"ISMAILI-SUFI-DARWISH-MYSTIC"ESOTERIC" POETRY
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Re: "ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
"Whoever loves Al-Hassan and Al-Hussein loves me; and whoever hates them hates me.
Hadith of Prophet Mohammad (Peace be upon him and his Ahl al-Bayt)
Hadith of Prophet Mohammad (Peace be upon him and his Ahl al-Bayt)
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Re: "THE ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
Come, come,
The roses are in bloom!
Come, come,
The Beloved has arrived!
Now is the time to unite
the soul and the world.
Now is the time to see the sunlight
dancing as one with the shadows.
What a day!
What a day!
A day of upheaval!
A day of revolt!
Perhaps the scroll
that records every deed
is falling from the sky!
Beat the drum,
Speak no more –
The heart has gone,
The mind has gone,
The soul, too, has gone
to the Beloved.
By: Divan-i Shams-i Tabriz (r.a)
The roses are in bloom!
Come, come,
The Beloved has arrived!
Now is the time to unite
the soul and the world.
Now is the time to see the sunlight
dancing as one with the shadows.
What a day!
What a day!
A day of upheaval!
A day of revolt!
Perhaps the scroll
that records every deed
is falling from the sky!
Beat the drum,
Speak no more –
The heart has gone,
The mind has gone,
The soul, too, has gone
to the Beloved.
By: Divan-i Shams-i Tabriz (r.a)
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- Posts: 666
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
Seek knowledge, make yourself known by it; practise it - you will so become learned man.
Mowlana Ali (Peace be upon him and his Ahl al-Bayt)
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- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
You are ordained to recognize the Imams (the right successors of the Holy Prophet) and to obey them.
Mowlana Ali (Peace be upon him and his Ahl al-Bayt)
Mowlana Ali (Peace be upon him and his Ahl al-Bayt)
-
- Posts: 666
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
The worst man is the one who sees himself as the best.
Mowlana Ali (Peace be upon him and his Ahl al-Bayt)
Mowlana Ali (Peace be upon him and his Ahl al-Bayt)
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- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
The Ismaili-Sufi Sage of Pamir: Mubarak-i Wakhani and the Esoteric Tradition of the Pamiri Muslims
Book Description:
The name of Mubarak-i Wakhani (1839-1903), a Persian (Tajik) mystic poet, musician, astronomer, and Ismaili religious scholar from Badakhshan, is hardly known in modern academic circles related to Persian and Ismaili studies. Despite his importance to Ismaili esoteric thought in general and the Ismaili tradition of the peoples of the Pamir Mountains in particular, Mubarak has received only scant attention from modern scholars. One of the major reasons for Mubarak’s relative obscurity is probably the geographic location of his homeland and its socio-economic, political, and intellectual environment. There has been no serious scholarly research conducted on Mubarak’s life and works. This book is the first introductory study on the subject, and provides the first systematic presentation of the seminal Islamic figure. In the desire to establish an accurate biography of Mubarak and to render his often confused Ismaili-Sufi ideas as lucidly and coherently as possible, this book, by Dr. Abdulmamad Iloliev (PhD, Cambridge University) of the Institute of Ismaili Studies, concentrates on assessing his life and thoughts in their historical and religious context. It explores how far Mubarak’s works represent the indigenous Pamiri perception of Ismailism and where he stands in relation to general Ismaili thought. Likewise, through the study of the works of Mubarak, it seeks to explore the distinctive elements of Pamiri Ismailism, which itself is an interesting, but relatively neglected area in religio-cultural studies of the minor nations within the diverse civilization of Islam in general and the former Soviet Union in particular. This is a must-have resource for all scholars in Islamic Studies.
Reference
http://ismailimail.wordpress.com/2008/0 ... i-muslims/
http://www.cambriapress.com/camber/camb ... 974&page=i
http://www.amazon.com/Ismaili-Sufi-Sage ... 90&sr=8-12
Book Description:
The name of Mubarak-i Wakhani (1839-1903), a Persian (Tajik) mystic poet, musician, astronomer, and Ismaili religious scholar from Badakhshan, is hardly known in modern academic circles related to Persian and Ismaili studies. Despite his importance to Ismaili esoteric thought in general and the Ismaili tradition of the peoples of the Pamir Mountains in particular, Mubarak has received only scant attention from modern scholars. One of the major reasons for Mubarak’s relative obscurity is probably the geographic location of his homeland and its socio-economic, political, and intellectual environment. There has been no serious scholarly research conducted on Mubarak’s life and works. This book is the first introductory study on the subject, and provides the first systematic presentation of the seminal Islamic figure. In the desire to establish an accurate biography of Mubarak and to render his often confused Ismaili-Sufi ideas as lucidly and coherently as possible, this book, by Dr. Abdulmamad Iloliev (PhD, Cambridge University) of the Institute of Ismaili Studies, concentrates on assessing his life and thoughts in their historical and religious context. It explores how far Mubarak’s works represent the indigenous Pamiri perception of Ismailism and where he stands in relation to general Ismaili thought. Likewise, through the study of the works of Mubarak, it seeks to explore the distinctive elements of Pamiri Ismailism, which itself is an interesting, but relatively neglected area in religio-cultural studies of the minor nations within the diverse civilization of Islam in general and the former Soviet Union in particular. This is a must-have resource for all scholars in Islamic Studies.
Reference
http://ismailimail.wordpress.com/2008/0 ... i-muslims/
http://www.cambriapress.com/camber/camb ... 974&page=i
http://www.amazon.com/Ismaili-Sufi-Sage ... 90&sr=8-12
Last edited by From_Alamut on Fri Dec 26, 2008 3:56 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
The poet’s dream/ die before you die.
Rising, dancing melodiously as the wind,
Are the flowers that bloom from only within,
I feel this spring that’s being born,
And by the light, the darkness is torn,
Etched into my soul, into existence it blooms,
Glowing brighter than a thousand moons,
And bursting into life, paradise
As I am taken through these havens,
Endlessly enticed,
By the golden beams that lure me in,
That of the sun that cannot dim,
As it is radiating, resplendent with Nur,
Running with rivers, flowing most pure
The blessed water, streams bona-fide,
Waterfalls cascading, side by side,
And in the distance, I see my guide,
Then the earth beneath me opens wide.
And the bed of roses that before me lay,
All of a sudden begin to sway,
And from the breaking ground,
This light rises to the sky,
Ascending to the heavens;
Calling “die before you die”
And here I was with the master of the world,
I was once an oyster, now I am the pearl,
As I am soaring within,
My search begins;
I see into this garden,
With my mind’s eye,
On these wings of paradise;
I die before I die.
Then my Imam; my guide,
He’s almost by my side,
Walking towards me,
Like a dove he glides,
Smiling with open arms,
As waterfalls begin to calm,
The rivers make a gradual halt,
And the moment then, begins to exalt,
So close to the sea,
I can almost taste the salt.
I feel the river within,
As I am now one with all,
Immersed in the mountains,
Between the divine walls,
And there he is, his hand in mine,
Blessed I am by the Imam of the time,
As he smiles and speaks, the clouds above me whirl,
He tells me his dream, his visions of this world,
We walk through the gardens, he notions to a lake,
Think of this he says, when you dream awake,
Reflect on this water; think it is the Lord,
And that your entire being, into it you have poured.
He clasps his hands, the water spilling in,
Smiling he says, “now let me begin;
I will show you your origin.”
He looks to the skies, as a snowflake descends,
So intricate, delicate, perfection it transcends,
Catching the snowflake in the water he clasped,
This glistening snowflake that water then grasps,
And gradually the sparkle of this diamond-like ice;
Shows me a glimpse of paradise,
As it melts into the water he holds,
The solid and liquid, together they mould,
The ice and the water, as one become whole,
“This,” he explains “is the journey of your soul”.
With a hand on my shoulder, he turns to take his leave,
“Remember this always, you must forever believe..”
The earth then sealed the opening, from which the Nur shone,
I blinked for a moment, and in that moment he was gone.
The waterfalls again began to pour on,
I heard sweet song from a nearby swan,
The trickling of water, the chirping of birds,
All the same harmony, that earlier I’d heard,
But this time, though the garden sang on,
My Imam who was near, has physically gone,
Now this small garden, will never suffice,
As with him he took, the ultimate paradise.
Yet when I close my eyes and dream the same,
I am in heaven with Mowla again,
When this elated state, I once more attain,
I know God is closer, than my jugular vein.
I recall on the example that my imam showed me,
“Now share this” he smiled “let the world see!”
“And if they cannot comprehend, this endless sky,
Tell them they must; die before they die…”
~*~Shaqiera Ladhu~*~
Rising, dancing melodiously as the wind,
Are the flowers that bloom from only within,
I feel this spring that’s being born,
And by the light, the darkness is torn,
Etched into my soul, into existence it blooms,
Glowing brighter than a thousand moons,
And bursting into life, paradise
As I am taken through these havens,
Endlessly enticed,
By the golden beams that lure me in,
That of the sun that cannot dim,
As it is radiating, resplendent with Nur,
Running with rivers, flowing most pure
The blessed water, streams bona-fide,
Waterfalls cascading, side by side,
And in the distance, I see my guide,
Then the earth beneath me opens wide.
And the bed of roses that before me lay,
All of a sudden begin to sway,
And from the breaking ground,
This light rises to the sky,
Ascending to the heavens;
Calling “die before you die”
And here I was with the master of the world,
I was once an oyster, now I am the pearl,
As I am soaring within,
My search begins;
I see into this garden,
With my mind’s eye,
On these wings of paradise;
I die before I die.
Then my Imam; my guide,
He’s almost by my side,
Walking towards me,
Like a dove he glides,
Smiling with open arms,
As waterfalls begin to calm,
The rivers make a gradual halt,
And the moment then, begins to exalt,
So close to the sea,
I can almost taste the salt.
I feel the river within,
As I am now one with all,
Immersed in the mountains,
Between the divine walls,
And there he is, his hand in mine,
Blessed I am by the Imam of the time,
As he smiles and speaks, the clouds above me whirl,
He tells me his dream, his visions of this world,
We walk through the gardens, he notions to a lake,
Think of this he says, when you dream awake,
Reflect on this water; think it is the Lord,
And that your entire being, into it you have poured.
He clasps his hands, the water spilling in,
Smiling he says, “now let me begin;
I will show you your origin.”
He looks to the skies, as a snowflake descends,
So intricate, delicate, perfection it transcends,
Catching the snowflake in the water he clasped,
This glistening snowflake that water then grasps,
And gradually the sparkle of this diamond-like ice;
Shows me a glimpse of paradise,
As it melts into the water he holds,
The solid and liquid, together they mould,
The ice and the water, as one become whole,
“This,” he explains “is the journey of your soul”.
With a hand on my shoulder, he turns to take his leave,
“Remember this always, you must forever believe..”
The earth then sealed the opening, from which the Nur shone,
I blinked for a moment, and in that moment he was gone.
The waterfalls again began to pour on,
I heard sweet song from a nearby swan,
The trickling of water, the chirping of birds,
All the same harmony, that earlier I’d heard,
But this time, though the garden sang on,
My Imam who was near, has physically gone,
Now this small garden, will never suffice,
As with him he took, the ultimate paradise.
Yet when I close my eyes and dream the same,
I am in heaven with Mowla again,
When this elated state, I once more attain,
I know God is closer, than my jugular vein.
I recall on the example that my imam showed me,
“Now share this” he smiled “let the world see!”
“And if they cannot comprehend, this endless sky,
Tell them they must; die before they die…”
~*~Shaqiera Ladhu~*~
-
- Posts: 666
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
On the Night of Power, when you kindle the lamp,
the mosque is filled with light, but your heart
remains pitch-dark. Whether you kindle the lamp or
not, understand that it will not dispel the darkness
of ignorance in your heart. - Nasir Khusraw
By: The Great Ismaili Dia, Hujjat and Pir Seyyendena Nasir-i Khusraw (Pbuh)
the mosque is filled with light, but your heart
remains pitch-dark. Whether you kindle the lamp or
not, understand that it will not dispel the darkness
of ignorance in your heart. - Nasir Khusraw
By: The Great Ismaili Dia, Hujjat and Pir Seyyendena Nasir-i Khusraw (Pbuh)
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- Posts: 666
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
Do not hate what you do not know; for the greater part of knowledge consists of what you do not know.
-- Hazrat Ali
Mowlana Ali (Peace be upon him and his Ahl al-Bayt)
-- Hazrat Ali
Mowlana Ali (Peace be upon him and his Ahl al-Bayt)
Last edited by From_Alamut on Tue Dec 23, 2008 4:05 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- Posts: 666
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
O, just one word from Shams, and I’d gladly give my life
O whispering breeze,
bring the news of my beloved Shams.
It would be worth more
than all the amber and musk
from China to Constantinople.
Please tell me if you’ve heard a word
from his sweet lips,
or a beat of his pounding heart.
O, just one word from Shams,
and I’d gladly give my life.
His love is before me and behind me;
Through his love
my heart has become pure,
my breast has imbibed every virtue.
One smell of his perfume
and I walk light-headed on this path.
O Saaqi, enough with your wine –
I am drunk on the wine from his cup!
My nose is so full of his fragrance
that I have no need for incense, musk,
or the fine amber of Mongolia.
Shamsuddin is forever alive in my heart.
Shamsuddin is the generosity of every soul.
Shamsuddin is poverty,
Shamsuddin is the purest of all wealth.
I am not the only one
singing, Shamsuddin, Shamsuddin –
The nightingales sing from the garden,
And the partridge from the mountainside.
The beauty of a starry night is Shamsuddin.
The Garden of Paradise is Shamsuddin.
Love, compassion, and gratitude are Shamsuddin.
Shamsuddin is the brightness of day,
Shamsuddin is the turning sky,
Shamsuddin is time everlasting,
Shamsuddin is the endless treasure.
Shamsuddin is the King of Cups,
Shamsuddin is the ocean of nectar.
Shamsuddin is the breath of Jesus,
Shamsuddin is the face of Joseph.
O God, show me that inner place,
where we can sit together,
Shams in the middle, my soul by his side.
Shamsuddin is sweeter than life,
Shamsuddin is an earth full of sugar,
Shamsuddin is the towering cypress,
Shamsuddin is the flowering Spring.
Shamsuddin is the well of clear water,
Shamsuddin is the harp and rubaab,
Shamsuddin is the barrel of wine,
Shamsuddin is the bliss of my soul.
O Shams, you are the hope of every heart,
the one every lover longs to hear.
O Shams, come back, alas,
Don’t leave my soul in ruins.
– Ode 1081
Version by Jonathan Star from translation by Shahram Shiva
“A Garden Beyond Paradise: The Mystical Poetry of Rumi”
Bantam Books, 1992
O whispering breeze,
bring the news of my beloved Shams.
It would be worth more
than all the amber and musk
from China to Constantinople.
Please tell me if you’ve heard a word
from his sweet lips,
or a beat of his pounding heart.
O, just one word from Shams,
and I’d gladly give my life.
His love is before me and behind me;
Through his love
my heart has become pure,
my breast has imbibed every virtue.
One smell of his perfume
and I walk light-headed on this path.
O Saaqi, enough with your wine –
I am drunk on the wine from his cup!
My nose is so full of his fragrance
that I have no need for incense, musk,
or the fine amber of Mongolia.
Shamsuddin is forever alive in my heart.
Shamsuddin is the generosity of every soul.
Shamsuddin is poverty,
Shamsuddin is the purest of all wealth.
I am not the only one
singing, Shamsuddin, Shamsuddin –
The nightingales sing from the garden,
And the partridge from the mountainside.
The beauty of a starry night is Shamsuddin.
The Garden of Paradise is Shamsuddin.
Love, compassion, and gratitude are Shamsuddin.
Shamsuddin is the brightness of day,
Shamsuddin is the turning sky,
Shamsuddin is time everlasting,
Shamsuddin is the endless treasure.
Shamsuddin is the King of Cups,
Shamsuddin is the ocean of nectar.
Shamsuddin is the breath of Jesus,
Shamsuddin is the face of Joseph.
O God, show me that inner place,
where we can sit together,
Shams in the middle, my soul by his side.
Shamsuddin is sweeter than life,
Shamsuddin is an earth full of sugar,
Shamsuddin is the towering cypress,
Shamsuddin is the flowering Spring.
Shamsuddin is the well of clear water,
Shamsuddin is the harp and rubaab,
Shamsuddin is the barrel of wine,
Shamsuddin is the bliss of my soul.
O Shams, you are the hope of every heart,
the one every lover longs to hear.
O Shams, come back, alas,
Don’t leave my soul in ruins.
– Ode 1081
Version by Jonathan Star from translation by Shahram Shiva
“A Garden Beyond Paradise: The Mystical Poetry of Rumi”
Bantam Books, 1992
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- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
The Ismailsm and Sufism
The word batin is derived from batan means hidden, concealed, covert, inward, inner or esoteric. Ibn Taymiyya quotes Hasan Basari as related that, "Verily, each Koranic verse has an outer meaning and the inner meaning" (Majmu Fatwa, Riyad, 1382 AH, 13:231). Abu Na'im related from Ibn Masud in his Kitab al-Huliya as quoted by Suyuti in al-Itaqan that, "The Koran indeed revealed in seven words, and there is not a single word which does not possess its outer and inner meanings. No doubt, Ali bin Abu Talib completely commanded the knowledge of both outer and inner meanings." Yusuf al-Bahrani (d. 1772) quotes the Prophet as saying in Kitab al-Burhan fi tafsir al-Koran (1:17) that, "Among you is one who will fight for the tawil of the Koran as I have fought for its tanzil. That one is Ali bin Abu Talib." In another tradition, the Prophet said, "I am the Lord of revelation (sahib al-tanzil) and Ali is the Lord of interpretation (shib al-tawil)." J.K. Birge writes in The Bektashi Order of Dervishes (London, 1937, p. 106) that, "This is understood to mean that Muhammad taught the external facts about what Muslims should believe and what they should do, but it is only through Ali that one can enter into an understanding of their deeper meaning." Abdullah bin Masud said, "The Koran was revealed in seven letters. There is not a single letter but it has an exterior and an interior meaning and with Ali is the knowledge of these." (Kitab al-Burhan fi tafsir al-Koran (1:21). The Ismailis are also called the Batiniyya (esotericists or interiorists) because of professing the inner aspects of Islam, and as such the Ismailism is the batini tariqah.
Ismaili:
The word sufi is derived from safa means purity, because the foremost need in Sufism is to purify the heart. The Ismaili da'is during the 8th century formed a fraternal organization in Basra, known as Ikhwan as-Safa (Brethren Purity) due to advocating Sufic tariqah. Another view suggests that the Sufis are in the first rank (saff'i awwal); others say that the Sufis claim to belong to the ashab'i suffa (the Companions of the Prophet). Some assert its derivation from suf (wool) because of wearing woolen garment (jama'i suf). The phrase labisa'l suf means he clad himself in wool occurred frequently in early Islamic literature. When the ascetism passed into mysticism, the above words generally reduced to mean he became a sufi. Fariduddin Attar writes in Mantiq-ut-Tahir (London, 1924, p. icon_cool.gif that, "The doctrines of the Sufi is ancient in Islam, and is much spread, especially among the partisans of Ali." The Ismaili batini tariqah is the Sufi tariqah. Sufism is a form of tasawwuf in Islam. It is the code of heart (fiqh'l batin), the purification of the soul (tazkiyat'l nafs) or the feeling of God's presence (al-ihsan).
Ismaili:
The Persian word darwish is from the Pahlavi driyosh is most likely derived from darviza meaning poverty. According to another view, the word darwish is composed o two syllables, dar (in) and vish (thought) means in thought. The ultimate goal of the Sufi tariqah of darwish is self-realization, and for remaining in such state (in thought), they are also called darwish. The Sufis mostly in Turkey and Persia adopted the term darwish for them, thus there is no difference between them. Spencer Trimingham writes in The Sufi Orders in Islam (London, 1971, p. 264) that, "Of course, one is darwish and a Sufi at the same time and there is no essential distinction in theory. The Sufi is a darwish and the darwish is a Sufi since neither can be in isolation from the other." The Ismaili tariqah is thus the darwishi tariqah in Islam.
Ismaili:
The Sufis in Damascus and some Arabian lands also became known as the faqir. The word faqir (pl. fuqara) is derived from faqar means poverty. The term serves to designate the Muslim mystic. The Koran says, "O men, you are the poor (al-fuqara) before God; He is the Rich" (35:15). It affirms the infinity of divine plentitude and, in the light of this richness, the state of man's dependence and his utter indigence. The Prophet also said, "Poverty (faqiri) is my pride (fakhri)." Abu Sa'id Fazalullah bin Muhammad al-Mayhani said, "al-faqr huwa'l-ghina billah means the faqiri is a wealth in God (cf. Kash al-Mahjub, London, 1911, p. 22). One of the Sufis defines the term faqir that, "The faqir is not be whose hand is empty of provisions, but he whose nature is empty of desires" (Ibid. p. 25). In sum, the tariqah of the faqir is the tariqah of the Sufis and darwish. "Hence, the term darwish referring to a person who possesses this "poverty" is the same as the Arabic term faqir used in Sufism for Muhammadan poverty" (The Encyclopaedia of Religion, 4:240).
It is therefore evident that the Shi'ite Ismaili is a Batini tariqah, the Sufis tariqah, the Darwishi tariqah or the Faqiri tariqah in Islam. It is an intellectual tariqah. The cornerstone of the Ismaili tariqah is the concept of the Imamate. The Imam is a spiritual Guide and exhorts his followers the interpretation in accordance with the time for their worldly and spiritual progress. It must be noted that Ismaili tariqah is not a random offshoot of Islam, nor is it a hotchpotch of other faiths. Ismaili tariqah is the kernel of Islam that the Prophet himself very carefully separated from the common injunctions of the Shariah. This kernel was kept reserved for the privileged few, and kept on the other hand the Shariah for the mass of ummah. There is much more in Islam than performing salat and saum.
By: Dr. D.S. Merchant
Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com
Reference:
http://www.articledashboard.com/Article/Ismaili/516575
The word batin is derived from batan means hidden, concealed, covert, inward, inner or esoteric. Ibn Taymiyya quotes Hasan Basari as related that, "Verily, each Koranic verse has an outer meaning and the inner meaning" (Majmu Fatwa, Riyad, 1382 AH, 13:231). Abu Na'im related from Ibn Masud in his Kitab al-Huliya as quoted by Suyuti in al-Itaqan that, "The Koran indeed revealed in seven words, and there is not a single word which does not possess its outer and inner meanings. No doubt, Ali bin Abu Talib completely commanded the knowledge of both outer and inner meanings." Yusuf al-Bahrani (d. 1772) quotes the Prophet as saying in Kitab al-Burhan fi tafsir al-Koran (1:17) that, "Among you is one who will fight for the tawil of the Koran as I have fought for its tanzil. That one is Ali bin Abu Talib." In another tradition, the Prophet said, "I am the Lord of revelation (sahib al-tanzil) and Ali is the Lord of interpretation (shib al-tawil)." J.K. Birge writes in The Bektashi Order of Dervishes (London, 1937, p. 106) that, "This is understood to mean that Muhammad taught the external facts about what Muslims should believe and what they should do, but it is only through Ali that one can enter into an understanding of their deeper meaning." Abdullah bin Masud said, "The Koran was revealed in seven letters. There is not a single letter but it has an exterior and an interior meaning and with Ali is the knowledge of these." (Kitab al-Burhan fi tafsir al-Koran (1:21). The Ismailis are also called the Batiniyya (esotericists or interiorists) because of professing the inner aspects of Islam, and as such the Ismailism is the batini tariqah.
Ismaili:
The word sufi is derived from safa means purity, because the foremost need in Sufism is to purify the heart. The Ismaili da'is during the 8th century formed a fraternal organization in Basra, known as Ikhwan as-Safa (Brethren Purity) due to advocating Sufic tariqah. Another view suggests that the Sufis are in the first rank (saff'i awwal); others say that the Sufis claim to belong to the ashab'i suffa (the Companions of the Prophet). Some assert its derivation from suf (wool) because of wearing woolen garment (jama'i suf). The phrase labisa'l suf means he clad himself in wool occurred frequently in early Islamic literature. When the ascetism passed into mysticism, the above words generally reduced to mean he became a sufi. Fariduddin Attar writes in Mantiq-ut-Tahir (London, 1924, p. icon_cool.gif that, "The doctrines of the Sufi is ancient in Islam, and is much spread, especially among the partisans of Ali." The Ismaili batini tariqah is the Sufi tariqah. Sufism is a form of tasawwuf in Islam. It is the code of heart (fiqh'l batin), the purification of the soul (tazkiyat'l nafs) or the feeling of God's presence (al-ihsan).
Ismaili:
The Persian word darwish is from the Pahlavi driyosh is most likely derived from darviza meaning poverty. According to another view, the word darwish is composed o two syllables, dar (in) and vish (thought) means in thought. The ultimate goal of the Sufi tariqah of darwish is self-realization, and for remaining in such state (in thought), they are also called darwish. The Sufis mostly in Turkey and Persia adopted the term darwish for them, thus there is no difference between them. Spencer Trimingham writes in The Sufi Orders in Islam (London, 1971, p. 264) that, "Of course, one is darwish and a Sufi at the same time and there is no essential distinction in theory. The Sufi is a darwish and the darwish is a Sufi since neither can be in isolation from the other." The Ismaili tariqah is thus the darwishi tariqah in Islam.
Ismaili:
The Sufis in Damascus and some Arabian lands also became known as the faqir. The word faqir (pl. fuqara) is derived from faqar means poverty. The term serves to designate the Muslim mystic. The Koran says, "O men, you are the poor (al-fuqara) before God; He is the Rich" (35:15). It affirms the infinity of divine plentitude and, in the light of this richness, the state of man's dependence and his utter indigence. The Prophet also said, "Poverty (faqiri) is my pride (fakhri)." Abu Sa'id Fazalullah bin Muhammad al-Mayhani said, "al-faqr huwa'l-ghina billah means the faqiri is a wealth in God (cf. Kash al-Mahjub, London, 1911, p. 22). One of the Sufis defines the term faqir that, "The faqir is not be whose hand is empty of provisions, but he whose nature is empty of desires" (Ibid. p. 25). In sum, the tariqah of the faqir is the tariqah of the Sufis and darwish. "Hence, the term darwish referring to a person who possesses this "poverty" is the same as the Arabic term faqir used in Sufism for Muhammadan poverty" (The Encyclopaedia of Religion, 4:240).
It is therefore evident that the Shi'ite Ismaili is a Batini tariqah, the Sufis tariqah, the Darwishi tariqah or the Faqiri tariqah in Islam. It is an intellectual tariqah. The cornerstone of the Ismaili tariqah is the concept of the Imamate. The Imam is a spiritual Guide and exhorts his followers the interpretation in accordance with the time for their worldly and spiritual progress. It must be noted that Ismaili tariqah is not a random offshoot of Islam, nor is it a hotchpotch of other faiths. Ismaili tariqah is the kernel of Islam that the Prophet himself very carefully separated from the common injunctions of the Shariah. This kernel was kept reserved for the privileged few, and kept on the other hand the Shariah for the mass of ummah. There is much more in Islam than performing salat and saum.
By: Dr. D.S. Merchant
Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com
Reference:
http://www.articledashboard.com/Article/Ismaili/516575
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Re: "ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
The authentic hadiths spoke of their distinctions and qualifications as permanent allies of justice and truth. Zeid Ibn Arqam reported that the Messenger of God said to Ali, Fatimah, Al-Hassan and Al-Hussein:
"I am at peace with whomever you are at peace; and I am at war with whomever you are at war."
Hadith of Prophet Mohammad (Peace be upon him and his Ahl al-Bayt)
"I am at peace with whomever you are at peace; and I am at war with whomever you are at war."
Hadith of Prophet Mohammad (Peace be upon him and his Ahl al-Bayt)
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Re: "ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
The Messenger did not intend to distinguish Ali simply because he was related to him. Al-Abbas (his uncle) and the rest of the Hashimites, including Jaafar (the brother of Ali) are all related to the Messenger. All of them would have been qualifed to represent him. But he said, "No one represents me but Ali."
Reference
Book of NahjulBalaghah
Reference
Book of NahjulBalaghah
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Re: "ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
At one time Muaweyah was criticizing Ali in the presence of Saad Ibn Abu Waqass. Saad said to him: "I heard the Messenger of God saying to Ali: You are to me like Aaron to Moses. But there shall be no Prophet (of God) after me. 6 "Thus, the Messenger gave Ali a position next to his own, for the position of Aaron was next to that of Moses
Reference
Book of NahjulBalaghah
Reference
Book of NahjulBalaghah
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Re: "ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
Al-Hakim recorded in his Mustadrak, that Abu Than (a famous companion of Mohammad whose truthfulness is known to the Muslims) said that the Messenger said:
"The example of the members of my House is like that of Noah's ark. Whoever embarked on it was safe, and whoever failed to embark was drowned. 8
Reference
Book of NahjulBalaghah
"The example of the members of my House is like that of Noah's ark. Whoever embarked on it was safe, and whoever failed to embark was drowned. 8
Reference
Book of NahjulBalaghah
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Re: "ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
This is to be found in a famous poem in the Diwan by Dia, Hujjat and Pir Seyyendena Nasir-i Khusraw (Pbuh), known as the Confessional Ode (Qasidah iitirafiyyah), The Qasidah is the longest in the Diwan (over 130 lines).
O widely read, O globally travelled one,
(still earth-bound, still caught beneath the sky),
what value would the spheres yet hold for you
were you to catch a glimpse of hidden knowledge?
Will your flesh luxuriate forever
in the boons and blessings of the world? Why not
for a little while enjoy as well the fruits
of knowledge with the tongue of the Spirit?
The dreamers banquets cannot profit him;
only the waking know the taste of gain
and loss. What does the dreamer know of stars
and turquoise dome, or things the Almighty brings
to pass upon his dusty sphere?
. . . Wake up
from this charming vision, you who have slept and dreamt
for forty years, and see that off all the friends
of your youth not one remains. No one is left
to share your drowse and super but the beasts . . .
and that which donkeys eat is not a blessing
any more than that which Caesar conquers
is a kingdom!
. . . Reader if you miss the Path
I would not be surprised, for I, like you,
languished in perplexity for years.
Three hundred ninety four of them had passed
since the Migration, when my mother
dropped me in the dust, a voiceless creature
like a weed which thrives on soil and rain.
From this vegetative state I reached
that of the beasts, and floundered like a bird
whose wings are clipped, till in the Fourth Age
I gained the stature of a man and left
a soul of reason worm its way into
my gloomy body. When the clock of years
had turned some forty-two rounds, my conscious self
began to seek our wisdom. From the mouths
of sages or the pages of ancient books
I heard of the Cosmos, of the whirl of Time
and the Three Kingdoms; but I found myself
superior to all around me, and
among all creatures (so I mused) there must
be one superior to others, like
the falcon amongst all birds, a camel amongst
all beasts of burden, the palm amongst the trees,
the Quran amongst all books, the Kaaba amongst
all houses, heart in the body, sun among stars.
I wondered, and my soul was filled with grief,
my meditations blasted with fear of all
the objects of thought.
From every School I searched:
from Shafiite, Malikite, Hanafite, sought a sign
of guidance, of the Chosen One of God,
the Almighty, the Guide; and each one pointed me
a different way, one to China, one
to Africa. When I asked for a reason, or
for corroboration from the Quran, they recoiled
in helplessness, like blind men, like deaf men.
Then one day, a I read in the Book the Verse
of the Oath, in which God proclaims His Hand
is above all hands, and pondered on that group
who swore allegiance beneath the Tree (like Jafar,
Miqdad, Salman, Budhar) I asked myself
How is it now with that Tree and with that Hand?
Where shall I see that Hand, that group, that Oath?
I asked, but was rebuffed. They are no more
-so I was told- The Tree, the Hand are gone,
the Assembly dispersed, the Hand concealed and veiled
in secrecy. Those men were the Companions,
favoured by that allegiance and chosen to be
with the Prophet in Paradise.
But I said to myself
In the Book it is clear that Ahmad is the Messenger
of Good News, and the Warner, luminous as light.
If the unbelievers wished to blow it out
God would light it again in spite of them.
How is it today that no one is left
of that Community? Surely the word
of the Universal Judge cannot be false!
Whose hand should we grasp, where should we take an oath
that even we men of latter times might enjoy
the justice of heaven? Why should it be our fault
not to be born in that era? Why should we
be deprived of the Prophet, afflicted and distressed?
My face grew pale as a yellow blossom in
the pain of ignorance. I bowed in the wind
of doubt like an aging cypress. The learned man
is like a pomander, his knowledge a halo of musk;
or like a mountain concealing its vein of gold;
but ore without gold, perfume without aroma
are worth no more than dust.
. . . Then I arose
and set out on my way, remembering
neither my home nor past nor garden of roses.
From Persian, Arab, Hindu, Turk and Jew,
from the folk of Sind, from the Romans, from everyone
I met the philosopher, Manichee, Sabaean, atheist,
I asked, I questioned, I pestered. Many a night
I made a stone my pillow, the clouds my tent.
I sank as low as a fish, I ascended as high
as the stars above the hills; now in a land
where water was frozen as marble, now in a land
where the very dust was hot as a spark, I roamed.
Now by the sea, now on the high plateau
or trackless waste, across mountains, sand and streams,
up and down the precipices, coil of rope
round my shoulder like a camel driver, pack
on my back like a mule, inquiring I went my way,
searching from city to city, shore to shore.
. . . . The one day I reached those city gates
where angels are servants, where planets and stars are slaves,
a garden of roses and pines girded round with walls
of emerald and jasper trees, set
in a desert of gold-embroidered silk, its springs
sweet as honey, the river of paradise:
a city which only Virtue can aspire
to reach, a city whose cypresses are like
the blades of Intellect, a cit whose sages
wear brocaded robes woven of silk . . .
And here, before these gates, my Reason spoke:
Here, within these walls, find what you seek
and do not leave without it. So I approached
the Guardian of the Gate, and told him of
my search. Rejoice he answered. Your mine
has produced a jewel, for beneath this land of Truth
there flows a crystal ocean of precious pearls
and pure clear water. This is the lofty sphere
of exalted stars; aye, it is paradise
itself, the Abode of Houris. I heard these words
freighted with meaning, sweet as honey, and felt
myself on the threshold of heaven. I told him, My soul
is weak, though my body may seem strong to you.
I am in pain, but that is nothing. I refuse
a medicine. I cannot understand,
I reject all that is beyond the law.
I am a doctor, he answered. Speak to me
and tell me all that ails you, every detail.
[Here Nasir burdens the gate-keeper with a hundred questions about the Origin and End of the Universe, the mystery of pre-destination, the purpose of creation, and Gods reason for sending Messengers to man. He asks a minute detail abstruse questions of a philosophical and theological nature. Then . . .]
That sage set his hand upon his heart
(a hundred blessings be on that hand and breast!)
And said, I offer you the remedy
of proof and demonstration; but if you
accept, I shall place a seal upon your lips
which must never be broken. I gave my consent and he
affixed the seal. Drop by drop and day
by day he fed me the healing potion, till
my ailment disappeared, my tongue became
imbued with eloquent speech; my face, which had
been pale as saffron now grew rosy with joy;
I who had been a stone was now a ruby;
I had been dust - now I was ambergris.
He put my hand into the Prophets hand,
I spoke the Oath beneath that exalted Tree
so heavy with fruit, so sweet with cooling shade.
Have you ever heard of a sea which flows from fire?
Have you ever seen a fox become a lion?
The sun can transmute a pebble, which even the hand
of Nature can never change, into a gem.
I am that precious stone, my Sun is he
by whose rays this tenebrous world is filled with light.
In jealousy I cannot speak his name
in this poem, but can only say that for him
Plato himself would become a slave. He
is the teacher, hearer of souls, favoured of God,
image of wisdom, fountain of knowledge and Truth.
Blessed the ship with him for its anchor, blessed
the city whose sacred gate he ever guards!
O Countenance of Knowledge, Virtues Form,
Heart of Wisdom, Goal of Humankind,
O Pride of Pride; I stood before thee, pale
and skeletal, clad in a woolen cloak,
and kissed thine hand as if it were the grave
of the Prophet or Black Stone of the Kaaba.
Six years I served thee; and now, wherever I am
so long as I live I'll use my pen and ink,
my inkwell and my paper . . . in praise of thee!
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
O widely read, O globally travelled one,
(still earth-bound, still caught beneath the sky),
what value would the spheres yet hold for you
were you to catch a glimpse of hidden knowledge?
Will your flesh luxuriate forever
in the boons and blessings of the world? Why not
for a little while enjoy as well the fruits
of knowledge with the tongue of the Spirit?
The dreamers banquets cannot profit him;
only the waking know the taste of gain
and loss. What does the dreamer know of stars
and turquoise dome, or things the Almighty brings
to pass upon his dusty sphere?
. . . Wake up
from this charming vision, you who have slept and dreamt
for forty years, and see that off all the friends
of your youth not one remains. No one is left
to share your drowse and super but the beasts . . .
and that which donkeys eat is not a blessing
any more than that which Caesar conquers
is a kingdom!
. . . Reader if you miss the Path
I would not be surprised, for I, like you,
languished in perplexity for years.
Three hundred ninety four of them had passed
since the Migration, when my mother
dropped me in the dust, a voiceless creature
like a weed which thrives on soil and rain.
From this vegetative state I reached
that of the beasts, and floundered like a bird
whose wings are clipped, till in the Fourth Age
I gained the stature of a man and left
a soul of reason worm its way into
my gloomy body. When the clock of years
had turned some forty-two rounds, my conscious self
began to seek our wisdom. From the mouths
of sages or the pages of ancient books
I heard of the Cosmos, of the whirl of Time
and the Three Kingdoms; but I found myself
superior to all around me, and
among all creatures (so I mused) there must
be one superior to others, like
the falcon amongst all birds, a camel amongst
all beasts of burden, the palm amongst the trees,
the Quran amongst all books, the Kaaba amongst
all houses, heart in the body, sun among stars.
I wondered, and my soul was filled with grief,
my meditations blasted with fear of all
the objects of thought.
From every School I searched:
from Shafiite, Malikite, Hanafite, sought a sign
of guidance, of the Chosen One of God,
the Almighty, the Guide; and each one pointed me
a different way, one to China, one
to Africa. When I asked for a reason, or
for corroboration from the Quran, they recoiled
in helplessness, like blind men, like deaf men.
Then one day, a I read in the Book the Verse
of the Oath, in which God proclaims His Hand
is above all hands, and pondered on that group
who swore allegiance beneath the Tree (like Jafar,
Miqdad, Salman, Budhar) I asked myself
How is it now with that Tree and with that Hand?
Where shall I see that Hand, that group, that Oath?
I asked, but was rebuffed. They are no more
-so I was told- The Tree, the Hand are gone,
the Assembly dispersed, the Hand concealed and veiled
in secrecy. Those men were the Companions,
favoured by that allegiance and chosen to be
with the Prophet in Paradise.
But I said to myself
In the Book it is clear that Ahmad is the Messenger
of Good News, and the Warner, luminous as light.
If the unbelievers wished to blow it out
God would light it again in spite of them.
How is it today that no one is left
of that Community? Surely the word
of the Universal Judge cannot be false!
Whose hand should we grasp, where should we take an oath
that even we men of latter times might enjoy
the justice of heaven? Why should it be our fault
not to be born in that era? Why should we
be deprived of the Prophet, afflicted and distressed?
My face grew pale as a yellow blossom in
the pain of ignorance. I bowed in the wind
of doubt like an aging cypress. The learned man
is like a pomander, his knowledge a halo of musk;
or like a mountain concealing its vein of gold;
but ore without gold, perfume without aroma
are worth no more than dust.
. . . Then I arose
and set out on my way, remembering
neither my home nor past nor garden of roses.
From Persian, Arab, Hindu, Turk and Jew,
from the folk of Sind, from the Romans, from everyone
I met the philosopher, Manichee, Sabaean, atheist,
I asked, I questioned, I pestered. Many a night
I made a stone my pillow, the clouds my tent.
I sank as low as a fish, I ascended as high
as the stars above the hills; now in a land
where water was frozen as marble, now in a land
where the very dust was hot as a spark, I roamed.
Now by the sea, now on the high plateau
or trackless waste, across mountains, sand and streams,
up and down the precipices, coil of rope
round my shoulder like a camel driver, pack
on my back like a mule, inquiring I went my way,
searching from city to city, shore to shore.
. . . . The one day I reached those city gates
where angels are servants, where planets and stars are slaves,
a garden of roses and pines girded round with walls
of emerald and jasper trees, set
in a desert of gold-embroidered silk, its springs
sweet as honey, the river of paradise:
a city which only Virtue can aspire
to reach, a city whose cypresses are like
the blades of Intellect, a cit whose sages
wear brocaded robes woven of silk . . .
And here, before these gates, my Reason spoke:
Here, within these walls, find what you seek
and do not leave without it. So I approached
the Guardian of the Gate, and told him of
my search. Rejoice he answered. Your mine
has produced a jewel, for beneath this land of Truth
there flows a crystal ocean of precious pearls
and pure clear water. This is the lofty sphere
of exalted stars; aye, it is paradise
itself, the Abode of Houris. I heard these words
freighted with meaning, sweet as honey, and felt
myself on the threshold of heaven. I told him, My soul
is weak, though my body may seem strong to you.
I am in pain, but that is nothing. I refuse
a medicine. I cannot understand,
I reject all that is beyond the law.
I am a doctor, he answered. Speak to me
and tell me all that ails you, every detail.
[Here Nasir burdens the gate-keeper with a hundred questions about the Origin and End of the Universe, the mystery of pre-destination, the purpose of creation, and Gods reason for sending Messengers to man. He asks a minute detail abstruse questions of a philosophical and theological nature. Then . . .]
That sage set his hand upon his heart
(a hundred blessings be on that hand and breast!)
And said, I offer you the remedy
of proof and demonstration; but if you
accept, I shall place a seal upon your lips
which must never be broken. I gave my consent and he
affixed the seal. Drop by drop and day
by day he fed me the healing potion, till
my ailment disappeared, my tongue became
imbued with eloquent speech; my face, which had
been pale as saffron now grew rosy with joy;
I who had been a stone was now a ruby;
I had been dust - now I was ambergris.
He put my hand into the Prophets hand,
I spoke the Oath beneath that exalted Tree
so heavy with fruit, so sweet with cooling shade.
Have you ever heard of a sea which flows from fire?
Have you ever seen a fox become a lion?
The sun can transmute a pebble, which even the hand
of Nature can never change, into a gem.
I am that precious stone, my Sun is he
by whose rays this tenebrous world is filled with light.
In jealousy I cannot speak his name
in this poem, but can only say that for him
Plato himself would become a slave. He
is the teacher, hearer of souls, favoured of God,
image of wisdom, fountain of knowledge and Truth.
Blessed the ship with him for its anchor, blessed
the city whose sacred gate he ever guards!
O Countenance of Knowledge, Virtues Form,
Heart of Wisdom, Goal of Humankind,
O Pride of Pride; I stood before thee, pale
and skeletal, clad in a woolen cloak,
and kissed thine hand as if it were the grave
of the Prophet or Black Stone of the Kaaba.
Six years I served thee; and now, wherever I am
so long as I live I'll use my pen and ink,
my inkwell and my paper . . . in praise of thee!
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
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Re: "THE ISMAILI SUFISM POETRY AND POEMS"
Why so silent, eloquent one? Why do you not
string pearls and corals upon the necklace of verse?
Do not content yourself to be like the mob;
take your place of pride amongst your equals,
for thanks to the spiritual guidance of Khwajah Muayyad
God has opened Wisdoms gate for you.
He who sees the Khwajah on assembly day,
sees Intellect itself in the midst of turmoil.
He made my dark night bright day
with proofs luminous as the sun.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
string pearls and corals upon the necklace of verse?
Do not content yourself to be like the mob;
take your place of pride amongst your equals,
for thanks to the spiritual guidance of Khwajah Muayyad
God has opened Wisdoms gate for you.
He who sees the Khwajah on assembly day,
sees Intellect itself in the midst of turmoil.
He made my dark night bright day
with proofs luminous as the sun.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
-
- Posts: 666
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "THE ISMAILI SUFISM POETRY AND POEMS"
The Divan
I shall turn over a new leaf, and whatever
is better, that shall I make my minds aim.
The world of April - for instance -is an emblem of delight:
shall I not by contemplation make my heart fresh as Spring?
On the green lawns and beds of this my poetic Divan
I shall weave lines and feet into hyacinths and sweet basil,
meanings and allusions into ripe fruit and plum roses,
and grow great trees from tiny seeds of precise words.
Clouds make a deserts jaundiced face a garden -
thus shall I too rain gently on my books face
and in the assembly of debate, favour the wise
with fine subtle points like scattering of petals;
if dusty error greys one of my blooms Ill sprinkle
from a clear sky upon it my commentary.
My odes will raise a castle; in its vast court Ill build
a rose-garden surrounded by a veranda of couplets.
A landscape gardener, here Ill raise a scenic panorama,
there spread out a peaceful meadow, broad and smooth.
The gate (inlaid with all the rarest metres of prosody)
shall be guarded by a trustworthy poet -
and the foundation of this blessed edifice shall be
Virtuous and learned guests from every clime of earth
shall gather at my place, leaving no place
for the ignorant (did I build my home and garden
for idiots?!) And the table I spread for these sages
will groan and leave them in a poet-prandial stupor.
Poetry, or speech, is like a body for which
(following the example of Wisdom) one must weave
from precious conceits an inner soul.
Have you ever witnessed such vivification? Watch,
I shall create for you in words the human image.
From subtle metaphors and limpid narrative
I shall fashion curling locks and smiling lips;
significance shall be its face, which then Ill hide
beneath the veil or masquerade of simile.
Ill take up the word like a polo stick
and make it crack; and if in some line I find
my hearts grown dull, Ill polish it with
the sandpaper of meditation; if ignorance-rust
appears on my soul Ill rub it till it shines
with verses from the Quran. The worlds woes
shall vanish before my piety and obedience;
Ill wash my hands clean of Greeds grease
and raise my fingers from my vest-pocket
to the sphere of Saturn. Does my heart sleep
in the nightgown of ignorance? Then let me go nude
and let the alarm of devotion rouse this
sluggish and melancholic body of mine to the pitch
of self-sacrifice. If all my faults
originate within me, to whom should I complain?
No, I shall rise in Gods grace and mercy
and make earths rough ways smooth to my soul;
the good and evil within me I shall judge as if
my heart were a jewellers balance, each moment
adding to the scale of good grain, and from
the pan of evil subtracting a gramme, till
I have shifted the chains and yokes which Satan
forged for me, to the devils own limbs and shoulders!
My personal demon will not repent his viciousness;
its up to me to make amends - and even - if
Ill never be a Solomon in the caravan of devils
at least I can convert (by the threat of intellects sword)
my private imp to Islam. I shall fashion
my saddle and reins from words and deeds, a halter
from the wisdom of Luqman. You may take
your vacation wherever you wish - Ill head
for the Threshold of the Compassionate, turning my head
towards the Guide of Truth, like Salman,
to the Household of the Messenger, to become
there a humble slave, there where in the glory
of the Imam I shall make my name the frontispiece
of the Book of Fame. That Sun of gnosis
will brighten my heart like the moon in Cancer,
that ocean of grace will fill my heart
as a casket of pearls, sunken treasure and corals.
Now now, Nasir, let me give you some advice;
A talented fellow like you could go far - even
to the Emirs court. All you have to do is
give up these crackpot notions and listen to me . .
Avaunt thee! The vapours of asininity curl
round your brows. What can I do to cure you?
How could I ever toady to you in the hope
of filling my saddlebag with crusts? Ive had
Tartars for slaves in my time - how could I ever
enslave myself to a Tartar? You advise me
to be more like X the Miser or Y the pander -
I know your world is like a sick cat
which devours its own litter - why should I
bow before it? Whom could I consider lower
than myself if I were to mortgage my body
like a dog for a bit of bread? Where
could I leave my faith, virtue and knowledge
if I took up the profession you offer me:
Ghoul-in-Waiting?
I have honour enough in this:
that in two tongues I have ordered Wisdom
and transformed it into verse, for the single purpose
of praising the Prophets Family, following in spirit
now Rudaki the Persian, now Hasan the Arab,
weaving my Divan of figures and images better than all
the lost books of China, Rome and Isfahan,
logical, clear as sunlight, furnished with
sensible solution to all thorny problems, which
I have made the guards and shepherds of my verse.
The Pilgrims Position is one of my treasures in prose
and the book you are reading now, one in poetry.
This world is a prison for the believer - why else
should I take up residence in Yamgan
if I werent sure that on the Day of Reckoning
the raging fire will make the prison for those
who have set themselves against the Holy Household?
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
I shall turn over a new leaf, and whatever
is better, that shall I make my minds aim.
The world of April - for instance -is an emblem of delight:
shall I not by contemplation make my heart fresh as Spring?
On the green lawns and beds of this my poetic Divan
I shall weave lines and feet into hyacinths and sweet basil,
meanings and allusions into ripe fruit and plum roses,
and grow great trees from tiny seeds of precise words.
Clouds make a deserts jaundiced face a garden -
thus shall I too rain gently on my books face
and in the assembly of debate, favour the wise
with fine subtle points like scattering of petals;
if dusty error greys one of my blooms Ill sprinkle
from a clear sky upon it my commentary.
My odes will raise a castle; in its vast court Ill build
a rose-garden surrounded by a veranda of couplets.
A landscape gardener, here Ill raise a scenic panorama,
there spread out a peaceful meadow, broad and smooth.
The gate (inlaid with all the rarest metres of prosody)
shall be guarded by a trustworthy poet -
and the foundation of this blessed edifice shall be
Virtuous and learned guests from every clime of earth
shall gather at my place, leaving no place
for the ignorant (did I build my home and garden
for idiots?!) And the table I spread for these sages
will groan and leave them in a poet-prandial stupor.
Poetry, or speech, is like a body for which
(following the example of Wisdom) one must weave
from precious conceits an inner soul.
Have you ever witnessed such vivification? Watch,
I shall create for you in words the human image.
From subtle metaphors and limpid narrative
I shall fashion curling locks and smiling lips;
significance shall be its face, which then Ill hide
beneath the veil or masquerade of simile.
Ill take up the word like a polo stick
and make it crack; and if in some line I find
my hearts grown dull, Ill polish it with
the sandpaper of meditation; if ignorance-rust
appears on my soul Ill rub it till it shines
with verses from the Quran. The worlds woes
shall vanish before my piety and obedience;
Ill wash my hands clean of Greeds grease
and raise my fingers from my vest-pocket
to the sphere of Saturn. Does my heart sleep
in the nightgown of ignorance? Then let me go nude
and let the alarm of devotion rouse this
sluggish and melancholic body of mine to the pitch
of self-sacrifice. If all my faults
originate within me, to whom should I complain?
No, I shall rise in Gods grace and mercy
and make earths rough ways smooth to my soul;
the good and evil within me I shall judge as if
my heart were a jewellers balance, each moment
adding to the scale of good grain, and from
the pan of evil subtracting a gramme, till
I have shifted the chains and yokes which Satan
forged for me, to the devils own limbs and shoulders!
My personal demon will not repent his viciousness;
its up to me to make amends - and even - if
Ill never be a Solomon in the caravan of devils
at least I can convert (by the threat of intellects sword)
my private imp to Islam. I shall fashion
my saddle and reins from words and deeds, a halter
from the wisdom of Luqman. You may take
your vacation wherever you wish - Ill head
for the Threshold of the Compassionate, turning my head
towards the Guide of Truth, like Salman,
to the Household of the Messenger, to become
there a humble slave, there where in the glory
of the Imam I shall make my name the frontispiece
of the Book of Fame. That Sun of gnosis
will brighten my heart like the moon in Cancer,
that ocean of grace will fill my heart
as a casket of pearls, sunken treasure and corals.
Now now, Nasir, let me give you some advice;
A talented fellow like you could go far - even
to the Emirs court. All you have to do is
give up these crackpot notions and listen to me . .
Avaunt thee! The vapours of asininity curl
round your brows. What can I do to cure you?
How could I ever toady to you in the hope
of filling my saddlebag with crusts? Ive had
Tartars for slaves in my time - how could I ever
enslave myself to a Tartar? You advise me
to be more like X the Miser or Y the pander -
I know your world is like a sick cat
which devours its own litter - why should I
bow before it? Whom could I consider lower
than myself if I were to mortgage my body
like a dog for a bit of bread? Where
could I leave my faith, virtue and knowledge
if I took up the profession you offer me:
Ghoul-in-Waiting?
I have honour enough in this:
that in two tongues I have ordered Wisdom
and transformed it into verse, for the single purpose
of praising the Prophets Family, following in spirit
now Rudaki the Persian, now Hasan the Arab,
weaving my Divan of figures and images better than all
the lost books of China, Rome and Isfahan,
logical, clear as sunlight, furnished with
sensible solution to all thorny problems, which
I have made the guards and shepherds of my verse.
The Pilgrims Position is one of my treasures in prose
and the book you are reading now, one in poetry.
This world is a prison for the believer - why else
should I take up residence in Yamgan
if I werent sure that on the Day of Reckoning
the raging fire will make the prison for those
who have set themselves against the Holy Household?
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
-
- Posts: 666
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "THE ISMAILI SUFISM POETRY AND POEMS"
Philosophy
GOD IN HIS UNITY
MOST ANCIENT OF ALL.
NO MULTIPLICITY.
ALONE OF EVERYTHING
UNCREATED.
What say you? Why did He
make the universe
out of pearl?
neither matter for form
height nor breadth.
You agree: in every case
cause precedes effect
as ONE is prior to numbers
or part to the whole
and since heaven and earth (all agree)
are both effects
why consider heaven alone
a realm of knowledge and power
(like its own antecedent cause)?
What He brings today
from potency into Act
could just as well be
yesterday or tomorrow
since He is not in need
nor impotent. You claim
that between cause and effect
between nothingness and creation
some interval of TIME must intervene
but TIME itself is born
of the rolling spheres.
How can TIME exist?
a non-existent entity?
a beginningless void?
before the spheres themselves?
If you think of nothingness
subsisting in itself
then Unity must have an opposite
a partner in manifestation.
If nothingness
is merely a name or sound
would this not prove that even names
are not without their due effects?
God is above all
as ONE above the numbers:
only thus is TIME s existence known
that of PLACE refuted
genesis necessitated
and Eternity proven.
Do not if you are wise
attribute to HIM
any action but creatio ex nihilo
of a single being in the wink
of an eye
or less.
Do not speak of His Action
in such a way that His Essence
might be passive like our own
moulded in time by act
by the least of intentions.
ABSOLUTE UNITY:
seek nothing outside His Essence
for He is All-comprehensive
while the essences of things
are particular, determined.
If you claim He transcends all vision
do not attribute qualities to Him
for this would make Him
dual in essence
no longer singular, unique and ONE.
True, you see in this universe
a myriad things made of earth
wind, water, fire, metals and seas.
If you could float down
like Harut the fallen angel
from celestial spheres
then could you not
lift yourself up again
like the Morning Star?
EMANATION FROM ESSENCE
NOT FROM BEING:
the cause of the creation of one thing
must be ONE
The First Emanation is Intellect
then Soul, then Body,
plants, the abundance of beasts,
the Rational Animal.
Each Archetype contingent in itself
bu (in reality) an impossible being;
each one manifest in itself but
(in reality) a hidden non-existent.
What say you now? how this painted screen
is set up in the vasty air
like an enamelled pavilion pitched
in a desert of fire?
Does it move by itself or
has someone set it spinning?
keeps it revolving like this
around the zenith on high?
How do you define movement ?
Locomotion? Turning from one state
to another lowly or sublime?
Then explain to me please
its condition and locus
if you know. If you don t know
stay off the path of Wisdom
till your blindfold is untied.
When by way of demonstration
and deduction you speak
of NINE SPHERES -
what say you again?
what lies beyond these verdant fields?
If you answer VACUUM
I say you re wrong - impossible
that solid forms should hang
in a void. If you say
PLENUM - no no - one cannot conceive
a physical body without limit or end
like a sublime substance.
Then what keeps this ball of dust
suspended - so - between water and fire
thunderbolt and raging tempest?
If the elements are opposites in nature
why do the four of them
seem to embrace in an excess of unity
in a single place like
loving brothers? or if you say
they re not opposites in essence
why have they been given NAMES
which express their opposition?
BEGIN NOW
KNOW THYSELF and turn
your steed away from the
whirling spheres
and this duststained toy.
How can you taste Divine Mysteries
with the DEVIL in you
slashing about with his sword
duelling the inner ADAM?
Your vision of the
spiritual essence of things
reminds me of a blind man
dropped in the middle of the
soul-nourishing Garden of the Spirit
trying with his sightless eyes
to visualise the shapes and colours
of its delights.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
GOD IN HIS UNITY
MOST ANCIENT OF ALL.
NO MULTIPLICITY.
ALONE OF EVERYTHING
UNCREATED.
What say you? Why did He
make the universe
out of pearl?
neither matter for form
height nor breadth.
You agree: in every case
cause precedes effect
as ONE is prior to numbers
or part to the whole
and since heaven and earth (all agree)
are both effects
why consider heaven alone
a realm of knowledge and power
(like its own antecedent cause)?
What He brings today
from potency into Act
could just as well be
yesterday or tomorrow
since He is not in need
nor impotent. You claim
that between cause and effect
between nothingness and creation
some interval of TIME must intervene
but TIME itself is born
of the rolling spheres.
How can TIME exist?
a non-existent entity?
a beginningless void?
before the spheres themselves?
If you think of nothingness
subsisting in itself
then Unity must have an opposite
a partner in manifestation.
If nothingness
is merely a name or sound
would this not prove that even names
are not without their due effects?
God is above all
as ONE above the numbers:
only thus is TIME s existence known
that of PLACE refuted
genesis necessitated
and Eternity proven.
Do not if you are wise
attribute to HIM
any action but creatio ex nihilo
of a single being in the wink
of an eye
or less.
Do not speak of His Action
in such a way that His Essence
might be passive like our own
moulded in time by act
by the least of intentions.
ABSOLUTE UNITY:
seek nothing outside His Essence
for He is All-comprehensive
while the essences of things
are particular, determined.
If you claim He transcends all vision
do not attribute qualities to Him
for this would make Him
dual in essence
no longer singular, unique and ONE.
True, you see in this universe
a myriad things made of earth
wind, water, fire, metals and seas.
If you could float down
like Harut the fallen angel
from celestial spheres
then could you not
lift yourself up again
like the Morning Star?
EMANATION FROM ESSENCE
NOT FROM BEING:
the cause of the creation of one thing
must be ONE
The First Emanation is Intellect
then Soul, then Body,
plants, the abundance of beasts,
the Rational Animal.
Each Archetype contingent in itself
bu (in reality) an impossible being;
each one manifest in itself but
(in reality) a hidden non-existent.
What say you now? how this painted screen
is set up in the vasty air
like an enamelled pavilion pitched
in a desert of fire?
Does it move by itself or
has someone set it spinning?
keeps it revolving like this
around the zenith on high?
How do you define movement ?
Locomotion? Turning from one state
to another lowly or sublime?
Then explain to me please
its condition and locus
if you know. If you don t know
stay off the path of Wisdom
till your blindfold is untied.
When by way of demonstration
and deduction you speak
of NINE SPHERES -
what say you again?
what lies beyond these verdant fields?
If you answer VACUUM
I say you re wrong - impossible
that solid forms should hang
in a void. If you say
PLENUM - no no - one cannot conceive
a physical body without limit or end
like a sublime substance.
Then what keeps this ball of dust
suspended - so - between water and fire
thunderbolt and raging tempest?
If the elements are opposites in nature
why do the four of them
seem to embrace in an excess of unity
in a single place like
loving brothers? or if you say
they re not opposites in essence
why have they been given NAMES
which express their opposition?
BEGIN NOW
KNOW THYSELF and turn
your steed away from the
whirling spheres
and this duststained toy.
How can you taste Divine Mysteries
with the DEVIL in you
slashing about with his sword
duelling the inner ADAM?
Your vision of the
spiritual essence of things
reminds me of a blind man
dropped in the middle of the
soul-nourishing Garden of the Spirit
trying with his sightless eyes
to visualise the shapes and colours
of its delights.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
-
- Posts: 666
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
[I have found a beautiful video clip song with introduction of Hujjat Seyyendena Nasir-i Khusraw (Pbuh) on [Youtube].......
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8WtTKlDi ... annel_page
Here, another wonderful video clip of Pamir Ismaili Muslim with a beautiful song on praise of Mowla Ali with Present Imam of the TIME <3
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=msePawnd ... annel_page
Another video clip, a beautiful recitation of Poem on the Praise of Mowlana Hazar Imam's Deedar by our Pamir Jamat.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wOU7o28O ... annel_page
Please, check this last video clip of my favorite on Golden Jubilee Visits of Mowlana Hazar Imam.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VLEvQc7t ... annel_page
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8WtTKlDi ... annel_page
Here, another wonderful video clip of Pamir Ismaili Muslim with a beautiful song on praise of Mowla Ali with Present Imam of the TIME <3
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=msePawnd ... annel_page
Another video clip, a beautiful recitation of Poem on the Praise of Mowlana Hazar Imam's Deedar by our Pamir Jamat.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wOU7o28O ... annel_page
Please, check this last video clip of my favorite on Golden Jubilee Visits of Mowlana Hazar Imam.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VLEvQc7t ... annel_page
-
- Posts: 666
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "THE ISMAILI SUFISM POETRY AND POEMS"
Speech
YOU whirligig windowless jasper dome
with the hump of an old wife, power of youth
we your brood and you the unloving mother
you our mother! and yet so vengeful.
Black silent clay, this body s your baby
(not pure Intelligence nor rational Substance)
the body - abode of noble sublimities
and you the mother, mother of the house . . .
When I finish my work in this house today
I shall be off alone and tomorrow the house is yours.
MY SON this corpse of yours, this prison
will never be lovely even draped in silk brocades;
embellish your soul with the jewel of SPEECH
for the soul is ugly even in silk brocades.
Can you not see God s chains on your ankles
(only awakened souls can see them)?
Be a man in your chains and cinch your belt
nor dream your cell the realm of DARIUS:
those wh act in moderation find
kingdoms wider far than his.
Patience! no one finds heart s desire
but a man of patience;
and for sexual lust open the Qur an
to the story of Adam and Eve.
Stay out of harm s way and do no hurt
but justly, eye to eye:
stick to no petty grudge like the brambles
nor like the datepalm bend in humiliation
for dung is thrown in the pit because it sinks
sweet incence burned for its refreshing fragrance.
Don t run around with everyone nor shut yourself up alone -
walk wisdom s way - be neither fly nor gryphon:
if there s no one around worth talking to
then 100 times better alone than with idiots
(the SUN s alone - who blames it
or calls it less than the seven PLEIADES?)
Don t screw up your face at more or less;
do with what s given and be equitable with all.
The states of this vagabond world are fleeting
cold after heat, joy after sorrow -
better not to have grabbed for ephemeralities.
Listen - GOOD ADVICE - don t be a bilious fool.
Who cares if the earth is littered with pebbles or gold:
you will lie in your grave beneath a shack or a palace
(remember the man who built a castle in SANAA
now fallen to ruins in a ruined city).
The world s - a cunning devil whom the wise
have never cultivated for companionship;
if you have an ounce of sense don t swagger
in its sulphurous wake like a drunken clot.
The world s a bottomless mudchoked well -
don t lose your purified soul in its cloudy depths
(your soul purified by SPEECH - as the wise
through LOGOS have flown from well s-bottom to the stars).
Take pride in speech as the Prophet (who willed
not even a camel to his heirs) treasured his eloquence;
come to life in speech as Jesus
raised the dead with a word;
make yourself known through speech
for no one known if not by what he says . . .
But if you ve no ideas sew up your trap
for a word unspoken s better than an asinine remark.
Carve your utterance straight as quarrel s shaft
then shoot - don t fumble the bow.
Pay your attention to words than good looks
for man is SUBLIMED through speech not stature
(the almond gives better fruit than willows
or poplars which are taller;
a sober man may look like a tramp
but his words will brand him no drunk).
The ocean of LOGOS are the lovely words of God
sparkling with gemstones, glowing with pearls.
The outward form of Revelation: bitter as a gulp
of seawater - sweet pearls its innards to the wise.
If sunken treasure lies in ocean deeps
look for a diver - why run vainly down the strand?
Why has the Creator sunk these chests
of gems in briny weeded troughs?
Tell for the Prophet s sake! Who told HIM
to entrust the hermeneutic to the wise, words to the rabble?
The diver surfaces with a handful of slime
perhaps because he sees in you an enemy . . .
look for the pith of Revelation, don t follow the herd
content with husks like asses with their braying.
On the NIGHT OF POWER the mosques are bright as day
with your candles - but your heart is pitchy as 12 o clock;
don t waste wax - for tappers cannot banish
darkened from an ignorant heart.
You have not learned piety but from sheer pride
you solve riddles at midnight in an ebon well . . .
if you re not a snake why dot he believers
tremble in your hands and the Christians fear you?
Cease this rambling and giggling at the fortunes of life
for nothing on this dusty globe belongs to you.
How often the spinning spheres distracted the wise
and thrown their perfect peace in turbulence?
DARIUS left behind his slaves, his concubines
his castle and gold and departed with a decaying bag of skin.
Earth is a vulture, no creature safe
from its beak, neither lord nor butler.
A day comes in which is no shelter nor refuge
from the arbitration of a just and equitable Judge;
at that hour all shall be paid for their deeds
both the just and the unjust receive justice;
on that day of tumult in that turbulent crowd
before the martyrs of God I shall take refuge with
THE DAUGHTER OF MUHAMMAD
so that God the Almighty may decide
between me
and the enemies
of the household
of the Prophet.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
YOU whirligig windowless jasper dome
with the hump of an old wife, power of youth
we your brood and you the unloving mother
you our mother! and yet so vengeful.
Black silent clay, this body s your baby
(not pure Intelligence nor rational Substance)
the body - abode of noble sublimities
and you the mother, mother of the house . . .
When I finish my work in this house today
I shall be off alone and tomorrow the house is yours.
MY SON this corpse of yours, this prison
will never be lovely even draped in silk brocades;
embellish your soul with the jewel of SPEECH
for the soul is ugly even in silk brocades.
Can you not see God s chains on your ankles
(only awakened souls can see them)?
Be a man in your chains and cinch your belt
nor dream your cell the realm of DARIUS:
those wh act in moderation find
kingdoms wider far than his.
Patience! no one finds heart s desire
but a man of patience;
and for sexual lust open the Qur an
to the story of Adam and Eve.
Stay out of harm s way and do no hurt
but justly, eye to eye:
stick to no petty grudge like the brambles
nor like the datepalm bend in humiliation
for dung is thrown in the pit because it sinks
sweet incence burned for its refreshing fragrance.
Don t run around with everyone nor shut yourself up alone -
walk wisdom s way - be neither fly nor gryphon:
if there s no one around worth talking to
then 100 times better alone than with idiots
(the SUN s alone - who blames it
or calls it less than the seven PLEIADES?)
Don t screw up your face at more or less;
do with what s given and be equitable with all.
The states of this vagabond world are fleeting
cold after heat, joy after sorrow -
better not to have grabbed for ephemeralities.
Listen - GOOD ADVICE - don t be a bilious fool.
Who cares if the earth is littered with pebbles or gold:
you will lie in your grave beneath a shack or a palace
(remember the man who built a castle in SANAA
now fallen to ruins in a ruined city).
The world s - a cunning devil whom the wise
have never cultivated for companionship;
if you have an ounce of sense don t swagger
in its sulphurous wake like a drunken clot.
The world s a bottomless mudchoked well -
don t lose your purified soul in its cloudy depths
(your soul purified by SPEECH - as the wise
through LOGOS have flown from well s-bottom to the stars).
Take pride in speech as the Prophet (who willed
not even a camel to his heirs) treasured his eloquence;
come to life in speech as Jesus
raised the dead with a word;
make yourself known through speech
for no one known if not by what he says . . .
But if you ve no ideas sew up your trap
for a word unspoken s better than an asinine remark.
Carve your utterance straight as quarrel s shaft
then shoot - don t fumble the bow.
Pay your attention to words than good looks
for man is SUBLIMED through speech not stature
(the almond gives better fruit than willows
or poplars which are taller;
a sober man may look like a tramp
but his words will brand him no drunk).
The ocean of LOGOS are the lovely words of God
sparkling with gemstones, glowing with pearls.
The outward form of Revelation: bitter as a gulp
of seawater - sweet pearls its innards to the wise.
If sunken treasure lies in ocean deeps
look for a diver - why run vainly down the strand?
Why has the Creator sunk these chests
of gems in briny weeded troughs?
Tell for the Prophet s sake! Who told HIM
to entrust the hermeneutic to the wise, words to the rabble?
The diver surfaces with a handful of slime
perhaps because he sees in you an enemy . . .
look for the pith of Revelation, don t follow the herd
content with husks like asses with their braying.
On the NIGHT OF POWER the mosques are bright as day
with your candles - but your heart is pitchy as 12 o clock;
don t waste wax - for tappers cannot banish
darkened from an ignorant heart.
You have not learned piety but from sheer pride
you solve riddles at midnight in an ebon well . . .
if you re not a snake why dot he believers
tremble in your hands and the Christians fear you?
Cease this rambling and giggling at the fortunes of life
for nothing on this dusty globe belongs to you.
How often the spinning spheres distracted the wise
and thrown their perfect peace in turbulence?
DARIUS left behind his slaves, his concubines
his castle and gold and departed with a decaying bag of skin.
Earth is a vulture, no creature safe
from its beak, neither lord nor butler.
A day comes in which is no shelter nor refuge
from the arbitration of a just and equitable Judge;
at that hour all shall be paid for their deeds
both the just and the unjust receive justice;
on that day of tumult in that turbulent crowd
before the martyrs of God I shall take refuge with
THE DAUGHTER OF MUHAMMAD
so that God the Almighty may decide
between me
and the enemies
of the household
of the Prophet.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
-
- Posts: 666
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "THE ISMAILI SUFISM POETRY AND POEMS"
The Angelic Presence
You, whose name has not been formed by anyone,
whose proof not even intellect can grasp.
To label you would be a loathsome act
for you are far removed from genus and species:
neither a subject nor an attribute ,
neither a Substance nor an Accident.
The moralist can t order you about
nor any censor tells you what to say.
The dance of the Sun s disc through the skies
is your command and gives birth to the shades
of animals; you stir the painter s pot,
the whirling spheres, mixing and mingling all
your most heart-catching colours in the stars.
The very mention of your name in the Nest
of Glory cuts off the wing of Gabriel;
on the Throne of Sanctity your lowliness
unveils the jewels which grace the bride of heaven.
Creation testifies that you were here before it,
and pre-eternity swears to your permanence.
O luminous sun, veiled by your shadow of light,
goal of all lovers, beyond their petty loves,
the paradoxical treasure of Qarun
(which is never where you find it) symbolises
your single pearl, concealed within two jewels -
two jewels which created the world, two gems
which chastised Adam.
The Universe is like
a rolling sea, our planet a tiny skiff
and Nature the anchor; its waves are trees, the stones
which wash up on the beach are animals;
but one, the pearl, the crimson carnelian
if YOU - the lonely beast endowed with speech.
And who is the diver? the Active Intellect
(worthy to be the mind of the Prophet himself).
What is the end? the same as was the beginning.
What is the goal? To seek that which is the best.
Behold the Good, if you have eyes, listen
to Truth, if you have ears to hear it with.
Lust s falcon has snatched you up in its beak, a dove
from Time s snare - have you forgotten, my brother,
Adam our father s sin and repentant tears?
I give a gift wrapped in veils of allusion
hoping you can slice away its seals
with meditation s sword: Adam ate
no bread in Eden; man was not the eater
of grain till his feet crossed the threshold of earth.
All this had happened to Adam when Satan s dam
had not yet come to birth.
What do you say
of Satan s refusal to worship man? Was he forced
not to bow, or did he have free choice to refuse?
If the power was his, to prostrate or not, then God
was impotent; but if God had pre-ordained
him to refusal, then God must be unjust.
No, give up thinking of work which is not your work
and cease to tread a path which is not your way.
No longer seek in vain the Water of Life
in the midst of your own darkness, like some lost
and bootless Alexander; for there were Khizr
found the fountain, the demon is no more
companion of the angel of our soul.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
You, whose name has not been formed by anyone,
whose proof not even intellect can grasp.
To label you would be a loathsome act
for you are far removed from genus and species:
neither a subject nor an attribute ,
neither a Substance nor an Accident.
The moralist can t order you about
nor any censor tells you what to say.
The dance of the Sun s disc through the skies
is your command and gives birth to the shades
of animals; you stir the painter s pot,
the whirling spheres, mixing and mingling all
your most heart-catching colours in the stars.
The very mention of your name in the Nest
of Glory cuts off the wing of Gabriel;
on the Throne of Sanctity your lowliness
unveils the jewels which grace the bride of heaven.
Creation testifies that you were here before it,
and pre-eternity swears to your permanence.
O luminous sun, veiled by your shadow of light,
goal of all lovers, beyond their petty loves,
the paradoxical treasure of Qarun
(which is never where you find it) symbolises
your single pearl, concealed within two jewels -
two jewels which created the world, two gems
which chastised Adam.
The Universe is like
a rolling sea, our planet a tiny skiff
and Nature the anchor; its waves are trees, the stones
which wash up on the beach are animals;
but one, the pearl, the crimson carnelian
if YOU - the lonely beast endowed with speech.
And who is the diver? the Active Intellect
(worthy to be the mind of the Prophet himself).
What is the end? the same as was the beginning.
What is the goal? To seek that which is the best.
Behold the Good, if you have eyes, listen
to Truth, if you have ears to hear it with.
Lust s falcon has snatched you up in its beak, a dove
from Time s snare - have you forgotten, my brother,
Adam our father s sin and repentant tears?
I give a gift wrapped in veils of allusion
hoping you can slice away its seals
with meditation s sword: Adam ate
no bread in Eden; man was not the eater
of grain till his feet crossed the threshold of earth.
All this had happened to Adam when Satan s dam
had not yet come to birth.
What do you say
of Satan s refusal to worship man? Was he forced
not to bow, or did he have free choice to refuse?
If the power was his, to prostrate or not, then God
was impotent; but if God had pre-ordained
him to refusal, then God must be unjust.
No, give up thinking of work which is not your work
and cease to tread a path which is not your way.
No longer seek in vain the Water of Life
in the midst of your own darkness, like some lost
and bootless Alexander; for there were Khizr
found the fountain, the demon is no more
companion of the angel of our soul.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
-
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Re: "ISMAILI SUFI POETRY AND POEMS"
In the path of the hereafter, one should not walk on foot but with the soul and the intellect, and for provisions, you must fill the tablecloth of your heart with obedience and knowledge.
By: The Great Ismaili Dia, Hujjat and Pir Seyyendena Nasir-i Khusraw (Pbuh)
By: The Great Ismaili Dia, Hujjat and Pir Seyyendena Nasir-i Khusraw (Pbuh)
-
- Posts: 666
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "THE ISMAILI SUFISM POETRY AND POEMS"
Freewill and Determination
Who forced you to go for all this
eating and running around and sleeping and waking up
and what s the good of it? If this fate
didn t tickle your palate, why
have you spent your life guzzling and snoring?
How have you become such a disaster to yourself?
Tell the truth (wise men always tell the truth):
if you yourself destined to such a fate
then you must be your own Maker!
but this is manifestly bad doctrine. No,
the truth is that God s chains are upon you
and this abode is your pasturing place.
But munching grass and chewing cud
- damn! - this is work for cows!
How then do you explain your curious love
for the pasture? Ah, gourmet of hay,
all your fear and sorrow is the fear
of decrease - which cannot be avoided.
How in this hurlyburly world do you expect
to find permanence? Becoming the Change
to the wise are signs of Annihilation.
Your state changes, the stars shift about
day gives way to night - are these
not witnesses of the world s impermanence?
My dear tourist; this earth is like
a room in a onenight hotel, your journey
towards to Abode of Eternity.
Do not forget your passing from this place -
even if the house is torn down
religion prospers. Do not debase yourself
for finally someday however late a last
you must depart this caravanserai.
Make your provision for the road
obedience to God, devotion
the coin you spend on this difficult journey.
Gird yourself in armour of godliness and wisdom
for there lurks along the path a hideous dragon.
When you reach the fork, choose the best way
for one street lead to felicity, the other to Hell.
When the Prophet himself has come to you
with promise and threats, how can you claim
that Good and Evil are written, kismet, Fate?
Why try to shift the burden of sin and sloth
on to the shoulders of Destiny? Nonesense!
If God destined you to sin
then - according to you - the sin is God s
the evil-doer is God (hideous belief!)
Even if you don t dare to draw
the logical conclusion, in fear of getting
knocked on the head. Yes, that s your doctrine
even if your tongue proclaims Him Judge
the Wisest of Men, God knows
your tongue and heart do not agree - but you
lie boldfaced to the Lord of the Universe.
The wiseman treads midway
between Fate and Freewill
the path of the learned threads between hope and fear.
Seek you the Straight Way likewise
for either extreme leads to pain and suffering.
Straight indeed is that Way in religion
approved by Intellect, the gift of God to Man.
Justice is the Cornerstone of the Cosmos
- and consider! - by what faculty is justice
distinguished from tyranny except by Reason?
If man follows the tracks of Reason
it would not be wrong to expect to see
pearls spring up in his footprints from the soil.
Reason - Wisdom - only for this
and its radiant dignity does the Lord
of the Universe applaud and deign to address
his creature Man. Wisdom is the prop
for every weakness, relief from every sorrow
comfort in every fear, balm for each ill
noble companion, bulwark in the way of the world
and in religion a trusty guide, a stout staff.
Even if the whole Universe were free
it would be in bondage - but the wiseman
even in chains would be at liberty.
The Sage! Study him well with an awakened eye
and see by contrast with what black plague
this ignorant world is afflicted.
This one tells All actions are performed
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? (missing whilst photocopying)
submission and contentment. That one replies
All good is from God, all evil, O World
your work alone . But both parties
Agree on one thing at least, that a Great Day
is coming, a day of reward and punishment.
But if the work is not mine, how
shall be rewarded? Look: Illogic!!!
Where s the justice in chastising the innocent?
You may see it but I am nonplussed. No,
this arbitrator of your ( your in italic) judgement day
is the Drunkard of Sodom, not the Wise Being
who has built the vault of Heaven.
True wisdom could never lead us astray
in such error - then follow Wisdom s manifest Way.
Know the God of the Universe and be grateful -
these two precepts are worth more to you
than all the powers of Solomon.
Learn to be wise. Do not prattle
but speak in measure. Know that on the Last Day
these things have value, these are priceless.
The True Man is robed in Faith and virtue
- even fine silks cannot disguise
the art-less and wicked. Endeavour
to become a man by SPEECH - know
that for such a man all creatures
are but weeds and thorns. GOOD SPEECH
is to man s heart a air and water
to his body - a source of life.
Listen then O noble heart to the PROOF
for to the truly noble, his words are nobility.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
Who forced you to go for all this
eating and running around and sleeping and waking up
and what s the good of it? If this fate
didn t tickle your palate, why
have you spent your life guzzling and snoring?
How have you become such a disaster to yourself?
Tell the truth (wise men always tell the truth):
if you yourself destined to such a fate
then you must be your own Maker!
but this is manifestly bad doctrine. No,
the truth is that God s chains are upon you
and this abode is your pasturing place.
But munching grass and chewing cud
- damn! - this is work for cows!
How then do you explain your curious love
for the pasture? Ah, gourmet of hay,
all your fear and sorrow is the fear
of decrease - which cannot be avoided.
How in this hurlyburly world do you expect
to find permanence? Becoming the Change
to the wise are signs of Annihilation.
Your state changes, the stars shift about
day gives way to night - are these
not witnesses of the world s impermanence?
My dear tourist; this earth is like
a room in a onenight hotel, your journey
towards to Abode of Eternity.
Do not forget your passing from this place -
even if the house is torn down
religion prospers. Do not debase yourself
for finally someday however late a last
you must depart this caravanserai.
Make your provision for the road
obedience to God, devotion
the coin you spend on this difficult journey.
Gird yourself in armour of godliness and wisdom
for there lurks along the path a hideous dragon.
When you reach the fork, choose the best way
for one street lead to felicity, the other to Hell.
When the Prophet himself has come to you
with promise and threats, how can you claim
that Good and Evil are written, kismet, Fate?
Why try to shift the burden of sin and sloth
on to the shoulders of Destiny? Nonesense!
If God destined you to sin
then - according to you - the sin is God s
the evil-doer is God (hideous belief!)
Even if you don t dare to draw
the logical conclusion, in fear of getting
knocked on the head. Yes, that s your doctrine
even if your tongue proclaims Him Judge
the Wisest of Men, God knows
your tongue and heart do not agree - but you
lie boldfaced to the Lord of the Universe.
The wiseman treads midway
between Fate and Freewill
the path of the learned threads between hope and fear.
Seek you the Straight Way likewise
for either extreme leads to pain and suffering.
Straight indeed is that Way in religion
approved by Intellect, the gift of God to Man.
Justice is the Cornerstone of the Cosmos
- and consider! - by what faculty is justice
distinguished from tyranny except by Reason?
If man follows the tracks of Reason
it would not be wrong to expect to see
pearls spring up in his footprints from the soil.
Reason - Wisdom - only for this
and its radiant dignity does the Lord
of the Universe applaud and deign to address
his creature Man. Wisdom is the prop
for every weakness, relief from every sorrow
comfort in every fear, balm for each ill
noble companion, bulwark in the way of the world
and in religion a trusty guide, a stout staff.
Even if the whole Universe were free
it would be in bondage - but the wiseman
even in chains would be at liberty.
The Sage! Study him well with an awakened eye
and see by contrast with what black plague
this ignorant world is afflicted.
This one tells All actions are performed
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? (missing whilst photocopying)
submission and contentment. That one replies
All good is from God, all evil, O World
your work alone . But both parties
Agree on one thing at least, that a Great Day
is coming, a day of reward and punishment.
But if the work is not mine, how
shall be rewarded? Look: Illogic!!!
Where s the justice in chastising the innocent?
You may see it but I am nonplussed. No,
this arbitrator of your ( your in italic) judgement day
is the Drunkard of Sodom, not the Wise Being
who has built the vault of Heaven.
True wisdom could never lead us astray
in such error - then follow Wisdom s manifest Way.
Know the God of the Universe and be grateful -
these two precepts are worth more to you
than all the powers of Solomon.
Learn to be wise. Do not prattle
but speak in measure. Know that on the Last Day
these things have value, these are priceless.
The True Man is robed in Faith and virtue
- even fine silks cannot disguise
the art-less and wicked. Endeavour
to become a man by SPEECH - know
that for such a man all creatures
are but weeds and thorns. GOOD SPEECH
is to man s heart a air and water
to his body - a source of life.
Listen then O noble heart to the PROOF
for to the truly noble, his words are nobility.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
-
- Posts: 666
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "THE ISMAILI SUFISM POETRY AND POEMS"
Being and Becoming
Whatever EXISTS, shall be worn away and die;
that which IS TO BE, then - whence does it spring?
He has not come into being, but is eternal;
that which BECOMES cannot be everlasting.
?????????? check seems a line missing ????????
Which does not increase, how can it die?
The world forever wears away and disappears
for if it did not die it could not grow.
No one can undo the knot tied by Gods hand.
Four wives and seven husbands procreate
without cease and all things of the world but God
are like these women. Decrepit filthy earth,
how does it manage to seize and enchant our hearts?
What do you think, my sage? When does the wheel
of this watermill ever cease to turn? Tell me how
that which is not can ever be, or that which is
can cease to be? Dont waste your time in chat
(fashionable as it may be with So-and-So);
how did you develop a taste for food
that gives indigestion? Rather ask:
if the world goes on forever, what can it do
for you? or if it dies, what can you do?
He who wants to know more of what I teach
ought first to purify his soul, for hone
cannot stick to a hand thats purified.
Wisdom asks no one but the wise
to busy himself with such matters.
Furs and silks are still lovely even on hag
but they cannot improve an ugly womans face.
He who cleanses his soul of error and sin
in the fire of intellect, deserves to dole out
measure by measure the contents of my sack,
but if you lack the wherewithal, refrain
from spattering heavens cupola with mire.
He whom love of the world has inflamed will never
be able to comprehend the truths I speak;
O confidence-man, O trickster, what can you gain
from poetry such as mine? You cannot trust
yourself - how then shall anyone trust you?
Prepare your heart, as I instruct and hope,
for the work at hand, so that this axe of mine
can trim the branches from your ignorance-tree
(but mildly and without pain); and turn your face
from those who deal in superstitious slander.
Good counsel scratches out the eye of ignorance
as sure as a fool in public will lose his pants!
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
Whatever EXISTS, shall be worn away and die;
that which IS TO BE, then - whence does it spring?
He has not come into being, but is eternal;
that which BECOMES cannot be everlasting.
?????????? check seems a line missing ????????
Which does not increase, how can it die?
The world forever wears away and disappears
for if it did not die it could not grow.
No one can undo the knot tied by Gods hand.
Four wives and seven husbands procreate
without cease and all things of the world but God
are like these women. Decrepit filthy earth,
how does it manage to seize and enchant our hearts?
What do you think, my sage? When does the wheel
of this watermill ever cease to turn? Tell me how
that which is not can ever be, or that which is
can cease to be? Dont waste your time in chat
(fashionable as it may be with So-and-So);
how did you develop a taste for food
that gives indigestion? Rather ask:
if the world goes on forever, what can it do
for you? or if it dies, what can you do?
He who wants to know more of what I teach
ought first to purify his soul, for hone
cannot stick to a hand thats purified.
Wisdom asks no one but the wise
to busy himself with such matters.
Furs and silks are still lovely even on hag
but they cannot improve an ugly womans face.
He who cleanses his soul of error and sin
in the fire of intellect, deserves to dole out
measure by measure the contents of my sack,
but if you lack the wherewithal, refrain
from spattering heavens cupola with mire.
He whom love of the world has inflamed will never
be able to comprehend the truths I speak;
O confidence-man, O trickster, what can you gain
from poetry such as mine? You cannot trust
yourself - how then shall anyone trust you?
Prepare your heart, as I instruct and hope,
for the work at hand, so that this axe of mine
can trim the branches from your ignorance-tree
(but mildly and without pain); and turn your face
from those who deal in superstitious slander.
Good counsel scratches out the eye of ignorance
as sure as a fool in public will lose his pants!
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
-
- Posts: 666
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "THE ISMAILI SUFISM POETRY AND POEMS"
Planets, Metals, Etc
Reveille! Time to get up! from the couch of sloth! my son!
And gaze upon the globe with the orb of sagesse!
Eating and sleeping is the work of a creature with whom
you my ignoramus cannot hope to compare: the ASS.
Why do you suppose God gave you a brain?
foe eating and snoring contests with donkeys?
Tie round your fat head the turban of Wisdom
then one night raise your eyes to the lapis lazuli vault
or heaven like an emerald seas surging waves
which cast bright pearls from stygian trenches:
dark night crawling with stars like the armour
of Alexanders legions glinting through tenebrous shades.
See the Pleiades like seven sisters sitting side by side
Venus palefaced as terrified girl and Mars
with the baleful eye of a he-lion. Ponder:
Did the Dogstar grow silvery grey or Capella
begin to glow like a scarlet carnelian by themselves?
Each might the spheres spin their cerulean twine
about the throats of thousands upon thousands
of blossoming narcissus and lay their distant fires
around the harvest of the water lilies. But -
if these lights are really fires, how has this harvest
never been sent to increase or diminish?
Without, wick or wood fire never gives
light and radiance. If fire is that which needs fuel
that which needs no fuel cannot be fire.
The Sun is the maker of fire, distinguish, my boy,
between the maker and the fire itself.
Or if that which you see is an army, who
is its general? Socrates spoke of seven
commanders of these troops, prudent and energetic.
The Moon (said he) is green and from it grows
salt and bowels of the earth, silver in stone.
Mars breeds ill-tempered iron and from the womb
of the Sun (so he maintained) all gold is born.
>Jupiter he claimed >is the father of tin
and all copper has Venus for its dam.
Quicksilver is the daughter of Mercury
and Saturn the mother of gloomy lead.
Thus did the Greek associate with seven worlds
these seven melting metals; are the words
of this great sage true? Reason! come
and arbitrate my argument with him. I say
these planets are mere agents, helpless
with no will of their own. Each is charged
as guardian of a certain function - but
a true leader could never be an agent,
a slave or servant - no - he must be the king
who brought into being the very stars themselves
and the greensward on which they play.
It must be his command that alone has raised
without a scaffold the foundations of sea and land,
his decree that harmonises dry earth
with humid water, his power that revolves
the swift and gateless millwheel of the heavens;
and through him the dusty world adorns itself
with countless beauties. Four fecund sisters
and their innumerable spawn praise and glorify
HIM without end beneath this finespun azure
pavilion - but - who has ever heard such praise
of the seven planets? Unless by some hallucinatory
tintinnabulation on the broken eardrum of the heart?
Seize the hand of God or youll regret it! Find
a new-minted ear, a fresh eye to gaze upon
this great sovereign - for he will not grant you
audience unless you cut off your ears and pluck
your eyes from the webs of this world.
Your lord summons you to the heights why
have you cast yourself in the Pit? Climb
to highest heaven on feet of knowledge
and wings of devotion.
Oh you who tread the wilderness
of Insolence, your body lard, your soul starved thin
your arms coiled like snakes around the neck
of this deceitful world (imagining shes some
gorgeous slut) and clasp to your bosom something
more venomous than a king cobra -
seclude yourself from the world or not,
it makes no difference, shell have her
vengeance, her stiletto-satisfaction in the end.
To expect fidelity from this infidel is
to blow on sifted ashes hoping for fire and warmth.
This ghoul, this vampire has kicked a million
like you off the wharf and drowned them
in the shoreless passageless sea.
The world is a scab: it hurts
but it feels so nice to scratch it.
You think its pleasant and cozy as hot milk and sugar
but when it means you ill, watch out:
neither Caesar nor the Emperor of China
can do a thing to save you.
Sometimes it appears to you as a young bride
dripping with earings, bracelets and a diadem
who with sinuously erotic gestures, blushing
like a virgin, removes from her face
first the dust of humility and then - the veil . . .
suddenly, just as you anticipate . . . well
we wont go into that - suddenly like a lunatic
she whips out a dagger and stabs you in the throat.
In doing battle with this psychopath forge yourself
a sword of patience, a helmet of faith;
pluck gnostic buds from the branch of religion
and gaze upon devotional hyacinths in the
in the pasture of knowledge. The here-and-now
is no mansion for the wise but merely
a thoroughfare to be passed and left behind;
it is a twig whose yield is forbidden us to enjoy
- no matter then it bears fruit of not.
Compared to God, the partnerless judge, this world
cannot be counted even as an atom.
If He cared a whit for the worlds worth
do you suppose Hed allow an unbeliever
to take from it even a sip of water?
This is but a store where you can buy
road-provision for your trip to the Hereafter,
only a book wherein you must read
the mysterious calligraphy of your Lord.
Do not deny these hints from the PROOF
(truth can never be denied); you may learn
most readily to decipher the divine script
if you enter the Prophets house - then
in your footsteps tulips and lilies will spring up
and water-mint grow. But God will not permit
you to enter this house except behind ALI
the hero whose glory in the conquest of Khaybar
ha spread from Qayrawan to China,
whose sword has dumbfounded the lions;
Ocean before his great heart has shrunk
into a single drop; his words are a restingplace
a lamp of enlightenment for the heart
his sword a pit of fear and confusion to the foe -
Gods gift to Muhammad - his name Ali
his nickname Kawthar. If you yearn to see
to glaze upon that blessed countenance, that holy face
then hurry to the threshold of the IMAM MUSTANSIR
and do him the honour to approach, face in the dust,
towards that Kaaba of this world and the hereafter
that sacred temple of glory and majesty.
The sun dims before his shining face and the universe
before his doorstep appears but a heap of dirt.
By your sword, by your words, the battlefield
and pulpit have at last attained to grandeur;
without your blessed face the world itself
remains unknown, naked and unadorned.
Only by your knowledge has religion been known:
religion is the frankincense, your heart the pyx.
Hail, PROOF of the land of Khorasan, well done!
This propaganda, this eulogy of the Prophet and his House.
The point of your eloquent pen is a lancet
stuck in the eye of the enemies of true faith.
Such astonishing brocades you spin - tell me
are the famous looms of Shustar hid in your heart?
Spend your remaining years in weaving
these poems of piety, and in devotion.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
Reveille! Time to get up! from the couch of sloth! my son!
And gaze upon the globe with the orb of sagesse!
Eating and sleeping is the work of a creature with whom
you my ignoramus cannot hope to compare: the ASS.
Why do you suppose God gave you a brain?
foe eating and snoring contests with donkeys?
Tie round your fat head the turban of Wisdom
then one night raise your eyes to the lapis lazuli vault
or heaven like an emerald seas surging waves
which cast bright pearls from stygian trenches:
dark night crawling with stars like the armour
of Alexanders legions glinting through tenebrous shades.
See the Pleiades like seven sisters sitting side by side
Venus palefaced as terrified girl and Mars
with the baleful eye of a he-lion. Ponder:
Did the Dogstar grow silvery grey or Capella
begin to glow like a scarlet carnelian by themselves?
Each might the spheres spin their cerulean twine
about the throats of thousands upon thousands
of blossoming narcissus and lay their distant fires
around the harvest of the water lilies. But -
if these lights are really fires, how has this harvest
never been sent to increase or diminish?
Without, wick or wood fire never gives
light and radiance. If fire is that which needs fuel
that which needs no fuel cannot be fire.
The Sun is the maker of fire, distinguish, my boy,
between the maker and the fire itself.
Or if that which you see is an army, who
is its general? Socrates spoke of seven
commanders of these troops, prudent and energetic.
The Moon (said he) is green and from it grows
salt and bowels of the earth, silver in stone.
Mars breeds ill-tempered iron and from the womb
of the Sun (so he maintained) all gold is born.
>Jupiter he claimed >is the father of tin
and all copper has Venus for its dam.
Quicksilver is the daughter of Mercury
and Saturn the mother of gloomy lead.
Thus did the Greek associate with seven worlds
these seven melting metals; are the words
of this great sage true? Reason! come
and arbitrate my argument with him. I say
these planets are mere agents, helpless
with no will of their own. Each is charged
as guardian of a certain function - but
a true leader could never be an agent,
a slave or servant - no - he must be the king
who brought into being the very stars themselves
and the greensward on which they play.
It must be his command that alone has raised
without a scaffold the foundations of sea and land,
his decree that harmonises dry earth
with humid water, his power that revolves
the swift and gateless millwheel of the heavens;
and through him the dusty world adorns itself
with countless beauties. Four fecund sisters
and their innumerable spawn praise and glorify
HIM without end beneath this finespun azure
pavilion - but - who has ever heard such praise
of the seven planets? Unless by some hallucinatory
tintinnabulation on the broken eardrum of the heart?
Seize the hand of God or youll regret it! Find
a new-minted ear, a fresh eye to gaze upon
this great sovereign - for he will not grant you
audience unless you cut off your ears and pluck
your eyes from the webs of this world.
Your lord summons you to the heights why
have you cast yourself in the Pit? Climb
to highest heaven on feet of knowledge
and wings of devotion.
Oh you who tread the wilderness
of Insolence, your body lard, your soul starved thin
your arms coiled like snakes around the neck
of this deceitful world (imagining shes some
gorgeous slut) and clasp to your bosom something
more venomous than a king cobra -
seclude yourself from the world or not,
it makes no difference, shell have her
vengeance, her stiletto-satisfaction in the end.
To expect fidelity from this infidel is
to blow on sifted ashes hoping for fire and warmth.
This ghoul, this vampire has kicked a million
like you off the wharf and drowned them
in the shoreless passageless sea.
The world is a scab: it hurts
but it feels so nice to scratch it.
You think its pleasant and cozy as hot milk and sugar
but when it means you ill, watch out:
neither Caesar nor the Emperor of China
can do a thing to save you.
Sometimes it appears to you as a young bride
dripping with earings, bracelets and a diadem
who with sinuously erotic gestures, blushing
like a virgin, removes from her face
first the dust of humility and then - the veil . . .
suddenly, just as you anticipate . . . well
we wont go into that - suddenly like a lunatic
she whips out a dagger and stabs you in the throat.
In doing battle with this psychopath forge yourself
a sword of patience, a helmet of faith;
pluck gnostic buds from the branch of religion
and gaze upon devotional hyacinths in the
in the pasture of knowledge. The here-and-now
is no mansion for the wise but merely
a thoroughfare to be passed and left behind;
it is a twig whose yield is forbidden us to enjoy
- no matter then it bears fruit of not.
Compared to God, the partnerless judge, this world
cannot be counted even as an atom.
If He cared a whit for the worlds worth
do you suppose Hed allow an unbeliever
to take from it even a sip of water?
This is but a store where you can buy
road-provision for your trip to the Hereafter,
only a book wherein you must read
the mysterious calligraphy of your Lord.
Do not deny these hints from the PROOF
(truth can never be denied); you may learn
most readily to decipher the divine script
if you enter the Prophets house - then
in your footsteps tulips and lilies will spring up
and water-mint grow. But God will not permit
you to enter this house except behind ALI
the hero whose glory in the conquest of Khaybar
ha spread from Qayrawan to China,
whose sword has dumbfounded the lions;
Ocean before his great heart has shrunk
into a single drop; his words are a restingplace
a lamp of enlightenment for the heart
his sword a pit of fear and confusion to the foe -
Gods gift to Muhammad - his name Ali
his nickname Kawthar. If you yearn to see
to glaze upon that blessed countenance, that holy face
then hurry to the threshold of the IMAM MUSTANSIR
and do him the honour to approach, face in the dust,
towards that Kaaba of this world and the hereafter
that sacred temple of glory and majesty.
The sun dims before his shining face and the universe
before his doorstep appears but a heap of dirt.
By your sword, by your words, the battlefield
and pulpit have at last attained to grandeur;
without your blessed face the world itself
remains unknown, naked and unadorned.
Only by your knowledge has religion been known:
religion is the frankincense, your heart the pyx.
Hail, PROOF of the land of Khorasan, well done!
This propaganda, this eulogy of the Prophet and his House.
The point of your eloquent pen is a lancet
stuck in the eye of the enemies of true faith.
Such astonishing brocades you spin - tell me
are the famous looms of Shustar hid in your heart?
Spend your remaining years in weaving
these poems of piety, and in devotion.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
-
- Posts: 666
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "THE ISMAILI SUFISM POETRY AND POEMS"
God and the World
Heres something for you to mull over:
He who made the world, what did He want of it?
The earth turns, day and night, sometimes more
sometimes less, sometimes even. Water
runs downhill, clouds scuttle across the sky
trees remain stuck in the mud, the beasts
move freely this way and that. And think of men:
how their works are boundless and uncountable.
Ewe, goat, cow, ass, elephant and lion
all suffer for this one beast alone;
seed, fruit, leaves of every plant
are either medicine for us, or food
(if it tastes good its food - the bitter
is perhaps some herbal remedy). Deer and game,
the browsing stag, all creatures that graze
are busy creating your steaks and kebabs
out of useless thorns and desert weeds -
the cows you feed on brambles and hay
you exploit for butter, cheese, yoghurt and milk.
Good, bad, right, wrong: the result of our actions.
The lion in his mountain, the bird in his sky
are not safe from our hands. Fire drudges
for us between the ovens stones, water
slaves for us in the mill, the wind
obeys us at sea, a good worker who keeps his place.
And what is all this to you? Look:
every human being is suffering because of some
other human being. This one says
I own the Roman Empire! Another one
China is mine! One raises a golden throne
over his treasures, another crouches starving in a corner.
X lies in a bed lid with silk and fine linen
Y wishes he had a tattered reed mat.
One stinks, armpits unwashed, never prays
another pure of heart, godfearing, pious.
How did one become bad, the other good?
Well? Whose fault is this mess?
And He Who made the world like this -
what can he fish out of such a kettle?
Good and bad, I repeat, more and less - wheres
the justice in such a set-up? If man
is good then obviously scorpions are bad.
No, really, tell me. This is no
rhetorical question. I really want to know.
I fear your opinions about Gods Justice
are not really sincere. Youre simply
trying to avoid being accused of heresy.
Ill tell you: to really understand Gods Justice
is the job of sages and prophets. Go
your lustful way - this is no business
for one infected with carnal passion.
Speech and action are attributes of man
- far removed is He from such human qualities.
Know God - perfectly - or all your panegyric
is nothing but satire. Do not speculate
about God as King of you and me - even though
the world and everything in it are fit to be
nothing but His slaves. What?
This tasteless and fleeting realm, how
could it be considered his domain?
The Kingdom of God (so you confess) knows
neither increase or decrease; but if the world
is His Kingdom - and the world is subject
at every moment to annihilation - then
His kingdom knows decrease! A contradiction!
In fact you do not know Him nd your words
bear witness to your ignorance. For me
what you profess is not religion but a cause
of wretched disbelief.
Now:
knowledge of Gods agents is the very foundation
of the Islamic Religion. The universe
is such an agent, without intelligence, knowledge or will.
And that Power which has dominion over the universe
is itself and agent - the beginning of all agents.
Agents everywhere: for example: the agent in plants
is sluggish, intractable. That by which the soil
makes raiment for your limbs, food for your stomach
that which produces wheat from dust -
that is not God, but thevegetative soul.
You object@God is pure of all this!
We will prove our point. According to your reasoning
the Lord of the Universe is without doubt inside
every grain of barley and every bean.
Surely you see how ugly, unjust and erroneous
such a belief must be!
Only when you know
the agents in all their reality is your soul
worthy of applause. You are an agent too.
Do your duty! and be rewarded with eternal bliss.
The duty of the tree is to bear leaves and fruit
and yours is glorifying God with prayer and invocation.
Follow the footsteps of that excellent guide
Muhammad the Chosen One of God.
Dont loll about in idleness. All this work
going on in the universe is all aimed at YOU -
the rest is dust. Follow the way of religion,
cure for the sickness of ignorance. You soul
in ignorance has grown thin as an old mule -
knowledge is its water, its pasture Divine Law.
Without knowledge your soul is lead - religion
is the alchemy to make it gold. Abstain
from dragonlike and sensual desires. Buy
true glory and eternal life, luminous
and beautiful as the light of Divine Law.
Intellect the gift of God has made religion
incumbent upon you, and he who refuses
to enter this path is an ass even if
(like you, to be sure) hes descended from Adam himself.
No - worse than and ass is man
satisfied with bestiality. Wisdom shows the way:
follow the track of faith, the blessed staff,
wearing the cloak of obedience, loveliest of mantles.
Devotion is the head of the body of blessings,
the seal of the epistle of good deeds -
but obedience without knowledge is not obedience,
only a puff of morning breeze. Know then:
obedience means two different things according
to whether we discuss the body or soul - for you
are two: body and soul. On the Day of Fire
man is saved by knowledge and action. Devote yourself
to these two, and prefer above all words the words
of the PROOF. Wisdom knows his sermons by heart.
Theyre the very head on the body of Wisdom
and his phrases are soothing balm for its eyes.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
Heres something for you to mull over:
He who made the world, what did He want of it?
The earth turns, day and night, sometimes more
sometimes less, sometimes even. Water
runs downhill, clouds scuttle across the sky
trees remain stuck in the mud, the beasts
move freely this way and that. And think of men:
how their works are boundless and uncountable.
Ewe, goat, cow, ass, elephant and lion
all suffer for this one beast alone;
seed, fruit, leaves of every plant
are either medicine for us, or food
(if it tastes good its food - the bitter
is perhaps some herbal remedy). Deer and game,
the browsing stag, all creatures that graze
are busy creating your steaks and kebabs
out of useless thorns and desert weeds -
the cows you feed on brambles and hay
you exploit for butter, cheese, yoghurt and milk.
Good, bad, right, wrong: the result of our actions.
The lion in his mountain, the bird in his sky
are not safe from our hands. Fire drudges
for us between the ovens stones, water
slaves for us in the mill, the wind
obeys us at sea, a good worker who keeps his place.
And what is all this to you? Look:
every human being is suffering because of some
other human being. This one says
I own the Roman Empire! Another one
China is mine! One raises a golden throne
over his treasures, another crouches starving in a corner.
X lies in a bed lid with silk and fine linen
Y wishes he had a tattered reed mat.
One stinks, armpits unwashed, never prays
another pure of heart, godfearing, pious.
How did one become bad, the other good?
Well? Whose fault is this mess?
And He Who made the world like this -
what can he fish out of such a kettle?
Good and bad, I repeat, more and less - wheres
the justice in such a set-up? If man
is good then obviously scorpions are bad.
No, really, tell me. This is no
rhetorical question. I really want to know.
I fear your opinions about Gods Justice
are not really sincere. Youre simply
trying to avoid being accused of heresy.
Ill tell you: to really understand Gods Justice
is the job of sages and prophets. Go
your lustful way - this is no business
for one infected with carnal passion.
Speech and action are attributes of man
- far removed is He from such human qualities.
Know God - perfectly - or all your panegyric
is nothing but satire. Do not speculate
about God as King of you and me - even though
the world and everything in it are fit to be
nothing but His slaves. What?
This tasteless and fleeting realm, how
could it be considered his domain?
The Kingdom of God (so you confess) knows
neither increase or decrease; but if the world
is His Kingdom - and the world is subject
at every moment to annihilation - then
His kingdom knows decrease! A contradiction!
In fact you do not know Him nd your words
bear witness to your ignorance. For me
what you profess is not religion but a cause
of wretched disbelief.
Now:
knowledge of Gods agents is the very foundation
of the Islamic Religion. The universe
is such an agent, without intelligence, knowledge or will.
And that Power which has dominion over the universe
is itself and agent - the beginning of all agents.
Agents everywhere: for example: the agent in plants
is sluggish, intractable. That by which the soil
makes raiment for your limbs, food for your stomach
that which produces wheat from dust -
that is not God, but thevegetative soul.
You object@God is pure of all this!
We will prove our point. According to your reasoning
the Lord of the Universe is without doubt inside
every grain of barley and every bean.
Surely you see how ugly, unjust and erroneous
such a belief must be!
Only when you know
the agents in all their reality is your soul
worthy of applause. You are an agent too.
Do your duty! and be rewarded with eternal bliss.
The duty of the tree is to bear leaves and fruit
and yours is glorifying God with prayer and invocation.
Follow the footsteps of that excellent guide
Muhammad the Chosen One of God.
Dont loll about in idleness. All this work
going on in the universe is all aimed at YOU -
the rest is dust. Follow the way of religion,
cure for the sickness of ignorance. You soul
in ignorance has grown thin as an old mule -
knowledge is its water, its pasture Divine Law.
Without knowledge your soul is lead - religion
is the alchemy to make it gold. Abstain
from dragonlike and sensual desires. Buy
true glory and eternal life, luminous
and beautiful as the light of Divine Law.
Intellect the gift of God has made religion
incumbent upon you, and he who refuses
to enter this path is an ass even if
(like you, to be sure) hes descended from Adam himself.
No - worse than and ass is man
satisfied with bestiality. Wisdom shows the way:
follow the track of faith, the blessed staff,
wearing the cloak of obedience, loveliest of mantles.
Devotion is the head of the body of blessings,
the seal of the epistle of good deeds -
but obedience without knowledge is not obedience,
only a puff of morning breeze. Know then:
obedience means two different things according
to whether we discuss the body or soul - for you
are two: body and soul. On the Day of Fire
man is saved by knowledge and action. Devote yourself
to these two, and prefer above all words the words
of the PROOF. Wisdom knows his sermons by heart.
Theyre the very head on the body of Wisdom
and his phrases are soothing balm for its eyes.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
-
- Posts: 666
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "THE ISMAILI SUFISM POETRY AND POEMS"
On the praise of Mowlana Imam Shamsud-Din Muhammad(Peace be Upon Him and His Family)
"HE IS THE KING OF THE WORLD,
THE CROWN OF RELIGION,
HE IS THE SON OF ALI, WHO IS THE LIGHT
OF THE EYES OF THE KING OF THE WORLD,
HE IS THE FATHER OF SPIRITUALISM
AND THE SWEETEST FRUIT OF THE ETERNAL
GARDEN OF CREATION."
By : The Great Dia, Hazrat Hakim Nizari Quhistan (Pbuh)
http://www.ismaili.net/hero/hero21.html
"HE IS THE KING OF THE WORLD,
THE CROWN OF RELIGION,
HE IS THE SON OF ALI, WHO IS THE LIGHT
OF THE EYES OF THE KING OF THE WORLD,
HE IS THE FATHER OF SPIRITUALISM
AND THE SWEETEST FRUIT OF THE ETERNAL
GARDEN OF CREATION."
By : The Great Dia, Hazrat Hakim Nizari Quhistan (Pbuh)
http://www.ismaili.net/hero/hero21.html
Last edited by From_Alamut on Sat Jan 31, 2009 2:18 pm, edited 2 times in total.
-
- Posts: 666
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "THE ISMAILI SUFISM POETRY AND POEMS"
Hermeneutics (The Garden)
Windowless revolving turquoise dome: why
is it sometimes a garden, sometimes a wilderness?
First house Ive ever heard of half-desert
half-rosebed, blossoming when you turn your back
on the wasteland. And a black globe
hangs suspended in the middle of the livingroom -
look: no wires. Whos the magician?
A better trick than King Solomons Throne?
Earth - a great tablecloth spread with delicacies
out there on the veranda. When they ask you
to join the feast, think for a moment:
do you deserve it? What about it?
O you whose back is bent like an umbrella.
Look: that eye-in-the-sky, staring,
staring at the earth, looking for the
secret mine-full of jewels, reaching out
with four hands ( Spring, Summer, Winter, Fall).
The jewel is dug out and planted
in another mine: mans body. A pale germ.
Give it colour then - dont be a weakling.
A rubys valued by its >water, man
by his speech. Your body is precious
only because its the shell for this pearl,
this Wisdom, this divine Spirit.
Give spirit to your jewel, for the spiritless
have no mercy from God when the
shell is split open. Wake up! beware
lest you leave this world as you entered it,
hungry, thirsty, naked. Dont buy
before you look at the label. The Divine Law
is Gods grain-garden. His plantation of trees,
some tended by His hand - but others
by Satan. Traveller, if you hunger for
these rare fruits, ask the gardeners permission
(a great and virtuous man) before you come in:
choose the apple, the quince; avoid
the brambles, dont be deceived by tall trees
which bear no fruit. The parrot and owl
are both birds, but one graces the courts
of kings, the other perches in ruins.
Black smokes may rise high as clouds
but gives no rain, not every child
whose father calls him Noah owns an ark
to ride out the Flood. The Messenger
is Lord and master of this house,
commander of humankind, herald of God.
The Messengers child is the gardener,
who protects you from oppressors as the harden
is protected from noxious insects. Just because
apples have worms doesnt mean the farmer
turns the orchards over to pests, any more
than youd surrender your new house
to the mice. A mouse stays in its hole
and travels the wainscotting - what does it know
of the parlour and the porch? No more
than the fool knows of religion. The fool
can mount the pulpit but that doesnt
make him equal to the Sage: the crow
can kick the nightingale out of the garden
but that doesnt mean that it can sing.
Wisdom comes from man, not from a pulpit;
light comes from the sun, not from some
distant star. The Quran is Gods battlefield -
come you knights, ride forth to the lists;
its easy enough to read the Book -
the hard thing is its hermeneutic sense;
if youre not a cow, dont eat chaff with grain
(so said Salman); dont eat the shell with the nut.
It would be libel to say the Prophet didnt know
the meaning of Gods Word - and no one
but the Prophets Family has power
over it now. The rod turned into a snake
in the hands of Moses and Moses alone.
A parrot can talk, but not understand
what it says - so with your reading
of the Quran! Parrots gabble, profitless
absurd, unproven. . . noise. They say
the Prophet died without appointing
a successor. Fools! Prophethood is the
dominion of God, not Rome or China;
what king would turn his empire
over to a stranger? Go, read the
Book of Kings and see for yourself!
Would any Muslim leave his wealth
to a stranger when his daughter,
his son-in-law and his grandchildren were all
still alive? Do you think the Messenger
would act contrary to the Word of the Lord,
the Judge, the Glorious? What crudities!
What are you saying, you around whose brows
the fumes of rebellion smoulder|?
Youll realise its all babble on that Day
when you have to chew stones and weep.
Regret is no use tomorrow if you have not
repented today. Sorrow will not help
the old man who fled from school
as a child. He who spends the summer
drowsing in the shade will not sleep
from hunger through winters nights.
Grief is useless if the patient falls ill
in Iraq, when the remedy is in Badakhshan!
Do you think the Sultan will accept
>Im sorry from the convicted thief?
The Prophets descendant sits in the place
of his ancestor, and the tip of his crown
brushes against Saturns sphere
He is the Chosen one of God - why
do you rave on? There, there where
the Prohet sat at the Divine command
he sits today. Your choice is not
Gods choice - do you know better
than the Creator, the Judge Himself?
Old man, God will not accept
your sacrifice of a dog - even a fat one!
The Prophets son is a sacrifice for you -
find your way by his wisdom to the Garden.
He is the Solomon of the Age; flee
to his gate, escape from your demons.
O Lord of Adams children, your kingdom
like Solomons. Your wisdom like Luqmans,
in the Garden of the Divine Law, March
appears from your justice, April
from your generosity. Religion is
adorned by you, the world made beautiful,
wisdom refreshed, heresy defeated.
When I proclaim your name from
the pulpit on Friday, roses spring up
from your blessing. When your servant
speaks your name - MUSTANSIR BILLAH -
the vale of Yamgan fills with dancing stars.
Your enemies are consumed like foam
in the moonlight. O you title of the Book
of Happiness. Your humble servant
is hounded by enemies only because
he is a guest at your gate. O PROOF
of Yamgan, let your words pierce the hearts
and souls of these villains. If Khorasnas soil
rejected you, be of good cheer - Gods pleasure
is richer than the soil of Khorasan.
Compose your odes on praise of the Wisdom
of the Family, as did the eulogists of old.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
Windowless revolving turquoise dome: why
is it sometimes a garden, sometimes a wilderness?
First house Ive ever heard of half-desert
half-rosebed, blossoming when you turn your back
on the wasteland. And a black globe
hangs suspended in the middle of the livingroom -
look: no wires. Whos the magician?
A better trick than King Solomons Throne?
Earth - a great tablecloth spread with delicacies
out there on the veranda. When they ask you
to join the feast, think for a moment:
do you deserve it? What about it?
O you whose back is bent like an umbrella.
Look: that eye-in-the-sky, staring,
staring at the earth, looking for the
secret mine-full of jewels, reaching out
with four hands ( Spring, Summer, Winter, Fall).
The jewel is dug out and planted
in another mine: mans body. A pale germ.
Give it colour then - dont be a weakling.
A rubys valued by its >water, man
by his speech. Your body is precious
only because its the shell for this pearl,
this Wisdom, this divine Spirit.
Give spirit to your jewel, for the spiritless
have no mercy from God when the
shell is split open. Wake up! beware
lest you leave this world as you entered it,
hungry, thirsty, naked. Dont buy
before you look at the label. The Divine Law
is Gods grain-garden. His plantation of trees,
some tended by His hand - but others
by Satan. Traveller, if you hunger for
these rare fruits, ask the gardeners permission
(a great and virtuous man) before you come in:
choose the apple, the quince; avoid
the brambles, dont be deceived by tall trees
which bear no fruit. The parrot and owl
are both birds, but one graces the courts
of kings, the other perches in ruins.
Black smokes may rise high as clouds
but gives no rain, not every child
whose father calls him Noah owns an ark
to ride out the Flood. The Messenger
is Lord and master of this house,
commander of humankind, herald of God.
The Messengers child is the gardener,
who protects you from oppressors as the harden
is protected from noxious insects. Just because
apples have worms doesnt mean the farmer
turns the orchards over to pests, any more
than youd surrender your new house
to the mice. A mouse stays in its hole
and travels the wainscotting - what does it know
of the parlour and the porch? No more
than the fool knows of religion. The fool
can mount the pulpit but that doesnt
make him equal to the Sage: the crow
can kick the nightingale out of the garden
but that doesnt mean that it can sing.
Wisdom comes from man, not from a pulpit;
light comes from the sun, not from some
distant star. The Quran is Gods battlefield -
come you knights, ride forth to the lists;
its easy enough to read the Book -
the hard thing is its hermeneutic sense;
if youre not a cow, dont eat chaff with grain
(so said Salman); dont eat the shell with the nut.
It would be libel to say the Prophet didnt know
the meaning of Gods Word - and no one
but the Prophets Family has power
over it now. The rod turned into a snake
in the hands of Moses and Moses alone.
A parrot can talk, but not understand
what it says - so with your reading
of the Quran! Parrots gabble, profitless
absurd, unproven. . . noise. They say
the Prophet died without appointing
a successor. Fools! Prophethood is the
dominion of God, not Rome or China;
what king would turn his empire
over to a stranger? Go, read the
Book of Kings and see for yourself!
Would any Muslim leave his wealth
to a stranger when his daughter,
his son-in-law and his grandchildren were all
still alive? Do you think the Messenger
would act contrary to the Word of the Lord,
the Judge, the Glorious? What crudities!
What are you saying, you around whose brows
the fumes of rebellion smoulder|?
Youll realise its all babble on that Day
when you have to chew stones and weep.
Regret is no use tomorrow if you have not
repented today. Sorrow will not help
the old man who fled from school
as a child. He who spends the summer
drowsing in the shade will not sleep
from hunger through winters nights.
Grief is useless if the patient falls ill
in Iraq, when the remedy is in Badakhshan!
Do you think the Sultan will accept
>Im sorry from the convicted thief?
The Prophets descendant sits in the place
of his ancestor, and the tip of his crown
brushes against Saturns sphere
He is the Chosen one of God - why
do you rave on? There, there where
the Prohet sat at the Divine command
he sits today. Your choice is not
Gods choice - do you know better
than the Creator, the Judge Himself?
Old man, God will not accept
your sacrifice of a dog - even a fat one!
The Prophets son is a sacrifice for you -
find your way by his wisdom to the Garden.
He is the Solomon of the Age; flee
to his gate, escape from your demons.
O Lord of Adams children, your kingdom
like Solomons. Your wisdom like Luqmans,
in the Garden of the Divine Law, March
appears from your justice, April
from your generosity. Religion is
adorned by you, the world made beautiful,
wisdom refreshed, heresy defeated.
When I proclaim your name from
the pulpit on Friday, roses spring up
from your blessing. When your servant
speaks your name - MUSTANSIR BILLAH -
the vale of Yamgan fills with dancing stars.
Your enemies are consumed like foam
in the moonlight. O you title of the Book
of Happiness. Your humble servant
is hounded by enemies only because
he is a guest at your gate. O PROOF
of Yamgan, let your words pierce the hearts
and souls of these villains. If Khorasnas soil
rejected you, be of good cheer - Gods pleasure
is richer than the soil of Khorasan.
Compose your odes on praise of the Wisdom
of the Family, as did the eulogists of old.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
-
- Posts: 666
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 8:22 am
Re: "THE ISMAILI SUFISM POETRY AND POEMS"
The Two Jewels
Somewhere above the seven heavens two jewels lie
by whose light Adam and the world are lit;
both formed and not formed, the foetus of nothingness
by the sperm of being - not sensible, nor
do we sense them, do not see them, for
they are neither dark nor luminous -
suckled by nurses of the holy land forever -
no - not jewels, though gemlike in quality:
on one side of creation, on the other side
of all things that exist, both inside and outside Time
they are settles; not in the world
- but they are the world; not in us
but in our bodies the nourishment of Spirit.
They say these two are the TWO WORLDS
both found and not found in all the seven Climes.
One the Holy Spirit, one the essence of Gabriel,
angels flying without wings, without wings
they spread their pinions over this lowly house,
without plumage they soar above their high nests.
With universal Hot and Cold, with the worlds Wet and Dry
like Earth and Wind they keep company with Water and Fire.
They are not - but are called - the Substances
of Eternitys treasure-house and the store of Permanenece.
Both Adam and the world, both Hell and Paradise
present and absent, poison and sugar,
stretching from light to darkness, from
apogee to perigee, from East to West, land to sea,
they are and are not, both hidden and revealed
far from you yet found int he same house.
In that Second World which is heir laboratory
they both destroy and build all things;
food of the five senses, nurses of the four natures,
stewards and cooks of the nine spheres and seven planets.
Ten spies stand around their house, five inside
and five by the gate. Heavens shopkeepers
wait to see what they will sell, and buy -
a ten-headed, six-faced, seven-eyed king
with his four sworn enemies lives in their house.
They are not substances, their substance is accident:
they both are and are not the axis of all accidents.
Illiterate, they read you the letter of the mysteries
and know your deeds without spying on you.
They are lost - and thus become manifest;
headless, bodiless - because they reside
in head and body. In attributes they are not contained
in the world, though hidden in our body and head.
They come from a place which is not a place;
there, they are angles; here, divine messengers.
In attribute they rank above the spiritual world,
neither elements not substances,
like the essence of God Himself.
Though they rule the two worlds they can if you like
conquer your soul as well. They speak
and act, bringing down revelations from on high.
Look at the vegabonds of the sky, an army
for the King of the Holy Throne: even if fools
deride them, they are the movers of the spheres.
Why so many thousand ears and eyes? No,
do not say so - they are blind and deaf.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977
Somewhere above the seven heavens two jewels lie
by whose light Adam and the world are lit;
both formed and not formed, the foetus of nothingness
by the sperm of being - not sensible, nor
do we sense them, do not see them, for
they are neither dark nor luminous -
suckled by nurses of the holy land forever -
no - not jewels, though gemlike in quality:
on one side of creation, on the other side
of all things that exist, both inside and outside Time
they are settles; not in the world
- but they are the world; not in us
but in our bodies the nourishment of Spirit.
They say these two are the TWO WORLDS
both found and not found in all the seven Climes.
One the Holy Spirit, one the essence of Gabriel,
angels flying without wings, without wings
they spread their pinions over this lowly house,
without plumage they soar above their high nests.
With universal Hot and Cold, with the worlds Wet and Dry
like Earth and Wind they keep company with Water and Fire.
They are not - but are called - the Substances
of Eternitys treasure-house and the store of Permanenece.
Both Adam and the world, both Hell and Paradise
present and absent, poison and sugar,
stretching from light to darkness, from
apogee to perigee, from East to West, land to sea,
they are and are not, both hidden and revealed
far from you yet found int he same house.
In that Second World which is heir laboratory
they both destroy and build all things;
food of the five senses, nurses of the four natures,
stewards and cooks of the nine spheres and seven planets.
Ten spies stand around their house, five inside
and five by the gate. Heavens shopkeepers
wait to see what they will sell, and buy -
a ten-headed, six-faced, seven-eyed king
with his four sworn enemies lives in their house.
They are not substances, their substance is accident:
they both are and are not the axis of all accidents.
Illiterate, they read you the letter of the mysteries
and know your deeds without spying on you.
They are lost - and thus become manifest;
headless, bodiless - because they reside
in head and body. In attributes they are not contained
in the world, though hidden in our body and head.
They come from a place which is not a place;
there, they are angles; here, divine messengers.
In attribute they rank above the spiritual world,
neither elements not substances,
like the essence of God Himself.
Though they rule the two worlds they can if you like
conquer your soul as well. They speak
and act, bringing down revelations from on high.
Look at the vegabonds of the sky, an army
for the King of the Holy Throne: even if fools
deride them, they are the movers of the spheres.
Why so many thousand ears and eyes? No,
do not say so - they are blind and deaf.
Reference
Forty Poems from the `Diwan' of Nasir Khusraw. Transl. by P. L. Wilson and Gholam R. Aavani. Tehran: Imperial Iranian Academy of Philosophy, 1977