Setting forth the inner meanings of the names of Ali
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ALI is the first Muslim and the King of men, | 995 |
In Love's eyes Ali is the treasure of the Faith. | |
Devotion to his family inspires me with life | |
So that I am as a shining pearl. | |
Like the narcissus, I am entraptured with gazing: | |
Like perfume, I am straying though his pleasure garden. | 970 |
If holy water gushes from my earth, he is the source; | |
If wine pours from my grapes, he is the cause. | |
I am dust, but his sun hath made me as a mirror: | |
Song can be seen in my breast. | |
From Ali's face the Prophet drew many a fair omen, | 975 |
By his majesty the true religion is glorified | |
His commandments are the strength of Islam: | |
All things pay allegiance to his House. | |
The Apostle of God gave him the name Bu Turab; | |
God in the Koran called him "the Hand of Allah." | 980 |
Every one that is acquainted with Life's mysteries | |
Knows what is the inner meaning of the names of Ali. | |
The dark clay, whose name is the body— | |
Our reason is ever be moaning its iniquity. | |
On avvount of it our sky-reaching thought plods over the earth; | 985 |
It makes our eyes blind and our cars deaf. | |
It hath in its hand a two-edge sword of lust: | |
Travelers' hearts are broken by this brigand. | |
Ali, the Lion of God, subdued the body's clay | |
And transmuted this dark earth to gold. | 990 |
Murtaza, by whose sword the splendour of Truth was revealed, | |
Is named Bu Turab from his conquest of the body.79 | |
Man wins territory by prowess in battle, | |
But his brightest jewel is masters of himself. | |
Whosoever in the world become a Bu Turab | 995 |
Turns back the sun from the west;80 | |
Whosoever saddles tightly the seed of the body | |
Sits like the bezel on the seal of sovereignty: | |
Here the might of Khaibar is under his feet,81 | |
And hereafter his hand will distribute the water of Kauthar.82 | 1000 |
Through self-knowledge, he acts as God's Hand, | |
And in virtue of being God's Hand he reigns over all. | |
His person is the gate of the city of the sciences.83 | |
Arabia, China, and Greece are subject to him. | |
If thou wouldst drink clear wine from thine own grapes. | 1005 |
Thou must needs wield authority over thine own earth. | |
To become earth is the creed of a moth: | |
Be a conqueror of earth; that alone is worthy of a man. | |
Thou art soft as a rose. Become hard as a stone, | |
That thou mayst be the foundation of the wall of the garden! | 1010 |
Build thy clay into a Man, | |
Build thy Man into a World | |
Unless from thine own earth thou build - thine own wall or door. | |
Someone else will make bricks of thine earth. | |
O thou who complaints of the cruelty of Heaven, | 1015 |
Thou whose glass cries out against the injustice of the stone, | |
How long this wailing and crying and lamentation ? | |
How long this perpetual beating of thy breast ? | |
The pith of Life is contained in action, | |
The delight in creation is the law of Life. | 1020 |
Arise and create a new world! | |
Wrap thyself in flames, be an Abraham!84 | |
To comply with this world which does not favour thy purposes | |
Is to fling away thy buckler on the field of battle. | |
The man of strong character who is master of himself | 1025 |
Will find Fortune complaisant. | |
If the world does not comply with his humour, | |
He will try the hazard of war with Heaven: | |
He will dig up the foundations of the universe | |
And cast its atoms into a new mould. | 1030 |
He will subvert the course of Time | |
And wreck the azure firmament. | |
By his own strength he will produce | |
A new world which will do his pleasure. | |
If one cannot live in the world as be seems a man, | 1035 |
Then it is better to die like the brave. | |
He that hath a sound heart | |
Will prove his strength by great enterprises. | |
' Tis sweet to use love in hard tasks | |
And, like Abraham, to gather roses from flames 85 | 1040 |
The potentialities of men of action | |
Are displayed in willing acceptance of what is difficult. | |
Mean spirits have no weapon but resentment, | |
Life has only one law. | |
Life is power made manifest, | 1045 |
And its mainspring is the desire for victory. | |
Mercy out of season is a chilling of Life's blood, | |
A break in the rhythm of Life's music. | |
Whoever is sunk in the depths of ignomity | |
Calls his weakness contentment. | 1050 |
Weakness is the plunderer of Life, | |
Its womb is teeming with fears and lies. | |
Its soul is empty of virtues, | |
Vices fatten on its milk. | |
O man of sound judgment, beware! | 1055 |
This spoiler is lurking in ambush | |
Be not its dupe, if thou art wise: | |
Chameleon-like, it changes colour every moment. | |
Even by keen observers its form is not discerned | |
Veils are thrown over its face. | 1060 |
Now it is muffled in pity and gentleness, | |
Now it wears the cloak of humanity. | |
Some times it is disguised as compulsion, | |
Sometimes as excusability. | |
It appears in the shape of self-indulgence | 1065 |
And robs the strong man's heart of courage. | |
Strength is the twin of Truth; | |
If thou knowest thyself, strength is the Truth-revealing glass. | |
Life is the seed, and power the crop: | |
Power explains the mystery of truth and falsehood. | 1070 |
A claimant, if he be possessed of power, | |
Needs no argument for his claim. | |
Falsehood derives from power the authority of truth, | |
And by falsifying truth deems itself true. | |
Its creative word transforms poison into nectar. | 1075 |
It says to good, "Thou art bad," and Good becomes Evil. | |
O thou that art heedless of the trust committed to thee, | |
Esteem thyself superior to both worlds86! | |
Gain knowledge of Life's mysteries! | |
Be a tyrant! Ignore all except God ! | 1080 |
O man of understanding, open thine eyes, ears, and lips !87 | |
If then thou seest not the Way of Truth, laugh at me! |