Showing that the system of the universe originates in the Self, and that the continuation of the life of all individuals dependents on strengthening the Self
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THE form of existence is an effect of the Self, | |
Whatsoever thou seest is a secret of the Self, | |
When the Self awoke to consciousness. | |
It revealed the universe of Thought. | |
A hundred words are hidden in its essence: | 190 |
Self-affirmation brings Not-self to light. | |
By the Self the seed of opposition is sown in the word: | |
It imagines itself to be other than itself | |
It makes from itself the forms of others | 195 |
In order to multiply the pleasure of strife. | |
It is slaying by the strength of its arm | |
That it may become conscious of its own strength. | |
Its self-deceptions are the essence of Life; | |
Like the rose, it lives by bathing itself in blood. | 200 |
For the sake of a single rose it destroys a hundred rose gardens | |
And makes a hundred lamentation in quest of a single melody. | |
For one sky it produces a hundred new moons, | |
And for one word a hundred discourses. | |
The excuse for this wastefulness and cruelty | 205 |
Is the shaping and perfecting of spiritual beauty. | |
The loveliness of Shirin justifies the anguish of Farhad.33 | |
One fragrant navel justifies a hundred musk-deer. | |
'Tis the fate of moths to consume in flame: | |
The suffering of moths is justified by the candle. | 210 |
The pencil of the Self limped a hundred to-days | |
In order to achieve the dawn of a single morrow. | |
Its flames burned a hundred Abrahams34 | |
That the lamp of one Muhammad might be lighted. | |
Subject, object, means, and causes— | 215 |
All these are forms which it assumes for the purpose of action. | |
The Self rises, kindles, falls, glows, breathes, | |
Burns, shines, walks, and flies. | |
The spaciousness of Time is its arena, | |
Heaven is a billow of the dust on the road. | 220 |
From its rose-planting the world abounds in roses; | |
Night is born of its sleep, day springs from its waking. | |
It divided its flame into sparks | |
And taught the understanding to worship particulars. | |
It dissolved itself and created the atoms | 225 |
It was scattered for a little while and created sands. | |
Then it wearied of dispersion | |
And by re-uniting itself it became the mountains. | |
'Tis the nature of the Self to manifest itself | |
In every atom slumbers the might of the Self. | 230 |
Power that is expressed and inert | |
Chains the faculties which lead to action. | |
Inasmuch as the life of the universe comes from the power of the Self, | |
Life is in proportion to this power. | |
When a drop of water gets of Self's lesson by heart, | 235 |
it makes its worthless existence a pearl. | |
Wine is formless because its self is weak; | |
It receives a form by favour of the cup. | |
Although the cup of wine assumes a form, | |
It is indebted to us for its motion. | 240 |
When the mountain loses its self, it turns into sands | |
And complains that the sea surges over it; | |
The wave, so long as it remains a wave in the sea's bosom.35 | |
Makes itself rider on the sea's back. | |
Light transformed itself into an eye | 245 |
And moved to and fro in search of beauty; | |
When the grass found a means of growth in its self, | |
Its aspiration clove the breast of the garden. | |
The candle too concatenated itself | |
And built itself out of atoms; | 250 |
Then it made a practice of melting itself away and fled from its self | |
Until at last it trickled down from its own eye, like tears. | |
If the bezel had been more self secure by nature, | |
It would not have suffered wounds, | |
But since it derives its value from the superscription, | 255 |
Its shoulder is galled by the burden of another's name. | |
Because the earth is firmly based on itself, | |
The captive moon goes round it perpetually. | |
The being of the sun is stronger than that of the earth | |
Therefore is the earth fascinated by the sun's eye. | 260 |
The glory of the red beech fixes our gaze. | |
The mountains are enriched by its majesty | |
Its raiment is woven of fire, | |
Its origin is one self-assertive seed. | |
When Life gathers strength from the Self, | 260 |
The river of Life expands into an ocean |