English    Türkçe    فارسی   

3
2970-2994

  • افعیی بر پشت تو بر می‌رود ** او ز بامی بیندش آگه کند 2970
  • A viper is walking on your back: he (the admonisher) sees it from a roof and makes (you) aware;
  • گوییش خاموش غمگینم مکن ** گوید او خوش باش خود رفت آن سخن
  • You say to him, “Hush! do not vex me”: he says, “Be happy! Truly, the words have gone (have been spoken).”
  • چون زند افعی دهان بر گردنت ** تلخ گردد جمله شادی جستنت
  • When the viper darts its mouth at your neck, all your desire for happiness is made bitter.
  • پس بدو گویی همین بود ای فلان ** چون بندریدی گریبان در فغان
  • Then you say to him, “O so-and-so, was this all (the warning you gave me)? Why didn't you tear your collar in outcry,
  • یا ز بالایم تو سنگی می‌زدی ** تا مرا آن جد نمودی و بدی
  • Or why weren't you throwing a stone at me from above, in order that that grave calamity and misfortune might be shown to me (plainly)?”
  • او بگوید زآنک می‌آزرده‌ای ** تو بگویی نیک شادم کرده‌ای 2975
  • He says, “(I refrained) because you were annoyed”; you say (ironically), “You have made me very happy!”
  • گفت من کردم جوامردی بپند ** تا رهانم من ترا زین خشک بند
  • He says, “I bestowed counsel generously, that I might deliver you from this sterile (unprofitable) bondage.
  • از لیمی حق آن نشناختی ** مایه‌ی ایذا و طغیان ساختی
  • From vileness you acknowledged no obligation for that (generosity): you made (it) a source of injury and insolence.”
  • این بود خوی لیمان دنی ** بد کند با تو چو نیکویی کنی
  • This is the nature of base villains: he (such a one) does evil to thee when thou doest good (to him).
  • نفس را زین صبر می‌کن منحنیش ** که لیمست و نسازد نیکویش
  • As for the fleshly soul, bend it double (mortify it) by means of this renunciation, for it is vile, and kindness suiteth it not.
  • با کریمی گر کنی احسان سزد ** مر یکی را او عوض هفصد دهد 2980
  • If thou show beneficence to a noble man, ’tis fitting: he will give seven hundred (benefits) in exchange for every one (conferred upon him);
  • با لیمی چون کنی قهر و جفا ** بنده‌ای گردد ترا بس با وفا
  • (But be merciless to the ignoble): when thou treatest a villain with violence and cruelty, he becomes a very faithful servant to thee.
  • کافران کارند در نعمت جفا ** باز در دوزخ نداشان ربنا
  • The infidels in (their) prosperity sow (the seed of) cruelty; again (afterwards) in Hell their cry is “O Lord, (deliver us)!”
  • حکمت آفریدن دوزخ آن جهان و زندان این جهان تا معبد متکبران باشد کی ائتیا طوعا او کرها
  • The wisdom of (God's) having created Hell in the world hereafter and the prison of (tribulation in) the present world to the end that they may be places of worship for the arrogant (evil-doers): “Come ye willingly or unwillingly.”
  • که لیمان در جفا صافی شوند ** چون وفا بینند خود جافی شوند
  • For in (suffering) cruelty the vile are purified; when they receive kindness, they themselves become cruel.
  • مسجد طاعاتشان پس دوزخست ** پای‌بند مرغ بیگانه فخست
  • Therefore Hell is the mosque where they perform their devotions: a trap is the (only) fetter for a wild bird.
  • هست زندان صومعه‌ی دزد و لیم ** کاندرو ذاکر شود حق را مقیم 2985
  • Prison is the cloister of the thief and villain, that there he may be constantly mindful of God.
  • چون عبادت بود مقصود از بشر ** شد عبادتگاه گردن‌کش سقر
  • Inasmuch as Divine worship was the object (in the creation) of mankind, Hellfire was made the place of worship for the rebellious.
  • آدمی را هست در هر کار دست ** لیک ازو مقصود این خدمت بدست
  • Man hath the power (of action) in everything, but this service (of God) has (ever) been the (final) object of him.
  • ما خلقت الجن و الانس این بخوان ** جز عبادت نیست مقصود از جهان
  • “I did not create the Jinn and mankind (save that they might serve Me).” Recite this (text). The (final) object of the world is naught but Divine worship.
  • گرچه مقصود از کتاب آن فن بود ** گر توش بالش کنی هم می‌شود
  • Though the (final) object of a book is the science (which it contains), (yet) if you make it a pillow (to rest on), it will become (serve as) that too;
  • لیک ازو مقصود این بالش نبود ** علم بود و دانش و ارشاد سود 2990
  • But this (function of being a) pillow was not its (final) object: it (the final object) was learning and knowledge and right guidance and profit.
  • گر تو میخی ساختی شمشیر را ** برگزیدی بر ظفر ادبار را
  • If you have made the sword a tent-pin, you have preferred defeat to victory.
  • گرچه مقصود از بشر علم و هدیست ** لیک هر یک آدمی را معبدیست
  • Although the (final) object of Man is knowledge (of God) and to be rightly directed (in religion), (yet) every man hath a particular place of worship.
  • معبد مرد کریم اکرمته ** معبد مرد لیم اسقمته
  • The place where (the means whereby) the noble man worships is your treating him with kindness; the place where (the means whereby) the vile man worships is your making him sick (your maltreating him).
  • مر لیمان را بزن تا سر نهند ** مر کریمان را بده تا بر دهند
  • Smite the vile, that they may bow their heads; give to the noble, that they may yield (good) fruit.