Story of the Sheikh and the Brahmin, followed by a conversation between Ganges and Himalayas to the effect that the continuation of social life depends on firm attachment to the characteristic traditions of the community
- Parent Category: English Translations
- Hits: 1688
AT Benares lived a venerable Brahmin. | |
Whose head was deep in the ocean of Being and Not-being. | |
He had a large knowledge of philosophy | |
But was well-disposed to the seekers after God. | |
His mind was eager to explore new problems, | 1235 |
His intellect moved on a level with the Pleiades; | |
His nest was as high as that of the Anka;93 | |
Sun and moon were cast, like rue, on the flame of his thought.94 | |
For a long time he laboured and sweated, | |
But philosophy brought no wine to his cup | 1240 |
Although he set many a snare in the gardens of learning, | |
His snares never caught a glimpse of the Ideal bird; | |
And notwithstanding that the nails of his thought were dabbled with blood, | |
The knot of Being and Not-being remained united. | |
The sighs on his lips bore witness to his despair, | 1245 |
His countenance told tales of his distraction. | |
One day he visited an excellent Sheikh, | |
A man who bad in his breast a heart of gold. | |
The Brahmin laid the seal of silence on his lips. | |
And lent his ear to the Sage's discourse. | 1250 |
Then said the Sheikh; "O wanderer in the lofty sky! | |
Pledge thyself to be true, for a little, to the earth; | |
Thou hast lost thy way in wildernesses of speculation, | |
Thy fearless thought hath passed beyond Heaven. | |
Be reconciled with -earth, O sky-traveller! | 1255 |
Do not. wander in quest of the essence of the stars; | |
I do not abandon thine idols. | |
Art thou an unbeliever; Then be worthy of the badge of unbelief !95 | |
O inheritor of ancient culture, | |
Turn not thy back on the path thy fathers trod; | 1260 |
If a people's life is derived from unity, | |
Unbelief too is source of unity. | |
Thou that art not even a perfect infidel, | |
Art unfit to worship at the shrine-of the spirit. | |
We both are far astray from the road of devotion: | 1265 |
Thou art far from Azar, and I from Abraham.96 | |
Our Majnun hath not fallen into melancholy for his Laila's sake; | |
I He hath not become perfect in the madness of love. | |
When the lamp of Self-expires, | |
What is the use of heaven surveying imagination ?" | 1270 |
Once on a time, laying hold of the skirt of the mountain, | |
Ganges said to Himalaya: | |
"O thou mantled in snow since the morn of creation, | |
Thou whose form is girdled with streams, | |
God made thee a partner in the secrets of heaven. | 1275 |
But deprived thy foot of graceful gait. | |
He took away from thee the power to walk: | |
What avails this sublimity and stateliness? | |
Life springs from perpetual movement; | |
Motion constitutes the wave's whole existence," | 1280 |
When the mountain heard this taunt from the river, | |
He puffed angrily like a sea of fire, | |
And answered: "Thy wide waters are my looking-glass; | |
Within my bosom are a hundred rivers like thee. | |
This graceful gait of thine is an instrument', of death: | 1285 |
Whoso goeth from Self is meet to die. | |
Thou hast no knowledge of thine own case, | |
Thou exultest in thy misfortune: thou art a fool! | |
O born of the womb of the revolving sky, | |
A fallen-in bank is better than thou! | 1290 |
Thou hast made thine existence an offering to the ocean, | |
Thou hast thrown the rich purse of thy life to the highway man. | |
Be self-contained like the rose in the garden, | |
Do not 'go to the florist in order to spread thy perfume! | |
To live is to grow in thyself | 1295 |
And gather roses from thine own flower bed. | |
Ages have gone by and my foot is fast on earth, | |
Dost thou fancy that I am far from my goal? | |
My being grew and reached the sky, | |
The Pleiads sank to rest under my skirts; | 1300 |
Thy being vanishes in the ocean, | |
But on my crest the stars bow their heads. | |
Mine eye sees the mysteries of heaven, | |
Mine ear is familiar with angels' wings. | |
Since I glowed with the heat of unceasing toil, | 1305 |
I amassed rubies, diamonds, and other gems. | |
I am stone within, and in the stone is fire: | |
Water cannot pass over my fire I" | |
Art thou a drop, of water? Do not break at. thine own feet, | |
But endeavour to surge and wrestle with the sea. | 1310 |
Desire the water of a jewel, become a jewel! | |
Be an ear-drop, adorn a beauty | |
Oh, expand thyself! Move swiftly! | |
Be a cloud that shoots lightning and sheds a flood of rain! | |
Let the ocean sue for thy storms as a beggar, | 1315 |
Let it complain of the straitness of its skirts | |
Let it deem itself less -than a wave | |
And glide along at thy feet! |