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6
3485-3534

  • بانگ گفت بد چو دروا می‌شود  ** از سقر تا خود چه در وا می‌شود  3485
  • When the sound of evil speech becomes loud, (bethink yourself) what door of Hell is being opened.
  • بانگ در بشنو چو دوری از درش  ** ای خنک او را که وا شد منظرش 
  • Since you are far from its door, hearken to the sound of the door: oh, blest is he whose eye has been opened (so that he can recognise the wicked).
  • چون تو می‌بینی که نیکی می‌کنی  ** بر حیات و راحتی بر می‌زنی 
  • When you are aware of doing a good action, you obtain a (feeling of spiritual) life and joy;
  • چونک تقصیر و فسادی می‌رود  ** آن حیات و ذوق پنهان می‌شود 
  • And when a fault and evil deed issues (from you), that (feeling of) life and rapture disappears.
  • دید خود مگذار از دید خسان  ** که به مردارت کشند این کرکسان 
  • Do not abandon your own eye (judgement) from regard for the vile, for these vultures will lead you to the carcase.
  • چشم چون نرگس فروبندی که چی  ** هین عصاام کش که کورم ای اچی  3490
  • You close your narcissus-like eye, saying, “What (is it)? Hey, sir, take my stick (and show me the way), for I am blind”;
  • وان عصاکش که گزیدی در سفر  ** خود ببینی باشد از تو کورتر 
  • But if you would only look, (you would see that) the guide whom you have chosen for the journey is (even) blinder than you.
  • دست کورانه به حبل الله زن  ** جز بر امر و نهی یزدانی متن 
  • Grasp in a blind man's fashion the rope of Allah: do not cling to aught but the Divine commandments and prohibitions.
  • چیست حبل‌الله رها کردن هوا  ** کین هوا شد صرصری مر عاد را 
  • What is the rope of Allah? To renounce self-will, for this self-will was a roaring wind (of destruction) to (the people of) ‘Ád.
  • خلق در زندان نشسته از هواست  ** مرغ را پرها ببسته از هواست 
  • ’Tis from self-will that folk are sitting in gaol, ’tis from self-will that the (trapped) bird's wings are tied.
  • ماهی اندر تابه‌ی گرم از هواست  ** رفته از مستوریان شرم از هواست  3495
  • ’Tis from self-will that the fish is (cooked) in a hot pan, ’tis from self-will that shame (bashfulness) is gone from the modest.
  • خشم شحنه شعله‌ی نار از هواست  ** چارمیخ و هیبت دار از هواست 
  • The anger of the police magistrate is a fiery spark from self-will; crucifixion and the awfulness of the gallows are (the consequence) of self-will.
  • شحنه‌ی اجسام دیدی بر زمین  ** شحنه‌ی احکام جان را هم ببین 
  • You have seen the magistrate (who carries out the punishment) of bodies on the earth: (now) see also the magistrate who executes judgements against the soul.
  • روح را در غیب خود اشکنجه‌هاست  ** لیک تا نجهی شکنجه در خفاست 
  • Verily tortures are inflicted on the soul in the world invisible, but until you escape (from self-will) the torture is concealed (from view).
  • چون رهیدی بینی اشکنجه و دمار  ** زانک ضد از ضد گردد آشکار 
  • When you are freed you will behold the torture and perdition (of the soul), because contrary is made manifest by contrary.
  • آنک در چه زاد و در آب سیاه  ** او چه داند لطف دشت و رنج چاه  3500
  • He that was born in the well (of the material world) and the black water, how should he know the pleasantness of the open country and (distinguish it from) the pain of (being in) the well?
  • چون رها کردی هوا از بیم حق  ** در رسد سغراق از تسنیم حق 
  • When, from fear of God, you have relinquished self-will, the goblet (of drink) from God's Tasním will arrive.
  • لا تطرق فی هواک سل سبیل  ** من جناب الله نحو السلسبیل 
  • Do not in your self-will make a way: ask of God's Majesty the way to Salsabíl.
  • لا تکن طوع الهوی مثل الحشیش  ** ان ظل العرش اولی من عریش 
  • Be not submissive to self-will (and yielding) like hay: in sooth the shade of the Divine Throne is better than the summer-house (of the world).
  • گفت سلطان اسپ را وا پس برید  ** زودتر زین مظلمه بازم خرید 
  • The Sultan said, “Take the horse back (to the Amír) and with all speed redeem (deliver) me from (committing) this wrong.”
  • با دل خود شه نفرمود این قدر  ** شیر را مفریب زین راس البقر  3505
  • The King did not say in his heart, “Do not (seek to) deceive the lion so greatly by means of the head of an ox.
  • پای گاو اندر میان آری ز داو  ** رو ندوزد حق بر اسپی شاخ گاو 
  • You (the ‘Imádu ’l-Mulk) drag in the ox in order to cheat (me): begone, God does not stick the horns of an ox upon a horse.”
  • بس مناسب صنعتست این شهره زاو  ** کی نهد بر جسم اسپ او عضو گاو 
  • This renowned Master-builder observes great congruity in His workmanship: how should He attach to a horse's body part of (the body of) an ox?
  • زاو ابدان را مناسب ساخته  ** قصرهای منتقل پرداخته 
  • The Master-builder has made (all) bodies congruously: He has constructed moving palaces,
  • در میان قصرها تخریج‌ها  ** از سوی این سوی آن صهریج‌ها 
  • (With) balconies in them and cisterns (distributing water) from this (part of the palace) to that;
  • وز درونشان عالمی بی‌منتها  ** در میان خرگهی چندین فضا  3510
  • And within them an infinite world: all this (vast) expanse (is contained) in a single tent.
  • گه چو کابوسی نماید ماه را  ** گه نماید روضه قعر چاه را 
  • Now He causes (one beautiful as) the moon to seem like an incubus (nightmare), now He causes the bottom of a well to have the semblance of a garden.
  • قبض و بسط چشم دل از ذوالجلال  ** دم به دم چون می‌کند سحر حلال 
  • Inasmuch as the closing and opening of the eye of the heart by the Almighty is continually working lawful magic,
  • زین سبب درخواست از حق مصطفی  ** زشت را هم زشت و حق را حق‌نما 
  • For this reason Mustafá (Mohammed) entreated God, saying, “Let the false appear as false and the true as true,
  • تا به آخر چون بگردانی ورق  ** از پشیمانی نه افتم در قلق 
  • So that at last, when Thou turnest the leaf, I may not (be stricken) by sorrow (and) fall into agitation.”
  • مکر که کرد آن عماد الملک فرد  ** مالک الملکش بدان ارشاد کرد  3515
  • (’Twas) the Lord of the Kingdom (that) guided the peerless ‘Imádu ’l- Mulk to the deception which he practised.
  • مکر حق سرچشمه‌ی این مکرهاست  ** قلب بین اصبعین کبریاست 
  • God's deception is the fountainhead of (all) these deceptions: the heart is between the two fingers of the (Divine) Majesty.
  • آنک سازد در دلت مکر و قیاس  ** آتشی داند زدن اندر پلاس 
  • He who creates deception and (false) analogy in your heart can (also) set the sackcloth (of deception) on fire.
  • رجوع کردن به قصه‌ی آن پای‌مرد و آن غریب وام‌دار و بازگشتن ایشان از سر گور خواجه و خواب دیدن پای‌مرد خواجه را الی آخره 
  • Return to the Story of the bailiff and the poor debtor: how they turned back from the Khwája's grave, and how the bailiff saw the Khwája in a dream, etc.
  • بی‌نهایت آمد این خوش سرگذشت  ** چون غریب از گور خواجه باز گشت 
  • This goodly episode is endless (too long to relate in full). When the poor stranger turned back from the Khwája's grave,
  • پای مردش سوی خانه‌ی خویش برد  ** مهر صد دینار را فا او سپرد 
  • The bailiff took him to his house and handed over to him the purse of a hundred dinars.
  • لوتش آورد و حکایت‌هاش گفت  ** کز امید اندر دلش صد گل شکفت  3520
  • He fetched viands for him and told him stories, so that from the (feeling of) hope (with which the bailiff inspired him) a hundred roses blossomed in his heart.
  • آنچ بعد العسر یسر او دیده بود  ** با غریب از قصه‌ی آن لب گشود 
  • He (the bailiff) opened his lips to relate the ease (prosperity) which he had experienced after difficulty (adversity).
  • نیم‌شب بگذشت و افسانه کنان  ** خوابشان انداخت تا مرعای جان 
  • Midnight passed, and (he was still) narrating: (then) sleep transported them to the meadow where the spirit feeds.
  • دید پامرد آن همایون خواجه را  ** اندر آن شب خواب بر صدر سرا 
  • On that night the bailiff dreamed that he saw the blessed Khwája (seated) on the high-seat in the (heavenly) palace.
  • خواجه گفت ای پای‌مرد با نمک  ** آنچ گفتی من شنیدم یک به یک 
  • The Khwája said, “O excellent bailiff, I have heard what you said, point by point,
  • لیک پاسخ دادنم فرمان نبود  ** بی‌اشارت لب نیارستم گشود  3525
  • But I was not commanded to answer, and I durst not open my lips without being directed.
  • ما چو واقف گشته‌ایم از چون و چند  ** مهر با لب‌های ما بنهاده‌اند 
  • Now that we have become acquainted with the conditions and degrees (of the spiritual world), a seal has been laid upon our lips,
  • تا نگردد رازهای غیب فاش  ** تا نگردد منهدم عیش و معاش 
  • Lest the mysteries of the Unseen should be divulged and (thereby) the life and livelihood (of mortals) be destroyed,
  • تا ندرد پرده‌ی غفلت تمام  ** تا نماند دیگ محنت نیم‌خام 
  • And lest the veil of forgetfulness should be entirely rent and (the meat in) the pot of tribulation be left half-raw.
  • ما همه گوشیم کر شد نقش گوش  ** ما همه نطقیم لیکن لب خموش 
  • We are all ear, (though) the (material) form of the ear has become deaf: we are all speech, but our lips are silent.
  • هر چه ما دادیم دیدیم این زمان  ** این جهان پرده‌ست و عینست آن جهان  3530
  • We now see (the result of) everything that we gave (during our life in the world): this (material) world is the veil, and that (spiritual) world is the vision.
  • روز کشتن روز پنهان کردنست  ** تخم در خاکی پریشان کردنست 
  • The day of sowing is the day of concealment and scattering seed in a piece of earth.
  • وقت بدرودن گه منجل زدن  ** روز پاداش آمد و پیدا شدن 
  • The season of reaping and the time of plying the sickle is the day of recompense and manifestation.
  • گفتن خواجه در خواب به آن پای‌مرد وجوه وام آن دوست را کی آمده بود و نشان دادن جای دفن آن سیم و پیغام کردن به وارثان کی البته آن را بسیار نبینند وهیچ باز نگیرند و اگر چه او هیچ از آن قبول نکند یا بعضی را قبول نکند هم آنجا بگذارند تا هر آنک خواهد برگیرد کی من با خدا نذرها کردم کی از آن سیم به من و به متعلقان من حبه‌ای باز نگردد الی آخره 
  • [How the Khwája disclosed to the bailiff in his dream the means of paying the debts incurred by the friend who had come (to visit him); and how he indicated the spot where the money was buried, and sent a message to his heirs that on no account should they regard that (sum of money) as too much (for the debtor) or withhold anything (from him), and that (even) though he were to refuse the whole or a part of it they must let it remain in the place (where it was accessible), in order that any one who wished might take it away; ‘for,’ said he, ‘I have made vows to God that not one mite of that money shall come back again to me and those connected with me,’ etc.]
  • بشنو اکنون داد مهمان جدید  ** من همی دیدم که او خواهد رسید 
  • Now hear the bounty (which I have reserved) for my new guest. I foresaw that he would arrive,
  • من شنوده بودم از وامش خبر  ** بسته بهر او دو سه پاره گهر 
  • And I had heard the news of his debt, (so) I packed up two or three jewels for him,