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6
425-434

  • چون بکاری جو نروید غیر جو  ** قرض تو کردی ز که خواهد گرو  425
  • When you sow barley nothing except barley will grow up: (if) you have borrowed, from whom (but yourself) will you require the security?
  • جرم خود را بر کسی دیگر منه  ** هوش و گوش خود بدین پاداش ده 
  • Do not lay (responsibility for) your sin upon any one else: give your mind and ear to this retribution.
  • جرم بر خود نه که تو خود کاشتی  ** با جزا و عدل حق کن آشتی 
  • Lay the sin upon yourself, for you yourself sowed (the seed): make peace with the recompense and justice of God.
  • رنج را باشد سبب بد کردنی  ** بد ز فعل خود شناس از بخت نی 
  • The cause of (your) affliction is some evil deed: acknowledge that evil is done by you, not by Fate.
  • آن نظر در بخت چشم احوال کند  ** کلب را کهدانی و کاهل کند 
  • To look at Fate (alone) makes the eye asquint: it makes the dog be attached to the kennel and lazy.
  • متهم کن نفس خود را ای فتی  ** متهم کم کن جزای عدل را  430
  • Suspect yourself, O youth; do not suspect the recompense of (Divine) justice.
  • توبه کن مردانه سر آور به ره  ** که فمن یعمل بمثقال یره 
  • Repent like a man, turn your head into the (right) Way, for whoso doeth a mote's weight (of good or evil) shall see it.
  • در فسون نفس کم شو غره‌ای  ** که آفتاب حق نپوشد ذره‌ای 
  • Do not be duped by the wiles of the carnal soul, for the Divine Sun will not conceal a single mote.
  • هست این ذرات جسمی ای مفید  ** پیش این خورشید جسمانی پدید 
  • These material motes, O profitable man, are visible in the presence of this material sun.
  • هست ذرات خواطر و افتکار  ** پیش خورشید حقایق آشکار 
  • (So too) the motes consisting of ideas and thought are manifest in the presence of the Sun of Realities.
  • حکایت آن صیادی کی خویشتن در گیاه پیچیده بود و دسته‌ی گل و لاله را کله‌وار به سر فرو کشیده تا مرغان او را گیاه پندارند و آن مرغ زیرک بوی برد اندکی کی این آدمیست کی برین شکل گیاه ندیدم اما هم تمام بوی نبرد به افسون او مغرور شد زیرا در ادراک اول قاطعی نداشت در ادراک مکر دوم قاطعی داشت و هو الحرص و الطمع لا سیما عند فرط الحاجة و الفقر قال النبی صلی الله علیه و سلم کاد الفقر ان یکون کفرا 
  • Story of the fowler who had wrapped himself in grass and drawn over his head a handful of roses and red anemones, like a cap, in order that the birds might think he was grass. The clever bird had some little notion that he was (really) a man, and said (to itself), “I have never seen grass of this shape”; but it did not wholly apprehend (the truth) and was deceived by his guile, because at the first view it had no decisive argument, (whereas) on its second view of the trick it had a decisive argument, namely, cupidity and greed, (which are) especially (potent) at the time of excessive want and poverty. The Prophet—God bless and save him!—has said that poverty is almost infidelity.