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3
1724-1748

  • که بودشان لرزه و تخویف و ترس ** از توهمها و تهدیدات نفس
  • So that they would be trembling and terrified and affrighted by the vain imaginings and threats of the carnal soul.
  • او نمی‌داست کایشان رسته‌اند ** بر دریچه‌ی نور دل بنشسته‌اند 1725
  • He did not know that they had been delivered and were seated at the window of the light of the heart;
  • این جهان خوابست اندر ظن مه‌ایست ** گر رود درخواب دستی باک نیست
  • (And that) they had recognised (the difference of) their (bodily) shadows from their (real) selves, and were brisk and alert and happy and exulting;
  • گر بخواب اندر سرت ببرید گاز ** هم سرت بر جاست و هم عمرت دراز
  • (And that), if the mortar of the Sky (Fortune) should pound them small a hundred times in this miry place (the material world),
  • گر ببینی خواب در خود را دو نیم ** تن‌درستی چون بخیزی نی سقیم
  • (Yet), since they had seen the origin of this (corporeal) composition, they were not afraid of the derivatives (which belong to the domain) of imagination.
  • حاصل اندر خواب نقصان بدن ** نیست باک و نه دوصد پاره شدن
  • This world is a dream—do not rest in (false) opinion; if in dream a hand go (be lost), ’tis no harm.
  • این جهان را که بصورت قایمست ** گفت پیغامبر که حلم نایمست 1730
  • If in dream a pruning-fork has cut off your head, not only is your head (still) in its place but your life is (still) prolonged.
  • از ره تقلید تو کردی قبول ** سالکان این دیده پیدا بی رسول
  • If in dream you see yourself (cut) in two halves, you are sound in body when you rise, not sick.
  • روز در خوابی مگو کین خواب نیست ** سایه فرعست اصل جز مهتاب نیست
  • The sum (of the matter is this): in dreams it is no harm for the body to be maimed or to be torn into two hundred pieces.
  • خواب و بیداریت آن دان ای عضد ** که ببیند خفته کو در خواب شد
  • The Prophet said of this world, which is substantial in appearance, that it is the sleeper's dream.
  • او گمان برده که این دم خفته‌ام ** بی‌خبر زان کوست درخواب دوم
  • You have accepted this (statement) conventionally, (but) the travellers (on the mystic Way) have beheld this (truth) clairvoyantly, without (relation from) the Prophet.
  • هاون گردون اگر صد بارشان ** خرد کوبد اندرین گلزارشان 1735
  • You are asleep in the daytime: do not say that this is not sleep. The shadow (reflexion) is derivative, the origin (of it) is naught but the moonlight.
  • اصل این ترکیب را چون دیده‌اند ** از فروع وهم کم ترسیده‌اند
  • Know, O comrade, that your sleep and waking (your life in this world) is as though a sleeper should dream that he has gone to sleep.
  • سایه‌ی خود را ز خود دانسته‌اند ** چابک و چست و گش و بر جسته‌اند
  • He thinks, “Now I am asleep,” (and is) unaware that he is (really) in the second sleep.
  • کوزه‌گر گر کوزه‌ای را بشکند ** چون بخواهد باز خود قایم کند
  • If the potter break a pot, he himself will restore it (to a perfect state) when he wishes.
  • کور را هر گام باشد ترس چاه ** با هزاران ترس می‌آید براه
  • The blind man at every step is afraid of (falling into) the pit: he walks on the road with a thousand fears;
  • مرد بینا دید عرض راه را ** پس بداند او مغاک و چاه را 1740
  • (But) the seeing man has seen the width of the road, so he knows (all about) the hole and the pit;
  • پا و زانواش نلرزد هر دمی ** رو ترش کی دارد او از هر غمی
  • His legs and knees do not tremble at any time: how should he look sour because of any affliction?
  • خیز فرعونا که ما آن نیستیم ** که بهر بانگی و غولی بیستیم
  • “Arise, O Pharaoh (and do thy worst)! for we are not such (so deluded) as to stop at every cry and (every) ghoul.
  • خرقه‌ی ما را بدر دوزنده هست ** ورنه ما را خود برهنه‌تر به است
  • Rend our (bodily) mantle! There is One who will sew (it again); and if not, truly the more naked we are, the better for us.
  • بی لباس این خوب را اندر کنار ** خوش در آریم ای عدو نابکار
  • Without raiment we would fain clasp this Beauteous One to our bosoms, O enemy good-for-naught!
  • خوشتر از تجرید از تن وز مزاج ** نیست ای فرعون بی الهام گیج 1745
  • There is nothing sweeter than to be stripped of the body and the (bodily) temperament, O stupid uninspired Pharaoh!”
  • حکایت استر پیش شتر کی من بسیار در رو می‌افتم و تو نمی‌افتی الا به نادر
  • How the mule related (his story) to the camel, saying, “I am often falling on my face, while thou fallest but seldom.”
  • گفت استر با شتر کای خوش رفیق ** در فراز و شیب و در راه دقیق
  • Said the mule to the camel, “O good friend, in hill and dale and in the obscure (difficult) track
  • تو نه آیی در سر و خوش می‌روی ** من همی‌آیم بسر در چون غوی
  • Thou dost not tumble on thy head but goest happily along, while I am tumbling on my head, like one who has lost his way.
  • من همی‌افتم برو در هر دمی ** خواه در خشکی و خواه اندر نمی
  • At every moment I am falling on my face, whether (it be) in a dry place or a wet.