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2
3153-3162

  • او بسوی سفل می‏راند فرس ** گر چه سوی علو جنباند جرس‏
  • He gallops his horse towards lowness, albeit he rings the bell (proclaims that he is going) aloft.
  • از علمهای گدایان ترس چیست ** کان علمها لقمه‏ی نان را رهی است‏
  • What is there to fear from the flags of beggars?—for those flags are (but) a means for (getting) a mouthful of bread.
  • ترسیدن کودک از آن شخص صاحب جثه و گفتن آن شخص که ای کودک مترس که من نامردم‏
  • Timet puer quidam hominem corpulentum. “Ne timueris,” inquit, “O puer; ego enim vir non sum.” [About a boy’s fear of the corpulent man and how that person said, “Don’t be afraid, O boy, since I am not manly.”]
  • کنگ زفتی کودکی را یافت فرد ** زرد شد کودک ز بیم قصد مرد 3155
  • Juvenis robustus puerum deprehendit solum. Palluit timore puer ne forte homo impetum faceret. [A stout youth found a boy alone. The boy turned pale from fear of the man’s intention (to attack).]
  • گفت ایمن باش ای زیبای من ** که تو خواهی بود بر بالای من‏
  • “Securus esto,” inquit, “mi pulcher; tu enim super me eris.” [He (the man) said, “Be secure, O my lovely one, since you will be on top of me. ]
  • من اگر هولم مخنث دان مرا ** همچو اشتر بر نشین می‏ران مرا
  • Etiamsi terribilis (aspectu) sum, scito me impotentem esse ad coitum: me sicut camelum conscende, propelle.” [“Although I am dreadful (in appearance), know me (to be an impotent) catamite. Mount me like a camel (and) thrust.”]
  • صورت مردان و معنی این چنین ** از برون آدم درون دیو لعین‏
  • (With) the appearance of men and the reality like this— Adam without, the accursed Devil within—
  • آن دهل را مانی ای زفت چو عاد ** که بر او آن شاخ را می‏کوفت باد
  • O you that are big as the people of ‘Ád, you resemble the drum against which a branch was beaten by the wind.
  • روبهی اشکار خود را باد داد ** بهر طبلی همچو خیک پر ز باد 3160
  • A fox abandoned his prey for the sake of a drum like a wind-filled leathern bag,
  • چون ندید اندر دهل او فربهی ** گفت خوکی به ازین خیک تهی‏
  • (But) when he found no (real) fatness in the drum, he said, “A hog is better than this empty bag.”
  • روبهان ترسند ز آواز دهل ** عاقلش چندان زند که لا تقل‏
  • Foxes are afraid of the noise of the drum; (but) the wise man beats it ever so much, saying, “Speak not!”
  • قصه‏ی تیر اندازی و ترسیدن او از سواری که در بیشه می‏رفت‏
  • The story of an archer and his fear of a horseman who was riding in a forest.