Persian Psalms - IIS - Allama Iqbal
Persian Psalms - IIS - Allama Iqbal
TO THE READER
A straw, at times, becomes the screen of my eye; And with one look, at times, I have seen both the worlds. The Valley of Love is a long way away, and yet, at times, The journey of a hundred years is covered in a sigh. Persist in your search, and do not let go of the hem of hope There is a treasure that, at times, you will find by the way. [Translated by Mustansir Mir]
Within my breast a conscious heart: Give me the vision to divine The rapture pulsing through the wine, It never pleased me, to receive Anothers breath, that I might live: Give me a breath as light as morn, A sigh that in the home was born. I am a torrent: do not set Me dribbling in a rivulet, But give my waters space to spill Oer valley broad and spreading hill. Is it thy will to fashion me A rival to the boundless sea, Amid the tumult of the main Grant me the pearls repose to gain. Thou hadst the falcon that I am Follow the leopard for his game: Give me high will, a sharper claw, To win my victim to my maw. The small fowl of the Sanctuary I marked my precious prey to be: Grant me an arrow that, unsped, Unerring flies, and strikes them dead. Illuminate my lifeless clay With anthems David used to play; Let all my atoms swiftly spring Upborne upon an embers wing.
PERSIAN PSALMS
PART ONE
Passing over outdoor matters, I have spoken of inside matters; With what bold abandon I have said things That had been left unsaid! [Translated by Mustansir Mir]
1 Tumultuous Love whereer it rove Unto Thy street is brought; What boasteth he who findeth Thee That for himself he sought? [Translated by A.J. Arberry] 2
The heart within the breast, The wine that moves the spirit And melts and soul oppressed Soft amid Persias rushes The breeze of morning sings: Bring me the spark that trickles From those melodious strings. 4
The ardent longing in our hearts Where does it come from? Ours is the tumbler, but the wine within Where does it come from? I know that this world is mere dust, And that we, too, are a handful of dust. But this pain of quest that runs through our being Where does it come from? Our glances reach the neckline of the Galaxy; This obsession of ours, this tumult and clamor Where does it come from? [Translated by Mustansir Mir] 3 O bring me back the singing, The airs of long ago; Bring back the sweet, sad music To set cold hearts aglow. Too hushed is mosque and temple, Too silent church and shrine; Stir up a thousand tumults With that dark glance of Thine. Fill me the fiery goblet That made my dust to flame: Youth thirsts anew, desirous, And youth shall quaff the same. The pipe that sets adancing From my handful of dust You draw out a hundred laments; You are nearer than the soulfor all Your shy reserve. Hiding in the gentle breeze, thieflike You enter the garden; Thou who didst make more ardent My sighing and my tears, O let my anthem quicken Dust of a thousand years. What wilt Thou of my heart, then, Who with the wine of life Excitest in the goblet This passion and this strife? And when my breath caressing Shall softly, sweetly blow, The withered heart will blossom, The tulip newly glow. My fantasy is soaring Beyond the stars and sun; Why lurkest Thou in hiding, When huntings to be done? O Master, guard the honour Of him who begs of thee; Hell let no wine of others Within his goblet be. [Translated by A.J. Arberry] 5
You mix with the flowers perfume, and blend with the bud. The West is indifferent to You, the East is all legends; It is time you etched a new design in the world. He who is heady with the ambition of worldconquest Soothe his craze with the lancet of Genghis. An unreined bondsman, I might slip away again Suppose You hung these curly tresses around my neck! Lament is all I know, but they say I am a singer of ghazal; What is this dewlike thing You are pouring on my heart? [Translated by Mustansir Mir] 6 Though dust, and dark as dust, am I, I have a little heart, whereby With vision open as a star I gaze on beauty from afar. Praying Thy fingers may caress, Unuttered is my hearts distress; And Thou supposest that maybe My lyre has lost its minstrelsy. Do Thou so quicken my desire That, with a melody of fire, I may the earthy heart make bright, And wholly melt the heart of light. The burning fever of my breed Is symptom of my so great need; Thou, who art God, and lackest naught, Knowst not the anguish in me wrought, I never sought to make this plain
Or keep it hid from any man; My secret has itself displayed, And so my melody was made. 7 With a song of agony, With a sweet, soft melody, To a dying world athirst Lo: lifes flagon I have burst. In the way as beggars are Thou hast set that world ajar Ere the ambition to attain Ever sprang in mortal brain. Twas Thy surmahshaded eye Heart and soul were ravished by; O, the archery of it, With one shaft two marks to hit! What a springtime of delight Greets my underserving sight! Hear me in the meadow sing, Like a new thrush caroling. Not so strange, if monarchs, twain In one kingdom cannot reign, As that both the worlds are less Than one dervish to possess. 8 On faith and infidelity O scatter wide Thy Clemency; At last the veil of darkness raise From the full splendour of Thy Face. Play once again the ancient song, And swiftly pass the wine along; Let the flamefever of Thy cup Irradiate us as we sup. Why, with Thy ringlets for a snare, Forth to the garden dost Thou fare, When on Thy roof a bird there be,
More worthy of Thy venery? Expectant waits the Iraqi sand, Athirst is Hijaz desert land; To Syria and Kufa give Husains spilled blood, that they may live. Love spurneth the attendant guide, Alone upon the way hell ride, Nor yield to any mans control The reining of his stubborn soul. To convent foolishly I went, Upon that threshold to lament, Until I found my road to be Direct unto Gods sanctuary. Behold this lone bird on the wing, First of the caravan of Spring, Who in his solitary cage Carols the message of his age! 9 A flame is in my minstrelsy, A fearlessness, a tragedy; A spark is smouldering in my corn, And sprightly blows the breath of morn. Love keeps no state, no manner grand. And yet an axe is in Loves hand Wherewith the mountains heart is hued All innocent of Parviz blood. It pricked my heart, this subtlety An orator once told to me: The loved ones glance hath more to teach Than all the wizardry of speech. Come to my pillow once again; Sit for one moment; for the pain Of separation wracks my soul, My cup of loneliness is full. Awhile into the mead I came, Naked my anguished spirits flame;
The breeze of morning fiercer blew, My heart was sprinkled oer with dew. The secret sign will overset The lovers shrine entire; and yet It is the fearless glance I need That makes the lovers heart to bleed. Waters the seat of both, and clay; What is the mystery then, I pray, The mind doth like the clay right well, But there the heart is loth to dwell? Behold, and see! in Inds domain Thou shalt not find the like again, That, though a Brahmans son I be, Tabriz and Rum stand wide to me. [Translated by A.J. Arberry] 10 The eyes and heart that I have take such delight in view What is my fault if I should carve idols out of rough stone? For all Your manifest glory You are veiled You cannot suffer looks! Tell me, my moon, what is my recourse other than lament? What harm would come if You strolled by the lodgings of a caravan, Whose only unworthy possession is a little, broken heart? I sang out a ghazal, hoping that expression would bring relief The flame does not die down with one spark breaking off. The livinmg heart You gave me is ill at ease with veils Give me an eye that will see the fire in the rock.
Every piece of my heart shares in the joy it gives How did You vest Your sorrow in a heart of a thousand pieces? High waves never wrecked anyones boat in the sea; The danger that love sees lies in the safety of the shore. With a stately disregard I passed by the lords of the world Like a full moon passing by the stars. [Translated by Mustansir Mir] 11 Though the falcon of the brain Yearneth on the wing to be, Archers in this desert plain Wait upon him secretly! Yet the tied and twisted cord Lacketh not for remedy: Singing can the cure afford Of this hard perplexity. If the power of speech be there, Yet is knowledge not possessed; Hapless servant, who doth bear Such a secret in his breast! Though a hundred varied ways They should burn and ravage me, There is comfort in my blaze And a glad felicity. Dust, and dead as dust, are we, Yet a heart we merited: Lo! the living deity Heartengendered in the dead. In my breast there is a flame Setteth all the house aglow, Yet it is the very same That the house doth overthrow.
Platos mind the world described, Yet I will not trust in it, For a heart is in my side Bold to view the infinite. 12 What is the world? The temple of my thought, The seen projection of my wakeful eye; Its far horizons, instant to espy, A circle by my spinning compass wrought. As I behold, or not, is aught, or naught; Time, space, within my mind audacious lie, Movement, repose, are my hearts wizardry Whereby are secrets known, and mysteries taught. That other world, where reaped is all our sown, Its light and fire are of my rosary made; I am fates instrument, whose antiphon Responds to every string thought ever played, Where is Thy sign? In Thee my life is stayed; Where is Thy world? These twain are mine alone. 13 It is the season of the spring And nightingales are carolling; O smile on me, and chant a song, And freely pass the wine along. Behold the tears that I have shed, Then on Thy beauty turn Thy head; O set my heart of reeds afire With the swift lightning of desire. And bid the breeze of spring, I pray, Unto my fancy take its way And paint the valley and the plain With beauteous images again.
Flower in the mead that blossometh, Receive new freshness from my breath; Amid Thy bower, since I was born, I lived beside the rose and thorn. On my hearts touchstone then assay This world of water and of clay; My heart shall prove a mirror bright Reflecting all Thy shade and light. Thou st never gambled with Thy heart, Nor of the world had any part; When in Thy presence I would be, What day of reckoning I see! The aged ringdovc in the glade Hearkened to my lament, and said, No songbird ever carolled here So sweet an air of yesterday. 14 From life and beings twisted skein Let me be free; In resignation is to gain True liberty. Love quivered, and within this field Of barren spring Sprinkled a thousand seeds, to yield My harvesting. Indeed I know not what His glance Viewed in my clay Upon the stone of time and chance Me to assay. With stubble and with straw He came A world to found, Then gave to me a heart of flame To prove me sound. O take the goblet from my hand, For hope is past; The saki played at glances, and My heart was lost.
15 Rise! and upon the thirsty land Sprinkle lifes wine with lavish hand; Kindle anew the spirits fire, And bid the flame in us expire. The tavern wine is drained and gone, The drinkers find oblivion; The school re echoes to the shout, And every lamp has flickered out. Reasons a knotresolving slave, Faith mid conventions laid to grave, For in the breast there beats a heart, The unseen target of loves dart, Both are in quest of one abode And both would lead upon the road: Reason tries every stratagem, But love pulls gently by the hem. Love to the dust ruin hurled The tabernacle of the world, And stretches high his fingers, even Unto the canopy of heaven. 16 Thinkest Thou that to the threshold I have made this pilgrimage? With the master of the household I have business to engage. O deny me not Thy presence, For a wan, pale spark am I That to win a moments lustre In eternal fever lie. Never more will I look backward On the road that I have traced; Tis to gain the far tomorrow That, like Time, I forward haste. Lo, loves ocean is my vessel,
And loves ocean is my strand; For no other ship I hanker, Nor desire another land. Scatter now a spark, but gently, Such a spark as will not burn; I am newly fledged to needing, To the nest I would return. In the far, fond hope that, haply, Thou wilt hunt for me one day, From the spinning noose of princes Like a fawn I leapt away. And if Thou wilt be so gracious, I will give these friends of mine A bright glass or two delightful Of my nightconsoling wine. 17 With a glance at us who sit by the way He goes riding by: Conceive, if Thou canst, my souls dismay Sore distraught am I. What have I to tell of the lovely fair Unto anyone? With a gaze as swift as a spark in the air He is past and gone. To the friends abode it is hard to tread And the road is far; But love rides high, and is quickly sped On the back of a star. What cause to despair, though the circling sky Be wrapped in a veil? It will pierce a rock, the audacious eye, And it cannot fail. Our sprinkled dew is an ocean wide, And the sky its shore; Let a lone wave break, and its swelling tide Shall yet higher soar. When Thou shalt stand with Him face to face,
Do not lift thine eyes; For sight is vain in that holy place, And the vision dies. How should I weep, though sorrow sears? For my broken heart Is borne on the flood of my bitter tears, And wi1l soon depart. 18 Better is the robbers train Than the heavenpacing brain, Better one distress of heart Than all Platos learned art. Yesterday the Magian boy Told me of loves secret joy: Better that salt tear of thine Than the sweet and ruby wine. Better poverty, that gains Bloodlessly the hearts domains, Than the realm Darius won, Feriduns dominion. In the Magian temple cry; Let Thy voice be heard on high! But within the Sufi cell Better is the whispered spell. With our river of hearts blood Need is none of Noahs flood; Better there one swelling wave Than where Oxus waters lave. Lo, Thy torrent sweeping down Threatens to engulf the town! Better let Thy havoc be In the deserts privacy. Singer Iqbal, sooth to tell, Call him not an infidel: Better he were out of school Till his fevered brain shall cool!
[Translated by A.J. Arberry] 19 Either do not tell the Muslim to put his life at risk, Or else breathe a new soul into this wornout frame. Do one thing or the other! Either tell the Brahmin to carve a new idol, Or go and dwell in zunnarwearers hearts Yourself Do one thing or the other! Either a new Adam, a little less evil than Iblis Or another Iblis to challenge faith and reason! Do one thing or the other! Either a new world or a new test! For how long will you go on treating us like this? Do one thing or the other! Give us poverty? Do it, but gives us Chosroes glory as well! Or give us reason together with Gabriels disposition. Do one thing or the other! Either kill the desire for revolution that stirs in my heart, Or completely change these heavens and the earth. Do one thing or the other! [Translated by Mustansir Mir] 20 Intellect is passion too, And it knows the joy to view, But the poor unfortunate Dares not as the inebriate. Though I know the fantasy
Of the stage was shaped by me, Yet it were a cowards way On the journey to delay. Every moment is my prayer That I may yet further fare, Till my follys governor Says there is no desert more. In such frenzy of the soul Still I do not yield control: Every madman cannot boast That to self he is not lost! 21 All that in life I love the best Is the sweet fever of Thy quest; The way is like an adders sting, Be not to thee my wayfaring. Lo, Gabriel with naked heart Out of loves bosom doth depart, Hopeful to catch a spark of fire From the vast flame of Thy desire. Anon I rend my veil in twain, Yearning the vision to attain; Anon with unavailing sight I veil myself before Thy light. Whether in quest of thee I go, Or at the last myself to know, Intellect, heart, sightall astray Blindly the wander on Thy way. I was a seedling of Thy mead; Sprinkle Thy dew upon my head; The blossoms heart will quicken, yet No drop hall lack the rivulet. 22 The night grows late, the route is up, No need for saki now or cup;
Pass me Thy goblet, friend of mine, Ill pour thee the remaining wine. Whoever from the golden bowl Quaffs the sweet poison of the soul, In my clay jar the bitter juice Is the sole antidote of use. Lo, from my dust the sparks unspire: Whose spirit shall I set afire? Twas wrong, to kindle in my breast This furnace of desires unrest! Alas, the Western mind hath soiled The springs of knowledge undefiled; Stoic alike and Platonist Have shrouded all the world in mist. Ah! I am poisonedhark, the cry Of the worlds heart ascendeth high; Reason replies lamentingly, I know no charm, no remedy. Let it be priest, or beggar poor, King, or the slave that keeps his door, All seek success of merchandise Amid hypocrisy and lies. The moneychangers in the mart Are blind of head, and black of heart; The brighter gleams my glowing gem, The meaner is its worth to them. 23 Saki, on my heart bestow Liquid flame with living glow; Let the resurrection day Dawn tremendous on my clay. He, for one small grain of corn, Cast me to the earth in scorn; Pour one glass, and see me rise Glorified beyond the skies. Give to love Thy liquor, then,
Strong to loose the thighs of men; Toss the liquors sediments In the beaker of the sense. Wisdom and philosophy Are a grievous load on me; Heavenly guide! Stretch out Thy hand, Lift my burden, let me stand. If hot liquor proveth vain To illuminate the brain, Suffer me a second chance, Save me with Thy flashing glance. Fear and hope are yet at odds In our banquet of the gods; Make us all in ignorance be Of the wheel of destiny! Roses and anemones Scatter at the autumn breeze; Yet within our ancient bough Set the new sap rising now! 24 The juice that maketh tulips spring Within the hearta bumper bring, Saki! and let the April gust Scatter at will my bodys dust. I drank the Wests enamelled bowl, And darkness settled oer my soul; O give me sight to see the way And where I went so sore astray. Upon the wave of every breeze Like chaff I turned as it might please; Tumultuous beats the heart of me With vain surmise; give certainty! My spirits fretful small desire Glows wanly as a spark of fire; Give me desire of hearts delight, A star to shine upon my night. Thou gavest in my hand a pen
Skilful to paint a king of men; Thou madest me a scribe; then give A tablet, that my creed may live! 25 Of every image that the heart Takes from the eyeI have no part; Perception weigheth not with me, I beg for pure reality. Anon a touch of madness lies In the conventions of the wise; I come with collar torn, a fool, For all I went to wisdoms school. Anon I wrap me in the world, Anon about me tis enfurled; Pass round the wine, and pass again, That I may break this tangled skein. No Sakis glance enchants me here, Nor any talk of love sincere; From Mullahs board and Sufis feast I nothing gain but care increased. Th time that they had much to do With me, Thy choice and favoured few: The desert was my upbringing; I fearless stride before the king. 26 Against the light, an infidel, My heart, unfettered, doth rebel; It bows before Gods sanctuary, And idols serves, indifferently. It sets a balance, to access The value of its righteousness, Ready to strike a bargain smart With God, in resurrections mart. It would have earth and heaven fulfil All the requirements of its will, And claims, though dust, a judge to be With a divine authority.
Anon it will with God accord, Anon it fights against the Lord, Stands for a time as truths ally. And then it doth the truth deny. While in its essence void of hue, It paints a lying image, too: A Moses, who the part doth bear Of prophet, and of sorcerer! Its glance a touch of the insane Imparteth to the prudent brain, And yet a lancet it can use The madmans swelling to reduce. When shall this traveller reach his goal, The inner chamber of the soul, That doth these thousand years abide At falsehoods shrine, in slothful pride? 27 Why in the concourse dost Thou seek The poets wild, ecstatic shriek, Or lookest for anothers riot, Whose heart is troubled and unquiet? My affluent muse was taught by thee To swim the waves of melody; Why seekest Thou the gem? Behold, My pierced heart doth the sea enfold. Except within Thy presence there I stand. I cannot breathe my prayer: My heart before Thy feet I fling What else should unbeliever bring? 28 Faith and infidelity Fight not for the mind of me; No delights of Paradise Do my stricken soul entice. Cleave my heart and lay it bare, Thou shall find Thy image there,
Gleam pervasive, shadowless, Moonlight on a wilderness. 29 Thine is the hawk upon the wing And thine the thrush sweetcarolling, Thine is the light and joy of life And thine its fire and baneful strife. Thou gayest me a heart awake And, through the world my way to take, A little dusta moon forlorn Upon a nightdark litter borne. My every thought from thee doth start, Whether on lip or in the heart; Whether the pearl be brought from sea, Or left enfoundered, tis of thee. I am the selfsame cloud of dust Swept idly as the wind doth lust; Tulip, and springtimes scattered dew. Thou art their sole creator too. Thou art the painter; Thy design Inspires and moves this brush of mine; Thy hands the living world adorn, And shape the ages yet unborn. Much sorrow in my heart I had That by the tongue could not be said: Love, lovelessness, troth, treachery All things alike are sprung of thee. 30 One step on friendships road Fairer I see Than the moat pressing load Of piety. Take for Thy rest awhile This heart of mine And lay aside Thy toil And task divine. O come; and tidings bring
How stands my heart, Where I am wandering, And where Thou art. Recall those glances pure Of love intense How long must I endure Indifference? Last night the burning moon Did me address: Accept the anguish, son, Of unaccess. Fair spake she; but, ah yes, My creed of love To live in loneliness Doth not approve. Before thee I have laid This heart of mine; Haply the twist thread Thou canst untwine. 31 In my hearts empire, see How He rides spitefully, Rides with imperious will To ravage, and to kill! No heart is there, but bright Gleameth in that moons light; A thousand mirrors, see! Reflect His coquetry. To each hand he hath won Ten realms of Solomon, Yet gambles with it all To gain a poor, mean thrall. The hearts of such as know Swift He assaults; but lo: Before the unwise, unskilled, He casteth down His shield. 32
Upon the road of high desire My load yet lieth in the mire, Because my heart would still engage With trappings, caravan, and stage. Where is the lightning of the gaze That shall my dwelling burn and raze? Fain would I yet a bargain keep With what men sow, and what men reap. O let this laymans vessel ride Upon a full, tempestuous tide: The wave affrighteth me so sore, I fix my gaze upon the shore. Ah, what adventure is to gain To quiver, never to attain: Thrice happy he, who even now Behind the train doth riding go. But he who never knew his heart From the two worlds to dwell apart, He still bemused and cheated is By unsubstantial images. A single, brief epiphany Consoleth not the passionate eye: Where shall I take the wounding dart That pricketh even yet my heart? In the glad presence of the friend A history is that hath no end, As still these sorrows yet unsaid Lie in my heart deepburied. 33 The days are ended Of winter long; The branches quiver With living song. The breeze in beauty Arrays the rose As from the river It gently blows.
The tulips lantern In desert bare Is fanned to brightness, By the spring air. Sad, mid the roses, My heart doth dwell, Yea, from the meadow Flees the gazelle; A little eases With grief and pain Or like a billstream Laments again. Lest my hearts passion May softer grow, Not to the trusty Ill tell my woe. 34 At home to loiter never did me please, A rover I, stranger in every land. At dawn, the ashes thus addressed the breeze: This deserts air put out my flaming brand; Pass gently; scatter me not with Thy hand; I yet recall the caravanss unease. My tears, like dew, trickled upon the sand, I, too, being dust on the worlds passages. Then in my heart I heard a soft voice sing: The stream of time did from my fountain spring. The past is all my fever and fire of yore, The future all that I am yearning for: Think not upon thy dust, O think no more Lo, by the life, I know no perishing! 35 By the Sakis eye Heartenflamed I lie; Drunk without wine
O delight divine! All unveiled, desire Burns a fiercer fire; Let me see or no, Yet my souls aglow. See the rebecs string At my fingering Like a candles wick Flameth bright and quick. Save my heart can be Lodging none for me, Naught is me assigned, Neer a way I find. Till the sun arise From the eastern skies Sleep to me denied. Like the stars I ride. 36 Thou didst turn my night to dawning; O Thou sun of presence bright, Like the sun Thou art in brightness, Light unveiled, most worthy light! Camest Thou to ease my sorrow, And within my thought didst rest, Then didst vanish from my vision With so swift, impetuous haste. Thou assay of the assayless, Ease of the reposeless mind, Cure of the afflicted spirit, Save too rare Thou art to find! Passions sorrow, passions pleasure, Two fold is loves influence: Now an agony and burning, Now the drunkards turbulence. Speak me then, for true Thou knowest: Of my heart the history tell
Where is now my heart in hiding? In my breast it doth not dwell. By the majesty I swear it, No desire my spirit moves Save the prayer: An eagle spirit, Lord, bestow upon Thy doves! 37 None other in this tavern is, Saki, to share my mysteries; Am I the first (O who can tell) Conceived in heaven, on earth to dwell? Awhile this spent and weary frame Thou makest dust; and on the same Scatterest water; lo I see Fire in the ashes presently Bring me that fortune ever new, The cup where lies the world to view, For, in the palace of the East, Another Jamshid sits to feast. 38 Tell me this: what is Thy share In this world of pain and care? Knowest Thou the spirits smart? Hast Thou an uneaseful heart? Of such bitter tears that well From the eye, what canst Thou tell? See, Thy roses petals hold Dewy pearls of price untold! Or the soul, that numbereth Life departing at each breath, Borrowed spirit, grief of time Shall I speak thee in rhyme? [Translated by A.J. Arberry] 39
If a sight causes loss of self, it is better hidden from view: I do not accept the deal, Your price is too high. Speak to us unveiled, the time for being reserved is gone When others told us whatever it was You wanted of us. My insolent eyes have pierced the blue sky. If you want to have a barrier between us, build another world. How You look out for Yourself! For all Your unconcern, You demand the blood of friends to prove you exist. Worship is one station, love is another: You want angels to bow before you, but men to do still more. With love I convert the crude copper I have into gold, For when I meet you tomorrow, You will want a gift from me. [Translated by Mustansir Mir] 40 Thy light defineth all things one by one: Black, white, sea, mountain, valley, moon and sun; Thou seekest one familiar with the light, My quest is He who cannot bear the sight. 41 Give me the heart whose rapture fine Flames from a draught of its own wine, And take the heart that, selfeffaced, By alien fancy is embraced. Give me the heart, give me the heart
That of the world will have no part; I yield the heart right gladly oer That is a slave to less and more. O draw me forth, Thou huntsman bold, Out of fates quiver Thou dost hold; Except the shaft be put to bow, How shall it lay the quarry low? This life is neer a weary thing While there be worlds for conquerring: Behold, one world lies bound and tied Into another world I ride. 42 A hand of dust is all I own; I scatter it upon the way, Because I hope that on a day It shall ascend to heavens throne. What stratagem have I, what art? For on the branch of wisdoms tree No thorn has ever sprung for me That I might thrust into my heart. The fires of separation give A brief effulgence to my flame, And when I would damp down the same, That very breath I no more live. Let it not vanish from my vein, The wine and drunkenness of love; I suffer none triumph of My heart, to take it back again. Upon the tablets Thou didst write The argument entire and whole; And now, so discipline my soul That I may read the script aright. If in Thy presence one ghazal I ever made be sung to thee, What would it cost, the courtesy To whisper, Yes, I know him well?
43 Let this heart Thou gavest me Overflow with certainty, And my worldbeholding glass All its radiance surpass. Let the bitter potion poured By the heavens in my gourd On this topers tongue of mine Taste as sweet as honeyed wine. 44 To passions slaves let no man eer The mystery of Thy love declare: It is not meet for straws to hear Talk of the blazing brazier. I was to eloquence designed, And Thou hast bid me speak my mind; Such things are in the breast of me As unto none may uttered be. Deep in my hearts recesses lies The sweetest song that yearns to rise; Among the leaves my notes shall ring, But in the cage I cannot sing. Tis passing strange, if yearning be Not born to immortality; How can Thy history be said In these few breaths, ere I am dead? 45 Ah, the wine, the lute, the piping, The dear memories of old, When I held the brimming beaker And my friend a bowl of gold. An Thou comest to my bosom, In my autumn spring shall glow; An Thou come not, May lies mourning Colder than Decembers snow.
Mute my soul, when Thou art absent, Like a harp with broken strings; From my breast, when Thou art with me, Rise melodious whisperings. Well Thou knowest what conveying Unto passions feast I went: Wine in vat, a mead of roses, And a reed bed of lament. Now renew loves old dominion, That by virtue of its sway Equal shall the vagrants mat be To the royal throne of Kay. Cry the friends with glad rejoicing That a wanderer is home; Though I trod the paths of knowledge, In my desert still I roam. 46 Stars on my bosom shine Wept from these eyes of mine: Lo, beyond heavens height; Cast me the joy of sight; Soared, though in dust I lay, High oer the starry way, Life of the embers glow Likes me not, Thou dost know. All the worlds eve and morn Are of my whirling born; Thou knowst this morn and eve My soul can scarce receive. Wine brimmed in heavens cup; I took and drank it up; Saki! not sparing be Another bowl for me! Not both the worlds suffice My follys avarice; Earth is a passing day, Heaven a passageway.
47 The East, that holds the heavens fast Within the noose its fancy cast, Its spirits bonds are all united, The flames of its desire have died. The burning glow of living birth Pulses no more in its dark earth; It stands upon the river side And gazes at the surging tide. Faint, faint the fires of worship be In temple and in sanctuary; The Magian still his cup would pass, But stale the wine is in his glass. The vision of the West is blind, Illusion fills the Western mind; Drunken with magic scent and hue, It bows before the great untrue. Swifter it spins than heavens sphere; Death is a gentler ravisher; Its fingers have so torn my soul, Never again can it be whole. Of the earth earthy, it would try To emulate the ancient sky; A rogue, a cheat, of works immense, With pivot none, and little sense. The East is waste and desolate, The West is more bewildered yet The ardent quest inspires no more, Death reigns supreme the whole world oer. Bring me the wine of hearts delight, And spread the banquet of the night; Give me the bold, adventurous eye, And in loves transport let me die. 48 Leave no quarter to resist To this restless heart of mine
Give Thy curls another twist, Let Thy tresses intertwine. In my heart Thy lightning shone Radiant as flashing gold, Which the expectant sun and moon Marvelled sorely to behold. Holy joy to dwell with thee Fashioned world idolatry; Love with his deceitful art Ever cheats the hopeful heart. Come the meadowbird again To the green and meadowed plain, That with mind devoid of care I may tune a sweet, new air. A high soul Thou gavest me; Loose my bonds, and set me free? Kingly raiment I would spurn If Thy sackcloth I may earn. If the axe (as legend says) Cleave the rock, shall that amaze Love upon his shoulder bears Such a mountainrange of cares! 49 My soul, embattled With fortune ever, Weeps like a river Among the mountains. Open and secret Fate is assailing, To the unfailing Fickle and faithless. Mountain and desert, Ocean and prairie Secret unwary Unsympathising. Stranger to passion, Stranger to yearning Rivulets turning,
Spray of the fountains. Pale lamentations Flameless outpouring Nightingales soaring Song in the thicket. Burns in my bosom The brand of passion; In such a fashion Burns not the tulip. No wine of Saki, No spirits riot; The soul unquiet Bitterly suffers. 50 In Thy hands I now deliver Once again my restless heart; It will never cease from labour For the ease Thou wouldst impart Hapless heart! whose whole affliction Is the counting of the breath, Having not within its power To be lord of life and death. In Thy thought as I was slumbring Thou, desirous of display, This Thy pearl of lustrous beauty From Thy breast didst cast away. Loud complaint they laid against thee, Moon and stars (didst Thou not hear?) That Thy spark Thou hast enkindled In my ashes dark and drear. In my breast His arrow pricking There is glory, there is fame! If I cast myself before Him, Hed not seize me for His game. 51 A single word sufficeth well The passion of a world to tell:
The joy to view thee night to me Moved me to this long history. Take Thou the faculty of speech From such as yearn Thy heart to reach, Knowest Thou not, that love conveys Eloquence in the tongueless gaze? To sons of light naught else is known Except the messenger alone; The son of earth, in rank so base, High heaven holds in his embrace. If but one atom I must give Of this the fabric that I live, Too great a price were that, for me To purchase immortality. Great ocean, infinitely vast, Into Thy wave myself I cast; Yet not ambitious to obtain The pearl, or that far coast to gain. Into my soul this meaning true Thou pourest like the summer dew, Whereof with sorrow and with sighs A new world dawns upon mine eyes. 52 How long the veil of eve and dawn About Thy beauty shall be drawn? Thy cheek display: make whole to me This incomplete epiphany. O glad consuming! rapture fine! Thyself wouldst beg of me for wine If unto thee I did relate The intoxication of my state. I added to the song of life The counterpoint of fiery strife; Scatter the dew that quenches drowth Into the tulips thirsty mouth. Mind searched the volume thro and thro Love found at once the subtle clue;
The clever bird will ever gain Beneath the snare the hidden grain. Where is the song, and he that sung? Words are a lyre pretence has strung; I draw towards the cameltrain The erring beast without a rein. In riddles yet I spake, forsooth; Now is the time for naked truth; Do Thou declare, where I shall lead My fellowtravellers in their need. 53 One by one we count our breath On the narrow road to death; Like a raging sea we roar As we walk along the shore. Though the terror of the sea Gives to none security, In the secret of the shell Selfpreserving we may dwell. Ask them not to price the heart, Moneychangers of the mart; We can estimate alone The true merit of our stone. Tribute none is asked of us For our fiefdom ruinous; Beggars sitting by the road, We are princes of our blood. There is one (O wonderful!) Dwells beside me in my soul; Who shall say, if it be thee Or myself, I meet in me? Draw aside fates veil, I pray, From this Adam shaped of clay; On Thy path precipitate For our coming we await. 54
No lament, no sigh I uttered; Naught avail laments and sighs; Best unspoken, the hearts sorrow; There be few to sympathise. In the shrine and in the temple There is lovetalk every where, Yet through all the world none knoweth This great secret that we share. Here are things too fine for vision; As the sparks that upward soar Guard our world for a brief moment, And the next it is no more. Coming by the path of seeing Thou didst past into my mind, But so sudden was Thy passing In that hour my eyes were blind. They that tell the worth of jewels Would not heed my jewelled ring; Since the world will not regard it, Unto thee my gem I bring. Lo, the goblet mindilluming That the West hath given me, All the suns aglow within it; Of the dawn no sign I see. 55 Tremulous as the moonlight To our far abode We came; and no man knoweth How we trod this road. Of our hearts grief Thou spakest To the watchful spies; We came with lamentation Shameful of our sighs. Unveil Thy hidden beauty! As the dawning sun All eyes to gaze upon thee Early we run.
Confirm our resolution With a stronger faith: We come unhorsed, unarmoured To this field of death. What a far gaze may fashion Art Thou not aware? So fared we in Thy presence, On our lips a prayer. 56 Lord, who didst bring the stars to birth, Look down upon my scattered earth; The atom doth itself enfold; This boundless wilderness behold. In solitude within my breast Immortal beauty lies at rest; Beneath this envelope of clay Regard the suns effulgent ray. Tumultuous love Thou didst impart To this my frail and mortal heart; See now Thy conflagration roll Among the rushes of my soul. Clothed in the robes of old disgrace Note how I labour to efface By hard endeavour every stain, And wash lifes garment white again. My dust ascending in the air Seeks a new heaven to prepare; This atom, That is naught, and less, Would populate a wilderness! [Translated by A.J. Arberry]
You are a branch of the Sidrah tree, Do not become the thorns and thistles of the garden. If you have denied His existence, Do not deny your own. Both worlds may be seen in the winepitches I have! Where is the eye to view the sights I see? There will come another man, possessed, who will shout hu! in the city; Two hundred commotions will arise from the obsession I have. Do not worry, ignorant one, at the approaching darkness of nights For the scar of my forehead sparkles like stars. You take me as your companion, but I am afraid That you are not up to the tumult and uproar I have raised. [Translated by Mustansir Mir] 1 Rise up! The hour is here That Adam shall appear; The stars bow, as they must, To this handful of dust. The secret, that at rest Was hid in Beings breast, By Clay and Water stirred Is magically heard. 2 On the roadway of desire Swift to gaze and to aspire, Glanceassaying, clear of head, Moon and star together tread. Say, what visions of delight In the dust amazed their sight,
PERSIAN PSALMS
PART TWO
That they turned them from the skies And have fixed on us their eyes. 3 Thou canst pass, like mornings breeze, Deep into the anemones, With a single breath disclose The locked secrets of the rose. What is Life? The world, and all, To make spirits captive thrall; Since the world has prisoned thee, How shalt thou bring this to be? Twas decreed, long since enow, Sun and moon to thee should bow, But as yet thou knowest not How thou canst achieve, and what. Take thou then a flask of wine From this tavern that is mine, And of one poor clod of earth Thou shalt bring a world to birth. Iqbal! What bright lamp is it In thy bosom thou hast lit, That the things thyself canst do Thou in us canst fashion, too? 4 If it be thy will to gain The safe shore of Passions main, With a thousand brands of fire One faint flame is thy desire. God has taught me how to spring Joyously upon the wing; Thou aspirest but to rest Cowering in thy meadows nest. Seekest thou to win perchance The Beloveds secret glance? First awhile be clutching then So the skirts of conscient men. With no madness in thy breast
Through the town thou clamourest; Pitcher shattered from thy grip, Thou wouldst yet the revel keep. Practice too the amorous art, Learn to captivate the heart, If thou dost desire of me Loves immortal minstrelsy. 5 Time is the winged messenger Of the Hearts Desire; Wondrous herald! Tidings fair Is his life entire. Think not, thou shalt never win The Beloved to view: The desire thy breast within Still is raw, and new! Well I know that thou dost soar Hawklike high in air; Yet beware the flower, for Ancient is his snare. How may Gabriel aspire Where Mans dust shall fly? If his present fame is higher, Tis his roof thats high! All thy life is breath to take, Knowing not, frail man, That true living is to break The days talisman. Of the science of the West This much I will speak: Sweet are sighs and tears expressed While the gaze is weak. Oer the Crescent and the Cross I am raised sublime; Other tumult now doth toss In the brain of Time.
6
Of the Friends ingenuous wit I can relate no more: By my pillow he did sit, And spake upon the cure! Though the tongue is bold enough, The argument right fair, What can I declare of Love, Save that none can declare? Happy he, who dared to reach Deep into Beings brain And drew forth like jewels speech, And fluent spoke again. Desolate with joy am I That, recognizing me, In reproach He whispered, sly, Poor, homeless vagrant, see! Grieve not, that this world of ours Its secret still conceals; What is speechless to the flowers, The birds lament reveals. Passions message, that anew I tell unfeignedly, To the tulip spake the dew, But spake in secrecy. If my speech is all distraught, What wonder were in this? Of His tresses who speaks aught, His tale distressful is. 7 Mind, that is ever questing, And finding, without resting, Fired by the joy of viewing Was vision still pursuing. Seek thou pure revelation Past sun and moons low station,
For all things here reported By vision are distorted. 8 I am the slave of each living heart Whose love is pure, refined, Not cloistered monks who dwell apart, Their hearts to none resigned. With such a heart as knows the hue, Yet from all hue is free, In mosque, and inn, and temple, too, The touchstone sure they be. Beyond the moon and Pleiades Their gaze is lifted high, The Milky Way contents not these For them to nest thereby. Within the multitude are they, Yet out of it withal; In spirits solitude they stay, While dwelling amid all. Regard not meanly, nor despise The truly loving man; Though little worth, tis merchandise Fit for Lifes caravan. The charter of their liberty Is writ for slaves to keep; And now the Shaykh and Brahman be Shepherds without their sheep. Take thou the goblet in thy hold; Wine lawful is, they tell Although the tale be strange, tis told By speakers credible. 9 The tulip of this meadowland Is yet all flecked with hue; Cast not the shield out of thy hand, For battle flares anew.
A tumult, in whose swelling breast Two hundred tumults wait That maiden is, who dwells caressed In Europes cradle yet. O thou who sittest at thy ease Beside the shore, arise! The whirlpool roars across the seas, The shark in menace lies. No part of wisdom tis, I trow, The trusty axe to shun; Within the rocks heart, even now, Are rubies to be won. Await! and I will raise the veil, That other songs may thrill; What should I of such music tell The lute concealeth still? When the worlds wondrous Artist viewed The madness in my brain, He cried, Too mighty swells thy mood, This ruin to contain! 10 Faith depends on arguments And on magic eloquence; Yet anon men serve the Lord With the lance and fearless sword. Oft the dervish robes conceal Underneath a coat of steel; Lovers, slaves to passions mood, With such armour are endued. When the world too old is grown, It is burnt and overthrown, Then its water and its clay Men for new foundation lay. Stored and cherished capital, For one glance they yield it all:
What a people these, who take Profit of the loss they make! What upon a blade of grass Etherborne they bring to pass, Ttis not strange that they can prove, Ponderous mountain chains to move. Love is as a merchandise; In Lifes marketplace it lies, Now at little price is sold, And anon for mighty gold. I have sung lamentingly Out of sleep to waken thee, Else is Love a labour done Sighlessly, without a groan. 11 Drunk with self hood like a wave Plunge into the stormy lave; Who commanded thee to sit With thy skirts about thy feet? Let the tiger be thy prey; Leave the mead and flowers gay, Out toward the mountain press, Tent thee in the wilderness. Cast thy strangling rope on high, Circle sun and moon in sky, Seize a star from heavens sphere, Stitch it on thy sleeve to wear. Selfhoods wine, as I have guessed, Tart and bitter is to taste, Yet regard thy pain within Drain our desperate medicine 12 Out of Hijaz and the lonely plain The Guide of the Time is come, Back from the far, far vale again The Caravan hastens home.
Lo, on the brow of the slaves I see The Sultans splendour bright, The dust of Ayaz shines radiantly With Mahmuds torch alight. In Kabah and Temple long, long years The deep lament arose, Till from Loves banquet now appears One Man who the Secret knows. The sighs that out of the bosom break Of a people at earnest prayer A brave and new foundation make In Lifes mind everywhere. O take the trembling lute from me, For my hand can play no more; In streams of blood my melody From the heart of the harp doth pour. 13 Of the Sultan I would take One gaze, if so I may; Muslim I, I do not make A god of clay. See, the independent heart That in my breast I bear To the beggar doth impart A regal air. What doth on the tulip fall Out of the starry sky, Oer the verdant herbage all Now scatter I. Ranging through the Infinite My thought begs never boon, As the Pleiades crave light From sun and moon. But if any wandering sun Toward my path should stray, With a smile I make it run Far from the way.
With the lustre and the flame That Nature hath endowed Like a lightningflash I gleam In a dark cloud. Well I know the wont and way Of them that rule, aloof Josephs in the well, and they Asses, on roof! 14 Like the dervish drunken be; Quaff the winecup instantly, And, when thou art bolder grown, Hurl thyself on Jamshids throne This our world, they asked of me, Ist congenial to thee? Nay, I answered; and they cried, Break and strew it far and wide! In the taverns I saw none Meet to be companion; Get thee less with tavernboys Smite with Rustam and rejoice! Tulip in the desert bright, Burn thou not in lonely light; Let thy heart consuming glow Blaze in Adams bosom, too. Thourt His fiery inward mood, Thou the fever of His blood; Dost thou not believe? Go, rend This worlds body, end to end. Is the Mind thy lamp? Today, Set it out upon the war; Is thy beaker Love? Drink wine With some trusty mate of thine. Ah, my heart is all aglow, From mine eyes the blood streams flow; See, my ruby offering; Take, and wear this in thy ring.
15
Greed is acting still his play This world to dominate; What new turbulence, I pray, Behind Heavens veil doth wait? Now and now Mind breaketh through What idols it designed; Come, for Love believeth true, And infidel is Mind. Thourt the Leader of the train; Then labour fiercely still; In our tribe, he rule doth gain Who hath a warriors will. Thou hast closed thine eyes, and said, The worlds a dream, no less: Ope thine eyes; this dreamabed Is all of wakefulness. In thy solitude, alone, Create a company: Love, thats made to know the One, The Many loves to see. But an instant quivered be Ere to the saddle bound Fortunate gazelle, to he So singled out to wound! In the garden and the mead I sow my jewelled air; Precious goods, yet cheap indeed When there are none to hear.
Sane are the tulip and the rose And yet their robe is torn. The tale of passion told may be Where the Friend sojourneth Alone, with a lament thats free Of all defiling breath. So from a star a man may clutch The apple of its eye; Mind is a falcon at his touch Eager and swift to fly. Unveil thy face; for He Who spake, Thou shalt not gaze on Me A hand of dust in view to take Still waiteth patiently. Who sang within the flowery mead? Say, whence his anthem came That lo! the rosebud hides her head, The roses blush for shame.
17
Where is the Arab, to revive The old nightrevelry, And where the Persian, to bring alive The lovelutes minstrelsy? Under the Sufi elders gown The flagon is bare and dry; Alas, for none can tell in the town Where young red wines to buy. Every man in this grassy mead Fashions and takes his rest, But where is he, ah, where indeed, Who will make, and burn, his nest? A thousand caravantrains have stared Like a stranger, and then passed on, But he that close as a lover dared To gazeis there anyone? Rise like a wave, and surging flow In the ocean eternally?
16
Although the Angel dwells beyond The talisman of the skies, Yet on this hand of dust in fond Affection rest his eyes. Think not upon one fashion goes The game of love forlorn;
Thou seekst the shore, and dost not know Where ever the shore may be. Hither (for in thy tendrils vein The fresh young blood doth bound) Hither hasten, nor ask again Where the Magian wine is found. Twist into one vast wararray All ages that ever were; Later and sooner are passed away; Where now is Time, ah, where? 18 Rise like the morning air And learn to blow again; Tulip and rose are fair; Play gently with their train; Deep in the rosebuds heart Learn how to stab thy dart. Though ermine wraps thy breast, Thou tremblest listlessly; This way thou shiverest Will nothing profit thee; In the assembly learn With love to shake, and burn. Faithless! thy heart astray Once more upon Him bind; Break from all else away, Nor unto self be blind; Learn with thy eyes to view, And how to close them, too. Breath is a messenger, Unheard its message told; Thy dust a vision clear, Yet thou canst not behold; Learn once again to see, And hearing get for thee! No falcons heart of rage We have, no eagles eye;
Like homebirds in a cage We lack the joy to fly; Homebirds encaged! arise, And soar into the skies. Darius royal throne Men sell not by the way; That mighty mount of stone They barter not for hay; Learn with thy own hearts blood To purchase thee this good. Thou weepst; yet Destiny Unchanging doth abide; The chain that circleth thee Was aye as firmly tied; Despair not, but anew Learn how to weep for rue. Art thou consumed? Take flame Out of thy hearts desire And wrap thee in the same, And set the reeds afire; Along the stubble learn To run a torch, and burn! 19 Little flower fast asleep, Rise narcissuslike, and peep; Lo, the bower droops and dies Wasted by cold griefs; arise! Now that birdsong fills the air And muezzins call to prayer, Listen to the burning sighs Of the passionate hearts, and rise! Out of leaden sleep, Out of slumber deep Arise! Out of slumber deep Arise! Now the sun, that doth adorn
With his rays the brow of morn, Doth suffuse the cheeks thereof With the crimson blush of love. Over mountain, over plain Caravans take route again; Bright and worldbeholding eyes, Gaze upon the world, and rise! Out of leaden sleep, Out of slumber deep Arise! Out of slumber deep Arise! All the Orient doth lie Like strewn dust, the roadway by, Or a still and bushed lament And a wasted sigh and spent: Yet each atom of this earth Is a gaze of tortured birth. Under Inds and Persias skies, Through Arabias plains, O rise! Out of leaden sleep, Out of slumber deep Arise! Out of slumber deep Arise! See, thy ocean is at rest, Slumbrous as a desert waste; Yea, no waxing or increase Eer disturbs thy oceans peace. Neer thy ocean knoweth storm Or Leviathans dread swarm: Rend its breast and, billowwise Swelling into tumult, rise! Out of leaden sleep, Out of slumber deep Arise! Out of slumber deep Arise! Listen to this subtlety
That reveals all mystery: Empire is the bodys dust; Spirit, true Religions trust; Body lives and spirit lives By the life their union gives. Lance in hand, and sword at thighs, Cloaked, and with thy prayer mat, rise! Out of leaden sleep, Out of slumber deep Arise! Out of slumber deep Arise! Thou art true and worshipful Guardian of eternal Rule, Thou the left hand and the right Of the Worldpossessors might. Shackled slave of earthy race, Thou art Time, and thou art Space: Wine of faith that fear defies Drink, and from doubts prison rise! Out of leaden sleep, Out of slumber deep Arise! Out of slumber deep Arise! Against Europe I protest, And the attraction of the West: Woe for Europe and her charm, Swift to capture and disarm! Europes hordes with flame and fire Desolate the world entire; Architect of Sanctuaries, Earth awaits rebuilding; rise Out of leaden sleep, Out of slumber deep Arise! Out of slumber deep Arise 20
Our world is dusty clay Trampled upon the way; I do not think our breath Returneth out of death. This night, whose only home Is in the strangers tomb, No moon, no stars here burn; To dawn how shall it turn? The heart, whose whole desire I quenchless flame and fire, Who knows, if it shall grow To lightning flash, or glow? High fancy, passions glance, And lifes exuberance, Fear not, for these all three Dust of the road shall be. So live, that if our death For aye continueth, God shall be shamed, to know What things He wrought below. 21 Sleeper, rise thou up, and fast! Once again upon the past And the future fix thy gaze; Thou must think on other ways. Love hath laid his heavy load On Times saddle to the road: Art thou lover? In thy need Eve and dawn must be thy steed. Elder said, This world below In no certain gait doth go; We must close our eyes, nor care What is foul herein, or fair. If, the world being wholly spurned, Unto Him thy mind is turned, First of all the things to do Is thy own life to forgo.
Ah, within my heart, said I, Yet unbroken idols lie: Then this temple, answered he, Must be shattered utterly! 22 My mind awhile was gone About the heavens to pace, High on the back of the moon, Fast in the stars embrace. Think not we are enfurled Within this globe of clay; Each separate stars a world, Or was a world one day. The lowly emmet sees In vision clear and true A thousand mysteries Which we lack sight to view. Earth on her back doth bear A many mountain tall; We, for the dust we were Lay heaviest of all. The panting tulip sighed; How deeply, well I know; Her cup with blood is dyed, Her hearts a brand aglow.
23
A melody swept me through and through And nobody knew; The air and the note is all they know. The high and low. Love in my heart was made to chime With thought sublime; Not like the moon I wax and wane; I never attain. Weep no more, but with brave heart take Disunions ache;
Love, till it sigheth, scarce can guess Its attractiveness. Be thou a torch, and set afire The bush and briar; Men of clay have no right to be In lifes sanctuary. A falcon thou art; yield not thy soul To domestic fowl; Rise, spread thy wing and pinion, and soar Both high and far. The poets a glow that giveth light In lifes dark night; A radiance shines in his wings anon, And sometimes none. Iqbal in his song his self has bared And truth declared; This newunbeliever knoweth naught Of cloister rote. 24 No Jamshids memory, the wine That floweth in this inn of mine, It is the pressing of my soul That sparkleth in my Persian bowl. Man like a billow quivereth In eager quest of Beings breath, While yet his arrow lies encased About annihilations waist. Come, let us shatter (for we can) Like Abraham this talisman; Within the temple, idols be Whatever I have seen, but thee. Until thou deeply enterest The very heart in Beings breast, To leave the gaze to speculate Is wickedness, and sin most great. To wander idly, without guide,
Peculiar pleasure is, beside; Happy am I, that our abode Is far, and ever winds the road. The casual glance, that gave to me The leave to wander, and to see, Twas better far, that casual glance, Than rapt attention to my chance. Though I was nourished all my days Where infidel to idol prays, Behold, my opened lips impart The secret of the Kabahs heart. 25 I am a blossom of the plain; Carry me back from the avenue To mountain and wilderness again Where airs to breathe, and the vast to view. Far from self I have gone astray, Learnt me the foxy and furtive wont; Carry me, helpers of the way, Back to the reeds, my ancient haunt. Once I had a word in my heart; Now it has vanished from my breast; Though I am old, let me depart Back to the school that taught me best. I am a hushed and silent lute; Now in my head is a new, sweet air; O let my strings be no longer mute, Take me to him whom will repair. In this night that enshroudeth me Sufficient sun is my ancient brand; Take away from my dormitory The shuttered lamp that is in thy hand. Lo, to the slaves I have declareed True kingships innermost mystery; I am a slave who greatly erred; To the king for judgement O carry me!
26 I uttered a new word, But there was none that heard; Vision to rapture grew, But glance was none to view. Be thou a stone, and pass Within these works of glass; Woe, stone to idol wrought That goblet shattered not! Break down the old, and then Rebuild the world again; Who in No God remained Has neer Except attained. O happy rivulet In selfhood passionate, Who to earths heart dost flee And flowest not so sea! To Moses lesson list; For Europes scientist Though oceans depth he plumb, Could neer to Sinai come. Loves self learnt quiverings art From this our trembling heart; Our spark it was that spired Until the moth expired. 27 Never lover true is he Who lamenteth dolefully; Lover he, who in his hold Hath the double world controlled. Lover true is passionate Selfhoods world to recreate, Not content to be enfurled By a bounded, finite world. Wakeful heart was never given Europes scientist by heaven; All that God has marked him by Is the speculative eye.
Love he knows not, and the Brain Snake like bites into his vein, Even though his golden cup Flowing ruby filleth up. Take the lees I give; for lo! In the taverns that I know Aged vintner never more Stands, the young, fierce wine to pour 28 In the heart of the birds, that range This garden, is ever change; Tis one with the rose at breast, And other within the nest. Look thou to thyself intent; Of the world what cause to lament? Theres a different world to see, Be there change of sight in thee. Each moment, if but thine eye Regardeth attentively, Changeth the tavern road And the Magians wonted mode. The caravans leader greet With my blessing, and then repeat: Though the way unchanged remain, Tis a different caravan! 29 We are gone astray from God; He is searching upon the road, For like us, He is need entire And the prisoner of desire. On the tulips petal He writes The message His heart indites, Yea, and His voice is heard In the passionate song of the bird. He lay in the iris fold Our loveliness to behold;
Bright cup of the ardent gaze Whose glance is a hymn of praise! Parted from us, forlorn He sighs with the breath of morn, Within and out He doth stand, Around, and on every hand. Great riot created He A creature of clay to see, Fashioned the piercing view To gaze upon mortal hue. Hidden in every grain Not yet is He known to man, Though bright as the full moons grace In cottage and street is His face. In our envelope all of dust The jewel of life is lost; Is it we, or Himself (O say), This pearl that is gone astray? 30 Of the hirelingss blood outpoured Lustrous rubies makes the lord; Tyrant squire to swell his wealth Desolates the peasants tillth. Revolt, I cry! Revolt, defy! Revolt, or die! City shaykh with string of beads Many a faithful heart misleads, Brahman baffles with his thread Many a simple Hindu head. Revolt, I cry! Revolt, defy! Revolt, or die! Prince and Sultan gambling go, Loaded are the dice they throw. Subjects soul from body strip While their subjects are asleep,
Revolt, I cry! Revolt, defy! Revolt, or die! Preachers at the mosque, his son To the kindergarten gone; Greybird is a child, in truth, Child a greybird, spite his youth. Revolt, I cry! Revolt, defy! Revolt, or die! Brother Muslims! woe to us For the havoc science does; Ahriman is cheap enough, God is rare, scarceoffered stuff. Revolt, I cry! Revolt, defy Revolt, or die! See how Falsehoods blandishment Shadows Truth, with ill intent, How the Bat, with blinded eyes, Plots against the Sun to rise. Revolt, I cry! Revolt, defy! Revolt, or die! In the Churches, Jesus Christ On the Cross is sacrificed, With Gods Book Muhammad too From the Kabah flees anew. Revolt, I cry! Revolt, defy! Revolt, or die! I have seen into the bowls Furnished by this age for souls; Such the venom they contain, Serpents twist and writhe in pain. Revolt, I cry! Revolt, defy! Revolt, or die!
Yet the weak are given at length Lions heart and tigers strength; In this bubbling lantern, lo! Haply yet a flame will glow. Revolt, I cry! Revolt, defy! Revolt, or die! 31 Although the soul, I know, One day unveiled shall be, Think not it shall be so By writhing endlessly. It needs a blow, to stir The sleeping soul from earth Unswept, the harp can neer Bring melody to birth. Thy cup replenish still With tears and midnight sighs, Replenish it until The radiant sun shall rise. So faint a mote thou art, I fear thoult vanish quite; Then fortify thy heart To meet the morning light. Transcend the dust, nor take Thy self but dust to be; If thou thy breast will break, The moon shall shine from thee. If in thy face they lock The gate to selfhoods shrine, Strike head upon the rock And see the ruby shine.
Forth from the nest, the cage, the snare, The bower, be gone! Though stranger thou art, and dost not know How the way doth wend, In a bold, familiar manner go In the lane of the Friend. Each breath that thou drawest, differently The world adorn; Within this ancient hostelry Swift as Time be borne. If Gabriel lay his hand on thy rein, And the Houris, too, With a loving glance pass on again As fair charmers do. 33 What is this life? A pearl In thy own shell to bear, In the flames heart to hurl Thyself, nor melt to air. Love is with speed to pass Out of this shuttered sphere, To cast the moons bright glass High over heaven clear. Power is from hand to fling The cash of heart and faith. To rule the world, a king, And brave the chance of death. Philosophy is taught By manly zeal alone, To whet the blade of thought Upon the world for stone. The living spirits trust
Beyond heavens shuttered dome I have found a way to come Where swifter than thought may fly The breath of a morning sigh. Falcon thou art, and hast made Thy nest in the grassy glade, And its air, I am fearful, might Foreshorten thy pinions flight. Art thou dust become? It is clear Thou canst not be resting here; On the breeze of the morning ride, Sit not by the roadway side. From the stream of the stars arise And cross the Nile of the skies; For the heart must die right soon If it lodge, though it be in the moon. Let its breast no longer beam With the rockless lightnings gleam, Less worth than a straw reckon I The mountain of Sinai. How men may the manners keep Of the throng, yet consuming leap Ask not of us, whom the gaze Of the passing fair one slays. When I am dead, this my lay Men will recite, and say: One man, who was selfaware, Transformed a world everywhere! [Translated by A.J. Arberry] 35 I am a sinner with selfrespect, I will take no wages without labor; I am scarred because my fault has been put down to His decree. Through bounty of love and ecstasy, I have taken thought to such heights, That, reaching behind, I can pluck the eyes of the worldbrightening sun.
Since the First Morning, I have been a drawer of wave and vortex; When the sea becomes calm, I invoke the storm for help. A hundred times before now, too, I have lit a fire under the worlds feet; My high and low notes burn the world clean of peace and tranquility. I have danced before idols and worn the holy thread, so that The shaykh of the city may become a man of God by calling me a heretic. Now they run away from me, now they associate with me; In this desert, they do not know whether I am hunter or prey. A heart that lacks warmth can ill profit from the company of a man; Come with redhot copper, so that my elixir may work on you. [Translated by Mustansir Mir] 36 The world had lost its sight And the glass of the heart forsook, But an eye now sees the light That into the heart can look. Dark is the night, twists the road, All faithless the wayfarers; And the caravans guide what load Of problems oppressive bears! Drunk are the feckless spy, The lover, the messenger; So the words of the sweethearts lie In how many loads to wear. Its faith of believer true, Its doubt of the infidel O Muslims, what shall I do
With the heart that in me doth dwell? Sometimes the helmsmans skill The storm doth display, and more! Lo, the waves, impetuous will Hath cast our craft on the shore. Who fashioned these seeing eyes In the wave, far in ocean lost, That the pearl in the seas heart lies, And the potsherd breaks on the coast? No part of my souls unrest Hath stirred in my Native land; With my magic I tried my best, It was lost on the desert sand. If a New World thou hast In thy bosom, declare thy faith! Wounded in heart and breast, Europe is nigh to death. 37 No friend in the world entire thou wilt find Sincere in solicitude Go, lose thyself in thy self, and mind The honour of loverhood. I am grieved, that He Who created us In rapture to be displayed Hath concealed the infinite various Manners of that His trade. None but Ayaz alone doth know This subtle and secret truth, How the Ghaznavids love augmented so His poor slaves anguish and ruth. Less than a grassblade, in my view, The knowledge and vision vast That the trusty sword and the buckler true From the hand of the warrior cast. Whatever the price of these goods, tis well And profit will yield, not harm,
Razis intelligence to sell For the power of Hyders arm. If there is a drop of blood in thy vein, A flutter to storm the height. Come, learn with me the way to attain The falcons ascending flight. If fluting thou thinkst is but taking breath, How little truth thou hast guessed; The minstrel his skill accomplisheth With the point of the sword in his breast! 38 The fine science thou dost learn After vision does not yearn; Tis no wanderer far astray, But a straggler on the way. He whose allembracing brain A new universe doth plan Burneth still with passions fire, Never lacketh high desire. Though Love made the moon to err On the road a wayfarer, Never blazeth in its breast The vast furnace of unrest. So His beauty doth entrance, I can never lift my glance From His Face, who heedlessly Doth not a glance spare for me. See, Iqbal in manly clothes To his worldly labour goes; Proving that his dervishood Neer depends on gown and hood. 39 Vision can be won As of morning sun, Making this dark clay Radiant as day.
Let thy vision be Needlesharp in thee, Like its lustre pass Thro the heart o the glass. In this garden, where Hushed is warblers air, As each bursting bud Chant thy tragic mode. Earth hides not His grace, Heavn veils not His face Thou mayst view, for sure, If thou canst endure. Childlike watchest thou Nests beneath the bough; Mount on wings, and soon Hunt the sun and moon!
That desolation passed. 41 Love went searching thro the earth Until Adam came to birth; Out of water, out of clay Manifested his display. Sun, and moon, and stars on high, These were little to set by So to purchase in lifes mart Adams dust, that owned a heart. 42 Come! The Asiatic man Has created a new plan: Go not, pilgrimage to make To the idol that he brake. What is this epiphany 40
Too oft was thy light With strangers to take wine, To suffer others light Within the bowl to shine. The orient winebearer Hands thee the purple cup; Drink! Let the drunkards air From thy parched earth mount up! The heart that knoweth well The fever of desire Mothlike will hover still About the candles fire. Sprinkle thy morning tears Upon lifes desert plain; New harvest scarce appears Except thou sow thy grain. Pass wine! Speak not to me Of Europes tumult vast; Caravans countlessly
That mens hearts, rejoiced to see, From the ashes of the way Gladly leap, like sparks at play? To attain what far abode Strive the Turks upon the road, That their bosom fluttereth With the quickness of their breath? Strive thou, selfhoods joy to know: They who on this journey go Shatter every worldly chain That they may to self attain. Men whose hearts are dead and cold As a cell this world behold; With two cups to fill their head, From the whole of life they fled. I will ever be the slave Of those horsemen bold and brave Who, with spear uplifted, far Ride, to pierce and thread a star. Angels lack the season now
Prostrate to their Lord to bow; Creatures of pure light, for they Rapturous gaze on men of clay! 43 I boast a love that is not grieved By being or to be bereaved, Whose infidelity doth neer The girdle of existence wear. If Love shall ever so command, Let precious life slip from thy hand; Love is thy one beloved and goal; There is no gain in life of soul. The shattering of the idolshrine Doth infidelity refine; It needs Mahmuds immortal ire To set the templehouse afire. In Muslim mosque and church of Christ, In incensed temple, tavern spiced, Although a hundred charms were tried The heart was never satisfied. Never in bower sweet with scent I raised a sorrowful lament, But from the mountain cataract I learned this music to enact. Wouldest thou approach me, here apart? Come cold of breath, and warm of heart; In thee is movement never calm; Such verve was not in Davids Psalm. Seek less my faults, but take my bowl To be the measure of thy soul; The pleasure of my bitter brew Is never without spirits rue. 44 The Saki, pouring his pure wine Upon my restless heart
Converts this quicksilver of mine To gold, by magic art. I do not know if it be light Within my breast, or flame; I only know its radiance white Shines with a moonlike gleam. Nature, all hushed, doth suddenly My quiet heart assail; The instrument in ecstasy Playeth its own sweet scale. Grieve not, thou fool; the starry skies Within this desert waste Have many founts, that secret rise And to the torrent haste. O thou who didst my sweet wine take, Grieve not at my sharp sting; It needs my sting, that I may wake Man from his slumbering. 45 Brighter shall shine mens clay Than angels light, one day; Earth through our Destiny Turn to a starry sky. The fancies in our head That upon storms were fed One day shall soar, and clear The whirlpool of the sphere. Why askest thou of me? Consider Man, and see How, Minddeveloped still, Sublime this subject will. Come fashioned forth, sublime. This common thought, in time, And with its beautys rapture Even Gods heart shall capture. 46
I have never discovered well Laws way, and the wont thereof, But know him an infidel Who denieth the power of Love. The travellers of the Shrine O may God succour and aid, That they may truly divine Mans rank, who of clay was made. I do not ask of the Way; The Friend is my only quest, For so I have heard men say, The friend, then the way, thats best! Europes philosopher So misseth the rapture fine, In the red bowl shines more clear The gleam of the crimson wine. Better a man were blind, Better a thousand wise, Than knowledge to have in mind That the seeing heart denies. Though intellects jugglery Peculiar joy impart, Better than subtlety Is the faith of a simple heart. I have washed my hearts tablets clean Of the learning that charmed my youth, Opened my teeming brain With the lancet of utter truth. Far from the threshold now Of the Sultans gate I have strayed; No infidel I, to bow To a god who can nothing aid. 47 Far, far from every other go With the One Friend upon the road;
Seek thou of God thy self to know, And seek in selfhood for thy God. One piercing glance can neer impart The consummation of it all: The gaze, the intellect, the heart, Each needs its vision several. Love is at Beings board to sup, To drain its glass, till all is gone; Seek not the worldrevealing cup, Seek the worldconquering hand alone! Naked of foot the travellers are, Thorny the way, and hard indeed; Till thou shall reach thy selfhood far, Take acquiescence for thy steed. Only in perfect poverty The proof of kingship is displayed; Beneath the rushes seek, to see The royal throne of Kaikobad. Look onward; Life is but a way That to another world doth wend; From what has been, and passed away Depart, and ever seek the end. But if Fates buffet maketh thee Like the lamenting reed to moon, Lay down the wine thou tookst from me; Seek liniment to mend thy bone! 48 The world, but not selfhood, thou canst see; How long in thy ignorance wilt thou sit? With thy ancient flame let the night be lit? The hand of Moses is sleeved in thee. Set forth thy foot from the circling skies; Greater and older than these thou art; Fearest thou death in thy deathless heart? Deaths but a prey that before thee lies. Life, once given thee, none can take;
Tis for lack of faith men faint and die; Learn to be sculptor, even as I, And haply anew thy selfhood make! 49 In the accidents of night There is naught can me affright, Seeing that the night is borne By the wheeling stars to morn. Of its station unaware, It has fallen in its own snare, This thy love, that did arise From thy supplicating cries. When the heart gives forth a sigh, Tis of burning inwardly; Let it not thy lips defile; Break it in thy breast, and smile! None remains in tavern now; Beg of Natures saki thou The rich wine that cannot pass In the drinkers narrow glass. Not with mosque and chanted verse, Not with learning schools rehearse To repose returns the heart When its Darling doth depart. 50 What man art thou, and where thy home? In the blue skies The stars have opened, to see thee come, A thousand eyes! Why shall I tell what thou hast done, What thou now art? Mahmud is now with Ayaz one This breaks my heart! No Milky Way thou mountest up At prayer to kneel;
The Sufis and the poets cup Thy soul doth steal. Though Europe many knots untied That chained thy thought, Intoxication magnified Her next draught brought. Much of the Balance and the Scroll I hear thee say; Strange, that thou seest not at all This judgementday! Blessed the man, who in his breast The shrine hath known, Fluttered awhile, then from the nest Of speech was flown. No more the tavern and the school I venerate; I do not reckon worshipful The browswept gate! 51 In the abode of passion, where The dust is fraught with pain, Shineth in every atom there Pure spirit without stain. No Magian wine from Magian boy The revellers there take; One glance of rapture and of joy Each fragile glass doth break. Let madness surge not in thee so When thou dost stand at prayer; Keep firm thy reason; do not go With shredded raiment there! 52 The young beloved, the ancient wine, The maids of Paradise, These joys men reckon rare and fine Charm not the truly wise.
Whateer eternal thou dost deem, Mountain, and sea, and shore, Land, plain, whateer assured doth seem, These pass, and are no more. The learning of the Westerner, The Easts philosophy, All is an idolhouse of prayer And idols nothing be! Cross not this desert terrified; Fix on thy self thy thought; Thou only art, and all beside, Yea, all the world, is naught! Upon this way mine eyelashes Have quarried out of stone, Nor stage nor caravan there is, And shifting sands are none. 53 Qalandars, who to their sway Water strive to win and clay, From the monarch tribute bear Though the beggars robe they wear. They appear, and round the sun And the moon their rope is spun; They retire, and in their breast Time and Space repose at rest. When the revel rules the day Bright as shimmering silks are they. Yet when battle is toward For the sacrifice prepared. A new order they devise For the broad and dappled skies, Bear the ancient stars and all On their backs to funeral. Time hath from her face untied Morrows veil, to lay aside; Yet today men still delight In the wine of yesternight.
Hovers on my lip the word That must never be declared; Strange, the learned of the town Silent are, nor even frown! 54 A doublehandled sword am I Laid naked by the circling sky; Fortune hath sharpened me in Space, And whetted me upon Times face. I am the world of fantasy; The genius of eternity The world of nightingale and rose Hath shattered, fashioning me for those. The youthful wine to cheer the soul That I am pouring in the bowl Is from the vat, whereby my jar And glass decanter molten are. The breath is burning in my breast; The sanctuary is my nest, And men may recognize my throat By the great ardour of my note. Wrecked is the barque the ancient guide Built out of sense, therein to ride; Blest is the one who fashioned me To be his vessel on the sea. 55 Each atoms body like a spark I set aquivering, Each atom quivers through the dark And soars as on a wing. List to my music burning new! Each diamantine grain I fashion like a drop of dew To trickle soft as rain. From manifestings stage when break My soft, sweet melodies,
Even in the dead of night I make The dawn desire to rise. Joseph, concealed from sight so long, I have revealed anew, That I may fire the needy throng His beauty to pursue. Dear love, that doth mans patience try, To dust in ecstasy Hath given eyes to weep, and I The wondrous joy to see 56 Ever to be about with men Proveth the self doth not attain; To friends be thou a stranger, then, Who art familiar with pain. How long before the palace gate Of princes wilt thou bow thy face? From God, Who did thy soul create, Learn thou the pride of matchless grace. The warriors love will come one day To such a point of excellence That notice he will no more pay To mortal beautys blandishments. I sang before the sanctuary So sad a song of hearts desire, That each initiate learned from me The joy of separations fire. Unseeing are the buyers eyes, And I rejoice and jubilate Because Loves precious merchandise Remaineth still immaculate. Come, let us on the tulip tread And drink the winecup fearlessly; Lawful it is, if lovers shed The blood of ancient piety. Go forth from Muslim company,
And in Islam thy refuge take; For Muslims count as equity The measures infidel they make. 57 Like a tulips flame I burn In your presence as I turn; By my life, and yours, I swear Youth of Persia ever fair! I have dived, and dived again With my thoughts into lifes brain Until I prevailed to find Every secret of your mind. Sun and moonI gazed on these Far beyond the Pleiades, And rebuilt a sanctuary In your infidelity. I have twisted well the blade Till its edge was sharper made; Pale the gleam and lustreless Wasted in your wilderness. My thoughts images dispense To the Orients indigence The bright ruby that I gain From your mines of Badakhshan. Comes the man, to free at last Slaves confined in fetters fast; Through the windows in the wall Of your prison I see all. Make a ring about me now; In my breast a fires aglow That your forebears lit one day, Things of water and of clay. 58 Soft my breath doth pass Soft as April airs; Jasminesweet the grass
Springeth from my tears. Desert tulip glows With the blood I shed As in beaker shews Wine all ruby red. Soareth so my flight Oer the highest sphere That the souls of light Seek to trap me there. Labours ever new Make mans dust to glow; Moon and star still do As long time ago. My selfs lamp I lit, Now that Moses hand Men have hidden it Neath the wristletband. Come, O come to prayer; Court no princes door: So our fathers were When the world was poor. 59 Leave him who never won to sight, And bears report alone; Who makes long speech, but the delight Of vision gives to none. To bard and scholar listened I, Philosopher to boot; Although their palm is proud and high, It yields nor leaf nor fruit. The gleam that hoary acolyte So prides himself upon Reveals a thousand shades of night, But never glow of dawn. I have a charge gainst God to lay That still I keep concealed;
He takes my precious heart away, And Joseph does not yield. Neither in idolhouse nor shrine That saki I can find To grant, no embers fitful shine, But splendour unconfined. 60 It chanced within the desert nigh A caravan was passing by, And presently there reached my ear The leaders carol, loud and clear. If from some Pharaohs dark redoubt A Joseph might at last come out, Open for all to plunder lies A caravan of merchandise. 61 Fool! Is there then such hope in thee Of winning Europes sympathy? The falcon grieves not overmuch About the bird thats in his clutch. Shame on thee, only to desire Rubies bequeathed thee by thy sire! Is there not one delight alone To win thee rubies from the stone. Speak not about the world to me, If it be not or if it be; I only know that I am I, The worldillusion let go by. Trembles each tavernglass with fear Because the officer is here, Except one lovers bowl doth make The very stones with dread to shake. Sayst thou that veiled the selfhood is? Say on; but let me tell thee this Tear not this veil into a shred; Narrows the vision in the head.
The ancient bough, beneath whose shade Thy little sprouting wings were laid, Were it into shame to move at last Thy nest, when all its leaves are cast? Call that a song, which Nature brings To serve as music for her strings; What use is in the minstrelsy That all with Nature doth agree? 62 Eschew the West, and do not be Bewitched by Europes wizardry; Not worth a barley, in my view, Is all her ancient and her new. Mighty Darius, Iskandar, Khusrau and Kaikobadall are A blade of grass upon the way Swept by a passing wind, today. Life is the self to beautify, To guard the self right jealously; Upon a caravan thou art Fare on with all, but go apart! Radiant thou camest from the sky, Far brighter than the sun on high; So live, that every mote may be Illumined by thy brilliancy. Thou hast not spared thy precious ring Idly to Ahriman to fling To pledge the which it were not well Even to trusty Gabriel. The tavern is ashamed, because So narrow is become our glass; A beaker take, and prudently Drink wineand then be off with thee!
Go, strike thyself upon its wire Thou art the plectrum, it the lyre. The gaze disclosed in ecstasy Trembles to view its purity, And yet thou sayst it is a veil. A covering, a thing unreal! Pull down the pole of the immense That struts heavens cerulean tents, For like a spark it naked lies Before the contemplative eyes. High Paradise is not so fair As this clay garment that I wear; Within this sanctuary of mine Is holy fire, and joy divine. I lose myself a little time, I lose awhile the great sublime, The twain discovering presently O miracle, O mystery! 64 This brand of grief, His love apart, Hath sown a garden in my heart; O desertflame anemone, I have a word to say to thee! Best in the wilderness, alone, To breathe the soulconsuming groan; Yet what can I, condemned for good To wrestle with the multitude? 65 When the tulips heart I viewed With the gaze of certitude, All I saw was ecstasy, Sighs, and sobbing bitterly. In the highest and the least
63 A secret tis, tis evident (Thou sayst) this world of hue and scent:
Is lifes quiver manifest; Over plain and hill and dell Ever leaps this wild gazelle.
Life is not of us alone, Life is not for us to own; Life is everywhere to see Ah, and whence came life to be? 66 This is a world, that like to it, Each boundless is, and infinite, An image each, a fantasy, A smokewave from the torch in me. Two moments this and that endure, I only everlasting, sure; That of but little worth, as this, My self the sole true coin is. Here to abide, and there to dwell, Both here and there a little spell; What is my labour, here and there? The lamentation of despair! This world and that my path waylay, In this and that is loss my pay; Each my brief nest and dwellingplace Both let me kindle, and both raze! 67 Spring is come; bright glances dart In the tulips bowl of fire; Thousand thousand sighs upspire From each several embers heart. Pour a stoup of ruby glow Oer the gardens dusty bed; Strange and shy, in autumns dread, Tulip and narcissus grow. Hueandscent world fills thine eyes; What the heart is, knowest thou? Tis a moon, that round its brow Casts a halo of the skies. 68 The Artist, Whose vast mind
Both day and night designed, Engraving these, displays Upon Himself His gaze. Sufi! Step out before Thy dim and dusty store; Nature has merchandise To offerat what price! Down, and the stars and moon, Nightfall, the sun at noon All these unveiled the eye For but one glance may buy! 69 This ancient universe New youth must now rehearse, Its trembling blade of grass Huge mountains should surpass. The handful of poor clay That did a glance display Allviewing, in the brain Must shape a cry of pain. Our aged moon and sun The course have never run; Fresh stars we must pursue To build the world anew. Each image of delight That dawns upon my sight Is fair; yet fairer still The image that I will. God said, The world so lies, And say not otherwise; Said Adam, So I see; But thus it ought to be! 70 In the mead a tulip blows In whose breast no yearning glows, A narcissus, languid too,
Yet it lacked the eye to view. Billowing breath was in the clay, But no heart did it display; Caravan upon the road Such was life, yet where the load? Time itself was void and free Of the topers song of glee, Wine was in the glass aflame Yet was none to quaff the same. Sinais lightning made complaint That desire was dumb and faint; In the peaceful valley there Silent was the voice of prayer. Love upon our woe exprest Builds anew the great unrest, Else no murmur ever stirs From these silent banqueters. 71 Whence hath this commotion swirled In our old, slowmoving world, That each girdled infidel Like a reed of grief doth tell? In the hut of the fakir, In the palace of the ameer There is pain and there is ruth Huge to bow the back of youth. Where is cure? For the disease With the cure doth yet increase; Science is all wizardry, Mean deceit, and trickery. Adams ship rides not the main Save the torrent strive and strain; Every heart a thousand wise Doth the helmsman agonize. Of lifes story do not seek Any tale for me to speak;
All its pain I sufferd long, And departed with a song. I have let my breath to ride; With the breeze of morning tide; I have wandered in this mead Yet no rose hath known my tread. Far from cottage and from street, Yet in both abroad, and fleet, With the vision of the moon I have gazed this world upon! 72 Tulip in the mountains blowing, Lamp in mead and garden glowing, Gaze on me, for I will give Guidance on the way to live. We are not the pigment charming, Nor the scattered scent disarming, We are that which moves confined In the heart, and in the mind. Drunkenness is wineengendered, Springeth not of goblet tendered, Though it needs the goblet, too, To consume the wine, tis true. Let thy breast be flameconceiving, For within this night of living Self may never come to sight Save discovered by this light. Wave of flame, O bare thy bosom To the morningbreeze; O blossom, Do not seek the dew, to quell Thy hearts fiery crucible! 73 I am a slave set free, And Love still leadeth me; Love is my leader still, Mind bows to do my will.
The tumult flareth up Out of my circling cup; This is my evening star, My full moon, flaming far. The spirit slept at rest, Desire stirred not the breast, Then struck a drunken air Caught in my circling snare. O world of scent and hue, How long shall we so do? Death thy survival proves My living all is Loves. The One my thought reveals, The One my thought conceals; Here is His dwellingplace Behold my lofty grace! 74 Silent rosebud in her heart Had a secret, veiled apart, Suffered countless aches and woes Buffeted by thyme and rose. So she sought, to keep her word, Breeze of spring and meadowbird, Putting faith in these (yet both Soared on wing) to guard her troth [Translated by A.J. Arberry] 75 I bow down before myselfthere is no temple or Kabah left! This one is missing in Arabia, that one in other lands. The petals of rose and tulip have lost their colour and moisture; The laments of birds have lost their melody. In the workshop that is the world I see no new designs:
Preexistence has, perhaps, run out of blueprints. The heavenly bodies no longer want to revolve: Day and night are, perhaps, unable to move. They have put up their feet before reaching their destination: The earthlings have, perhaps, no breath left in their chests. Either the Register of Possibles has no blank pages left Or the Pen of Fate has grown too tired to write. [Translated by Mustansir Mir]
INTRODUCTION
The old ardour has disappeared from the life of the East; Its breath wavered and soul left its body Like a picture without the chain of breath And does not know what the taste of life is. Its heart lost desire and craving, Its flute ceased to produce notes. I am expressing my ideas in a different form,
And writing in reply to the book of Mahmud. Since the time of the Shaikh, No man has given the sparks of fire to our life. We lay on the earth with shrouds around our bodies, And did not experience a single resurrection. That wise man of Tabriz witnessed before his eyes Calamities that resulted from the invasion of Genghis. I saw a revolution of another type: Appearance of a new sun. I removed veil from the face of meaning, And gave sun in the hands of a mote. Dont you think I am intoxicated without wine, And spin tales likes poets. You will see no good from a low person, Who accuses me of being a poet. I have nothing to do with the street of the beloved, And do not have a griefstricken heart nor a longing for the beloved; Neither is my earth the dust of a street, Nor is within my clay a heart without self control. My mission in life is in line with Gabriel the Truthful, I have neither a rival, nor a messenger, nor a porter. Though a mendicant, I have the wherewithal of Moses: Kingly pomp under a beggars garment. If I am earth, desert cannot contain me; If water, river cannot encompass me. The heart of a stone trembles at my glass, The ocean of my thought is without a shore.
Behind my curtain lie concealed several destinies, And several resurrections take birth at my hand. For a moment I retired unto myself, I created an immortal world. I am not ashamed of such poetry, For in a hundred years an Attar might not appear.1 A battle of life and death is being waged in my soul, My eye is riveted on immortal life. I saw your clay stranger to life, Hence I breathed into your body of my own soul. I am wholly affected by the fire that I possess: Illumine the darkness of your night by my lamp. Heart was sown into the soil of my body like a seed, A different destiny was written on my tablet: To me the ideal of khudi is sweet as honey. What else can I do? My whole stock consists of this experience. First I tasted the fruit of this experience myself, Then I decided to share it with the people of the East. If Gabriel were to go through this book, He would cast aside the pure [Divine] Light as if it were dust; He would bewail about his [low] station, And relate to God the condition of his heart: I no longer desire unveiled Epiphany, I desire nothing but hidden heartsore. I am ready to forego eternal union, For now I realise what sweetness is in lamentation! Give me the pride and submissiveness of man,
Mahmood Shabistry
Earth and sky are its halting places, It walks alone amid a caravan. Some of its states are: the world of darkness and light, The sound of the trumpet, death, paradise, and Houri. It gives both to Iblis and Adam opportunity to develop, And provides them a chance of expansions. Eye is impatient at its sight, Its charms even beguile God. With one eye, it sees its own privacy, With the other eye, it looks at its apparent lustre. If it closes one eye, it is a sin; If it sees with both eyes, it is the true condition of the path. Out of its little stream, it produces an ocean, It becomes a pearl and then settles at its bottom. Soon it takes a different form; Becomes a diver and catches itself again. In it there are noiseless commissions; It has colour and sound perceptible without eye and ear. There is a world hidden in its glass, But it reveals itself to us piecemeal. Life makes it into a lasso and throws it To catch everything low and high. By its means it ensnares itself, And wrings also the neck of duality. One day the two worlds fall a prey to it And are caught into its beautiful lasso. If you conquer both these worlds, You will become immortal even if everything else dies Do not set foot in the desert of search lazily; First, take hold of that world which lies within you.
QUESTION 1
First of all I am perplexed about my thought: What is that which is called thought? What sort of thought is the condition of my path? Why is it sometimes obedience, sometimes sin? ANSWER What a light there is within the heart of man! A light that is manifest in spite of its invisibility. I saw it in the constancy of change, I saw it both as light and fire. Sometimes its fire is nourished by argumentation and reasoning, Sometimes its light is derived from the breath of Gabriel, What a lifeilluminating and heartkindling light! The sun is nothing in face of a single ray of this light. Conjoined with dust, it is above limitations of space; Chained to the alternation of day and night, it is free from the bonds of time. The calculation of its time is not through breath, There is none like it in seeking and discovering. Sometimes it feels exhausted and sits on the shore, Sometimes a shoreless ocean is in its cup. It is both the river and the staff of Moses, On account of which the river is divided into two. It is a deer whose pasture is the sky, Who drinks water from the stream of the Milky Way.
If you are low, become strong by conquering the self. If you wish to seek God, get nearer yourself. If you become proficient in conquering self, Conquering the world will become easy for you. Happy is the day when you conquer this world, And pierce the bosom of the skies. The moon will prostrate before you, And you throw over it a lasso of waves of smoke. You will be free in this ancient world, Able to fashion the idols to your purpose; To hold in the grasp of your hand all the world Of light and sound, of colour and smell; To change its quantitative aspect, To mould it according to your purpose; Not to be captivated by its sorrows and delights To break the spell of its nine skies; To go down into its heart like the point of an arrow, Not to exchange your wheat for its barley; This is indeed thetrue kingly glory, This is the State that is linked to religion.
It left the ocean and imparted moisture to the desert, It gave to the eye the sense of quantity and quality. Whatever thing comes into its presence, Gets illumined through the grace of its consciousness. It is satisfied with its privacy and is not inclined to association with others, Yet all things are illumined by its light. First it brightens it up, Then it ensnares it in a mirror. Its consciousness makes it familiar with the world, The world made it aware of its potentiality. Intellect removes veil from its face, But speech reveals it much better. Yet it is not confined to this mundane world It is only one of its stages in the path of evolution. You look upon the world as existing outside you: These mountains and deserts, oceans and mines; This world of colour and smell is our nosegay; It is independent and yet intimately related to us. The ego bound them all by its one glance: The earth and the sky, the moon and the sun. Our heart has a secret gateway to it, For every existent depends for its existence upon our perception. If nobody sees, it becomes contemptible; If anybody sees, it becomes mountains and oceans. The world has significance through our seeing it Its tree grows by our growth. The problem of subject and object is a mystery;
QUESTION 2
What is this ocean whose shore is knowledge? What is that pearl which is found in its depth? ANSWER Evermoving Life is a flowing ocean, Consciousness is its shore. What an ocean that is deep and surging A thousand mountains and deserts are on its bank. Dont talk about its surging waves, For each had overflowed its bank.
The heart of every particle of matter is expressing its supplication: O observer, make me your object, Make me existent by the grace of your sight. The perfection of the being of a thing lies in being present, In becoming an object for an observer; Its defect, not to be before our eyes, Not to be illumined by our awareness. The world is nothing but our manifestation, For without us there would be no world of light and sound, You also should crave help by associating with it, Discipline your eyes by its twists and turns. Rest assured that masterhuntsmen Have sought help in this matter from insects. With its help, keep a watchful eye on yourself; You are like Gabriel the truthful; take wings. Open the eye of intellect on this world of plurality, So that you may enjoy the revelations of the One. Take your share from the smell of the shirt, While sitting in Kanan, get fragrance from Egypt and Yemen. Ego is the hunter, the sun and the moon are its prey; They are chained to the strings of his intellectual efforts. Throw yourself on this world like fire! Make an assault on the visible and the invisible worlds alike.
The world of how and why has three dimension Intellect controls its quantitative aspect. This is the world of Tusi and Euclid. The fit object of earthmeasuring intellect. Its time and space are relative, And so are its earth and sky. Draw your bow and find the target, Learn from me the secret of ascension. Do not seek the Absolute in this mundane world For the Absolute is nothing but the Light of the Heavens. Reality is beyond time and space, Dont say any more that the universe is without a limit. Its limit is internal, not external; There are no distinctions of low and high, more or less, in its internal aspect. Its internal aspect is devoid of high and low, But its external aspect is liable to extension. Infinity is not amenable to our intellect, One in its hand becomes a thousand. As it is lame, it likes rest; It does not see the kernel; it therefore looks towards the shell. As we divided Reality into several spheres, We made a distinction of change and rest. In nonspatial sphere intellect introduced spatial categories, Like a belt it girdled time round its waist. We did not look for time within the depth of our hearts, And so we created months and years, nights and days. Your months and years are of no value: Just ponder over the Quranic verse, How long did you remain? Reach within yourself and retire from this noisy world,
QUESTION 3
What is the union of the contingent and the necessary? What are near and far, more and less? ANSWER
Throw yourself into the inner recesses of your heart. To talk of body and soul as two separate entities is wrong; To see them as two is sinful. The whole secret of the universe lies in the soul, Body is one of its modes of expression. The bride of Reality adorned itself by the henna of form, It assumed different shapes for its manifestation. Reality weaves veils for its face, For it finds delight in display. Since the West viewed body and soul as separate, It also regarded State and Religion as two. The churchman only tells his beads, For he has no work of the State to perform. See deceit and artifice in statecraft: It is a body without a soul, or a soul without a body. Make intellect a companion of your heart; Behold, for instance, the Turkish nation. By imitation of the West, the Turks lost their individuality; They did not see any link between State and Religion. We looked at the One as compound of so many parts That we created numerals to count it. Do you think that this ancient world is a handful of earth? It is a fleeting moment of Gods activity. The scientists tend to adorn a dead body; They neither possess the Hand of Moses nor the Breath of Jesus. I have seen nothing of value in this type of science,
I have been craving for a wisdom of another sort. I believe that the world is undergoing a revolution, Its inside is alive and in convulsions. Pass beyond your numerals, Look for a while within your self and leave. In a universe where a part is greater than the whole, The calculations of Razi and Tusi are irrelevant. For a while familiarise yourself with Aristotle, For another while sit in the company of Bacon. But then you must pass beyond their stand, Dont get lost in this stage, journey on. With the aid of that intellect that deals with quantities Probe the depths of mines and oceans, Master the world of how and why, Catch the moon and Pleiades from the sky. But then learn wisdom of another sort, Free yourself from the snare of night and day. Your real place is beyond this mundane world, Aspire for a right that is without a left.
QUESTION 4
How did the eternal and temporal separate, That one became the world, and the other God? If the knower and known are the One pure essence, What are the aspirations of this handful of earth? ANSWER The life of the ego is to bring nonego into existence, The separation of the knower and known is good.
Our ideas of eternal and temporal are due to our way of reckoning, Our reckoning is the result of the spell of mathematical time. We constantly talk of yesterday and to morrow, We deal with is, was, and might be. To sever ourselves from Him is our nature, And also to be restless and not to reach the goal. Neither do we get worth in separation from Him, Nor does He feel peace without union with us; Neither He without us, nor we without Him! How strange! Our separation is separationinunion. Separation gives to this dust (i.e. man) an insight, It gives the weight of a mountain to a straw. Separation is a token of love; It agrees with the nature of lovers. If we are alive, it is due to this affliction (of separation), And if we are immortal, it is due to it. What is I and He? It is a divine mystery! I and He are a witness to our immortality. The light of the Essence is everywhere, hidden and apparent; To live in company is real life. Love does not acquire insight without company, And without company, it does not become selfconscious. In our assembly, there are divine manifestations, behold! The world is nonexistent and He is existent, behold. Doors and walls, cities, towns and streets are not there, For here there is nothing existent except we and He.
Sometimes He makes Himself a stranger to us, Sometimes He plays upon us as upon a musical instrument. Sometimes we fashion His idol out of stone, Sometimes we prostrate before Him without having seen Him. Sometimes we tear every veil of Nature, And boldly see His beautiful face. What fancy has this handful of dust? It is due to this fancy that his inner self is illumined. What a nice fancy that he bewails in separation And yet he grows and develops through it. This separation developed in him such a spiritual insight, That he turned his dusk into a dawn. He made the ego subject to affliction: Thus turned the ancient grief into an ever living joy. He got strings of pearls from the tears of his eyes From the tree of bewailing he got sweet fruit. To press the ego tightly to the bosom Is to turn death into everlasting life. What is Love? It is to tie all the different stages in a knot. What is Love? It is to pass beyond all goals. Love does not know of any termination, Its dawn has no dusk. There are no bends in its way as in that of intellect, In its lustre of a moment, there is a world. Thousands of worlds lie along our path, How can our endeavours reach their finale? O traveller I live for ever and die for ever, Take hold of the world that comes before you. It is not the goal of our journey to merge ourselves in His ocean. If you catch hold of Him, it is not fana (extinction).
It is impossible for an ego to be absorbed in another ego, For the ego to be itself is its perfection.
Its appearance is like the rising of the sun. In the innermost heart of ours is its sun, Our dust is illumined through its potency. You ask to be informed about I, and What is meant by travel into yourself. I informed you about the relation of body and soul Travel into yourself and see what I is. To travel into self?It is to be born without father and mother, To catch Pleiades from the edge of the roof; To hold eternity with a single stroke of anguish, To see without the rays of the sun; To obliterate every sign of hope and fear, To sunder the river like Moses, To break this spell of sea and land, To split the moon with a finger. So to return from this experience of the spaceless world, That it is within his heart, and the world in his hand. But it is difficult to unravel this secret: Here seeing is valuable and describing worthless. What can I say about I and its brilliance? It is manifest from the Quranic text, We proposed. The heavens are in terror of its glory, Time and space are in its grip. It sought refuge in the heart of man, And has fallen to the lot of this handful of dust. It is distinct from the other and yet related to it, Is lost within itself and yet conjoined with the other. What kind of aspiration this handful of dust has That its flight is beyond the limitations of time and space.
QUESTION 5
What am I? Tell me what I means. What is the meaning of travel into yourself? ANSWER Ego is the amulet for the protection of the universe. The first ray of its essence is Life. Life awakens from its sweet dream, Its inside, which is one, becomes many. Neither it develops without our expansion, Nor do we expand without its development. Its inner core is a shoreless sea, The heart of every drop is a tumultuous wave. It has no inclination to rest, Its manifestation is nothing but individuals. Life is fire and egos are like its flames; Like stars they are (both) stationary and moving. Without going outside, it looks towards others; Though in company, is yet in privacy. Just see its selfmeditation, It develops out of the trodden earth. Hidden from the eyes, it is in tumult, It is constantly in search of adornment. It is in perpetual activity through its internal ardour, As if it is at war with itself. The world gets order through this strife of the ego! A handful of dust becomes translucent through strife. From its ray, nothing comes into being save egos, From its sea, nothing appears save pearls. The earthly garb is a veil for khudi,
It is in prison and yet free! What is this? It is the lasso, the prey, and the hunter! What is this? There is a lamp within your heart; What is this light which is in your mirror? Dont be negligent, you are its trustee, What folly that you do not look within your self!
You call every creature to be determined, To be confined to the chains of near and far. But the soul is from the breath of the Creator, Which lives in privacy with all its manifestations. Determinism with regard to it is out of question, For soul without freedom is not a soul. It lay in ambush on this world of quantitative measurements. From determinism it passed over to freedom. When it (ego) removes from itself the dust of determinism, It drives its world like a camel. The sky does not revolve without its permission, Nor do stars shine without its grace. One day it reveals its hidden nature, And sees its essence with its own eyes. Rows of heavenly choir stand on either side of the road, Waiting for a glimpse of its countenance. The angel gets wine from its vine, It gets significance from its earth. You ask about the way of its seeking; Come down to the state of lamentation. Change your days and nights for eternity, Change from intellect to the morning lamentation (intuition). Intellect has its source in senses, Lamentation gets light from love. Intellect grasps the part, lamentation the whole Intellect dies but lamentation is immortal. Intellect has no categories to comprehend eternity, It counts moments as the hands of the watch. It contrives days and nights and mornings;
QUESTION 6
What is that part which is greater than its whole? What is the way to find that part? ANSWER Ego is greater than what we imagine it to be; Ego is greater than the whole which you see. It falls from the heaven again and again to rise, It falls into the sea of the world to rise. Who else in the world is selfconscious? Who else can fly without wings? It lies in darkness and yet has a light in its bosom, Outside the paradise and yet has a houri in embrace! With the charming wisdom that it possesses, It brings out pearls from the depth of life. The impulse of life is eternal, But looked at from outside, it is bound by time. Upon its destiny depends the position of this universe, Its manifestation and preservation of it. What do you ask about its nature? Destiny is not something separate from its nature. What should I say about its character? Outwardly it is determined, inwardly it is free. Such is the saying of the Lord of Badr, That faith lies between determinism and indeterminism.
It cannot catch the flames; therefore it takes on sparks. The lamentation of the lovers is the ultimate goal, In one moment of it lies hidden a world. When the ego manifests its potentialities, It removes its inner knots and veil. You do not have that light by which it sees You look upon it as momentary and mortal. Why fear that death which comes from without?2 For when the I ripens into a self it has no danger of dissolution. There is a more subtle inner death Which makes me tremble! This death is falling down from loves frenzy, Saving ones spark and not giving it away freely to the heaps of chaff; Cutting ones shroud with ones own hands; Seeing ones death with ones own eyes; This death lies in ambush for thee! Fear it, for that is really our death. It digs your grave in your body, Its Munkar and Nakir are with it.
That we look so insignificant in the eyes of moon and stars. Dont seek the end of the journey, for you have no end; As soon as you reach the end, you lose your soul. Do not look upon us as ripe, for we are raw, At every destination we are perfect and imperfect. Not to reach the end is life; Immortal life for us lies in constant travelling. The whole world from the centre of the earth to the moon is within our reach, Time and space are like dust in our path. Our selves are our centres and pine for manifestation, For we are waves and rise from the bottom of Being. Lie in constant ambush against the self, Fly from doubt to faith and certainty. The fire and ardour of love are not subject to extinction; Faith and sight have no end. The perfection of life consists in seeing the Essence, The way of achieving it is to free oneself from the limits of time and space. You should enjoy privacy with the Divine Person in such a way, That He sees you and you see Him. Become illumined by the light of what you see. Do not wink, otherwise you will be no more. In His presence, be strong and selfpossessed, Dont merge yourself in the ocean of His Light. Bestow that perturbation to the mote,
QUESTION 7
Of what sort is this traveller, who is the wayfarer? Of whom shall I say that he is the Perfect Man? ANSWER If you direct your eyes towards your heart, You will find your destination within your bosom. To travel while at rest is: To travel from ones self to ones self. None knows here where we are,
2
McTaggarts Philosophy.
That it may shine in the vicinity of the sun. So burn amid the splendour of the Beloved That you may illumine yourself in public and Him in privacy. He who saw is the leader of the world, We and you are imperfect; he alone is perfect. If you do not find him, rise in search of him; If you find him, attach yourself to him. Do not allow yourself to be guided by the faqih, shaikh, and mulla, Like fish, do not walk about careless of the hook. He is a man of the path in matters of State and religion; We are blind and he is a man of insight. Like the sun of the morning, Wisdom shines from every root of his hair. The West has set up the rule of democracy, It has untied the rope from the neck of a fiend. It does not possess sound without plectrum and musical instruments, Without a flying machine it does not possess the power of flying. A desolate field is better than its garden, A desert is better than its city. Like a marauding caravan it is active, Its people are ever busy in satisfying their hunger. Its soul became dormant, and its body awoke; Art, science and religion all became contemptible. Intellect is nothing but fostering of unbelief, The art of the West is nothing but mankilling. A group lies in ambush against another group, Such a state of affairs is sure to lead to disaster. Convey my message to the West That the ideal of democracy is a sword out of its sheath: What a sword that it kills men
And does not make a distinction between a believer and an unbeliever! If it does not remain in the sheath for a little more time, It will kill itself as well as the world.
QUESTION 8
What point does the aphorism I am the Truth imply? Do you think that this mystery was mere nonsense? ANSWER I am once again going to explain the mystery of I am the Truth. Before India and Iran I am unfolding a secret again. The Magi in the circle of his followers said, Life was taken in by itself and uttered I. God went to sleep and our being is through His dream; Our existence and appearance are merely His dreams. Down and above, all four dimensions are illusions, Rest and motion, desire and search are all illusions! Wakeful heart and wise intellect, a dream. Dread and anxiety, certainty and belief, a dream; Your wakeful eye is in reality in a state of dream, Your speech and action are all in a dream! When He wakes up, nothing else remains, There is no customer for the merchandise of yearning. The development of our intellect is through reasoning, Our reasoning depends upon the nature of the senses.
When sense changes, this world becomes different Rest and motion, quality and quantity are changed. It can be said that the world of colour and smell is nonexistent, Earth and sky, house and street, are nothing. It can be said that all these are dreams or illusions, Or veils over the countenance of the Divine Person. It can be said that all is sorcery of the senses, A deception produced by our eyes and ears. But the ego does not belong to the universe of colour and smell; Our senses do not intervene between us and it. Eyesight has no access to its sacred precincts, You can see self without eyesight. The calculation of its days is not through the revolution of the sky; If you look within, there is no doubt or misgiving about it. If you say that the I is a mere illusion3 An appearance among other appearances Then tell me who is the subject of this illusion. Look within and discover. The world is visible, yet its existence needs proof! Not even the intellect of an angel can comprehend it; The I is invisible and needs no proof Think awhile and see thine own secret! The I is Truth, it is no illusion; Dont look upon it as a fruitless field. When it ripens, it becomes eternal! Lovers, even though separated from the Beloved, live in blissful union!
It is possible to give wings to a mere spark, And to make it flutter for ever and for ever! The Eternity of God is (elemental and) not the reward of His action! For His eternity is not through seeking. That eternity is superior, which a borrowed soul Wins for herself by loves frenzy. The being of mountains and deserts and cities is nothing, The universe is mortal, the ego immortal and nothing else matters. Do not talk of Shankar and Mansur any longer, Seek God through seeking your own self. Be lost in your self to find the reality of the ego, Say I am the Truth and affirm the existence of the ego.
QUESTION 9
Who at last became familiar with the secret of unity? Who is the wise man that is a gnostic? ANSWER The world beneath the sky is a charming place, But its sun and moon are prone to decay. The corpse of the sun is carried on the shoulders of the evening, The stars vanish when the moon appears. The mountain flies like the moving sand, The river changes in a moment. Autumn lies in ambush against the flowers, The merchandise of the caravan is the fear (of loss) of life. The tulip does not retain its beauty through dew,
McTaggarts Philosophy.
If it retains it for a while, it loses it the next moment. The sound dies in the harp without being produced, The flame dies in the stone without manifesting itself. Dont ask me about the universality of death, You and I are tied by our breaths to the chain of death.
Who cast the lightning of His Grace on the heart? Who drank that wine and struck the cup on the head? Whose heart is the criterion of beauty and good? Whose house is it round which His moon revolves? From whose privacy the cry of Am I not your Lord arose? From whose musical strings the answer of Yes appeared? What a fire Love kindled in this handful of dust One cry from us burnt down thousands of veils. It is only our presence that keeps the cup of the Saki in motion And maintain liveliness in His society. My heart burns on the loneliness of God!4 In order, therefore, to maintain intact His Ego Society I sow in my dust the seed of selfhood, And keep a constant vigil over my I.
An Ode
Death is destined to be the wine of every cup, How ruthlessly has it been made common! The arena of sudden death Has been called the world of moon and stars. If any particle of it learnt to fly, It was brought under control by the spell of sight. Why do you seek rest for us? We are Tied to the revolutions of the days. Be careful of the ego within your heart, From this star, the night was illumined. The world is absolutely a place of decay, This is the gnosis in this strange land. Our heart is not seeking anything futile, Our lot is not fruitless grief. Desire is looked after here, And also the intoxication of the yearning of search. Ego can be made immortal; Separation can be changed into union. A lamp can be lit by our hot breath, Crack in the sky can be sewn by a needle. The Living God is not without a taste for beauty, His manifestations are not without society.
EPILOGUE
You are a sword, come out of your cover, Come out of your sheath. Remove the veil from your potentialities, Take hold of the moon, the sun and the stars. Illumine your night by the light of faith, Take your white hand out of the armpit. He who has opened his eyes on the heart Has sown a spark and reaped a fire. Have a spark from my innermost heart, For my heart is as fiery as Rumis.
McTaggarts Philosophy.
Otherwise get fire from the new Culture of the West, Adorn your exterior and bring spiritual death on you. [Translated by Bashir Ahmad Dar]
Cast it away into the space blue, Sever the ties that bind us, the celestial beings, to it. Either relieve me of my service to him Or create another Adam out of its soil. It were better if my evervigilant eye be blind! O God, let this earthly abode remain without light.
Servitude deadens ones heart, It makes the soul a burden for the body. Through servitude the young suffer weakness of old age, A fierce lion of the forest is enervated; A society disintegrates And its members fly at one anothers throat. If one is standing, the other is in prostration; Their affairs are disorganised like a prayer without an Imam. Everyone is fighting with the other Each individual is seeking his own interests. Through servitude even a virtuous man goes astray And his potentialities for good fail to actualise. His branches are shorne of leaves even when there is no autumn. He is always encumbered with the fear of death. Devoid of good taste, he takes the evil for the good, He is dead without death and carries his corpse on his shoulders. He has staked away the very honour of life, And like asses is content with hay and barley. Just look at his possible and his impossible, See how months and years of his life pass. His days bewail of one another, Their movement is slower than the sands of time.
Imagine a brackish ground, infested with stings of scorpions, Its ants bite dragons and prey on scorpions. Its strong wind has fire as if from Hell Which is for the barge of Satan steering gail. The fire permeates the air Its flames intermingling and multiplying. A fire that has grown bitter through wreathing smoke A fire that has the roar of a thunder and the rage of a storming sea. On its outskirts, snakes are biting one another Snakes whose hoods are full of poison. Its flames pounce upon (people) like biting dogs, Are dangerously frightening, burn them alive and their light is dead. To live for millennia in such a dangerous desert Is far better than a moment spent in servitude.
It makes you weak and ill And estranges you from the world. His eyes are always full of tears Keep away from his songs as far as you can. Beware! it is but the song of death! It is nothing but nothingness in the guise of sound. Feeling thirsty? This Haram is without Zamzam. His songs bring about the destruction of mankind. It removes from the heart all ambitions and gives grief instead, It pours poison in the cup of Jamshid. Hearken brother! grief is of two kinds, Lighten your lamp of reason with our flame: One kind of grief is that consumes man; The other kind of grief is that eats up all other griefs. The second kind of grief that is our companion Frees life from all kinds of grief. It involves the tumults of the east and west It is like a vast ocean in which all beings are submerged. When it takes its abode in the heart, It turns the heart into a vast shoreless sea. Servitude is but ignorance of the secret of life; Its song is empty of the second kind of grief. I dont say that its notes are wrong; Such bewailings become only a widow. Song should be violent like a storm So that it may remove from the heart the clouds of grief. It should be nourished on ecstasy A fire dissolved in the blood of the heart. It is possible to develop flame out of its wetness, And to make silence a part of it. Do you know that in music there is a stage Where speech develops without words?
A brilliant song is Natures lamp Its meaning imparts form to it. I dont know whence comes the essence of meaning We are aware of its form which is apparent. If the song is shorne of meaning, it is dead; Its heat emanates from a dead fire. The secret of meaning was unveiled by Rumi On whose threshold my thought prostrates: Meaning is that transports you aloft And makes you independent of the apparent form; Meaning is not that makes you deaf and blind And makes a man enamoured of mere form all the more. Our musician did not enjoy the beauty of meaning; He attached himself to form and ignored meaning altogether. PAINTING Similar is the case of Painting, It shows the stamp neither of Abraham nor of Adhar. A monk entrapped in the snare of baser passion; A beloved with a bird in a cage; A king (sitting) before a Khirqahclad dervish; A highlander with a bundle of wood on shoulders; A beautiful maiden on way to the temple; A hermit sitting in the solitude of his cell, A puny old man crushed under the burden of old age In whose hands the flame (of life) has gone out; A musician lost in a strange and alien song, A nightingale bewailed and his string broke; A youth torn by the arrows of beloveds glance;
A child on the neck of his aged grandfather. From the pen flow nothing but discourses of death, Everywhere there is the story and spell of death. The modern science prostrates before the evanescent, It increases doubt and removes faith from the heart. A man without faith has no taste for search of truth; He has no capacity to create. His heart is everwavering, It is difficult for him to bring forth new forms. He is far removed from the self and is sick at heart, He is led by the vulgar taste of the masses. He begs beauty from external nature, He is a highwayman and tries to rob the destitute. It is wrong to seek beauty outside ones self; What ought to be is not (lying) before us. When a painter gives himself up to Nature, He depicts Nature but loses thereby his own self. Not for a moment did he manifest his real own self, Nor did he ever try to break our (idols). Nature wrapped in multicoloured gown Can be seen on his canvas with a limping foot. His low burning moth lacks heat; His today is devoid of reflections of to morrow. His sight cannot pierce through the skies, Because he does not possess a fearless heart. He is earth rooted, without experience of ecstasy, shy, Totally devoid of contact with the world of spirit. His thought is hollow and he has no liking for struggle,
His Israfillike, call does not bring about any resurrection. If man deems himself earthly, The light divine dies in his heart. When a Moses loses hold of his own self, His hand becomes dark and his staff merely a rope. Life is nothing without the capacity for new creations, Not everybody knows this secret. The artist who adds to Nature Reveals before our eyes his inner secret. Although his ocean does not stand in need of anything, Yet our rivulets do contribute to it. He transforms the old values of life, His art establishes the true standard of beauty. His houri is more charming than the houri of paradise, He who does not believe in his Lat and Manat is an infidel. He creates a new universe And gives a new life to the heart. He is an ocean and lets his waves strike against himself These waves scatter pearls before us. With that fullness which characterises his soul, He strives to nourish the impoverished. His pure nature is the norm of the right and the wrong, His art reflects both the ugly and the beautiful. He is the very essence of Abraham and Adhar, His hands make as well as break idols. He uproots all old foundations And polishes all creation. In servitude body is deprived of soul; What good can be expected of a soulless body? Such a person loses all taste for creative work And forgets his own self. If you make Gabriel a slave
He would of necessity fall down from his lofty celestial sphere. His creed is blind imitation and all his activity is centred in idolmaking; Newness is an infidelity in his religion. New things increase his doubts and misgivings; He is pleased with everything old and decayed. He always looks to the past and is blind to the future, Like an attendant (of a tomb) he seeks his living from the grave. If this is skill, then it is death of ambition, His inside is dark though his outside is beautiful. A wise bird is never entrapped Though the net be of silken thread.
Nothing but falsehood can come from it. As long as you prostrate before it, this idol is your god, But as soon as you stand up before it, it disappears. That God gives you bread as well as life; This god gives you bread but snatches life away. That God is One par excellence, this is divided into hundred parts; That God provides everything for everybody; this god is totally helpless. That God cures the ailment of separation, The word of this god sows the seeds of disunity. He makes his worshipper intimate with himself, And then makes his eyes, ears, and consciousness infidels. When he rides on the soul of his slave, It is (no doubt) in his body but (in reality) is absent from it. Alive and yet soulless! What is the mystery? Listen, I unfold for you its manifold meaning. O wise man! dying and living are Nothing but relative events. For the fish, mountains and deserts do not exist; For the birds, the depth of the sea is simply a nonentity. For a deaf person, there is no charm in a song; For him sound is nonexistent. A blind man enjoys the song of the harp, But before a display of colours, he remains unaffected. The soul with God is living and lasting; For one it is dead, for the other it is alive. It is God who is living and never dies; To live with God is absolute life; He who lives without God is nothing but dead.
Although nobody weeps and bewails over him. To his eyes, thing worth seeing is hidden, His heart is unaware of the desire for change. There is no mark of devotion in his deeds; There is no breadth of vision in his talk. His religion is as narrow as his world, His forenoon is darker than the night. Life is a heavy burden on his shoulders; He nourishes death in his own bosom. In his company even love suffers from manifold diseases, With his breath is extinguished many a fire. For a worm that did not rise from the earth The sun, the moon, and the revolving sky do not exist at all. You cannot expect from a slave any desire for vision, Nor is there in him any sign of an awakened soul. His eyes never bore the trouble of seeing; He ate, slept well, and died. If the ruler unfastens one bond, He imposes another on him. He produces a complex and intricate canon, And expects from the slave unswerving obedience. He sometimes shows a bit of wrath and malice towards the slave; This increases in him the fear of sudden death. When the slave loses all faith in himself, From his heart vanish all desires. Sometimes he bestows on him handsome bounty, And also invests him with some powers. The chessplayer throws the chessman out, of his hand, And raises his pawn to the status of queen. He becomes so much enamoured of todays wellbeing,
That in reality he becomes a denier of to morrow. His body fattens through the benevolence of the kings, His dear soul becomes thin like a spindle. It is better that a whole village of men be destroyed Than that a single pure soul be subjected to sorrow and grief. The fetters are not on feet, but (in fact) on the heart and soul; This is indeed a very intriguing situation.
Woe me! the branch of my faith is sapless. I do not possess that power (which is implicit in) illallah; My prostration is not befitting this shrine. Just cast a glance on that pure jewel Look at the Taj in the moonlight. Its marble ripples faster than flowing waters, A moment spent here is more stable than eternity. Love of men has expressed its secret, And perforated the stone by their eyelashes. Love of men is pure and charming like a paradise, It produces songs from brick and stone. Love of men is the criterion of beauty; It unveils beauty and sanctifies it too. His aspirations soar beyond the sky, And go away from this world of quantity. As what he sees cannot be expressed in words, He whisks away veil from his heart. Through love passions are elevated, The worthless gain value through it. Without love life is all awailing Its whole affair becomes corrupt and unstable. Love polishes ones common sense, And imparts the quality of mirror to the stone. It gives to the people with enlightened heart, the heart of Sinai, And gives to the men of skill the white hand. Beside him, all possibilities and existences are nothing All the world is bitter; it alone is sweet honey. To its fire is due the vigour of our thought To create and to infuse soul is its work. Love suffices men, animals, and insects: Love alone suffices the two worlds. Love without power is magic, Love with power is prophecy. Love combined both in its manifestations, Love thus created a world out of a world.