them. “Do not do so,” the woman said, “for when the poor
creatures will be greatly distressed when turned out of their homes.”
Accordingly, the foolish man left the bees in
peace.
One day the woman was stung by one of the insects
and stood wailing on the doorstep. Hearing her cries the husband left his shop
and hurried towards the house. Angered, he said, “O, wife! Show not such a
bitter face to the world; remember thou didst say to me, ‘Kill not the poor
bees.’”
How can one do good to the evil? Forbearance with
the wicked but increases their iniquity.
What is a dog that a dish of viands should be set
before him? Command that they should give him bones. A kicking animal is best
well burdened.
If the night watchman display humanity, no one
sleeps at night for fear of thieves.
In the battlefield, the spear shaft is worth more
than a hundred thousand sugarcanes.
When thou rearest a cat, she destroys thy pigeons
when thou makest fat a wolf, he rends one who is dear to thee.
Raise not a building that has not a strong foundation;
if thou dost, beware.
__ A Discourse Concerning Kindness to
Orphans
Protect him whose father is dead; remove the dust
from his raiment, and injure him not. Thou knowest not how hard is his
condition; no foliage is there on a rootless tree. Give not a kiss to a child
of thin own in the sight of a helpless orphan. If the latter weep, who will
assuage his grief? If he be angered, who will bear his burden? See that he
weeps not, for the throne of G-d trembles at the orphan’s lament. With pity,
wipe the tears from his eyes and the dust from his face. If the protecting
shadow of his father’s care be gone, cherish him beneath the shadow of thy
care.
Upon my head was a kingly crown when it reposed
upon the bosom of my father. Then, if a fly settled upon my body, many were
distressed on my behalf. Now, should I be taken in captivity, not one among my
friends would come to aid me. Well, do I know the orphan’s sorrow, for my
father departed in my childhood.
Concerning
Love
Happy are the days of them that are infatuated by
love for Him, whether they be sorrowed by separation from Him or made joyous by
His presence.
They are mendicants who fly from worldly
sovereignty; in the hope of meeting Him they are patient in their mendicity.
Often have they drunk of the wine of anguish; be it bitter, they remain silent.
In the remembrance of Him patience is not bitter, for wormwood is sweet fromthe
hand of a friend.
They that are captive in the coils of His love,
seek not to escape; they suffer reproach, but are monarchs in the seclusion of
their mendication, and their way is not known. They are like the temple of
Jerusalem, splendid of which is the interior, but whose outer wall is left in
ruin.
Like moths, they burn themselves in the fire of
love. Their beloved is in their breasts, yet do they seek Him; though near a
fountain, their lips are parched.
True Love’s
Devotion: A Discourse Concerning
Constancy
Thy love renders thee impatient and disturbed.
With such sincerity has thou placed thy head at her feet that thou art
oblivious to the world.
When in the eyes of thy beloved riches count not,
gold and dust are as one to thee.
Thou sayest that she dwelleth in thine eyes—if
they be closed, she is in thy mind.
If she demands thy life, thou dost place it in
her hand; if she places a sword upon thy head, thou holdest it forward.
When earthly love produces such confusion and
such obedience demands, dost thou wonder if travelers of the road of God remain
engulfed in the Ocean of Reality?
In the remembrance of their Friend they have
turned their backs upon the world; they are so fascinated by the Cup-bearer
that they have spilled the wine.
No medicine can cure them, for no one has
knowledge of their pains.
With their cries of longing do they root up a
mountain; with their sighs they dismember a kingdom.
Such is their weeping at dawn that the tears wash
the sand of sleep from their eyes. Night and day are they immersed in the sea
of love; so distracted are they that they know not night from day.
So enamored are they of the beauty of the Painter
that they care not for the beauty of His designs.
He drinks of the pure wine of Unity who is forgetful
of both this world and the next.
___________________ The Story of
a Dancer
I have heard that, at the singing of a musician,
one of the fairy-faced began to dance. Surrounded by distracted hearts, the
flame of a candle caught her skirt. She was distressed and angered.
One of her lovers said, “Why agitate thyself? The
fire has burned thy skirts—it has entirely consumed the harvest of my life.”
God’s
Friendship: A Story Illustrating the Reality
of Love
One who loved God set his face towards the
desert. His father, being grieved at his absence, neither ate nor slept.
Someone admonished the son, who said, “Since my
Friend has claimed me as His own, no other friendship do I own. When He
revealed to me His beauty, all else that I saw appeared unreal.”
They that love Him care for no one else; their
senses are confused and their ears are deaf to the words of them that reproach.
They wander through the desert of Divine
Knowledge without a caravan.
They have no hope of approbation from their
fellow-men, for they are the chosen of the elect of God.
_____________ A Story Illustrative of
Patience
An old man begged at the door of a mosque.
Someone said to him, “This is not the place to beg; stand not here with
impudence.”
“What house is this,” the man inquired, “from
which no pity comes upon the condition of the poor?”
“Silence!” Was the reply. “What foolish words are
these! This is the house of our Master!”
The beggar raised a cry, “Alas,” he said, “that I
should be disappointed at this door. I have not gone hopeless from any street;
why should I go thus from the door of God? Here will I stretch forth my hand of
want, for I know that I shall not depart empty-handed.”
For a year he remained devoutly employed in the
mosque. One night, through weakness, his heart began to palpitate, and at
daybreak his last breath flickered like a morning lamp. Thus did he exclaim
with joy; “And whoever knocked at the door of the Bounteous One, it opened.”
He who seeks God should be patient and enduring;
I have not heard of an alchemist being sad. Much gold he reduces to ashes so
that he may one day turn copper into gold. Gold is good with which to buy—and
what couldst thou wish to buy better than the face of thy Friend?
The Supplicant’s Refuge:
The Story of One
Who was
Assiduous in Prayer
An old man spent the night in worship and the
morning in prayer. A guardian angel whispered to him, “Go, take thy way, for
thy prayers are not acceptable at this door.”
The next night again he passed the night in
devotion, and a disciple, being informed of his circumstances said, “When thou
seest that the door is shut, why dost thou thus exert thyself?”
Weeping, he replied, “O, my son! Dost thou
suppose that although He has torn my reins I shall keep my hands from off his
saddle-straps? When a supplicant is repelled at one door, what is his fear if
he know of another?”
While thus he spoke, with his head upon the
ground, the angel uttered this message in his ears, “Although there is no merit
in him, his prayers are accepted, for except Me, he has no refuge.”
The Story of
Sultan Mahmud and His Love for
Ayaz
Some one found fault with the king of Ghazani,
saying, “Ayaz, his favorite slave, possesses no beauty. It is strange that a
nightin-gale should love a rose that has neither color nor perfume.”
This was told to Mahmud, who said, “My love, O
sir, is for virtue, not for form or stature.”
I have heard that in a narrow pass a camel fell
and a chest of pearls was broken. The king gave the signal for plunder, and
urged on his horse with speed. The horsemen did likewise, and, leaving the king
behind, gathered up the pearls. Not one of them remained near the king except
Ayaz.
“O, thou of curly locks!” said Mahmud, “What hast
thou gained of the plunder?”
“Nothing,” he replied. “I walked in haste behind
thee, I do not occupy myself with riches away from thy service.”
If an honorable place in the court be thine, be
not neglectful of the king because of gain elsewhere.
__ Honor’s Sacrifice: The Story of a
Village Chief
A village chief passed with his son through
the center of the imperial army. In the presence of such pomp and splendor the
man displayed humility and fled, through fear, into a corner.
“After all,” observed the son, “thou art a village
chief, and of higher position than the nobles. Why dost thou tremble like a
willow tree?”
“True,” replied the father. I am a chief and a
ruler, but my honor lies as far as my village.”
Thus, are the saints overwhelmed with fear when
they stand in the court of their King.
____________________ The Story of
a Firefly
Perhaps thou mayest have seen the firefly shine
like a lamp in the garden at night.
“O, night-illuminating moth!” Someone said, “Why
comest thou not in the daytime?”
The firefly gave an answer full of wisdom,
“Because I am not visible before the sun.”
________________________ Love’s
Sacrifice
Someone said to a moth, “Go, thou contemptible
creature, and make friendship with one worthy of thyself. Go where thou seest
the path of hope. How different is thy love from that of the candle! Thou art
not a salamander— hover not around the fire, for bravery is necessary before
combat. It is not compatible with reason that thou shouldst acknowledge as a
friend one whom thou knowest to be thine enemy.”
“What does it matter if I burn?” The moth
replied.
“I have love in my heart, and this flame is as a
flower to me. Not of my own accord do I throw myself into the fire; the chain
of her love is upon my neck. Who is it that finds fault with my friendship of
my friend? I am content to be slain at her feet. I burn because she is dear to
me, and because my destruction may affect her. Say not to the helpless man from
whose hands the rein have fallen, ‘Drive slowly.’”
Another Story
on the Same Subject
One night, as I lay awake, I heard a moth say to
a candle, “I am thy lover; if I burn, it is proper. Why dost thou weep?”
The candle replied, “O, my friend! Love is not
thy business. Thou fliest from before a flame; I stand erect until I am entirely
consumed. If the fire of love has burned thy wings, regard me, who from head to
foot must be destroyed.”
Before the night had passed, someone put the
candle out, exclaiming, “Such is the end of love!”
Grieve not over the grave of one who lost his
life for his friend; be glad of heart, for he was the chosen of Him.
I thou art a lover, wash not thy head of the
sickness of love; like Sa‘di, wash thy hands of selfishness.
A devoted lover holds not back his hand from the
object of his affections though arrows and stones may rain upon his head.
Be cautious; if thou goest down to the sea, give
thyself up the storm.
chapter 4
Concerning
Humility
Thou, O creature of God, wast created of the
dust; therefore, be humble as the dust. Be not covetous, nor oppressive, nor
headstrong. Thou art from the dust; be not like fire. When the terrible fire
raised his head in pride, the dust prostrated itself in humility.
And since the fire was arrogant and the dust was
meek, from the former were the demons formed, and from the latter mankind.
__________________ The Story of a
Raindrop
A raindrop fell from a spring cloud, and, seeing
the wide expanse of the sea, was shamed. “Where the sea is,” it reflected,
“where am I? Compared with that, forsooth, I am extinct.”
While thus regarding itself with an eye of contempt,
an oyster took it to its bosom, and Fate so shaped its course that eventually
the raindrop became a famous royal pearl.
It was exalted, for it was humble. Knocking at
the door of extinction, it became existent.
Humility the
Path of Greatness: A Story Illustrative of Pious Men Regarding Themselves with Contempt
A sagacious youth of noble family landed at a
seaport of Turkey, and, as he displayed piety add wisdom, his baggage was
deposited in a mosque.
One day the priest said to him, “Sweep away the
dust and rubbish from the mosque.”
Immediately, the young man went away and no one
saw him there again. Thus, did the elder and his followers suppose he did not
care to serve.
The next day, a servant of the mosque met him on
the road and said, “Thou didst act wrongly in thy perverse judgment. Knowest
thou not, O conceited youth, that men are dignified by service?”
Sorrowfully, the youth began to weep. “O
soul-cherishing and heart-illuminating friend!” He answered, “I saw no dirt or
rubbish in that holy place but mine own corrupt self. Therefore, I retraced my
steps, for a mosque is better cleansed from such.”
Humility is the only ritual for a devotee. If
thou desire greatness, be humble; no other ladder is there by which to climb.
Concerning
Humility: A Story of Sultan Bayazid
Bastami
When Bayazid was coming from his bath one morning
during the Eid festival, someone unwittingly emptied a tray of ashes from a
window upon his head. With his face and turban al bespattered, he rubbed his
hands in gratitude and said, “I am in truth worthy of the fires of hell. Why
should I be angered by a few ashes?”
The great do not regard themselves; look not for
the godliness in a self-conceited man. Eminence does not consist in outward
show and vaunting words, nor dignity in hauteur and pretension.
On the Day of Judgment thou wilt see in Paradise
him who sought truth and rejected vain pretension.
He who is headstrong and obdurate falleth
headlong; if thou desire greatness, abandon pride.
The Laudable Character: Discourse
on Conceit
Expect not he who is possessed of worldly vanities
to follow the path of religion, nor look for godliness in him who wallows in
conceit.
If thou desire dignity, do not, like the mean,
regard the fellows with contemptuous eyes.
Seek no position more honorable than that of
being known to the world as a man of laudable character.
Thou deemest him not great who, being of equal
rank, is haughty towards thee; when thou makest a similar display before
others, dost thou not appear before them as the arrogant appear before thee?
If thou are eminent, laugh not, if thou art wise,
at them that are lowly. Many have fallen from high whose places have been taken
by the fallen.
Though thou be free from defect, revile not me
who am full of blemishes.
One holds the chain of the Ka’ba temple in his
hands; another lies drunken in the tavern. If God calls the latter, who can
drive him away. If He expel the former, who can bring him back? The one cannot
implore the divine help be reason of his good deeds, nor is the door of
repentance closed upon the other.
The Story of the Dervish and
the Proud Ghazi
A poorly clad doctor of law and divinity sat one
day in the front row of seats in a Ghazi’s court. The Ghazi gave him a sharp
look, whereupon the usher took the man by the arm and said, “Get up; dost thou
not know that the best place is not for such as thee? Either take a lower seat,
or remain standing, or leave the court altogether. Be not so bold as to occupy
the seat of the great. If thou are humble, pose not as a lion. Not every one is
worthy of the chief seat; honor is proportionate to rank, and rank to merit.”
He who sits with honor in a place lower than that
of which he is worthy falls not with ignominy from eminence.
Fuming with anger, the doctor moved to a lower
seat. Two advocates in the court then entered into a spirited discussion, and
flew at each other with their tongues like fighting-cocks with beak and claw.
They were involved in a complicated knot that neither could unravel. From the
last row of seats the tattered doctor roared out with the voice of a lion in
the forest:
“It is not the veins of the neck that should
stand out in argument,” he said, “but the proofs, which should be full of
meaning. I, too, have the faculty of argument.”
“Speak on,” they answered.
__________________ The Essentials of
Worth
With the quill of eloquence that he possessed,
the doctor engraved his words upon the minds of his listeners like inscriptions
on a signet -ring; and, drawing his pen through the letters of pretension, he
invoked applause from every corner. So hard did he drive the steed of speech
that the Ghazi lagged behind like an ass in the mire. Removing his cloak and
turban, the latter sent them to the doctor as a token of his respect.
“Alas!” he said, “I did not discern thy merit,
nor welcome thee on thy arrival. I regret to see thee in the condition with
such a stock of knowledge.”
The usher then approached the stranger courteously
in order that he might place the Ghazi’s turban upon his head. But the doctor
repelled him with his hands and tongue, saying:
“Place not upon my head the fetters of pride, for
tomorrow this fifty-yarded turban would turn my head from those in jaded garb.
Those who called me ‘lord’ and ‘chief’ would then appear insignificant in mine
eyes. Is pure water different whether it be contained in a goblet of gold or an
earthen ewer? A man’s head requires brain and intellect, not an imposing turban
like thine. A big head does not make one worthy; it is like the gourd, void of
kernel. Be not proud because of thy turban and beard, for the one is cotton and
the other grass. One should aim at the degree of eminence that is comfortable
with one’s merit. With all this intellect, I will not call thee man, though a
hundred slaves walk behind thee. How well spoke the shell when a greedy fool
picked it out of the mire: ‘None will buy me for the smallest price; be not so
insane as to wrap me up in silk.’ A man is not better than his fellows by reason
of his wealth, for an ass, though covered with a satin cloth, is still an ass.”
In this way the clever doctor washed the rancor
from his heart with the water of words. Thus do those who are aggrieved speak
harshly. Be not idle when thine enemy has fallen. Dash out his brains when thou
art able, for delay will efface the grudge from thy mind.
So overcome was the Ghazi by his vehemence that
he exclaimed, “Verily, this day is a hard one.” He bit his fingers in
amazement, and his eyes stared at the doctor like the two stars near the pole
of the lesser bear. As for the latter, he went abruptly out and was never seen
there again. They in the court clamored to know whence such an impertinent
fellow had come. An official went in search of him, and ran in all directions,
asking whether a man of that description had been seen. Someone said, “We know
no one in this city so eloquent as Sa‘di.”
A hundred thousand praises to him who said so;
see how sweetly he uttered the bitter truth!
Sa‘di’s
Eloquence: The Story of the
Honey-Seller
A man of smiling countenance sold honey, captivating
the hearts of all by his pleasant manner. His customers were as numerous as
flies around the sugar cane—if he had sold poison people would have bought it
for honey.
A forbidding looking man regarded him with envy,
being jealous of the way his business prospered. One day he paraded the town
with a tray of honey on his head and a scowl on his face. He wandered about
crying his wares, but no one evinced a desire to buy. At nightfall, having
earned no money, he went and sat dejectedly in a corner, with a face as bitter
as that of a dinner fearful of retribution. The wife of one of his neighbors
jokingly remarked, “Honey is bitter to on of sour temper.”
It is wrong to eat bread at the table of one
whose face is as wrinkled with frowns as the cloth on which it is served.
O, sir! Add not to thine own burdens, for an evil
temper brings disaster in its train.
If thou hast not a sweet tongue like Sa‘di, thou
hast neither gold nor silver.
A Story Illustrating the
Forbearance of Good Men
I have heard that a debased drunkard caught a
pious man by the collar. The latter received his blows in silence, and in
forbearance lifted not his head.
A passerby remarked, “Art thou not a man? It is a
pity to be patient with this ignorant fellow.”
The pious man replied, “Speak not thus to me. A
foolish drunkard collars one by the neck in the thought that he is fighting
with a lion; there is not fear that a learned man will contend with an inebriated
fool.”
The virtuous follow this rule in life—when they
suffer oppression they display kindness.
Patience Under
Oppression: A Story Illustrating the
Noble-Mindedness of Men
A dog bit the leg of a hermit with such violence
that venom dropped from its teeth, and the poor man could not sleep all night
through pain.
His little daughter chided him, saying, “Hast
thou not teeth as well?”
The unfortunate parent wept and then smilingly
replied, “Dear child! Although I was stronger than the dog, I restrained my
anger. Should I receive a sword-blow on the head, I could not apply my teeth to
the legs of a dog.”
One can revenge oneself upon the mean, but a man
cannot act like a dog.
The Story of a Kind Master and His Disobedient Slave
An eminent man, famous for his many virtues,
possessed a slave of evil disposition, who in ugliness of feature surpassed
every one in the city. He closely attended his master at meal times, but he
would not have given a drop of water to a dying man. Neither reproof nor the
rod influenced him; the house was in a constant state of disorder through him.
Sometimes, in his bad temper, would he litter the paths with thorns and
rubbish; at other times, throw the chickens down the well. His unhappy
temperament was written on his face, and never did he perform a task successfully.
Someone asked his master, “What is there that
thou likest in this slave—his agreeable manners, or his skill, or beauty?
Surely, it is not worth while to keep such an unruly knave and burden thyself
with such an affliction. I will procure for thee a slave of handsome appearance
and good character. Take this one to the slave-market and sell him. If a piece
is offered for him, do not refuse it, for he would be dear at that.”
The good-natured man smiled and said, “O, friend!
Although the character of my slave is certainly bad, my character is improved
by him, for when I have learned to tolerate his manner I shall be able to put
up with anything at the hands of others. It was not humane to sell him and thus
make known his faults. And it is better to endure his affliction myself than to
pass him on to others.”
Accept for thyself what thou wouldst accept for
others. If distressed thyself, involve not thy fellows.
Forbearance is at first like poison, but when
ingrained in the nature it becomes like honey.
Good that
Comes from Evil: The Story of Maruf
Karkhi and the Sick Traveler
No one follows the path of Maruf Karkhi who does
not first banish the idea of fame from his head.
A traveler once came to Maruf’s house at the
point of death— his life was joined to his body by a single hair. He passed the
night in wailing and lamentation, sleeping not himself nor permitting any one
else to sleep by reason of his groans. His mind was distressed and his temper
was vile; though he died not himself, he killed many by his fretting. Such was
his restlessness that every one flew from him. Maruf Karkhi alone remained. He,
like a brave man, girt his loins and sat up many nights in attendance at the
sick man’s bedside. But one night Maruf was attacked by sleep— how long can a
sleepless man keep up?
When the invalid saw him asleep he began to rave,
“Cursed be thy abominable race.” He cried, “What knows this glutton,
intoxicated with sleep, of the helpless man who has not closed his eyes?”
Maruf took no notice of these words, but one of
the women of the harem, overhearing them, remarked, “Didst thou not hear what
that wailing beggar said? Turn him out, and tell him to take his abuse with him
and die elsewhere. Kindness and compassion have their occasions, but to do good
to the evil is evil; only a fool plants trees in barren soil. A grateful dog is
better than an ungrateful man.”
Maruf laughed, “Dear woman,” he replied, “Be not
offended at his ungracious words. If he raves at me through sickness, I am not
angered. When thou art strong and well thyself, bear gratefully the burdens of
the weak. If thou cherish the tree of kindness, thou wilt assuredly eat of the
fruits of a good name.”
They attain to dignity who rid themselves of
arrogance.
He who worships grandeur is the slave of pride;
he knows not that greatness consists in meekness.
__ The Story Illustrating the Folly of the
Ignoble
An impudent fellow begged of a pious man, but the
latter had no money in his house. Otherwise, would he have showered gold upon
him like dust. The infamous rascal, therefore, went out and began to abuse him
in the street.
The eye of the fault-finder sees no merits. What
regard has he who has acted dishonorably for the honor of another?
Being informed of his words, the pious man smiled
and said, “It is well; this man has enumerated only a few of my bad
qualities—only one out of a hundred that are known to me. The evil that he has
supposed in me I know for certain that I possess. Only one year has he been
acquainted with me; how can he know the faults of seventy years? None but the
Omniscient knows my faults better than myself. Never have I known one who has
attributed to me so few defects. If he bear witness against me in the Day of
Judgment, I shall have no fear. If he who thinks ill of me seek to reveal my
faults, tell him to come and take the record from me.”
Be humble when the veil is torn from off thy
character. If a pitcher were made of the dust of men, calumnious would shatter
it with stones.
The Story of
One Who Had a Little Knowledge
A certain man knew something of astronomy and his
head, in consequence, was filled with pride. Journeying far, he visited
Kushyar, their sage, who turned his eyes from him and would teach him nothing.
When the disappointed traveler was on the point of leaving, Kushyar addressed
him with these words:
“Thou imaginest that thou art full of knowledge.
How can a vessel that is full receive of more? Rid thyself of thy pretensions,
so that thou mayest be filled. Being full of vanity, thou goest empty.”
A Story of
Illustrating the Humility of the
Pious
Someone heard the barking of a dog in the ruined
hut of a pious man. Reflecting upon the strangeness of the fact, he went and
searched, but found no traces of a dog. In truth, the devotee alone was in the
house.
Not wishing his curiosity to be revealed, the man
was departing, when the owner of the house cried out, “Come in, why standest
thou upon the door? Knowest thou not, O friend, that it was I who barked? When
I discerned that humility was acceptable to God, I banished pride and vanity
from my heart, and clamored with barks at the door of God, for I saw none more
lowly than a dog?”
If thou desire to attain to dignity, let humility
be thy path.
Behold, when the dew lies low upon the earth, the
sun doth raise it to the skies.
Soft Speech
Quenches Wrath: A Story Illustrating
the Value of Soft Words
The slave of a king escaped, and though a search
was made, was not discovered. Later, when the fugitive returned, the king in
anger, ordered that he should be put to death.
When the executioner brought out his scimitar,
like the tongue of a thirsty man, the despondent slave cried out:
“O, God!” I forgive the king the shedding of my
blood, for I have ever enjoyed his bounty and shared in his prosperity. Let him
not suffer for this deed n the Day of Judgment, to the delight of his enemies.”
When the king heard these words his anger was
appeased, and he appointed the slave to be an officer of the standard.
The moral of this story is that soft speech acts
like water on the fires of wrath. Do not the soldiers on the battlefield wear
armor consisting of a hundred folds of silk?
O friend! Be humble when thou dealest with a
fierce foe, for gentleness will blunt the sharpest sword.
A Story
Illustrating the Wisdom of Feigning
Deafness
Many writers affirm the falsity of the idea that
Hatim was deaf.
One morning this attention was attracted by the
buzzing of a fly, which had become ensnared in a spider’s web. “O thou,” he
observed, “Who art fettered by thine own avarice, be patient. Wherever there be
a tempting bait, huntsmen and snare are close at hand.”
One of his disciples remarked, “Strange it is
that thou couldst hear the buzzing of a fly that hardly reached our ears. No
longer can they call thee deaf.”
The Sheik replied, “Deafness is better than the
hearing of idle words. Those that sit with me in private are prone to conceal
my faults and parade my virtues; thus, do they make me vain. I feign deafness
that I may be spared their flattery. When my assumed affliction has become
known to them they will speak freely of that which is good and bad in me; then,
being grieved at the recital of my faults, I shall abstain from evil.”
Go, not down a well by a rope of praise. Be deaf,
like Hatim, and listen to the words of them that slander thee.
No Malice in a
Loving Heart: A Story Illustrating
Forbearance for the Sake of Friends
A certain man, whose heart was as pure as
Sa‘di’s, fell in love. Although taunted by his enemies in consequence, he
showed no anger.
Someone asked him, “Hast thou no sense of shame?
Art thou not sensible to these indignities? It is abject to expose oneself to
ridicule, and weak to endure patiently the scoffs of enemies. To overlook the
errors of the ignorant is wrong, lest it be said that thou hast neither
strength nor courage.”
How elegantly did the distracted lover make
reply! His words are worthy to be writ in letters of gold:
“Alone is my heart there dwelleth affection for
my loved, thus, it contains no room for malice.”
______________ A Story of Luqman, the Sage
I have heard that Luqman was of dark complexion
and careless of his appearance. Someone mistook him for a slave, and employed
him in digging trenches at Baghdad. Thus, he continued for a year, no one
suspecting who he was. When the truth was known the master was afraid, and fell
at Luqman’s feet, offering excuses.
The sage smiled and said, “Of what use are these
apologies? For a year my heart has bled through thine oppression. How can I
forget that in one hour? But I forgive thee, good man, for thy gain has caused
to me no loss. Thou hast built thy house; my wisdom and knowledge have
increased. I, too, possess a slave, and frequently set him to arduous labor.
Nevermore, when I remember the hardships of my toil, will I afflict him.”
He who has not suffered at the hands of the
strong grieves not at the frailties of the weak.
If thou be sorrowed by those above thee, be not
harsh with thine inferiors.
Concerning
Resignation
Happiness comes from the favor of God, not from
the might of the powerful.
If the heavens bestow not fortune, by no valor
can it be obtained.
The ant suffers not by reason of its weakness;
the tiger eats not by virtue of its strength.
Since the hand reaches not to the skies, accept
as inevitable the fortune that it brings.
If thy life is destined to be long, no snake or
sword will harm thee; when the fated day of death arrives, the antidote will
kill thee no less than the poison.
The Story of a
Soldier of Isfahan
In Isfahan I had a friend who was warlike, spirited,
and shrewd. His hands and dagger were forever stained with blood. The hearts
of his enemies were consumed by fear of him; even the tigers stood in awe of
him. In battle he was like a sparrow among locusts; in combat, sparrows and
men were alike to him. Had he made an attack upon Feridun, he would not have
given the latter time to draw his sword. Neither in bravery nor magnanimity
had he an equal.
This warrior formed a liking for my company, but
as I was not destined to remain in Isfahan, Fate transferred me from Iraq to
Syria, in which holy land my staying was agreeable. After some time the desire
for my home attracted me, so I returned to Iraq.
One night, the memory of the sepoy passed through
my mind; the salt of his friendship opened the wounds of my gratitude, for I
had eaten salt from his hand. To meet him, I went to Isfahan and inquired as to
where he lived.
I chanced upon him. He who had been a youth had
become old; his form, once erect as an arrow, had become as a bow. Like a hoary
mountain, his head was covered with snowy hair. Time had conquered him and
twisted the wrist of his bravery. The pride of his strength had gone; the head
of weakness was upon his knees.
“O, tiger-seizer!” I exclaimed. “What has made
thee decrepit like an old fox?”
_____________________ Resignation to Fate
He laughed and said, “Since the day of the battle
of Tartary, I have expelled the thoughts of fighting from my head. Then did I
see the earth arrayed with spears like a forest of reeds. I raised like smoke
the dust of conflict, but when Fortune does not favor, of what avail is fury? I
am one who, in combat, could take with a spear a ring from the palm of the
hand, but as my star did not befriend me, they encircled me as with a ring. I
seized the opportunity of flight, for only a fool strives with Fate. How could
my helmet and cuirass aid me when my bright star favored me not? When the key of
victory is not in the hand, no one can break open the door of conquest with his
arms.
“The enemy were a pack of leopards, and as strong
as elephants. The heads of the heroes were encased in iron, as were also the
hoofs of the horses. We urged on our Arab steeds like a cloud, and when the two
armies encountered each other, thou wouldst have said they had struck down the
sky to the earth. From the raining arrows, that descended like hail, the storm
of death arose in every corner. Not one of our troops came out of the battle,
but his cuirass was soaked with blood. Not that our swords were blunt—it was
the vengeance of stars of ill fortune. Overpowered, we surrendered, like a fish
which, though protected by scales, is caught by the hook in the bait. Since Fortune
averted her face, useless was our shield against the arrows of Fate.”
______ The Story of the Doctor and the
Villager
One night a villager could not sleep owing to a
pain in his side. A doctor said, “This pain is caused by his having eaten the
leaves of the vine. I shall be astonished if he lasts through the night, for
the arrows of a Tartar in his breast were better for him than the eating of
such indigestible food.”
That night the doctor died. Forty years have
since passed and the villager yet lives.
________ The Story of the Villager and His
Ass
The ass of a villager died, so he set the head
upon a vine in his garden in order that it might ward off the Evil Eye.
A sage old man passed by and laughingly remarked,
“Dost think, O friend, this will effect the purpose? In life, the ass could not
protect itself from blows; so, in weakness, did it die.”
What knows the physician of the condition of the
sick, when, helpless, he himself will die through illness?
Predestination
of Fortune: A Story Illustrating
Luck
A poor man dropped a dinar in the road. He
searched much, but at last, despairing, abandoned the attempt.
Someone came along and found the coin by chance.
Good and ill fortunes are predestined. Our daily
portion depends not upon our strength and efforts, for those who are strongest
and strive the most stand often in the direst need.
_____ A Story of One Who Blamed His
Destiny
There was once a rich and prosperous man named
Bakhtyar. The wife of one of his neighbors, who was in the other extreme of
poverty, upbraided her husband one night when he went to her empty-handed,
saying, “No one is so poor and unfortunate as thee. Take a lesson from thy
neighbors, who are well to-do. Why art thou not fortunate like them?”
The man replied, “I am incapable of aught;
quarrel not with Fate. I have not been endowed with the power to make myself a
Bakhtyar.”
_________ The Story of a Dervish and His
Wife
A dervish remarked to his wife, who was of ill-
favored countenance, “Since Fate has made thee ugly, do not encrust thy face
with cosmetics.”
Who can attain good fortune by force! Who, with
collyrium, can make the blind to see?
Not one among the philosophers of Greece or Rome
could produce honey from the thorn. Wild beasts cannot become men; education is
wasted upon them. A mirror can be freed from stain, but it cannot be made from
a stone. Roses do not blossom on the branches of the willow; hot baths never
yet made an Ethiopian white. Since one cannot escape the arrows of Fate,
resignation is the only shield.
Fate Blinds
the Eye: The Story of a Vulture and
a Kite
A vulture said to a kite, “No one can see so far
as I.”
“Possibly,” replied the kite, “but what canst
thou see across the desert?”
Gazing down, the vulture exclaimed, “Yonder do I
see a grain or wheat.”
Thereupon, they flew to the ground. When the
vulture settled upon the wheat he became caught in a trap. He had not known
that, through his eating the grain, Fate would ensnare him by the neck.
Not every oyster contains a pearl, not every
archer hits the target.
“Of what use,” the kite inquired, “was it to see
the grain when thou couldst not discern the trap of thine enemy?”
“Caution,” said the captive vulture, “availeth
not with Destiny.”
When the decrees of past eternity are brought to
action, the keenest eyes are rendered blind by Fate.
In the ocean, where no shoreline appears, the
swimmer strives in vain.
_____________________ A Story of a
Camel
A young camel said to its mother, “After thou
hast made a journey, rest awhile.”
“If the bridle were in my hands,” was the reply,
“no one would ever see me in the string of camels with a load upon my back.”
Fate is the helmsman of the ship of life, no matter
though the owner rend his clothes.
O, Sa‘di! Look not for aid from any man. God is
the giver, and He alone. If thou worship Him, the door of His mercy sufficeth
thee if He drive thee away, no one will ease thee. If He make thee to wear a
crown, raise thy head; if not, bow thy head in despair.
Specious
Piety: A Discourse Concering
Hypocrisy
Who knows that thou art not pledged to God even
though thou standest in prayer without ablution?
That prayer is the key to hell which thou per-
formest only before the eyes of men.
If the high-road of thy life lead to aught but
God, thy prayer mat will be thrown into the fire.
He whose heart is good and makes no outward show
of piety is better than one of outward sanctity whose heart is false.
A night-prowling robber is better than a sinner
in the tunic of a saint.
Expect not wages from Omar, O son, when thou
workest in the house of Zaid.
If in private I am bad and mean, of what avail is
it to pose before the world with honor? How much will the bag of hypocrisy
weigh in the Scales of Justice?
The outside of the hypocrite’s coat is neater
than the lining, for the one is seen and the other is hidden.
Concerning
Contentment
He knows not God nor performs His worship who is
not contented with his lot.
Contentment maketh a man rich—tell this to the
avaricious.
O irresolute one! Be tranquil, for grass grows
not upon revolving stones.
Pamper not thy body if thou be a man of sense,
for in so doing dost thou seek thine own destruction.
The wise acquire virtue, and they that pamper
their bodies are devoid of merit.
Eating and sleeping is the creed of animals; to
adopt it is the manner of fools.
Happy is that fortunate who, in meditation,
prepares for the last journey by means of the knowledge of God.
To him who knows not the darkness from the light,
the face of a demon is as that of a Houri.
How can the falcon fly to the sky when the stone
of avarice is tied to its wing?
If thou pay less attention to thy food than to
worship thou mayest become an angel. First, cultivate the qualities of a man,
then reflect upon the character of angels.
Eat in proportion to thy hunger; how can he give
praises whom scarce can breathe by reason of his gluttony?
He whose stomach is full is void of wisdom. The
prey is entrapped in the snare because of its greed.
The Snare of
Avarice: the Story of the King
Khwarazm
A covetous man paid an early morning visit to the
king of Khwarazm, and twice prostrated himself to the ground before him.
“Tell me, O father,” his son inquired, “didst
thou not say that Mecca was thy place of worship? Why didst thou today repeat
thy prayers before the king?”
Contentment exalteth the head; that which is full
of avarice comes no higher than the shoulder.
He who has wrapped up the volume of his avarice
needs not to write to anyone, “I am thy slave and servant.”
By begging wilt thou be driven from every
assembly; drive it from thyself, so that no one may drive thee away.
__________ Concerning the Evil of
Over-eating
Some said to a pious man who was stricken with
fever, “Ask for some conserve of roses from such a one.”
“O, friend!” He replied, “It were better to die
in bitterness than to endure the affliction of his sour face.”
A wise man does not eat conserve of roses from
the hand of one whose face has been soured by pride.
Pursue not that which thy heart desires, for the
pampering of the body destroys the fires of life.
The gluttonous man bears the weight of his corpulence;
if he obtains not food, he bears the weight of grief. It is better that the
stomach should be empty than the mind.
____ The End of Gluttony: A Story of a
Glutton
In company with some religious mendicants I
entered a date-grove in Basra. One of the party was a glutton. He, having girt
his loins, climbed up a tree, and falling headlong, died.
The headsman of the village asked, “Who killed
this man?”
“Go softly, friend,” I answered, “he fell from a
branch—‘twas the weight of his stomach.”
_____________________ A Story of a Recluse
The Amir of Tartary presented a silken robe to an
elderly recluse, who, putting it on, kissed the hand of the messenger, and
said, “A thousand praises to the king! Excellent is this splendid robe, but I
prefer my own patched habit.”
If thou hast relinquished the world, sleep upon
the bare ground—kiss it not before any one for the sake of a costly carpet.
_______ A Story Illuminating the Evil of
Avarice
To a poor man who had naught to eat but bread and
onions, a foolish man remarked, “Go, wretched man, and bring some cooked meat
from the public feast. Ask boldly and be not afraid of anyone, for he who is
modest must go without his share.”
Acting on this advice, the beggar put on his
cloak and started off. The servants of the feast tore off his clothes and broke
his arm.
Weeping, he cried, “O, my soul! What remedy is
there for one’s own actions? One seized by avarice becomes the seeker of his
own misfortunes. After this, the bread and onions are good enough for me.”
A barley loaf procured by the exertions of one’s
own arm is better than a loaf of flour from the table of the liberal.”
_____________ The Story of an Ambitious
Cat
A cat who lived in the house of an old
woman of humble circumstances wandered to the palace of a noble, whose slaves
repulsed the animal with arrows.
Bleeding from many wounds, the cat ran off in
terror, thus reflecting, “Since I have escaped from the hands of those slaves,
the mice in the ruined hut of the old woman are good enough for me.”
Honey is not worth the price of a sting; better
it is to be content with the syrup of dates than expose oneself to that.
God is not pleased with him who is not contented
with his lot.
Contetedness
With One’s Lot: The Story of a Short-Sighted
Man and His High-Minded Wife
A certain child having cut its teeth, the father
bent his head in anxious thought and said, “How can I obtain the bread and food
of which the child will now have need?”
“Be not alarmed,” his wife replied, “for until
our child shall die, He who gaveth him teeth will send him bread. A rich man
provides for his slave; why should not He who created the slave do likewise?
Thou has not the trust in God that the purchased slave reposes in his master.”
I have heard that in olden times stones became
silver in the hands of saints. Think not that this is contrary to reason—when
thou hast become contented, silver and stones will be as one to thee.
Say to the devotee who worships kings that a king
is poorer than a dervish.
A dinar satisfies a beggar; Feridun was but half
content with the whole of the kingdom of Persia.
A beggar free from care is better off than a
troubled king.
The villager and his wife sleep more happily than
the king ever did in his palace.
Though one be a king and the other a cottoncarder,
when they sleep in death the night of both becomes day.
When thou seest a rich man filled with pride, go
and give thanks, O thou who art poor, that thou, praise be to God! hast not the
power to inflict injury upon anyone.”
____ A Story of a Holy-Man Who Built a
House
A holy man built a house as high as is own stature.
Someone said to him, “I know thee able to erect a better house than this.”
“Enough,” he cried, “what need have I of a lofty
roof? This that I have built is high enough for a dwelling which I must leave
at death.”
Set not thy house in the path of a flood, O
slave, for never will it be perfected.
Safety in
Retirement: Story of a Sheikh Who
Became King
A certain king died, and, having no heir,
bequeathed the throne to a vulnerable sheikh. When the recluse heard the roar
the drums of empire, he desired no longer the corner of seclusion. He leads
the army to left and right, and became so strong and valiant that he filled the
hearts of the brave with fear.
After he had slain a number of his enemies some
others combined together against him and reduced him to such straits in his
fortified town that he sent a message to a pious man, saying, “Aid me with thy
prayers, for the sword and arrow do not avail.”
The devotee laughed and said, “Why did he not
content himself with half a loaf and his vigils? Did not the
wealth-worshipping Korach know that the treasure of safety lies in the corner
of retirement?”
______________ Discourse Concerning Riches
The generous man may attain to perfection
although he possesses not gold.
Dost think that if a mean man became a Korach his
sordid nature would be changed?
If he who trades in liberality obtains not bread,
his nature remains yet rich.
Generosity is the soil, and riches the seed that
is sown; give, that the root may not be destitute of a branch.
Exert not thyself in the amassing of wealth, for
evil is the smell of stagnant water; strive rather, to be generous, for running
water becomes a flood.
The miser who falls from position and wealth, but
seldom stands a second time upon his feet.
If thou be a precious jewel, grieve not, for Time
will not pass thee by; it is the brickbat by the wayside that goes unheeded.
Shavings of gold that fall from the scissors are searched for with a candle.
Concerning
Education
Those who turn the reins of their desires from
unlawful things have surpassed Rustam and Sam in valor.
None is so fearful of the enemy as thou, slave of
thine own passions.
The earthly body is a city, containing both good
and evil; thou art the King and Reason is thy wise minister.
In this city, the headstrong men pursue their
trades of avarice and greed; Resignation and Temperance are the citizens of
fame and virtue; Lust and Wantonness the thieves and pick-pockets.
When the king shows favor to the wicked, how can
the wise remain in peace?
The passions of evil, envy, and hatred are
inherent in thee as is the blood of thy veins. If these thine enemies gained in
strength they would turn their heads from thy rule and counsel; no resistance
do they offer when they see the mailed fist of Reason.
Night-thieves and vagabonds wander not in the
places where the patrols guard.
The chief who punishes not his enemy is bereft of
power by the strength of the latter.
More on this point I will not speak—a word
suffices to him who puts into practice what he reads.
The Wisdom of
Silence: Discourse Concerning the
Exellence of Taciturnity
Be silent, O thou who knowest many things! For he
that speaketh little will be free from reproach on the Day of Judgment.
The man of many words is deaf; no counsel does he
heed like silence.
When thou desirest continually to speak thou
findest no sweetness in the speech of others.
Those who reflect upon right and wrong are better
than triflers with ready answers.
He that speaks little thou dost never see
ashamed; a grain of musk is better than a heap of mud.
Beware of the fool whose volume of words is as
that of ten men—a hundred arrows shot and each one wide of the target. If thou
art wise, shoot one, and that one straight.
Utter not slander before a wall—oft may it happen
that behind are listening ears.
Enclose thy secrets within the city walls of thy
mind, and beware that none may find the gates of thy city open.
A wise man sews up his mouth: the candle is
burned by means of its wick.
_____ A Story Concerning the Keeping of
Secrets
Takash, king of Persia, imparted a secret to his
slaves, adding, “Tell it not to anyone.” For a year they kept secret in their
hearts; in one day it became diffused throughout the world.
The king ordered the slaves to be executed. One
among them begged for mercy, saying: “Kill not thy slaves, for the fault was
thine. Thou didst not dam up that secret when it was a spring: why seek to
arrest its course now that it has become a flood?
Entrust jewels to treasurers, but be the keeper
of thine own secrets. Thou hast the power until the word be spoken; then, does
it gain mastery over thee.
Speech is a demon confined in the well of the
mind; leave it not free on thy palate and tongue. When the genii has escaped
from the cage, no stratagem will bring him back.
Idle Talkers—A
Comparison: A Story Illustrating the Fact that Silence is Best for Fools
There was once in Egypt a religious mendicant who
never opened his mouth in speech. Wise men assembled around him from far and
near, like moths around a candle.
One night, he reflected: “Merit is concealed
beneath a silent tongue. If I remain thus silent, how will men know that I am
learned?”
Therefore he indulged in speech, and his friends
and enemies alike found him to be the most ignorant man in Egypt. His followers
dispersed and his glory vanished. So he went on a journey and wrote on the
wall of a mosque: “Had I but seen myself in the mirror of understanding I
should not imprudently have torn the veil from off my mind. Although deformed,
I exposed my figure in the thought that I was handsome?”
A little-talker has a high reputation. Silence is
dignity, and the concealer of blemishes.
Express not in haste the thoughts of thy mind,
for thou canst reveal them when thou wilt.
The beasts are silent, and men are endowed with speech—idle-talkers
are worse than the bests.
___ A Story Illustrating the Folly of
Impertinence
In the course of a dispute someone uttered
improper words and was, in consequence, seized and nearly throttled.
“O thou conceited fellow!” Said an experienced
man, “If thy mouth had been closed like a bud, thou wouldst not have seen thy
skirt torn like a flower.”
Dost thou not see that fire is nothing but a
flame, which at any moment can be quenched with water?
If a man possesses merit, the merit speaks for
itself, not the owner of the merit.
If thou hast not the purest musk, claim not to
possess it; if thou hast, it makes itself known by its perfume.
____________________ Discourse on Slander
Speak no evil concerning the good or the wicked,
for thus thou wrongest the former and makest an enemy of the latter.
Know that he who defames another revealeth his
own faults.
If thou speak evil of anyone, thou art sinful,
even though what thou sayest be true.
________ A Story Concerning the Same
Subject
To one who stretched his tongue in slander, a
wise man said: “Speak not evil of any one before
me, so that I may not
think ill of thee. Although his dignity is lowered, thine own honor is not
increased thereby.”
Slander Leads
to Perdition: Why Thieving is Better
than Slandering
Someone said: “Thieving is better than backbiting.”
I replied: “That is strange to me. What good
seest thou in thieving that thou givest it preference to slander?”
“Thieves,” he explained, “live by virtue of their
strength and daring. The slanderer sins and reaps nothing.”
__________ Sa‘d.i and His Envious
Class-Friend.
A fellow-student at Nizamiah displayed malevolence
towards me, and I informed my tutor, saying: “Whenever I give more proper
answers than he the envious fellow becomes offended.”
The professor replied: “The envy of they friend
is not agreeable to thee, but I know not who told thee that back-biting was
commendable. If he seeks perdition through the path of envy, thou wilt join him
by the path of slander.”
_______________ A Story of Sa'di’s
Childhood
When a child, unable to distinguish between right
and wrong, I once resolved to fast, and a certain devout man thus taught me to
perform my ablutions and devotions: “First,” he said, “repeat the name of God,
according to the law of the Prophet. Secondly, make a vow. Thirdly, wash the
palms of the hands. Then wash thy nose and mouth three times and rub thy front
teeth with thy forefinger, for a toothbrush is forbidden when fasting. After
that, throw three handfuls of water upon thy face; then wash thy hands and arms
up to the elbows and repeat thy prayers by the telling of beads and the recital
of the attributes and praises of God. Lastly, wipe again thy head and wash thy
feet—thus end in the name of God.”
“No one,” added the old man, “knowing the form of
ablution better than myself. Dost thou not see that the elder of the village
has become decrepit?”
Hearing these words, the elder cried: “O impious
wretch! Didst thou not say that the use of a tooth-brush was unlawful in
fasting? I suppose, then, that slander is lawful? Before thou settest about a fast,
wash first thy mouth of improper words.”
____ Evil-Speaking: The Story of a Sufi’s
Rebuke
Some Sufis were sitting together in private, when
one of them opened his mouth in slander.
“Didst thou ever make a crusade in Europe?” he
was asked.
“Never have I met so unfortunate a man,” observed
the questioner. “The infidel remains safe from his enmity, yet a Muslim escapes
not the violence of his tongue.”
________________ Concerning Absent
Friends
In relation to an absent friend, two things are
unlawful. The first is to squander his possession; the second, to speak evil of
his name.
Look not for good words from him who mentions
the names of men with scorn, for behind thy back he says those things which he
said to thee of others.
He only is wise who concerns himself with his own
affairs and is I in indifferent to the world.
_________________ Where Slander is
Lawful
Three persons only is it permissible to slander.
The first is a tyrannical king who oppresses his subjects; it is lawful to
speak of his misdeeds so that people may beware of him. The second is he who is
shameless; deem it not a sin to speak ill of such a one, for by his own actions
are his faults revealed. The third is he that gives false weight and is a
cheat; say what thou knowest of his evil ways.
_________ Tale-Bearers Worse than Back-Biter
Someone said to a pious man, “Knowest thou what
such a one said concerning thee?”
“Silence!” He replied, it is best not to know
what an enemy said. Those who carry the words of an enemy are assuredly worse
than the enemy himself. Only they convey the speech of an enemy to a friend who
are in agreement with the enemy. Thou art worse than an enemy, for thou
revealest what he said in private.”
A tale-bearer makes an old strife now; fly as far
as thou art able from one who stirs up a dormant quarrel.
To be tied by the feet in a gloomy pit is better
than to carry mischief from place to place.
A quarrel is like a fire that the tale-bearer
feeds with fuel.
Ill-Fate of Tale-Bearers: Feridun
and His Vizier
Feridun had a vizier who was discerning and of enlightened
mind.
Some one went to the king one day and said, “The
vizier is thy secret enemy. There is not a person in the kingdom to whom he
has not lent out gold and silver on the condition that at thy death the loans
shall be repaid.
Regarding the vizier with threatening mien, the
king exclaimed, “Thou appearest before me in the guise of a friend; why art
thou my enemy at heart?”
The vizier kissed the ground as he replied, “I
desire, O renowned king, that all the people should be thy well-wishers. Since
at thy death they must repay me, they will pray for thy long life from fear of
me.”
Approving of this explanation, the king increased
the dignities of the vizier, while no one was more ill-fated and changed in
fortune than the tale-bearer.
It is not compatible with reason to kindle
between two men the fire of strife and burn oneself in the flames.
_______________ Discourse Concerning
Wives
That poor man is a king whose wife is obedient
and chaste. Grieve not over the troubles of the day when at night the dispeller
of thy sorrows is by thy side.
He has obtained his heart’s desire whose beloved
is of the same mind as himself.
If a woman be pure and of kindly speech, regard
neither her beauty nor her homeliness.
A woman of good nature is more to be desired than
one of beauty, for amiability conceals a multitude of flaws. Beware the
ill-tempered fairy. May heaven grant protection from a bad woman!
Prison is preferable to a house full of frowns;
traveling is a joy to him whose house contains a woman of ugly mind.
Close the door of happiness upon that house
whence the woman’s voice comes louder than her husband’s.
To walk bare-footed is better than to wear tight
shoes; the hardships of a journey are better than discord at home.
Domestic
Happiness: Discourse on the Training
of Sons
If thou desire that thy name should remain, train
thy son in knowledge and wisdom, for if he possesses not these thou diest
obscure, with no one to commemorate thy name.
Teach him a handicraft, though thou be as rich as
Korach. Place no hope in the power that thou hast—riches may go from thee.
A bag of silver and gold is emptied; the purse of
an artisan remains filled.
Dost thou not know how Sa‘di attained to rank? He
journeyed not over the plains, nor crossed the seas. In his youth he served under
the yoke of the learned: God grant him distinction in after-life. It is not
long before he who served obtains command.
A boy who suffers not at the hands of his teacher
suffers at the hands of Time.
Make thy son good and independent, so that he may
not be beholden to any man.
Protect him from evil associates and pity him not
if he brings ruin and destruction upon himself, for it is better that a
vicious son should die before his father.
_________ Sa‘di Rebuked for his
Fault-Finding
There was a certain young preacher who was
learned and intelligent, a man of sanctity and a true worshipper. He was
forcible in eloquence and correct in grammar, but his articulation was so
faulty that he could not properly repeat the letters of the alphabet.
I said to a holy man, “The youth has not got his
front teeth!”
“Speak not thus,” he replied. “Thou hast discerned
his fault, but thine eyes are closed to his many virtues. Thorns and roses grow
together; why regardest thou only the thorns? He who is of bad nature sees
nothing in the peacock but its ugly feet.”
Do not expose not the faults of others, for by
exposing their faults art thou forgetful of thine own.
Whether I be good or evil, keep thou silent, for
I am the bearer of my own profit and loss, and God is better acquainted with my
character than thou.
I seek no reward from the for my virtues so that
I may not be afflicted by thee by reason of my sins.
For every good act God will bestow, not one, but
ten rewards. If thou see one virtue in a man, do thou pass over the ten faults
that he hath.
Are not all things created the product of the art
of God? -black they are and white, handsome and deformed. Not every eye and
eyebrow that thou seest is good: eat the kernel the nut and throw the husk
away.
Concerning
Gratitude
I cannot give thanks to that Friend, for I know
of none that are worthy. Every hair of my body is a gift from Him; how could I
thank Him for every hair?
Praise be to the very generous Lord, Who from
non-existence brought His creatures into being. Who can describe His goodness?
All praises are encompassed by His glory.
See how from childhood to old age he has endowed
thee with a splendid robe!
He made thee pure; therefore, be pure— unworthy
it is to die impure by sin.
Let not the dust remain upon the mirror, for once
grown dull it never again will polish.
When thou dosts seek to gain the means of life,
rely not upon the strength of thine own arms.
O self worshipper! Why lookest thou not to God,
Who giveth power to thy hand?
If by thy striving thou dost aught of good, take
not the credit to thyself; know it to be by the grace of God.
Thou standest not by thine own strength— from the
Invisible art thou sustained each moment.
Final
Affection: A Mother’s Warning to
her Son
Sorrowed at the conduct of her son, who gave no
ear to her advice, a woman brought to him the cradle in which he once slept and
said, “O weak in love and forgetful of the past! Wast thou not a weeping and
helpless child, for whom through many nights I sacrificed my sleep? Thou hadst
not then the strength thou hast today; thou couldst not ward the flies from thy
body. A tiny insect gave thee pain; today thou excelelst amidst the strong. In
the grave wilt thou again be thus, unable to repelthe onslaughts of an ant. How
, when the grave worms eat the marrow of thy brain, wilt thou relight the Lamp
of Intellect? Thou art as a blind man who seeth not the way, and knoweth not
that a well lies in his path. If thou be grateful for thy sight, ‘tis well; if
not, then surely art thou blind. Thy tutor gave thee not the power of wisdom;
by God was it implanted in thy nature. Had He withheld this gift from thee,
truth would have appeared to thee as falsehood.”
Discourse
Concerning the Art of the Most High
God
For thee is set the bright moon in the sky by
night, the world-illuminating sun by day.
Like a chamberlain, the heavens spread for thee
the carpet of the Spring.
The wind and snow, the clouds and rain, the
roaring thunder and the lightning glittering as a sword—all are His agents,
obedient to His word, nourishing the seed that thou hast planted in the soil.
If thou be athirst, fret not, the clouds bear
water upon their shoulders.
From the bee He giveth thee honey, and manna from
the wind; fresh dates from the date tree and the date tree from a seed.
For thee are the sun and moon and the Pleides;
they are as lanterns upon the roof of thy house.
He bringeth rose from the thorn and musk from a
pod; gold from the mine and green leaves from a withered stick.
With His own hands did He paint thine eye and
eyebrows—one cannot leave one’s bosom friends to strangers.
Omnipotent is He, nourishing the delicate with
His many bounties.
Render thanks each moment from they heart, for
gratitude is not the work of the tongue alone.
O God, my heart is blood, mine eyes are sore when
I behold thy indescribable gifts.
The Lessons of
Affliction: A Discourse Concerning the
Condition of the Weak
He knows not the value of a day of pleasure who
has not seen adversity. Hard is the winter for the beggar—the rich man heeds it
not. If thou art swift of foot, be thankful when thou lookest upon the lame.
What know they of the value of water who dwell
upon the banks of the Jayhun? Ask it of them who are parched in the heat of the
sun. Ask it of them who are parched in the heat of the sun. What cares the Arab
by the Tigris for the thirsty ones of the desert?
He knows the value of health who lost his
strength in fever. How can the night be long to thee reclining in ease upon thy
bed? Think of him who is racked with fever—the sick man knows the tediousness
of the night.
At the sound of the drum the master awak-
ens—what knows he how the watchman passed the night?
One’s Ease is Another’s
Toil:
The Story of Tughral, King of Shiraz, and the Hindu Watchman
One night in winter Tughral passed by a Hindu
sentinel, who was shivering like the star Canopus in the icy rain. Moved to
pity, he said, “Thou shalt have my fur coat. Wait by the terrace and I will
send it by the hand of a slave.”
On entering his palace he was met by a beautiful
slave, at the sight of whom the poor sentinel passed from his mind. The fur
coat slipped through the latter’s ears; through his ill-luck it never reached
his shoulders.
The king slept through the night devoid of care,
but what said the chief watchman to him in the morning?
Perhaps thou didsts forget that ‘lucky man’ when
thy hand was upon the bosom of thy slave. By thee the night was spent in
tranquillity and joy; what knowest thou how the night has gone with us?”
They with the caravan bend their heads over the
cauldron; what care they for them that toil on foot through the desert sand?
Tarry, O active youths, for old and feeble men
are with the caravan. Well hast thou slept in the litter while the driver held
the nose-string of the camel. What of the desert and mountains? What of the
stones and the sand? Ask how it fares with them that lag behind.
_____________________ The Story of a
Thief
A thief was arrested by a night watchman
and bound by the hands. Thus, crestfallen and afflicted, he remained. During
the night he heard someone cry out in want.
“How long wilt thou bewail thy lot?” he asked.
“Go sleep, O wretched man! Give thanks to God that the watchman has not tied
thee by the hands.”
Bemoan not thine own misfortune when thou seest
another more wretched than thyself.
A Story of One Who Was Not What
He Seemed
Someone passed by a pious man whom he took for a
Jew, and , therefore, struck him on the neck. The latter bestowed his robe upon
the aggressor, who, becoming ashamed, remarked, “I acted wrongly and thou hast
forgiven me. But what occasion is this for a gift?”
“I stood not up in anger,” was the reply, “being
thankful that I was not a Jew, as thou didst suppose.”
SA‘DI v 113
___________________ The Story of a
Donkey
One left behind on the road wept, saying, “Who in
this desert is more distressed than I?”
A pack donkey answered, “O, senseless man! How
long wilt thou bewail the tyranny of fate? Go, and give thanks that, though
thou ridest not upon a donkey, thou art not a donkey upon which men ride.”
Misfortune
Through Pride: A Story Illustrating
the Evils of Pride
A theologian passed by a drunkard who had fallen
by the wayside. Filled with pride at his own piety, he disdained even to regard
him.
The young man raises his head and said, “Go, old
man, and give thanks that thou art in the Divine favour—misfortune comes from
pride. Laugh not when thou seest one in bonds lest thou likewise became
involved. After all, is it not within the bounds of possibility that tomorrow
thou mayest fall, like me, by the roadside?”
If with a mosque the heavens have befriended
thee, revile not them that worship in the fire temple.
Muslim! Fold thy hands and render thanks that He
has not bound the idolater’s thread about thy waist.
Turn to Him who guides the hand of Fate;
blindness it is to look for help elsewhere.
Sa‘di and the Idol: The
Story of Sa‘di and the Idolaters
At Sumanat I saw an ivory idol. It was set with
jewels like the Manat, and nothing more beautiful could have been devised.
Caravans from every country brought travelers to its side; the eloquent from
every clime made supplication before its lifeless figure.
“Why,” I pondered, “does a living being worship
an inanimate object?”
To a fire-worshipper, who was a fellow lodger and
friend of mine, I said with gentleness, “O Magi! I am astonished at the doings
of this place. All are infatuated with this feeble form; they are imprisoned in
the well of superstition. No power has the idol to move its hands or feet; if
thou throw it down, it cannot rise from its place. Dost thou not see that its
eyes are of amber? It were folly to seek faithfulness from the stony-eyed.”
The Magi was angered at my words. He became my
enemy, and informed the idolaters of what I had said. Since to them the crooked
road appeared straight, they saw the straight one crooked. Though a man be wise
and intelligent, he is a fool in the eyes of the ignorant.
Like a drowning man, I was destitute of help;
save in politeness, I saw no remedy. When the fool bears malice towards thee,
safety lies in gentleness and resignation.
Therefore, I praised aloud the chief of the
Magis, saying, “O, old man! Expounder of the Zend Avista! I, too, am pleased
with the figure of this idol. Its appearance was strange in my sight— of its nature
I have no knowledge. Only recently have I arrived in this place, and a stranger
can seldom distinguish between the evil and the good. Devotion by imitation is
supersti-tion, what reality is there in the form of this idol, for I am foremost
among the worshippers?”
The face of the Magi glowed with joy as he said,
“Thy question is reasonable and thy actions are good—whoever seeks for proofs
arrives at his destination. Whom but this idol can raise his hands to God? If
thou wilt, tarry here tonight, so that tomorrow the mystery of this may become
known to thee.” The night was as long as the Day of Judgment; the
fire-worshippers around me prayed without ablution. In the morning, they came
again into the temple, and I was sick with anger and confused from lack of
sleep. Suddenly, the idol raised its arm; and later, when the crowd had left,
the Magi looked smilingly towards me saying:
“I know that now thou wilt have no doubts; truth
has become manifest, falsehood remaineth not.”
Seeing his ignorance thus increased, I shed hypocritical
tears and cried, “I am sorry for what I said.”
At the sight of my tears the hearts of the infidels
were softened; they ran towards me in service and led me by the arms to the
ivory idol, which was seated upon a golden chair set on a throne of teak. I
kissed the hand of the little god—curses upon it and upon its worshippers! For
a few days I posed as an infidel and discussed the Zend Avista, like a Magi.
When I became a guardian of the temple, my joy was such that I could scarce
control my feelings.
One night, I closed fast the door of the temple
and searching, discovered a screen of the jewels and gold that went from the
top of the throne to the bottom. Behind this screen the Magi high priest was
devoutly engaged with the end of a rope in his hand. Then did it become known
to me that when the rope was pulled the idol of necessity raised its arm.
Greatly confused at my presence, the Magi ran
away in haste. I followed in hot pursuit and threw him headlong down a well,
for I knew that, if he remained alive, he would seek to shed my blood. When the
purpose of an evil man is revealed to thee, pull him up by the roots, otherwise
will he not desire that thou shouldst live. The alarm being raised, I fled
quickly from the land. When thou settest fire to a forest of canes, beware of
the tigers, if thou art wise.
Whenever I supplicate at the shrine of the Knower
of Secrets, the Indian puppet comes into my recollection—it throws dust on the
pride of mine eyes. I know that I raise my hand, but not by virtue of mine own
strength. Men of sanctity stretch not out their hands themselves the Fates
invisibly pull the strings.
chapter
9
Concerning
Repentance
O Thou of whose life seventy years have passed,
perhaps thou hast slept in negligence that thy days have been thrown to the
winds. Worldly aims hast thou well pursued; no preparations hast thou made for
the departure to that world to come.
On the Judgment Day, when the bazaar of Paradise
will be arrayed, rank will be assigned in accordance with one’s deeds.
If thou shouldst take a goodly stock of virtues,
in proportion will be thy profit; if thou be bankrupt, thou wilt be ashamed.
If fifty years of thy life have passed, esteem as
a precious boon the few that yet remain.
While still thou hast the power of speech, close
not thy lips like the dead from the praise of God.
____ Old Age and Youth: An Old Man’s
Lament
One night, in the season of youth, several of us
young men sat together; we sang like bulbuls and raised a tumult in the street
by our mirth.
An old man sat silent, apart; like a filbert nut,
his tongue was closed from speech. A youth approached him and said, “O old man!
Why sittest thou so mournfully in this corner? Come raise thy head from the
collar of grief and join us in our festivity.”
Thus did the old man reply, “When the morning
breeze blows over the rose garden, the young trees proudly wave their branches.
It becomes not me to mingle in thy company, for the dawn of old age has spread
over my cheeks. Thy turn it is to sit at this table of youth; I have washed my
hands of youthful pleasures. Time has showered snow upon my crow-like wings;
like the bulbul, I could not sport in the garden. Soon will the harvest of my
life be reaped; for thee, the new green leaves are bursting. The bloom has
faded from my garden; who makes a nosegay from withered flowers? I must weep,
like a child, in shame for my sins, but cannot emulate his pleasures.
Well has Luqman said, “It is better not to live
at all than to live many years in sinfulness.” Better, too, may it be to close
the shop in the morning than to sell the stock at a loss.
No Time Like
the Present: Advice and Warning
Today, O youth, take the path of worship, for
tomorrow comes old age. Leisure thou hast, and strength—strike the ball when
the field is wide.
I knew not the value of life’s day till now that
I have lost it.
How can an old ass strive beneath its burden? Go
thy way, for thou ridest a swift-paced horse.
A broken cup that is mended—what will its value
be? Now that in carelessness the cup of life has fallen from thy hand, naught
remains but to join the pieces.
Negligently hast thou let the pure water go; how
canst thou now perform thy ablutions, except with sand?
_________ Sadi’s Rebuke from a
Camel-Driver
One night in the desert of Faid my feet became
fettered with sleep. A camel-driver awoke me, saying, “Arise, since thou
heedest not the sound of the bell, perhaps thou desirest to be left behind! I,
like thee, would sleep awhile, but the desert stretches ahead. How wilt thou
reach the journey’s end if thou sleepest when the drum of departure beats?”
Happy are they who have prepared their baggage
before the beat of the drum! The sleepers by the wayside raise not their heads
and the caravan has passed out of sight.
He who was early awake surpassed all on the road;
what availeth it to awaken when the caravan had gone?
This is the time to sow the seeds of the harvest
thou wouldst reap.
Go not bankrupt to the Resurrection, for it
availeth not to sit in regret. By means of the stock that thou hast, O son,
profit can be acquired; what profit accrueth to him who consumeth his stock
himself?
Strive now, when the water reacheth not beyond
thy waist; delay not until the flood has passed over thy head.
Heed the counsel of the wise today, for tomorrow
will Nakir question thee with sternness. Esteem as a privilege thy precious
soul, for a cage without a bird has no value. Waste not thy time in sorrow and
regret, for opportunity is precious and time is a sword.
_______ Story Concerning Sorrow For the
Dead
A certain man died and another rent his clothes
in grief. Hearing his cries, a sage exclaimed, “If the dead man possessed the
power he would tear his shroud by reason of thy wailing and would say, “Do not
torment thyself on account of my affliction, since a day or two before thee I
made ready for the journey. Perhaps thou hast forgotten thine own death, that
my decease has made thee so distressed.”
When he whose eyes are open to the truth scatters
flowers over the dead, his heart burns not for the dead but for himself.
Why dost thou weep over the death of a child? He
came pure, and he departed pure.
Tie now the feet of the bird of the soul; tarry
not till it has borne the rope from thy hand.
Long hast thou sat in the place of another; soon
will another sit in thy place.
Though thou be a hero or a swordsman, thou will
carry away nothing but the shroud.
If the wild ass break its halter and wander into
the desert its feet become ensnared in the sand. Thou, too, hast strength till
thy feet go into the dust of the grave.
Since yesterday has gone and tomorrow has not
come, take account of this one moment that now is.
In this garden of the world there is not a
cypress that has grown which the wind of death has not uprooted.
Vanity of Worldly Desires: Story of a Pious Man and a Gold Brick
A gold brick fell into the hands of a pious man
and so turned his head that his enlightened mind became gloomy. He passed the
whole night in anxious thought, reflecting, “This treasure will suffice me till
the end of my life; no longer shall I have to bend my back before any one in
begging. A house will I build, the foundation of which shall be of marble; the
rafters of the ceiling shall be of aloe-wood. A special room will I have for my
friends, and its door shall lead into a garden house. Servants shall cook my
food, and in ease will I nourish my soul. This course woolen bed cloth has
killed me by its roughness; now will I go and spread a carpet”
His imaginings made him crazy; the crab had pierced
its claws into his brain. He forsook his prayers and devotions, and neither ate
nor slept.
Unable to rest tranquil in one place, he wandered
to a plain, with his head confused with the charms of his vain fancies. An old
man was kneading mud upon a grave for the purpose of making bricks. Absorbed in
thought for awhile, the old man said:
“O foolish soul! Hearken to my counsel. Why hast
thou attached thy mind to that gold brick when one day they will make bricks
from thy dust? The mouth of a covetous man is too widely open that it can be
closed again by one morsel. Take, O base man, thy hand from off that brick, for
the river of thy avarice cannot be damned up with a brick.
So negligent hast thou been in the thought of
gain and riches that the stock of thy life has become trodden underfoot. The
dust of lust has blinded the eyes of thy reason—the simoom of desire has burned
the harvest of thy life.”
Wipe the antimony of neglect from off thine eyes,
for tomorrow wilt thou be reduced to antimony under the dust.
Thy life is a bird, and its name is Breath. When
the bird has flown from its cage it cometh not back to captivity.
Be watchful for the world lasts but a moment, and
a moment spent with wisdom is better than an age with folly.
Why fix we thus our minds upon this caravanserai?
Our friends have departed and we are on the road. After us, the same flowers
will bloom in the garden, together will friends still sit.
When thou comest to Shiraz, dost thou not cleanse
thyself from the dust of the road?
Soon, O thou polluted with the dust of sin, wilt
thou journey to a strange city. Weep, and wash with thy tears thy impurities
away.
___ Moral From an Incident in Sa'di’s
Childhood
I remember that, in the time of my childhood, my
father (may God’s mercy be upon him every moment!), brought me a gold ring.
Soon after, a hawker took the ring from my hand in exchange for a date fruit.
When a child knows not the value of a ring he
will part with it for a sweetmeat. Thou, too, did not recognize value of life,
but indulged thyself in vain pleasures.
On the Day of Judgment, when the good will attain
to the highest dignity and mount from the bottom-most depths of the earth to
the Pleiades, thy head will hang forward in shame, for thy deeds will gather
around thee.
O brother! Be ashamed of the works of the evil,
for ashamed wilt thou be at the Resurrection in the presence on the good.
______ The Story of a Man Who Reared a
Wolf
Someone reared a wolf cub, which, when grown in
strength, tore its master to pieces. When the man was on the point of death a
sage passed by and said, “Didst thou not know that thou wouldst suffer injury
from an enemy thus carefully reared?”
How can we raise our heads from shame when we ate
at peace with Satan and at war with God?
Thy friend regards thee not when thou turnest thy
face towards the enemy.
He who lives in the house of an enemy deems right
estrangement from a friend.
____ Alliance with the Evil: The Story of
a Cheat
Someone robbed the people of their money by
cheating, and whenever he had accomplished one of his nefarious acts he cursed
the Evil One, who said:
“Never have I seen such a fool! Thou hast
intrigued with me secretly; why, therefore, dost thou raise the sword of enmity
against me?”
Alas! That the angels should record against thee
iniquities committed by the order of the Evil One!
Go forward when thou seest that the door of peace
is open, for suddenly the door of repentance will be closed.
March not under a load of sin, O son, for a
porter becomes exhausted on the journey.
The Prophet is the Mediator of him who follows
the highway of his laws.
_______________ A Recollection of
Childhood
In the time of my childhood I went out with my
father during the Eid Festival, and in the tumult of the mob got lost. I cried
in fear, when my father suddenly pulled my ear, and said, “Several times did I
tell thee not to take thy hand from the skirt of my robe.”
A child knows not how to go alone; it is difficult
to travel on any road unseen.
Thou, poor man, art as a child in thine endeavor;
go, hold the skirt of the virtuous. Sit not with the base, but fasten thy hand
to the saddle straps of the pious.
Go, like Sa‘di, glean the corn of wisdom so that
thou mayest store a harvest of divine knowledge.
_____ A Story of One Who Burned His
Harvest
In the month of July, a certain man stored his
grain and set his mind at ease concerning it. One night, he became intoxicated
and lighted a fire, which destroyed his harvest.
The next day he sat down to glean the ears of
corn, but not a single grain remained in his possession. Seeing him thus
afflicted, someone remarked, “If thou didst not wish for this misfortune, thou
shouldst not in folly have burned thy harvest.”
Thou, whose years have been wasted in iniquity,
art he who burns the harvest of his life.
Do no so, O my life! Sow the seeds of religion
and justice, and throw not to the winds the harvest of a good name.
Knock at the door of forgiveness before thy
punishment arrives, for lamentation beneath the lash is of no avail.
_______________ A Discourse on Repentance
He who supplicates the Deity by night will not be
shamed on the Day of Judgment.
If thou art wise, pray for forgiveness in the
night for the sins that thou hast committed in the day.
What is thy fear if thou hast made thy peace with
God? He closes not the door of forgiveness upon them that supplicate Him.
If thou art a servant of God, raise thy hands in
prayer and if thou be ashamed, weep in sorrow.
No one has stood upon His threshold whose sins
the tears of repentance have not washed away.
Concerning
Prayer
Come, let us raise our hands in prayer, for
tomorrow they will be powerless in the dust.
Think not that he who supplicates before the Door
of Mercy, which is never shut, will turn away in hopelessness.
O, Lord, regard us with compassion, for sin has
entered among Thy servants.
O, gracious God! By thy bounty have we been
sustained; to Thy gifts and loving kindness have we become habituated.
Since in this life Thou has ennobled us above all
things created, hope of similar glory have we in the world to come.
O, God, humiliate me not by reason of Thy
greatness; make me not ashamed by reasons of my sins.
Let no one prevail over me, for it is better that
I should suffer punishment from Thy hand.
Let it suffice that I am ashamed in Thy presence;
make me not ashamed before my fellow men.
If the shadow of Thy mercy fall upon me, mean is
the dignity of the sky before mine eyes.
If Thou give to me a crown, I will raise my head;
exalt me, so that no one may caste down.
The Idolater’s
Lament: A Worshipper’s Lament
I tremble when I recall the prayer of one distracted
in the temple of Mecca. Thus did he lament:
“Throw me not down, for no one will hold my hand
to succor me. Whether Thou call me or drive me away, my head has no resting
place, but Thy threshold. Thou knowest that I am poor and helpless; I am
oppressed by my evil passions. Keep me from pollution, and forgive my sins.
Close not mine eyes from the face of happiness; bind not my tongue when I
recite the creed. Place the lamp of Faith before my way; make my hand short
from doing evil. From the sun of Thy goodness one ray suffices, for except in
Thy rays I am not seen. Why should I weep because of my condition? If I am
weak, my refuge is strong.”
___________________ A Story of an
Idolater
A Zoroastrian turned his back upon the world and
girt up his loins in the service of an idol. After some years he was overtaken
by misfortune and wept at the feet of the idol, saying, “I am afflicted—help
me, O idol! I am weary—have pity upon me.”
Long did he continue in his lamentation, but no
benefit did he derive. How can an idol accomplish the desires of a man when of
itself it cannot drive away a fly?
The idolater frowned and said, “O thou, whose
feet are bound to error! With folly have I worshipped thee for years. Help me
to fulfill my wishes, or I will ask them of God.”
While his face was yet besmeared with the dust of
the idol’s feet, the Almighty fulfilled his object.
A pious man was astonished when he heard this.
Then did a voice from heaven speak into his ear, saying, “This old man prayed
before the idol, but his prayer was not heard. If at the shrine of God he were
likewise spurned, what difference would there be between an idol and Him Who is
eternal?”
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