Morning
O My brother! Not every sea hath pearls; not every branch
will flower, nor will the nightingale sing thereon. Then, ere the nightingale
of the mystic Paradise repair to the celestial garden, and the rays of the morn
of inner meaning return to the Day-Star of Truth, make thou an effort, that
haply in this dust-heap of a mortal world thou mayest catch a fragrance from
the everlasting rose-garden and live in the shadow of the inhabitants of this
everlasting city. And when thou hast attained this highest plane and most
exalted degree, then shalt thou gaze on the Beloved and forget all else.
The Friend, unveiled, doth shed the splendour of His light
Through every door and wall, O ye endued with sight!
[Hatif-i-Isfahání]
Thou hast given up the drop of life and drawn nigh unto the
ocean of the Well-Beloved. This is the goal thou didst seek; God grant thou
mayest attain thereunto.
In this city, even the veils of light are rent asunder and
vanish away. “His beauty hath no veiling save light, His countenance no
covering save revelation.” [From a Hadith] How strange that the Beloved is as
visible as the sun and yet the heedless still hunt after tinsel and base metal.
Yea, the intensity of His revelation hath veiled Him, and the fullness of His
shining forth hath hidden Him.
Even as the noontide sun
Hath the True One brightly shined,
But alas that He hath come
To the city of the blind! [Attributed to Rumi]
- Baha’u’llah (‘The Seven Valleys’, revised translation by
the Baha’i World Center included in ‘The Call of the Divine Beloved’)
Evening